Cultural impact of Cher

Impact of American singer and actress Cher on popular culture From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cher (born 1946) is an American entertainer who has influenced popular culture across music, film, television, fashion and activism throughout a career spanning more than six decades. She is the only solo artist to have topped the US Billboard singles charts in seven consecutive decades and the only performer to hold both an Academy Award for acting and induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. She is also a recipient of the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award and the Kennedy Center Honors, the highest cultural recognition in the United States.

Cher with arms raised above her head, wearing a blush pink peasant blouse with silver leaf embroidery and billowing sleeves, gazing softly at the camera.
Cher photographed by Harry Langdon Jr., 1978

Cher first reached global audiences as one half of the folk rock duo Sonny & Cher, whose 1965 single "I Got You Babe" became an emblem of the 1960s counterculture. The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour drew more than 30 million weekly viewers in the early 1970s, and her solo follow-up Cher was credited with bringing "a rock sensibility to prime-time television". She transitioned to film in the 1980s, winning the Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Actress for Mask (1985) and the Academy Award for Best Actress for Moonstruck (1987); her roles often mirror her public image as an independent, self-made woman. Her 1998 album Believe and its title track introduced the stylized use of Auto-Tune, later dubbed the "Cher effect" and called "the sound of the 21st century".

Widely referred to as the "Goddess of Pop", Cher has also been called the "ultimate pop chameleon" and the "Queen of the Comeback" in recognition of her continual reinvention. She has been cited as a fashion icon whose Bob Mackie-designed looks reshaped red-carpet fashion. She has also been embraced as a gay icon for her defiant self-presentation and long-standing LGBTQ advocacy, and is frequently imitated by drag queens. Entertainers including Beyoncé, Lady Gaga, Jennifer Lopez and Kanye West have cited her as an influence. Her humanitarian work—channeled through the Cher Charitable Foundation, amfAR, Operation Helmet, Free the Wild and the CherCares pandemic initiative—has addressed LGBTQ rights, veterans' welfare, HIV/AIDS relief, animal rights and advocacy for recognition of the Armenian genocide.

Artistry

Musicianship and voice

Cher sings into a microphone, her long dark hair framing her face, wearing a simple, casual light-colored outfit and a ring.
Cher performing in New York, 1996; her contralto voice has been praised for its versatility across genres

Music historian Annie Zaleski wrote in Cher's Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction essay that she sings "nearly every style of music" effortlessly.[1] Across her career, Cher has explored a range of genres including rock—spanning folk, punk, arena and pop subgenres—as well as soul, jazz, disco, new wave, power ballads, hip hop and electronic dance music,[1][2] an eclecticism she framed as an attempt to "remain relevant and do work that strikes a chord".[3]

Before her Sonny & Cher partnership, Cher sang backup vocals under Phil Spector, appearing on canonical Wall of Sound recordings including the Ronettes' "Be My Baby" (1963) and the Righteous Brothers' "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'" (1964).[4] The Guardian's Alexis Petridis described Cher's early work with Sonny Bono as "the sound of the growing 60s counterculture",[5] while author Joseph Murrells called the duo "leading exponents of the rock-folk-message type of song", blending rock instrumentation, folk themes and protest lyrics.[6] Goldmine's Phill Marder credited Cher's musical success to her "nearly flawless" song selection, noting that while Sonny contributed to early hits, most of her solo successes came from independent songwriters she chose.[7] Cher's songbook has centered on heartbreak, independence and women's empowerment, positioning her, in the words of Out's Judy Wieder, as a "brokenhearted symbol of a strong but decidedly single woman".[8]

Cher's contralto voice has been praised for its distinctiveness.[9] Ann Powers of The New York Times described her voice as "a quintessential rock voice: impure, quirky [and] a fine vehicle for projecting personality."[10] Her low timbre drew notice from the earliest stage of her career: many radio programmers rejected her 1964 debut single "Ringo, I Love You", mistaking her deep voice for a male vocal and assuming it was a gay man singing to the Beatles drummer Ringo Starr.[11] On her first charting solo single "All I Really Want to Do", Cher's voice dips so low on alternating lines that Atlantic Records president Ahmet Ertegun became convinced Sonny was singing alongside her, which would have constituted a breach of contract.[12]

An advertisement features a black-and-white portrait of Cher with long, straight hair and bangs, wearing a dark outfit. The text promotes her "phenomenal talent" and upcoming TV appearances.
Advertisement for Cher's third solo single, "All I Really Want to Do", featured in Cash Box, June 26, 1965

Writing about Cher's musical output during the 1960s, Robert Hilburn of the Los Angeles Times stated that "rock was subsequently blessed with the staggering blues exclamations of Janis Joplin in the late '60s and the raw poetic force of Patti Smith in the mid-'70s. Yet no one matched the pure, seductive wallop of Cher".[13] Her debut album, All I Really Want to Do (1965), was praised by AllMusic's Tim Sendra as "one of the stronger folk-pop records of the era".[14] Upon its release, the Byrds withdrew their competing version of the Bob Dylan-written title song; Roger McGuinn recalled, "We loved the Cher version ... We didn't want to hassle. So we just turned our record over."[15] AllMusic's Mark Deming later judged 3614 Jackson Highway (1969) "the finest album of her career" and "still a revelation four decades after it was released".[16]

Hilburn wrote, "There were a lot of great records by female singers in the early days of rock ... None, however, reflected the authority and command that we associate with rock 'n' roll today as much as [Cher's] key early hits".[13] Some of Cher's early solo songs address subjects rarely explored in American popular music, such as divorce, prostitution, unplanned and underaged pregnancy, and racism.[7] According to AllMusic's Joe Viglione, her 1972 single "The Way of Love" reads "either about a woman expressing her love for another woman or a woman saying au revoir to a gay male she loved",[17] and her ability to carry both male and female ranges allowed her to sing solo in androgynous and gender-neutral songs.[17]

Cher's 1970s vocals were described by Eder as "dramatic, highly intense ... [and] almost as much 'acted' as sung".[18] Her 1975 album Stars, recorded during her push to establish herself as a rock artist, drew praise from Richard Seeley of the Daily Breeze as "an important link between the rock and roll subculture and the mass popular music audience", with Seeley noting that Cher showed "real talent" by choosing lesser-known rock songwriters over "surefire hit makers like John [Lennon] and [Paul] McCartney".[19] First heard on the 1980 record Black Rose,[20] her sharper, more aggressive vocals on hard rock-oriented albums established her sexually confident image. The album, recorded with a short-lived band she formed with guitarist Les Dudek, received poor reviews; Cher told Rolling Stone that critics "didn't attack the record, they attacked me. It was like, 'How dare Cher sing rock & roll?'"[21][22] AllMusic's Donald A. Guarisco praised her 1981 duet with Meat Loaf, "Dead Ringer for Love", as "one of the more inspired rock duets of the 1980s".[23]

