QUEEN of Disco Donna Summer died yesterday at 63 after a battle with lung cancer.
The star passed away in Florida.
Sources say she had attempted to keep the extent of her illness from fans and was recently trying to finish up her latest album.
Summers, real name LaDonna Gaines, is best known for her string of 70s hits, including I Feel Love, Last Dance and Bad Girls.
She
was a five-time Grammy Award winner and the first artist to have three
consecutive double albums reach number one on the US Billboard chart.
She also charted four number-one singles in the United States within a thirteen-month period.
Summers married actor Helmuth Sommer in 1973 before giving birth to the couple’s daughter Mimi later that year.
Although
the marriage crumbled in 1975, she kept an altered version of her ex’s
surname to use as her stage name. She married Brooklyn Dreams musician
Bruce Sudano in 1980 and the couple went on to have two daughters,
Brooklyn, born in 1981 and Amanda the following year.
In
1994, the family moved from Los Angeles to Nashville where Donna took
time out from showbusiness to focus on painting but had recently
returned to the recording studio.
As well as staggering career highs, Summer also endured personal lows.
She suffered serious depression in the wake of September 11.
‘I
was really freaked out by the horrific experiences of that day,’
Summer, who was at her Manhattan apartment during the attacks, once
said.
‘I couldn’t go out, I didn’t want to talk to anybody. I had to keep the blinds down and stay in my bedroom.’
Friends eventually intervened and the born-again Christian also found strength in her faith.
‘I went to church, and light came back into my soul,’ she said in 2008.
She
had a mezzo-soprano vocal range, and was a five-time Grammy Award
winner. Summer was the first artist to have three consecutive double
albums reach number one on the US Billboard chart, and she also charted
four number-one singles in the United States within a 13-month period.
Summer
was born on New Year's Eve 1948 in the Dorchester neighborhood of
Boston, Massachusetts. She was one of seven children raised by devout
Christian parents. Influenced by Mahalia Jackson, Summer began singing
in the church at a young age. In her teens, she formed several musical
groups including one with her sister and a cousin, imitating Motown girl
groups such as The Supremes and Martha and the Vandellas in Boston.
In
the late 1960s, Summer was influenced by Janis Joplin after listening
to her albums as a member of Big Brother and the Holding Company, and
dropped out of school convinced that music was her way out of Boston,
where she had always felt herself to be an outsider, even among her own
family who ridiculed her for her voice and her looks. She joined the
psychedelic rock group the Crow as lead singer, but the group was
short-lived as they split upon their arrival in New York. In 1968,
Summer auditioned for a role in the Broadway musical, Hair, but she lost
the part of Sheila to Melba Moore. When the musical moved to Europe,
Summer was offered the role. She took it and moved to Germany for
several years. While in Germany, where she learned to speak German
fluently, she participated in the musicals Ich Bin Ich (the German
version of The Me Nobody Knows), Godspell and Show Boat. After settling
in Munich, she began performing in several ensembles including the
Viennese Folk Opera and also sang as a member of the pop group
FamilyTree (created by the German music producer Guenter "Yogi" Lauke).
She joined the group in 1973 and toured with them throughout Europe.
She
also sang as a studio session singer and in theaters. In 1971, while
still using her birth name Donna Gaines, she released her first single, a
cover of "Sally Go 'Round the Roses", though it was not a hit. In 1972,
she married Austrian actor Helmuth Sommer and gave birth to their
daughter Mimi Sommer in 1973. Citing marital problems caused by her
affair with German artist (and future live-in boyfriend) Peter
Mühldorfer, she divorced Helmuth but kept his last name, anglicising it
to 'Summer'. She also worked on an album with keyboardist/producer Veit
Marvos in 1972, providing backing vocals on his Ariola records release
Nice To See You (where she was credited under the pseudonym Gayn
Pierre). Several single releases over the years have included a young
Donna performing with the group, even though she often denied ever
singing on any of the Marvos releases. The name 'Gayn Pierre' was also
used by Donna whilst performing in 'Godspell' with Helmuth Sommer during
1972.
It
was while singing background for the hit-making 1970s trio Three Dog
Night that Summer met producers Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte. She
eventually signed a deal with the European label Groovy Records and
issued her first album, Lady of the Night, in 1974. The album was not
released in America, but found some limited European success on the
strength of the song "The Hostage", which reached number one in Belgium
and number two in the Netherlands.
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