What is The Judds real last name?

From the early 1980s to the 1990s, Wynonna Judd has been known as one half of the most popular and respected female country acts, The Judds. Together with her mother, Naomi Judd, the mother-and-daughter duo provided country music with a crucial contrast to their male peers like no one else. 

However, The Judds soon parted ways after Wynonna’s mother experienced some health problems.

Following Naomi’s unexpected retirement, Wynonna set out to pursue a solo career. While she was first unsure of carrying on without her mother, she ended up showcasing a range that even more bewildered diehard country fans and radio programmers – at the same time, helped her retain a heaps of admiring followers.

Truly, Wynonna is one of a kind – a force of nature to be reckoned with. Get to know more about country star Wynonna Judd with these facts.

1. She is a native of Ashland, Kentucky. 

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Born Christina Claire Ciminella on May 30, 1964, the country singer was the love child of Charles Jordan and Naomi Judd – who got pregnant at the age of seventeen and gave birth to Wynonna two weeks before her high school graduation ceremony.

2. She never met her biological father, which has been her biggest regret. 

Sadly, Jordan didn’t want the responsibility of a child, so he abandoned Naomi and Wynonna. Eventually, Naomi married Michael Ciminella, who decided to raise baby Wynonna with him.

Wynonna was already thirty years old when she found out that Ciminella wasn’t her real father. She made arrangements to meet Jordan, but he died before they were able to do so.

3. She had an impoverished childhood. 

Wynonna grew up in a mountain home where there was no phone or television, and as Naomi tried to make ends meet. The only entertainment they had was by listening to country music on the radio.

But it was on that mountain top that Wynonna learned to play the guitar. She and her mother ease the tension by harmonizing, singing at the back of their porch or around the fire after chores. Eventually, their family vocal chemistry made them one of the genre’s most successful duos, with many of The Judds songs hitting the charts.

4. She said she knew she was going to be a lead singer the minute she was born. 

In an interview, Wynonna said she knew she could sing at the young age of three. “I just knew as a kid,” she said.

5. She got her name from a song. 

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Wynonna borrowed the name from Nat King Cole’s popular rhythm and blues song “Route 66,” which references an Arizona town called Winona.

6. She was once arrested for drunk driving. 

In 2003, Wynonna was charged with drunken driving after a city police officer stopped her speeding vehicle close to Music Row. It was found out that her blood alcohol level was more than twice the legal limit, and she told the officer she didn’t remember how many drinks she had consumed during the celebration of her friend’s birthday.

Wynonna posted the standard bond for a first offense and was released.

7. She has a famous sister. 

Wynonna’s half-sister, Ashley Judd, is an American actress whose career spans over three decades and has appeared in more than twenty films. Some of her renowned movies are Norma Jean & Marilyn, Double Jeopardy, and Natural Born Killers. She also earned a number of nominations, such as a Best Actress nomination from the Golden Globe Award.

8. She’s been married three times. 

In 1995, Judd first married Nashville businessman Arch Kelley III. They then welcomed their children: son Elijah Judd and daughter Grace Pauline. However, the couple parted ways two years later.

Nearly five years after her divorce, the country singer found love again in the arms of her former bodyguard, D.R. Roach. The two married in 2003 until Roach was arrested for attempted sexual assault of a minor in 2007. Five days after his arrest, Wynonna – who found herself shocked and in disbelief – filed for divorce.

In 2009, Wynonna began a fairytale romance with fellow country singer Cactus Moser and finally got married in an intimate wedding three years later. The two have been inseparable ever since.

9. She’s a spokesperson for prison reform. 

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Wynonna’s daughter Grace Pauline Kelley had multiple run-ins with the law over her use and possession of illegal drugs. In 2018, she was sentenced to eight years in prison after she violated her drug probation.

Kelley’s case prompted Wynonna to work with the nonprofit Hope for Prisoners, which aims to help inmates re-join the community after they’re released. She even met White House officials to work on criminal justice reform.

10. She continued her mother-daughter tour alone following Naomi’s death. 

Wynonna’s mother died by suicide in April 2022. After a lot of thought, Wynonna decided to tour by herself in her mother’s honor. She believed the decision would help her find peace.

Truly, Wynonna Judd is living quite an interesting life.

What is The Judds real last name?

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It's hard to picture Naomi Judd going by any other name, but, as it turns out, the late country legend bore a different moniker until she was in her 30s.

The singer was born Diana Ellen Judd on January 11, 1946, in Ashland, Kentucky. She took the last name of her first husband, Michael Ciminella, when they married in 1964. But she told Bob Millard, the author of the 1988 biography The Judds, that she didn't think twice about changing her last name back to Judd when they divorced.

"I was having a time with this long name," she recalled per Taste of Country. "Whatever I did, it gave me troubles, and I did not feel like a Ciminella. I was a Judd and darned proud of it."

