logo
5 interesting facts about the only African artist to get a Hollywood Walk of Fame Star

5 interesting facts about the only African artist to get a Hollywood Walk of Fame Star

Angélique Kidjo has made history yet again, this time on the streets of Hollywood. On July 3, 2025, the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce revealed that Kidjo, from Benin, is the first Black African artist ever chosen for a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame as part of the Class of 2026.
Angélique Kidjo has become the first Black African artist to be recognized with a Hollywood Walk of Fame star, announced on July 3, 2025, as part of the Class of 2026.
The Walk of Fame board made their selection on June 25, 2025, with the unveiling ceremony to occur within two years.
Kidjo, born in Benin in 1960, has profoundly impacted global music by blending African rhythms with international genres.
The African music sensation joins a remarkable lineup for the Class of 2026, including Miley Cyrus, Timothée Chalamet, Deepika Padukone (who becomes the first Indian actress to earn the award), Shaquille O'Neal, and more.
The Walk of Fame board accepted her selection on June 25, 2025, after reviewing hundreds of international nominations, as seen on Forbes Africa.
While the specific unveiling date has not been set, awardees have up to two years to prepare their ceremonies.
Kidjo was born in 1960 in what was then Dahomey (now Benin), and grew up immersed in music, drama, and dance.
She released her first album, Pretty, in 1981 before going to Paris in the wake of a political crisis.
There, she perfected her craft by combining West African rhythms with jazz, funk, R&B, Latin, and gospel elements.
With that said, here are 5 interesting facts about the artist.
5 interesting facts about Angélique Kidjo
Five-Time Grammy Winner
Kidjo has won five Grammy Awards, including Best Contemporary World Music Album for Djin Djin (2008), Eve (2015), Sings (2016), Celia (2020), and Mother Nature (2022).
Time 100 and Polar Music Prize Honoree
Angélique Kidjo was named among TIME's 100 Most Influential People in 2021 and awarded the prestigious Polar Music Prize in 2023, cementing her place as a global cultural icon.
Generational Music Collaborations
Despite beginning her musical career in the 80s, Angélique Kidjo's collaborations with other artists have spanned 5 decades and different continents, from working with Carlos Santana, Alicia Keys, and Bono, to more recent cross-generational collaborations with Burna Boy, Yemi Alade, Davido, and Mr Eazi.
Educator & Honored Scholar
The famous and highly accomplished Benin artist holds multiple honorary awards from numerous academies, including Yale (2015), Berklee (2010), Middlebury (2014), and UCLouvain (2020), recognizing her artistic brilliance and advocacy.
UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kalahari Resorts & Conventions, Founders of National Waterpark Day, Celebrates Ninth Annual Holiday July 28 Across All U.S. Locations
Kalahari Resorts & Conventions, Founders of National Waterpark Day, Celebrates Ninth Annual Holiday July 28 Across All U.S. Locations

Business Wire

time2 hours ago

  • Business Wire

Kalahari Resorts & Conventions, Founders of National Waterpark Day, Celebrates Ninth Annual Holiday July 28 Across All U.S. Locations

