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The eldest child of Johnny Cash and his first wife, Vivian Liberto, Rosanne Cash was born in Memphis, Tennessee on May 24, 1955. After her parents separated she and her three sisters grew up in California.

At 18 she joined The Johnny Cash Show, further absorbing his influence along with that of his legendary touring show partners Carl Perkins and the Carter Family. The Carter Family's June Carter later became Rosanne's stepmother when she married Cash in 1968.

Rosanne went on to study drama at Nashville's Vanderbilt University and at the Lee Strasberg Institute in Los Angeles before focusing on her music. In the 30 years since she has released 12 albums including Right or Wrong, Seven Year Ache,Somewhere in the Stars, Rhythm and Romance, King's Record Shop, Interiors, The Wheel, 10 Song Demo, Rules of Travel, Black Cadillac, and most recently, The List. She has also recorded 11 No. 1 singles, blurring the genres of country, rock, roots and pop. In 1985 she won the Grammy Award for Best Country Vocal Performance, Female, for her hit "I Don't Know Why You Don't Want Me," and has received nine other nominations.

Her highly personal yet universally appealing writing style is also manifest in her parallel prose career. Rosanne published a collection of short stories, Bodies of Water, in 1995, and a children's book, Penelope Jane: A Fairy's Tale, in 2000. Composed, her long-awaited memoir, was published in 2010. Additionally, her essays and fiction have appeared in various collections and publications, including The New York Times, Rolling Stone, Time Magazine, The Oxford American and New York Magazine.

The mother of five children, Rosanne lives in New York City with her husband, producer and guitarist John Leventhal, and her youngest child.

For more:  Rosanne's Wikipedia entry

Links

rosannecash.com



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September 21, 2009

Submission from my sister Tara: Simple Heart

My Mother gave me this heart locket many, many years ago, and it quickly became a very special part of my material entourage…the locket was one that she had worn as a young girl, while still courting my Father, which held two very young and innocent photos of them. I have had the locket since I was a young girl myself, and when wearing it one day in high school, (I’m not even sure it had been gifted to me at that point, it was still a loan) I opened the locket to look at their photos like I had done so many times before, but this time, when I looked at it, I discovered that my Mother’s photo seemed to be bulging out a tiny bit, so I removed the photo and found a tiny piece of paper folded up with my Father’s words….”I love you darling” aparently torn from a letter he’d sent to her from when he was stationed in the Air Force.  I was so excited with my discovery , and the necklace became even more special to me from that day forward.  I wore the necklace with the simple black cord it was given to me on, and realized soon after that it needed a more special place to hang from, and from my great interest in jewelry making and beading, I chose some special stones to adorn the locket with, and made a more worthy necklace.  The years have passed, my parents are both gone now, and the locket is ever more special…

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