Gwen Renée Stefani Rossdale ( ; born October 3,
1969) is an American singer and
fashion
designer. Stefani is the lead vocalist for the rock band
No Doubt.With previous material ranging
from
punk rock to
new wave music, their
third wave ska oriented third studio album
Tragic Kingdom (1995) was a
success, selling 16 million copies. It spawned the singles
"
Just a Girl", "
Spiderwebs", and "
Don't
Speak". The band's popularity went into decline with its fourth
album,
Return of Saturn
(2000), but
Rock Steady
(2001) focused on
dancehall production
traits, and generally received positive reviews.
Stefani recorded her first solo album
Love. Angel. Music. Baby. in 2004. The album was
primarily inspired by music of the 1980s, and emerged an success
with sales of seven million. The album's third single "
Hollaback Girl" was the first U.S. digital
download to sell one million copies. Stefani's second solo album
The Sweet Escape (2006)
yielded "
Wind It Up",
a moderate success, and "
The
Sweet Escape". Including her work with No Doubt, Stefani has
sold more than 40 million albums worldwide. She won the World's
Best-Selling New Female Artist at the
World Music Awards 2005.
In 2003, she debuted her clothing line
L.A.M.B. and expanded her collection with the 2005
Harajuku Lovers line, drawing
inspiration from
Japanese culture
and fashion. Stefani performs and makes public appearances with
four back-up dancers known as the
Harajuku Girls dancers. She married British
grunge musician
Gavin Rossdale in 2002 and they have two
sons: Kingston James McGregor Rossdale, who was born May 26, 2006,
and Zuma Nesta Rock Rossdale, who was born August 20, 2008.
Early life
Stefani
was born and raised in Fullerton, California
, and grew up in a Roman
Catholic household. Her mother named her after a
stewardess in the 1968 novel
Airport, and her middle name, Renée,
comes from
The Four Tops' 1968 cover
of
The Left Banke's 1966 hit song
"
Walk Away Renée". Her father,
Dennis Stefani, is
Italian and worked
as a
Yamaha marketing executive. He currently
is Executive VP of The Added Value Company. Her mother, Patti (née
Flynn), is of
Irish and
Scottish descent and worked as an
accountant before becoming a
homemaker. Her parents were fans of
folk music and presented music by
Bob Dylan and
Emmylou
Harris to their daughter. She is the second oldest of four
children; she has a younger sister, Jill Stefani, a younger
brother, Todd, and an older brother,
Eric. Eric was the keyboardist for No Doubt but
left the band to pursue a career in animation on
The Simpsons on the
FOX TV network.
Many of the women in Stefani's family were
seamstresses, and much of her clothing was made
by her or her mother. As a child, Stefani's musical interests
consisted of musicals such as
The
Sound of Music and
Evita. After making a
demo tape for her father, she was encouraged to
take music lessons to train her "loopy, unpredictable" voice.
Stefani is a distant cousin of
Madonna.
Stefani made her onstage debut during a talent show at
Loara High School, where she sang "I Have
Confidence," from
The Sound of
Music, in a self-made
tweed
dress inspired by one from the film. Stefani was on the Loara
swim team in an attempt to lose
weight. She first worked at a
Dairy
Queen and later manned the MAC makeup counter of a department
store.
After graduating from high school in 1987,
she began attending Fullerton
College before transferring to California
State University, Fullerton
.
Music career
No Doubt (1986–2004)
Eric introduced Gwen to
2 Tone music by
Madness and
The Selecter, and in 1986 he invited her to
provide vocals for No Doubt, a
ska band he was
forming. Finally, in 1991, the band was signed to
Interscope Records. She also did backup
vocals for
Sublime on the song "Saw
Red", notably before either No Doubt's breakthrough success in 1995
or Sublime's the following year.
The band released its
self-titled debut album in 1992,
but its ska-
pop sound was unsuccessful due
to the popularity of
grunge. Stefani rejected
the aggressiveness of female grunge artists and cited
Blondie singer
Debbie
Harry's combination of power and
sex
appeal as a major influence. No Doubt's third album,
Tragic Kingdom (1995), which
followed the self-released
The Beacon Street
Collection (1995), took more than three years to make.
