Brandy Rayana Norwood (born February 11, 1979),
known professionally as
Brandy, is an American
R&B singer-songwriter,
record producer, television entertainer, actress, and film
producer. In 2009, she introduced her rap alter-ego
Bran'Nu.
Born into
a musical family in McComb, Mississippi and
raised in Carson,
California
, Norwood first appeared in a supporting role on the
short-lived ABC sitcom
Thea in 1993. Her
engagement led to her own star vehicle, successful
UPN sitcom
Moesha in
1996, and resulted into roles in the 1998 horror sequel
I Still Know
What You Did Last Summer, and the TV films
Rodgers and Hammerstein's
Cinderella (1997)
and
Double Platinum (1999),
two of television's best rated special programs.
In 1993, she signed a recording contract with
Atlantic, releasing her
self-titled debut album a year after.
Following a major success with
Grammy
Award-winning "
The Boy Is Mine",
a duet with singer
Monica, and her
second album
Never Say
Never in 1998, a series of successful records established
her as one of the most successful of the new breed of urban R&B
female vocalists to emerge during the mid-to late
1990s. Her latest studio album,
Human (2008), was her first effort
to be released on the
Epic label after
a label change in 2005.
The
RIAA ranks Norwood as one of the
best-selling female artists in American music history, having sold
over 10.5 million copies of her five studio albums in the United
States and over 25 million albums worldwide, to date. Additionally,
she has won over 100 awards as a recording artist.
Biography
Childhood
Norwood is
the elder of two siblings born to Willie
Norwood, a former gospel singer and choir
director, and his wife Sonja Norwood, a former district manager for
H&R Block, in McComb
, Mississippi. She is the sister of singer,
actor and television host
Ray J, and a cousin
of the late blues music singer
Bo Diddley
as well as rapper
Snoop Dogg.
Through
her father's work Norwood started singing at the Brookhaven Church of Christ in Brookhaven
, Mississippi at an early age of two.
In 1984,
when she was four years old, The Norwoods grabbed the chance to
move to Carson
, California, just south of Los Angeles
, in hopes of getting a chance to start careers for
their children. Inspired by a spontaneous onstage performance
with Diddley and Little Richard in
the Los Angeles
Forum
at the age of six, Brandy began performing at many
West Coast functions as part of a youth singing group and then, at
eleven, she met manager Chris Stokes
who obtained her gigs as a backing
vocalist for his R&B boy band Immature. In 1993, while researching record
companies, seeking a record deal, Norwood attended a party hosted
by the
Atlantic Recording
Corporation. After performing in front of hundreds of people,
an executive, Darryl Williams indicated interest in her persona and
eventually offered Brandy a recording contract with Atlantic
Records.
Recording career
1994–1999
By the time Norwood was putting the final touches on her debut
album with producers Keith Crouch and
Darryl Williams, Atlantic Records decided to
release "
I Wanna Be Down" as the
newcomer's first outing. Although the singer was barely satisfied
with her label's debut single choice at the time of its release,
the song subsequently scored Brandy her first number-one hit on
Billboard’s
Hot R&B
Singles chart, where it remained four weeks atop. Its success
resulted in a
remixed version of the song,
containing new vocals by rappers
Queen
Latifah,
Yo-Yo and
MC Lyte, and increased the sales of Norwood's second
number-one hit "
Baby", her first
international top-10 entry. Her
debut
album Brandy, a
collection of street-oriented
rhythm-and-blues, scored number 20 on the
U.S.
Billboard 200 and number
six on the
Top R&B
Albums chart. It eventually sold over four million copies
domestically, and although the album's success was limited
elsewhere, it produced another two top 10 hits with "
Best Friend" and "
Brokenhearted". Latter single, a re-done
version with
Boyz II Men singer
Wanya Morris, was recorded during Brandy's
two-month stint as the
opening act on
the group's national tour.
