Quick Facts
In full:
Lindsay Dee Lohan
Born:
July 2, 1986, Bronx, New York, U.S. (age 38)
Movies/Tv Shows (Acted In):
"Late Night with Jimmy Fallon" (2013)
"Among the Shadows" (2019)
"Chapter 27" (2007)
"Georgia Rule" (2007)
"2 Broke Girls" (2014)
"Jimmy Kimmel Live!" (2015)
"Sesame Street" (1995)
"Anger Management" (2013)
"I Know Who Killed Me" (2007)
"The Canyons" (2013)
"Just My Luck" (2006)
"That '70s Show" (2004)
"Scary Movie 5" (2013)
"Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen" (2004)
"The Wonderful World of Disney" (2000)
"Glee" (2012)
"Love Advent" (2014)
"Machete" (2010)
"Freaky Friday" (2003)
"Sick Note" (2018)
"The Parent Trap" (1998)
"Mean Girls" (2004)
"Bobby" (2006)
"A Prairie Home Companion" (2006)
"Another World" (1996–1997)
"Bette" (2000)
"Ugly Betty" (2008)
"InAPPropriate Comedy" (2013)
"Labor Pains" (2009)
"King of the Hill" (2004)
"Herbie Fully Loaded" (2005)
Albums:
"Speak" (2004)
"A Little More Personal (Raw)" (2005)
Top Questions

What were Lindsay Lohan’s early career achievements?

What challenges did Lindsay Lohan face in her 20s?

How did Lindsay Lohan attempt to revitalize her career?

Who is Lindsay Lohan married to, and do they have children?

Lindsay Lohan (born July 2, 1986, Bronx, New York, U.S.) is an American actress, singer, and producer who started out as a child actress and went on to become an A-list star with such films as Mean Girls (2004). Her career faltered during her 20s when she had a series of criminal run-ins and incidents of drug and alcohol misuse, but, after a break from Hollywood, she made a return to acting in her 30s.

Early life, first acting roles, and The Parent Trap

Lohan is the eldest of four children born to Michael Lohan, an investment banker, and Donata “Dina” Lohan (née Sullivan), a Wall Street analyst. In the late 1980s Michael Lohan received a four-year prison sentence in a stock fraud case, which was followed by other legal troubles. He was consequently absent for years at a time. Lindsay Lohan, meanwhile, began her professional career at age three when she signed with Ford Models and went on to appear in more than 60 TV commercials and a number of print ads. Between 1996 and 1997 she secured her first recurring television role on the long-running soap opera Another World. Her extensive resume helped Lohan land the part of twin sisters plotting to reunite their divorced parents in Nancy Meyers’s 1998 remake of The Parent Trap. The Disney movie, which was filmed on a $15 million budget, was a hit, earning more than $92 million worldwide at the box office. Lohan subsequently starred in the Disney movies Life-Size (2000), Get a Clue (2002), Freaky Friday (2003) alongside Jamie Lee Curtis, and Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen (2004).

Mean Girls and celebrity

By the time Lohan turned 18, she was a star, and her celebrity only increased with the movie Mean Girls (2004), written by Tina Fey, who also appeared as a supporting character. The film was a hit with critics and fans alike. Lohan parlayed her fame into a music career, releasing her debut album, Speak, that same year. Her incredible success and her penchant for going to nightclubs made her a favorite subject of the paparazzi, and her moves were excessively scrutinized by the media. Her father, meanwhile, continued to have run-ins with the law, drawing unfavorable attention to the actress. Lohan nonetheless remained upbeat, as Rolling Stone reported in 2004. She told the magazine, “He’s the best dad. He’s the most loving, kind person you could ever meet. My parents are working some things out right now. But they’ve been married for twenty years. They’ll work it out.” Lohan returned to Disney in 2005, starring in another remake, Herbie: Fully Loaded, which generated $144 million in sales on an estimated $50 million budget. In 2006 she starred in the rom-com Just My Luck and then joined the ensemble casts of A Prairie Home Companion and the Robert F. Kennedy biopic Bobby.

Public struggles

Lohan’s movies from 2007 included Chapter 27, I Know Who Killed Me, and Georgia Rule. Reports during filming suggested the actress was difficult to work with on set; the media described chronic tardiness and unpredictable behavior. At the beginning of the year she joined a drug rehab program for the first time, but in July she was charged with possession of cocaine and driving under the influence. She subsequently began a years-long cycle of legal troubles that were compounded by a battle with drug and alcohol misuse. Meanwhile, her family also made headlines: her father with his continued brushes with the law and her parents with their turbulent divorce proceedings. Lohan tried to continue to work, appearing in such movies as Labor Pains (2009), Machete (2010), Liz & Dick (2012), Love, Marilyn (2012), and The Canyons (2013). Her career, however, was largely hobbled by jail time, probation, rehab, and erratic behavior. In 2011 she agreed to pose nude for Playboy for close to $1 million. The magazine’s founder, Hugh Hefner, said that the spread helped Playboy break sales records.

