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Toni Braxton

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American singer (born 1967)
For the album, seeToni Braxton (album).

Toni Braxton
Braxton in 2015
Born
Toni Michele Braxton[1]

(1967-10-07)October 7, 1967 (age 58)[2][3]
Occupations
  • Singer
  • songwriter
  • actress
  • television personality
Years active1989–present
Spouse(s)
Keri Lewis
(m. 2001; div. 2013)

Children2
Relatives
AwardsFull list
Musical career
Genres
InstrumentVocals
Labels
Member ofThe Braxtons
Websitetonibraxton.com
Musical artist
Signature

Toni Michele Braxton (born October 7, 1967) is an American singer, songwriter, actress and television personality. She has sold over 70 million records worldwide and is one of the best-selling female artists in history. Braxton has won sevenGrammy Awards, nineBillboard Music Awards, sevenAmerican Music Awards, and numerous other accolades. In 2011, Braxton was inducted into theGeorgia Music Hall of Fame. In 2017, she was honored with the Legend Award at theSoul Train Music Awards.[7]

In the late 1980s, Braxton began performing with her sisters in the R&B groupthe Braxtons; the group was signed toArista Records. After attracting the attention of producersAntonio "L.A." Reid andKenneth "Babyface" Edmonds, she signed with their labelLaFace Records as a solo artist to release herself-titled debut studio album (1993). The album reached number one on theBillboard 200 chart, sold 10 million copies worldwide, and spawned the international hit singles "Another Sad Love Song" and "Breathe Again". Also a critical success, the album yielded Braxton threeGrammy Awards, including forBest New Artist.

Braxton experienced continued success with the albumsSecrets (1996) — which included theBillboard Hot 100-number one singles "You're Makin' Me High/Let It Flow" and "Un-Break My Heart" — andThe Heat (2000), which debuted at number two on theBillboard 200 and spawned the top two single "He Wasn't Man Enough". Braxton's subsequent studio albums,Snowflakes (2001),More Than a Woman (2002),Libra (2005) andPulse (2010), were released amid contractual disputes and health issues. In 2014, Braxton and former label boss Babyface released the duet albumLove, Marriage & Divorce (2014), which wonBest R&B Album at the57th Annual Grammy Awards. Further label changes saw the release ofSex & Cigarettes (2018) underDef Jam Recordings andSpell My Name (2020) underIsland.

Braxton is also active in television production and presentation. She competed in theseventh season of the reality competition seriesDancing with the Stars. She executive produced and starred inBraxton Family Values, a reality television series that aired onWe TV from 2011 to 2020. Braxton was also an executive producer ofTamar & Vince, a spinoff reality series starring her younger sister, Tamar.

Early life

Toni Michele Braxton was born inSevern, Maryland,[8] on October 7, 1966.[9] Her father, Michael Conrad Braxton Sr., was aMethodist[10][11]clergyman and power company worker, and her mother, Evelyn Jackson, a native ofSouth Carolina, was a former opera singer and cosmetologist, as well as a pastor.[12][13] Braxton's maternal grandfather was also a pastor.[14] Braxton later said that her religious upbringing had given her an advantage musically, saying it gave her "a finer-tuned ear. [...] The church pulpit is the stage. You got the congregation, that's your audience. And so we were comfortable performing".[15]

Braxton is the eldest of six siblings.[16] She has a younger brother Michael Jr. (born 1968) and four younger sistersTraci Renee (1971 - 2022),Towanda Chloe (born 1973),Trina Evette (born 1974), andTamar Estine (born 1977). They were raised in a strict religious household,[17] and Braxton's first performing experience was singing in her church choir.[17]

Braxton attendedBowie State University to obtain a teaching degree,[18] but decided to sing professionally after she was discovered by William E. Pettaway Jr., who reportedly heard her singing to herself while pumping gas.[19]

On her appearance May 24, 2014, broadcast ofNPR'sWait Wait... Don't Tell Me!, she stated that she was not singing to herself at the gas station. Pettaway, working as an attendant at theAnnapolis service station where she was refueling, recognized her from local performances and introduced himself, saying he wanted to produce her. Although skeptical, Braxton decided to, in her words, "take a chance" and accepted.[20]

