In the 1980s, Cher's career as an actress reached its peak: she starred in critically successful films such as
Silkwood (1983),
Mask (1985),
The Witches of Eastwick (1987), and won the
Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance in
Moonstruck (1987). By the early 1990s, however, her movie career came to a halt: having turned down films such as
The War of the Roses (1989) and
Thelma & Louise (1991), and suffering from
chronic fatigue syndrome complicated by
pneumonia, she was reduced to "
infomercial queen", something that deeply embarrassed her. "The infomercials were just devastating to my career", Cher recalled. On top of that,
Faithful (1996), her first major movie since 1990's
Mermaids, was a commercial failure. Cher came to the conclusion that something needed to be done if she wanted to revive her career. As part of her comeback, she starred and directed one of the segments of
HBO's
If These Walls Could Talk (1996), and began working on her twenty-first studio album, ''
It's a Man's World''. The record was Cher's first studio album since 1991's
Love Hurts; she saw it as a way of challenging herself, "it's [me] experimenting with me. I didn't want to sound like I've always sounded on records, because I'm kind of bored with it." She also chose to work with several producers, including
Stephen Lipson, as opposed to just one. Most of the songs on ''It's a Man's World'' were
covers of male-written tracks, as Cher wanted to sing them from a woman's perspective; these included
Marc Cohn's "
Walking in Memphis" (1991),
Don Henley's "
Not Enough Love in the World" (1985), and
James Brown's "
It's a Man's Man's Man's World" (1966). One of the songs on the album, "One by One", was co-written by Cher and
the Real People member Anthony Griffiths, and recorded at London's Elephant Studios. == Composition and remix ==