|   
          Broadway 
          star Sarah Brightman was the inspiration behind such stage hits as Phantom 
          of the Opera and Requiem, written in her honor by ex-husband 
          Andrew Lloyd Webber. Born August 14, 1960 in Berkhampstead, England, 
          Brightman began dancing at the age of three, and ten years later made 
          her London theatrical debut in Charles Strouse's I and Albert. 
          By 1976, she was a dancer on the television series Pan's People, 
          and later led the pop group Hot Gossip, which in 1978 scored a U.K. 
          number one hit with the single "I Lost My Heart to a Starship Trooper." 
          In 1981, she was cast in the role of Jemima in Lloyd Webber's Cats; 
          there she and the composer were introduced, and he divorced his first 
          wife to marry her in 1984. Their relationship lasted through 1990, during 
          which time Brightman created the role of Christine Daaé in Phantom, 
          also appearing in Requiem and Aspects of Love; after their 
          divorce, she toured in The Music of Andrew Lloyd Webber: A Concert Spectacular. 
          In addition to her stage work, Brightman also recorded a number of solo 
          albums, including 1988's The Trees 
          They Grow So High, 1989's The 
          Songs That Got Away, 1990's As 
          I Come of Age, 1993's Dive 
          and 1995's Fly.
  | 
      | 
Search 
Artists 
Styles 
Biographies 
Home
  
 
  
Order 
My Account 
Shipping Info
  
	 
  
Live Radio 
Free E-Mail 
MP3
DVD 
Movies
  
 
  
Hot Picks 
TLC 
Moby 
N'Sync 
Dr. Dre 
Eiffel 65 
Faith Hill 
Kid Rock 
Santana 
D'Angelo 
The Cure 
No Doubt 
Macy Gray 
Dixie Chicks 
Marc Anthony 
Savage Garden 
Christina Aguilera
 |