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The Ebony Dolls: Vanity (Denise Matthews)

From Canadian beauty queen and pop icon to born-again Christian minister

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She looked like a mirror of me. I saw her and thought, that’s me in female form.” — — Prince

Denise Matthews, known to the world as Vanity, embodied a rare and arresting form of beauty—one that felt almost mythic. With her almond-shaped eyes, glowing skin, racially ambiguous features, and effortless beauty, she represented the archetype of the 1980s “Ebony Doll”: a woman whose presence commanded attention before she ever spoke a word. Vanity was not merely admired; she was desired, elevated into fantasy, and projected onto screens and stages as an icon of glamour and Black feminine mystique.

Yet the most profound chapter of her life unfolded far from the spotlight. After years of fame, addiction, and near-death, Vanity experienced a spiritual awakening that led her to renounce celebrity culture entirely. She publicly surrendered her stage name, calling it a false identity, and dedicated the rest of her life to Jesus Christ and Christian ministry. In doing so, she became one of the rare figures in pop history whose legacy is not defined only by beauty and desire, but by repentance, faith, and radical transformation—an “Ebony Doll” who walked away from the world to choose God.

Denise Katherine Matthews (January 4, 1959 – February 15, 2016), professionally known as Vanity, was a Canadian model, singer, songwriter, actress, and later a Christian evangelist. She rose to global fame in the early 1980s as the frontwoman of the provocative pop-funk group Vanity 6, created and produced by Prince. Her life became a powerful narrative of beauty, fame, addiction, redemption, and spiritual rebirth.


Denise Matthews was born in Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada. She was of mixed racial heritage, with a Black father and a mother of German and Jewish descent. From a young age, Denise gravitated toward modeling and performance. She entered beauty competitions and gained national recognition when she won Miss Niagara Hospitality (1977) and later competed in Miss Canada (1978). These early achievements established her as a rising figure in Canadian beauty culture and opened doors to professional modeling. She was one of the most beautiful celebrities.


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Following her pageant success, Matthews relocated to New York City, where she signed with the prestigious Zoli Model Agency. Though she did not fit traditional high-fashion height standards, her magnetic presence, camera appeal, and sensual confidence made her highly marketable. She appeared in commercials, print advertisements, and international modeling campaigns, including work in Japan.

Her early image combined innocence and eroticism, foreshadowing the bold persona she would later embody as Vanity.


Denise’s career took a dramatic turn after meeting Prince at the 1980 American Music Awards. Prince saw in her a female reflection of his own artistic identity and envisioned her as the centerpiece of a new musical project.

Originally, Prince proposed highly explicit stage names, but Denise refused one of them and accepted “Vanity” instead. The name symbolized both beauty and self-obsession—qualities that became central to her public persona.

USA Today

Prince formed Vanity 6, a three-woman group that blended sexual imagery, synth-funk music, and provocative performance aesthetics. The group’s lingerie-styled outfits and explicit lyrics made them cultural lightning rods.

Their breakout hit “Nasty Girl” (1982) became a defining anthem of the decade, reaching #1 on the U.S. Billboard Dance Chart and turning Vanity into a global sex symbol.


After leaving Vanity 6, Denise signed with Motown Records and launched a solo career. She released two albums:

  • Wild Animal (1984)
  • Skin on Skin (1986)

Her single “Under the Influence” charted on Billboard’s R&B and Dance rankings.

In parallel, she pursued acting, appearing in major films including:

  • The Last Dragon (1985)
  • 52 Pick-Up (1986)
  • Never Too Young to Die (1986)
  • Action Jackson (1988)

Vanity became one of the most visible Black female celebrities of the era, blending beauty, sexuality, and pop culture power.

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Vanity’s beauty and fame attracted high-profile relationships throughout the 1980s, including musicians and rock stars. However, behind the glamorous image were deep struggle with substance abuse.

In 1995, she married former NFL player Anthony Smith after a brief courtship. The marriage ended in divorce, and Smith later became infamous after being convicted of multiple murders and receiving life imprisonment. This period marked a traumatic chapter in her personal life.


