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Celebrity Childrens Authors
by Shazy | 12:44 PM in Barack obama, Billy Crystal, Celebrity Childrens Authors, entertainment, Jada Pinkett Smith, Jamie Lee Curtis, Julianne Moore, Julie Andrews, Madonna, Queen Rania of Jordan, Tori, Whoopi Goldberg |
Celebrity Childrens Authors
Madonna
Her over-the-top image aside, Madonna has been writing kid lit since 2003.
Jamie Lee Curtis
Since the late 1990s, Jamie Lee Curtis has written books that focus on kids’ emotional well-being.
Billy Crystal
Billy Crystal, himself a doting grandpa, wears his heart on his literary sleeve.
Whoopi Goldberg
With all of her live performances and a daily talk show, it’s a wonder Whoopi Goldberg has the time to be a prolific children’s author.
Julianne Moore
Red hair and freckles may be Julianne Moore’s striking features, but they’re a big pain for her picture book heroine.
Barack Obama
President Barack Obama hoped to inspire his daughters and other children by sharing the stories of a handful of remarkable Americans in “Of Thee I Sing.”
Queen Rania of Jordan
Queen Rania’s best-selling 2010 picture book explores cultural tolerance from a child’s perspective.
Jada Pinkett Smith
Jada’s 2004 book is all about girl power aiming to boost self-esteem in girls of all ages and walks of life.
Julie Andrews
Julie Andrews knows a thing or two about princesses and she’s put that knowledge to work in her 2010 book, “The Very Fairy Princess.”
Tori Spelling
Tori Spelling writes about what she knows best — a pampered girl who has it all — in her 2010 debut, “Presenting … Tallulah.”
Gloria Estefan
Parents know her for her infectious ‘80s hits, but to their little ones, Gloria Estefan is the woman behind bilingual bulldog Noelle.
Ricky Gervais
Sharp-tongued British comic Ricky Gervais tones it down a tad for his smart-alecky books about imaginary creatures.
Jay Leno
By night, Jay Leno is a talk-show icon. By day, he thinks of silly scenarios to make kids laugh, as in “If Roast Beef Could Fly.”
Sarah, Duchess of York
The Duchess of York has been writing kids books since the 1980s. Her most recent books include the tales of an adventurous little redhead and a book of manners for minis.
Current children’s best-sellers
The publishing industry tracks the top-selling children’s books. The top kids title of the moment? “Silverlicious.” It’s the latest in a series.
Many of the hottest young-adult titles can also been seen on movie marquees:
Source:Specials
Famous Female Firsts
by Shazy | 5:21 AM in Barbara Walters, Barbra Streisand, Beyonce, Chris Evert, Famous Female Firsts, jennifer lopez, JK Rowling, Kathryn Bigelow, Listomania, Mariah Carey, Oprah Winfrey, Queen, Whoopi Goldberg |
Famous Female Firsts
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Famous Female Firsts |
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Mariah Carey |
Famous First: First female artist to debut a single at #1 on the charts
Year: 1995
Not only did "Fantasy" make Mariah the first woman to debut a single atop the Billboard Hot 100, but she was also the second person ever to do so. The first? Michael Jackson, who did it less than a month earlier with "You Are Not Alone."
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Oprah Winfrey |
Famous First: First woman to own and produce her own talk show
Year: 1986
Running nationally since Sept. 8, 1986, "The Oprah Winfrey Show" has since become one of the
longest-running daytime TV talk shows. Maybe that's why Oprah's the only person in the world to be named to Time magazine's Most Influential People list each year since its inception.
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Barbra Streisand |
Famous Firsts: First woman to produce, direct, write and star in a major motion picture ("Yentl"); first female composer to win the Best Song Oscar for "Evergreen" ("A Star is Born")
Year: 1983 and 1977, respectively
Babs can play everything from a cross-dressing yeshiva student from a Polish shtetl to Fanny Brice in "Funny Girl." Girlfriend has range.
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Beyonce |
Famous First: First female artist to be awarded the International Artist Award at the American Music Awards
Year: 2007
When B joined the ranks of Aerosmith, Led Zeppelin, Michael Jackson, Rod Stewart and the Bee Gees to
accept the International Artist Award at the AMAs, she also became the award's youngest recipient.