Career

1989–1995: The Braxtons,Toni Braxton and breakthrough

Main article:The Braxtons

Braxton and her four sisters Traci, Towanda, Trina, and Tamar began performing asThe Braxtons in the late 1980s and were signed toArista Records in 1989. Their first single, "Good Life", was released in 1990.[21] Though the song was not successful, it attracted the attention of record executiveAntonio "L.A." Reid and record producerKenneth "Babyface" Edmonds.[21] Reid and Babyface recruited her to record a demo of "Love Shoulda Brought You Home", a song that they had written for Anita Baker for the soundtrack ofEddie Murphy's film,Boomerang. Baker, who was pregnant at the time, did not record the song but suggested that Braxton record it.[22] Her recording was later included on the soundtrack along with "Give U My Heart", a duet by Braxton and Babyface. Braxton, meanwhile, was signed to Reid and Edmonds' Arista-distributed imprint,LaFace Records, and immediately began recording her solo debut album.[citation needed]

In July 1993, LaFace released Braxton'sself-titled debut album.[23] Primarily produced by Reid,Babyface, andDaryl Simmons, it peaked at number one on the USBillboard 200 and entered the top ten of the albums chart in Australia, Canada, Germany, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom.[24] The first single, "Another Sad Love Song", peaked at number seven and number two on theBillboard Hot 100 andR&B Singles charts respectively.[25] The album's second single, "Breathe Again", peaked in the top five of both the Hot 100 and R&B singles charts[25] and no 2 in the UK.[26] More singles fromToni Braxton were released in 1994, including "You Mean the World to Me", "Seven Whole Days", and "I Belong to You/How Many Ways".[25]

Braxton's debut album won her several awards, including threeGrammy Awards (forBest New Artist and two consecutive awards forBest Female R&B Vocal Performance in 1994 and 1995).[27] She won twoAmerican Music Awards (for Favorite Soul/R&B New Artist and Favorite New Adult Contemporary Artist)[27] in 1994 and another one in 1995 (for Favorite Soul/R&B Album).[27]Toni Braxton was certified 8× platinum in USA and has sales of over 10 million worldwide.[28][29]

1996–1999:Secrets and financial issues

In June 1996, Braxton released her second albumSecrets.[30] Motivated "to include a little bit of everything",[31] Braxton reteamed with Babyface, but also worked withR. Kelly,Tony Rich, andDavid Foster on the album, which she co-produced.[32] A major success, it peaked at number two on theBillboard 200 and reached the top ten on most international charts.[33] After 92 weeks in the charts,Secrets was certified 8× platinum, becoming Braxton's second straight 8 million-seller. Internationally,Secrets sold more than 15 million copies, further cementing Braxton's superstar status.[29] The album's first single, "You're Makin' Me High", marked Braxton's first number-one hit on the USBillboard Hot 100,[25] while follow-up "Un-Break My Heart", a ballad written and composed byDiane Warren, became the biggest hit of Braxton's career yet. It spent eleven consecutive weeks at number one on the Hot 100 and enjoyed worldwide top five success.[21][34][35]

As a result, Braxton topped several ofBillboard's year-end charts,[36] and won two Grammy Awards; one forBest Female Pop Vocal Performance[27] for "Un-Break My Heart" and Best Female R&B Vocal Performance for "You're Makin' Me High" as well as twoAmerican Music Awards for Favorite Female Soul/R&B Artist and Favorite Soul/R&B Album.[27] Still waiting on her financial rewards, Braxton eventually launched an unsuccessful lawsuit against Arista and LaFace Records. Soon after, she filed for chapter 7 bankruptcy. Public reaction to these events was very harsh, having been expressed most clearly in an interview onThe Oprah Winfrey Show.[37]

Braxton has appeared in twoDisneyBroadway shows: She made her Broadway debut asBelle inBeauty and the Beast beginning September 9, 1998, when she replaced Kim Huber.[38] During her run in the showAlan Menken wrote and composed a new song for the musical, titled "A Change in Me", which he specially wrote and composed for Braxton, and was still being used in the musical as of late July 2014.[39] She left the production on February 28, 1999, and was succeeded byAndrea McArdle.[40] Her role inBeauty and the Beast marked the first (and only) time a black woman commanded the leading role of Belle on Broadway. (In the UK,Michelle Gayle played the role in the West End.) It also marked the first time a black woman would star in a Disney musical on Broadway. In 1999, the lawsuit against LaFace Records was settled and Braxton was given back all her possessions, giving her time to recordThe Heat, her first album in four years.[41]

