Rollergirl

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Rollergirl
Rollergirl in 2001
Rollergirl in 2001
Background information
Birth nameNicole Safft
Born (1975-11-19) 19 November 1975 (age 45)
OriginLünen, West Germany
GenresTrance
InstrumentsVocals
Years active1999–2003
LabelsUniversal Music Group

Nicole Safft (born 19 November 1975), professionally known as Rollergirl, is a German singer with a number of successful tracks such as "Dear Jessie" (a loose cover of a Madonna song) and "Luv U More", the latter being a cover of a song by Sunscreem.

Biography[]

The love for rollerskates developed early when working at a rollerskating rink. Safft was discovered by German producer Alex Christensen on Mallorca and signed up for auditions. In 1999, Christensen produced the song "Dear Jessie" for Rollergirl, which was successful as the opening song at a techno-parade in the United Kingdom, where Safft continued to work using the stage name, 'Nicci Juice'. The pseudonym Rollergirl was taken from Heather Graham's role as a naive young porn starlet in the film Boogie Nights.

"Geisha Dreams" (2002) was Rollergirl's last release[1] before she retired to focus on her private life, including Christensen and their son, born in 2003. Safft has also appeared with Daniel Hartwig as co-presenter of the German television channel RTL 2's The Dome and Megaman 2002.

Personal life[]

Safft is married to Alex Christensen. They have a son, born in 2003.[citation needed]

Discography[]

Albums[]

  • 2000 - Now I'm Singin'... And the Party Keeps on Rollin' (Album)
  • 2001 - Now I'm Singin'... And the Party Keeps on Rollin (Album, revised version) (#19 SWE)

Singles[]

Year Single Peak chart positions Album
GER
[2]
AUT
[3]
FRA
[4]
NED NOR
[5]
SWE
[6]
SWI
[7]
UK
[8]
1999 "Dear Jessie" 13 43 11 10 25 22 Now I'm Singin'... And The Party Keeps On Rollin'
"Luv U More" 19 21 19 51 75
2000 "Eternal Flame" 40 87 Singles only
"You Make Me Feel Like Dancing"
2001 "Superstar" 37 27 6
"Close to You" 70 53
2002 "Geisha Dreams" 35 24 13
2003 "In the Name of Love"
"Beautiful Day"
"—" denotes releases that did not chart.

References[]

  1. ^ "discography on Discogs". Discogs.
  2. ^ German peaks
  3. ^ Austrian peaks
  4. ^ French peaks
  5. ^ Norwegian peaks
  6. ^ Swedish peaks
  7. ^ Swiss peaks
  8. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.

External links[]

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