Vanessa Williams
has distinguished her career with remarkable success in music,
theater, television and film. Among her recent accomplishments,
she ended a triumphant nine-month run on Broadway in "Kiss
of the Spider Woman," during which time her third album,
The Sweetest Days, achieved platinum success and her single,
"Colors of the Wind," from the platinum soundtrack
to "Pocahontas," soared up the charts and earned
an Academy Award and a Golden Globe Award. Williams was born
in Millwood, New York, to two music teachers who encouraged
her pursuit of a career in entertainment. She majored in musical
theater at Syracuse University and in 1983, won the Miss America
title. The controversy that followed only left her stronger
and more empowered in her commitment to a career in entertainment,
which has since been honored with two NAACP Image Awards,
nine Grammy Award nominations and a number of New York Music
Awards. Her musical accomplishments began with her first release,
1988's The Right Stuff, which became a pop and R&B smash.
In 1991, Williams released the multi-million seller The Comfort
Zone, which featured the hit single "Save the Best for
Last," which topped the pop, adult contemporary and R&B
charts for five straight weeks and reached number-one success
around the world. Williams has recently contributed to several
unique musical projects, including Ain't Nothin' but a She
Thing, an all-female concept record on which she collaborates
with Me'shell N'dege O'cello; People, a release celebrating
the 50th anniversary of the United Nations; and Harolyn Blackwell
Sings Leonard Bernstein ... A Simple Song, on which she covers
songs from the composer's classic "West Side Story."
Williams reached another personal and professional pinnacle
this year with her performance of the national anthem on the
telecast of Super Bowl XXX and her stunning live performance
of "Colors of the Wind" on the Academy Awards telecast.
Williams has received widespread acclaim for her television
performances, which include the mini-series "The Jacksons:
An American Dream," the television movies "Stompin'
at the Savoy" and "The Boy Who Loved Christmas"
and the Emmy-winning special "Motown Returns to the Apollo."
Her more recent television appearances include the mini-series
"Nothing Lasts Forever," based on a Sidney Sheldon
bestseller; the revival of the musical "Bye, Bye Birdie,"
opposite Tyne Daly, Jason Alexander and Chynna Phillips; and
the animated "Beauty and the Beast" episode of HBO's
"Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child."
Williams other feature-film credits include "Under the
Gun," "The Pick-Up Artist," "Another You"
and "Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man."