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SHANIA FACTS AND FIGURES |
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"My mother lived
for my career. We were extremely poor when I was a kid, and my mother had
five children and no food to feed them. She knew I was talented, and she
lived with the hope that my abilities were my chance to do something
special."-Shania |
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Little Shania |
Shania in High School |
Shania at Deerhurst |
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BIOGRAPHY |
Shania’s story may well be the great American dream, that is, the great
North American dream since Shania was born in Canada on August 28, 1965 as
Eilleen Twain, the second oldest of five siblings. Shania was raised in
Timmins, Ontario (about 500 miles due north of Toronto), where Shania’s
stepfather, an Ojibway Indian and mother had both been raised. It was a
proud but, at times, impoverished existence. There may have been a struggle
to keep enough food in the cupboards but there was always an abundance of
music in the household.
As a child, Shania Twain had big dreams and a lot of support at home. But
what she didn’t always have was a lot of money. “There were plenty of
mornings when I took only a mustard sandwich to school”, she recalls. “For
me it wasn’t a sad situation. I just didn’t want to go to school one more
day and have to make an excuse for why I didn’t have a lunch. It taught me a
lot of good things in life.” “One of those things was a determination to
help other children avoid this problem.” Since the start of her career,
Shania has been involved in two innovative charities that are dedicated to
helping children in need. The first is Kids Café, a Chicago-based program
that provides free meals and a safe environment to play and do homework to
some of the estimated 12 million children in North America who are at risk.
The second is Breakfast for Learning, a Canadian program that helps provide
nutrition support for thousands of children either before, during, or after
school. “The biggest challenge that I find”, says Shania, “and the biggest
role I can play, is awareness. A lot of people don’t want to acknowledge
that hunger is happening right in our own backyards. But it is.” During her
tour, Shania plans to visit many of these sites and invite these children to
her shows. “But the most important thing is for people to look at me and
realize I came from a similar background. I went without meals at times too.
I think it not only inspires people to give to these charities, but also
inspires people who might be in that situation. I was there. I know how you
feel. But look at me now. It can happen to you, too!”
Shania often grabbed a guitar and retreated to the solitude of her bedroom,
singing and writing until her fingers ached. “But I loved it! I grew up
listening to Waylon, Willie, Dolly, Tammy, all of them”, she recalls. “But
we also listened to The Mamas and the Papas, the Carpenters, the Supremes,
and Stevie Wonder. The many different styles of music I was exposed to as a
child not only influenced my vocal style, but even more so my writing
style”. Mom noticed her daughter’s talents, and Shania was soon being
shuttled to radio and TV studios, community centers, senior citizen homes,
“everywhere they could get me booked."
Part of the legend has eight-year-old Shania being dragged out of bed at
midnight, to sing with the house band at local club after the nightly liquor
curfew went into effect. “The opportunities I got from local bands and
artists who allowed me to share their stage is what gave me the experience
and the training to become a professional”, she says. “It’s not like being a
child athlete where you can go to a local gym and get a coach. It doesn’t
work like that. Where do you get your experience if you want to become a
singer?” The answer, of course, is local outlets. As a young professional,
Eilleen Twain received encouragement from artists like Myrna Lorrie, who
invited her onstage at age 9; soon she was invited to appear on a number of
television shows across Canada. She performed an original song on the
Canadian Country Music Awards at age 11. |
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