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Biography
Reba Nell McEntire, also known mononymously as Reba, (born March 28, 1955) is an American country music singer, extra and businesswoman. She is often referred to as "the Queen of Country," having sold more than 75 1000000 records worldwide. Since the 1970s, McEntire has placed over 100 singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs nautical chart, 25 of which reached the number one spot. She is also credited equally an extra, having appeared in both films and television. She starred in the television serial Reba, which aired for six seasons. She also owns several businesses, including a vesture line.
One of iv children, McEntire was born and raised in the state of Oklahoma. In childhood and adolescence, her interests included barrel racing and sports. She besides had a natural singing ability, which was encouraged by her mother. With her mother'southward assist, she and her siblings formed the Singing McEntires, which played at local events and recorded for a small label. McEntire later enrolled at Southeastern Oklahoma State University and studied to become a public school teacher. She as well connected to occasionally perform and was heard singing at a rodeo issue by country performer Ruby Steagall. Drawn to her singing vocalization, Steagall helped McEntire secure a country music recording contract with PolyGram/Mercury Records in 1975.
Over the next several years, PolyGram/Mercury released a series of McEntire'due south albums and singles, which amounted to little success. In the early on 1980s, McEntire's music gained more momentum through several top ten country songs, including "(You Elevator Me) Up to Heaven", "I'm Not That Lone Yet" and her first number one "Tin can't Even Get the Blues". Yet McEntire became increasingly unhappy with her career trajectory and signed with MCA Records in 1984. Her second MCA album titled My Kind of Country (1984) became her breakout release, spawning ii number i Billboard country singles and pointed towards a more traditional musical style. Through the 1980s, McEntire released seven more studio albums and had ten more number one country hits. Her number ane singles included "One Promise Also Tardily", "The Last I to Know" and the Grammy Laurels-winning "Whoever's in New England".
In 1991, McEntire lost eight of her band members in a plane crash in San Diego, California. The feel led to McEntire's critically acclaimed album For My Broken Eye, which is her highest-selling disc to appointment. She followed information technology with several commercially successful albums during the 1990s, including Read My Mind (1994), What If It's You (1996) and If You See Him (1998). These albums featured the number one country singles "The Heart Is a Lone Hunter", "How Was I to Know" and a duet with Brooks and Dunn called "If You Run into Him/If You lot See Her". McEntire besides began acting on film and television set, beginning with 1990's Tremors. In 2001, she played the role of Annie Oakley in the Broadway musical Annie Get Your Gun. The same year, the WB channel launched the Television serial Reba, which starred McEntire in the lead role. The testify became successful and ran until 2007.
In 2004, McEntire returned to her country recording career with the top 5 Billboard album Room to Breathe. She followed the release with 2007's Reba: Duets, 2009's Continue On Loving You and 2011's All the Women I Am. Her 2000's albums spawned the number one singles "Somebody", "Consider Me Gone" and "Turn on the Radio". In 2012, McEntire briefly returned to television with the serial Malibu Country and in 2022 portrayed the function of Colonel Sanders in television commercials for KFC. She has continued releasing new music, including Love Somebody (2015), Sing Information technology Now (2017) and Revived Remixed Revisited (2021).
Early life
McEntire was born in McAlester, Oklahoma in 1955 but was raised on a ranch in Chockie, Oklahoma. She was the third of four children born to Clark and Jacqueline McEntire. Her grandfather, John Wesley McEntire, was a world-champion steer roper in 1934, while her begetter held the same title three times (1957, 1958 and 1961). Jacqueline McEntire had aspirations of becoming a land vocalist, but instead became a public school instructor, librarian and secretary While her female parent was tender and loving, her father had trouble showing affection. "When we were growing up I used to regret that Daddy never told us that he loved u.s.a.," she recalled in her autobiography. The McEntire family unit owned a cattle ranch in Chockie. Each family fellow member contributed to running the cattle operation. The McEntire children helped with ranch chores earlier and afterward school. This included castrating bulls and giving them worm medicine.
The McEntire siblings too developed an interest in singing, which was encouraged by their mother. On auto trips to their male parent'south rodeo dates, Jacqueline McEntire taught her children to sing in harmony with i another. Young Reba then started performing school, outset in first grade when she sang "Away in a Manger" at an elementary school Christmas pageant. In fifth course, she joined the 4-H guild and won first place in the Junior Act Sectionalisation for singing "My Sweet Picayune Alice Blue Gown". She too played basketball and ran track. For several summers, she attended a basketball camp. She too learned pianoforte and guitar. She also developed an involvement in the rodeo and trained to go a barrel racer.
By loftier schoolhouse the McEntire siblings had been frequently performing. Together, they formed a trio which they chosen The Singing McEntires. In 1971, the trio released a single about their famous grandad chosen "The Carol of John McEntire". It was pressed as a single by a local characterization and was issued in small numbers regionally. The trio eventually included a backing ring which performed at local functions. The grouping was afterwards named The Kiowa High Schoolhouse Cowboy Band. They also had paying gigs at bars at trip the light fantastic toe halls in nearby Oklahoma City. "We were a bunch of kids barely in puberty who didn't get to bed until nigh daylight after some of our shows," McEntire remembered. The ring parted ways one time Reba'southward blood brother graduated high school. In 1973, McEntire graduated from Kiowa High School.
In one case finishing loftier schoolhouse, McEntire enrolled in college at Southeastern Oklahoma State University. She majored in simple instruction with a minor in music. She completed student instruction and afterwards graduated with a Available's degree. She also connected to aid out on her family's ranch during her higher years. In 1974, McEntire's male parent encouraged her to have a task opportunity singing "The Star-Spangled Banner" at the National Finals Rodeo in Oklahoma City. She contacted family friend and rodeo announcer Clem McSpadden, who helped her become hired for the gig. Following one of her performances, McEntire was heard by country artist Red Steagall who was impressed by her singing. Reba, her siblings and her mother later on joined him at a hotel party the aforementioned week. At the hotel, Reba performed an a cappella version of Dolly Parton's "Joshua". Jacqueline McEntire asked Steagall if he was able to help get all her children a recording contract. Subsequently going back to Nashville, Steagall contacted her in early 1975 and said, "I can't take all 3. Just I could take Reba. She's got something a fiddling unlike."
In March 1975 and accompanied by her mother, McEntire embarked on a trip to Nashville, Tennessee to record a sit-in record that Steagall hoped to pass forth to record labels. At the start of the trip, she was unsure about pursuing a professional land music career. McEntire recalled in her autobiography continually making excuses for her mother to stop the car instead of traveling to Nashville. After noticing her daughter's fear, Jacqueline McEntire told her, "At present Reba, allow me tell yous something. If you don't want to go to Nashville, we don't have to do this. Merely I'm living all my dreams through y'all." The conversation changed her heed and they continued on to Nashville.
