Rhona Bennett
Rhona Bennett was born in Chicago, Illinois, United States on May 10th, 1976 and is the TV Actress. At the age of 48, Rhona Bennett biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, songs, and networth are available.
At 48 years old, Rhona Bennett physical status not available right now. We will update Rhona Bennett's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.
Rhona Lynn Bennett (born May 10, 1976), also known as Miss R&B, is an American singer, actress, and model best known for her recurring appearance on The Jamie Foxx Show as Nicole.
En Vogue, an American contemporary R&B group, is now a member.
Bennett began out doing voice overs and commercial films before progressing to professional theatre and television.
Rhona was a cast member of the Disney Channel's variety show The All-New Mickey Mouse Club before joining the cast of The Jamie Foxx Show.
She is a member of Zeta Phi Beta sorority.
Career
Bennett began singing at the age of 11 with the ETA Creative Arts Theater and performed "Christmas Melody" in Goodman Theater. On the '90s revival of The Mickey Mouse Club, she became a Mouseketeer. Emerald Cove, a spin-off dramedy on the Disney Channel, was also featured. Bennett left California to continue her acting career, including Living Single and Martin, after the show was cancelled in 1994. She appeared in the mid-1990s as Loquatia on the sitcom Homeboys in Outer Space, and she also played in Loquatia.
Dee Dee Bradley, the casting director, requested Bennett to appear in the fourth season of the WB sitcom The Jamie Foxx Show, in which she played Nicole, Jamie's co-worker and singing partner.
Bennett signed with Sony Music under producer Rodney "Darkchild" Jerkins' newly formed boutique imprint Darkchild Records, where she was branded "First Lady of Darkchild" in late 2000. Robert "Big Bert" Smith, LaShawn Daniels, and his brother Fred Jerkins III were among Jerkins' regular collaborators on his self-titled debut album, which also included Robert "Big Bert" Smith, LaShawn Daniels, and his brother Fred Jerkins III. "Satisfied," the album's first single, which was released in March 2001, became a top-five hit on the US Hot Dance Club Play chart, but it didn't manage or sell well elsewhere. Following a setback between Sony Music and Darkchild Records, further plans to unleash Rhona were postponed. As a result, Bennett was soon removed from the record and the album received a limited Japan-wide release.
Bennett landed a leading role opposite Allen Payne in the stage play Men Cry in the Dark (2003), based on Michael Baisden's 1999 book. Bennett rejoined En Vogue for a five-year tenure, during which she and original band members Terry Ellis and Cindy Herron released the album Soul Flower (2004). Bennett withdrew the band in 2008 after many years of touring, the band reformed during the 20th Anniversary World Tour due to former member Dawn Robinson's return to the band. Bennett also performed solo at the American Airlines Center on July 27, 2008, under the Miss R&B moniker, where she helped raise funds for a new charity for the homeless. Bennett and En Vogue's members reunited to appear at the American Music Festival on August 29, 2008.
Bennett began composing her second solo album The Anticipation of R&B under her own name Tone'n'Rhone Productions following her departure from En Vogue. On the project, the singer collaborated with a variety of artists, including producers J.Y. T.I.C.E. Park and J.U.S.T.I.C.E. Team League, as well as guest vocalists such as Brandy, 40 Glocc, and her former En Vogue colleagues Ellis and Herron are among those who have performed on the league. The album was preceded by the singles "Range" and "Letting You Go," but the album was shelved in 2010 due to internal conflicts and insufficient promotion. Bennett performed several songs from The Anticipation of R&B to her SoundCloud account later this year.
Bennett revived En Vogue in 2012 after new material by all four original members failed to appear, and both Robinson and Jones had left the band after more. Bennett, Ellis, and Herron signed a new deal with Pyramid Records in July 2014 and began working on the album Electric Café with mentors Denzil Foster and Thomas McElroy. The threesome appeared on Lifetime's holiday film An En Vogue Christmas, in which they starred fictional versions of themselves, and they reunited to perform a charity concert to save the nightclub where they got their start. En Vogue's hit singles, as well as two new tracks and a version of "O Holy Night" were all released digitally on Ellis and Herron's own label En Vogue Records.
Bennett's single "Take Me There" debuted in 2016, which was supposed to precede a solo EP called R&B Gumbo. The EP didn't appear in time with R&B's Anticipation.