During this time, the band almost split up because of the failed
romantic relationship between Stefani and bandmate
Tony Kanal. Their break-up inspired Stefani
lyrically, and many of the album's songs, such as "
Don't Speak", "
Sunday Morning", and "Hey
You", chronicle their relationship and her happiness. Five singles
were released from
Tragic Kingdom and "Don't Speak" led
1996's U.S. year-end
airplay chart.
Stefani left college for one semester to tour for
Tragic
Kingdom but did not return when touring lasted two and a half
years. The album sold more than 16 million copies worldwide, and
received several
Grammy Award
nominations.
No Doubt released the less popular
Return of Saturn in 2000, which
expands upon the
New Wave influences
of
Tragic Kingdom. Most of the lyrical content focuses on
Stefani's often rocky relationship with then-
Bush frontman
Gavin
Rossdale and her overall insecurities, including indecision on
settling down and having a child. The band's 2001 album,
Rock Steady, explores
more
reggae and
dancehall sounds while maintaining the band's New
Wave influences, generally receiving positive reviews., which was
recorded live by Guy Charbonneau (audio recording engineer)'s
Le Mobile Remote Recording Studio and
later released on CD and DVD formats. The album generated
career-highest singles chart positions in the United States, and
"
Hey Baby" and "
Underneath It All" received Grammy Awards.
A greatest hits collection,
The Singles 1992–2003,
which includes a
cover of
Talk Talk's "
It's My Life", was released in
2003 to moderate sales.
Outside No Doubt, Stefani has collaborated on the singles "
South Side" and "
Let Me Blow Ya Mind" with
Moby and
Eve, respectively.
In 2002 Eve and Stefani won a
Grammy
Award for
Best Rap/Sung
Collaboration for "Let Me Blow Ya Mind". She also collaborated
with
The Brian Setzer
Orchestra on a cover of "You're the Boss", originally performed
by
Elvis Presley and
Ann-Margret, for its 1998 album
The Dirty Boogie.
Solo career (2004–2008)
Following No Doubt's hiatus, Stefani sought out her former bandmate
Tony Kanal to discuss the possibility of a solo career. The idea
was to make a quick dance record, but this became a large
collaboration with other artists, producers and various non-ska
influences. The result was two successful albums. Currently,
Stefani has two solo albums,
Love. Angel. Music. Baby. (2004), and
The Sweet Escape
(2006).
Love. Angel. Music. Baby.
(2004–2006)
Stefani's debut solo album
Love. Angel. Music. Baby. was released in
November 2004. The album features a large number of collaborations
with producers and other artists, including
Tony Kanal,
Linda
Perry,
André 3000,
Nellee Hooper and
The
Neptunes. Stefani created the album to modernize the music to
which she listened when in high school, and
L.A.M.B. takes
influence from a variety of music styles of the 1980s and early
1990s such as New Wave and
electro.
Stefani's decision to use her solo career as an opportunity to
delve further into pop music instead of trying "to convince the
world of [her] talent, depth and artistic worth" was considered
unusual. As a result, reviews of the album were mixed, and it was
described as "fun as hell but…not exactly rife with
subversive social commentary." The album debuted
on the U.S.
Billboard 200
albums chart at number seven, selling 309,000 copies in its first
week. It sold well, reaching multi-platinum status in the United
States, the United Kingdom, Australia, and Canada. At the
2005 Grammy Awards, Stefani was nominated
for
Best Female Pop
Vocal Performance, and at the
next year's awards, Stefani received
five nominations for
Record of the
Year,
Album of
the Year, Best Female Pop Vocal Performance,
Best Pop Vocal Album, and
Best Rap/Sung
Collaboration.
The first single released from the album was "
What You Waiting For?", which charted
outside the U.S.
Top 40, but reached the
Top 10 on most other charts. The song served
to explain why Stefani produced a solo album and discusses her
fears in leaving No Doubt for a solo career as well as her desire
to have a baby. "
Rich
Girl" was released as the album's second single. A duet with
rapper Eve, and
produced by
Dr. Dre, it is an adaptation of
a 1990s pop song by British musicians
Louchie Lou & Michie One,
which itself is a
cover of "
If I Were a Rich Man", from the
musical
Fiddler on the
Roof. "Rich Girl" proved successful on several formats,
and reached the UK and U.S. top ten.
