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Revision as of 17:55, 18 July 2006 by Bob247 (talk | contribs) (format refs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff) For the movie based on the life of the singer, see Selena (film); for things with a similar name see Selene (disambiguation)
Selena
Musical artist

Selena Quintanilla Pérez (April 16, 1971March 31, 1995), best known as Selena, was a Mexican-American singer who has been called the "queen" of Tejano music. The youngest child of a Mexican immigrant couple, Selena released her first album at the age of 12. She took the award for Female Vocalist of the Year in 1987 at the Tejano Music Awards and landed a recording contract with EMI a few years later. Her fame continued to grow throughout the early nineties, especially in Spanish-speaking countries. Her album Selena Live! won a Grammy Award for Best Mexican-American album at the 36th Grammy Awards and her 1994 album Amor Prohibido, which was nominated for another Grammy and produced four number one Spanish hits.

Selena attained further notability in the United States and Mexico after Yolanda Saldívar, the president of her fan club, murdered her at the age of 23. On April 12, 1995, two weeks after her death, George W. Bush, then the governor of Texas, declared her birthday "Selena Day" in Texas. Warner Brothers made a film based on her life starring Jennifer López in 1997. As of June 2006, Selena was commemorated with a museum and a bronze life-sized statue (Mirador de la Flor in Corpus Christi, Texas). Both the statue and museum are visited by hundreds of fans each week.

Early career

Born in Lake Jackson, Texas, Selena was the youngest child of Abraham and Marcela Quintanilla, both Mexican-Americans. She began singing at the age of six; when she was nine her father founded the singing group Selena y Los Dinos, which she fronted. They initially performed at the Quintanilla family's restaurant, "Papagallos," but the restaurant failed shortly afterwards.

The family soon went bankrupt, and was evicted from their home. Taking all their musical equipment in an old bus, they relocated to Corpus Christi, Texas. There they performed whenever they could, at street corners, weddings, quinceañeras, and fairs. These efforts at spreading their name paid off in 1984, when Selena, then twelve years old, recorded her first album for a local record company. The album was not sold in stores, and her father bought all the original copies. It was later released in 1995 under the title Mis Primeras Grabaciones.

Selena did well in school, but as she grew more popular, the travel demands of her performance schedule began to interfere with her education. Her father pulled her out of school altogether when she was in the eighth grade. She continued her education on the road; at age seventeen she earned a high school diploma from The American School of Correspondence in Chicago and was accepted at Louisiana State University. Selena released her second album, Alpha in 1986.

Successes

See also: List of Selena awards and achievements

Template:Sound sample box align right Template:Multi-listen start Template:Multi-listen item Template:Multi-listen end Template:Sample box end At the Tejano Music Awards in 1987, Selena took the award for Female Vocalist of the Year (and would continue to dominate the Awards for the next seven years). In 1988, she released two albums, Preciosa and Dulce Amor. In 1989, Jose Behar, the former head of the Sony Latin Music division, signed Selena with Capitol/EMI records, a record company founded by Behar. Behar later said that the reason he signed Selena was because he thought he discovered the next Gloria Estéfan. Selena signed a contract with Coca-Cola to become one of their spokespersons the same year, and her concerts were drawing thousands of people.

In 1988, Selena met guitarist, Chris Perez, who had his own band. Two years later, the Quintanilla family hired him to play in Selena's band and they quickly fell in love. At first her father didn't approve of the relationship between Perez and Selena, and went as far as firing Perez from the band. He eventually came to accept the relationship, telling Selena that Perez could come back only if they married and moved next door to the family home. Selena accepted and on April 2, 1992, Selena and Perez married in Nueces County, Texas, and Selena added her new husband's surname to her own.

