Tiffany (singer)

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Tiffany
Tiffany, performing at Gulfstream Park in 2003
Tiffany, performing at Gulfstream Park in 2003
Background information
Birth name Tiffany Renee Darwish
Also known as Tiffany
Born October 2, 1971 (1971-10-02) (age 36)
Origin Norwalk, California, United States
Genre(s) Pop, dance-pop, teen pop, electronica
Instrument(s) Vocals
Label(s) MCA (1986–1995)
Eureka (1999–2001)
Backroom (2001–2006)
10 Spot / Water Music (2007–present)

Tiffany Renee Darwish (born October 2, 1971), known popularly as Tiffany, is an American singer who had a number of teen pop hits during the late 1980s.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Tiffany was born in Norwalk, California, to parents James Robert Darwish (of Lebanese descent) and Janie Wilson (of mostly Irish and some distant Cherokee descent).[1] Her parents divorced when she was very young.

Around 1975, when Tiffany was four years old, she learned the words to the song "Delta Dawn", and she started singing it often.

[edit] Early singing career

In 1981, Tiffany made her first professional singing show, with country music singer Jack Reeves at a country and western spot called Narods in Chino, California. She passed a hat along the crowd afterward, and collected US$235 in what would be her first career earnings.

Tiffany was singing at a Los Angeles club named El Palomino when she was discovered by Hoyt Axton and his mother Mae Axton. Mae took her to sing in Nashville, Tennessee, where she performed at the Ralph Emery Show, singing Juice Newton's "Queen of Hearts" and Tammy Wynette's "Your Good Girl's Gonna Go Bad".

In 1982, Tiffany toured several cities in Alaska, earning US$3000 for the tour. Also that year, she performed on the same bill as Jerry Lee Lewis and George Jones. At that time she was managed by George Tobin. In 1983, Ronald Kent Surut became her manager.

[edit] Recording contract and fame

Finally, in 1984, she was signed to a recording contract by George Tobin, who heard a demo tape she recorded and liked it.

In 1985, Tiffany appeared on Star Search with Ed McMahon, but she came in second place that year.

In 1986, Tiffany signed a contract that gave Tobin total control over her career. Then, she went into the studio to record her first album, and a contract was signed with MCA. Tiffany's eponymous album, Tiffany, was released in 1987, and she promoted it by touring shopping malls across America (the originality of this approach at that time earned substantial coverage on its own Which kicked off at the Bergen Mall in Paramus New Jersey[2] and a decade later would inspire Britney Spears' similar Hair Zone Mall Tour). Her cover of the Tommy James & the Shondells hit, "I Think We're Alone Now", became a number one smash hit on the Billboard chart, propelling Tiffany to international stardom.

Soon, she was vying with fellow pop star Debbie Gibson for space on the covers of teen magazines, including Tiger Beat, Teen Beat, as well as on television shows on MTV, Fox, etc. Her ballad "Could've Been" also shot to the #1 spot of the Billboard charts in February 1988. Her modified cover of "I Saw Him Standing There" and "Feelings of Forever" also saw chart success from the over 4.1 million selling debut.[3] Tiffany also set a record for the youngest female artist to top the Billboard charts with a debut album. Later that year, she cast the then-unknown singing group New Kids on the Block as the opening act for her concert tour. During the tour she briefly dated Jonathan Knight, a relationship that was short lived because of touring difficulties.

[edit] Family turmoil

In 1988, at the peak of her popularity, Tiffany ended up in the middle of a conflict between her manager (George Tobin) and her mother and stepfather over control of her career and earnings. This led to a court fight which included an attempt by Tiffany to have herself declared an emancipated minor. This was rejected by the court, but her grandmother became her temporary guardian.[4][5][6][7] Unfortunately, the legal battles took a toll on the singer's career.

[edit] Career stall

In late 1988, Tiffany released her second album, Hold An Old Friend's Hand. It did not do as well as her first album. Although it did not feature any number one hits, the song "All This Time" did make the top ten.[8] Hold An Old Friend's Hand received mixed reviews from critics but eventually went double-platinum. Later that year, she signed on to provide the voice of Judy Jetson for Jetsons: The Movie, which was ultimately released in 1990 after delays; she contributed 3 songs to the soundtrack including the single "I Always Thought I'd See You Again".

Shortly after her 18th birthday in 1989, Tiffany bought a mansion that used to belong to action movie star Chuck Norris. She also left Tobin's management and signed with Dick Scott, who managed New Kids on the Block, by then a very successful teen pop group.

Tiffany's career suffered as musical tastes changed in the early 1990s, swinging away from Dance-pop, towards harder-edged rock and rap. This was shown in her third album, the Urban influenced New Inside. It was her first album away from Tobin, and some of her fans felt the new soulful, sultrier Tiffany was a hard sell. New Inside received good reviews from critics,[9] but failed to make the charts at all, although she made several TV appearances to promote it including on the sitcom Out of This World. Tiffany never regained her "Teen Queen" popularity.