After recording a demo, McEntire's record was heard by Glenn Keener of PolyGram/Mercury Records, who was interested in signing her to a Nashville contract. Keener brought McEntire'due south record and another female's record to PolyGram'due south Chicago headquarters. The label informed Kenner that he could simply sign i female performer. "He looked at the two tapes in his paw and handed 'em mine," McEntire told Entertainment Weekly.
Music career
1976–1983: Career launch at Mercury
In Nov 1975, McEntire signed a country music recording contract with PolyGram/Mercury Records. She made her first recordings for the label in January 1976. She was produced by Glenn Keener and was backed past a Countrypolitan arrangement that included a string section. McEntire's debut single was released in 1976 titled "I Don't Desire to Be a 1 Dark Stand". The rails failed to become a major hit, only peaking at number 88 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart that May. It was followed by the low-charting Billboard country singles "(There'south Cipher Like the Love) Between a Woman and Man" and "Glad I Waited Just for You". Mercury issued her self-titled debut album in 1977. In his album review, Greg Adams of AllMusic compared it to the country crossover style of Barbara Mandrell and Tammy Wynette. McEntire also began touring and performing more often. Without a band of her own, she oft relied on house bands to accompany her. In some instances, the backing bands did not know country music and McEntire would have to fill her time onstage with jokes.
McEntire's career gained more than momentum past 1978. That year she collaborated on two singles with state creative person Jacky Ward. The duo's double-sided release of "I'd Really Love to See You lot This night"/"Three Sheets in the Air current" became her first tiptop 20 hitting on the country nautical chart. When Glenn Keener left the PolyGram/Mercury roster, McEntire inherited producer Jerry Kennedy. Kennedy produced her second studio anthology titled Out of a Dream (1979). The anthology's cover of Patsy Cline's "Sweet Dreams" became her kickoff tiptop twenty hit as a solo artist. Four additional top 40 state singles were spawned from the album as well. Past 1980, McEntire had formed her own ring which included sister Susie and brother Pake McEntire. She too hired a new manager. McEntire and her band toured to dates in a iii-car caravan, which included a equus caballus trailer for transporting instruments. She later upgraded to a autobus nicknamed "Silver Eagle", which routinely broke downward. Also in 1980, "(You Lift Me) Upwards to Heaven" became her first top 10 striking on the country songs chart. It was included on her tertiary studio anthology, Feel the Fire, which was released in Oct.
Past this point, McEntire's label pushed her record music in a soft country pop way that she often disagreed with. Time to come material (which included her next album) was recorded in this format. Her fourth anthology, Heart to Heart was issued in 1981 and became her first disc to nautical chart the Billboard Country Albums list. It received only a 2.5 star review from AllMusic's William Ruhlmann, who described McEntire every bit existence "a promising, but not yet accomplished country creative person." Yet its lead unmarried, "Today All Over Again", became her highest charting country single yet, reaching number five. In 1983, McEntire'southward bus had broken down when she was informed that her latest single "Can't Even Get the Blues" reached the number one spot on the Billboard country chart. It was followed by her second number 1 song "Yous're the Get-go Fourth dimension I Thought Nearly Leaving". The rails also became her 2d to reach the top ten of Canada'due south RPM state songs chart. Both singles appeared on her 1983 anthology Unlimited. The following year, the single "Why Do We Want (What We Know Nosotros Can't Have)" reached the height ten. With increased success in the country music industry, she was able to arrange an early release from PolyGram/Mercury in 1983. "Allow met put it this way, I've sorta taken my career into control myself," she explained of the decision. She has three Grammy awards in 2021.
1984–1990: Breakthrough
McEntire signed with MCA Records in 1984 and released her seventh studio album Just a Niggling Love. Harold Shedd was originally intended to produce the disc, however, McEntire rejected his desire for a land pop arrangement. Instead, Norro Wilson produced the project. Despite spawning a height ten hitting, McEntire was still dissatisfied with the record's production and the lack of command over material. Instead, she turned to MCA president Jimmy Bowen who suggested that she find her ain songs to record. Accompanied past Don "Clay" Lanier, McEntire spent several days listening to various songs from publishing companies. Somewhen she found a vocal written by Harlan Howard titled "Somebody Should Leave" and a song by Jon Moffat titled "How Blue". Released equally singles, they reached the number one spot on the state songs chart and later appeared on 1984's My Kind of Country. The drove also included several covers of classic country songs by Ray Toll, Charley Pride and Connie Smith. AllMusic's William Ruhlmann gave the disc iv.v stars. Billboard magazine described McEntire on the album as existence "the finest woman land vocalist since Kitty Wells." The album became her breakthrough recording, leading McEntire to winning 1984's Female Vocaliser of the Year honor from the Country Music Association. Along with music by George Strait and Randy Travis, the album besides brought along a stylistic change in country towards traditional arrangements and sounds.
Her side by side MCA album was 1985's Have I Got a Deal for You. The projection followed the aforementioned traditional country format of its predecessor. It was produced by Jimmy Bowen, along with co-production credits from McEntire herself. The album 'southward title track reached the Billboard country top ten along with "But in My Mind", a vocal equanimous by McEntire herself. In Feb 1986, her 9th studio album was released named Whoever's in New England. On the record, McEntire and co-producer Jimmy Bowen mixed a traditional country style with a modern, contemporary audio. Writer Kurt Wolff described the title track'due south product, equally being "bigger and sentimentalism more obvious, fifty-fifty manipulative". Issued as the lead unmarried, the title track peaked at number one on the Bilboard country chart and won McEntire the Grammy Award for Best Female Land Vocal Performance. The anthology itself became her kickoff to pinnacle the Billboard State Albums survey. and later certified platinum past the Recording Industry Clan of America for sales of one 1000000 copies.
By this bespeak McEntire had reached the height of her commercial stardom. Following this, McEntire made changes to her stage show. She began implementing choreography and experimented with stage lighting. As well in 1986, McEntire's 12th studio album appeared titled What Am I Gonna Do Nearly You. AllMusic institute that information technology lacked the features that had made Whoever'southward in New England unique. The title track was the atomic number 82 single from the release. It became her adjacent number ane vocal on the Billboard country chart and her first number one on the RPM Canadian country chart. Its 2d single "One Promise Too Belatedly" also topped the land chart. Her thirteenth studio project, The Last One to Know, was released in 1987 and reached number three on the Billboard country albums nautical chart. Reviewer Tom Roland noted that McEntire chose material that reflected her contempo divorce from first hubby Charlie Battles. Both the title track and "Dear Will Observe Its Way to You" topped the Billboard land songs chart. In late 1987, McEntire released her first Christmas collection called Merry Christmas to You. Also in 1987, she played Carnegie Hall in New York City for the kickoff time.