Theater, break from acting, and other endeavors

In 2014 Lohan turned to theater, appearing in a revival of David Mamet’s Speed-the-Plow in London’s West End. The Guardian wrote about her performance, “Anyone who turned up expecting Ms Lohan, making her stage debut at the age of 28, to exhibit spoilt-child celeb behaviour…was in for a disappointment. She was rather sweet, rather husky, rather wide-eyed—and rather good. She was, in fact, possibly the best thing about this show.” Lohan later described the production as a turning point in her life. She then began to spend more time at her residence in Dubai, where taking photographs of individuals without their consent can be illegal.

Although Lohan took a break from acting, she continued to draw headlines for erratic behavior and controversial comments, particularly about the Me Too movement. “I’m going to really hate myself for saying this,” she told The Times in 2018, “but I think by women speaking against all these things, it makes them look weak when they are very strong women.” Her struggles also continued to be scrutinized by the media, as when videos emerged on the Internet in 2016 showing an altercation between her and her then fiance, Russian entrepreneur Egor Tarabasov, suggesting that he was physically abusive toward the actress. Two years later the actress told The New York Times she had her revenge by opening the Lohan Beach House, a resort in Mýkonos, Greece, where one skirmish took place. The beach house venture was the subject of a reality show that aired on MTV in 2019. Meanwhile, Lohan quietly began to act again, appearing alongside Harry Potter star Rupert Grint in the second season (2018) of the British series Sick Note. Lohan also starred in the fantasy flick Among the Shadows (2019).

Netflix movies, marriage, and baby

In 2022 Lohan signed a deal with Netflix (which it termed the “Lindsay Lohan-aissance”) to star in and produce the movies Falling for Christmas (2022), Irish Wish (2024), and Our Little Secret (2024). In between films she married financier Bader Shammas, and the following year they announced a baby boy, Luai, Arabic for “shield or protector.”

Are you a student?
Get a special academic rate on Britannica Premium.
Fred Frommer The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica

singing, the production of musical tones by means of the human voice. In its physical aspect, singing has a well-defined technique that depends on the use of the lungs, which act as an air supply, or bellows; on the larynx, which acts as a reed or vibrator; on the chest and head cavities, which have the function of an amplifier, as the tube in a wind instrument; and on the tongue, which together with the palate, teeth, and lips articulate and impose consonants and vowels on the amplified sound. Though these four mechanisms function independently, they are nevertheless coordinated in the establishment of a vocal technique and are made to interact upon one another.

Singing versus speaking

Singing is distinguished from speaking by the manner in which the breath is expended to vibrate the vocal cords. Singing requires more breath the louder, higher, and longer one sings. It also requires that the emission of breath be more firmly controlled. A pertinent analogy is the function of the instrumentalist’s breath in playing a reed instrument—e.g., a clarinet, an oboe, or a saxophone. The technique of singing depends ultimately on the coordination of the various anatomical mechanisms in order to produce a propulsion of sound in a steady flow. A further distinction between singing and speaking is the control that is required, in singing, of the movement and reflexes of the larynx. As one sings higher, the larynx tends to rise sympathetically and at a certain point becomes an interference causing the voice to break, or crack. Not much movement of the larynx occurs within a singer’s normal range, which is usually about an octave and a third. Beyond that range, either above or below, an element of technical accomplishment sets the professional off from the unschooled amateur.

The character of Western singing

Western singing is distinguished above all by its volume. Singers of other cultures may have a wider range, particularly a greater upward extension; but it is doubtful that they have sung louder. Western singing is also distinguished by its concern with pure sound, with the tone quality, or timbre, and with colour, with what is felt to be the sheer beauty of the voice itself. Both singers and their listeners, in Western music more than any other, have tended to lose sight of song’s roots in language and to think of singing as a purely instrumental production.

Young girl wearing a demin jacket playing the trumpet (child, musical instruments, Asian ethnicity)
Britannica Quiz
Sound Check: Musical Vocabulary Quiz

Modern Western styles of singing largely derive from the Italian bel canto, which had its origin in a style associated with the polyphonic music of the 16th century. Because this music expressed the significance or the moods of the text, a great range of expression was required from the singers, who, in these polyphonic works, assumed something of the function of a vocal orchestra. The art of singing accordingly evolved to allow the singers the maximum power and variety of expression. (See also bel canto.)