In 1990, Selena released another album, Ven Conmigo, written by her main songwriter and brother Abraham Quintanilla, III. Around the same time, a registered nurse and fan named Yolanda Saldívar approached Selena's father with the idea of starting a fan club. Her wish was granted, and she became the club's president; later she would become the manager of Selena's clothing boutiques. Selena released another hit album in 1992, Entre A Mi Mundo, which achieved gold status. Songs from that album, such as Como La Flor, helped make Selena a star. Her 1993 Live album won a Grammy award for Best Mexican American Performance.

Selena released her next album, Amor Prohibido in 1994. The album won the singer another Grammy award for Mexican-American Album of the Year. She also began designing and manufacturing her own clothing line in 1994, and opened two boutiques called Selena Inc., one in Corpus Christi and the other in San Antonio, each equipped with its own in-house beauty salon. Hispanic Business magazine reported that the singer earned over five million dollars from these boutiques, making her one of the twenty wealthiest Hispanic entertainers in the world, and the only Tejana among that number. Selena made appearances alongside Erik Estrada in a Latin soap opera titled Dos Mujeres, Un Camino. When she appeared on the show, the ratings skyrocketed. Selena was asked to make a second appearance but declined on account of schedule conflicts.

Meanwhile, Selena and her band continued to receive accolades; Billboard's Premio Lo Nuestro awarded them a total of six prestigious awards, including Best Latin artist and song of the year for Como La Flor. Coca-Cola released a commemorative bottle in her honor to celebrate their five-year relationship together. Meanwhile, her duet with the Barrio Boys, Dondequiera Que Estes raced to the top of the Latin charts. This prompted Selena to tour in New York City, Argentina, Puerto Rico and Central America where she was in growing demand. The duet with Salvadorian singer Alvaro Torres Buenos Amigos was also a hit.

File:Selena 9.jpg
Selena on the cover of Amor Prohibido

By fall of 1994, Amor Prohibido was a commercial success in Mexico and made four number one Latin hits, replacing Gloria Estefan's "Mi Tierra" on the chart's number one spot. It sold over 400,000 copies by March of 1995, reaching gold status. At this point, Selena developed plans to record an English-language album, but continued touring for Amor Prohibido while beginning preparations for the album.

In 1995, Selena made a cameo appearance in the romantic comedy Don Juan DeMarco, which starred Marlon Brando, Johnny Depp and Faye Dunaway. She appeared as a background mariachi singer during the first scene. In February 1995, Selena played a concert at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo in the Houston Astrodome which attracted over 60,000 fans -- more than country stars such as George Strait, Vince Gill and Reba McEntire. Despite her busy schedule, Selena visited local schools to talk to students about the importance of education. She also donated her time to civic organizations such as D.A.R.E., and planned a fundraising concert to help AIDS patients. These demonstrations of community involvement won her loyalty from her fan base. Selena scheduled her English album for release in the summer of 1995. Afraid that her fans would think she was turning her back on them, she was working on a new Tejano album as well. Meanwhile, she planned to open two more boutiques, including one in Monterrey, Mexico.

Death

In early 1995 bounced payroll checks,letters and phone calls to Abraham from dissapointed fans were the wake-up call. Selena's father met with Yolanda Saldivar alongside Selena and Suzette in early March to request that she surrender all of the records from Selena Etc. According to him, Saldivar did not hand over all of the financial statements and other paperwork at their meeting. After that the entire Quintanilla family had grave doubts about Yolanda Saldivar and her so called records and it was time to fire her.

On the night of March 30, 1995 Selena met up with Yolanda at the Days Inn Motel on Navigation Blvd In Corpus Christi. Saldivar assured Selena and Chris that the accounting records were in order and that the fans received there packets and handed over more papers. Selena and Chris Returned home to discover some documentation still missing.

