Reba McEntire’s path from the dusty plains of Oklahoma to the neon glow of Nashville’s stages is a blueprint for perseverance in country music—a tale woven with ranch work, rodeo grit, early heartbreak, and a soaring voice that turned personal tragedy into timeless anthems. Dubbed the “Queen of Country,” McEntire has sold over 75 million albums worldwide, notched 25 No. 1 singles, and earned three Grammys, all while navigating the male-dominated industry with unyielding faith and determination. Now 70, she’s thriving with a new single “Trailblazer,” a Voice coaching gig, and an engagement to actor Rex Linn, proving her story isn’t over—it’s evolving.

Born Reba Nell McEntire on March 28, 1955, in McAlester, Oklahoma, she was raised on an 8,000-acre cattle ranch in Chockie, where her father, Clark—a three-time world champion steer roper—instilled a work ethic from toddlerhood. By age 5, Reba was castrating bulls and worming cattle before school, tasks that built her resilience. “I didn’t play cowgirl growing up. I was one,” she later quipped. Her mother, Jacqueline, a former teacher and barrel racer, nurtured the family’s musical side, teaching Reba and siblings Pake and Susie to harmonize on rodeo road trips. The Singing McEntires performed locally, but Reba’s solo spark ignited early: At 6, she sang “Away in a Manger” in a school pageant.

Rodeo was Reba’s first stage. Starting barrel racing at 9, she competed through college at Southeastern Oklahoma State University, majoring in elementary education while keeping a horse on campus. In 1974, her father pushed her to sing the national anthem at the National Finals Rodeo in Oklahoma City—a gig that caught country artist Red Steagall’s ear. Steagall invited her to Nashville, where, in 1975, she signed with Mercury Records after a demo session.

Early years were lean. Her 1977 debut album flopped commercially, and Mercury pushed a pop-country sound that clashed with her traditional roots. Frustrated, Reba graduated college in 1976 and briefly taught, but music called. Switching to MCA Nashville in 1983 marked her pivot: My Kind of Country embraced her honky-tonk style, yielding No. 1s “How Blue” and “Somebody Should Leave.” Breakthroughs followed—”Whoever’s in New England” (1986) won a Grammy—and by the late ’80s, she was a force, forming Starstruck Entertainment for creative control.

Tragedy tested her in 1991. After a San Diego gig, a plane crash killed eight crew: tour manager Jim Hammon, musicians Kirk Cappello, Joey Cigainero, Paula Evans, Terry Jackson, Anthony Saputo, Chris Austin, and Michael Thomas. Reba, sidelined by bronchitis, awoke to the news. “It was like losing family,” she said. Many expected her to retire; instead, she channeled grief into For My Broken Heart (1991), her best-selling album, with hits like the title track. Faith sustained her: “God doesn’t give us more than we can handle,” she often says.

The ’90s solidified her reign. Albums like Read My Mind (1994) and duets (“If You See Him” with Brooks & Dunn) dominated charts. Acting beckoned: Tremors (1990), Broadway’s Annie Get Your Gun (2001), and the sitcom Reba (2001-2007), earning a Golden Globe nod. Inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2011, she’s won CMA Female Vocalist four times and hosted the ACM Awards 17 times.

In 2025, Reba’s vital: Coaching The Voice Season 28, starring in Happy’s Place Season 2 (renewed February), and debuting “Trailblazer” at the ACM Awards with Miranda Lambert and Lainey Wilson. Engaged to Linn since December 2024, she told People, “I’m happier than ever.” Philanthropy thrives via Reba’s Place and charities.

Reba’s journey—from ranch chores to red carpets—embodies country soul: Hard work, heartbreak, and harmony. As she sings, she’s “not that fancy,” but undeniably queenly.