Critical reaction to
Brandy was generally positive, with
Allmusic writer Eddie Huffman calling Brandy "a lower-key
Janet Jackson or a more stripped-down
Mary J. Blige [...] with good songs and crisp
production". The album eventually earned Norwood two Grammy Award
nominations for "
Best
New Artist" and "
Best
Female R&B Vocal Performance", four
Soul Train Music Awards, two
Billboard Awards, and the New York
Children's Choice Award. The singer continued to be popular during
the next two years, teaming with
Lenny
Kravitz for the
Batman
Forever soundtrack and scoring another hit single with her
Waiting to Exhale
contribution, "
Sittin' Up in My
Room" (1995). In 1996, Norwood also collaborated with
Tamia,
Chaka Khan, and
Gladys Knight on the single "Missing
You", released from the
Set It
Off soundtrack. While not her greatest success, the single
did score number 25 on the popular music chart, and earned Brandy
her third Grammy nomination in the "
Best Pop Collaboration with
Vocals" category.
In 1997, Atlantic Records consulted beginning producer
Rodney "Darkchild" Jerkins to contribute to
Norwood's second album
Never
Say Never, which was released on June 9, 1998 stateside.
Brandy co-wrote and produced six songs on the album which yielded
her first number-one rated song on the U.S.
Billboard
Hot 100, "
The Boy
Is Mine", a duet with singer
Monica. Exploiting the media's presumption
of a rivalry between the two young singers, the song was one of the
most successful records of the year, spending record-breaking
thirteen weeks on top of the
Billboard charts, and
eventually garnered the pair a Grammy Award for "
Best
R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal". The album's
success was equally widespread, and after extensive radio play of
the single overseas, the label released it globally during the
summer.
Never Say Never eventually became Brandy’s
biggest-selling album, selling over fourteen million copies
worldwide; and critics rated the album highly, with
Allmusic`s Stephen Thomas Erlewine praising Brandy and her
team for wisely finding "a middle ground between
Mariah Carey and
Mary
J. Blige — it's adult contemporary
with a slight streetwise edge". Altogether the album spawned seven
airplay and
CD singles respectively,
including Norwood's second number-one song,
Diane Warren-penned "
Have You Ever?".
2000–2004
After a lengthy hiatus that saw the end of the
Moesha sitcom, and a
flurry of tabloid headlines discussing her bout with
dehydration, Norwood returned to music in 2001
when she and brother Ray-J were asked to record a
cover version of
Phil
Collins' 1980s hit "
Another
Day in Paradise" for the
tribute
album Urban Renewal: A
Tribute to Phil Collins. Released as the album first
single in Europe and Oceania, the song became an instant
international success overseas, scoring top ten entries on the
majority of all charts it appeared on.
Full Moon,
Norwood's third studio album, was released in February 2002. It
once again comprised a row of R&B and pop-oriented songs with
adult contemporary, many of them co-created with Jerkins, Warryn
Campbell and
Mike City. While its lead
single "
What About Us?" became a
worldwide top ten hit, the album's title track failed to chart or
sell noticeably outside the United States and the United Kingdom,
where it managed to enter the Top 20 of charts. Media reception was
generally lukewarm, with
Rolling
Stone describing the album as "frantic, faceless,
fake-sexy R&B." Within the coming year, Norwood and spouse
Robert "Big Bert" Smith began writing and producing for other
artists such as
Toni Braxton,
Kelly Rowland,
Tarralyn Ramsey, and
Kiley Dean.
Returning from yet another hiatus, Brandy's fourth album
Afrodisiac was released on June
29, 2004 in North America, amidst both her weakest promotional
campaign ever and the well-publicized termination of her
short-lived business relationship with entertainment manager
Benny Medina. Norwood ended her
contract with his Los Angeles-based Handprint Entertainment after
less than a year of representation following controversies
surrounding Medina's handling of the lead single "
Talk About Our Love", and failed
negotiations of a purported co-headlining tour with R&B singer
Usher. Upon parting Norwood admitted
her switch to Medina made her appreciate what she had with her
mother, stating that "it was such a drastic change that it didn't
work for me. Nobody out there can match her passion for me."
