Queen Latifah (Actress/Rapper/Author)

Dana Elaine Owens (born March 18, 1970) is an American Grammy-winning rapper/singer and Academy Award-nominated actress, best known by her stage name, Queen Latifah.

Early life

Latifah was born in Newark, New Jersey to Lancelot Owens (a police officer) and Rita (a high-school art teacher); they divorced when she was eight years old. After singing in the choir of her local Baptist church, she performed the number “Home” from the musical The Wiz in a high school play. Her stage name, Latifah (لطيفة), meaning “delicate” and “sensitive” in Arabic, was given to her when she was eight by her cousin. While in high school, she was a power forward on her basketball team. Her father also gave her lessons in karate and firearms use.

Music career

Latifah started her career beatboxing for the rap group Ladies Fresh. In 1988, local DJ Mark the 45 King heard a demo version of Latifah’s single, “Princess of the Posse”, and gave the demo to Fab Five Freddy (who at the time hosted Yo! MTV Raps). Freddy helped Latifah sign with Tommy Boy Records. They released Latifah’s first album, All Hail the Queen, in (1989); at the time, she was 18. This debut managed to be both a critical and commercial success and was followed by the albums Nature of a Sista and Black Reign, which contained the hit single, U.N.I.T.Y., for which she won a Grammy. After releasing four rap albums (the fourth being Order in the Court, released in 1998), she released a soul/jazz standards album in 2004 called The Dana Owens Album.

Acting career

From 1993 to 1998, Latifah had a starring role on Living Single, a FOX sitcom; she also wrote and performed its theme music. She began her film career as a supporting actress in movies like House Party 2 (1991), Juice, Jungle Fever(1991), and Set It Off (1996).

Latifah first attracted notice for her role as a lesbian in the 1996 box-office hit, Set It Off, and subsequently had a supporting role in the Holly Hunter film Living Out Loud (1998). Although she had already received some critical acclaim, she gained mainstream success after being cast over Kathy Bates as Matron “Mama” Morton in the Oscar-winning musical Chicago, the recipient of the Best Picture Oscar. Latifah received an Academy Award nomination for “Best Supporting Actress” for her role. In 2003 she co-starred with Steve Martin in the film Bringing Down the House, which was a big success at the box office. Since then, she has had both leading and supporting roles in a multitude of films that received varied critical and box office receptions, including Scary Movie 3, Barbershop 2: Back in Business, Taxi, and Beauty Shop.

Her latest film, released in early 2006, is a romantic comedy/drama entitled Last Holiday. Latifah has received some notably positive reviews for the role, including a statement by film critic Richard Roeper that “this is the Queen Latifah performance I’ve been waiting for ever since she broke into movies”. Also in early 2006, Latifah voiced Ellie the mammoth in the animated film, Ice Age 2: The Meltdown (her first voice appearance in an animated film), and will soon appear in the drama Stranger Than Fiction, the action film Bad Girls, which also stars Jada Pinkett Smith, and a remake of Hairspray, playing Motormouth Maybelle opposite John Travolta; filming on Hairspray will begin in the fall of 2006, for a summer 2007 release.

Other work

Latifah is a celebrity spokesperson for Cover Girl cosmetics and Curvation ladies underwear; she has starred in several commercials for the line, as well as a commercial with fellow spokeswoman and singer Faith Hill. She has also had her own talk show, The Queen Latifah Show, from 1999 to 2001. She has been, and still is to this day, a spokesperson for Pizza Hut.

Latifah is one of two hip-hop artists to receive an Academy Award nomination in an acting category (Best Supporting Actress, Chicago, 2002). [The other is Will Smith (Best Actor, Ali, 2001)]

Personal life

Latifah’s older brother Lance was killed in 1992, in a biking accident involving the motorbike that Latifah had just bought him. She still wears the key to the motorbike around her neck and dedicated Black Reign to him. In 1993, she was the victim of a carjacking, in which a friend of hers was shot. In 1996, she was arrested due to possession of a small amount of marijuana and a hand gun; she was fined and sentenced to two years probation.