Reviewing Cher's 1991 album Love Hurts in Entertainment Weekly, Jim Farber praised her "sexually autonomous persona" as "one of the surest of any pop female", noting how she turned heartbreak lyrics into expressions of revenge rather than victimhood.[22] For 1995's It's a Man's World, by contrast, she restrained her vocals, singing in higher registers and without vibrato;[24] Stephen Holden of The New York Times wrote that "From an artistic standpoint, this soulful collection of grown-up pop songs ... is the high point of her recording career."[25]

Cher's 1998 song "Believe" was the first commercial recording to use Auto-Tune—an audio processor for correcting off-key vocals—as a stylistic effect, creating a robotic, futuristic sound.[26][27] According to Rolling Stone's Christopher R. Weingarten, the producers "used the pitch correction software not as a way to fix mistakes in Cher's iconic voice, but as an aesthetic tool".[27] Cher, who proposed the effect,[28] faced resistance from her label but insisted it remain, saying, "You can change [the song] over my dead body".[28] Dubbed the "Cher effect",[26] the technique was later described by Pitchfork's Simon Reynolds as having "revolutionized the sound of popular music" and as "the sound of the 21st century".[29] Cher used Auto-Tune extensively on Living Proof (2001) and later albums.[30]

AllMusic's Jose F. Promis described Cher's 2000 album Not Commercial, largely self-written during a songwriting camp in 1994 and recorded with members of David Letterman's CBS Orchestra, as carrying a "1970s singer-songwriter feel" that highlights her storytelling skills.[31] She chose the title after her label's chief dismissed the project as "nice, but not commercial" and rejected it for its explicit language and bleak content, including personal trauma, homelessness, veteran neglect and the suicide of Kurt Cobain. She sold it independently on her website, an unusual move for an artist under contract with a major label. One of its songs, "Sisters of Mercy", described the nuns who prevented her mother from retrieving her from a Catholic orphanage as "daughters of hell", drawing condemnation from the Catholic Church.[32]

Live performances, TV shows and music videos

Cher sits on a chandelier-like stage prop, wearing a black and nude vampire-themed outfit with a feathered headpiece. Bare-chested male dancers with fake horns pose around her.
Cher on the Dressed to Kill Tour, 2014; critics have noted her concerts' defiance of age and expectations of female sexuality

Cher's live performances, prime-time television work and music videos have frequently reflected her public image, addressing themes such as self-construction, female sexuality and the pursuit of perfection.[33] Commenting on the scale of her shows, Tony Spilde of The Bismarck Tribune wrote that Cher's "lavish concerts have become bigger than the music they're meant to promote",[34] while James Sullivan of the San Francisco Chronicle credited her with influencing the development of stadium-scale concerts, stating, "She's comfortable enough to see such imitation as flattery, not theft."[35]

Cher's concerts often include biographical montages and self-referential visuals. Author Diane Negra described them as multimedia retrospectives that merge different phases of her career into a cohesive stage narrative and frame performance as a form of autobiography.[36] The New York Times' Jon Pareles observed that Cher's onstage appearances alongside projected images of her younger selves function to reaffirm and reclaim earlier identities, crediting her ability to "triumph over restraint, aging and gravity" and calling her "a hit machine immune to sagging flesh".[37] Ann Powers of the Los Angeles Times described her shows as rooted in "her larger-than-life story [and] mythology of self-reinvention".[38]

In her 1991 Cher... at the Mirage concert video, she subverted the typical staging of female pop performances by replacing female backup dancers with a male dancer impersonating her. Dressed in a replica of her 1986 Academy Awards outfit, the impersonator initially appeared to be Cher; Cher then emerged in a different costume and began performing, while the impersonator interacted with oversized props symbolizing fame and media attention.[33] Negra interpreted this segment as Cher casting herself as the narrator of her own life story, using the impersonator to emphasize her status as a "fictionalized production" shaped by media and performance—a dynamic she described as offering audiences a "pleasurable plurality".[36]

The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour (1971–1974) was praised for its comedic timing, as a deadpan Cher mocked Sonny about his looks and short stature. According to biographer Connie Berman, they "exuded an aura of warmth, playfulness and caring that only enhanced their appeal. Viewers were further enchanted when a young [Chaz] appeared on the show. They seemed like a perfect family."[39] Cher honed her acting skills through comedy sketches,[40] including her original character Laverne LaShinsky, a brash and over-the-top housewife.[41] Her solo follow-up Cher (1975–1976) was described by Billboard as having brought rock music into mainstream prime-time programming,[42] and director George Schlatter praised Cher as the first woman to anchor a variety show on the same terms as her male counterparts.[43]

Cher's 1980 video for "Hell on Wheels" employed cinematic techniques,[44] and film historian Lawrence J. Quirk described it as one of the earliest examples of a modern music video.[45] Her 1989 music video for "If I Could Turn Back Time" became the first to be banned by MTV,[33] amid controversy over her performance aboard the battleship USS Missouri, where she straddled a cannon in a leather thong that revealed her tattooed buttocks,[46] accompanied by homoerotic imagery featuring sailors.[47] VH1 ranked Cher 17th on its 2003 list of the "50 Greatest Women of the Video Era".[48]

Acting style and screen persona

Cher with a voluminous blonde bouffant hairstyle and winged eyeliner, wearing a gold sequined top while seated in a red booth.
Cher in her first leading film role, Good Times (1967)

Cue magazine wrote of Chastity (1969) that "Cher has a marvelous quality that often makes you forget the lines you are hearing",[49] while Frank Rich of The New York Times, reviewing the 1982 Broadway production Come Back to the 5 & Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean, praised her "cheery, ingratiating nonperformance" as a refreshing contrast in the ensemble.[50] The New York Times' Janet Maslin wrote that Moonstruck "offers further proof that Cher has evolved into the kind of larger-than-life movie star who's worth watching whatever she does".[51]

Maclean's magazine's Barbara Wickens described Cher as "probably the most fascinating movie star of her generation", highlighting her "magnetic" screen presence and her ability to be both "boldly shocking" and "ultimately enigmatic".[52] New York Post critic David Edelstein attributed Cher's "top-ranking star quality" to her capacity for projecting "honesty, rawness and emotionality", adding that she "wears her vulnerability on her sleeve".[52] Film Comment wrote, "For Cher is a star. That is, she manages the movie star trick of being at once a character and at the same time never allowing you to forget: that's Cher."[53] In the Farrelly brothers' comedy Stuck on You (2003), Cher played a satirical version of herself in a relationship with a high schooler (Frankie Muniz) in a direct nod to media scrutiny of her real-life relationships with younger men.[54]

Author Yvonne Tasker noted that Cher's film roles mirror her public image as a rebellious, sexually autonomous and self-made woman.[55] She often portrays women who help marginalized male characters navigate mainstream society—including Eric Stoltz's character with craniodiaphyseal dysplasia in Mask (1985), Liam Neeson's mute homeless veteran in Suspect (1987), and Nicolas Cage's socially isolated baker with a wooden hand in Moonstruck (1987).[56] Film critic Kathleen Rowe wrote of Moonstruck (1987) that the depiction of Cher's character as "a 'woman on top' [is] enhanced by the unruly star persona Cher brings to the part".[57]