Despite the negative publicity,
Timbaland-produced
Afrodisiac became
Brandy's most critically acclaimed album to date, with some
highlighting the "more consistently mature and challenging" effect
of Timbaland on Brandy's music, and others calling it "listenable
and emotionally resonant," comparing it to "
Janet Jackson at her best". Norwood described
the CD as her most mature and versatile effort by then: "I just
wanted to sing my heart out and connect with people. I wasn’t old
enough or mature enough before to get into people’s hearts. Now I
am." Nevertheless
Afrodisiac became a moderate seller:
While the album debuted at number three on the
Billboard 200, selling 500,000 copies
domestically, it generally failed to chart or sell noticeably
outside the United States. "Talk About Our Love" reached number six
in the
United Kingdom but later
singles failed to score successfully on the popular music
charts.
2005–2008
After eleven years with the company Norwood asked for and received
a release from Atlantic Records in the end of 2004. As a direct
consequence the company released a collection of all of her
singles,
The Best of
Brandy in 2005. "I think it's awesome to have an album
that reflects the songs that people have enjoyed over the years,"
Brandy said in an interview the following year, "I'm happy to say
that many of the tracks included are my favorites too." Thereupon
she reportedly started shopping for a new record deal under
Knockout Entertainment, her
brother's label.
In June 2006, Norwood was cast as one of three talent judges on the
first season of
America's Got
Talent, an amateur talent contest on NBC with executive
producer
Simon Cowell and host
Regis Philbin. The broadcast was one of the
most-watched programs of the summer, and concluded on August 17,
2006 with the win of 11-year-old singer
Bianca Ryan. Brandy was originally scheduled to
return for a second season of the
America's Got Talent in
summer 2007, but decided eventually not to do so, feeling that "she
couldn't give the new season the attention and commitment it
deserved". She was eventually replaced by reality TV star
Sharon Osbourne.
Brandy's fifth studio album
Human was released on December 9,
2008 in North America, involving a wide range of producers and
songwriters such as James Fauntleroy,
Toby
Gad,
Brian Kennedy, and
RedOne, among others, Distributed by
Koch Records and
Sony
Music, the album marked Brandy's debut on the
Epic Records label, following her split with
Atlantic, and her reunion with long-time contributor and mentor
Rodney "Darkchild" Jerkins, who wrote and
executive produced most of the album. Generally well-received by
critics,
Human debuted at number fifteen on the U.S.
Billboard 200 with opening
week sales of 73,000 copies, becoming the singer's lowest-charting
debut since her first album fourteen years prior. While leading
single "
Right Here " scored
Brandy her biggest chart success since 2002's "
What About Us?," the album failed to impact
elsewhere, resulting into lackluster sales in general and the
release of just one other single, "
Long Distance."
2009–present
In early 2009, it was announced that Norwood had signed a new
management deal with
Jay-Z's
Roc Nation, however, it was eventually announced
that she is no longer attached to
Roc
Nation, this was confirmed by a spokesperson for Norwood:
"Brandy and Roc Nation parted amicably".. A couple of months later,
it was also confirmed that Norwood left
Epic Records. Prior to the split, it was
reported that Norwood had started work on her sixth studio album,
currently scheduled for release in 2010, which is involving
production by
The-Dream,
Tricky Stewart, production team
Stargate,
Ne-Yo,
Timbaland, and among
others. In December 2009, she officially introduced her rapping
alter-ego Bran'Nu with two credits on Timbaland's album
Timbaland Presents
Shock Value 2.BraNdy's New NAME!!!!!! BranNu'..BUY SHOCK
VALUE II, She is RAPPING with TIMBO "Meet me in the Middle" &
"Symphony" ft AttitudeBUY SNOOP DOGG "Special" ft Brandy Pharrell,
New Surf CLub ft Brandy "Change,"New Audio Push ft Brandy
"Aviator," Bran-Bran is coming back like she just had some
HotSauce!!New Album Dropping Early 2010, and New TV Series COming
Soon!! 2010. Jay has never given Up on Brandy the WOman that is
true to Music!!!!!In addition, Norwood is preparing a collaboration
album with brother
Ray J, tentatively titled
R&B, also scheduled for a 2010 release.
