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Ricky MArtin
Pop singer. Born Enrique Jose Martin Morales
IV, on December 24, 1971, in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Martin began
appearing in commercials on local television at the age of six.
He auditioned three times for the teen singing group Menudo
before finally earning a spot in 1984. In his five years with
Menudo, Martin toured around the world, singing in several
languages. He reached the group’s age limit of 18 in 1989, and
returned to Puerto Rico just long enough to finish high school
before moving to New York to pursue a solo acting and singing
career. His debut solo album, Ricky Martin was released in 1988
by the Sony Latin division, followed by a second effort Me
Amaras in 1989.
Martin traveled to Mexico to appear in a stage musical; the gig
led to a role as a singer on the 1992 Spanish-language
telenovela, Alcanzar una Estrella, or “To Reach a Star.” The
show proved so popular that he reprised the role in a movie
version of the serial. In 1993, Martin moved to Los Angeles,
where he made his American TV debut in the NBC sitcom Getting
By. From 1995 to 1995 he acted on ABC’s daytime soap opera,
General Hospital and in 1996 he starred in the Broadway
production of Les Miserables.
While Martin was actively pursuing his acting career, he was
also recording and releasing albums and making concert
appearances. He had become well known in his native Puerto Rico
and among the Latin/Hispanic community as a whole. His third
album, A Medio Vivir, came out in 1997, the same year that he
lent his voice to the Spanish-language version of Disney’s
animated feature, Hercules.
His fourth album, Vuelve, released in 1998, featured the hit
single, “La Copa de la Vida” (“The Cup of Life”), which Martin
performed at the 1998 World Cup soccer tournament in France, as
part of a showcase broadcast to two billion people around the
world.
At the Grammy Awards in February 1999, Martin—already a global
pop sensation—gave a sizzling performance of “La Copa de la
Vida” at Los Angeles’s Shrine Auditorium just before picking up
an award for Best Latin Pop Performance for Vuelve. He followed
up on his star-making Grammy night with the release of his
phenomenally successful first English single, “Livin’ La Vida
Loca,” and his album, Ricky Martin, which debuted at No. 1 on
the Billboard chart. Martin was also featured on the cover of
Time magazine and credited with helping to bring a growing Latin
cultural influence into the mainstream of American pop music.
To add to the phenomenal popular success of his debut English
album and single, Martin was nominated in four categories at the
Grammy Awards, held in February 2000. Although he lost in all
four categories--to veteran male pop artist Sting (Best Pop
Album, Best Male Pop Vocal Performance) and Santana, the band
led by resurgent guitarist Carlos Santana (Song of the Year,
Record of the Year)--Martin delivered another red-hot live
performance, a year after his triumphant Grammy debut.
In November 2000, Martin released Sound Loaded, the
much-anticipated follow-up album to Ricky Martin. Its hit
single, "She Bangs," earned Martin yet another Grammy
nomination, for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance.
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