In 1991, she took part in the recording of the song "Voices That Care", which peaked at #11 on the Billboard Hot 100.

[edit] Marriage and comeback attempts

In 1992, she married make-up artist Bulmaro Garcia. She gave birth to her son, Elijah Garcia, on September 17, 1992.

During a brief early-1990s comeback attempt, Tiffany got back together with Tobin, released the album Dreams Never Die in Asia (but not in the United States), and did some performances at the Las Vegas Hilton in the summer of 1993, before breaking with Tobin again.[10]

In 1995, Tiffany moved to Nashville to attempt a country music career, but never released any music of that genre.[11]

In 2000, Tiffany released a "comeback" album, The Color of Silence, which received stellar reviews. Billboard pegged it as "one of the best pop albums of the year" and the year's "biggest surprise".[12] Despite the critical validation - and a record-breaking turnout for her college campus tour[13]- a record deal with a shady, now defunct company and the teen-pop "stigma" attached to her name hindered the album's potential success.

In 2004, Tiffany was the subject of an E! True Hollywood Story television show. She also had a greatest hits album released in Singapore and three in Japan.

Having divorced her first husband on August 1, 2004, Tiffany married a British man named Benn George, and she has been dividing her time between Cannock in England and Los Angeles.

[edit] Back in public eye

On April 2, 2005, Tiffany was featured on the British TV show Hit Me Baby One More Time, winning the first heat and subsequently securing a place in the show's finale. She also appeared on the U.S. version of the show on June 2, 2005, but lost to hip-hop group Arrested Development. Both versions of the show aim to bring former pop stars back into the limelight. Tiffany performed the Girls Aloud song "Love Machine" on the UK version of the show. In 2006, Girls Aloud returned the favor by covering Tiffany's best known song "I Think We're Alone Now" on their greatest hits album The Sound of Girls Aloud.

In May 2005, Tiffany released the album Dust Off And Dance independently through CDBaby (and later for download on iTunes). It was dedicated to her new husband, but recorded as a "Thank You" to her fans (particularly her gay and European fanbase) for reminding her about the fun to be had with her career, and it serves as a reminder of a lighter time when she could lose herself on the dance floor.[14] The album consists of Eurodance and Hi-NRG style songs. The singles from Dust Off And Dance, such as "Ride It", "Fly", "Be With U Tonite", "Na Na Na", and "Artificial Girlfriend", all charted on listener sponsored radio stations that also stream online, such as WMPH and C895Worldwide. Both radio stations are Rhythmic/Dance format stations. A few of the singles made the Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart.

Tiffany toured with the album, which in September 2006 was nominated for six JPF awards. She won for best dance song of the year for "Be With U Tonite" and best dance CD of the year on November 4, 2006. She was mentioned several times (along with fellow pop diva Deborah Gibson) in the film Music and Lyrics.

In 2007, Tiffany was also one of the contestants on the fifth season of the TV show Celebrity Fit Club, going from 152 to 124 lbs for a loss of 28 lbs (69 to 56 kg for a loss of 13 kg) (11 to 9 stone for a loss of 2 stone).

In April 2008, Tiffany began appearing in an ad, entitled "Paradise by the GoPhone Light", for AT&T's GoPhone, which featured Meat Loaf. The ad, which parodies Meat Loaf's "Paradise by the Dashboard Light", has been released in two versions, a long form and a short form, the latter of which cuts out most of Tiffany's singing part.

Also in April 2008, Tiffany made a cameo appearance on the situational comedy How I Met Your Mother, playing a backup singer in a music video by one of the main characters '80s-inspired pop star video by Robin Sparkles—"Sandcastles in the Sand".

In recent years, Tiffany has performed frequently at gay pride events; although she is heterosexual, she is a supporter of gay rights.[15]

In 2008, Tiffany appeared in the second season of the Mojo show I Bet You.

[edit] New record contract

Tiffany has signed a record deal with 10 Spot Records, a new division of Water Music Records Group, which is distributed by Universal Music Group. She released a new album on June 5, 2007, entitled Just Me.[16]

Tiffany has also re-recorded an updated version of "I Think We're Alone Now" for a new album of cover material released by Cleopatra Records in early April 2007, entitled I Think We're Alone Now: '80s Hits and More. The album, which carries a less-than-flattering picture of Tiffany from her 1980s glory days, contains several updated versions of songs from her debut album, and also features her take on songs like "Voices Carry", "Kids In America", "Venus", and more. The new album contains all new material in a singer/songwriter format a la "The Color of Silence". It includes a studio recording of "Winter's Over". The first single from the album, "Feels Like Love", was released on May 1, 2007. On April 15, 2007, Tiffany filmed a music video for "Feels Like Love" in Los Angeles.

