Abimbola Fernandez

Darnel Abimbọla "Bim" Olumegbon Fernandez (born May 25, 1989) is a French-born American heiress and singer. She is the daughter of Antonio Deinde Fernandez, a Nigerian billionaire ambassador.[2] In 2014, she sang with the band Pink Grenade, and released two controversial videos that picked up millions of online views. She left her label later that year.

Bim Fernandez
Born
Darnel Abimbọla Olumegbon Fernandez[1]

May 25, 1989[1]
OccupationSinger
Years active2009–present
Parent(s)Antonio Deinde Fernandez
Aduke Fernandez
RelativesDJ Caise (nephew)
Musical career
Also known as
  • Madame Luxe
  • Bim
OriginNew York City
GenresPop
Instruments
LabelsSMH Records
Associated actsPink Grenade

Early life

Abimbola Fernandez was born at the American Hospital of Paris in Neuilly-sur-Seine, a commune in the western suburbs of Paris, France. Her father was billionaire Antonio Deinde Fernandez from Lagos State in southwestern Nigeria, who had moved to the United States as a young adult.[3] His Fernandez clan descended from a Portuguese-Brazilian slave trader who raised a family with an African wife in Lagos in the early 19th century.[4]

Fernandez's father had four earlier unions;[5] his third wife was white American Barbara Joyce[6] who married him in 1961 while they were living in Virginia, bore him three children in the United States, separated from him in 1984 or early 1985, then filed for divorce in 1987.[7] His fourth partner was Princess Abiola Dosunmu, who married him in Nigeria in April 1973 in a well-attended ceremony. The union produced a daughter and lasted until 1987–1988.[8] His fifth partner, Fernandez's African-American mother, was born Sandra Inett Price. She took the name Aduke Fernandez at their union, which she said began in 1982 with a tribal wedding in Nigeria, though he later said they were never formally married.[9][6][10] The first child born to the couple was daughter Atinuke in 1984, then Abimbola followed in 1989. Her French birth certificate states her name as Darnel Abimbola Olumegbon Fernandez and her mother's name as Aduke Olufunmilola Olumegbon Price Fernandez.[1] The shared name of Olumegbon comes from the Olumegbon noble line of Isale-Eko, Lagos; her father was a descendant of this ruling house through his mother.[11]

After the birth of Fernandez, the family lived a short while in the Hotel Ritz Paris, then moved to the Chateau de Bois-Feuillette in Pontpoint.[12]

Another move took her to New York, her father buying the historic All View Estate at the southern tip of Premium Point, New Rochelle. Fernandez began learning the violin at age four. At age six, she attended Rye Country Day School, and later the Convent of the Sacred Heart in Connecticut. At age 10, she moved with the family to Edinburgh, where she attended Fettes College.[12] At 13, she started playing guitar.[2] Fernandez graduated from Fettes at age 18. She took classes in video production at The Art Institute of New York City, then in 2009, enrolled at Oxford Brookes University at Oxford.[12] When she dropped out after one month to follow a music career, her father disapproved.[2][13][14]

Throughout her childhood, Fernandez lived a sheltered life as a rich man's daughter, traveling the world on his jet, especially to African nations, and vacationing in the summers on his 150-foot yacht, Yemoja. She trained as an equestrian, competing in six national horse shows.[2] Her father worried she might be kidnapped and held for ransom.[13] Many world figures visited her home on business with her father, including Pope John Paul II, George H. W. Bush, Kofi Annan, Nelson Mandela and Mobutu Sese Seko.[15]

In May 2003 while she was in school in Scotland, her father moved out of their Edinburgh home, and her mother initiated divorce proceedings, suing for £300 million, reported at the time as one of the largest-ever divorce suits.[16] The case was eventually settled for 36 monthly payments of £30,000 totalling £1,080,000.[9]

Fashion

In her teens, Fernandez modeled once for Vivienne Westwood during the Edinburgh Fashion Week.[17][18] Living on her own in New York, her wardrobe includes designer clothing such as a cocktail dress by Carmen Marc Valvo, and a Gasparee caftan by Gillian Harding.[13] She inherited her mother's collection of couture clothing including multiple caftans, one by Jean-Paul Gaultier, and other items by Givenchy, Chanel, Oscar de la Renta and more.[19]

