Fantasia Barrino - Television Appearances

Television Appearances

  • American Idol (2004) (Contestant/Winner in 2004 and has made numerous musical guest appearances on seasons afterwards)
  • The Simpsons (2005) She plays Clarissa Wellington in the episode A Star Is Torn.
  • An Evening of Stars: Tribute to Aretha Franklin (2007)(Herself; tribute performer singing "Rock Steady" & "Baby I Love You")
  • An Evening of Stars: Tribute to Patti LaBelle (2009) (Herself; tribute performer singing "Lady Marmalade" and "Somebody Loves You Baby (You Know Who It Is)")
  • Soul Train Awards (2009;Tribute to Chaka Khan singing "Tell Me Something Good")
  • BET Celebration of Gospel (Appeared in numerous years singing)
  • Fantasia for Real (2010-2011)
  • Wrestlemania 26 (2010) (singing America the Beautiful)
  • Black Girls Rock (2010) (Herself, singing "A Brand New Day" and "I'm Every Woman")
  • An Evening of Stars: Tribute to Chaka Khan (2011) (Herself; tribute performer singing "Tell Me Something Good")
  • RuPaul's Drag Race (2011) (Celebrity Guest Judge on Season 3)
  • American Idol (2011) (guest performer Season 10)
  • Super Bowl Gospel Celebration (2012) (Performed "Total Praise" alone & "He's Done Enough" with her mother Diane Barrino)
  • American Idol (2012) (guest performer Season 11)

Read more about this topic:  Fantasia Barrino

Famous quotes containing the words television and/or appearances:

    The television screen, so unlike the movie screen, sharply reduced human beings, revealed them as small, trivial, flat, in two banal dimensions, drained of color. Wasn’t there something reassuring about it!—that human beings were in fact merely images of a kind registered in one another’s eyes and brains, phenomena composed of microscopic flickering dots like atoms. They were atoms—nothing more. A quick switch of the dial and they disappeared and who could lament the loss?
    Joyce Carol Oates (b. 1938)

    We often think ourselves inconsistent creatures, when we are the furthest from it, and all the variety of shapes and contradictory appearances we put on, are in truth but so many different attempts to gratify the same governing appetite.
    Laurence Sterne (1713–1768)