In the tardily 1980s, McEntire took more control of her career. She fired her manager and formed her own entertainment visitor that helped further promote her textile. Other new changes included her 1988 popular-inspired release Reba. Her fifteenth studio disc included covers of the sometime pop hits "Respect" and "A Sunday Kind of Honey". It produced the number one Billboard country singles "New Fool at an Old Game" and "I Know How He Feels". It was followed by 1989's Sweetness Xvi, which was noted to exist a more than of a "render[due south] to the neo-traditionalist fold", according to reviewer William Ruhlmann. The anthology featured the country hits "'Til Love Comes Again", "Piffling Girl", "Walk On" and a comprehend of "Cathy's Clown". Her first live project titled Reba Live was besides released in 1989.
Rumor Has It (1990) was another popular-oriented album release featuring a mix of ballads and uptempo numbers. It was the first disc in McEntire'due south career to reach the top xl of the Billboard 200 albums nautical chart. The disc would became McEntire's highest-selling albums, certifying three-times platinum from the RIAA. Iv hit country singles came from the release, including "You Prevarication" and her cover of "Fancy". The latter single eventually become i of McEntire'southward signature songs.
1991: Plane crash and For My Broken Heart
"Improper planning/decision by the pilot, the pilot's failure to maintain proper distance and clearance over mountainous terrain, and the copilot's failure to adequately monitor the progress of the flight. Factors related to the accident were: insufficient terrain information provided by the flight service specialist during the preflight briefing later the pilot inquired virtually a low altitude difference, darkness, mountainous terrain, both pilot'south lack of familiarity with the geographical area, and the copilot's lack of familiarity with the aircraft."
—The findings from the National Transportation Safety Lath following their 1991 investigation of the plane crash.
In the late 1980s, McEntire's touring schedule became increasingly busy. To avert long autobus trips, she and her band began traveling by private planes to concerts. McEntire and her touring ring started the 1991 leg of their bout with dates in Alaska, Saginaw, Michigan, Fort Wayne, Indiana and a private gig for IBM in San Diego, California. Two planes were scheduled to leave San Diego which would deport McEnrire'south band. McEntire, her husband and her stylist would have a different aircraft the side by side solar day. In the eye of the night on March 16, 1991, McEntire was awoken to a phone call from Roger Woolsey, who flew the second plane. McEntire's married man took the phone call and discovered that one of the planes had crashed. Following the successful takeoff of both planes, one airplane'due south wing striking the side of Otay Mountain in San Diego, kiling everyone on board.
In total, eight members of her band were killed: Chris Austin, Kirk Cappello, Joey Cigainero, Paula Kaye Evans, Jim Hammon, Terry Jackson, Anthony Saputo, and Michael Thomas. In addition pilot Donald Holmes and co-pilot Chris Hollinger were also killed. The first airplane was a Hawker Siddeley DH-125-1A/522 charter jet that took off at 1:forty AM from the Brown Field Municipal Airport, located near the border of Mexico. After reaching an altitude of 3,400 feet (one,040 m) above sea level, the aircraft crashed on the side of Otay Mountain, located 10 miles (16 km) due east of the aerodrome. The National Transportation Condom Board (NTSB) determined the probable accident source was related to "improper pilot planning".
Meanwhile, the 2d plane carrying the balance of her band made it successfully to an airport in Nashville. McEntire, her husband and hair stylist returned on their own plane following the accident. "By the time that long, terrible weekend was over, we were emotionally and physically exhausted," McEntire stated in her autobiography. The news was reported nearly immediately to McEntire and her hubby, who were sleeping at a nearby hotel. A spokeswoman for McEntire made a statement to The Los Angeles Times on behalf of her: "She was very close to all of them. Some of them had been with her for years. Reba is totally devastated by this. It's like losing part of your family. Correct at present she just wants to get back to Nashville." Two days after the crash, McEntire conducted an interview with People magazine and scheduled a memorial service for the families of the victims. Ix days post-obit the accident, McEntire performed at the 63rd Academy Awards ceremony, singing the All-time Original Song nominee "I'm Checkin' Out" from the film Postcards from the Edge.
McEntire dedicated her sixteenth album, For My Broken Center, to the deceased members of her road band. Released in October 1991, it contained songs of sorrow and lost love about "all measure of suffering", according to Alanna Nash of Entertainment Weekly. Nash reported that McEntire "notwithstanding hits her footstep with the more than traditional songs of emotional turmoil, above all combining a spectacular vocal performance with a terrific vocal on 'Ownership Her Roses', a wife'due south head-spinning discovery of her husband's other woman." The disc peaked at number three on the Billboard Top State Albums nautical chart. It also became her highest-charting release on the Billboard 200 even so, peaking at number thirteen. It later sold over iv million copies in the United states of america, becoming her best-selling album to date. Its championship track and "Is There Life Out At that place" both became number 1 Billboard country singles. In addition, "The Greatest Human being I Never Knew" and McEntire's cover of "The Dark the Lights Went Out in Georgia" both became major country hits.
1992–1995: Connected success
In December 1992, McEntire's nineteenth studio anthology, It's Your Telephone call, was released. It became her commencement anthology to peak within the Billboard 200 Superlative x, reaching No. 8. McEntire commented that the record was a "2nd chapter" to For My Broken Heart, while music reviewers such every bit Alanna Nash of Amusement Weekly disagreed, writing "In truth, it isn't well-nigh as pessimistic as its predecessor—and unfortunately it isn't anywhere every bit involving." Nash called the album's championship rails—which peaked at No. v on the Billboard Hot State Singles & Tracks chart—"ane of those moment-of-truth sagas at which McEntire excels. In the song, a wife answers the phone to find her husband'southward girlfriend on the other end and seizes the opportunity not merely to inform her mate that she knows of his affair but to give him the ultimatum of choosing between the 2. She's non the but 1 who's waitin' on the line, she sings, handing her husband the phone. It'southward your call."
Christopher John Farley of Fourth dimension wrote that the album ranged from existence "relaxing" to "cathartic", and "these vocals from 1 of the best country singers linger in the heed". The anthology's preceding singles—"The Centre Won't Prevarication" (a duet with then-labelmate Vince Gill) and "Take It Back"—were Top 10 hits on the Billboard country chart, reaching No. 1 and No. v respectively. Similar its preceding album, It's Your Phone call sold over a million copies, eventually certifying by the RIAA in sales of double-platinum.
In October 1993, McEntire'due south third compilation album, Greatest Hits Volume 2 was released, reaching No. i and No. v on the Billboard Top State Albums and Billboard 200 charts respectively, selling 183,000 copies during Christmas week 1993. Out of the x tracks were ii new singles: the showtime, "Does He Dear Y'all", was a duet with Linda Davis. The song later reached No. i on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart and win both women a Grammy for Best State Collaboration with Vocals. Its second single, "They Asked Near Yous", was also a Summit 10 striking. The boosted eight songs were some of McEntire's biggest hit singles during a grade of five years including "The Last One to Know", "I Know How He Feels", "Cathy'south Clown", and "The Heart Won't Lie". After originally selling two million copies upon its initial release (2× Platinum), Greatest Hits Book Two subsequently certified at v× Platinum by the RIAA in 1998. The album has gone to sell over ten million copies worldwide, which makes it McEntire'south all-time selling anthology to date.