Music

Fernandez started writing songs on her guitar in her teens. She went to concerts and got to know the members of punk group Forever the Sickest Kids, and Gabe Saporta, the leader and singer of the electro-pop band Cobra Starship. In 2009, Fernandez sang backing vocals on the band's song "Nice Guys Finish Last",[13] and she modeled for the album cover of Hot Mess, which reached number 4 on the Billboard 200 to become Cobra Starship's most successful album. Fernandez also modeled for the cover of the band's single, "Good Girls Go Bad".[12]

Taking the stage name Madame Luxe, Fernandez began collaborating with various musicians. EDM artist Draper, also an alumnus of Oxford Brookes University, featured Madame Luxe singing on his dubstep song "Painting the Sky", uploaded to SoundCloud in June 2011.[20] The song was included on Draper's self-titled EP, released in February 2012 on the Drop Dead label run by Bring Me the Horizon frontman Oliver Sykes.[21]

Fernandez collaborated with the deejay trio Cash Cash, singing lead and backing vocals on the songs "Tongue Twister" and "We Don't Sleep at Night", both released on the Japan-only version of the Cash Cash album The Beat Goes On in September 2012. Fernandez was also featured on Cash Cash's "Love Crime (Not Innocent)", uploaded to SoundCloud in 2013.[22]

In November 2013, Fernandez signed to SMH Records, founded by Jonathan Hay and Mike Smith, who formed the band Pink Grenade around Fernandez. Credited as Bim Fernandez, she played guitar and sang on the songs "Lets Take It Naked" and "Lipstick", sharing the latter song's co-writing credit with Hay and Cash Cash.[23] The pop song "Let's Take It Naked" was released for streaming online in January 2014.[24][25] On July 1, 2014, a video for "Let's Take It Naked" was uploaded to Vevo and WorldStarHipHop, amassing 7.5 million views in its first week. The video contrasted the upbeat, poppy music with fictional scenes of Fernandez partying with boys and cocaine, cooking meth, and playing Russian Roulette, fitted with a prosthetic pregnant belly as if she was in the last months of pregnancy. The Herald in Nigeria called the video "scandalous, disturbing and provocative."[26] The video was taken down by Vevo and WorldStarHipHop but can still be viewed on Tidal.[27]

A video for the hip-hop single "Lipstick", was released on July 23, 2014, with scenes of Fernandez performing, alternating with scenes of women playing with red lipstick and paint. The "sexually charged" song has lyrics suggesting fellatio, and at the end a male voice "disses" Kim Kardashian and her family.[28] The songs were included in late July on the Pink Grenade album, Fear of a Pink Planet, distributed through Caroline Records.[29]

Fernandez left SMH Records in November 2014.[12]

Personal life

Fernandez's mother died of colon cancer in May 2013.[12] The loss caused Fernandez to re-evaluate her career, and to push forward in music, as her mother had wished,[13][30] unlike her father who had cut off her allowance for a few years because he disapproved of her music path.

After her father died in September 2015, Fernandez posted tribute messages and family photos on her Instagram account, showing her father together with her.[31]

With her father dead, Fernandez and her step-mother Halima, her father's sixth long-term partner, became embroiled in a bitter dispute about inheritance. Halima did not consider Fernandez to be a legitimate heir of her father, while Fernandez said Halima was never married to her father. Fernandez wrote that Halima was not considerate of the father's wish to be buried in Nigeria with a state funeral, burying him instead in Belgium where he died, and arranging a smaller funeral service, conducted with insulting insinuations aimed at Fernandez's deceased mother. The dispute spilled over into online jabs.[32][33]

