Samantha Newark

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Samantha Newark
Newark in 2014, as "Jem"/"Jerrica"
Newark in 2014, as "Jem"/"Jerrica"
Background information
Born (1967-06-27) 27 June 1967 (age 56)
London, England
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Musician
  • singer
  • actress
Instrument(s)
  • Vocals
  • guitar
Years active1985–present
Websitesamanthanewark.com

Samantha Newark (born 27 June 1967) is an English musician and actress. She is best known for her voice-over work as the speaking voice of Jem and Jerrica in the animated cartoon series Jem.[1] As a teenager, Newark became a voice-over talent in mainstream television. Her work on "Jem" produced a serious cult following that persists to this day.[2][3][4][5] She lent her voice to many radio and TV projects while writing and performing her original music as a solo recording artist in Los Angeles CA, Nashville TN and Dallas, Texas. In 2015 Newark appeared in the live-action feature film adaptation on Jem and the Holograms directed by Jon M. Chu.

Early years[edit]

Samantha Newark was born in Wimbledon, London. Although she was born in England, her family then moved to Africa and later to the US. She attended several different schools and began her music career in Africa after seeing Lena Zavaroni perform. She continued working as an actress and singer and came to prominence when she landed the role of Jem in 1985.[6]

Acting career[edit]

Newark is best known for her voice-over work on the animated 1980s cartoon series Jem as the speaking voice of Jerrica/Jem[7][6] (Britta Phillips was the singing voice). "Jem" remains her most well known role and Newark receives invitations to meet the Jem fans at Pop Culture conventions all over the world. Newark made a cameo appearance in the Jem and the Holograms live action film adaptation.[8]

Newark was nominated for a "Young Artist award" twice for "Exceptional young actress in animation, series, specials, or film features" also nominated for her performance in "Best animated series". Other voice-over credits include guest-starring on the original Transformers cartoon as "Ariel" in the classic Transformers episode "War Dawn" and in other episodes playing Elise Presser. Newark was also cast as the voice of a young Peter Pan's mother in Steven Spielberg feature film Hook as well as doing countless on camera and voice-over TV and radio commercials. She also played the role of Debbie in the 1987 thriller film Summer Camp Nightmare. In 2012 she was invited to contribute two characters to the Festival favorite animated short Pound Dogs, created by Mike Salva. This project won the MTV "Voice and Vision animation award for writing and animation and garnered two development deals with MTV.[9]

Newark also works in video games, providing voices for games including Twisted Metal: Black and Britney's Dance Beat, where she played the roles of the Choreographer and the Asian dancer.[6]

Music career[edit]

Newark began her professional music career at the age of seven. Signed to Nitty Gritty records she recorded her first record while living in Africa and then toured to support her single "Jimmy Jimbo" produced by Allan Goldswain and Mike Adams. At age 10 she and her family immigrated to America and Samantha was promptly signed to International Creative Management where she was thrust onto the State fair circuit opening for Eddie Rabbitt, Pat Boone, Debby Boone and Mac Davis. She was cast in the title role in the United States Navy band production of the musical Annie in Washington DC.[6] and eventually moved with her family to Burbank California where she played Rosie in a production of Sweet Charity and Dorothy in a Los Angeles production of The Wizard of Oz She was a frequent performer of The L.A. Kids cabaret and performed often with the Ray Anthony orchestra at the famous Shrine Auditorium and on many telethons. She also was a featured guest vocalist at age 14 with the 65 piece Los Angeles Pops orchestra. She won the Los Angeles vocal competition at the age of 17 and then through the late 1990s started to write and record her own original music with many different incarnations of original bands.

Newark recorded the song "In Your Eyes" for the 1986 anime film Project A-ko[10][11] and worked with Richie Zito and Joey Carbone and was hired to sing multiple songs on the soundtrack for the movie Crazy Six starring Rob Lowe, Burt Reynolds, Mario Van Peebles.

She was one of the 20 finalists out of 10,000 submissions for the Lilith Fair talent contest sponsored by Star 98.7 radio and Universal contests in 1999. And was one of 15 budding songwriters accepted into the coveted Lester Sill Ascap songwriting workshop where she met writer producer and long time collaborator composer Mike Reagan[12] She and Mike worked together through the late 1990s writing original music performing live and contributing vocals for various PlayStation games. She sang vocals on the movie soundtrack Some Girl starring Juliette Lewis and also sang vocals in the movie Material Girls.

While living in Los Angeles she worked as a session singer for writer, producer Michele Vice Maslin. She has worked in the EDM world co-writing a song called "Deeper" for the German group Fragma.[13] The version with her vocals was remixed by EDM producer Nick Terranova. In late 2006 she auditioned for Julian Coryell to be a backup singer for Leonard Cohen. The project was set to do a world tour and after two months of rehearsals the tour was cancelled and put on hold for two years where it started up again with a new MD and new team.

