Grammy-Winning Pointer Sisters Anita Pointer Dies at 74

Here we are talking about Anita Pointer Dies at 74. She was a founding member of the Pointer Sisters, a multi-genre musical band, and passed away on December 31 at her Beverly Hills home. She was 74. According to Roger Neal, her publicist, the cause was cancer.

By fusing a sensual electronic motif with brassy R&B, The Pointer Sisters contributed to the sound of the early 1980s. The trio demonstrated their breadth in records like its original “I’m So Excited” and the Bruce Springsteen cover “Fire,” which they based in part on the 1940s Andrews Sisters singing performance.

Their early performances were varied, and for “Fairytale” (1974), written by Anita and Bonnie Pointer, they received their first Grammy Award in the category of best country vocal performance by a pair or group.

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According to a biography on the group’s website, the country singer gave the Pointer Sisters the legitimacy they needed to appear at the Grand Ole Opry as the first Black female group. Elvis Presley covered Fairytale for one of his final albums, “Today.” Anita sang lead on their first hit, “Yes We Can Can,” by Allen Toussaint, released in 1973.

Before the sister act became a huge hit, Bonnie quit the group in the late 1970s to pursue a solo career. The group’s other two Grammys, for the best vocal arrangement for “Automatic” and best pop performance for “Jump (For My Love),” came from the 1983 album “Break Out.”

Anita Pointer Dies at 74

Ruth Pointer, the only surviving member of the original Pointer Sisters, a group of four sisters, has passed away. On January 23, 1948, Anita Marie Pointer was born in Oakland, California. The sisters joined the church choir and often attended the place of worship where their father served as a minister.

After quitting her work as a legal office secretary in the late 1960s, Anita started a singing career. 2015 saw the end of her touring career. She amassed works of art and artifacts related to African Americans.

According to her publicist, she gathered so many items that the Pointer Sisters’ “Ever After” display was awarded to the entire second floor of the Hollywood Museum in Los Angeles. The exhibition was where Bonnie, Anita, and Ruth’s final photograph—which they took in 2020—was born. 2006 saw June Pointer’s passing.

The unions of Ms. Pointer with David Harper and Richard Gonzales disintegrated. Jada, a child from her first union, passed away in 2003. She is survived by her sister Ruth, two brothers, Aaron and Fritz, and a grandchild.

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