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Barbara Walters |
Famous First: First female co-anchor of network evening news
Year: 1976
Before Barbara took a seat at the "ABC Evening News" desk, she was what she called a "tea pourer" at
"TODAY" because at the time nobody would take a woman reporting hard news seriously.
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Whoopi Goldberg |
Famous First: First woman to host the Oscars solo
Year: 1994
Before Whoopi took the stage to host the 1994 Oscars, Helen Hayes, Carol Burnett, Diana Ross, Shirley MacLaine, Goldie Hawn, Ellen Burstyn, Jane Fonda, Liza
Minnelli and Rosalind Russell had all emceed the event. However, all these ladies had been cohosts.
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Jennifer Lopez |
Famous First: First female spokesperson for the Boys & Girls Club of America
Year: 2010
It's strange to think that before J.Lo repped the Boys & Girls Club of America, all the organization's celebrity
spokespeople were men. Let's hear it for the girls!
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Kathryn Bigelow |
Famous First: First woman to win Best Director at the Oscars
Year: 2010
Not only was Kathryn's Best Director win for "The Hurt Locker" sweet because it was a female first, but
defeating her ex-husband James Cameron and his big-budget flick "Avatar" made it even sweeter.
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Chris Evert |
Famous First: First female tennis player to earn $1 million in career prize money; first tennis player, male or female, to win 1,000 singles matches
Year: 1976 and 1984, respectively
During the mid-'70s, as Chris racked up tennis titles for
her WTA winnings, she also earned another -- "Ice Maiden" -- for her tough demeanor on the court.
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JK Rowling |
Famous First: First female billionaire book author
Year: 2004
Not only is this "Harry Potter" scribe the first woman to make a billion dollars on books, but she's also the first human to do so. Take that, dudes.
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Queen Latifah |
Famous First: First female rapper to win a Grammy
Year: 1995
Sure, women had been taking home Grammys since 1959, but it was the Queen who broke up the hip-hop boy's club by snagging the award for Best Rap Solo
Performance from Coolio, Craig Mack, Snoop and Warren G.
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Jackie Joyner-Kersee |
Famous First: First female athlete to be featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated, aside from the swimsuit edition
Year: 1987
Voted the greatest female athlete of the 20th century by
Sports Illustrated, Jackie holds the world record in heptathlon.
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Sandra Day O'Connor |
Famous First: First female Supreme Court justice
Year: 1981
In 1983, the New York Times printed an editorial about the increasing use of acronyms, taking issue with the "nine men" of the Supreme Court being called SCOTUS.
Sandra corrected them in a pithy retort and gave herself the nickname FWOTSC: First Woman on the Supreme Court.
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Tina Turner |
Famous First: First woman to be on the cover of Rolling Stone
Year: 1967
It didn't take long for Rolling Stone to put a woman on its cover. In fact, Tina appeared on the cover of the
magazine's second issue, right after John Lennon.
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Danica Patrick |
Famous First: First woman to win a major closed-course auto race
Year: 2008
Whoever says women are bad drivers obviously hasn't met Danica. This racer has been breaking records and
driving circles around her male competitors since she went pro for the IRL IndyCar series in 2005 and was named Rookie of the Year.
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Lucille Ball |
Famous First: First woman in television to head a major studio
Year: 1962
Lucille and her husband Desi Arnaz had set up Desilu Productions in 1950 to produce "I Love Lucy." But the
couple divorced in 1960, and in 1962, Lucille bought out her ex's shares and took over as president of the company. She eventually sold the company to conglomerate Gulf+Western, but not before making history.
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Candice Bergen |
Famous First: First female host of "Saturday Night Live"
Year: 1975
While Gilda Radner, Jane Curtin and Laraine Newman were all part of the original "SNL" cast, it wasn't until the fourth episode that a woman hosted. Another famous first
happened that evening: It was the first time that the cast gathered on the stage to say goodbye to the audience at the end of the episode, a tradition that endures today.
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Helen Hayes |
Famous First: First woman to win the EGOT
Year: 1976
Here's how Helen got her EGOT: She won a Best Actress Oscar in 1932 for "The Sin of Madelon Claudet," a Best Actress Tony in 1947 for "Happy Birthday," a
Best Actress Emmy in 1953 for "Medallion Theatre," and a Best Spoken Word Recording Grammy in 1976 for "Great American Documents."
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