L.A.M.B.'s third
single "
Hollaback Girl" became
Stefani's first U.S. and second Australian number-one single; it
was less successful elsewhere. The song was the first U.S.
digital download to sell more than one
million copies legally, and its
brass-driven composition remained popular
throughout 2005.
The fourth single "
Cool" was released
shortly following the popularity of its predecessor, but failed to
match its chart success, reaching the top twenty in UK and U.S.
The song's
lyrics and its accompanying music video, filmed in Lake Como
, Italy, depict Stefani's former relationship with
Kanal. "
Luxurious" was released as
the album's fifth single, but did not perform as well as its
predecessors. "
Crash" was
released in early 2006 as the album's sixth single in lieu of
Love. Angel. Music. Baby.'s
sequel, which Stefani postponed because of her
pregnancy.
The Sweet Escape (2006–2008)
Stefani's second solo album,
The
Sweet Escape, was recorded by Guy Charbonneau's
Le Mobile Remote Recording Studio and released in
December 2006. Stefani recollaborated with Kanal, Perry, and
The Neptunes, along with
Akon and
Tim Rice-Oxley
from English rock band
Keane. The album
focuses more heavily on
electro/
dance
music for
clubs than its predecessor.
Stefani commented that it differed from
L.A.M.B. because
"I just wasn't inspired to do another album and…I was a lot more
relaxed making it." Its release coincided with the DVD release of
Stefani's first
tour, entitled
Harajuku Lovers Live.
The album received mixed reviews by critics, who found that it "has
a surprisingly moody, lightly autobiographical feel...[but] Stefani
isn't convincing as a dissatisfied
diva" and
called the album a "hasty return" that repeats
Love.
Angel. Music. Baby. with less
energy.
"
Wind It Up", the
album's
lead single, was panned by
critics for its use of
yodeling and an
interpolation of
The Sound of Music but was
moderately successful, reaching the Top 20 in most markets.
The title track was
well-received. To promote
The Sweet Escape, Stefani was a
mentor on the
sixth season
of
American Idol and
performed the song with Akon. It was an international success and
earned Stefani a
Grammy nomination. The song
is Stefani's most successful song of her solo career. In November
2006, the club single "Yummy" was released as a 3-track maxi promo
single and as a 12" vinyl single, both featuring a radio edit, an
instrumental and an a cappella version of the song. "
4 In The Morning" was released as the
album's third single with mediocre success. The album's fourth
single was a hybrid version of
Now
That You Got It which featured
Damian
Marley. The song was a commercial failure and became her first
solo single to fail to chart on the Billboard Hot 100.
Early Winter was released in February 2008
worldwide with initial success on European Charts. To promote the
album, Stefani embarked a worldwide tour,
The Sweet Escape Tour. The tour
covered North America, Europe, Asia and the Pacific and part of
Latin America.
No Doubt reunion (since 2008)

Stefani during No Doubt's 2009 summer
reunion tour.
With Stefani promoting her second solo album, No Doubt began
initial work on a new album without her and planned to complete it
after Stefani's
tour was
finished. In March 2008, the band started making posts concerning
the progression of the album on their official fan forum. Stefani
made a post on March 28, 2008 stating that songwriting had
commenced but was slow on her end because she was, at the time,
pregnant with her second child.
Manager Jim Guerinot said the yet-untitled album is being produced
by Mark "Spike" Stent, who helped produce and mix
Rock
Steady. Between Stefani's pregnancy and recording, No Doubt
did not tour in 2008, but Guerinot promised they plan to hit the
road hard in 2009 for their first full-fledged band tour in nearly
five years.
"The Singles 92-03" became available on December 9 2008 for the
Rock Band 2 video game platform. All members of No Doubt except for
Stefani are appearing as
Scott
Weiland's backing band on the album
Happy In Galoshes.