Public image

Cultural stature

Cher sings on stage in a gold, beaded outfit with fringe detailing, wearing a large sunburst-style headpiece and long, platinum blonde hair.
Cher in 1978; Rolling Stone called her "the one-woman embodiment" of pop music

Cher has repeatedly reached the top of multiple entertainment fields since 1965. Billboard's Keith Caulfield wrote that "there's divas and then there's Cher".[58] Rob Sheffield of Rolling Stone wrote that "there are no other careers remotely like hers in the history of pop music", calling her "the one-woman embodiment of the whole gaudy story of pop music".[59] She has been widely referred to as the "Goddess of Pop" in publications such as The Washington Post, Time and Billboard.[a] Music critic Jeff Miers credited Cher with setting the template for generations of female pop artists, citing her theatrical presentation, her seamless genre shifts and her knack for provoking without losing mainstream appeal.[77] James Reed of The Boston Globe paired Cher with David Bowie as "one of the original chameleons in pop music, constantly in flux and challenging our perceptions of her".[78]

Cher's public image—marked by defiance, flamboyance and an unwavering sense of self—has itself become a subject of cultural study and popular fascination.[79][80] Ann Powers of the Los Angeles Times called her a "mainstream translator" of 1960s counterculture, casting her as a bridge between teenage rebellion and marketability.[38] Gilbert described Cher as "a walking, singing eye roll [who] has never met an obstacle without theatrically raising a middle finger."[81] In Rolling Stone, Jancee Dunn called Cher "the coolest woman who ever stood in shoes", attributing the status to her refusal to conform: "Her motto is, 'I don't give a shit what you think, I'm going to wear this multicolored wig.'"[82]

Wilson recounted that during Sonny & Cher's late-1960s lounge act, which eventually led to their television variety show, "their lounge act was so depressing, people started heckling them. Then Cher started heckling back."[83] Cher's 1979 album Prisoner, whose cover showed her naked and draped in chains, was intended to symbolize her struggle as a "prisoner of the press" amid intense tabloid scrutiny; feminist groups criticized the imagery for its perceived depiction of a sex slave.[84] Billboard's Brooke Mazurek wrote that Cher "revolutionized the idea of what a pop star could visually accomplish, the way they could create multiple personas that live on and off-stage"; as the red carpet emerged as a "cultural fixture" in the 1980s, "Cher became one of its leaders".[85]

Cher sings on stage with arms raised, wearing a sheer gold outfit with beaded fringe detailing and long hair.
Cher on the Do You Believe? Tour, 1999; Believe was called "the most dramatic comeback Hollywood has seen"

In May 1986, Cher appeared on Late Night with David Letterman and called David Letterman "an asshole", generating extensive media coverage; Letterman later said, "It did hurt my feelings. Cher was one of the few people I've really wanted to have on the show."[86] Reflecting on Cher's November 1987 return to the show—where she reunited with Sonny for a final on-air performance of "I Got You Babe"—Rolling Stone's Andy Greene wrote, "They weren't exactly the best of friends at this point, but both of them knew it would make for unforgettable television. Had YouTube existed back then, this would have gone insanely viral the next morning."[87] During the early 1990s, she appeared in infomercials for health, beauty and diet products.[88][89] Critics saw it as a sellout and speculated her film career was over,[89][90] with Entertainment Weekly stating she had eroded her "hard-won A-list actress status".[91] Cher later reflected, "Suddenly I became the Infomercial Queen ... people stripped me of all my other things."[88]

Cher's career has been marked by continual reinvention;[92] Richard Aquila described her as "the ultimate pop chameleon",[93] while The New York Times dubbed her the "Queen of the Comeback".[25] The Atlantic's Sophie Gilbert commented, "Decades before Madonna had reinventions and Taylor Swift had eras, Cher had comebacks—triumphs over decline in which she'd reemerge stronger, shinier, and more resolute than ever."[81] Entertainment Weekly described her album Believe (1998) as "the most dramatic comeback Hollywood has seen",[94] while Pitchfork wrote that "coming from Cher—a confident, charismatic, and massively talented woman who'd been subjected to frequent public ridicule over her personal life", the era gained "an extra survivalist edge".[95]

Author Craig Crawford described Cher as "a model of flexible career management", highlighting how she adapted her image to align with cultural trends while maintaining a rebellious persona that made her transformations both strategic and authentic.[96] The Boston Globe credited her with driving her own evolution, calling her a forerunner of transformation in pop music who turned reinvention into a deliberate strategy rather than a survival instinct.[97]

Cher sings on stage in a gold, beaded outfit with fringe detailing, wearing a large sunburst-style headpiece and long, platinum blonde hair.
Cher on the Here We Go Again Tour, 2019; she is often referred to as the "Goddess of Pop"

Conversely, anthropologist Grant McCracken wrote that while reinvention is a common frame for celebrity careers, Cher's case is distinct: she "is inclined to lock on to each new fashion wave [and] is swept violently down the diffusion stream and out of fashion. Only substantial re-creation permits her to return to stardom".[98] Cher remarked, "It's a thousand times harder to come back than to become. Becoming famous is hard, but making a comeback is almost impossible."[99]

Shon Faye of Dazed wrote that Cher's legacy underpins many modern pop stars: "If Madonna and Lady Gaga and Kylie Minogue and Cyndi Lauper were playing football, Cher would be the stadium they played on and the sun that shone down on them."[100] According to The New York Times, Cher "earned her mononym" and inspired "an entire industry of imitators, both figurative and literal".[101] The mononym was formalized in 1979, when she legally dropped her first name Cheryl along with the surnames Sarkisian (paternal), LaPiere (her stepfather's) and the married names Bono and Allman.[102] Alexander Fury of The Independent described Cher's celebrity as "seemingly immortal" and operating at an "omnipotent, uni-monikered level".[103]

Frank Bruni of The New York Times wrote that Cher personifies "a magnitude of celebrity for which the word fame is pathetically insufficient".[104] Bego emphasized her multifaceted career: "No one in the history of show business has had a career of the magnitude and scope of Cher's. She has been a teenage pop star, a television hostess, a fashion model, a rock star, a Broadway actress, an Oscar-winning movie star, a disco diva and the subject of a mountain of press coverage."[105] Lynch concluded, "The world would certainly be different if she hadn't stayed so irrevocably Cher from the start."[106]

Feminism and gender

Cher's career has drawn sustained attention from critics and scholars as a case study in gender roles and feminism in the entertainment industry.[77][107] Billboard described her as a "pioneer of female autonomy" who "paved a way in a sexist industry" during a "male-driven" era.[108] Goldmine's Phill Marder said Cher advanced "feminine rebellion" in 1960s rock, describing her as "the prototype of the female rock star" who set "the standard for appearance, from her early hippie days to her later outlandish outfits and her attitude—the perfect female punk long before punk even was a rock term".[7][109] Billboard credited Cher with establishing an "androgynous musical identity" that predated and influenced artists such as David Bowie and Patti Smith.[106]