Her eighteenth studio release was 1994's Read My Mind. The anthology spawned v major hit singles onto the Billboard Country chart, including the No. ane single "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter". The further releases ("Till You Love Me", "Why Haven't I Heard from You lot", and "And Still") became Tiptop 10 singles on the same nautical chart, with "Till You lot Love Me" also reaching No. 78 on the Billboard Hot 100, a chart that she had not previously entered. The album itself reached No. 2 on both the Billboard 200 and Height Land Albums charts. Charlotte Dillon of Allmusic gave the album 4 out of 5 stars, calling information technology "some other wonderful offering of songs performed by the gifted country singer Reba McEntire". Dillon likewise felt that the album's material had "a niggling soul, a little swing, and some popular, too".
Entertainment Weekly 's Alanna Nash also gave the album positive feedback, viewing the album to have "enough boiling rhythms and brooding melodies to reflect the acrimony and disillusionment of the center form in the '90s", calling the rail "She Thinks His Name Was John" to be the best example of that idea. The vocal was eventually spawned as a unmarried and was considered controversial for its storyline, which described a adult female who contracts AIDS from a one-night stand. Due to its subject thing, the song garnered less of a response from radio and peaked at No. 15. Read My Mind became another major seller for McEntire and her characterization, selling three meg copies past 1995 and certifying at 3× Platinum from the RIAA.
After many years of releasing studio albums of newly recorded material, McEntire's nineteenth studio album, Starting Over (1995) was drove of her favorite songs originally recorded by others from the 1950s through the early on 1980s. The anthology was made to commemorate twenty years in the music industry, but many music critics gave it a less positive response than her previous release. Allmusic 'south Stephen Thomas Erlewine commented that although the anthology was considered a "rebirth" for McEntire, he thought that some tracks were recorded for merely "cypher more than entertainment". The album paid tribute to many of McEntire's favorite artists and included cover versions of "Talking In Your Sleep" originally sung by Crystal Gayle, "Delight Come to Boston", "I Won't Mention It Again" sung by Ray Price, "Starting Over Again", cowritten past Donna Summer and originally a hitting for Dolly Parton, "On My Own", and "By the Time I Get to Phoenix". "On My Ain" featured guest vocals from Davis, too as Martina McBride and Trisha Yearwood.
Despite negative reviews, Starting Over was certified Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America within the first ii months of its release, but simply one unmarried—a comprehend of Lee Greenwood'south "Ring on Her Finger, Time on Her Easily"—was a Superlative x striking single.
1996–2002: Musical shifts and new opportunities
McEntire made a major comeback into the music industry the following year with her twentieth studio album, What If It'due south You lot. The anthology's lead unmarried, "The Fear of Existence Alone" reached No. 2 on the state charts, and its farther ii singles ("How Was I to Know" and "I'd Rather Ride Around with You") reached No. 1 and No. two respectively. The release garnered college critical acclaim than Starting Over, with Thom Owens of Allmusic calling the album "nevertheless an excellent reminder of her deep talents as a vocalist". MCA Nashville chairman Bruce Hinton told Billboard how pleased he was with McEntire's release, calling the album's 10 tracks "powerful" and concluding by stating "There are so many writers and so many keen songs in Nashville, and Reba has collected her disproportionate share[...]She'due south country music's female artist of the 90s." What If Information technology's You peaked at No. 1 Top Country Albums and No. 15 on the Billboard 200, while too becoming her get-go anthology in three years to certify in multi-platinum sales, selling 2 million copies by 1999. At the end of 1997, McEntire too charted at No. 23 the charity single "What If". The proceeds of sales for this single were donated to the Salvation Army.
In 1997, McEntire headlined a bout with Brooks & Dunn that led to the recording of "If You Come across Him/If You Run across Her" with the duo the following year. This song was included on McEntire's If You lot See Him anthology and Brooks & Dunn'southward If You lot See Her anthology, both of which were released on June ii. Thom Owens of AllMusic reported in its review that both album titles were named nearly the same as "a way to draw attention for both parties, since they were no longer new guns—they were veterans in danger of losing basis to younger musicians". The duet reached No. i on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart in June 1998 and spawned an additional 3 Top 10 hits during that year: "Forever Love", "Wrong Night", and "1 Honest Heart". In addition, If You Run into Him peaked within the Top x on both the Billboard 200 and Top Land Albums nautical chart, reaching No. 8 and No. two, respectively.
In 1999, McEntire released two albums. In September she issued her second Christmas anthology, The Secret of Giving: A Christmas Drove, which eventually sold 500,000 copies in the United States. In November, her xx-second studio album, So Expert Together was released, spawning three singles. The beginning release, "What Do You Say" and the second release, "I'll Exist" both reached the Top v on the Hot Land Singles & Tracks chart. So Good Together also brought her into the Top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100 for the kickoff time, peaking at No. 31. The anthology eventually certified Platinum past the cease of the decade. What Do You lot Say became her start crossover hit as well. Unlike whatever of her previous albums, So Good Together was produced by three people, including McEntire. Entertainment Weekly commented that nigh of the album'south fabric was "an odd set—mostly ballads, including an English/Portuguese duet with Jose due east Durval on Boz Scaggs' 'Nosotros're All Lone'".
In 2001, McEntire returned with her 3rd greatest-hits album: Greatest Hits Vol. 3: I'm a Survivor. The album helped McEntire receive her 3rd gold certification from the Recording Industry Association of America, which fabricated her the most certified female country artist in music history. It spawned the number-three hitting "I'g a Survivor", which was her concluding major hit for ii years, as McEntire went on a temporary hiatus to focus on her boob tube sitcom, Reba. The album's only other single, a cover of Kenny Rogers' "Sweet Music Human being", went to No. 36.
2003–2007: Nashville improvement
McEntire's seventy-6th chart single, "I'yard Gonna Take That Mountain", released in mid-2003, concluded her ii-year pause from recording. In Nov 2003, her 20-third studio album, Room to Exhale, marked her commencement release of new material in four years. Dan MacIntosh of Country Standard Time gave Room to Breathe a less-received review, reporting that "it ultimately falls brusk of leaving the listener breathless". He highlighted "I'm Gonna Take That Mountain" for sounding like a Bluegrass-inspired vocal such as music by Ricky Skaggs or Patty Loveless. The album itself reached a peak of No. 4 on the Billboard Top State Albums chart and No. 25 on the Billboard 200, staying at the position for only one week. The second single, "Somebody", too recorded by Marking Wills on his "Loving Every Minute" release, became her twenty-second number-one single on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart and first since "If You Encounter Him/If Y'all Run across Her" six years previous. This became her thirty-third number-1 single overall. Information technology took longer than expected to become a striking, according to McEntire, who said, "Yeah, that had usa concerned. The album came out in November and it took 30 weeks for "Somebody" to work its way up the charts. Unremarkably, it's fifteen weeks. But this 1 had a resurgence of life, specially after the video came out. MCA is really kicking butt with it." Its third single, "He Gets That from Me" reached No. seven, followed past the Amy Dalley co-written track "My Sis", which reached No. 16.