2000–2002:The Heat,More Than a Woman, and acting debut

After her three-year-long dispute with LaFace and Arista had been settled, Braxton signed a new $20 million contract.[42] In April 2000, her third studio album,The Heat was released. Braxton took a more hands-on approach, co-writing and co-producing a handful of the tracks which saw her adapting a moreurban sound. It opened at number two on the USBillboard 200 with 199,000 copies sold in its first week, eventually going double platinum in the United States, while selling over 4 million copies worldwide.[29][43][44] Additionally, the album was nominated forBest R&B Album at the2001 Grammy Awards, while uptempo lead single "He Wasn't Man Enough", a worldwide top ten hit, won forBest Female R&B Vocal Performance and was nominated forBest R&B Song.[45]

In 2001, Braxton made her movie acting debut in directorDoug McHenry's comedy filmKingdom Come opposite an ensemble also starringLL Cool J,Jada Pinkett Smith, andWhoopi Goldberg. A modest box-office success, it grossed $23.4 million worldwide.[46] The same year, Braxton recorded and released theChristmas albumSnowflakes which consistedR&B–led original songs co-penned with Keri Lewis and Babyface as well as several remixes and cover versions ofChristmas standards andcarols. It received a mixed reception by critics, many of whom compared its nature to Braxton's other work but found the stylized production and original material too contemporary to conjure images ofChristmas, and failed to reach the upper half of theBillboard 200, eventually going gold in the United States.

In 2002, while gearing up for the release of her fourth studio album, Braxton discovered she was pregnant with her second child. Knowing that she would be unable to promote the album properly, she unsuccessfully lobbiedArista Records to get the label to postpone its release until after she was to give birth. In November 2002,More Than a Woman was released. Opening to an instant commercial disappointment, the album peaked at number 13 on the USBillboard 200, but was less successful internationally. The first single "Hit the Freeway" failed to impact, resulting in lackluster sales in general and the release of no further singles.More Than a Woman was eventually certified gold in the United States and sold more than 800,000 copies worldwide.[47]

2003–2007:Libra and Las Vegas residency

In April 2003, Braxton abruptly left Arista Records, having been there for 14 years, and immediately signed withBlackground Records, headed byBarry Hankerson, her manager at the time. She then starred inAida as Aida beginning June 30, 2003, when she replaced actressSimone,[48] until she left the cast on November 16, 2003.[49] In April 2005, Braxton's new label, Blackground/Universal, released "Please", the first single from her fifth album,Libra. The album was originally planned for a June release, but it was pushed back several times and was finally issued on September 27.Libra peaked at number four on the USBillboard 200, selling 114,593 copies in the first week, and peaked at number two on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums. The album was certified gold in late 2005 and has since sold 679,000 copies worldwide.[47]

In May 2005, Braxton made an appearance on the season finale ofAmerican Idol 5, where she performedElvis Presley's "In the Ghetto" with soon-to-be winnerTaylor Hicks.[50] A month later, "The Time of Our Lives", a duet with classical crossover vocal groupIl Divo, was released as a single, serving as the official2006 FIFA World Cup anthem. Braxton performed the song, which entered the top ten in Switzerland, at the opening ceremony inBerlin on June 9, 2005.[51] In August 2006, Braxton replaced singerWayne Newton as theFlamingo Las Vegas's new headlining act.[52] The show, entitledToni Braxton: Revealed, was to be performed six nights a week and was scheduled to run through to March 2007. Braxton later confirmed that she was extending her show through to August 2007. Due to its success, it was reported that Braxton would extend her show through to August 2008, though the show was later cancelled in order for Braxton to focus on her health after being diagnosed withmicrovascular angina.[53]

On January 12, 2007, Braxton filed a $10 million lawsuit against her former managerBarry Hankerson, alleging "fraud, deception and double dealing", in addition to mismanaging her relationship with Arista Records.[54] According to Braxton's lawsuit, Hankerson placed his personal financial interests ahead of hers by using 'double-talk' to compromise the relationship between Braxton and her former label, with Hankerson allegedly telling Arista that "Braxton no longer wanted to record for Arista", and telling Braxton that "Arista was not interested in working with her anymore".[54] The suit was settled with Braxton being forced to return a $375,000 advance to Hankerson, who would also receive a percentage of the sales of her next album, and Hankerson releasing Braxton from her contract with him. The settlement also temporarily limited the companies with which Braxton could sign.[55][56] Hankerson claimed that the problems initially arose due to a number of disputes with Braxton and her wish to include her husband in her music.[57]

