Kylie Ann Minogue was born on 28 May, 1968. The eldest of
three children, Kylie's acting career began early, but it
was her role as Charlene in the Australian soap "Neighbours"
(1985) which established Kylie as an international star.
Her singing career began purely by accident when a record
company executive heard Kylie's rendition of Little Eva's
1962 hit "The Loco-Motion." She signed with PWL
Records and hitmakers Stock/Aitken/Waterman in 1987. Five
albums and a greatest hits compilation followed, and she
made history by having more than 20 consecutive top ten
hits in the UK. Her motion picture debut came with the starring
role of Lola in Delinquents, The (1989). She left PWL Records
in 1992 to head in a decidedly more mature musical direction,
and her self-titled debut on deConstruction records was
released in 1994, spawning chart hits like "Confide
In Me" and "Put Yourself In My Place." Kylie's
doings were always a favourite subject of the press, but
she really made waves with her controversial 1995 duet with
Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, "Where the Wild Roses
Grow." 1997 saw the release of Kylie's first single
in more than 3 years, "Some Kind of Bliss" co-written
and produced by James Dean Bradfield and Sean Moore of The
Manic Street Preachers.
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