Shanté was born March 8, 1969, in
Queens, New York. In 1984, she met
Mr. Magic and
Marley Marl outside the Queensbridge housing project. They discussed
U.T.F.O., since the rap trio had failed to make an appearance at a concert. U.T.F.O. had recently released a single called "Hanging Out", which did not gain much critical acclaim; however, the B-side "Roxanne, Roxanne", about a woman who would not respond to their advances, became a hit. Shanté, who was a member of the
Juice Crew, was contracted to write a track in rebuttal to U.T.F.O.'s rhyme, posing as the Roxanne in the U.T.F.O. song. Marley Marl produced the song "Roxanne's Revenge" using the original beats from an instrumental version of "Roxanne, Roxanne". The track became an instant hit and made Shanté, only 14 at the time, one of the first female MCs to become very popular. Then the "
Roxanne Wars" started, and Shanté continued to rhyme and started touring with her producer, Marley Marl. In 1985, Shanté released a record together with rapper
Sparky D, who had earlier released a
diss track about her called "Sparky's Turn (Roxanne, You're Through)". The record called "Round One, Roxanne Shanté vs Sparky Dee" was released by
Spin Records and included six tracks: the two original
battle tracks ("Roxanne's Revenge" and "Sparky's Turn") as well as "Roxanne's Profile" by Shante, "Sparky's Profile" by Sparky D and a battle track, in which the two emcees freestyle and dis each other, in a censored and an uncensored version. Other hits included "Have a Nice Day" and "Go on Girl". In 1985, Shanté battled
Busy Bee Starski for the title of best freestyle emcee but lost due to improper judging. Judge
Kurtis Blow later admitted to Shanté that he did not vote for her because she was a girl. The ongoing battle with
KRS-One hit its height when KRS-One claimed in his 1986 track "The Bridge is Over" that Shanté was nothing more than a sexual appendage to male rappers. In 1988, she rhymed on the Rick James single
Loosey's Rap. In 1989, Shanté released
Bad Sister,
The Bitch Is Back in 1992, and a greatest hits anthology in 1995. In 1997, Roxanne was featured on
Frankie Cutlass third single, titled "The Cypher Part III," which featured Marley Marl's juice crew emcees Big Daddy Kane, Big Markie, and Craig G. == Hiatus ==