2008–2012:Pulse and television

Following the abrupt cancellation of herToni Braxton: Revealed show, Braxton experienced financial difficulties when insurance agencyLloyd's of London refused to honor her policy that she purchased for upwards of $70,000 that included financial compensations for financial losses.[58][59][60] Lloyd's responded with a counter-suit seeking damages against her because of an unrelated heart condition that the company was not made aware of at the time the application was filed.[61] When Braxton acknowledged that she did not disclose her full medical history at the time,[59][62] she got on the hook for all damages because of the cancelled shows, being sued by multiple companies, and had to once again file for bankruptcy.[63][60][64] In September 2008, Braxton appeared on theseventh season of American dance competition seriesDancing with the Stars; her partner wasAlec Mazo. They were voted off in the fifth week of the competition.[65]

Braxton at theVH1 Divas 2009 red carpet

In 2009, Braxton signed toAtlantic Records and began work on her next studio album.[66] In February 2010, she was part of thesupergroup Artists for Haiti who recorded "We Are the World 25 for Haiti", a remake of the 1985 hit "We Are the World", to help benefit the people ofHaiti following themagnitude 7.0 Mwearthquake.[67] Three months later,Pulse, her seventh studio album, was released.[68][69] A collection of up-tempo songs and R&B ballads with production varying from smooth todance-based styles, it debuted at number nine on the USBillboard 200, selling 54,000 copies in its first week, and topped theR&B/Hip-Hop Albums, becoming Braxton's fifth US top-ten album. A moderate chart success elsewhere, it reached the top ten in Switzerland, and the top 20 in Germany and Greece. While critical reception ofPulse was generally positive,[70] its singles "Yesterday", "Hands Tied" and "Make My Heart" achieved moderate chart success.[71][72]

In 2011, Braxton signed withWE tv for areality series,Braxton Family Values. Chronicling the lives of Braxton and her sistersTamar,Traci, Towanda, andTrina, plus their mother Evelyn, the series debuted on April 12, 2011.[73] It received favorable reviews from critics who recognized it as a "guilty pleasure" and spawned several seasons and spin-offs.[74] In September 2011, Braxton parted ways with her long-time manager Vincent Herbert, husband of sister Tamar, and signed a new management deal with Los Angeles-based entertainment/production company The Collective.[75] In March 2012, she released the standalone single "I Heart You", a dance-pop,EDM and house song that peaked at number one on the USDance Club Songs.[76][77] Also that year, Braxton played Rosalie Rosebud, a singer with an over-the-top personality, in the children's musical adventure comedy filmThe Oogieloves in the Big Balloon Adventure alongsideJaime Pressly andCloris Leachman,[78][79] and began filming a lead role in theLifetime Movie Network filmTwist of Faith which premiered the following year.[80]

2013–2014:Love, Marriage and Divorce, Broadway return, and biographical film

In 2013, Braxton and longtime creative music partnerBabyface began work on their collaborative studio albumLove, Marriage & Divorce which was released in February 2014 underMotown Records. It received favorable reviews from music critics, who labeled it as "high-quality R&B",[81] and debuted at number 4 on theBillboard 200 and the top of the R&B/Hip-Hop Albums with first-week sales of 67,000 copies.[82]Love, Marriage & Divorce was nominated for World's Best Album at the2014 World Music Awards and won forBest R&B Album at the57th Grammy Awards.[83] Lead single "Hurt You" reached number one on the USAdult R&B Songs, becoming Braxton's first song to do so since her 2000 release "Just Be a Man About It".[84] The song also hit number 16 onBillboard Hot R&B/ Hip Hop Airplay chart.[85][86]

Braxton, alongside Babyface, made her return toBroadway in the musicalAfter Midnight in March 2014. The third in rotation in the role of "Special Guest Star" followingFantasia Barrino andKD Lang, they performed from March 18 to 31, 2014 at theBrooks Atkinson Theatre.[87] In May 2014, Braxton published a memoir,Unbreak My Heart: A Memoir, throughHarper Collins Publishers. In it, Braxton discusses her career success and struggles and the self-healing she took charge of after her own diagnosis with the auto-immune diseaselupus and her son's diagnosis with autism.[88] In October 2015, Toni along withThe Braxtons released the holiday albumBraxton Family Christmas onDef Jam Recordings.[89][90] Comprising cover versions of Christmas standards and carols as well as several original songs, it debuted and peaked at number 27 on the USBillboard R&B/Hip-Hop Albums.[91]