Cher in a revealing black Bob Mackie ensemble with a towering feathered headdress stands next to Don Ameche, who holds an Oscar statuette, at the 1986 Academy Awards.
Cher with Don Ameche at the 58th Academy Awards, 1986, wearing a Bob Mackie design; Ms. praised her as "the quintessential woman of the '80s"

Marder attributed Cher's rebellious image in part to her commanding, "near dominatrix" stage persona alongside Sonny and her rise to greater prominence as a solo act.[7] AllMusic noted that during her popular 1970s TV shows with Sonny, "he was a diminutive foil to Cher's sexually provocative comedienne", reversing traditional gender dynamics and positioning her as the comedic lead.[110] Writing for Time, Ginia Bellafante described The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour as having brought "a jokey, mass-market, safe feminism to TV as Sonny played emasculated buffoon to Cher's smart aleck".[111] Director George Schlatter credited Cher with redefining women's roles in TV comedy, stating, "Until Cher, women have been the joke, not done the joke ... She's the first female star to carry a show in the same way that men have".[43]

Early in her career, Cher's critics often framed her output as an extension of male collaborators,[112] a view Cher addressed directly: "It was a time when girl singers were patted on the head for being good and told not to think".[25] Over time, her image evolved, reflecting what professor Yvonne Tasker described as her ambition to build an acting career "on her own terms" by rejecting both "dependence on a man [and] the conventional role assigned to women [over 40] in an industry that fetishises youth".[113] Author Lucy O'Brien saw her as embodying the American Dream of self-reinvention by challenging assumptions around aging in the entertainment industry.[114]

In the weeks before Cher's Academy Award win in 1988, The New York Times' Stephanie Brush compared her impact on women to Jack Nicholson's cultural appeal among men, stating that she embodied women's "revenge fantasies" by confronting those who underestimated her: "You need to be more than beautiful to get away with this. You need to have been Cher for 40 years."[115] Following the win, Ms. magazine praised her as an "authentic feminist hero" and "the quintessential woman of the '80s", citing her flamboyant self-presentation, her public confrontation with David Letterman and her candor about single motherhood and cosmetic surgery.[116] Columnist Kathleen Parker dissented in the Orlando Sentinel, arguing that Cher was being celebrated "for doing all the things most of us try so hard not to do" and that feminism should be about "learning to keep your mouth shut ... and mastering the arts of discretion and modesty".[116]

A 1996 Dateline NBC interview clip featuring Cher's response to her mother's advice to "marry a rich man"—"Mom, I am a rich man"—went viral in 2016.[117] Bustle described the quote as a subversion of traditional gender norms and a landmark feminist statement.[118] Taylor Swift referenced it in the music video for her 2019 single "You Need to Calm Down",[118] and in 2025 the K-pop group Aespa cited it as the direct inspiration for their single "Rich Man".[119]

Fashion

Cher with long, straight black hair parted in the center, wearing a white fringed crop top that exposes her midriff, with dramatic eye makeup.
1972 publicity photo of Cher

Time described Cher as a "cultural phenomenon [who] has forever changed the way we see celebrity fashion".[66] She emerged as a fashion trendsetter in the 1960s, popularizing "hippie fashion with bell-bottoms, bandanas and Cherokee-inspired tunics".[120] After "I Got You Babe" displaced the Beatles at the top of the UK charts in 1965, English teenagers began emulating Sonny & Cher's look—bell-bottoms, striped pants and fur vests.[121] On the duo's subsequent US tour, their concerts drew numerous Cher look-alikes, with girls straightening and dyeing their hair black and adopting her signature vests and bell-bottoms.[122] Writer Cintra Wilson recalled that after Sonny & Cher were thrown out of the London Hilton over their outfits in 1965, "London went gaga for the heretofore-unseen S&C look, which was neither mod nor rocker".[83] In 1967, she caught the attention of then-Vogue editor Diana Vreeland at a party for Jacqueline Kennedy and began modeling for photographer Richard Avedon.[120] She appeared five times as the cover model for US Vogue.[123]

By the turn of the 1970s, as the duo pivoted from counterculture flag-bearers to a "new, sophisticated and mature" nightclub act, Cher adopted the "alluring, low-cut gowns that became her signature look".[124] Avedon photographed Cher in a beaded and feathered nude gown by Bob Mackie for the cover of Time in 1975;[125] Billboard called it "one of the most recreated and monumental looks of all time".[85] Cher had first worn the gown to the 1974 Met Gala. According to André Leon Talley of Vogue, "it was really the first time a Hollywood celebrity attended and it changed everything. We are still seeing versions of that look on The Met red carpet 40 years later."[85] Billboard wrote that Cher has "transformed fashion and [become] one of the most influential style icons in red carpet history".[85] When she formed the rock band Black Rose in 1980, she took the opposite turn, adopting a punk-inspired look and cutting her signature long hair in an effort to blend in with the group and avoid overshadowing them with her celebrity status.[126]

Cher stands on the Academy Awards stage holding a presenter's envelope, wearing a black Bob Mackie ensemble featuring a feathered headdress, an open lattice-work top exposing her midriff, sequined pants, and a long cape.
Cher at the 58th Academy Awards in 1986, wearing a Bob Mackie design

The Hamilton Spectator declared Cher "the It girl of the '70s".[127] She became a sex symbol through her TV shows, wearing inventive and revealing Mackie-designed outfits and successfully fighting network censors to bare her navel.[128] Because she did so by choice rather than at the direction of male producers, Cher is often credited as the first woman to expose her navel on TV.[b][130] People dubbed Cher the "pioneer of the belly beautiful".[131] In 1972, after she was featured on the International Best Dressed Hall of Fame List, Mackie stated: "There hasn't been a girl like Cher since [Marlene] Dietrich and [Greta] Garbo. She's a high-fashion star who appeals to people of all ages."[132] At the 58th Academy Awards in 1986, after being left off the Oscar nomination list for her lead role in Mask, Cher wore a dramatic, tarantula-like Bob Mackie outfit that Vanity Fair's Esther Zuckerman later dubbed Cher's "Oscar revenge dress".[133] Presenting the Best Supporting Actor nominees, Cher quipped, "As you can see, I did receive my Academy booklet on how to dress like a serious actress".[134]

In 1999, after the Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA) honored Cher with its Influence on Fashion Award, Robin Givhan of the Los Angeles Times called her a "fashion visionary" for "striking just the right note of contemporary wretched excess".[135] Givhan noted that designers such as Tom Ford, Anna Sui and Dolce & Gabbana have cited Cher as "source of inspiration and guidance".[135] She added that "Cher's Native American showgirl sexpot persona now seems to epitomize the fashion industry's rush to celebrate ethnicity, adornment and sex appeal."[135] Vogue proclaimed Cher their "favorite fashion trendsetter", calling her "eternally relevant [and] the ruler of outré reinvention".[136] The Independent's Alexander Fury traced her influence on celebrities including Beyoncé, Halle Berry, Jennifer Lopez and Kim Kardashian, stating, "They all graduated from the Cher school of never sharing the stage with anyone."[103]