References

  1. Harold Udaka (September 2, 2015). "Fernandez Feud Gets Messier". The Light News. Nigeria. Retrieved October 5, 2018.
  2. Peter Okeugo. "My father wants me to mine gold – Abimbola Fernandez". Punch. Nigeria. Archived from the original on March 2, 2014. Retrieved October 4, 2018.
  3. Mfonobong Nsehe (16 November 2011). "10 African Millionaires To Watch". Forbes.
  4. "The Fernandez house in Lagos: Relic of an Afro-Brazilian past". The Nerve Africa. 2015-12-18. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  5. "Erelu Dosumu refuses to talk about late husband, Fernandez". Encomium Magazine. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  6. "Anthonio Oladehinde Fernandez: His Intimate World - The Elites Nigeria". The Elites Nigeria. 2015-09-18. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  7. "FERNANDEZ v. FERNANDEZ | 208 Conn. 329 (1988) | conn3291514 | Leagle.com". Leagle. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  8. "Fernandez: At last 'the veil is lifted' - Vanguard News Nigeria". Vanguard News Nigeria. 2015-09-16. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  9. "Absence makes the ex-partner £1m richer". Scotsman.com. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  10. "Fernandez v Price". Justia Law. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  11. "Billionaire Deinde Fernandez Is Dead! | YemojaNews". Yemojanewsng.com. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  12. Abimbola Fernandez (January 31, 2015). "Abimbola Fernandez aka Bim Fernandez". PRLog Press Release Distribution. Retrieved October 4, 2018.
  13. Gregory E. Miller (January 20, 2014). "Meet the Nigerian heiress who wants to be the next Rihanna". New York Post.
  14. Annette Witheridge (February 16, 2014). "The Punk Princess". People. London. Text hosted by thefreelibrary.com. Also hosted by HighBeam Research.
  15. Dele Momodu (2000). "Tribute to Achievement". Ovation International. No. 26. Nigeria. Exclusive edition devoted to Antonio Deinde Fernandez. Partial text and images hosted by Asabeafrika here.
  16. Seenan, Gerard (2003-07-04). "'Wife' of diplomat sues for £300m". The Guardian. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  17. "[PHOTOS] Billionaire Businessman Deinde Fernandez: His Wealthy Lifestyle, Wives And Children Revealed". Nigerianmonitor.com. 2 September 2015. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
  18. Sydney Gore (December 16, 2016). "Abimbola Fernandez Invites Us Inside Her Couture Closet". Nylon.com. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
  19. "Draper - Painting the Sky". Too Good For Radio. 2011-06-29. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  20. Drapermusic. "Draper EP 12" [LIMITED EDITION]". Drapermusic.bigcartel.com. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  21. "Love Crime (Not Innocent) - Bim as Madame Luxe". Soundcloud.com. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
  22. "Pink Grenade: Fear of a Pink Planet". AllMusic. Retrieved October 3, 2018.
  23. Hillary Crosley Coker (January 23, 2014). "Meet the Nigerian Heiress Who's Chasing Rihanna's Throne". Jezebel.
  24. "A estrela pop afilhada de Eduardo dos Santos". Cmjornal.pt. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
  25. "Billionaire rockstar heiress Bim Fernandez in controversial new music video 'Let's Take it Naked'". The Herald. Nigeria. July 2014.
  26. "Let's Take It Naked – Pink Grenade". Tidal.com. Retrieved October 5, 2018.
  27. Amber Ryland (July 23, 2014). "RHONJ's Jacqueline Laurita's Daughter Ashlee Holmes Stars In Controversial Music Video — Disses Kim Kardashian!". Radaronline.com. Retrieved October 3, 2018.
  28. SMH Records (March 20, 2014). "Fear of A Pink Planet: Pink Grenade is About to Explode". Archived from the original on March 24, 2014. Retrieved October 3, 2018.
  29. "Abimbola Fernandez is unlikely songbird". Thenationonlineng.net. Nigeria. January 26, 2014.
  30. Gbenga Bada (September 5, 2015). "Deinde Fernandez – See last pictures of late billionaire with daughter". Pulse.ng. Nigeria.
  31. "Late Deinde Fernandez's Daughter Abimbola & 3rd Wife Halima Launder Dirty Linen On Social Media | THEWILL". Thewillnigeria.com. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  32. "Fernandez Family Feud Gets Messier: "Why I Am At War With My Father's Mistress, Halima - Deinde Fernandez' Last Child, Abimbola - The Elites Nigeria". Theelitesng.com. 2016-01-29. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.