One of the most well-known crossover artists of the mid-1990s was Canadian singer-songwriter Eilleen Regina Edwards, best known by her stage name Shania Twain.
On August 28, 1965, she was born in Windsor, Ontario.
After releasing her Greatest Hits CD in 2004, which included three brand-new songs, including “Party for Two,” Twain took a break and later revealed that she had been diagnosed with Lyme illness and dysphonia, which had severely harmed her voice.
She wrote an autobiography titled From This Moment On, debuted her first song in six years, “Today Is Your Day,” in 2011, and discussed her vocal rehabilitation in the OWN miniseries Why Not? with Shania Twain.
On August 28, 1965, in Windsor, Ontario, Sharon (née Morrison) and Clarence Edwards welcomed Eilleen Regina Edwards into the world.
She has two sisters: Jill and Carrie Ann. Her mother and daughters moved to Timmins, Ontario, when she was two years old as a result of her parents’ divorce.
Are Shania Twain and Mark Twain related?
Yes, Sharon and Jerry Twain, an Ojibwa couple from the nearby Mattagami First Nation, gave birth to Mark. Jerry adopted the girls and legally changed their last names to Twain. When Darryl’s mother passed away when Mark was a little child, Jerry and Sharon adopted the infant as their own.
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