WISCONSIN DELLS, Wis.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Kalahari Resorts & Conventions, home to America's Largest Indoor Waterparks, and the founders of National Waterpark Day, will celebrate the ninth annual holiday on July 28. The celebration will feature a fun-filled day of family-friendly festivities at all four of its award-winning resorts. Established in partnership with the National Day Calendar in 2017, this celebration spotlights the adventure, excitement and memory-making power of waterparks nationwide. 'When we started National Waterpark Day, our goal was simple: inspire families to come together, unplug and enjoy some uninterrupted fun,' said Travis Nelson, President of Kalahari Resorts. 'Watching our guests embrace that spirit year after year reminds us why we created this celebration in the first place.' On July 28, Kalahari resort locations in Wisconsin Dells, WI, Sandusky, Ohio, Pocono Mountains, PA and Round Rock, Texas will have on-site foam parties and live DJs spinning poolside tracks, exciting games and giveaways, foodie pop-ups, family poolside activities, meet-and-greets with everyone's favorite Kalahari characters, and more. On July 28 only, guests can also dive into a 24-hour flash sale offering up to 30% off overnight stays, $10 off waterpark day passes, 10% off cabana and bungalow rentals, and 30% off fall 2025 season passes when they use the promo code WATERPARK. 'Whether it's our flagship Wisconsin Dells location or our newest resort in Texas, National Waterpark Day is the perfect time for families to dive into summer,' added Nelson. 'From the sun-drenched outdoor pools that lets guests soak up every ray to the mega slides in our indoor waterpark that keep the excitement flowing, Kalahari gives families the flexibility to craft their ultimate waterpark getaway.' For more information on National Waterpark Day activities or to book your stay, please visit About Kalahari Resorts & Conventions Kalahari Resorts & Conventions in Wisconsin Dells, WI, Sandusky, Ohio, the Pocono Mountains, PA, Round Rock, Texas, and opening soon in Spotsylvania, VA, deliver a beyond-expectations waterpark resort and conference experience all under one roof. The African-inspired Kalahari Resorts, privately owned by the Nelson family, are home to America's Largest Indoor Waterparks. Todd and Shari Nelson, the founders of Kalahari Resorts, were honored with an induction into the Wisconsin Business Hall of Fame in 2023. All Kalahari Resorts feature well-appointed guest rooms and suites, the full-service Spa Kalahari, a fun-filled family entertainment center, on-site signature restaurants, unique retail shops and a state-of-the-art convention center. For more information, members of the media are encouraged to visit

The time-travel stones are up to their old tricks in Outlander: Blood Of My Blood trailer
The time-travel stones are up to their old tricks in Outlander: Blood Of My Blood trailer

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

The time-travel stones are up to their old tricks in Outlander: Blood Of My Blood trailer

Those pesky damn time travel stones! Always catapulting young women through time for romantic adventures. We knew that, much like the flagship series, Outlander: Blood Of My Blood would feature multiple timelines. But we didn't know that, like her daughter Claire, Julia Moriston (Hermione Corfield) would also find herself sent back in time. But according to the new trailer for the prequel, the love stories of Claire and Jamie's parents are even more entangled than we could've imagined. According to a synopsis from Starz, Outlander: Blood Of My Blood begins 'on the eve of an earlier Jacobite rebellion.' In 1714, Ellen MacKenzie (Harriet Slater) and Brian Fraser (Jamie Roy) fall in love despite the fact that 'my father detested yours,' as she tells him in the trailer. Meanwhile, Vanity Fair reports that Julia Moriston (Hermione Corfield) and Henry Beauchamp (Jeremy Irvine) fell in love writing letters back and forth while Henry serves in the first World War. But their long-distance, wartime courtship ain't got nothing on accidentally being separated by 200 years. 'What if you never find her?' Someone asks Henry after Julia's disappearance. 'I will,' he vows. The Outlander: Blood Of My Blood cast also includes Tony Curran as Simon Fraser, Lord Lovat, Séamus McLean Ross as Colum MacKenzie, Sam Retford as Dougal MacKenzie, Rory Alexander as Murtagh Fitzgibbons Fraser, and Conor MacNeill as Ned Gowan. Executive producer Maril Davis teased to Vanity Fair, 'With prequels, the challenge is you know exactly where you're ending. But we have a lot of freedom in figuring out how to get there. We don't have a book series on this one, so we're definitely not going to have that debate necessarily of, 'Oh, this was in the book this way, but the show's doing it a different way.' But sometimes it's nice to have the blueprint.' Outlander: Blood Of My Blood, which has already been renewed for a second season, will premiere August 8. More from A.V. Club Staff Picks: A rug pull of a film and some deceptively breezy reads Nacho Vigalondo retreats to an unimaginative dream world for Daniela Forever ELO cancels planned final show ever due to Jeff Lynne health issues Solve the daily Crossword