By the early 1990s, Vanity’s cocaine addiction had devastated her health. In 1994, she suffered near-fatal kidney failure. During her hospitalization, she reported a spiritual encounter with Jesus Christ, which she described as a divine intervention that saved her life.

She immediately renounced the “Vanity” persona, abandoned secular entertainment, and became a born-again Christian evangelist.

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Denise founded Pure Hearts Ministries in California and dedicated her life to preaching, counseling, and sharing her testimony about spiritual transformation, repentance, and redemption.

She later published her autobiography:
Blame It On Vanity: Hollywood, Hell and Heaven (2010), detailing her journey from fame to faith.


Years of substance abuse permanently damaged her kidneys. She underwent a kidney transplant in 1997 and later suffered from sclerosing encapsulating peritonitis, a rare and painful abdominal disease.

After multiple surgeries and long-term dialysis, Denise Matthews died on February 15, 2016, at age 57, in Fremont, California, from kidney failure.


Vanity remains a symbol of Black feminine beauty, erotic power, and cultural transformation. As an “Ebony Doll,” she embodied the intersection of beauty, visibility, and spirituality—first as a singer-actress and later as a woman who publicly rejected celebrity culture in favor of faith.

Her life stands as a rare testimony of radical personal change within the entertainment industry, illustrating the spiritual cost of fame and the possibility of redemption.



References

Matthews, D. (2010). Blame It On Vanity: Hollywood, Hell and Heaven. Destiny Image Publishers.

Vanity. (n.d.). In Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanity_(singer)

Vanity 6. (n.d.). In Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanity_6

Nasty Girl (Vanity 6 song). (n.d.). In Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nasty_Girl_(Vanity_6_song)

Time Magazine. (2016). Vanity, singer and actress, dies at 57. https://time.com/4225112/vanity-denise-mathews-dead/

The Washington Post. (2016). Denise Matthews, troubled pop singer known as Vanity, dies at 57.

Vogue. (2016). Vanity’s legacy: Prince, pop culture, and the erotic imagination.

AOL Entertainment. (2016). Denise “Vanity” Matthews dies at 57.

Billboard. (1984–1986). Chart history for “Under the Influence”.

From Vanity to Victory: The Redemption Story of Denise Katrina Matthews

Photo courtesy of Steve Landis, the photographer used with his permission.

“When you’re empty on the inside, it doesn’t matter how beautiful you are on the outside.” – Denise Matthews (Vanity)


Introduction: Beauty, Fame, and the Battle Within

Denise Katrina Matthews—widely known by her stage name Vanity—was a striking beauty, a singer, actress, and model who captivated the world in the 1980s. With an exotic allure and a voice that blended sensuality and soul, Vanity became a pop culture icon during the height of Prince’s musical empire. Yet, beneath the surface of stardom and seduction, Denise battled addiction, identity confusion, and spiritual emptiness. Her journey from sex symbol to servant of Christ is one of profound transformation and testimony.

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Early Life and Mixed Heritage

Denise Matthews was born on January 4, 1959, in Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada. Of African-American, German-Jewish, and Polynesian descent, her mixed-race heritage contributed to her “exotic” beauty that would later become her ticket to the entertainment industry—and, paradoxically, her curse. Standing at about 5’6”, she was admired for her radiant skin, bone structure, and seductive onstage presence. Her early experiences, however, were not glamorous; Denise came from a turbulent household marked by abuse and instability. These early wounds left deep scars that influenced many of her later choices.


Rise to Fame: Vanity 6 and Prince

In the early 1980s, Denise moved to the United States to pursue a career in modeling and acting. She participated in beauty pageants and was even crowned Miss Niagara Hospitality. Her path shifted dramatically when she met Prince, the enigmatic musical genius. He renamed her “Vanity,” claiming she was the female version of himself—a reflection of his own vanity.

