Shania Twain

Canadian musician
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Also known as: Eilleen Regina Edwards
Quick Facts
Original name:
Eilleen Regina Edwards
Born:
August 28, 1965, Windsor, Ontario, Canada (age 59)
Also Known As:
Eilleen Regina Edwards
Notable Works:
“Now”
“Up!”

News

Shania Twain (born August 28, 1965, Windsor, Ontario, Canada) is a Canadian singer and musician who, with her mix of country melodies and pop vocals, became one of the most popular crossover artists of the mid-1990s.

Early life

Edwards took the surname of her stepfather, Jerry Twain, at a young age. After the family moved north to Timmins, Ontario, she developed an exceptional singing voice and by age eight was performing in clubs to help supplement her parents’ irregular income. During high school she sang with a Top 40 cover band called Longshot. At age 21 she moved to Toronto, where she worked during the day while singing in clubs at night. Less than a year later, however, her parents were killed in a traffic accident, and she returned home to raise her sister and two brothers.

Shania Twain and The Woman in Me

Twain continued to sing in clubs, and in 1991 she attracted the attention of producer Norro Wilson, who took her to Nashville, Tennessee, to record her first album. She changed her name to Shania, meaning “I’m on my way,” a nod to her stepfather’s Ojibwa heritage. Her first album, Shania Twain, sold only 100,000 copies, but her talent caught the eye of another producer, Robert John (“Mutt”) Lange, who had a highly successful career producing albums for Def Leppard, Bryan Adams, and Michael Bolton. Twain and Lange, who immediately began writing songs together, also became romantically involved and married in 1993. Two years later Twain released her second album, The Woman in Me. It was a critical and commercial success, selling more than 18 million copies and winning a Grammy Award for country album of the year.

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Come On Over and Up!

For her third album, Come On Over (1997), Twain produced chart-topping hits on both the country and pop charts, including “You’re Still the One” and “Man! I Feel Like a Woman.” The following year she embarked on her first tour of North America. By 1999 Come On Over had sold more than 10 million copies, which made Twain the best-selling female country musician and the first female recording artist in any genre to have two consecutive albums top the 10 million mark in copies sold. In 2002 she released the highly anticipated Up!. The double album contained both country and pop versions of the songs. Her Greatest Hits collection, featuring a duet with country artist Billy Currington, appeared in 2004.

Hiatus, Las Vegas residencies, and later career

In the ensuing years, Twain largely avoided the public eye, though her 2010 divorce from Lange was tabloid fodder. She also battled Lyme disease for many years, after being diagnosed in 2003. Her hiatus ended in 2011 when she starred in the reality television series Why Not? with Shania Twain and published the autobiography From This Moment On. In the same year, she was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame and received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. During this time she also resumed her music career. After releasing the single “Today Is Your Day” (2011), she had a residency show titled Shania: Still the One (2012–14) at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. In 2017 Twain released the chart-topping Now, her first studio album in 15 years. She launched another Las Vegas residency, Let’s Go!, in 2019, though the show was put on hold in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic; it resumed in 2021.

In 2022 Twain’s life and career were the subject of a Netflix documentary, Not Just a Girl. The following year she released the album Queen of Me, which saw her collaborate with artists such as Justin Bieber and Pitbull. In May 2024 she began another Las Vegas residency.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by René Ostberg.