Lifetime premiered the biographical filmToni Braxton: Unbreak My Heart, based on Braxton's memoir, in January 2016;[92] actressLex Scott Davis portrayed Braxton in the film. The biopic's premiere generated 3.6 million viewers.[93] In July, Braxton announced that she would embark on a concert tour, titledThe Hits Tour, that October.[94] She was hospitalized on October 3, five days before the tour was scheduled to begin, due to complications withlupus, resulting in the cancellation of the tour's first two dates.[95][96] Braxton was admitted to hospital again on October 15, leading to another tour date cancellation, which was later rescheduled.[97][98] In December, she announced that the January 2017 concert dates had been canceled.[99][100][101][102]

2017–2019:Sex & Cigarettes, touring, and other ventures

In January 2018, Braxton starred in the Lifetime filmFaith Under Fire.[103] In March, her eighth studio albumSex & Cigarettes, her first solo album in eight years, was released on Def Jam Recordings.[104] An adult contemporary R&B album with production fromFred Ball, Babyface,Dapo Torimiro, andTricky Stewart, it debuted at number 22 on the USBillboard 200 and number one on theTop R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.Sex & Cigarettes received mainly positive reviews from music critics,[105] and was nominated forBest R&B Album at the61st Annual Grammy Awards.[106] Second single "Long as I Live" topped the US Adult R&B Songs, becoming Braxton's eighth chart topper, while breaking a tie with singers Maxwell and R. Kelly to give her sole possession of the second-most number-ones in the chart's 24-year history.[107] It also received Grammy Award nomination forBest R&B Performance andBest R&B Song.[106]

Also in 2018, Braxton and Uncle Bud's Hemp products created a joint marketing campaign for the latter's products, which Braxton noted as helpful in her battle against lupus.[108] In April 2018, Braxton and her sisters Trina and Towanda appeared on their sister Traci's single "Broken Things".[109] In November, Braxton and Towanda appeared in the holiday filmEvery Day is Christmas, which premiered on Lifetime.[110][111][112] The same month, she announced herAs Long as I Live Tour, a joint concert tour withSWV,[113] which took her to South Africa and the United Kingdom.[114] In June 2019, Braxton headlined the 2019 Pittsburgh Pride festival.[115]

2020–present: New record label andSpell My Name

In April 2020, it was announced that Braxton had signed withIsland Records. She released the single, "Do It", her first song under the new deal on April 6, 2020.[116] In May, Braxton released a remix EP for her second single "Dance".[117] On June 26, 2020,Missy Elliott appeared on the official remix to the single "Do It".Elliott co-produced the track alongside Hannon Lane.[118] On August 4, 2020, Braxton released the music video for "Dance", directed by Mike Ho.[119] On August 27, 2020, Braxton released the song "Nothin'".[120] Braxton's tenth studioSpell My Name was released on August 28, 2020.[121] On October 23, 2020, Braxton released a video for her song "Gotta Move On".[122]

In 2021, Braxton competed onseason six ofThe Masked Singer as "Pufferfish". She was the third to be eliminated during the two-night premiere alongsideDwight Howard as "Octopus" andVivica A. Fox as "Mother Nature". Despite being unmasked, Braxton kept on a glittered KN95cloth face mask over her mouth due to her lupus condition.[123] Braxton is anexecutive producer and star in the 2022Lifetime movieThe Fallen Angels Murder Club.[124][125][126]

Artistry

Braxton has been recognized for her distinctivecontralto voice.[127][128] Her voice has been called "husky, sultry, elegant and sexy".[129] Due to the huskiness of her voice, Braxton often used male singers such asMichael McDonald,Luther Vandross andStevie Wonder as vocal style models.[4]Chaka Khan andAnita Baker were two of the few female singers that she could stylize. Steve Huey ofAllMusic cites a key to Braxton's success is the versatility of her voice, which he states as being "soulful enough forR&B audiences, but smooth enough for adult contemporary; sophisticated enough for adults, but sultry enough for younger listeners; strong enough in the face of heartbreak to appeal to women, but ravishing enough to nab the fellas."[4] In 2023,Rolling Stone ranked Braxton at No. 48 on their list of the 200 Greatest Singers of All Time.[130]

Braxton began her career singing traditional R&B and soft rock ballads and love songs on her debut and second albums. However,hip-hop soul anddance music elements begun to get spun into her sound onThe Heat,[131]More Than a Woman,[132] andPulse. She also showcased her classical training while performing in Broadway playsBeauty and the Beast andAida as well as her duet withIl Divo, "The Time of Our Lives".