Acting career
In 1993, while recording her debut album, Brandy was given the role
of Danesha Turrell in the
ABC sitcom
Thea, playing the 12-year-old daughter
of protagonist Thea Turrell (
Thea
Vidale). The series was ended eight months after its release
but earned her a
Young Artist
Award nomination for "Outstanding Youth Ensemble in a
Television Series."Her brief engagement earned Brandy her first
starring role in the
UPN sitcom
Moesha. Appearing alongside
Sheryl Lee Ralph and
Countess Vaughn, she played
Moesha Mitchell, a typical 16-year-old girl
from Los Angeles growing into adulthood. The program was first
broadcasted during January 1996 on UPN, and soon became the most
watched show broadcasted on the television network. Norwood who had
not considered herself an actress before, gained confidence
finally: "I think Moesha is so much like me that I feel real
comfortable." In 2001, the network canceled the show after six
seasons on the air, leaving it ending with a
cliffhanger for a scrapped seventh season.
In 1997, Norwood was hand-picked by executive producer
Whitney Houston to play the title character
in
Rodgers and Hammerstein’s
television version of
Cinderella featuring a multi-cultural
cast that also included
Jason
Alexander,
Whoopi Goldberg,
Bernadette Peters and Houston. The
two-hour
Wonderful World
of Disney special garnered an estimated 60 million
viewers, giving the network its highest ratings in the time period
in 16 years, and won an
Emmy Award. About
filming Brandy later told
Jet: "It was the best experience
I could ever have." A year after, Brandy made her
big screen debut after winning the supporting
role of sassy Karla Wilson in the franchise-flick
I Still Know What You Did
Last Summer. The movie outperformed
the original with a total of
16.5 million at its opening weekend but critical reaction towards
the film was largely disappointing, with film review site
Rotten Tomatoes calculating a poor rating of
7% based on 46 reviews. Norwood, however, earned positive reviews
for her "bouncy" performance, which garnered her both
Blockbuster Entertainment
Award and
MTV Movie Award
nominations for "Best Actress" and "Best Breakthrough Female
Performance" respectively. In 1999, she co-starred with
Diana Ross in the
telefilm drama Double Platinum.
Since the early 2000s, Norwood's focus on acting has decreased to
occasional guest appearances on several television shows such as
Reba (2002),
Sabrina, the Teenage
Witch (2002),
American
Dreams (2004),
House (2005) and
One on One (2006). Also in her
big-screen movie career, in 2001, she participated in the
animated/live action film
Osmosis
Jones, playing the voice of Leah. While plans for a
Touchstone Television-produced
sitcom for
The CW network, scripted by
Mara Brock Akil for the 2004–2005
season, failed to materialize, in 2009, Norwood joined the
production of the upcoming
ABC series
This Little Piggy, also starring
Jeff Davis, Rebecca Cheskoff and
Kevin Rahm.
Personal life
Between February 1997 and February 1998 Norwood was dating
Wanya Morris, lead singer of
R&B-band
Boyz II Men.
In 1997 she went to her high school prom with
Los Angeles Lakers player
Kobe Bryant.
During the ensuing production of her third studio album, Norwood
became involved romantically with producer Robert "Big Bert" Smith.
The couple quietly began a regular relationship during the summer
of 2001 but their union did not become known until February
2002—the same month Norwood revealed that she was expecting her
first child. However, shortly after the birth of their daughter
Sy'rai Iman Smith on June 16, 2002—an event tracked by the
four-part
MTV reality series
Special
Delivery—Norwood "divorced" Smith. The "marriage" itself was
later exposed as not of legal status but instead was used as a ruse
to protect Brandy's image. Norwood later stated that she regarded
her relationship with Smith as a "spiritual union and true
commitment to each other".
By the following year, Norwood had entered a relationship with
New York Knicks guard
Quentin Richardson. The couple soon got
engaged in July 2004 but Brandy eventually ended her 15-month
engagement with the
NBA player in October 2005.