At the same time, she decided to look for a new first name, too. According to Millard's book, Naomi felt that the name Diana didn't fit "her own spiritual, rural Kentucky conception of her true heritage."

After searching the Bible for women with stories she could relate to, she settled on Naomi.

She and her oldest daughter Wynonna went on to form the country music duo The Judds. Together they won five Grammys and scored 14 No. 1 singles.

Sadly, Naomi died at the age of 76 on Saturday, April 30, 2022, after a years-long battle with severe depression and anxiety.

"Though my heart's broken, I will continue to sing, because that's what we do," Wynonna told the audience at the Country Music Hall of Fame induction ceremony in Nashville, Tennessee, on Sunday—just one day after her mother's untimely death.

If you or someone you know is having thoughts of suicide, please contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255).

Mother-daughter country group

For the Record

Selected discography

Sources

Virtually unknown in 1984, the Juddsa mother-daughter duohave become one of the biggest acts in country music. Theirs is a Cinderella story of long years of hardship, of singing around kitchen tables and crisscrossing the country in search of work before landing a major recording contract and some of Nashvilles most prestigious awards. As Alanna Nash puts it in Stereo Review, the two Kentucky natives have given staid, lifeless country radio a direct and well-positioned kick in the pants by introducing a fresh, new direction for progressive country fare. Indeed, the two performers seem to have much in their favor: daughter Wynonna Judd is said to possess the most significant voice to enter country music in the last twenty years, and mother, Naomi, brings a daredevil spirit, uncommon verve, and astute songwriting to the team. Drawing on an inventive collage of sources, from folk to bebop to early rock and roll, the Judds have molded a personal style that animates lyrics like a spring breeze blowing a window curtain, to quote Jay Cocks in Time magazine. Cocks adds that the Judds will cross any musical boundaries, but their real strength comes

For the Record…

Naomi Judd, given name Diana Judd, name legally changed to Naomi Judd; born c. 1946 in Ashland, Kentucky; daughter of Glen (a filling-station owner) and Polly Judd; married Michael Ciminella, c. 1963 (divorced, 1970); children: Wynonna, Ashley.

Wynonna Judd, given name Christina Ciminella, name legally changed to Wynonna Judd; born c. 1964 in Ashland, Kentucky; daughter of Naomi Judd and Michael Ciminella. Education: High-school graduate.

Formed country singing duo, the Judds, 1982; signed with RCA Records, 1983; released first album, 1984, and had first hit singles, Had a Dream (for the Heart) and Mama, Hes Crazy, 1984. Have made numerous tours of United States and Europe, 1984, appearing at Caesars Palace, Las Vegas, Nev., 1985, and Lincoln Center, New York, N.Y., 1987.

Awards: Three Grammy Awards for best country vocal duet; four Country Music Association awards for best vocal duet; named country duo of the year by the Academy of Country Music, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, and 1989; two platinum albums, Why Not Me and Rockin with the Rhythm.

Addresses: Other P.O. Box 17087, Nashville, Tenn. 37217.

from staying close to the roots the traditional roots of the country sound.

Both Naomi and Wynonna Judd were born in Ashland, Kentucky. Naomi, who was christened Diana, was the daughter of a comfortably well-off filling-station attendant. Her formative years in Ashland were very traditional until her younger brother, Brian, developed Hodgkins disease. Not only did the cancer kill Brian, it caused the Judd family to splinterNaomi, who married at seventeen and had daughter Wynonna at eighteen, embarked on a new life in Los Angeles in 1968. It was there that Wynonnaborn Christina Ciminellagrew up, a typical Hollywood kid, eating Ding-Dongs and watching The Brady Bunch on TV, to quote her mother in Life magazine. Naomi drifted through a series of jobs as a model and secretary, eventually deciding that the West Coast did not provide a suitable environment for her two daughters. In 1976 the family of three (Naomi had left her husband in 1970) returned to Kentucky to live in a rustic cottage on a mountaintop near Morrill.

Some early publicity exaggerated the primitive conditions of the Judds home in Morrill, but the cottage did lack a telephone and a television, forcing Wynonna and her sister, Ashley, to find their own amusements. Wynonna discovered the guitar, and singing and picking became an obsession with her. Meanwhile, Naomi struggled to pay the bills, and the family sometimes went without heat and electricity for days at a time. Finally the three Judds moved back to California, this time to Marin County, where Naomi enrolled in nursing school and worked the night shift as a waitress. Naomi remembers those California years as the hardest of all. In Behind Closed Doors: Talking with the Legends of Country Music, she said that she, Wynonna, and Ashley shared a tiny, one-bedroom apartment above a real-estate office. Were talking serious poverty, she said. There were times when I didnt know how we were gonna eat, or how I was even gonna pay the small rent that I paid. It still amazes me how I did it.