In early August 2007, the dance single "Higher", not featured on the album, began showing up online. On October 2, 2007 (Tiffany's 36th birthday), it debuted on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart at number 45, her first Billboard chart appearance since 1989; since then the single has climbed the charts to #19.

In March 2008, an independent limited (500 copies pressed) release album, Mimi's Kitchen, full of rare demos from age 3 up until the present, was shipped to fans in a personalized package which included autographed photos, two autographed CDs, and the "Mimi's Kitchen" demo collection. A small subset of the release also included Playboy T-shirts.

It has been stated that a new dance album is due out the Summer of 2008 to coincide with a summer tour.

In late April 2008, a track with the same name as her 2005 dance album, "Dust off And Dance", became available for download on the web. The song is Tiffany doing vocals for a dance team called Hydra Productions, and the song is found on their album Liquid.

[edit] Film

Tiffany is making a foray into a long-desired acting career. The short film The Isolationist is currently making festival rounds. Her character, Barbara Newman, is a sexually aggressive woman unwilling to let a co-worker enjoy some alone time. She recently completed work on her first feature film, Necrosis, a psychological thriller where she stars alongside James Kyson Lee of NBC's Heroes and George Stults of 7th Heaven. In it she plays Karen, a fun-loving adrenaline junkie who takes matters into her own hands when a blizzard traps her and her friends in a cabin and paranoia gets the best of them.

[edit] Other musical Tiffanys

Tiffany Darwish is not the only musical act to go by the surnameless stage name Tiffany, which has at times caused confusion for her fans. In 1984, a song entitled "Remembering Love", credited to "Tiffany", was released in Canada, followed up in 1987 by another song, "In The Dark". As these turned up in used-record catalogs, fans debated whether they were by "the" Tiffany or not, and even Tiffany's own denial wasn't always fully trusted (people sometimes suggested that she was either mistaken or was trying to cover up early failures in her career). However, these releases were ultimately found to be by Canadian singer Kimberly Warnock, who has sometimes used the stage name "Tiffany" but has no other connection with the better-known "Tiffany".

Other uses of the name for musical artists or groups have included a 1960s British vocalist, a 1970s Dutch band, a German band, an Italian singer, and two different R&B singers (with real names Charli Baltimore and Tiffany Nichole Tatum).

[edit] Discography

[edit] Studio albums

Information Peak positions Sales and certifications
US UK CAN JAP
Tiffany
  • 1st studio album
  • Released: May 1987
1 2 7 5
  • Worldwide sales: n/a
  • RIAA certification: 6x Platinum
  • IFPI certification: n/a
Hold an Old Friend's Hand
  • 2nd studio album
  • Released: November 1988
17 - - 18
  • Worldwide sales: n/a
  • RIAA certification: 2x Platinum
  • IFPI certification: n/a
New Inside
  • 3rd studio album
  • Released: October 1990
- - - 17
  • Worldwide sales: n/a
  • RIAA certification: n/a
  • IFPI certification: n/a
Dreams Never Die
  • 4th studio album
  • Released: November 1993
- - - -
  • Worldwide sales: n/a
  • RIAA certification: n/a
  • IFPI certification: n/a
The Color of Silence
  • 5th studio album
  • Released: November 2000
- - - -
  • Worldwide sales: n/a
  • RIAA certification: n/a
  • IFPI certification: n/a
Dust Off and Dance
  • 6th studio album
  • Released: May 2005
- - - -
  • Worldwide sales: n/a
  • RIAA certification: n/a
  • IFPI certification: n/a
Just Me
  • 7th studio album
  • Released: June 2007
- - - -
  • Worldwide sales: n/a
  • RIAA certification: n/a
  • IFPI certification: n/a

[edit] Compilations

Information Peak positions Sales and certifications
US UK CAN JAP
I Saw Him Standing There
  • Remix EP (Japan Only)
  • Released: 1988
- - - -
  • Worldwide sales: n/a
  • RIAA certification: n/a
  • IFPI certification: n/a
Best of Best
  • Hits compilation (Japan Only)
  • Released: 1994
- - - -
  • Worldwide sales: n/a
  • RIAA certification: n/a
  • IFPI certification: n/a
All the Best
  • Hits compilation w/ 2 new songs
    (Singapore Only)
  • Released: 1995
- - - -
  • Worldwide sales: n/a
  • RIAA certification: n/a
  • IFPI certification: n/a
Best One
  • Hits compilation (Japan Only)
  • Released: 1996
- - - -
  • Worldwide sales: n/a
  • RIAA certification: n/a
  • IFPI certification: n/a
Greatest Hits
  • Hits compilation
  • Released: 1996
- - - -
  • Worldwide sales: n/a
  • RIAA certification: n/a
  • IFPI certification: n/a
I Think We're Alone Now: '80s Hits and More
  • Re-recordings of hits of the 1980s
  • Released: 2007
- - - -
  • Worldwide sales: n/a
  • RIAA certification: n/a
  • IFPI certification: n/a