Physical appearance

Cher has attracted media attention for her physical appearance, including her youthful looks, hairstyles and tattoos. Journalists have often called Cher the "poster girl" of plastic surgery.[98] In his book Transformations: Identity Construction in Contemporary Culture (2008), Grant McCracken connected her surgeries to her career reinventions, describing the procedures as "hyperbolic, extreme, over the top ... a transformational technology that is dramatic and irreversible".[98] Cher has admitted to plastic surgery but criticized media speculation, denying most rumored procedures. She stated she does not need to justify her choices, saying in 2002, "If I want to put my tits on my back, it's nobody's business but my own."[137] New York magazine's David Denby described Cher's look as "odd, a bit oriental and snaky" and suggested that it aligned with "the traditional definition of a Hollywood star—that you always want to see more".[52] In 1992, Madame Tussauds wax museum honored Cher as one of the five "most beautiful women of history" by creating a life-size statue.[138] In 2002, VH1 ranked her 26th on its "100 Sexiest Artists" list.[139]

Cher with long, straight dark hair parted in the center, wearing a light-colored patterned top.
Cher with a dark, feathered hairstyle with bangs, wearing a white off-the-shoulder top.
Cher performs on stage wearing a blonde wig and a jeweled dark outfit.
Cher's signature "Cher hair" (left, 1977), a teased look (center, 1985) and a blonde wig (right, 2019)

Author Caroline Ramazanoglu wrote that Cher's appearance has evolved from "a strong, decidedly 'ethnic' look [to] a more symmetrical, delicate ... and ever-youthful version of female beauty". She argued that Cher's idealized beauty "now acts as a standard against which other women will measure, judge, discipline and 'correct' themselves".[140] Paddy Calistro of the Los Angeles Times wrote that during Cher's rise as a movie star in the 1980s, her "highly articulated bone structure captured audience attention", which led to an increased number of medical requests for "surgically inserted 'cheekbones'".[141]

Cher's signature hairstyle, known as "the Cher hair"—long, straight, jet-black hair parted in the center—was a 1970s fashion trend that saw multiple revivals in later decades.[135][142][143] In the 1970s, she started wearing wigs on her TV shows to play various characters in the same episode.[144] By the 1990s, wigs became a staple of her public appearances, enabling her to experiment with colors and lengths.[145] She has stated that wigs help her "stay current" while protecting her natural hair.[145] Professor Katrin Horn from University of Greifswald wrote that Cher's use of wigs has surpassed typical celebrity fashion, elevating her into "the realms of feminine drag".[47]

Cher has six tattoos. The Baltimore Sun called her the "Ms. Original Rose Tattoo".[146] She got her first tattoo in 1972.[146] According to Sonny, "Calling her butterfly tattoos nothing was like ignoring a sandstorm in the Mojave. That was exactly the effect Cher wanted to create. She liked to do things for the shock they created."[147] In the late 1990s, she began having laser treatments to remove her tattoos.[148] She commented, "When I got tattooed, only bad girls did it: me and Janis Joplin and biker chicks. Now it doesn't mean anything. No one's surprised."[149]

Social media voice

Cher's social media presence has been noted for its unconventional and candid style. Time named Cher "Twitter's most outspoken (and beloved) commentator",[66] while The New York Times' J Wortham highlighted her authenticity, contrasting it with the heavily curated online personas typical of celebrity accounts. Wortham described Cher as "an outlier, perhaps the last unreconstructed high-profile Twitter user", whose posts combine "nakedness and honesty" that is "rarely celebrated" in mainstream culture.[151] Similarly, The Guardian's Monica Heisey described Cher's Twitter account as "a jewel in the bizarro crown of the internet", noting, "While many celebrities use Twitter for carefully crafted self-promotion, Cher just lets it all hang out."[152] Journalists have also remarked on her frequent use of emojis, which Cher has linked to her dyslexia, describing them as intuitive tools for visualizing emotions.[153]

In November 2022, after criticism of her relationship with music executive Alexander Edwards, 40 years her junior, Cher replied on Twitter, "Love doesn't know math."[154] In July 2023, after a fan-made music video featuring an AI-generated version of Cher's voice covering Madonna's "La Isla Bonita" circulated online,[155] Cher expressed concerns about the use of AI to replicate her voice and likeness: "I've spent my entire life trying to be myself and now ... they'll do my acting and they'll do my singing?"[156]

Activism

Cher poses with a U.S. Army servicemember at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany.
Cher visiting wounded servicemembers at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany, 2006

Cher's advocacy and philanthropic work, undertaken across five decades, have centered on LGBTQ rights and HIV/AIDS relief, with further involvement in recognition of the Armenian genocide, veterans' welfare, progressive political advocacy, disaster relief, elder rights and animal welfare, channeled primarily through the Cher Charitable Foundation and partnerships with organizations such as the American Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR).[157]

Cher's support for her son Chaz Bono, who came out as a lesbian at age 17 and later transitioned as a transgender man, shaped the trajectory of her LGBTQ advocacy. After initially grappling with "guilt, fear and pain", she concluded that LGBTQ people "didn't have the same rights as everyone else, [and she] thought that was unfair".[158] In 1997, Cher delivered the keynote at the national Parents, Families, & Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG) convention,[158] and in 1998 received the GLAAD Vanguard Award for having "made a significant difference in promoting equal rights for lesbians and gay men".[159] In September 2013, Cher declined an invitation to perform at the 2014 Winter Olympics opening ceremony in Russia, citing the country's anti-LGBTQ legislation.[160]

Cher is a donor, fundraiser and international spokesperson for Keep a Child Alive, which seeks to combat AIDS, including providing antiretroviral medicine to children and their families.[161] In 1996, she hosted the amfAR Benefit alongside Elizabeth Taylor at the Cannes Film Festival.[162] In 2015, she received the amfAR Award of Inspiration for "her willingness and ability to use her fame for the greater good" and for being "one of the great champions in the fight against AIDS".[163]

In 1993, Cher joined a humanitarian mission to Armenia, delivering food and medical supplies to the war-torn region.[164] She has since advocated for recognition of the Armenian genocide; at the 2016 premiere of The Promise, a war film depicting the genocide, she criticized Turkey's denial and cited Hitler's Obersalzberg Speech—"Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?"—while recalling her grandparents' survival of the genocide.[165]

Cher wearing a black face mask and long dark hair at an outdoor event.
Cher at an early voting site in 2020; she has been an outspoken critic of the conservative movement

Cher has been a vocal advocate for American soldiers and returning veterans. In October 2003, she anonymously called a C-SPAN phone-in program to recount a visit to wounded soldiers at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center and criticized the lack of media coverage and government attention given to injured servicemen.[166] In a 2006 Stars and Stripes interview, she described her position as "against the war in Iraq but for the troops".[167] She has supported Operation Helmet, which provides free helmet upgrade kits to troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, and contributed to the Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund, which aids military personnel severely injured in war-related operations.[161]

Cher's progressive political views have drawn media attention, and she has been an outspoken critic of the conservative movement.[168] She has said she did not understand why anyone would be a Republican because eight years under the administration of George W. Bush "almost killed [her]".[169] During the 2000 United States presidential election, ABC News wrote that she was determined to do "whatever possible to keep [Bush] out of office";[170] she said, "If you're black ... a woman [or] any minority in this country at all, what could possibly possess you to vote Republican? ... You won't have one fucking right left."[170]