Legacy

Toni Braxton became an R&B superstar after the release of her first album. LA Reid stated during an interview withVH1: "We called her the first lady of LaFace. She was our Diva.Clive hadWhitney,Tommy hadMariah and we had Toni." BBC called the album "spiritedly, mature soul at its best – and just urban enough to make it the bedroom album for the hip hop generation."[133] Over the span of her career Braxton has sold over 70 million records,[citation needed] including 40 million albums,[134] worldwide. Her hit "Un-Break My Heart", theDiane Warren-penned ballad, spent 11-weeks at number 1. Bob McCann, author ofEncyclopedia of African American Actresses in Film and Television (2010), considered it "simply one of the most haunting R&B records ever made." Reviewer Mark Edward Nero named it one of the best R&B break-up songs and considered it Braxton's "finest moment". He further commented, "damn, this song is so sad it can make people cry for hours at a time." Braxton is a recipient of sevenGrammy Awards, sevenAmerican Music Awards, and nineBillboard Music Awards.[citation needed] She has been cited as an influence by various artists, such asBeyoncé, sisterTamar Braxton,Billie Godfrey,Kelly Clarkson,Leela James,Keyshia Cole,Teyana Taylor,Kehlani,Sevyn Streeter,[135]Ari Lennox[136] andAnja Nissen.[137]

Braxton's career, she made several impacts on fashion, mostly for her high splits in her dresses. In 2011, Braxton topped the list for theGrammy Award's best dressed of the decade.[138] "I've always gone a little risque with all my other award show outfits."[139] In 2012, Braxton made the list forVH1's 50 Greatest Women in Music. Braxton's 2000 performance atSuper Bowl XXXIV is ranked as one of the most memorable Super Bowl performances.[140] Braxton is featured alongside other R&B and pop divas as a primary character on the popularwebparodyGot 2B Real: The Diva Variety Show.[141] With her Las Vegas residencyToni Braxton: Revealed, she became the first African American performer in Las Vegas to have her act enter the top ten Vegas shows charting.[citation needed] Braxton also made headlines for her Giantto Million Dollar Microphone that she performed every show with. Braxton said: "I think it's a great element to the show. You have to have a little sprinkle ofLiberace and this is my little sprinkle of that." Braxton's prop was made up of white gold and encrusted with 650 karats of diamonds.[142] The microphone reportedly cost $1 million.[citation needed]

Braxton has also been seen as agay icon, with some of her songs becominggay anthems, such as "Un-Break My Heart", "He Wasn't Man Enough" and "Make My Heart". The singer stated that after the release of "Un-Break My Heart", she "recognized all the support. And it was really wonderful." When asked about her gay fans, Braxton said "I love my boys because my boys help me be a better girl. My choreographer and my video director are gay, and they've been my best friends since I started in the industry. They're my favorite part of the whole industry".[143]

Personal life

Relationships

Braxton met musicianKeri Lewis when his group,Mint Condition, opened for her on tour; they married on April 21, 2001. In December 2001, she gave birth to their first child, a son. In 2002, while gearing up for the release of her fourth studio album, Braxton discovered she was pregnant with her second child; the complicated pregnancy confined her tobed rest. The couple's second son was born in 2003. As he has been diagnosed withautism, Braxton has become involved withAutism Speaks, serving as their International Spokesperson. In November 2009, Braxton announced that she and her husband had separated. The couple later divorced in July 2013.[144]

In her early 30s, Braxton had an abortion after discovering she was pregnant by then-boyfriend Keri Lewis. In her memoirUnbreak My Heart, Braxton discusses her abortion and guilt, saying that her second son's autism was "God's payback".[145] In an October 2006 concert at theFlamingo Las Vegas, Braxton broke down in tears while announcing to the audience that just before the concert began she had been told that her son had been diagnosed withautism.[146] Braxton has been outspoken regarding her doctor's failure to diagnose his condition earlier, contending that if he had been diagnosed earlier he could have received treatment earlier.[147] As well as becoming a spokeswoman for Autism Speaks,[148] she is also a spokeswoman for theAmerican Heart Association.

