Trisha Yearwood
Trisha Yearwood is an American country and folk singer, songwriter, actor, and writer born on September 19, 1964, in Monticello, Georgia.
Her education took her through several institutions, including Young Harris College, the University of Georgia, and Belmont University, the last of which has long served as a pathway for artists pursuing careers in the music industry. Working across country and folk music, Yearwood built a career that extended beyond recording into television acting and writing, reflecting a range of creative pursuits that resisted easy categorization within a single medium. Her work as a songwriter runs alongside her identity as a performer, suggesting a hands-on relationship with the craft of composition rather than reliance on outside material alone.
Yearwood received the Country Music Association Award for Female Vocalist of the Year, one of the more prominent individual honors the genre offers to its performers, as well as the Country Music Association Award for International Achievement. These recognitions place her within a tradition of country music performance that draws on both domestic audiences and broader international reach. Her work spans country and folk idioms, and her presence across music, television, and writing marks her as a figure whose career has moved through several distinct but related fields.
Quotes by Trisha Yearwood

The best thing that I bring in my live show is that it's not scripted. It's more of a conversation with my audience. And that's what people like about the show - it's very real. There are mistakes and laughter.

I'm like everybody: I gain the Christmas 10 or so, and then I try to exercise more and dial it back.

When I was a little girl, I always dreamed of being a country music singer, but I never dreamed I'd be a member of the Grand Ole Opry.

When we got married - almost 10 years ago now - we made a commitment to really be together, which means we hardly ever spend a night apart. And being madly in love is important, but I think it's equally important to be in deep like! I like this guy... we talk about everything, and we laugh a lot. Life is good!

When people say, 'You seem so grounded; you seem so normal,' I think it's the way I was raised and the way my sister and I were brought up by our parents.

Sometimes, life just gets in the way, and you have to forgive yourself for putting on a few pounds.

One thing my mom taught me was that when you're making deviled eggs, flip the eggs over the night before. They've been sitting in the carton as they're transported, so the yolks settle on bottom. If you flip them, then the yolks aren't skewed to one side.

I wanted to be Cher for a long time, but not for the singing. I just thought she was so cool. I wanted her long hair, and I wanted to weigh five pounds.

It's always a balance, and sometimes I'm on the good side of that scale, and sometimes I'm on the bad side.

Education was a given, only because of the way I was raised. Truth be told, I thought, at 15 years old, I should go and get a record deal and drop out of school, and my parents would have had none of that. I'm grateful now that my parents were pushing me in that way, because I wasn't mature enough on so many levels to do that.