In 2005, McEntire released the compilation Reba i'southward. The anthology comprised all 30-three number-i hits in her career on all major merchandise charts. Ii new songs were included on the album: "You're Gonna Be" and "Love Needs a Holiday". Both were released as singles, peaking at No. 33 and No. sixty, respectively, with the latter becoming her first single in twenty-seven years to miss the country top forty entirely. Country Standard Time called the tracks "Whoever's in New England" and "Y'all Lie" the album highlights. The album reached a peak of No. 3 on the Top Country Albums chart and No. 12 on the Billboard 200 upon its release, certifying ii× Platinum past the RIAA within two years. On Baronial 30, 2007, McEntire received 2 CMA nominations: Female person Singer of the Twelvemonth and Vocal Event of the Year. With those two nominations plus another in 2008 and two more in 2009, McEntire became the female creative person with the nearly nominations (forty-eight) in the forty-iii-twelvemonth history of the CMA Awards, surpassing Dolly Parton, who has forty-iii.
In mid-2007, McEntire announced the release of her twenty-fifth studio album, Reba: Duets, on September 18. McEntire stated that out of all the albums she had previously recorded, her newest release was particularly special: "This is an anthology that will go down in history as probably my favorite anthology to record because I got to work and sing and be with my friends. Out of everything in this whole career that I tin can say that I'grand the almost proud of, are my friends. And here's the proof." In promotion for the album, McEntire made appearances at radio shows and on The Oprah Winfrey Bear witness September 19. The album'due south atomic number 82 unmarried, "Considering of You"—a duet with Kelly Clarkson, who originally recorded the vocal—became her fifty-fifth Top x single on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, tying her with Dolly Parton, who also had the aforementioned amount of Top 10 records. The album was given high critical praise from magazines such every bit PopMatters, which called McEntire'southward vocals, "to sound sugariness without being syrupy, while being extremely powerful. McEntire'south vocal strength yields a different kind of authority than the bluesy, drawling growl of Janis Joplin, the weathered rasp of Marianne Faithfull, or fifty-fifty the soul-shrieking powerhouse of Tina Turner. Instead, Reba'due south vocalisation combines the aspects of all three singers but tempers it with a Southern sweet and an unmistakable femininity." The album contained x tracks of duets with country and pop artists, including Kenny Chesney, LeAnn Rimes, Trisha Yearwood, Carole King, and Justin Timberlake. Reba: Duets peaked at No. one on the Meridian Country Albums chart, while also becoming her first anthology in her xxx-yr career to tiptop and debut at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, with 300,536 copies (according to Nielsen Soundscan) sold within its showtime calendar week of release. On January 17, 2008, McEntire embarked on the 2 Worlds two Voices Tour with Clarkson, which began in Fairborn, Ohio and ended in November of the same year. A month after its release, the album was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Clan of America on October 19, 2007. The album'southward only other unmarried was "Every Other Weekend". Recorded on the album as a duet with Chesney, information technology was released to radio with its co-writer, Skip Ewing, as a duet partner.
2008–2015: Record label switch and middle age success
In November 2008, McEntire announced that she would be departing from her label of 25 years and signing with the Valory Music Group, an imprint of Big Motorcar Records (coincidentally distributed past MCA and Mercury's parent, Universal Music Grouping). Under MCA, she had sold a total of 67 million records worldwide and won ii Grammys. The switch to Valory reunited McEntire with the characterization'southward president, Scott Borchetta, who had worked as senior vice president of promotion at MCA during most of the 1990s. McEntire later commented on her label switch, stating "I am thrilled to be joining the Valory team. Scott and I worked together on some of the biggest singles of my career, and I am excited to renew our partnership." In Nov 2008, MCA released a 50 Greatest Hits box set compilation album, containing three CDs, from 1984's "How Blueish" to 2007'due south "Considering of You lot". On April 5, 2009, McEntire debuted her first single, "Strange", on Valory at the 2009 Academy of Country Music Awards. The vocal debuted at No. 39 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, giving McEntire the highest unmarried debut of her career, and went on to peak at number eleven. Her twenty-sixth studio album, Continue On Loving Y'all was released in August 2009, and became McEntire'south first solo studio album in half-dozen years. The album gained fairly positive reviews from most album critics. On August 26, Go along on Loving You became McEntire'due south 2nd anthology to top both the Billboard Country and 200 charts, selling most 96,000 copies within its kickoff calendar week. With the anthology, McEntire broke the record for the female country artist with the well-nigh Billboard number-one albums, which was previously held by Loretta Lynn. Later that summer, the label released the anthology's 2nd single, "Consider Me Gone", and it debuted at No. 51 on the Hot Country Single's Chart. The unmarried became McEntire's thirty-4th number-one on the Billboard chart in December.
McEntire's twenty-9th studio album, All the Women I Am, was released in November 2010, under Valory Music Grouping/Starstruck Records. The album's lead unmarried called "Plough On the Radio" was released in Baronial 2010, and the music video premiered before long afterward. Upon its release, All the Women I Am received mostly positive reviews from well-nigh music critics. On Dec twenty, 2010, McEntire had her 35th Billboard number-i single with "Turn On the Radio". The second single from All the Women I Am was a cover of Beyoncé's "If I Were a Boy", which McEntire took to No. 22. Later it came "When Dearest Gets a Hold of You" at No. forty and "Somebody's Chelsea" at No. 44. The latter was the only single that McEntire had co-written since "Just in My Listen" in 1985. McEntire later on announced that she would be visiting 30 one cities on her All the Women I Am Tour, belatedly that year with the Ring Perry, Steel Magnolia, and Edens Edge every bit opening acts on unlike stops of the tour.
On October 21, 2014, it was announced that McEntire would be the countdown signing for Large Machine'due south new imprint Nash Icon Music. She also disclosed that she was working on a new album, with xi new songs. Her first single for the new characterization, "Going Out Like That", was announced in Dec 2022 and was released in Jan 2015. Information technology served as the pb-off single to Love Somebody, McEntire's twenty-7th studio album, released on Apr fourteen, 2015. Love Somebody debuted at No. i on the Billboard Meridian Land Albums—her twelfth number-i album on the chart—and No. 3 on Billboard 200, selling 62,469 copies in the U.S. The album has sold 171,600 copies in the U.S. as of Oct 5, 2015. McEntire released her tertiary Christmas album My Kind of Christmas on September 2, 2016. The album was exclusively sold at Cracker Barrel and online. She also announced she would presently be selling her own line of clothing, abode decor, jewelry and other things under the "Rockin' R by Reba" line also at Cracker Barrel.
