Nobody's Angel

Nobody's Angel was an American pop girl group of the late 1990s. The group consisted of four members Alitzah Navarro, Stacey Harper, Amy Sue Hardy and Sarah Smith. The band was put together after they became friends and discovered they had something in common: a shared taste for music, dancing and acting.

In 1998, the quartet recorded "Let's Get Together" for the movie The Parent Trap. A year later, the girls all guest-starred as themselves on the ABC television show, Boy Meets World and soon after, in 2000, they released their self-titled album, on the Hollywood Records label. Nobody's Angel featured the hit song, "If You Wanna Dance". Later, they released the song "Pokémon World" with the boy band Youngstown for the movie Pokémon The Movie 2000.

They were featured on the Disney TV movie, Model Behavior, starring Justin Timberlake. Stacey and Amy Sue both left the group in 2001 to pursue careers of their own. They were soon replaced by actress-singer Jennie Kwan (formerly of the NBC show California Dreams) and Tai-Amber Hoo. Tai-Amber was a former member of another girl group called Gyrl before she joined Nobody's Angel. However, the group disbanded after the debut single was released.

After recording a few songs for the soundtracks to the Disney films 102 Dalmatians and The Princess Diaries, the group split up. An album was due to be released in 2002, but was shelved. The album did feature the singles "Whatcha Gonna Do (With Your Second Chance)", "Always Tomorrow", and a remake of the Salt-N-Pepa song "It Ain't Nothing But a She Thang" featuring Lil' J. Besides the songs from the soundtracks no new music from their second album has been leaked.

On Jennie's official website, she has posted two demos from the album called "Out of My Life" and "I'd Like to Be". It can be heard here.

Read more about Nobody's Angel:  Past Members, Discography

Famous quotes containing the word angel:

    A turkey is more occult and awful than all the angels and archangels. In so far as God has partly revealed to us an angelic world, he has partly told us what an angel means. But God has never told us what a turkey means. And if you go and stare at a live turkey for an hour or two, you will find by the end of it that the enigma has rather increased than diminished.
    Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1874–1936)