The next morning on March 31, 1995 Selena met with Yolanda at the motel and had taken her to the hospital because Yolanda said she had been raped returning from Monterrey, Mexico. After discovering that Yolanda had not been raped as she had suggested the ladies both returned back tho the hotel where both woman began to argue. As Selena turned to leave the room Yolanda the pulled out a .38 caliber and shot the singer in the back. The young singer drenched with blood ran along the side of the hotel pool her long black hair electrified by fear. Behind her scurried Yolanda in a two piece hospital suit. The lady in the scrub suit had a crazed look on her face and waved a .38 caliber pistol in the air. Suddenly she halted, took aim and fired, missing her fleeing target as she screamed bitch. The young woman, bleeding profusely from a bullet wound in her back stumbbled into the motel lobby. Before collapsing near the registration desk she managed to name her assailant screaming "They shot me. Yolanda room 158. Hurry lock the doors she is going to shoot me again!" The manager of the Days Inn raced to call 911. Being whisked by the ambulance to Memorial Medical Center and the Corpus Christi police lay in wait for her murder. Meanwhile just a few miles away, Selena lay dying on an emergency room table. Her assailant's bullet severed a main artery in the singer's right shoulder and had suffered a critical loss of blood. On the table at Memorial Medical Center , Selena's life flickered like a flame and the went out. She was pronounced dead at 1:05 pm at the age of 23, sixteen days shy of her 24th birthday.

Aftermath

Template:Sound sample box align right Template:Multi-listen start Template:Multi-listen item Template:Multi-listen end Template:Sample box end Selena's death shocked and saddened Latinos and non-Latinos alike across the United States and abroad. Major networks interrupted their regular programming to break the news; Tom Brokaw referred to Selena as "The Mexican Madonna". Numerous vigils and memorials were held in her honor and radio stations in Texas played her music non-stop. Her funeral drew approximately 60,000 mourners, many of whom came from outside the United States. Among the celebrities who were reported to have immediately phoned the Quintanilla family to express their condolences were Gloria Estefan, Julio Iglesias and Madonna. People magazine published a commemorative issue in Selena's honor, this being only the third occasion on which People had released such an issue. A few days afterwards, Howard Stern made fun of Selena's burial by poking fun at her mourners and making comments about her music including "This music does absolutely nothing for me. Alvin and the Chipmunks have more soul, Spanish people have the worst taste in music. They have no depth." Stern's comments, predictably, outraged the Hispanic community all across Texas. Two weeks after her death, on April 12, 1995, George W. Bush, the then Governor of Texas, declared April 16 her birthday "Selena Day," in Texas.

That summer, Selena's album Dreaming of You, a combination of Spanish language songs and several new English language tracks, debuted at number one on the Billboard music charts in the US, making her the first Hispanic singer to accomplish this feat and the second highest debut after Michael Jackson's HIStory. On its release date, the album sold over 175,000 copies, a record for a female pop singer, and sold two million copies in its first year. Songs such as "I Could Fall In Love" and "Dreaming Of You" were played widely by mainstream English language radio with the latter reaching #25 on the Billboard Hot 100. Meanwhile, "I Could Fall In Love," while ineligible for the Hot 100 at the time due to it not being released as a commercial single, did reach #12 on the Hot 100 Airplay chart and the top 10 on the Adult Contemporary Chart. To date, "Dreaming of You" has sold approximately four million copies in the USA.

In October of 1995 a Houston jury convicted Saldívar of first degree murder and sentenced her to life in prison, with the possibility of parole in thirty years.

Legacy

File:Mirador200109.jpg
A statue in made in the honor of Selena in Corpus Christi, Texas

In 1997, Jennifer López played Selena in the film of the same name directed by Gregory Nava, which opened with mostly positive reviews. More than 12,000 people auditioned for a role in the film. The film stirred some controversy in the Mexican-American community, since López is Puerto Rican and played the role of a singer of Mexican descent. But Selena's fans supported the biography, and López's role in the film helped elevate her career. Although López would succeed as a pop star herself a few years later, Selena's voice was dubbed in for all the songs in the movie. For her role in the film, López was nominated for a Golden Globe award for Best Actress.