As reported, Norwood had to get a tattoo of Richardson's face on
her back transformed into a cat.
Car accident
During late 2006, TMZ publicized the story that Brandy was involved
in a car wreck on a Los Angeles freeway on December 30. Following
the accident, a statement to TMZ from Brandy's publicist, Courtney
Barnes, confirmed her involvement in the fatal crash: "Brandy was
involved in a car accident December 30, 2006 in Los Angeles where
there was a fatality. She wishes to express her condolences
publicly to the family of the deceased. Brandy asks that you
respect the privacy of everyone involved at this time". The
accident claimed the life of 38-year-old Awatef Aboudihaj—the
driver of the Toyota that was struck by Brandy's Range Rover.
Aboudihaj was taken to Holy Cross Hospital in critical condition
and she died the next day. The man driving directly behind Brandy
at the time of the crash had an exclusive conversation with TMZ; he
revealed that the singer repeatedly blamed herself at the scene of
the accident. Norwood was not arrested and there was no evidence of
use of drugs or alcohol. Norwood was not charged with vehicular
manslaughter, due to "insufficient evidence". Law enforcement
sources told TMZ that Brandy was driving her 2007 Range Rover at
65 mph and did not notice that cars in front of her had slowed
considerably. Brandy's vehicle then slammed into the back of a 2005
Toyota, causing the Toyota to strike another vehicle before sliding
sideways and impacting the center divider. As the Toyota came to a
stop, it was hit by another vehicle. A well-placed source in the
California Highway Patrol, however, told TMZ Aboudihaj actually
struck the car in front of her and then slammed on her brakes
before Brandy made contact, the sudden stop caused Brandy to hit
Aboudihaj's car. L.A. County Coroner spokesman Captain Ed Winter
told TMZ that toxicology reports show Aboudihaj had "slight traces"
of marijuana in her system at the time of the crash. In December
2007, Brandy's attorney, Blair Berk, released the following
statement exclusively to TMZ: "We are extremely pleased that after
a more thorough and extensive investigation by authorities, the Los
Angeles City Attorney has determined that Brandy Norwood should not
be charged with any crime whatsoever relating to the accident back
in 2006." She continued, "These past 12 months have posed an
extraordinary hardship for Brandy and her family, who have been
unfairly forced to live under a cloud of suspicion initially caused
by the ill-advised and premature press release sent out by the
California Highway Patrol accusing Brandy of wrongdoing before the
police investigation was even finished. However, Brandy continues
to be mindful that she was so fortunate to be uninjured in this
accident and there was a life lost that should be remembered".
Meanwhile, speaking in May 2009 to noted R&B writer Pete Lewis
of 'Blues & Soul', Brandy herself stated: "The whole experience
did completely change my life. And I can say that I think I'm a
better person from it. You know, I still don't understand all of it
and why all of it happened. But I definitely have a heart, and my
heart goes out to everyone involved. I pray about it every single
day, and that's all I can really say on the subject."
There have been multiple lawsuits filed against Norwood:
- Aboudihaj's parents filed a $50 million wrongful death lawsuit
against Norwood. The suit was filed on January 30, 2007 Lawyers for
the family of the deceased claim, "Defendant Brandy Norwood was
driving recklessly in the freeway when her car collided with Awatif
Aboudihaj's car". The $50 million lawsuit seeks both compensatory
and punitive damages. TMZ has obtained Brandy's response to the
wrongful death suit filed against her. In the papers, filed May 23,
Brandy says she "denies each and every allegation in the complaint
and further denies that plaintiff's have been damaged in any sum or
sums whatsoever." In addition, Brandy "alleges and asserts her
Fifth Amendment privileges" and asks that the matter go to trial
before a jury. The lawsuit was set to go to trial in April
2009.