Newark made her move to Music city Nashville in Tennessee in October 2007. She released her self-titled debut album in 2008.[14][15] Songs from the album have been featured in numerous television programs including Smallville, Reba, Life is Wild, and Gossip Girl, America's Next Top Model, as well as MTV's Laguna Beach, Punk'd, and My Super Sweet 16.[16]

In 2008, Newark was invited to be a part of the documentary film "Saravia" written and directed by Joaquin Montalvan about the spiritual journey into the life of painter, writer and composer Mauricio Saravia.[17] Newark and Saravia met in Los Angeles and worked closely together on the soundtrack for the film. Newark composed the melodies for Saravia's poetry that was featured throughout the film and she performed one of the songs live in the movie.

Newark released her second album Somethin' Good in late October 2011,[18][19] with songs written and performed by Newark and produced by Dave Polich, Michael Jackson's keyboard programmer on the This Is It concerts. Her third album, Hologram described as a "love letter" to her many fans, was scheduled for release in November 2016[20] and final debut in 2017.[21][22] A dance music version of this album, Hologram 2.0, was released in late 2021 and included remixes by musical artists Hyperbubble and Jipsta.[23][22]

Filmography[edit]

Film[edit]

Year Title Role Notes
1987 Summer Camp Nightmare Debbie
2015 Jem and the Holograms Hair Stylist

Television[edit]

Year Title Role Notes
1985–1988 Jem Jerrica Benton / Jem (voice) 65 episodes
1985–1986 The Transformers Ariel, Elise Presser (voices) 2 episodes
2016 HG Chicken and the Chronological Magus Pink Television short

Video games[edit]

Year Title Role Notes
2001 Twisted Metal: Black Uncredited
2002 Britney's Dance Beat
2002 Wild Arms 3 Vocalist - "Advanced Wind", "Only the Night Sky Knows", "Wings"
2003 James Bond 007: Everything or Nothing
2005 God of War Score vocals

References[edit]

  1. ^ Danielle Henbest. "Samantha Newark – Jem and the Hologrmas". Dvdtalk.com. Retrieved 31 May 2012.
  2. ^ "'Jem and The Holograms' Hits DVD: Get Your 80s Retro Sing On (Exclusive Video)". The Hollywood Reporter. 7 October 2011.
  3. ^ "JEM IS HER NAME, NO ONE ELSE IS THE SAME!". Gay.net.
  4. ^ "A Truly Outrageous Interview with the Voice of Jem, Samantha Newark!". MTV.
  5. ^ "Truly, Truly, Truly Outrageous! An interview with gay icon Samantha Newark". Out.com.
  6. ^ a b c d "A Talk With Samantha Newark", Retrojunk, retrieved 20 July 2016
  7. ^ "Samantha Newark | Music Videos, News, Photos, Tour Dates, Ringtones, and Lyrics | MTV". MTV. Archived from the original on 25 April 2010. Retrieved 16 May 2010.
  8. ^ "'Jem & The Holograms' Movie News: Two New Video Interviews, Including One With Rio!". Sciencefiction.com. May 2014.
  9. ^ "Mike Salva's animations (featuring Sean Parrott & Ryan Williams) win awards and development deals at NYTVF". Nashvillestandup.com. 26 September 2011. Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  10. ^ "Original Soundtrack Project A-Ko", AllMusic, retrieved 30 July 2016
  11. ^ "Project A-ko: Original Soundtrack". VGMDb. Retrieved 3 December 2023.
  12. ^ "Mike Reagan Music – Official Website". Mikereagan.com.
  13. ^ Peeples, Jase (6 October 2014). "Jem's Samantha Newark: Still Truly Outrageous". Advocate.com. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  14. ^ "AllMusic Database". Retrieved 16 May 2010.
  15. ^ ""JEM'S" SAMANTHA NEWARK RELEASES HER DEBUT CD". Henshinjustice.com.
  16. ^ "CD Universe artist Biography". Cduniverse.com. Retrieved 16 May 2010.
  17. ^ "One Man. A Dream. His Journey. Saravia A JOAQUIN MONTALVAN FILM". Docplayer.net. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  18. ^ "POP, rinse, repeat – Samantha Newark talks about her new album "Something Good"". Poprinserepeat.com.
  19. ^ "GAY.NET 'SAMANTHA NEWARK'S "SOMETHIN' GOOD" IS SOMETHIN' GREAT". Gay.net.
  20. ^ "Samantha Newark: Hologram on PledgeMusic". Archived from the original on 11 September 2016. Retrieved 31 August 2016.
  21. ^ Samantha Newark – Hologram Discogs. Retrieved on November 9, 2022.
  22. ^ a b Lai, Chi Ming (2 December 2021). "SAMANTHA NEWARK Hologram – HYPERBUBBLE Mix". The Electricity Club.
  23. ^ Samantha Newark – Hologram 2.0 Discogs. Retrieved on November 9, 2022.

External links[edit]