During the 2012 United States presidential election, Cher and comedian Kathy Griffin released a public service announcement, "Don't Let Mitt Turn Back Time on Women's Rights", criticizing Republican nominee Mitt Romney for supporting Richard Mourdock, who had called pregnancies resulting from rape "part of God's plan".[171]

Cher serves as the Honorary National Chair of Habitat for Humanity's "Raise the Roof" initiative for affordable housing, and since 2007 has been the primary supporter of the Peace Village School in Ukunda, Kenya.[161] In 2016, after the discovery of lead contamination in the drinking water of Flint, Michigan, Cher donated more than 180,000 bottles of water to the city.[172] In 2017, she executive-produced Edith+Eddie, a documentary about a nonagenarian interracial couple, which was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short.[173] In 2020, she traveled to Pakistan to help secure the transfer of Kaavan, an elephant confined to a zoo for 35 years, to a wildlife sanctuary in Cambodia;[174] the effort was chronicled in the 2021 documentary Cher & the Loneliest Elephant, released on Paramount+.[175]

Gay icon status

Cher stands on stage with Chaz Bono, smiling. She wears a black outfit with an afro hairstyle, while Chaz wears a suit and tie.
Cher presenting son Chaz Bono with the GLAAD Stephen F. Kolzak Award, 2012

Cher is revered by the LGBTQ community, a status attributed to her career accomplishments, distinctive style and enduring longevity; Alec Mapa of The Advocate described her appeal as embodying "an unapologetic freedom and fearlessness that some of us can only aspire to".[79] Many of her songs are considered gay anthems, including "If I Could Turn Back Time",[176] "Believe",[177] "Strong Enough"[178] and "Song for the Lonely".[179] She is regarded as a gay icon and is frequently imitated by drag queens.[180] According to Salon writer Thomas Rogers, drag queens emulate figures like Judy Garland, Dolly Parton and Cher because they "overcame insult and hardship on their path to success"—narratives that resonate with the struggles many gay men face when coming out.[180]

Maclean's journalist Elio Iannacci stated that Cher was "one of the first to bring drag to the masses", hiring two drag queens to perform with her during her Las Vegas residency in 1979.[181] The Advocate's Jeff Yarbrough described Cher as "one of the first superstars to 'play gay' with compassion and without a hint of stereotyping", as she portrays a lesbian in the 1983 film Silkwood.[182] Cher's social activism has further solidified her status as a gay icon.[183] She has headlined major LGBTQ events, including the 2013 Dance on the Pier Pride benefit in New York—the event's first sellout in five years[184]—and the 40th Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras in 2018, whose tickets sold out within three hours of her teasing the performance on Twitter.[185] As the mother of a trans man, Chaz Bono, Cher has advocated for visibility and support for trans families.[186]

Tributes and references

Chad Michaels poses in a platinum blonde wavy wig, smokey eye makeup with false lashes, a metallic v-neck top and a pendant necklace, with black sequined detailing on one shoulder.
Professional Cher impersonator Chad Michaels at RuPaul's DragCon LA, 2018

Cher's long-running presence in popular media has yielded a steady stream of references and tributes. In 1976, Mego Toys released a line of Sonny & Cher dolls; the Cher doll outsold Barbie to become the year's best-selling doll.[187] In 1992, her life was featured in the children's inspirational book series Reaching Your Goals, which highlighted her "integrity" and "perseverance" as models of self-actualization.[188] During her 1990s infomercial run, the ads were parodied on Saturday Night Live and referenced in Clueless (1995), whose protagonist Cher Horowitz jokes she was named after a "great [singer] of the past who now does infomercials".[189][190] In 1993, she was invited by MTV to re-record "I Got You Babe" with animated duo Beavis and Butt-Head, who introduce her as "a chick that's got tattoos on her butt ... who's older ... done it a lot of times [and] used to be married to some dork" (referring to Sonny Bono), mocking her own image.[191]

Cher's influence on LGBTQ culture is highlighted in the NBC sitcom Will & Grace, where she is frequently referenced as the idol of gay character Jack McFarland. She appears as herself in two episodes: 2000's "Gypsies, Tramps and Weed" (referencing her 1971 song "Gypsys, Tramps & Thieves"), which became the show's second-highest-rated episode;[192] and 2002's "A.I.: Artificial Insemination", where she appears as Jack's version of God.[193]

Within the drag community, Cher's impact is evident in the reality competition RuPaul's Drag Race, which has honored her through challenges such as the musical performance "Cher: The Unauthorized Rusical" in season 10 and the runway theme "Everything Every-Cher All at Once" in season 16.[194][195] Chad Michaels, a drag performer and professional Cher impersonator, gained mainstream recognition on the show. He won the Snatch Game challenge in season 4 for his portrayal of Cher and later won the first season of RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars.[196]

Kahmora Hall poses in a long straight black wig parted in the center, evoking Cher's signature 1970s look.
Drag performer Kahmora Hall impersonating 1970s Cher at RuPaul's DragCon LA, 2022

The 1997 The X-Files episode "The Post-Modern Prometheus" features a scientist's grotesque creature who idolizes Cher because of her role in Mask (1985), where her character cares for her disfigured son.[197][198] Cher was the inspiration for Mother Gothel, a fictional character who appears in Walt Disney Pictures' animated feature film Tangled (2010). Gothel's beauty, dark curly hair and voluptuous figure were deliberately designed to serve as a foil to Rapunzel's, and director Byron Howard stated that Gothel's appearance was based on Cher's "exotic and Gothic looking" looks, continuing that the singer "definitely was one of the people we looked at visually, as far as what gives you a striking character".[199] In 2015, Cher appeared on the Wu-Tang Clan's Once Upon a Time in Shaolin, produced as a single physical copy and sold via Paddle8 auction to become the most expensive album ever sold.[200] She was credited under her 1964 alias, Bonnie Jo Mason.[201]

Cher's life and career inspired the 2018 jukebox musical The Cher Show.[202] Her casting as the grandmother of Sophie (Amanda Seyfried) and mother of Donna (Meryl Streep) in Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again (2018)—a three-year age gap from Streep—prompted director Ol Parker to remark, "Cher exists outside of time."[100] For the soundtrack, Cher recorded two ABBA songs, including "Fernando", about which Björn Ulvaeus commented, "She makes 'Fernando' her own. It's her song now."[203] Vulture responded that "every single movie ... would be infinitely better if it included Cher".[204] In May 2021, Cher made a virtual cameo appearance as God in Pink's music video "All I Know So Far".[205]

Achievements and recognition

Cultural milestones

A star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, featuring a TV emblem in the center, honors the duo Sonny & Cher.
Star for Sonny & Cher on the Hollywood Walk of Fame