- Another car that was involved in the accident was Donald
Lite’s, who also filed a lawsuit against Norwood. Lite filed the
lawsuit against Norwood, and the estate of the woman who died in
the crash. Lite filed suit on December 8, 2008 claiming Norwood and
Aboudihaj both failed to follow road regulations. Lite says their
failure to keep a safe distance, mixed with their inability to
travel at a safe speed, caused Brandy to rear-end Awatef, which
sent Awatef's car smashing into his. Lite says he's suffered
"serious and permanent injuries" and that he has incurred large
hospital bills. He is suing for an undetermined amount. Norwood has
denied all of Lite's allegations and wants the matter to be decided
by a jury.
- The other car that was involved in the accident was Mallory
Ham's, who also filed a lawsuit against Norwood. Ham filed suit on
May 25, 2007 claiming that Brandy "recklessly wantonly, unlawfully,
and maliciously" operated the car. According to the document, Ham,
who says he was "severely injured" as a result of the multi-car
accident, is demanding that the singer pay for unspecified medical
bills, pain and suffering, legal costs and punitive damages. On
July 14, 2009 it was announced that Ham setteled with Norwood for
an undisclosed amount.
- Awatef Aboudihaj's husband, Marouane Hdidou, also filed a
lawsuit against Norwood. The suit was filed on May 3, 2007. He
claims that Brandy and another motorist named Mallory Ham were
"recklessly and carelessly ... traveling too fast for conditions
and "following too closely" on the 405 Freeway, which factored into
the collision that killed his wife. Hdidou is suing for an
undisclosed amount of financial relief to cover medical and funeral
expenses, as well as legal costs and other damages. Hdidou has not
yet settled with Norwood. He rejected a $1.2 million settlement
offer in February 2009.
- Aboudihaj's two children also filed a lawsuit against Norwood.
The two children will receive $300,000 each, according to court
documents filed in L.A. County Superior Court on June 2, 2009.
Discography
Studio albums
Other albums
DVDs
Filmography
Film
Television series
- Thea (1993–94)
- Moesha (1996–2001)
- New York Undercover
(1 episode, 1996)
- The Parkers (1 episode,
2000)
- Sabrina,
the Teenage Witch (1 episode, 2002)
- Reba (1 episode,
2002)
- Raising Dad (1 episode,
2002)
- American Dreams (1
episode, 2004)
- House (1 episode,
2005)
- One on One (4
episodes; 2006)
- The Hills (1 episode,
2008)
- This Little Piggy (pilot episode, 2009)
Reality television
Awards
References
- {{cite web|date=2008-08-15|title=Epic Records Readies the
Release of
'Human'|work=Marketwatch|url=http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/epic-records-readies-release-human/story.aspx?guid={BFD16F28-4B0F-4FA0-B88E-F0DDEC84E59F}&dist=hppr,|accessdate=2008-08-15}}
- http://www.bvbuzz.com/2009/07/09/brandy-dropped-by-label-/
-
http://www.tmz.com/2007/01/24/brandy-causes-fatal-car-crash/
- http://www.tmz.com/tag/brandy%20car%20accident/page/2/
- http://www.tmz.com/2007/12/28/brandy-in-the-clear/
-
http://www.tmz.com/2007/12/26/brandy-crash-dead-woman-at-fault/
-
http://www.tmz.com/2007/12/28/brandys-lawyer-to-chp-you-did-her-wrong/
-
http://www.bluesandsoul.com/feature/407/brandy_still_intoxicating/
-
http://www.tmz.com/2007/01/30/brandy-sued-for-wrongful-death/
-
http://www.tmz.com/2007/05/25/brandy-sued-by-survivor-in-fatal-wreck/
- [1]
-
http://www.tmz.com/2008/12/16/brandys-dead-victim-sued-for-car-crash/
- http://www.radaronline.com/exclusives/2009/02/post-8.php
-
http://www.tmz.com/2009/07/14/brandy-settles-lawsuit-with-crash-survivor/
-
http://www.tmz.com/2007/05/03/victims-husband-sues-brandy-over-fatal-crash/
-
http://www.tmz.com/2009/06/02/brandy-settles-fatal-car-crash-case/
External links