No Doubt announced on their official website that they want to tour
in 2009 while finishing their upcoming album, which is set for
release late 2009. On November 24, 2008, it was announced that No
Doubt would be headlining the
Bamboozle
2009 festival in May, along with
Fall
Out Boy. The band completed a national tour in the summer of
2009.
Stefani has stated she has no plans to continue her solo career,
and will just focus on
No Doubt from now
on.
Vocals
Stefani's unusual and dynamic vocals have been noted for their
"deep
vibrato" and Stefani has been
described has having a "unique vocal prowess". Kelefa Sanneh in the
New York Times pop review joked that as Stefani grew as a musician,
she kicked her "addiction" to vibrato.
In
Cool, her
vocal range covers close to two
octaves.
Stefani received five nominations at the
2006 Grammy Awards, including Best
Female Pop Vocal Performance and
Best Pop Vocal Album.
Non-musical projects
Stefani made most of the clothing that she wore on stage with No
Doubt, resulting in increasingly eclectic combinations. Stylist
Andrea Lieberman introduced her to
haute
couture clothing, which lead to Stefani launching a fashion
line named
L.A.M.B. in 2004.
The line takes
influence from a variety of fashions, including Guatemalan
, Japanese,
and Jamaican
styles. The line achieved popularity among celebrities and
is worn by stars such as
Teri Hatcher,
Nicole Kidman, and Stefani herself. In
June 2005, she expanded her collection with the less expensive
Harajuku Lovers line, which she
referred to as "a glorified merchandise line", with varied products
including a
camera,
mobile phone charms, and
undergarments. In late 2006, Stefani released a
limited edition line of dolls called "Love. Angel. Music. Baby.
Fashion dolls". The dolls are inspired by the various costumes that
Stefani and the Harajuku Girls wore while touring for the album. In
late summer 2007, Stefani launched a perfume,
'L', as a part of her L.A.M.B. collection
of clothing and accessories. The perfume has high notes of sweet
pea and rose. In September 2008, Stefani released a fragrance line
as a part of her Harajuku Lovers product line. There are five
different fragrances based on the four Harajuku Girls and Stefani
herself called 'Love', 'Lil' Angel', 'Music', 'Baby' and 'G'
(Gwen).
In 2004, Stefani showed interest in making film appearances and
began auditioning for films such as
Mr. & Mrs. Smith.
She made her acting debut playing
Jean
Harlow in
Martin Scorsese's
The Aviator in 2004 and was
nominated for the
Screen
Actors Guild Awards for Outstanding Performance by Cast in
Motion Picture. Scorsese, whose daughter was a No Doubt fan, showed
reciprocal interest in casting Stefani after seeing her picture
from a
Marilyn Monroe-inspired photo
shoot for
Teen Vogue in 2003. To
prepare for the role, Stefani read two biographies and watched 18
of Harlow's films. Shooting her part took four to five days, and
Stefani had few lines. Stefani lent her voice to the title
character of
Malice, a
PS2 and
Xbox video
game in 2004; before completion, however, the company opted not to
use No Doubt bandmembers' voices.
Personal life
Soon after Stefani joined No Doubt, she and bandmate
Tony Kanal began dating. Stefani stated that she
was heavily invested in the relationship, commenting that "...all I
ever did was look at Tony and pray that God would let me have a
baby with him." Kanal ended the relationship.
During her time with No Doubt, the band toured with fellow ska punk
band
Reel Big Fish, whose frontman,
Aaron Barrett, later wrote the song
"She's Famous Now" for their 1998 album
Why Do They Rock So Hard?.
The song is commonly interpreted to be about a relationship between
the two and Stefani's subsequent success with No Doubt. Barrett
later stated that he "was just trying to start a rumor".

Stefani's husband, Gavin
Rossdale
In December 1995, No Doubt and rock band
Goo Goo Dolls went on tour opening for
alternative rock band Bush.
Stefani met Bush
guitarist and lead singer Gavin
Rossdale They married on September 14, 2002, with a wedding in St Paul's Church
in Covent
Garden
, London
.