Together, they created the girl group Vanity 6, which became famous for their hit “Nasty Girl” in 1982. Clad in lingerie, the group embodied Prince’s provocative style, and Vanity became the face of erotic empowerment in pop culture. Though their chemistry was palpable, Vanity and Prince’s relationship was tumultuous, complicated by control issues and emotional turmoil. Vanity once said:

“Prince and I lived together. We were in love. But I had to walk away to find myself.”

Their relationship ended before the release of Purple Rain, a role Prince had initially written for her but gave to Apollonia Kotero after Vanity’s departure. Many fans speculated rivalry between Vanity and Apollonia, but Vanity later denied ill will, stating that she had outgrown that world.


Hollywood Fame and Drug Addiction

Vanity transitioned to acting, starring in films such as The Last Dragon (1985), Action Jackson (1988), and 52 Pick-Up (1986). Her sultry image became her brand, and she was often featured on “Most Beautiful Women” lists in magazines. She dated Rick James, a fellow icon of funk and excess, whose wild lifestyle mirrored her own. Their relationship was destructive, filled with drugs, sex, and volatility. Rick James later admitted that their bond was fueled by cocaine and chaos.

Fame, however, could not fill the void Denise felt. By the late 1980s, her drug use escalated, and her health began to decline. She overdosed in 1994, suffering near-fatal kidney failure. Doctors gave her three days to live.


A Radical Transformation: From Vanity to Denise Matthews

Facing death, Denise cried out to God. That moment of desperation became her spiritual awakening. She renounced her stage name and identity as Vanity and gave her life to Jesus Christ. Her conversion was not superficial; she walked away from Hollywood, cut ties with former friends and lovers, and devoted herself fully to evangelism. She once declared:

“Vanity is dead. Denise lives for Christ now.”

Denise became a preacher, Christian speaker, and evangelist, traveling across the U.S. and Canada to share her testimony of deliverance from drugs, sexual sin, and vanity. She described her fame as a form of idolatry and warned others about the traps of fame and seduction.


Her Book: Blame It On Vanity

In 2010, Denise published her memoir “Blame It On Vanity”, a raw, honest, and spiritual account of her life. The book detailed her early trauma, rise to stardom, abuse, overdose, and spiritual rebirth. She was vulnerable about her failures, yet triumphant in describing how God saved her. She emphasized the emptiness of fame, saying:

“Fame is like a drug—it makes you feel high, important, untouchable. But it’s all a lie.”


Personal Life: Marriage and Ministry

In 1995, Denise married former NFL player Anthony Smith, though the marriage ended in divorce. She had no children but often referred to the youth and young women she mentored as her spiritual children. She battled with kidney issues for the rest of her life and was on dialysis.

Despite her physical decline, Denise remained bold in her faith, never compromising her beliefs. She lived modestly and refused to return to the entertainment industry, despite offers.


Death and Tributes

Denise Matthews passed away on February 15, 2016, at age 57, from kidney failure caused by years of drug abuse. Just two months later, Prince also died. Upon hearing of her death, Prince paid tribute to her during a concert in Australia, dedicating “Little Red Corvette” to her and reportedly mourning deeply. He stated:

“She loved the Lord, and now she’s home.”

Other celebrities also expressed admiration and sadness. Apollonia Kotero wrote on social media:

“You were my sister. Your light will never dim.”


Conclusion: Beauty Redeemed by Grace

Denise Matthews’ life is a modern parable—a stunning woman who had it all in the world’s eyes but found true life in surrendering to Christ. Her journey from Vanity to virtuous womanhood serves as a powerful reminder that external beauty, fame, and riches are fleeting. The only glory that lasts is the one rooted in the eternal.


References

Matthews, D. (2010). Blame It On Vanity. CreateSpace Independent Publishing.

James, R. (2007). Memoirs of a Super Freak. Amber Books.

Holy Bible. (1611). King James Version.

George, N. (2004). The Life and Times of Prince. Da Capo Press.

Kotero, A. (2016). [Social Media Tribute]. Twitter.