Cher is one of five actor-singers to have had a US number-one single and won an acting Academy Award.[41] In 1988, she became the first performer to win an acting Oscar and earn an RIAA-certified gold album in the same year since the inception of gold awards in 1958.[206] She is one of the few artists to win three of the four major American entertainment awards (EGOT—Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony).[207] She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame as part of Sonny & Cher, dedicated in 1998;[208] she was offered a solo star in 1983 but declined the required personal appearance.[209] Her handprints and footprints were set in the forecourt of Grauman's Chinese Theatre in 2010.[210] Whoopi Goldberg presented Cher with the Kennedy Center Honors, the highest cultural recognition in the US, in 2018.[211] In 2024, Cher was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame—the first and, to date, only performer to have won an Academy Award for acting and been inducted into the Rock Hall.[212][213]

Cher has received numerous lifetime and career achievement honors, including the 1985 Woman of the Year Award from the Hasty Pudding Theatricals society at Harvard University,[214] the Legend Award at the 1999 World Music Awards,[215] the Influence on Fashion Award from the Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA) in 1999,[135] the Lucy Award for Innovation in Television at the 2000 Women in Film Awards[216] and the Artist Achievement Award at the 2002 Billboard Music Awards—presented by Steven Tyler in recognition of her having "helped redefine popular music with massive success on the Billboard charts".[217][218] Later honors include the Icon Award at the 2017 Billboard Music Awards,[219] the Ambassador for the Arts Award at the 2019 Chita Rivera Awards for Dance and Choreography, the 2020 Spirit of Katharine Hepburn Award[220][221] and the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2026.[222]

VH1 included Cher at number 41 on "The 200 Greatest Pop Culture Icons" (2003).[223] Esquire included Cher at number 44 on its "The 75 Greatest Women of All Time" list in 2016.[224] In November 2024, Cher: The Memoir debuted at number one on The New York Times Best Seller list, holding the position for three weeks.[225] In 2026, Forbes ranked Cher 130th in its inaugural "Self-Made 250", a list of the greatest living self-made Americans.[226]

Musical milestones

Cher sings on stage with one arm extended, wearing a black sheer bodysuit adorned with sparkling embellishments and dark curly hair cascading down.
Cher on the Here We Go Again Tour in 2019, wearing a sheer bodysuit with cutouts evoking her late-1980s stage costumes

Cher has sold over 100 million records as a solo artist, ranking among the best-selling music artists of all time.[111][168][227] Her breakthrough single "I Got You Babe" (1965) is a Grammy Hall of Fame inductee[228] and appeared on Rolling Stone's 2003 list of the "500 Greatest Songs of All Time".[229] Billboard named "Gypsys, Tramps & Thieves" (1971) one of the greatest songs of the 20th century[230] and listed "If I Could Turn Back Time" (1989) among its "500 Best Pop Songs" in 2023.[231] "Believe" (1998), the UK's best-selling single by a female artist,[232] was included on Rolling Stone's updated "500 Greatest Songs of All Time" list in 2021[233] and ranked eighth in a 2003 BBC poll of the world's favorite songs—the only American entry.[234]

Billboard placed Cher at number 49 on its 2015 list of the "Greatest Hot 100 Artists of All Time".[235] With 16 Billboard number-one singles, she is the only solo artist with a number-one single on a US Billboard chart in seven consecutive decades,[236] In the 1960s, she topped the Hot 100 with "I Got You Babe" (1965) as part of Sonny & Cher.[237] She scored three solo Hot 100 number-ones in the 1970s: "Gypsys, Tramps & Thieves" (1971), "Half-Breed" and "Dark Lady" (both 1973), while Sonny & Cher's "All I Ever Need Is You" led Adult Contemporary in 1972.[237]

From the 1980s, Cher's number-one singles shifted to other Billboard charts. She topped Adult Contemporary with "After All" and "If I Could Turn Back Time" (both 1989) and multiple charts with "Believe" (1998), including the Hot 100.[237] Dance Club Songs number-ones followed: "Strong Enough" and "All or Nothing" (both 1999),[237] "Song for the Lonely"[238] and "A Different Kind of Love Song" (both 2002), "When the Money's Gone" (2003), "You Haven't Seen the Last of Me" (2011)[237] and "Woman's World" (2013).[239] "DJ Play a Christmas Song" (2023) reached number one on multiple charts, including Adult Contemporary.[240]

Cher sings on stage in a black fringed mini dress with spaghetti straps, her dark curly hair framing her face. A drum set is visible in the background.
Cher performing during a benefit concert for Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, 1989

Cher is the only solo artist with new material in the Official UK Top 40 in seven consecutive decades (1960s–2020s),[241] most recently with a top-ten cover of Oasis' "Stop Crying Your Heart Out" (2020),[242] recorded with charity supergroup BBC Radio 2 Allstars in support of Children in Need;[243] and "DJ Play a Christmas Song" (2023), which made her the oldest female artist—at 77—to enter the chart.[241] She held the previous record[c] for the longest span between a first and most recent number-one single on the US Billboard Hot 100—33 years—from "I Got You Babe" (1965) to "Believe" (1999).[d] At 52, she was the oldest female artist to top both the Hot 100 and the UK singles chart.[246][e]

At the height of Sonny & Cher's 1965 breakthrough, five of their songs appeared simultaneously in the Billboard Hot 100's top 50—a feat previously achieved only by Elvis Presley and the Beatles.[249] Their debut album, Look at Us (1965), spent eight weeks at number two on the Billboard 200, behind the Beatles' Help!.[250] Time's Ginia Bellafante described the duo as rock's "it" couple.[111] The following year, Sonny & Cher's "Little Man" reached number one in Sweden,[251] while Cher's solo recordings "Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)" and "Sunny" topped charts in Italy[252] and Norway,[253] respectively. "Gypsys, Tramps & Thieves" (1971) became the first single by a solo artist to rank number one on the US Billboard Hot 100 at the same time as on the Canadian singles chart.[254] When "Dark Lady" became her fourth Hot 100 number one in March 1974, she tied with Rosemary Clooney, Patti Page and Connie Francis for the most number-one singles by a female solo artist in US history at the time.[f][257]

Cher's hair metal comeback amplified her global reach: Heart of Stone (1989) peaked at number one in Australia—her first album to top a national chart—and its second single, "If I Could Turn Back Time", spent seven weeks at number one in the country.[258][259] In 1991, "The Shoop Shoop Song (It's in His Kiss)" topped the UK singles chart for five weeks—her first British number-one solo single and the first time she topped the chart since "I Got You Babe" in 1965.[260] That same year, the album Love Hurts spent six weeks at number one in the UK—her first album to top the British charts.[261] A year later, the UK-only[262] compilation album Greatest Hits: 1965–1992 topped the UK chart for seven weeks and became the best-selling album by a female artist of 1992.[261][263] In 1995, Cher returned to the top of the UK singles chart with the charity single "Love Can Build a Bridge", recorded alongside Chrissie Hynde, Neneh Cherry and Eric Clapton.[264]

Cher sings on stage in a shimmering gold beaded outfit with fringe, a matching headpiece and long platinum blonde hair, surrounded by backup dancers.
Cher on Living Proof: The Farewell Tour (2002–2005), then the highest-grossing tour by a female artist

