REAL NAME: Alpharita Constantia Anderson-Marley
BIRTH DATE/PLACE: July 25, 1946, Cuba

In the mid sixties Rita was singing with a trio named The Soulettes
who were recording for Studio One, when she met Bob Marley. Rita
married Bob on 10 February 1966, and then became a singer in his
backing vocals group, the I Threes. She converted to the Rastafari
movement after witnessing Haile Selassie on his visit to Kingston,
Jamaica.
"Queen of Reggae" is a title often used to describe Rita Marley.
Even if she had never sung a note in her life, few would question
her right to be so called, for she is the widow of the late reggae
master Bob Marley and mother of all the members of the Grammy
Award-winning reggae quartet the Melody Makers. But Rita Marley's
own musical achievements are as impressive as those of her family
tree. During the 1960s she achieved stardom in her own right as a
solo artist (sometimes singing under the pseudonyms Esete and
Ganette) and as a member of the Soulettes; after marrying Marley,
she co-wrote many of his best-loved songs and shared the world
stage alongside him as a member of his backing group the I Threes;
after his death, she took her solo career to new heights and helped
guide the Melody Makers to their triumphs.

Born in poverty in Cuba, Rita Marley was raised from early
childhood in Trenchtown, a Kingston, Jamaica, ghetto that nurtured
many of reggae's greatest musicians. But the music called "reggae"
had not yet emerged when Rita first met the young man who would
develop into its greatest proponent, Robert Marley. Their paths
crossed in the mid-1960s. She was eighteen years old, the mother of
an illegitimate child, living with her aunt in a shack made of
sheet metal. He was a couple of years older than she, and along
with his friends Bunny Wailer and Peter Tosh, he was enjoying the
first flush of fame with his musical trio, the Wailers.
The Wailers captured Rita's attention as they passed by her house
every day on their way to rehearse at Coxsone Dodd's recording
studios. Rita, a Sunday school teacher in the Christian church at
the time, found their tough appearance somewhat intimidating; but
the sweet sound of their music convinced her that they could not be
as bad as they looked. She gathered her courage to call out to
them, begging them to arrange an audition for her at Dodd's.
They did, and Dodd liked what he heard. He set Rita up in an
all-female trio called the Soulettes and gave Bob Marley the
responsibility of developing their sound. He proved to be a stern
taskmaster, but his hard-driving ways soon paid off; the Soulettes
quickly became almost as popular as the Wailers. Their early
hits--performed in the light "ska" style that preceded the
development of the reggae sound--included "Pied Piper" and "I Love
You Baby," arranged by Bob Marley. His attitude toward the
Soulettes remained professional, critical, and distant, so Rita was
astonished when Bunny Wailer delivered a handwritten note to her
from Bob, in which he declared his love for her. The two were
married in 1966.
Rastafarianism, the religion that holds that Emperor Haile Selassie
I of Ethiopia was the risen Christ who would lead blacks the world
over to freedom, was beginning to exert a powerful influence in
Kingston during the late 1960s, but Rita Marley remained skeptical.
When Selassie visited the island, she turned out with thousands of
others to see him for herself, hoping for a sign. As his motorcade
passed her, he waved and nodded to her; in his open palm, she
believed she saw the nail prints of the crucifixion, and from that
moment on, her faith was unwavering. Her conversion deeply
impressed her husband and influenced him to study and accept the
Rastafarian beliefs that became so essential to his music and
philosophy.

By the early 1970s, the Wailers had begun to reach an international
audience, but the alliance of the original members was drawing to
an end. Haile Selassie died just after Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, and
Bunny Wailer went their separate ways. The emperor's death stunned
the Rasta world.
Within days of the announcement, Marley had written "Jah Live," a
single that affirmed the Rasta faith and insisted that their God
lived on. To back him up as he recorded the song, he called
together his wife and two more of the country's favorite female
vocalists, Marcia Griffiths and Judy Mowatt. (The Soulettes had
disbanded some time before.) The collaboration of Rita, Griffiths,
and Mowatt was so successful that they continued to work together
as the "I Threes." Popular in their own right, they also became an
integral part of Marley's reorganized band, Bob Marley and the
Wailers. Touring the world with the Wailers, the I Threes were a
mesmerizing part of every performance, contributing their perfect
harmonies, graceful choreography, and regal bearing.

Rita Marley was at work on her first solo album when, in 1981, her
husband succumbed to cancer. In the wake of his death, she released
the album, which yielded the top-selling reggae single in history,
"One Draw." But although that album, Who Feels It Knows It, and its
follow-up, Harambe, were critical and popular hits, Marley soon set
her own career aside. Nurturing her husband's children (seven by
other women, as well as the four they'd had together), working to
keep his cultural legacy strong, and grappling with the monumental
legal problems associated with his multimillion dollar estate--he
died leaving no will--occupied her time for most of the 1980s. She
performed occasionally in Jamaica, both as a solo artist and with
the I Threes, but her main musical focus was producing and managing
the fledgling Melody Makers.
Affirming her deep faith in the power of music to Christian Science
Monitor correspondent Amy Duncan, Marley declared that music's
"main purpose is to bring about changes in the system, in the
society." Quoting the lyrics to her song "There Will Always Be
Music," the singer concluded: "'All things shall perish from under
the sky but music alone shall live.' Whatever time we're passing
through, there will always be music.
She is now, however, an active member of the Ethiopian Orthodox
Church. After Marley's death, she recorded a few albums under her
name with some success in the United Kingdom and took care of
Marley's estate.

Rita has five children, two from other relationships and three with
Bob. Bob adopted Rita's two children as his own and they have the
Marley name. Bob has 13 children total: the two of Rita's that he
adopted, three born to Rita, and the remaining eight with separate
women.
Rita's children are, in order of birth:
1. Sharon,born November 23, 1964 (from a previous relationship)
2. Cedella Marley born August 23, 1967
3. David "Ziggy", born October 17, 1968
4. Stephen, born April 20, 1972
5. Stephanie, born 17 August 1974 (from a different relationship)