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- Published: 05 Jan 2007
- Uploaded: 18 Aug 2011
- Author: euge2006
Name | Xuxa |
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Birth date | March 27, 1963 |
Birth place | Santa Rosa, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil |
Occupation | TV host, actress, singer |
Url | www.xuxa.com.br |
Her achievements include the second best-selling album in the history of Brazil and being the singer with the second highest total of number-one hits by a female in the Brazilian charts, surpassed only by Daniela Mercury. Xuxa has some of the biggest box office results in Brazilian history and has amassed a fortune of over $100 million.
In 1980, Xuxa posed for another magazine with other Brazilian models and the great soccer legend Pelé.
She was in ELLE, Vogue, Cosmopolitan, NOVA and a centerfold in Playboy magazine's Brazilian edition in December 1982.
She was only 20 when she was given her own variety TV show, Clube de Criança (Children's Club). She was an instant hit; her candor on camera and her way with kids caught the attention of Latin America's media giant, Rede Globo.
In 1985 she starred for the first time in a movie with the comedy group Os Trapalhões in Os Trapalhões no Reino da Fantasia, and then in 1989, A Princesa Xuxa e Os Trapalhões (Princess Xuxa and The Messed-Up Guys). Previously, she had appeared in leading roles such as that in Os Trapalhões e o Mágico de Oróz. The following year, she starred in two more movies: Xuxa e os Trapalhões em O Mistério de Robin Hood and Lua de Cristal. The latter was her biggest box office hit, spawning her hit single "Lua de Cristal". Lua de Cristal was also the last Brazilian movie to have more than five million viewers in theaters before Dois Filhos de Francisco, 16 years later.
Show name | Xou da Xuxa |
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Format | Children |
Picture format | 480i (SDTV) |
Runtime | 240 minutes |
Starring | Xuxa Meneghel |
Country | |
First aired | 1986 |
Last aired | 1992 |
The audience of the show was of kids who jumped up and down during the whole show. Kids shook pompoms throughout the show, marking the trademarks of the show. But the biggest trademark was the pink spaceship. Every show began with Xuxa getting out of the spaceship and at the end, she would go back to the spaceship (it remains so even today).
Every year she released a new album for children. 1988's Xou da Xuxa 3 with her biggest hit 'Ilariê' (#1 in the radio in almost every Latin America country) is her best-selling album, selling 4 million copies in Brazil alone. Xou da Xuxa 3 is the best-selling album in Brazilian history and the best-selling album for children in world, to date with almost 6 million copies sold.
Xou da Xuxa ended in 1993 due to Xuxa's desire to invest more time in her international career, which included Spanish and English versions of Xou da Xuxa as well as various shows in the U.S. and Europe. During that year, she developed health problems attributed to stress; a typical week consisted of seven hours of taping for a month's worth of shows coupled with flying to Argentina where the Spanish version was taped. By the 1990s English-dubbed versions of the show were also broadcast in the southern Anglophone Caribbean.
Xuxa Hits – Aimed at a teenage audience, Xuxa Hits aired just after Xuxa Park on Saturday mornings. It was later moved to Sunday and renamed Planeta Xuxa (Xuxa Planet).
Planeta Xuxa – The show was a big hit and was shown on Sunday afternoons with musical guests. It ran concurrently with Xuxa Park. The most popular segment was 'Intimacy' where Xuxa would interview different celebrities. The show went on hiatus after the fire on Xuxa Park; it came back and was later canceled due to Xuxa's desire to work with children once more.
Reinvented as a children's entertainer, Xuxa began the Xuxa Só para Baixinhos (Xuxa Just for Kids) series, releasing CDs and a videotape with song clips. She also began her first tour since the end of her Xou da Xuxa show, and won two Latin Grammy awards.
In 2003 Xuxa began a new children's show, Xuxa No Mundo da Imaginação (Xuxa at the World of Imagination), a show for preschool children on weekday mornings. The show was initially successful, but following a dispute between Xuxa and her manager, Marlene Matos, ratings for the show began to decline, resulting in the show being pulled from air in 2004. Xuxa, however, being one of the most popular Brazilian TV personalities at the time, was kept on and a new show, TV Xuxa was launched, containing more educational content and cartoons, and less of Xuxa than previous shows.
TV Xuxa – In this show, presented on weekday mornings, Xuxa did segments on nature, internet and art, but the main focus was the game 'Battle of the Titans'. The show also included a "day's topic" which was explored and explained by Xuxa. During the show, she also presented cartoons. After a few seasons, the show was remodeled and came back with new segments, games and cartoons, but remained much the same as the old show. The program did not hit the success of the previous shows, like Mundo da Imaginação, making Xuxa lose audience against other TV broadcasts. In 2008 Xuxa came back with a new TV Xuxa, but the show was not successful, because of a new concurrent show featuring a seven year old girl Maísa who is a prodigy child and Internet hit at SBT's Saturday morning cartoon show Sábado Animado.
