Alice Tan Ridley Dies: ‘America’s Got Talent’ Singer, Mother Of Gabourey Sidibe Was 72
She was not on the list.
Alice Tan Ridley, the mother of Precious and American Horror Story actor Gabourey Sidibe and a singer who performed for several decades in New York City subway stations, Harlem’s Cotton Club and other venues before finding national fame on America’s Got Talent in her late 50s, has died in New York. She was 72.
Her March 25 death was announced by her family. A cause was not stated.
Born Alice Ann Ridley on December 21, 1952, in what then was called Charles Junction (now Lumpkin), Georgia, Ridley was the seventh of eight children, and in 1971 moved to New York to teach special-needs children. Called Tan by family and friends, for years she sang with family members, including brother Melton Lee Ridley Jr., but only turned her focus to a music career in 1992, when she began busking in the subways, singing full time in the Union Square, 34th Street and Times Square stations.
Performing favorites such as “I Will Always Love You,” “I Will Survive,” “My Heart Will Go On” and others, Ridley’s powerful vocals became a local sensation that reached wider audiences via YouTube videos. She was featured in a 2010 New York Post article, and that same year auditioned for NBC’s America’s Got Talent with a raise-the-roof performance of the Etta James classic “At Last.”
While her ATG Season 5 performance — she made it to the
semifinals — was perhaps her most impactful career moment, Ridley had several brushes
with national fame years before. In 2002, she was the winner on the first
episode of Fox’s short-lived 30 Seconds to Fame, taking home the prize of
$25,000. Three years later was a contestant on Showtime at the Apollo, and her
music was featured in David LaChapelle’s documentary Rize as well as the
feature film Heights.
Six years after her ATG performance, Ridley, at age 63, Ridley released her debut studio album Never Lost My Way. She continued to perform in venues around the world until she retired in 2018 due to health issues.
In addition to daughter Gabourey Sidibe and son Ahmed Sidibe — both from her marriage to Ibnou Sidibe, which ended in divorce — survivors include brothers James D. “Jimmy” Ridley and Tommy Lee “Tom-Tom” Cherry; sisters Julia Van Mater-Miller and Mildred Ridley Dent; two grandchildren and other extended family.
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