Reliant Stadium in Houston hosted a massive tribute concert, "Selena ¡VIVE!", on April 7, 2005, a week after the 10th anniversary of the star's death. Over 50,000 fans attended the concert, which featured various high-profile artists including Gloria Estefan, Pepe Aguilar, Thalía, Paulina Rubio, Ana Barbara, Alejandra Guzmán, Ana Gabriel, and Fey. All of the artists at the event performed renditions of Selena's music, as did her brother, A.B. Quintanilla, who performed along with his band Kumbia Kings backed with footage of Selena singing Baila Esta Cumbia. Broadcast live on the Univision network, "Selena ¡VIVE!" now holds the record for the highest-rated and most-viewed Spanish-language show in American television history. The show, which was over three hours long, scored a 35.9 household rating.

Selected discography

Main article: Selena discography

Early releases

Year Album
1986 Alpha
1987 And the Winner Is...
1988 Preciosa
1988 Dulce Amor

EMI Music releases

Year Re-released Album
1989 2002 Selena
1990 2002 Ven Conmigo
1992 2002 Entre A Mi Mundo
1993 2002 Selena Live!
1994 2002 Amor Prohibido

Posthumous releases

Year Album
1995 (Re-released in 2002) Dreaming of You
1999 All My Hits Vol. 1
2002 Ones (CD/DVD)
2003 Greatest Hits (CD/DVD)

References

  1. ^ Mitchell, Rick. "Selena". Houston Chronicle, 05/21/95. Retrieved on 2006-05-14.
  2. ^ Orozco, Cynthia E. Quintanilla Perez, Selena. The Handbook of Texas online. Retrieved on 2006-06-05
  3. ^ Selena. Thompson Gale (Gale.com). Retrieved on 2006-06-06.
  4. "Fans, Family Remember Selena". CBSNews.com, Oct. 17, 2002. Retrieved on 2006-07-09.
  5. Patoski, Joe Nick. "Selena follows her heart". Houston Chronicle, 04/01/96. Retrieved on 2006-06-05.
  6. Selena Pop Musician. Who2.com. Retrieved on 2006-06-05.]
  7. "Selena - Life Events". Corpus Christi Caller Times, March 27, 2005. Retrieved on 2006-06-07.
  8. Selena. VH1.com. Retrieved on 2006-05-21.
  9. "In the spirit of Selena: Tributes, a book and an impending film testify to the Tejano singer's enduring". by Gregory Rodriguez Pacific News, March 21, 1997. Retrieved on 2006-07-18.
  10. Asin, Stephanie and Dyer, R.A. "Selena's public outraged: Shock jock Howard Stern's comments hit raw nerve." Houston Chronicle, April 6, 1995. Retrieved on 2006-05-20.
  11. Hodges, Ann. "Selena legend lives on with TV movie'. Houston Chronicle, December 6, 1996. Retrieved on 2006-05-20.
  12. "In the spirit of Selena: Tributes, a book and an impending film testify to the Tejano singer's enduring". Houston Chronicle, March 31, 1996. Retrieved on 2006-05-20.
  13. Graczyk, Michael. "Selena's killer gets life". Associated Press, October 26, 1995. Retrieved on 2006-05-20.
  14. Rotten Tomatoes reviews of Selena". Rotten Tomatoes, Retrieved on 2006-07-20.
  15. "Scholar examines the spell of Selena". Houston Chronicle, April 28, 1996. Retrieved on 2006-06-05.
  16. "Lopez Hello Magazine profile". Hello Magazine, Retrieved on 2006-07-20.
  17. Selena movie review. Roger Ebert, Retrieved on 2006-07-20.
  18. Awards for Selena (1997). IMDb.com. Retrieved on 2006-05-17.
  19. Univision’s Selena ¡Vive! Breaks Audience Records. Univision, 04-11-2005. Retrieved on 2006-06-06.

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