In 1993 Xuxa hosted an English language series in the United States, Xuxa, but it did not achieve the popularity she had enjoyed throughout Latin America and Spain. The show was sold to a great number of countries throughout the world, among them Japan, Israel, Russia, Australia, Romania and some Arab countries.
Xuxa Park, the 1992 Spanish game show in which she presented, drew good ratings. The theme song of the show, 'Sabor de la Vida' ('Flavor of Life'), was a big hit in Spain, topping the charts. Her Xuxa Park album also sold well for 8 weeks, and was certified gold.
Her international ambitions apparently ended after the gruelling taping schedule for her American show. She was hospitalized for several days due to exhaustion, and decided to give up her international career.
On July 7, 2007, Xuxa presented at the Brazilian leg of Live Earth in Rio de Janeiro.
At the summer of 1993, presenter Sergio Malandro, "Lua de Cristal" male lead, and the "Paquitas" and "Paquitos" (Xou da Xuxa dancers) made another movie, this time produced by Xuxa. Sonho de Verão (Summer Dream), a youth-oriented movie, was a hit but more moderate compared to her other films.
It took seven years before she made her next film, 1999's Xuxa Requebra. The movie was a critical success and a big commercial hit, becoming the most successful Brazilian movie of the year and the most successful Brazilian movie in years, and she used the same formula for her next movie, Xuxa Popstar, which was also very successful, but a critical failure. This film is one of the worst 10 comedies in history at the Internet Movie Data Base, with a rating of 1.4 stars out of 10.
In 2001, she did Xuxa e os Duendes. Since then, she has released a new movie every year. Xuxa e os Duendes 2 in 2002, Xuxa Abracadabra in 2003, and Xuxa e o Mistério da Cidade Perdida in 2004. Her first animated movie Xuxinha e Guto: Contra os Monstros do Espaço, released in 2005, was a commercial and critical flop.
Xuxinha e Guto: Contra os Monstros do Espaço, Xuxa em O Mistério de Feiurinha, Xuxa em Sonho de Menina and the already mentioned Xuxa Popstar are among the 10 worst Family Films in history at the Internet Movie Data Base, earning Xuxa the dubious honour of being the only actress with multiple films in that list, all of them with less than 1.4 stars out of 10, dominating the category. In her 2006 movie, Xuxa Gêmeas, she played twins, one evil and one good. The movie featured the singer Ivete Sangalo and was a "come back" of Xuxa in the cinema. The movie had more than 1 million viewers and also received very poor ratings by international audiences with 1.7 stars out of 10 at the Internet Movie Database.
Xuxa is still popular with children today, who listen to her CD collection Só Para Baixinhos. As an extremely popular children's presenter in Brazil, her success created demand for more presenters to appear on TV in the mid-'80s/early '90s such as Angélica, Eliana and Mara Maravilha. She was the first Brazilian to appear twice on the Forbes list of richest artists, first in 1991 taking 37th place with an annual gross income of US$19 million. Her second appearance put her in 28th place with US$26 million. Xuxa is reportedly the wealthiest Brazilian entertainer. In 1991, she was one of the 40 best-paid celebrities in the World according to Forbes. She was the only Latin American on the list. Xuxa is one of the richest women in Brazil, with a net worth of more than US$350 million.
Her third album was the best-selling album in Brazilian history, selling almost 4 million copies. The album included the hit "Ilarie", which went to Number 1 across Latin America and was the bestselling single and most-played song on the radio in 1989. Xuxa's biggest singles were during her Xou da Xuxa era, the biggest of them all being "Ilariê", but she was also successful with "Lua de Cristal"; "Tindolelê"; "Brincar de Índio" and "Arco-Íris".
, Rio Grande do Sul – the city is Xuxa's birthplace]]
In 1992 People Magazine included Xuxa in its annual list of the 50 most beautiful people in the world, along with Princess Diana and Elizabeth Taylor.
On October 5, 2010, Xuxa sued Google over an action tried in Rio de Janeiro. The action claimed that Google should suppress all results including the actress, and the Brazilian word equivalent to "pedophilia". She won the action and the judge ordered that Google would pay a fine of R$20,000 for each "positive result" (link). The reason behind this process was her role in the very same film, Amor, Estranho Amor, which portrayed a relationship with a 12 year old child, and nude pictures of her published in 1981, both widely distributed over the Internet. As a result she got her name published in major portals in the Brazilian media, publishing the keywords "Xuxa pedófila", making it an example of the Streisand effect. Google claims not being capable to remove the references.
Category:1963 births Category:1980s singers Category:1990s singers Category:2000s singers Category:Brazilian film actors Category:Brazilian television actors Category:Brazilian female singers Category:Brazilian television personalities Category:Brazilian television presenters Category:Brazilian vegetarians Category:Brazilian Roman Catholics Category:Living people Category:People from Rio Grande do Sul Category:Brazilian people of Polish descent Category:Brazilian people of German descent Category:Brazilian people of Italian descent Category:Brazilian people of Austrian descent Category:Portuguese-language singers Category:Spanish-language singers Category:Latin Grammy Award winners
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