Bel canto from the 17th to the early 19th century

Bel canto singing from the 17th through the early 19th century was built primarily on the recognition that the intensity of vocal tone on a single note may be increased or diminished. The varying of this intensity was known as the messa di voce. There is, however, a difference between variation in intensity and variation in volume of vocal tone. The style depended on the technique of intensity; that is, tone was varied by increasing or decreasing the air pressure on the glottal lips and not by enlarging the oral chamber, which merely resulted in a larger tonal volume. The style was also based on the principle that the voice has two “tones,” a diapason tone produced when the larynx is in a relatively low position, and a flute tone when the larynx assumes a higher position. These distinctions, however, were largely obliterated when a broader style of singing was introduced by Richard Wagner and later composers.

Physical aspects of the technique of bel canto singing demanded a stance in which the chest was raised and the stomach drawn in; the raising of the soft palate together with a corresponding lowering of the larynx; and the drawing back of the chin with the effect of opening the throat. Correct breathing was above all essential, and the Italians went so far as to declare that “he who knows how to breathe can sing.” By a contraction of the upper abdominal muscles, control is achieved over the diaphragm, which thus enables the flow of air pressure from the lungs to be kept steady. This principle, which was the basis of singing in the 18th century, was later adopted by the Spanish tenor Manuel García, who declared that “the lungs are for tone emission, the glottis is for pitch, the oral cavity is for vowel and timbre, and the front of the mouth is for consonants.” The function of the diaphragm is to regulate the pressure of air, while the larynx, as a nozzle in a water spray, determines the nature of the flow.

With the muscles in appropriate position and the reserve of air under proper control, accented notes in singing are given their full value not as startling percussive notes but in the manner of an accented note produced by a violinist who prepares his effect by the proper placing of his bow. An exercise known as vibrazione enables the singer to control the voice at the larynx and, by attacking a note softly, to increase the volume by pressure of the larynx.

Are you a student?
Get a special academic rate on Britannica Premium.

Mid-19th century departure from bel canto style

Later schools of singing paid much attention to the resonation of the voice in the “mask,” that is, the cavities of the head, though this resonation did not affect the radiative power of the voice but only its volume. These singers, and also the still-later parlando singers, who effected a union of speech and singing, made a conscious use of resonation in this way and differed from the bel canto singers in that they exercised less control over physical mechanisms.

The development of the orchestra by Hector Berlioz, Giuseppe Verdi, and Wagner in the 19th century encouraged singers to seek means of amplifying their voices by methods of resonation unknown in the bel canto style, and a new method was established of “singing on resonance.” Jean de Reszke, who emphasized the function of the nose in resonation, was the main exponent of this school. Apart from the facial mask and the nose, other resonators were held to be the hard palate and the teeth.

Demands made on the voice by the Romantic operatic composers transformed the principles of the style, largely because the human voice would have been submerged by the vast orchestral resources drawn upon by these composers. Especially in the later music dramas of Wagner, sheer weight of orchestral sound forced the singer to unprecedented vocal exertions. With Verdi it was the vehemence of dramatic utterance rather than the presumptions of the orchestra that called for louder and more emphatic singing than would have been thought seemly in the age of bel canto. Singers found it difficult, if not impossible, to be at once forceful and elegant. A strong reaction thus set in, especially in Germany, against vocal improvisation and embellishment of any kind. What had seemed the ultimate in singing from the 17th to well into the 19th century was now anathematized as presumptuous frippery.

Singing since the turn of the 20th century

Florid song lived on into the 20th century in the surviving operas of the older repertoire, but it tended to become stereotyped and the property of specialists. Whereas until about 1830 all singers were expected to be masters of the devices of bel canto, they were now categorized as dramatic, lyric, coloratura (specialist in florid song), and so on. The traditional range classifications of soprano, alto, tenor, and bass were also widened to admit the mezzo-soprano, the baritone, and the bass-baritone.

The second half of the 20th century produced a predictable reaction in favour of the singer, with a revival of public enthusiasm for nearly forgotten operas by Gioachino Rossini, Gaetano Donizetti, and Vincenzo Bellini, and even of the true bel canto operas of George Frideric Handel, and the emergence of singers capable of acquiring the requisite technique imposed by music that left much to the singer’s invention and discretion. The popular singer, too, relieved by the microphone of the necessity of raising his voice, and exploiting the improvisatory conventions of jazz, employed intuitively many ornaments and expressive devices nearly identical to those of bel canto. The vocal requirements of avant-garde music extended beyond those of traditional operatic singing to include wider flexibility of timbre, techniques such as Sprechstimme (musically pitched speech), and improvisational fantasy drawing on sounds formerly excluded from the trained singer’s vocal resources.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Adam Augustyn.