2017–present: New beginnings in her 60s
Afterward her split from ex-hubby Narvel Blackstock, McEntire took command of her career as her own manager. She recruited Justin McIntosh of Starstruck Amusement, Leslie Matthews serving as Brand Manager, and Carolyn Snell who has been with McEntire for nine years. They formed Reba's Business Inc. (RBI). She moved out of the edifice she and Blackstock had worked in, and moved her company to Dark-green Hills, Nashville.
On December 15, 2016, McEntire announced that she was releasing her get-go gospel album titled Sing It Now: Songs of Faith & Hope. It was released by Nash Icon/Rockin' R Records on February 3, 2017, and consists of two discs. Disc one contains traditional hymns while disc two contains original tracks. "Softly and Tenderly", featuring Kelly Clarkson and Trisha Yearwood, was the commencement rails off the album released. Some other track on the album, "In the Garden/Wonderful Peace", features the Isaacs. Jay DeMarcus of the Rascal Flatts produced the album. The get-go single off the album is "Back to God". In January 2018, McEntire won the Grammy Award for Best Roots Gospel Album, her first nomination since 2007, and her first Grammy Award win in more twenty years, since 1994. She also headlined the C2C: Country to Country festival in the Britain alongside Brad Paisley and Zac Brown Ring in March. Because of its express release in 2016, on October thirteen, 2017 My Kind of Christmas was re-released - this fourth dimension including songs with Vince Gill, Amy Grant, Darius Rucker and Lauren Daigle - on her website and through iTunes. In July 2018, it was announced that McEntire would be one of four honorees for the 41st annual Kennedy Eye Honors, along with Cher, Philip Drinking glass, and Wayne Shorter. The creators of the musical Hamilton will besides exist celebrated. The ceremony was held December 2, 2018, and broadcast on CBS Dec 26, 2018.
McEntire released her xx-ninth studio anthology Stronger Than the Truth on April 5, 2019. McEntire also returned to host the 54th University of Country Music Awards on April eight, 2019.
On June 25, 2019, The New York Times Magazine listed McEntire amid hundreds of artists whose material was destroyed in the 2008 Universal fire.
On Feb 20, 2020, during a surprise appearance at the Country Radio Seminar, McEntire announced she had signed a new record deal with MCA Nashville, returning to the characterization later leaving in November 2008. McEntire hosted the 54th Annual Country Music Clan Awards alongside Darius Rucker in Nov 2020. McEntire previously hosted in 2022 with Carrie Underwood and Dolly Parton, 1992 with Vince Gill, 1991 by herself (the second solo female person host) and 1990 with Randy Travis.
Acting career
1989–99: Entry into film and television receiver acting
In 1990, she obtained her starting time pic role playing Heather Gummer in the horror comedy Tremors, along with Kevin Bacon. The flick told the story of a small group of people living in Nevada who were fighting subterranean worm-like creatures. Afterward the film'south release, McEntire developed a stiff interest in interim and made information technology her 2d career. The film earned McEntire a nomination for Best Supporting Actress at the 1991 Saturn Awards. The following year, she starred along with Kenny Rogers and Burt Reynolds in the made-for-tv movies The Gambler Returns: The Luck of the Draw and The Man From Left Field. In 1994, McEntire worked with manager Rob Reiner in the film North, playing Ma Tex. The motion picture obtained negative reviews, receiving only two and a one-half stars from Allmovie.
In 1994, McEntire starred in Is There Life Out There? a television movie based on her song of the same proper noun. The following year, she appeared in Buffalo Girls, which was based upon the life of western cowgirl Calamity Jane (played past Anjelica Huston). Playing Jane'due south friend Annie Oakley, Buffalo Girls was nominated for an Emmy award. In 1996, McEntire was cast past director James Cameron as Molly Brown in his flick Titanic. However, when it became apparent production for the movie would extend well beyond its original length, McEntire had to turn down the part, as she had already scheduled prior concert engagements. The role was recast with Kathy Bates. In 1998, she starred as Lizzie Brooks in Forever Love, which was based upon McEntire's striking single of the same proper name.
2000–07: Broadway and television serial
In early on 2001, McEntire expanded into theater, starring in the Broadway revival of Annie Get Your Gun. Playing Annie Oakley (whom she had previously portrayed in Buffalo Girls), her performance was critically acclaimed by several newspapers, including The New York Times, which commented, "Without qualification the best performance past an extra in a musical comedy this season." McEntire personally called the musical "some of the hardest piece of work I've always done in my life".
In 2005, McEntire starred equally Nellie Forbush in the Carnegie Hall concert product of the Broadway musical South Pacific with Alec Baldwin as Luther Billis and Brian Stokes Mitchell equally Emile de Becque, directed past Walter Bobbie and with an adapted script past David Ives. The concert was circulate as part of the Swell Performances serial in 2006.
In October 2001, McEntire premiered her half-60 minutes television sitcom Reba on the WB network. The testify was based around divorced mother Reba Hart, who learns how to handle life situations after her husband divorces her in social club to marry his dental hygienist––with whom he had been cheating and gotten pregnant––and and so their teenage daughter becomes pregnant as well. Reba garnered critical acclamation and success, becoming the network'southward highest-rated idiot box testify for adults ranging from the ages of 18 to 49. The testify ran for 6 seasons and earned McEntire a nomination for a Golden Globe award. Information technology was canceled on February xviii, 2007; the series finale had 8.7 meg viewers.
2011–20: Brief television return and current projects
In September 2011, McEntire confirmed on her website that ABC had ordered a airplane pilot for her second goggle box series Malibu Country. McEntire played a divorced mother of 2 who moves to Malibu, California to restart her music career. The pilot was filmed in Apr 2012 and began production on its first season in August. It was announced that the pilot for Malibu Country would premiere November 2, 2012. The show was circulate Friday nights at 8:thirty/7:30c on ABC. On May 11, 2012, McEntire tweeted that the show had been picked up. She also was the host in the 2011 NASCAR Award Show in Las Vegas.
Despite reports that Malibu Country was the virtually-watched freshman comedy in its debut flavour (eight.seven 1000000), the show was canceled on May 10, 2013, after 18 episodes.
In January 2017, information technology was appear that McEntire would star and produce a Southern drama serial for ABC titled Red Blooded. It was reported in May that ABC ultimately turned down the show, then it moved to being shopped around to other networks. In January 2018, Reba was chosen to portray KFC'southward offset female Colonel Sanders. The commercials ran through the stop of Apr 2018.
In 2020, McEntire launched a podcast titled Living & Learning hosted by herself and her old Reba co-star Melissa Peterman.
She made a cameo appearance in the 2022 comedy film Barb and Star become to Vista Del Mar as a water spirit named Trish later on Annie Mumolo and Kristen Wiig, who wrote, produced, and starred in the film, wrote her an "impassioned alphabetic character" asking her to join the film. Director Josh Greenbaum said in an interview, "There's some casting that only clicks. Reba is not only 100% authentic, we knew she would be game."