[edit] Singles

Year Single Album U.S. U.S. AC UK Dance
1987 "Danny" Tiffany - - -
"I Think We're Alone Now" 1 - 1 23
1988 "Could've Been" 1 1 4
"I Saw Him Standing There" 7 - 8
"Feelings of Forever" 50 - 52
"All This Time" Hold An Old Friend's Hand 6 10 47
1989 "Radio Romance" 35 - 13
"Hold an Old Friend's Hand" - 27 -
"It's the Lover (Not the Love)" - - - -
"Oh Jackie" 1 - - - -
1990 "I Always Thought I'd See You Again" Jetsons: The Movie Soundtrack - - - -
"New Inside" New Inside - - - -
"Here in My Heart" - - - -
1991 "Back in the Groove" 1 - - - -
"Voices That Care" Single Only 11 6 - -
1993 "If Love Is Blind" 1 Dreams Never Die - - - -
1994 "Can't You See" 1 - - - -
2000 "I'm Not Sleeping" The Color of Silence - - - -
"Open My Eyes" - - - -
2005 "Be with U Tonite" Dust Off and Dance - - - -
2006 "Na Na Na" - - - -
2007 "Feels Like Love" Just Me - - - -
"Higher" 2 Single Only - - - 19
2008 "Dust Off And Dance (Feat. Hydra Productions)" Hydra Productions: Liquid - - - -


Footnotes

  • 1 Released in Asia only.
  • 2 Reached #19 on the Billboard Dance Charts. Release exclusive to Perfect Beat.

[edit] Music videos

Year Video Director
1987 "I Think We're Alone Now" George Tobin
"Could've Been"
"I Saw Him Standing There"
"Feelings of Forever"
1988 "All This Time"
"Radio Romance"
1990 "Here In My Heart" Doug Nichol
1993 "Can't You See"
2007 "Feels Like Love" Michael Stratigakis

[edit] References

  1. ^ IMDB [1]
  2. ^ Russell, Lisa, "Tiffany, the teenage mallflower who serenades the shoppers of America", People Weekly, v28, 14 September 1997, p. 81
  3. ^ Gett, Steve, "Tiffany conquers the charts", Billboard, v100, 23 January 1988, p. 24
  4. ^ Haring, Bruce, "Tiffany gets a guardian as she seeks adult status", Billboard, v100, 1998-04-16, p. 6
  5. ^ Dougherty, Steve, "It's a bittersweet 16 for Tiffany, who's suing her mom for 'emancipation'", People Weekly, v29, 1998-04-18, p.94
  6. ^ McDougal, Dennis, "Tiffany: The $5-million star of stage and court", Los Angeles Times, Sun., 1988-06-12, Home Edition, Calendar Section, p. 6 [correction in Section One, p. 3]
  7. ^ Hunt, Dennis, "The trials of Tiffany: A year after filing suit, she and mom are talking", Los Angeles Times, Sun., 1989-04-09, Home Edition, Calendar Section, p. 63
  8. ^ Boehm, Mike, "Heartaches of two songwriters are behind Tiffany's latest hit", Los Angeles Times, Fri., Feb. 10, 1989, Orange County Edition, Calendar Section(6), p. 23
  9. ^ Album review, Billboard, October 27, 1990
  10. ^ Lutz, Natalie. "Tiffany Changes Her Style for Third Album", Showbiz (Las Vegas), July 25-31, 1993; article title is erroneous, since it is actually discussing her fourth album.
  11. ^ Keel, Beverly, "Tiffany's starting all over again -- in country", Country Weekly, Vol. 3, No. 52, Dec. 24, 1996, p. 17.
  12. ^ Paoletta, Michael, "Tiffany Tells Stories Her Way", Billboard, August 19, 2000, p. 1
  13. ^ Perry, Audrey, "Tiffany Rocks the Campus", BYU Newsnet, March 12, 2001, http://newnewsnet.byu.edu/story.cfm/30239
  14. ^ Gower, Van, "'Dust Off' Old Notions and Dance", David (Atlanta), issue #355, August 3, 2005, p. 60 [2]
  15. ^ Henderson, William, "Just Tiffany", In Newsweekly, May 31, 2007
  16. ^ As noted on the official sites of Tiffany and 10 Spot

[edit] External links



Persondata
NAME Darwish, Tiffany Renee
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Tiffany
SHORT DESCRIPTION Singer
DATE OF BIRTH 1971-10-02
PLACE OF BIRTH Norwalk, California
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH