Tanya Haden Bio. Age, Family, Husband, Movie, Songs and Images

Tanya Haden Biography

Tanya Haden is an American artist, cellist, and singer. She is one of the triplet daughters of jazz bassist Charlie Haden.

Tanya Haden Age

She was born on 11th October 1971, in New York City, New York, U.S. She is 47 years old.

Tanya Haden Family

She was born to his parent Charlie Haden(father) and Ellen Haden(Mom). She had two sisters Rachel and Petra Haden and also one brother called Josh( bassist and singer as well for the band Spain).

Tanya HadenEducation

She graduated with a Master’s of Fine Arts with a major in Experimental Animation from California Institute of the Arts.

Tanya Haden Husband  | Tanya Haden Son

She is married to Jack Black and they have two sons named Samuel Haden Black and Thomas David Black.

Tanya Haden Images

Tanya Haden Height

She stands at a height of 5 feet and 7 inches(1.70m)

Tanya Haden Net Worth

She has an estimated net worth of 2 million Dollars as of 2019. She is ranked as the 2019 60th richest comedian.

Tanya Haden Art

Studied animation at California Institute of the Arts Engel and received her MFA in 2001.

Tanya Haden Music

Tanya HadenSongs

  • When the Chips Are Down
  • Nothing Changes
  • Gone, I’m Gone
  • Single Girl, Married Girl
  • Voice From on High
  • Slowly
  • When I Stop Dreaming
  • Making Believe
  • Oh Take Me Back
  • Billy Bee
  • Memories of Mother and Dad
  • My Baby’s Gone
  • Raining Raining
  • Tiny Broken Heart
  • Resonance Man
  • Will You Miss Me When I’m Gone
  • Lonesome Night

Tanya Haden Movies

Kung Fu Panda
The Muppets
Muppets Most Wanted

Tanya Haden Triplets

The Haden Triplets, Petra, Tanya and Rachel, 11th October 1971 in New York City. They are musicians who have performed individually in bands and together. They are the triplet daughters of jazz double-bassist Charlie Haden.

The women, separately and together, have contributed to recordings and performances by the:
Foo Fighters
Queens of the Stone Age
Weezer
Beck
Green Day
Todd Rundgren
The Rentals
Silversun Pickups
Petra and Rachel are former members of That Dog. The three had before performed together live and as The Fates on Anais Mitchell’s Hadestown.

In 2014, they released their first vocal album together, “The Haden Triplets” produced by Ry Cooder on Jack White’s Third Man Records and it collects stripped-down, old-time country songs from the Carter Family, Bill Monroe, the Stanley Brothers, Webb Pierce, Kitty Wells, and the Louvin Brothers. On 13th January 2015, they performed together at Charlie Haden’s Memorial Concert in New York City’s Town Hall.

Tanya Haden Ween

According to Aaron Freeman (Gene Ween), the Ween song “Stay Forever” was written for her.

Tanya Haden Cello

NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert

Tanya Haden Twitter

Tweets by tanya_haden

Tanya Haden Instagram

Tanya Haden Interview

Jack Black talks Tropic Thunder,’ how he got the girl

“You know, the toughest interview I’ve ever had was with your father-in-law.”

Black takes the bait. His father-in-law? The legendary jazz bassist Charlie Haden. You need to bone up on your jazz before talking to Charlie Haden. Otherwise, he has you for lunch. Superficial “that time you worked with Pat Metheny” questions won’t do.

“Man, don’t just bring your Metheny game to a Charlie Haden interview,” Black laughs. “Believe me, I did some research, too. Are you kidding me? I wanted to marry his daughter. I watched all 10 hours of that Ken Burns jazz documentary. But I’m still a novice. I know better than to broach the subject.”

Black got the girl, and now they have two kids. And when Haden, who just turned 71, cut a CD of the traditional folk music he was raised on, a “Charlie Haden with Family” CD, guess whom he got to sing?

“Fare thee well, Ol’ Joe Clark, fare thee well I saaaaay,” the singing half of Tenacious D belts out. “Fare thee well, OLD Joe Clark. I’m goin’ way to staaaaay.’ A bluegrass standard, a classic. I’ve never sung that style before, but I felt I was channeling my own hickory-flavored ancestors for that.”

The CD will be out at the end of the month, Black says, just in time for Black’s 39th birthday.

Black sounds positively ebullient, even at the end of a long day of interviews about his new movie, “Tropic Thunder.” It’s a big-budget, raunchy comedy about movie stars trapped in a Vietnam War tale whose filming becomes all too real. Black couldn’t be further from the character he plays, Jeff Portnoy, an obese, substance-abusing comic trapped in a series of flatulent cross-dressing comedies because that’s all Hollywood wants from him.

“Look, a lot of him is me, obviously,” Black says. “I haven’t done multiple-character comedies that are all about farting. But I do fart in some of my movies, and I am fat, in, well, pretty much all my movies. So I understand this guy. There’s a little Chris Farley-John Belushi, a little angry Tom Sizemore in there, too. I’ve phased the excess partying out of my life. But the guy is not a long trip for me to take.”

No DeNiro “Method” stuff here, Black insists. “Yeah, I gained weight for the part. Sure.”

It was a demanding movie, never more so than when Black’s character slips into withdrawal and has to be strapped across a water buffalo.

“That’s scary. I knew that would be when I read the script. ‘OK, I’ll say “Yes” to this, and then I’ll talk Ben (Stiller, director, and co-star) out of it.’ Didn’t happen. DANGEROUS. ‘Get on the water buffalo. They don’t mind. They won’t hurt you.’ Yeah, right.”

Black is totally down with the New Outrageousness, the style that “Tropic Thunder” was filmed in. Raw language, substance abuse as a source of comedy, an actor in blackface (Robert Downey Jr.), this is a movie that’s out there, and Black loves it.

“Let’s offend EVERYBODY, and then nobody’ll be offended.”

“Tropic” is earning enthusiastic reviews, as is Black, who, Box Office Magazine says, is “at last reminding audiences of why they thought “School of Rock” was so funny.”

No wonder Black is so good-natured, so far removed from the comically tortured funnyman he plays in the film. Happy at work, happy at home? Well, just so long as he does his jazz/folk homework. He laughs at that.

“I’m golden, man,” he says. “But you? You need to study your Charlie Haden.”

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