A second
wedding was held in Los
Angeles
two weeks later. According to Stefani, it
was held so that she could wear her custom-designed
wedding dress designed by
John Galliano twice.
A
paternity test in 2004 revealed
that Rossdale had a daughter,
Daisy Lowe
(b. 1989), from a previous relationship with model and designer
Pearl Lowe. Stefani was "devastated and
infuriated" at the discovery, leading to a rocky patch in her
relationship with Rossdale. Though Rossdale remains Daisy's
godfather, he has severed all ties with
the Lowes. Stefani's song "Danger Zone" was widely believed to be
about the discovery and its aftermath. However, the song was
written prior to the incident.
In December 2005, Stefani and Rossdale announced that they were
expecting their first child together.
The pregnancy was
first reported by Us Weekly, and
Stefani confirmed the pregnancy by shouting "I want you to sing so
loud that the baby hears it" during a concert in Fort
Lauderdale
, Florida
after her
press agent stated that it was
untrue. On May 26, 2006, their son, Kingston James McGregor
Rossdale, was born via
caesarean
section at the
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in
Los Angeles. Kingston weighed . In January 2008, it was confirmed
by her father-in-law that Stefani would be expecting her second
child. As of the date of announcement, she was 13 weeks along.
Reports from In Touch magazine came in on August 21, 2008,
reporting that Stefani had checked in Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
in Los Angeles, and was scheduled to give birth via C-section
around 10:00 a.m.
People confirmed that Stefani gave birth
to her second son, Zuma Nesta Rock Rossdale, on August 21, 2008
weighing . A representative for Stefani said "Mother, baby and
family are all happy and healthy."
Public image
Stefani began wearing a
bindi in
the mid 1990s after attending several family gatherings for
Tony Kanal, who is of Indian heritage.
During No Doubt's breakthrough, Stefani wore the forehead
decoration in several of the band's
music
videos and briefly popularized the accessory in 1997. First
attracting attention in the 1995 music video for "Just a Girl",
Stefani is known for her
midriff and
frequently wears shirts that expose it. Stefani's
makeup design generally includes light face powder,
bright red
lipstick, and arched
eyebrows; she wrote about the subject in a song
titled "Magic's in the Makeup" for No Doubt's
Return of
Saturn, asking "If the magic's in the makeup/Then who am
I?".
Stefani is a natural
brunette, though her
hair has not been its natural color since she was in ninth grade.
Since late 1994, she has had
platinum
blonde hair. Stefani discussed this in the
song "Platinum Blonde Life" on
Rock Steady and played
original blonde
bombshell Jean Harlow in the 2004 biopic
The Aviator. Stefani also dyed her hair
blue in 1998 and pink in 2000, appearing on the cover of
Return
of Saturn with pink hair.
In 2006, Stefani modified her image, inspired by that of
Michelle Pfeiffer's character in the 1983
film
Scarface. The
reinvented image included a symbol consisting of two back-to-back
G's, which appears on a diamond-encrusted key she wears on a
necklace and which became a
motif in the promotion of
The Sweet
Escape. Stefani raised concerns in January 2007 about her
rapid
weight loss following her
pregnancy. She stated she lost the weight through diet and exercise
but admitted to obsessing over her weight due to the
size zero trend. She later stated that she had
been on a diet since the sixth grade to fit in size 4 clothing,
commenting, "It's an ongoing battle and it's a
nightmare. But I like clothes too much, and I
always wanted to wear the outfits I would make."
Harajuku Girls
The
release of Stefani's first solo album brought attention to her
entourage of four Harajuku Girls,
named for the area around the Harajuku Station
of Tokyo
,
Japan. Stefani treats the back-up dancers, who appear in
outfits influenced by
Gothic Lolita
fashion, as a figment of her imagination. Stefani's clothing also
took influence from Japanese fashion, in a style described as a
combination between
Christian Dior
and Japan. The dancers are featured in her music videos, press
coverage, and on the album cover for
Love. Angel.
Music. Baby., with a song named for and dedicated
to them on the album. They were also featured in, and the namesake
for, Stefani's
Harajuku Lovers
Tour 2005.
Discography
Tours
Filmography
Awards and nominations
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External links