Biography:
Described by Paul Simon as "one of the most natural singers I've ever encountered" and likened by many to Frank Sinatra for his slender, angular looks, and for his astonishingly clear "angelic" voice, interpretive prowess and budding movie career, NYC native Marc Anthony became the undisputed superstar of salsa during the 1990s by making the genre hip among young Latinos who had grown up in the United States. English was his first language, but he encountered Latin music in the person of his father, a singer, songwriter and jabaro guitarist who had named him Marco Antonio Muniz after a famous Mexican crooner. Anthony began singing at home, and then at the age of 12, a neighborhood friend helped him land work as a background singer for commercials and demos. Though he eventually wrote songs and sang back-up for the Ricky Martin-era Menudo, he recalled to the Daily News (September 20, 1998): "Growing up, I was the ugly, skinny one, so I was forced to work on my personality."
Anthony and his father clashed when he began favoring Anglo pop, and he initially scored as a club-music artist with the 1991 dance hit "Ride on the Rhythm". Still, he was a natural when he finally decided to record salsa, developing his distinctive from-the-heart style of starting calmly and building to exultant crescendos. After the success of his first two salsa albums, he finally won a Best Tropical Latin Grammy for his third ("Contra La Corriente" 1997) and became the first salsa singer to sell out Madison Square Garden that year. Having made his feature debut in "Hackers" (1995), he exhibited a magnetic screen presence and an ability to easily play characters 10 years younger than himself as the restaurant's bus boy in "Big Night" and as a gangbanger in "The Substitute" (both 1996). Anthony subsequently made his Broadway debut starring as the teenage Salvador Agrand (Ruben Blades played him as an older man) in Paul Simon's "The Capeman" (1997). Despite lukewarm reviews for the show and an abbreviated run, he received enthusiastic notices for his performance.
Sony Music Entertainment chairman Thomas 'Tommy' Mottola saw more than just a salsero in the charismatic singer. Sensing that Latin music could snowball into a kind of "new Seattle scene," Mottola brought Anthony aboard Sony's Columbia Records, along with artists like Ricky Martin and Jennifer Lopez, though contractual difficulties with his former label (RMM Records) delayed the release of his 1999 English-language album "Marc Anthony" (The singer had previously released one album in English). The skinny youth who had matured into a legitimate heartthrob delivered a ballad-heavy disc as his introduction to pop audiences, but it was the scarcer upbeat, Latin-tinged songs (i.e., "I Need to Know") that really grabbed attention. His bilingual, multi-record deal worth more than $30 million promised to yield two records in 2000, one a return to salsa, and the other a move into Spanish-language pop. He also upped his screen profile considerably with "Bringing Out the Dead" (1999), playing the dreadlocked, brain-damaged homeless man described by director Martin Scorsese as "the soul of the movie." That same year he wrote and performed the song "You Sang to Me," which was promienntly featured in the Julia Roberts-Richard Gere romantic comedy "Runaway Bride."
In 2001 Anthony had a supporting role in the Spanish language film "En el tiempo de las mariposas" aka "In the Time of the Butterflies," the true story of the Mirabel sisters of the Dominican Republic, who were found murdered in 1960 after opposing the local military dictatorship. The singer would endure some personal trevails--including splitting and reconciling and splitting again with his wife Dayanara Torres Delgado and being romantically linked to his longtime friend, actress and singer Jennifer Lopez following her highly hyped relationship with Ben Affleck--before returning before the cameras for the action thriller "Man on Fire" (2004), playing a wealthy Mexico City industrialist with an American wife who hires a bodyguard (Denzel Washington) to keep his ten-year-old daughter (Dakota Fanning) safe. Shortly there after, Anthony secured a quickie Caribbean divorce from his wife Dayanara Torres and just days later shocked fans around the world with a sudden and unexpected marriage to Lopez just five months after her split from Affleck.
Facts:
Name: Marc Anthony
Birth Name: Marco Antonio Muniz
Height: 5' 7''
Sex: M
Nationality: American
Birth Date: September 16, 1968
Birth Place: New York, New York, USA
Profession: Actor, musician
Husband/Wife: Jennifer Lopez (actress; married on June 5, 2004), Dayanara Torres Delgado (Puerto Rican; former Miss Universe; engaged on October 17, 1999; married on May 9, 2000; split in July 2002; renewed their vows in December 2002; divorced on June 1, 2004)
Relationship: Debbie Rosado (policewoman; separated in 1995)
Father: Felipe Muniz (Puerto Rican; musician)
Mother: Guillermina Muniz (Puerto Rican; also known as Genny Muniz)
Sister: Yolanda Muniz
Half Brother: Bigram Zayas (Marc's manager; born in 1957)
Sister in law: Lynda López (Entertainment Correspondent for WB Network; born on June 14, 1973), Leslie Lopez
Son: Max (twins; born on February 22, 2008; mother: Jennifer Lopez), Ryan Anthony Muniz (born on August 16, 2003; mother: Dayanara Torres Delgado), Christian Anthony Muniz (born on February 5, 2001; mother: Dayanara Torres Delgado)
Daughter: Emme (twins; born on February 22, 2008; mother: Jennifer Lopez), Arianna Muniz (born in 1994; mother: Debbie Rosado)
Claim to fame: Number one dance hit Ride on the Rhythm (1991)