Musical styles and legacy
McEntire's sound has been influenced by the country music of Bob Wills, Merle Haggard, Dolly Parton, Barbara Mandrell, and Patsy Cline. In higher, McEntire attended local dances at the Oklahoma–Texas border then she could dance to Wills's music, commenting that, "it didn't get whatsoever better than dancing to Bob Wills music". She also explained Merle Haggard's influence on her career, stating "I had every album he e'er put out", and would sing "every song he did", forth with her brother, Pake and sister, Susie. In add-on, her first major hit, "Sweet Dreams" was a remake of Patsy Cline's version of the song, according to McEntire herself.
McEntire'south music has been described to non only exist built upon traditional country music, but also aggrandize into the genres of country pop, mainstream popular, soul, and R&B. At times, her music has been criticized for moving away from traditional country music. Many music critics take called her music to be "melodramatic", "formulaic", and "flatulent", especially after her 1988 anthology Reba. Studio releases such as Sweetness Sixteen, Rumor Has Information technology, It's Your Phone call, and Starting Over have been described by these terms.
McEntire possesses a contralto song range and performs "song gymnastics" with her vocalisation, a musical technique in which a singer twirls a notation around, using their vibrato. McEntire has credited Dolly Parton for influencing this trait, stating that she always listened to Parton'southward records and find her style of song gymnastics "so pretty".
McEntire has often been regarded as one of country music's virtually influential female vocalists and nigh love entertainers. She is highly credited for remaining one of country's virtually popular female artists for nearly 4 decades, maintaining her success by continually incorporating contemporary musical sounds without irresolute her traditional vocal style. For numerous artists, she has been credited as an inspiration to their careers in music. The Cyberspace Music Countdown second-handedly reported, "That influence has manifested itself in many ways. Equally a role model, she'south shown others how to handle fame with grace and good sense of humour while never backing down from her values or goals. Only equally importantly, she's shown others to refuse to take limitations on what she can do or how much she tin attain." McEntire also explained to the online website, "Whatsoever I'm doing, I feel like I'thousand representing state music". "It's always been my main career, and it'southward where my loyalties lie. I feel like I'grand waving the flag of country music wherever I get, and I couldn't be prouder to do information technology."
Personal life
McEntire is a Christian, and she has stated that her religion in God has helped her immensely throughout her life.
Two of her siblings accept also had careers in the music industry. Her brother Pake dabbled in the land music manufacture in the belatedly 1980s merely returned to Oklahoma after a brief stint. He owns and operates a i,000-acre ranch nearly Coalgate, Oklahoma, and continues to rodeo. Her sister Susie McEntire-Eaton (Martha Susan "Susie" McEntire-Eaton, formerly Luchsinger) is a successful Christian music singer who travels the country with her husband, speaking and performing. She also has an older sis, Alice Foran, a retired social worker who resides in Lane, Oklahoma. Her niece Calamity McEntire is an banana basketball game autobus at the University of Dayton.
Relationships and children
In 1976, McEntire married steer wrestling champion and rancher Charlie Battles who was 10 years her senior and had two sons from his previous matrimony. The couple shared a ranch in Oklahoma. In 1987, McEntire divorced Battles and moved to Nashville, Tennessee, to farther pursue her career.
In 1989, McEntire married her manager and former steel guitar thespian Narvel Blackstock. The couple wed at Lake Tahoe on a boat in a individual ceremony. Together, the pair took over all aspects of McEntire'southward career, forming Starstruck Entertainment, which was originally designed to aid manage her career. From her marriage to Blackstock, McEntire gained three stepchildren, Chassidy, Shawna, and Brandon. She gave birth to a son, Shelby Steven McEntire Blackstock, in Feb 1990. On August iii, 2015, it was announced in a articulation statement on McEntire's website that she and Blackstock had been separated for a few months after twenty-six years of marriage. McEntire announced in December 2022 that their divorce had been finalized on Oct 28, 2015. Despite the divorce, McEntire remains very close to her three stepchildren and the Blackstock family; she considers her stepchildren'due south children to exist her grandchildren.
McEntire's stepson Brandon Blackstock married singer Kelly Clarkson, with whom he has a daughter and a son. Speaking about their impending marriage in 2013, McEntire stated she was "Thrilled to decease, to have my buddy as my girl-in-police. I hateful, who could ask for more than?"
In 2017, McEntire began a relationship with photographer Anthony "Skeeter" Lasuzzo. The couple met through McEntire's association with Kix Brooks. In describing her feelings about Lasuzzo, she stated, "We're totally in love — absolutely," she says. "I wouldn't put up with somebody for two years if I wasn't in love with 'em!" McEntire and Lasuzzo separated in the fall of 2019.
In 2020, during the COVID-nineteen pandemic, McEntire began dating film and TV role player Rex Linn.
Philanthropy
In 1992, she opened Reba's Ranch House in Denison, TX. Similar to a Ronald McDonald Firm, the business firm incorporates holistic care past providing a calm setting for residue, warm meals for nourishment and sensitive staff for spiritual connections to guests who accept loved ones being treated at the nearby Texoma Medical Eye.
Over the form of her career, she has been and continues to be an active supporter of various charitable organizations including Habitat for Humanity, The Conservancy Regular army, the American Red Cross, Feeding America and Glory Fight Night. She has been honored with the Minnie Pearl Award, the ACM Abode Depot Humanitarian Award and the Andrea Bocelli Foundation Humanitarian Award for her efforts. In 2018, she was honored with the Horatio Alger Award for Pedagogy, Charity Piece of work. Named later on the "rags to riches" author, the honour recognizes perseverance and giving back.
Accolades
McEntire has the second-nigh wins for the University of Country Music'due south Top Female Vocalist Awards with seven. McEntire holds the record American Music Awards for Favorite Country Female Artist (twelve). She also holds the stardom of existence the first to win the Country Music Association's Female Vocalizer of the Yr Honor iv times consecutively. Martina McBride won Female Vocalist four times, although non consecutively. In 2013, Miranda Lambert tied McEntire to win Female Vocalizer 4 years in a row and in 2022 Carrie Underwood joined this elite club by winning her fourth Female person Vocalizer accolade. McEntire is also a rare musical artist to reach solo number-ones across 4 decades (1980s, 1990s, 2000s, 2010s). She holds the record for most CMA Award nominations for a female artist, with l. McEntire also holds the record with the most ACM Awards nominations for a female artist with 47, respectively. In December 2018, McEntire received the Kennedy Center Honor.
