
By 1988, Céline had established a strong name for
herself in her native province of Quebec, where she was enjoying superstar
status, receiving numerous Felix Awards and racking up platinum albums. That
same year, Céline won the prestigious Eurovision Song Contest in Dublin
Ireland, where she performed live before a television audience of 600 million
viewers throughout Europe, the USSR, the Middle-East, Japan, and Australia.
Céline's international breakthrough came when she recorded the title track for
the soundtrack to the animated Disney hit movie 'Beauty and the Beast. The
song went to number one and garnered an Academy Award and a Grammy Award.
"Beauty and the Beast" formed the cornerstone for Céline's second
English language album, called simply 'Céline Dion.' That album produced four
more hit singles including "Love Can Move Mountains," "Water From
The Moon," "If You Asked Me To" and "Did You Give Enough
Love." In Canada, the album went six times platinum and set the stage for
an incredible streak of Juno Awards.
At this time, the Céline juggernaut started rolling at a momentous pace in the UK. British fans took extremely well to "Think Twice," a ballad on 'The Colour Of My Love.' For five consecutive weeks, the song and album stood on top of the respective British charts, an achievement not replicated since 1965 and the heyday of The Beatles. "Think Twice" remained at number one for two more weeks, surpassing the magic million mark to become only the fourth million-selling single ever in the UK by a female artist.
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