CELEBIRONY    the ironic world of celebrities
Top       Set CelebIrony as homepage
Women
   actresses
   singers
   athletes
   models
   showgirls

Men
   actors
   singers
   athletes
   models
   calendars

Singers
Adam Gaynor
Adriano Celentano
Adriano Pappalardo
Al Bano Carrisi
Al Jarreau
Alan Sorrenti
Alberto Fortis
Aleandro Baldi
Alejandro Sanz
Alessandro Errico

Partners
   Neuromu..
   1000�..
   Celebri..
   Celebri..

Add link
All partners

Rufus Wainwright


 

Español Français Deutsch Italiano

Biography
A singer/songwriter whose lush, theatrical pop harked back to the traditions of Tin Pan Alley, cabaret and even opera, Rufus Wainwright was born in 1973; the son of folk

Nano Site
music luminaries Loudon Wainwright III and Kate McGarrigle, his parents divorced while he was a child, and he was raised by his mother in Montreal. Beginning his piano studies at age six, by thirteen he was touring with his mother, aunt Anna and his sister Martha in a group billed as the McGarrigle Sisters and Family; a year later, Wainwright was nominated for a Juno (the Canadian equivalent of a Grammy) as Most Promising Young Artist, while his "I'm A-Runnin'" was concurrently nominated for a Genie (the Canadian countepart to an Oscar) for Best Song in a Film.

Coming out as a homosexual while still in his teens, Wainwright sought solace in opera throughout his adolescent years, also becoming an enormous fan of performers including Edith Piaf, Al Jolson and Judy Garland. After attending the prestigious Millbrook School in upstate New York, he briefly studied music at Montreal's McGill University, eventually turning away from classical performance towards pop and rock. Becoming a fixture on the Montreal club circuit, Wainwright soon cut a series of demos with producer Pierre Marchand; Loudon Wainwright III then passed a copy of the tape to friend Van Dyke Parks, who in turn handed it on to DreamWorks exec Lenny Waronker. The label signed him soon after, resulting in the release of Rufus Wainwright during the spring of 1998. The album landed on several critics' "best of 1998" lists, while Wainwright spent the next few years touring and appearing sporadically on soundtracks (Shrek) and compilations (The McGarrigle Hour). His sophomore album, Poses, brought similar acclaim in mid-2001. After spending much of 2001 and 2002 touring on his own and with Tori Amos, Wainwright settled into Bearsville Studio, in Woodstock, N.Y., with producer Marius deVries to record sort of a double album. The first project Want One was released in September, 2003, with Want Two expected to follow up later in the year.

 

 



Newsletter
Get a free monthly email with all the latest celeb news and gossip.
Enter your email

CelebIrony.com ® Copyright 2005 - 2009
Legal notes