In her 1999 autobiography, Ladies First: Revelations of a Strong Woman, Latifah discussed how her brother’s death led to a bout of depression and drug abuse from which she later recovered.

Because of her portrayal of a lesbian in Set It Off and her avoidance of discussing her romantic life, tabloid media sometimes speculate that she is a lesbian. Latifah responded to these rumors in her autobiography by saying: “It’s insulting when someone asks, ‘Are you gay?’ A woman cannot be strong, outspoken, competent at running her own business, handle herself physically, play a very convincing role in a movie, know what she wants–and go for it–without being gay? Come on.”

In early 2003, Latifah had breast reduction surgery to relieve back pain. She also works out with a trainer and kickboxes. In March 2006, she announced that she is in the early stages of adopting a child, and will possibly have a baby by the beginning of 2007.

Source: Queen Latifah. (2006, July 18). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 17:14, July 19, 2006.

6 comments

  • Eve Smith

    Dear Queen Latifah,

    you are my idol.I want to be like you.Even though I haven`t
    met you, Ithink your smart and funny.
    Got to go.Bye.

    From,
    Eve.

  • Veronica

    I just luv u gal.Keep it up

  • Dear Queen latifah there is nothing wrong being gay because you can do alot of fun together and love someone who you love the most and respect the women to be with in your heart and always be there for a person like you so much as you are incredable women you are and help that person you always wanted to be with someone special like you but anyway someone who can be there for you and help you out when you are in love with someone who cares about that person who you are and save the person’s life and protect that person who you love the most and you can be with someone you love and be there for people and respect them in your own way things are to love the person who you are and getting to know that person to put in your arms to be safe and warm in your heart with love and courge who you wanted to be with that person and feel the love in the heart you can feel the touch of heart you always wanted to have the most times to be with somone who wanted love always and forever love is the heart you treated someone like a Queen and love with desire in your heart and to feel the love be with the person who you love and being with that person to spend time with and getting married with her who you always wanted to have baby with somone who you always wanted to be with someone in your heart with love and dreams to share with someone who cares about a women who is crazy for love and be with someone special and beautiful women who you love in my heart.

  • Dear Dana:
    My name is Robin Hunt I promote LGBT events in Jersey I would really like to invite you and your friends to our club every Tuesday at Axis Lounge in Carlstadt by the Meadowlands. Check us out at myspace.com/pinkmoneypromotions

    Thank You

  • Mari Woodland

    Dear Queen Latifah:

    I met your father (by chance) in Pennsylvania a short while ago. My husband and I were looking for a cheap vehicle just to get around locally, and we were behind your dad (with a for sale sign up) on a Burger King line.
    We were very excited to hear that he was your father, and just want to say that you and your talents have cheered us up many times (we are both very sick – John – my husband has pulmonary hypertension and had a pulmonary thromboendarectomy in UCSD in LaJolla and cannot breathe very well, and I have had extensive open heart surgeries with MRSA and 3 other infections. I can only tell you that you have provided us with so much entertainment and we thank you for same. If you are ever in the area, please call – our new phone number is 570-629-3252 – it would be an honor to cook a nice meal for you.

    Love, Mari & John Woodland-Marchese

  • Glenda Wright

    Dear Queen Latifah,

    I am the Director of a non for profit in Newark, NJ advocating for all people of low income housing. I watched Life Support on HBO and I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart for acting and producing such a film. It was so inspiring, you can’t help but to want to do something to help! Would you come to visit us?

    How do I send you an invitation to come to our annual conference at the Sheraton Convention Center in Atlantic City in June?

    There is not enough said or done about the AIDS epidemic threatening our minority men and women.

    Again, thank my friend, sistah and a good person.

    Additionally, how do we send a formal invitation to you. We would love to have you.

    Sincerely,
    Glenda Wright

cowgirl

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