On July 8, 2015, Braxton's attorney, Antavius Weems, announced that Braxton had settled her contentious child support case with her former husband, Keri Lewis.[149] On June 2, 2016, the city and county officials ofAtlanta, Georgia, named June 2 as Toni Braxton Day.[150]

Braxton began dating rapperBirdman in May 2016, and the couple announced their engagement in February 2018.[151] In January 2019, the couple called off the engagement.[152] In April 2019, both Braxton and Birdman confirmed that they were still together,[153] however, they broke up later that year.[154] In November 2023, Braxton posted that they were dating again.[155] On August 8, 2024, the couple got married.[154] Two weeks later, Braxton filed for divorce.[154] She later dismissed the filing in January 2025.[154]

Health problems

In August 2007, rumors surfaced that Braxton had been diagnosed with breast cancer. She stated toAccess Hollywood that the breast cancer rumors were false and that her health was very good. However, in 2008, she had abenign lump removed from her breast. On April 8, 2008, near the end of her two-year run at theFlamingo Hotel, Braxton was briefly hospitalized and the remaining dates on the show, which was scheduled to end on August 23, 2008, were cancelled.[156] Later, while appearing on Season 7 ofDancing with the Stars, she stated, that she has been diagnosed withmicrovascular angina (small vessel disease).[157]

On November 18, 2010, Braxton revealed toCBS News that she had been diagnosed withsystemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), a potentially life-threatening autoimmune disease.[158]

Braxton's uncle died of complications from lupus.[158] While taping her reality seriesBraxton Family Values, she went into hospital for surgery. Braxton was hospitalized in Los Angeles in December 2012 because of "minor health issues" related tolupus.[159]

Discography

Main article:Toni Braxton discography
See also:The Braxtons discography

Studio albums

Collaborative albums

Tours and residencies

Headlining

Co-headlining

Residencies

Awards and nominations

Main article:List of awards and nominations received by Toni Braxton

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
2001Kingdom ComeJuanita Slocumb
2002Play'd: A Hip Hop StoryShondaTelevision film
2012The Oogieloves in the Big Balloon AdventureRosalie Rosebud
2013Twist of FaithNina JonesTelevision film
2016Toni Braxton: Unbreak My HeartHerselfTelevision film
2018Faith Under Fire: The Antoinette Tuff StoryAntoinette TuffTelevision film
2018Every Day Is ChristmasAlexis TaylorTelevision film
2022Fallen Angels Murder ClubHollis MorganTelevision film
2025He Wasn’t Man EnoughMel MontgomeryTelevision film[163]
2026Breathe AgainJenniferTelevision film[163]

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1994RocHerselfEpisode: "The Concert"
2000Mad TVHerselfEpisode: "6.10"
2004Blue's CluesHerselfEpisode: "Bluestock"
2005Kevin HillTerry Knox3 episodes
2008Dancing with the StarsHerselfSeason 7 contestant
2011–2020, 2024[164][165][166]Braxton Family ValuesHerselfMain role; 142 episodes
2021The Masked SingerHerself/PufferfishSeason 6 contestant
2024The NeighborhoodHerselfEpisode: "Welcome to the World"

Music videos

TitleYearArtistNotes
"Miss You"2002Aaliyah
"Last Call"2014Traci Braxton

See also

References

  1. ^"Ebony". Johnson Publishing Company. June 2001.Archived from the original on March 9, 2023. RetrievedOctober 29, 2020.
  2. ^Amy Duncan (February 27, 2018)."Toni Braxton age, net worth, husband, children and lupus diagnosis".Metro.
  3. ^"Toni Braxton facts: Singer's age, songs, husband, children and career revealed".Smooth Radio. February 10, 2023.
  4. ^abcHuey, Steve."Toni Braxton – Music Biography, Credits and Discography".AllMusic.Archived from the original on July 2, 2012. RetrievedJuly 29, 2012.
  5. ^Otterson, Joe (October 6, 2015)."Lifetime Finds Its Toni Braxton for Biopic".TheWrap.Archived from the original on July 12, 2018. RetrievedSeptember 1, 2016.
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