Name: Toni Braxton
Birthday: October 7, 1968
Birth Place: Severn, Maryland, USA
Height: 158cm (5' 2'')
Hair Colour: Brown
Eyes: Brown
Claim to fame: Album - Toni Braxton (1993)
Education: Glen Burnie High School; Bowie State University
Nationality: American
Occupation: Singer
Toni Braxton was born October 7, 1968, in Severn, Maryland,
the daughter of an Apostolic minister and a vocalist.
Toni, her four sisters and her brother were forced to
live under the strict rules of their family's faith.
The girls of the Braxton family were not allowed to
wear pants, sandals or makeup, were not allowed to have
boyfriends, and the children were not allowed to listen
to mainstream music. That didn't stop them from listening
to music; when their parents were out, they watched
Soul Train and listened to music.
Toni and her siblings no longer had to sneak around
to watch television once her parents joined the United
Methodist Church, which had less strict rules. Watching
soul greats such as Stevie Wonder and Chaka Khan eventually
contributed to Toni's musical style.
Doe-eyed Toni discovered her talent as a member of
the church choir, which her mother encouraged her to
join. Although Toni knew she wanted to pursue a singing
career, she received a college education at Bowie State
University.
While studying teaching, Toni never gave up music.
She took singing lessons to fulfill her true passion
in life.
Remaining true to her love for music, Toni and her
sisters formed a group called the Braxtons. Signed with
Arista, the Braxtons released a single entitled "The
Good Life". Although the song was a commercial
success, it did manage to catch the ear of Kenneth "Babyface"
Edmonds and Antonio "L.A. Reid", of LaFace
Records.
"The Good Life" was good enough for Toni's
career, as it led to her record contract with LaFace.
The aspiring singer broke into the music industry when
she had the opportunity to contribute to the Boomerang
soundtrack, when Anita Baker backed out because she
was pregnant. Singles such as "Give U My Heart"
(a duet with Babyface) and "Love Shoulda Brought
You Home" both appeared on the Billboard charts.
Her work on Boomerang was only an inkling of what listeners
would hear from the soulful artist. Her debut album,
the self-entitled Toni Braxton, was released in 1993,
and spawned the hits "Another Sad Love Song",
"You Mean The World To Me" and "Breathe
Again". Her critically acclaimed album and Aretha
Franklin/Whitney Houston style garnered her the Grammy
Award for Best New Artist in 1993.
Her follow-up album, the 1996 Secrets, equally did
not disappoint. The singles "You're Makin' Me High"
and "Un-Break My Heart" were huge hits, especially
the latter which can probably be considered Toni's biggest
international single. Toni also contributed to another
soundtrack, the female bonding film Waiting to Exhale.
After having won the 1997 Billboard Award for Female
R&B Artist of the Year, Toni's stroke of success
crashed when she filed for bankruptcy in 1998, after
litigation with her record company.
This did not stop Toni, who got back into the record
studio to develop her third album, The Heat, released
in April 2000. Although The Heat has not had the same
fiery success as her previous albums, her first single,
"He Wasn't Man Enough" has been on the Top
Ten charts for months, and has become a staple on R&B,
Pop and Adult Contemporary radio stations.
The artist known as "The First Lady of LaFace"
has triumphed over hardship to become a modern R&B,
soul diva.