The album Believe (1998) became Cher's biggest global commercial success: the album sold 11 million copies worldwide, earning quadruple platinum certification in the US and gold, platinum or multi-platinum status in 39 countries.[265] Its title track debuted at number one in the UK, held the position for seven weeks and became the country's best-selling single by a female artist.[232] In the US, it was named 1999's number-one song,[266] and altogether the song reached number one in 23 countries.[267] Believe's second single, "Strong Enough" (1999), reached number one in Hungary and entered the top five in Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Iceland, Poland, Scotland, Spain, Switzerland and the UK.[268] Entertainment Weekly emphasized the album's role in introducing her to a new generation of fans who "hadn't yet been born when 'I Got You Babe' ruled the charts in 1965".[94]

The Greatest Hits (1999), overseen by Cher for international markets, reached number one on the European Top 100 Albums chart.[269] Her follow-up studio album Living Proof (2001) reached number one in Greece.[270] Closer to the Truth (2013), her first studio album in twelve years, debuted at number three on the Billboard 200—her highest solo peak on the chart.[250] Dancing Queen (2018), her collection of ABBA covers, matched that debut, and its 153,000 first-week units marked the year's largest sales week for a pop album by a female artist.[271]

Cher launched Living Proof: The Farewell Tour in 2002, promoted as her final concert tour. By October 2003, it had grossed $145 million from 200 shows with 2.2 million attendees, becoming the highest-grossing concert tour by a female artist at the time.[272] Her 2003 earnings of $33.1 million made her the year's highest-paid female musician, according to Forbes.[273] The tour concluded in April 2005 after 325 dates, with total gross exceeding $250 million[274] and earning Cher a Guinness World Record for the highest-grossing tour by a female artist.[275][276]

The NBC special Cher: The Farewell Tour (2003), which earned Cher the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Special,[277] drew 17 million viewers,[278] becoming the highest-rated network concert special of the year.[279] Her Dressed to Kill Tour (2014) grossed $54.9 million from 49 sold-out North American shows before being cut short by illness.[280] In 2014, Billboard ranked her the 23rd highest-grossing touring act since 1990, with $351.6 million in total revenue and 4.5 million attendees across 548 shows.[281] 12 years later, Pollstar ranked Cher seventh on their list of "The Millennium's Most Popular Women in Touring", with $525.8 million in total revenue and 5.6 million tickets sold across 716 shows.[282]

Film and TV milestones

Cher, holding a microphone, wears a dark floral-patterned outfit and a short bob hairstyle. Beside her, David Bowie wears a dark suit with a buttoned-up shirt.
Cher performing with David Bowie (in his American TV debut) on the variety show Cher, 1975

The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour (1971–1974) drew more than 30 million viewers weekly over its three-year run,[21] earning Cher the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Television Series Musical or Comedy in 1974.[283] Her solo CBS variety show Cher (1975–1976) hosted David Bowie's American TV debut alongside musical guests such as Ray Charles, Elton John, Bette Midler, Tina Turner and the Jackson 5; Billboard credited the show with bringing "a rock sensibility to prime-time TV".[42] Her 1976 reunion with Sonny, The Sonny and Cher Show, was the first program ever to star a divorced couple.[284]

In 1983, Cher received the CableACE Award for Best Actress in a Variety Program for her NBC special Cher... A Celebration at Caesars.[285] Mask (1985), her first critical and commercial success as a leading actress, earned her the Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Actress.[286] In 1987, she starred in three films, with The Witches of Eastwick and Moonstruck ranking among the year's top 10 highest-grossing movies;[287] her performance in Moonstruck earned her the Academy Award for Best Actress and the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Comedy or Musical.[283]

By the end of the 1980s, Cher had become one of the most bankable actresses of the decade, commanding $1 million per film.[286] Her directorial debut came with a segment of HBO's anthology film If These Walls Could Talk (1996), in which she also starred; it became HBO's highest-rated original movie to date, drawing 6.9 million viewers.[288] In 1999, Cher performed "The Star-Spangled Banner" at Super Bowl XXXIII[289] and co-headlined the TV special VH1 Divas Live '99, which drew 19.4 million viewers and became the highest-rated program in VH1's history at the time.[290][291]

Cher was ranked first by Billboard on its list of "The 100 Best Acting Performances by Musicians in Movies" for her role in Moonstruck, with the performance described as "the standard by which you mentally check all others".[292] The film was named the eighth-greatest romantic comedy of all time by the American Film Institute.[293] People included Cher among its "100 Greatest Movie Stars of our Time"[294] and Biography ranked her the third-favorite leading actress of all time, behind Katharine Hepburn and Audrey Hepburn.[295] Cher was featured in The New York Times Magazine's annual "Best Actors" list for 2020,[296] becoming the first actor included without appearing in a theatrical release that year;[297] her performance in Moonstruck (1987) was praised as "radiant" and a source of comfort during quarantine.[296]

Impact on other public figures

Notes

  1. Cher has been referred to as the "Goddess of Pop" in various publications. Primary sources using the title include Billboard,[60] Harper's Bazaar,[61] Los Angeles Times,[62] Love,[63] The Mercury News,[64] Rolling Stone,[65] Time,[66][67] USA Today,[68] Vogue España[69] and The Washington Post.[70] Secondary sources describing her as "often called", "nicknamed" or "known as" the "Goddess of Pop" include ABC News,[71] CR Fashion Book,[72] The Cut,[73] E!,[74] The Independent[75] and New York Post.[76]
  2. The first woman to expose her navel on TV was Yvette Mimieux in 1964.[129]
  3. Brenda Lee surpassed Cher's record for the longest span between a first and most recent number-one single on the US Billboard Hot 100 in December 2023, when "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree" reached number one for the first time since its 1958 release. Until then, Lee's only number-one hits had been "I'm Sorry" and "I Want to Be Wanted", both released in 1960.[244]
  4. The span between Cher's first and most recent number-one single on the US Billboard Hot 100 is 33 years, seven months and three weeks, from the first week at number one for "I Got You Babe", the week ending August 14, 1965, to the final week at number one for "Believe", the week ending April 3, 1999.[245]
  5. Cher's record as the oldest woman to top the US Billboard Hot 100 was surpassed by Mariah Carey, who was 53 when "All I Want for Christmas Is You" (1994) reached number one in December 2023, and Brenda Lee, who was 78 when "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree" (1958) topped the chart that same month.[247] Her record on the UK singles chart was surpassed by Kate Bush, who was 63 when "Running Up That Hill" (1985) reached number one in June 2022.[248] Excluding catalog songs, Cher remains the oldest female artist to top both charts.[247]
  6. Some sources credit Cher as the female solo artist with the most US Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles when "Dark Lady" topped the chart in March 1974—counting Sonny & Cher's "I Got You Babe" as her first number one.[255][256] This claim likely stems from Billboard's current rules, which credit a song to a solo artist if their name appears in the official billing. Billboard's reporting in 1974 did not include "I Got You Babe" among Cher's solo number ones, suggesting that the current rules were not in effect at the time.[257]

References

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