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Born Aaliyah Dana Haughton, January 16, 1979,
Brooklyn, New York. Raised in Detroit, Michigan, the young singer
competed unsuccessfully on the television program Star Search
at age 11. Later that same year, she performed with R&B legend Gladys
Knight, the former wife of her uncle and manager, Barry Hankerson,
at a five-night stand in Las Vegas.
In 1994, at the age of 15, Aaliyah catapulted onto
the R&B charts herself with her debut album, Age Ain’t Nothing
But a Number. Produced by the successful singer R.
Kelly, the album quickly sold a million copies and eventually earned
platinum status based largely on the success of two hit singles,
“Back and Forth” and “At Your Best (You Are Love).” Later that year,
tabloid reports surfaced claiming that the sultry teen singer had
married the 27-year-old Kelly, but Aaliyah denied the union and
the marriage was reportedly annulled.
While a student in the dance program at Detroit
High School for the Fine and Performing Arts (she graduated in 1997),
Aaliyah released her sophomore album, One in a Million (1996).
Helmed by the well-known pop producer Timbaland (Tim Mosely) and
featuring rap performer Missy “Misdemeanor” Elliott, One in a
Million portrayed the 17-year-old singer as a sultry hip-hop
chanteuse with a self-confidence well beyond her years. The album
garnered favorable reviews and sold two million copies.
Aaliyah gained even more recognition in 1997 when
she recorded “Journey to the Past,” the Academy Award-nominated
theme song to the animated feature Anastasia. She also performed
the song for the Oscar telecast in 1998. Her next soundtrack effort,
“Are You That Somebody?" for 1998’s Dr. Dolittle, starring
Eddie Murphy, went to No. 1 on the R&B charts, was a pop crossover
hit, and earned Aaliyah her first Grammy Award nomination.
In 2000, Aaliyah made her acting debut in the surprise
action hit Romeo Must Die, starring opposite martial arts
star Jet Li in a Romeo and Juliet-inspired story set in modern-day
Los Angeles. She was also an executive producer of the movie’s soundtrack
and performed the hit single “Try Again,” which netted her a second
Grammy nomination as well as two MTV Music Video Awards for Best
Female Video and Best Video From a Film.
Her third album, Aaliyah, was released in
July 2001 and reached No. 2 on the Billboard album chart.
Also in 2001, she played the title role in Queen of the Damned,
based on the bestselling novel by Anne Rice and set for release
in 2002. She scored a major casting coup when she signed to appear
in two upcoming sequels to the blockbuster sci-fi thriller The
Matrix, starring Keanu Reeves and Laurence Fishburne.
Tragically, Aaliyah was killed on August 25, 2001,
when a small Cessna passenger plane carrying the singer and her
video crew crashed and burst into flames shortly after takeoff from
Abaco Island in the Bahamas, where they had just completed work
on a video. The plane was headed for Miami, Florida. Aaliyah and
seven other people, including the pilot, were believed to have died
instantly, while a ninth passenger died later at a Bahamian hospital.
Aaliyah was 22 years old at the time of her death. She is survived
by her parents, Diane and Michael Haughton, and an older brother,
Rashaad.
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