A Psychologist Explains Why The Nicki Minaj Challenge Became A Viral Sensation
A Psychologist Explains Why The Nicki Minaj Challenge Became A Viral Sensation

Black America Web

time14 hours ago

  • Black America Web

A Psychologist Explains Why The Nicki Minaj Challenge Became A Viral Sensation

Source: Axelle/Bauer-Griffin / Getty Since #TheNickiMinaj challenge swept the internet last week amid the rapper's puzzling and pointed jabs at fellow music artists like SZA and Doechii, over one billion social media users have hopped on books, stacked dumbbells, and pool ledges to prove their physical aptitude on heels. The trend, that popped up seemingly out-of-the-blue and has now spread like wildfire, is an homage to a pose Nicki Minaj clocked in her 2013 music video, 'High-School,' balancing on sky-high beige heels beside a pool while rocking a long blonde wig and bubble-gum pink bikini. Twelve years later, an ordinary scene from an old rap video is now one of the most viral moments of the 2025 summer run, racking up over one billion views and counting. Every post appears aimed at outdoing the one before it, with TikTokers upping the stakes by balancing on increasingly outrageous household items like soda cans or cooking pots. So what's behind the latest wave of internet peacocking? We spoke to Columbia-trained psychologist, Bea Arthur, about why the high-heeled challenge has the social media world in a chokehold. Feminine Strength In A #TradeWife Era Arthur said that one of the driving forces motivating the trend's popularity is the 'brag-a-docious aura' of Nicki herself. 'One of the things that makes Black women so awesome and Black people so awesome is that we give ourselves confidence, that cockiness,' she said. The pose celebrates feminine prowess and seemingly superhuman strength, which is a visually captivating combination. 'The core strength in heels, it's so feminine. All the girls who were doing it in stripper shoes, I was like, 'Yes,'' Arthur said. 'And how they kept elevating it too. I think Ciara did it on three dumbbells,' she said. The pose is naturally defiant in a #tradewife era that demands women be more demure and submissive. Arthur said this trend calls forth a new message: 'The bad bitch will never die.' Showing Off Is In Our DNA Arthur, whose family is from Ghana, says that culturally, people of African descent tend to be 'shamelessly cocky,' a thread of gold we derived from our struggles. 'You look at hip-hop, we had to call ourselves kings. We had to put on gold. We had to flex, because it literally wasn't given.' She said in Black gay culture, we see the rise of the ballroom king and queen archetypes, who flounce about in a shamelessly vain way, but that's the magic marginalized people must tap into to create their own sense of value outside of systems of oppression. 'The human soul seeks balance at all times in our actions,' Arthur said. 'We seek to be understood, and we seek to be known on a subconscious level.' Participating in a trend like #thenickiminajchallenge is a chance to be seen and known by others, which is a form of self-regulation, albeit brief, she said. But seeking validation online can come with a dark side, especially for people who struggle with social isolation. Arthur said posting can cause spikes in dopamine, our brain's pleasure chemical, which can literally change social media from a pastime into an addiction. 'We're alone. Right? We're watching Netflix. We're scrolling. We're in the house. We're not connected. And so these likes feel like love.' she said. Social Media As Community Arthur said that it's no coincidence that TikTok's popularity took off during COVID when humans were socially and emotionally secluded for months. Viral trends give users an opportunity to feel a part of something, even if it's online and not in-person. 'We need community. We're social animals or tribal creatures, so we need to feel part of something and to be seen. These needs are innate, just like food and water,' she said. Being alone triggers cortisol, which is the body's stress hormone, to be more present in the blood, according to research. So viral trend participants may feel a sense of belonging and alignment by posting. 'That's why athletes love sports so much,' she said. 'Being with other people who love the game as much as you, is a beautiful thing, a necessary thing. Again, we are tribal social animals, but once it becomes ego serving, then it's an addiction, and then it's destructive,' Arthur said. SEE ALSO A Psychologist Explains Why The Nicki Minaj Challenge Became A Viral Sensation was originally published on

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store