Sheena Easton
Sheena
Shirley Orr was born in 1959 in Bellshill, Scotland, and began
performing while studying speech and drama at the Royal Scottish
Academy of Music And Drama, studying by day and singing with a
band (Something Else) in the evenings.
Her short-lived marriage to actor Sandi Easton gave Orr her new
name, and as Sheena Easton she was signed to EMI Records in 1979
following an audition for a planned documentary following a
budding pop star.
The resulting BBC television film, The Big Time, about
the creation of her chic image helped her debut single Modern
Girl into the UK charts.
This was followed by the chirpy 9 To 5, which reached
Number 3 and propelled a reissued Modern Girl into the Top
10. The former sold over a million copies in the USA - where
it was known as Morning Train (Nine To Five) - and topped
the singles chart for two weeks.
Extraordinary success followed in America where she spent most
of her time. Now established as an easy-listening rock singer,
Easton was offered the theme to the 1981 James Bond movie, For
Your Eyes Only, which became a US Top 5 hit.
Further hits followed from her second album, including When
He Shines and the title track, You Could Have Been With Me.
In 1983, Easton, who by now had emigrated to California, joined
the trend towards celebrity duets, recording the country
chart-topper We've Got Tonight with Kenny
Rogers.
The Top 10 hit Telefone (Long Distance Love Affair) was
in a funkier dance mode and her career took a controversial turn
in 1984 with attacks by moralists on the sexual implications of Sugar
Walls, a Prince song that became one
of her biggest hits.
Easton also sang on Prince's 1987 single, U Got The Look,
and appeared in Sign 'O' The Times. The same year she
starred as Sonny Crockett's wife in several episodes of Miami
Vice.
Easton's later albums for EMI included Do You, produced
by Nile Rodgers, and the Japan-only release No Sound But A
Heart. In 1988, she switched labels to MCA, releasing The
Lover In Me.
When the title track was issued as a single, it soared to
Number 2 on the US charts. The album's list of producers read like
the Who's Who of contemporary soul music, with L.A. And Babyface,
Prince, Jellybean and Angela Winbush among the credits.
What Comes Naturally, released in 1991, was a hard and
fast dance record produced to the highest technical standards but
lacking the charm of her earlier work. The same year she starred
in the revival of Man Of La Mancha, which reached Broadway
a year later.
Easton finally became a US citizen, but during the 90s she
enjoyed most success in Japan, with several of her new albums only
released in that territory.
By now her focus had switched towards her acting career, and in
1996 she appeared as Rizzo in the Broadway production of Grease.
She signed a new recording contract with Universal International
in 2000, and appeared opposite David
Cassidy in the Las Vegas production, At The Copa.
Easton sounds like an unlikely favourite of John
Peel's but his widow Sheila confirmed that a box of 142 of his
favourite 7" singles - the crown jewels of his vast record
collection - contained, alongside Buzzcocks
and The White Stripes, two copies of her chart-topper 9 To 5.
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