Miriam Makeba

@Black Women, Birthday and Life

Zenzile Miriam Makeba was a famous South African musician, actor and a keen civil rights activist

Mar 4, 1932

South AfricanActivistsCivil Rights ActivistsMusiciansSingersPisces Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: March 4, 1932
  • Died on: November 10, 2008
  • Nationality: South African
  • Famous: Black Women, Activists, Civil Rights Activists, Musicians, Singers
  • Spouses: Stokely Carmichael
  • Known as: Mama Africa, Zenzile Miriam Makeba
  • Childrens: Bongi Makeba

Miriam Makeba born at

Johannesburg, South Africa

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Birth Place

Miriam Makeba got married for the first time in 1949 to James Kubay, a trainee policeman, with whom she gave birth to a child, Bongi Makeba. Kubay used to beat her up frequently so the marriage did not work and they separated after two years of marriage. Her second marriage took place in 1964, with musician Hugh Masekela, which also lasted two whole years.

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Personal Life

She got married for a third time to Stokely Carmichael. He was a Trinidadian-American civil rights activist. The couple first moved to Guinea then Belgium, but the they divorced after 9 years.

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Personal Life

Miriam Makeba was born on 4th March, 1932, in a poor black household in Johannesburg,South Africa, to a domestic worker mother and a Xhosa teacher father, who died when Miriam was just six-year-old. Miriam had a very tough life ever since she was conceived as just a few days after her birth, her mother got arrested for the possession of a beer which was illegal to sell and produce in south Africa. As a result, Miriam had to spend first six months of her life in Jail with her mother.

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Childhood & Early Life

Miriam attended a Methodist school as a kid in her hometown and started singing in the choir, sowing the seeds of a future which was filled with music in its every pore. As she grew up, she started singing in English as well along with traditional African Xhosa, Zulu and Sotho. When her father died, Miriam, despite being a small child, had to work to survive. Their family with six children depended on her mother and Miriam for their needs. Miriam, as a teenager got married to a policeman, who was a narcissist and used to beat her up.

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Childhood & Early Life

At the age of 18, Miriam was diagnosed with an aggressive form of breast cancer. Her mother, who also happened to be a traditional healer, cured her. Sometime later, Miriam found a new way to grow around her troubles and started working on her music.

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Childhood & Early Life

Miriam started her professional musical career making American song covers with the South African band 'The Cuban Brothers', but she got bored of it and at the age of 21, she found her calling in Jazz music. She partnered up with group 'The Manhattan Brothers' and the all women group named 'The Skylarks', which combined traditional African vocals with westernized jazz sounds. It clicked with music lovers on a deeper level and these two bands started getting mentioned as the trendsetters in local and to some extent, in western media.

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Career

Her first solo success arrived in the year 1956, under Gallotone Records, when Miriam recorded her very first solo album titled ‘Lovely Eyes’. The record got released in the United States and became the first ever South African album to make it to the Billboard 200 chart. During this time, the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa was starting to boil up and Miriam came out in full supported. She secretly appeared in a documentary film ‘Come Back, Africa’, the film which later won the top honour at the Venice film festival.

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Career

The film’s international success opened Miriam’s way for international acclaim and she got signed on to perform in the US and Europe. She landed in London in late 50’s and met Henry Belafonte, whom she regarded as her mentor. She released the song ‘Pata Pata’ which is still known among her most popular songs and put her in the class of best international musicians. She kept switching between London and New York during that time and got married briefly to an Indian man, but upon divorce, she moved to New York City to concentrate on making music.

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Career

In 1960, she wanted to come back to South Africa due to some personal purposes, but she wasn’t allowed, and then followed a three years exile. Miriam continued making music and wooing Americans with her musical skills and was being hailed as ‘the most exciting young musician’. Her songs ‘The Click Song’ and ‘Malaika’ became popular across the US for introducing Americans to the African sounds, which was a refreshing change.

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Career

Miriam’s popularity reached the then American president, John F. Kennedy, who claimed that he was a huge fan of the singer and invited her over to perform at his son’s birthday party in 1962. Three years later, she along with her mentor Belafonte, released a duo album titled ‘An Evening with Belafonte and Makeba’, which went on to receive the Grammy award for best folk album of the year in 1966. The duos ‘Train Song’ and ‘Cannon’ also received widespread love from around the country.

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Career

On 9th November 2008, Miriam bid her final goodbye to the world. She had been suffering from several illnesses and a heart attack finally turned out to be the cause of her death. She kept making music and spreading awareness about several causes among the African youth till her last breathe.

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Final Years