When Reba McEntire made her Grand Ole Opry debut on September 17, 1977, she almost did non make it in the door after a guard at the Opry gate missed her proper noun on the night's list of performers. Her parents and older sister, Alice, drove i,400 miles round trip from their Oklahoma home to see what turned out to be Reba's three-infinitesimal performance that nighttime. Her deed was cut from two songs to merely ane—"Invitation to the Dejection"—because of a surprise appearance past Dolly Parton. McEntire was inducted into the Grand Ole Opry on January 17, 1986. "The K Ole Opry is a home," she says. "Information technology'due south a family unit. It's similar a family reunion, when yous come back and get to encounter everybody."
In 2011, the Country Music Association announced that McEntire would be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. McEntire was unable to nourish the declaration after her father had slipped into a blackout following a stroke. McEntire attended the official induction ceremony alongside the other 2011 inductees Jean Shepard and Bobby Braddock. She was inducted by Dolly Parton.
Discography
Studio albums
- Reba McEntire (1977)
- Out of a Dream (1979)
- Feel the Fire (1980)
- Centre to Heart (1981)
- Unlimited (1982)
- Behind the Scene (1983)
- Merely a Piffling Honey (1984)
- My Kind of Country (1984)
- Have I Got a Deal for You lot (1985)
- Whoever's in New England (1986)
- Reba Nell McEntire (1986)
- What Am I Gonna Practice About You (1986)
- The Terminal 1 to Know (1987)
- Merry Christmas to You lot (1987)
- Reba (1988)
- Sweetness Xvi (1989)
- Rumor Has It (1990)
- For My Broken Heart (1991)
- It'southward Your Telephone call (1992)
- Read My Mind (1994)
- Starting Over (1995)
- What If It's You (1996)
- If You See Him (1998)
- So Good Together (1999)
- The Secret of Giving: A Christmas Drove (1999)
- Room to Breathe (2003)
- Reba: Duets (2007)
- Continue On Loving You (2009)
- All the Women I Am (2010)
- Love Somebody (2015)
- My Kind of Christmas (2016)
- Sing It Now: Songs of Faith & Hope (2017)
- Stronger Than the Truth (2019)
- Revived Remixed Revisited (2021)
Tours
- Headlining tours
- The Reba McEntire Show (1985)
- The Last I to Know Tour (1987)
- North American Tour '88 (1988)
- World Tour '89 (1989)
- '90 Tour (1990)
- Rumor Has Information technology Bout (1991)
- Reba in Concert (1992)
- It'due south Your Phone call Tour (1993)
- Read My Listen Tour (1994)
- Starting Over Tour (1995)
- 20th Anniversary Tour (1996-97)
- Vocalizer'due south Diary (1999-2000)
- Room to Breathe Tour (2004)
- All the Women I Am Tour (2011-12)
- Canadian Tour (2013)
- Reba: Alive in Concert (2022)
- Co-headlining tours
- Brooks & Dunn and Reba: The Bout (with Brooks & Dunn) (1997-98)
- Girls Night Out (with Martina McBride) (2001))
- 2 Hats and a Redhead (with Brad Paisley and Terri Clark (2005)
- 2 Worlds ii Voices Tour (with Kelly Clarkson) (2008)
- Reba and George Strait on Tour (with George Strait) (2010-11)
- Residency shows
- Cardinal to the Heart (2006-07)
- Together in Vegas (with Brooks & Dunn) (2015-present)
- Opening act
- Today Bout (for the Statler Brothers) (1983)
Filmography
Year | Championship | Part | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1990 | Tremors | Heather Gummer | |
1994 | Maverick | Spectator | Uncredited |
1994 | North | Ma Tex | |
1994 | The Little Rascals | A.J. Ferguson | |
2001 | I Nighttime at McCool's | Dr. Green | |
2006 | The Fox and the Hound 2 | Dixie | Vocalization role |
2006 | Charlotte's Web | Betsy | Voice role |
2015 | Romances of the Republics | Stella Wonders | |
2016 | The Land Earlier Time Xiv: Journey of the Brave | Etta | Voice role |
2019 | Spies in Disguise | Joyless | Voice function |
2021 | Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar | Trish |
Year | Championship | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1985 – 2012 2018 – 2019 | Academy of Country Music Awards | Herself (co-host) | with Vince Gill |
1990 – 1992 2019 – 2020 | State Music Clan Awards | Herself (co-host) | with Randy Travis: 1990 with Vince Gill: 1992 with Carrie Underwood & Dolly Parton: 2019 with Darius Rucker: 2020 |
1991 | The Gambler Returns: The Luck of the Depict | Burgundy Jones | Movie |
1992 | WrestleMania Viii | Herself (performer) | Sang the national anthem |
1993 | The Homo from Left Field | Nancy Lee Prinzi | Movie |
1994 | Frasier | Rachel (voice) | Episode: "Fortysomething" |
1994 | Is There Life Out At that place? | Lily Marshall | Motion picture |
1995 | Buffalo Girls | Annie Oakley | Miniseries |
1998 | Forever Love | Lizzie Brooks | Movie |
1998 | Hercules | Artemis (vocalisation) | 2 episodes |
1999 | Undercover of Giving | Rose Cameron | Moving picture |
2001–07 | Reba | Reba Hart | 126 episodes |
2010 | Better with Yous | Lorraine Ashley | Episode: "Improve With Flirting" |
2011 | Working Course | Renee | Episode: "Carbohydrate Mama" |
2012–13 | Malibu Country | Reba McKenzie | eighteen episodes |
2012 | Blake Shelton's Not So Family Christmas | Herself (performer) | Special |
2013 | Kelly Clarkson's Cautionary Christmas Music Tale | Herself (performer) | Special |
2015–sixteen | Baby Daddy | Charlotte | 2 episodes |
2015 | Best Time Always with Neil Patrick Harris | Herself (guest announcer) | Episode: "Reba" |
2015 | Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade | Herself (performer) | Special |
2015 | The Voice | Herself (counselor) | Multiple episodes |
2016 | Terminal Human Continuing | Billie Cassidy | Episode: "Outdoor Woman" |
2016 | America'due south Got Talent | Herself (guest judge) | Episode: "Judge Cuts two" |
2018 | Red Blooded | Cerise Adair | Main role; unsold pilot |
2020, 2021 | Immature Sheldon | June | Episode: "A Boyfriend'due south Ex-Girlfriend and a Good Luck Caput Rub" |
2021 | Christmas in Melody | Georgia | Authentication Christmas Moving picture |
TBA | Fried Green Tomatoes | Idgie Threadgoode | Main office; airplane pilot |
Twelvemonth | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2001 | Annie Get Your Gun | Annie Oakley | |
2006 | S Pacific: In Concert from Carnegie Hall | Nellie Forbush |
Bibliography
- McEntire, Reba (1999). Condolement from a Land Quilt: Finding New Inspiration and Strength from Erstwhile-Fashioned Values . New York: Bantam Books. ISBN 978-0-553-10794-iv.
Reference sources
References
The basics
Early life
Music career
Interim career
Musical styles and legacy
Personal life
Accolades
Discography
Tours
Filmography
Bibliography
Gallery
Source: https://peoplepill.com/people/reba-mcentire
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