Growing up under these conditions, Wynonna found herself drawn to music to the exclusion of all else. She often skipped school to listen to her Joni Mitchell and Bonnie Raitt albums, and her share of the chores never seemed to get done. Wynonna was a very difficult teenager, Naomi told Teen magazine. She was so obsessed with music that she never helped out around the house. Shed even take grocery money to buy new guitar strings. Mother and daughter seemed to fight constantly, only coming to an accord on the occasions when they found time to make music together. In these rare moments, they discovered that they could harmonize almost by telepathy, and soon the enterprising Naomi was fantasizing about a singing career for herself and her daughters.

The Judds moved to Nashville in 1979, after Naomi had completed nursing school. While the familys finances improved, Wynonnas enthusiasm for school and household duties continued to slide. She did attend high school in Nashville, however, and there, during a talent show, she impressed the daughter of record producer Brent Maher, who had several prominent country-music clients. In 1982 Mahers daughter was injured in an automobile accident, and quite by chance, Naomi Judd was assigned to nurse her. After the girls recovery, Maher was so grateful for Naomis skillful nursing that he agreed to listen to a homemade demo tape that the Judds had cut themselves. It was a full month before he got to the tape, finally putting it in his car stereo on the way to work. It takes me thirty minutes to get from the house to the studio, he told Alanna Nash, and by the time I got there, I was on the phone calling them up. On the spot, Maher agreed to produce the Judds.

Maher called in two associates to help him with the Juddsguitarist-songwriter Don Potter and Ken Stilts, a wealthy businessman who agreed to manage the duo. Potter and Maher worked with the women for six months before they put anything on tape; most of that time was spent defining a style and building the distinctive country-jazz framework that has become the Judds trademark. In 1983 the Judds won a contract with RCA with a live auditiona highly unusual way for an unknown group to proceed in Nashville. Stilts provided the financial resources to keep the family afloat and to begin a hectic round of national concert appearances, everywhere from Caesars Palace in Las Vegas to tiny Arkansas community halls. By 1984 the Judds had released a mini-album of eight songs. Their first single, Had a Dream (for the Heart) made the country Top 20, and the second and third singles, Mama, Hes Crazy and Why Not Me, both topped the country charts. By 1986 they had two platinum albums, Why Not Me and Rockirí with the Rhythm. I never thought it would happen this fast, Wynonna told Life, from the supper table to RCA to a couple of $200, 000 tour buses.

Wide-ranging though their musical tastes may be, the Judds have one constant in their recordings: a sense of home and heart. Joe Galante, vice president of RCA Nashville told Rolling Stone that when he first heard the duo it was just guitar and vocals and that absolute emotion in Wynonnas voice. Galante added: I grew up in New York, Im an old rock and roller. I knew this was authentic country music, but I also intuitively knew that there was something hip about it, how tight their harmonies were. You could feel sensitivity, how they look at each other when they share a musical moment. Their message is open communication in most of their songs. Life correspondent Jamie James expresses a similar opinion: Not for the Judds the mournful laments or cheatin-on-satin-sheets sexy stuff, writes James. They sing about family love and solid rural valueswithout ever lapsing into cornball. Their harmonies are smooth as Karo syrup and solidly supported by twangy acoustic rhythms in old-timey ballads. Despite their dizzying ride to the top of the C&W heap, the Judds are still as unpretentious as fried catfish and hush puppies.

The Judds dizzying ride to the top has caused some jealousy among industry hard-liners, some of whom feel that the pair failed to pay their dues. Wynonna bristles at the charge. So many people say, You made it so quickly and you havent paid your dues. You havent played in the honky-tonks for ten years, she said in Behind Closed Doors. And I want to get up and go over and shake em. Because you have to realize that my mother had to work two jobs to put food on the table. We have worked, but it was working to survive. And in my heart, what has happened [for us] musically is something that is completely a miracle. In the same interview, Naomi also expressed gratitude for the change in her familys fortunes. Wynonna and I consider that we arent just one in a million, she said. I mean, were one in millions, to have been blessed with whats happened to us. What is goin on in our lives right now is so far beyond our control. I mean, its absolutely in the Lords will. We are doin things that not even in my wildest imaginationwhich is pretty out thereI would have thought possible.

Selected discography

The Judds, RCA, 1984.

Why Not Me, RCA, 1985.

Rockin with the Rhythm, RCA, 1985.

Heart Land, RCA, 1987.

Christmas Time with the Judds, RCA, 1987.

The Judds Greatest Hits, RCA, 1988.

River of Time, RCA, 1989.

Sources

Books

Nash, Alanna, Behind Closed Doors: Talking with the Legends of Country Music, Knopf, 1988.

Periodicals

Life, February, 1986.

Rolling Stone, July 2, 1987.

Stereo Review, February, 1986; December, 1986.

Teen, December, 1987.

Time, January 13, 1986.

Anne Janette Johnson