Tamara Johnson-George


Tamara Antrice George , best known by her stage/nickname Taj, is an American singer, rapper, actress, and author. George is best known as one-third of the R&B singing group Sisters with Voices. She also competed on the eighteenth season of Survivor, .

Background

The youngest of six children, Tamara was born in Brooklyn, New York as Tamara Antrice Johnson. Her father died of pancreatic cancer when she was nine. George grew up in an abusive household; her mother, who was sick with bone cancer, was beaten regularly by her drug-addicted stepfather. When Tamara would intervene on her mother's behalf, she was also beaten.
When Tamara was 14 years old, her mother died, which caused Tamara and her siblings to be parceled amongst several relatives; Tamara wound up with a cousin who molested her, adding to the sexual abuse she had experienced over the years with other male relatives. Tamara graduated from high school and attended Baruch College to study accounting, but left college because of a physically abusive boyfriend, as well as to join singing group Sisters With Voices, better known as SWV.

SWV

Tamara was recruited into SWV by Cheryl “Coko” Gamble, who would become SWV's lead singer. She was so shy that she auditioned with the lights turned off. Tamara was known as the background dancer/model in the music video for Big Daddy Kane's "Ain't No Half Steppin" and had a bubbly, upbeat personality. This caused friction between Tamara and Gamble, who felt that Taj's recognizable face and cheerful demeanor shielded her from criticism from the press.
Originally, Tamara was both a singer and an emcee; she can be heard rapping the bridge over the original version of Right Here and I'm So Into You, and is the primary female performer on the song Blak Pudd'n. She co-wrote a number of SWV songs, including Right Here from their debut album, It's About Time, and You're the One, which also features Gamble as a co-writer. Tamara ceased rapping when New Beginning was released in 1996, shortly after the end of the new jack swing era, and began to sing leads and co-leads. The group went on to sell more than 20 million albums, making them one of the best selling girl groups of all time. Taj can be seen on the upcoming January issue of STS Entertainment And Fashion magazine.

Post-SWV

After SWV officially disbanded in 1998, Tamara was signed to a two-year contract with the Ford Modeling Agency. Shortly after this contract ended, Tamara began dating Tennessee Titan Eddie George, whom she'd met at a shopping mall in 1994. George contributed to the anthology Souls of My Sisters: Black Women Break Their Silence, Tell Their Stories and Heal Their Spirits, which was published in 2000.
In 2002, Tamara enrolled in Belmont University in Nashville, earning a Bachelor of Business Administration in May 2004. The following month, Johnson married Eddie George in Rockleigh, New Jersey, thus adding his name to hers. Their son, Eriq Michael George, was born in 2005 after a difficult pregnancy that left George bedridden for the first five months of her pregnancy. George is stepmother to Eddie's son, Jaire David, whom she refers to as her oldest son, and the godmother of Coko's oldest son, Jazz.
Along with Katrina Chambers, Tamara wrote the book Player hateHER: How to Avoid the Beat Down and Live in a Drama-Free World in 2007. That same year, George and husband Eddie George starred in the reality TV show I Married a Baller, which depicted five weeks in the George household over a course of nine shows. The show focused on Tamara and her marriage to Eddie George, her struggle to lose her "baby weight," and performing with SWV, who came together to perform the theme song of the show. Baller also highlighted Visions with Infinite Possibilities, the Georges' not-for-profit charity for survivors of domestic violence and their children.
On March 7, 2012, Tamara George's husband was present in the vehicle of then 21-year-old professional golfer Rachel Connor when she was arrested for a DUI at 2 a.m. after a charity golf event held in Florida. In April 2012 the home George owned in Nashville, Tennessee was served a foreclosure notice due to non-payment. To address media speculation about her marriage, she gave an expletive-laden interview in May 2012, in which she claimed her son was afraid that his father would be going to prison over the alleged affair, and that her house had been on the market for several months prior to the scandal. After a bank negotiated settlement, the auction of the home was halted and she was allowed to remain in her home.

''Survivor''

George was recruited to Survivor after answering a casting call specifically looking for an NFL wife. Prior to casting, George had never watched Survivor and could neither swim nor fish. However, she turned out to be one of the strongest competitors of the season, and came in second to J.T. Thomas in the fan favorite vote. Despite letting it be known that she was married to Eddie George, blowing up at her tribe mates and locking horns with Survivor host Jeff Probst, George was one of only four Jalapao members, as well as the only woman from her tribe, to make it to the merge. In the final episode, George was blindsided by her tribe, coming in fourth and becoming the sixth member of the jury. In the end she voted for J.T., who won in a unanimous 7–0 vote, against Stephen Fishbach.