Naomi Judd (born Diana Ellen Judd; January 11, 1946 – April 30, 2022) was an American country music singer and actress. In 1980, she and her daughter Wynonna Judd (born Christina Claire) formed the duo known as The Judds, who became a successful country music act, winning five and nine Country Music Association awards. The Judds ceased performing in 1991 after Naomi was diagnosed with hepatitis; while Wynonna continued to perform as a solo artist, she occasionally reunited with her mother for tours as The Judds. Naomi died by suicide in 2022, the day before she and Wynonna were inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.
Judd's first child, Christina Claire Ciminella (later Wynonna Judd), was born when Judd was 18. Her daughter was given the last name Ciminella after Michael Ciminella, the man who Judd quickly married after being abandoned by her boyfriend and Wynonna's biological father, Charles Jordan. After the birth of her second daughter, Ashley Judd (1968), who later became a film and stage actress, and the end of her marriage to Ciminella, Judd brought up both daughters as a single parent. Judd attended nursing school at the University of Kentucky campus in Lexington, Kentucky and then College of Marin in California from 1975 through 1979 while living in nearby Lagunitas, California.
When she reverted to her maiden name following her divorce, she also took the opportunity to change her name, Diana, which she did not think fit "her own spiritual, rural Kentucky conception of her true heritage", and decided to pay homage to the Biblical figure Naomi, finding resonance in her story of moving to another land and eventually being left without a husband raising two women.
In 1998, she achieved virologic cure of hepatitis C following treatment with interferon alpha. The Judds reunited for a 1999 New Year's Eve concert in Phoenix at the America West Arena, with Ashley as the MC. This continued with the "Power to Change" tour throughout 2000, while the Phoenix concert was released as The Judds Reunion Live. The duo was nominated as the Academy of Country Music's top vocal duo of the year in 2001.
From 2003 to 2004, Judd featured as a judge on the Star Search show hosted by Arsenio Hall. Judd began Naomi's New Morning, a Sunday morning talk show on the Hallmark Channel, in 2005. The show lasted two seasons. She was also the author of several self-help books, including Naomi's Guide to Aging Gratefully: Facts, Myths, and Good News for Boomers (2007).
Judd joined the television reality-competition series Can You Duet, as a judge and mentor in 2008. The show aired on CMT. She competed in a duo with her husband, Larry Strickland, in the first season of the Fox Broadcasting reality cooking series My Kitchen Rules in 2017.
In 2021, Judd was one of the first to be inducted into the Women Songwriters Hall of Fame.
Judd starred alongside Laura Prepon in the 2011 Lifetime television movie The Killing Game. She later starred in the Hallmark Channel films Nearlyweds and Window Wonderland, both released in 2013. In 2014, she starred as "Honey" in the Netflix film An Evergreen Christmas. In 2021, Judd starred in the Lifetime adaptation of V. C. Andrews' novel Ruby playing the title character's grandmother.
Judd married her second husband, Larry Strickland of the Palmetto State Quartet, on May 6, 1989. Strickland has also sung with other gospel groups, including J.D. Sumner and the Stamps Quartet.
Announcing her death, her daughters Twitter: "Today we sisters experienced a tragedy. We lost our beautiful mother to the disease of mental illness." Ashley Judd revealed the cause of her mother's death in a May 12, 2022, interview with Diane Sawyer on Good Morning America. She made the revelation to help raise awareness of mental illness, which she hoped would help those suffering from it. She also said that she and the rest of the family wanted the manner of death to be shared by them rather than a secondhand source.
A memorial for Judd was televised on CMT. Naomi Judd: A River of Time Celebration was broadcast from the Ryman Auditorium, as specified by Judd before she died and was hosted by Robin Roberts. It featured appearances from Ashley Judd, Larry Strickland, Bono, Bette Midler, Martina McBride, Reba McEntire, Reese Witherspoon, Morgan Freeman, Oprah Winfrey and Salma Hayek, plus performances by Wynonna, Brad Paisley, Carly Pearce, Ashley McBryde, Emmylou Harris and Allison Russell, Little Big Town, Brandi Carlile, and Jamey Johnson.
| 2004 ! scope="row" | "Flies on the Butter (You Can't Go Home Again)" | 33 | What the World Needs Now Is Love |
| 1979 | More American Graffiti | Girl in Bus | |
| 1983 | Redhead | Television film | |
| 1993 | Rio Diablo | Flora Mae Pepper | Television film |
| 1994 | Sisters | Naomi Judd | Episode: "Up in the Air" |
| 1995 | Executive producer | ||
| 1996 | The Client | Psychiatrist | Episode: "Damn Yankees" |
| 1996 | 3rd Rock from the Sun | Frances Randell | Episode: "Father Knows Dick" |
| 1998 | Littlest Angel's Easter | Understanding Angel | Voice |
| 1999 | Family Tree | Sarah Musser | |
| 1999 | A Holiday Romance | Lily Waite | Television film |
| 2000 | Touched by an Angel | Liz | Episode: "Mother's Day" |
| 2001 | Someone Like You... | Makeup Artist | |
| 2002 | Maybe It's Me | Tillie Krupp | Episode: "The Wedding and a Funeral Episode" |
| 2002 | Frasier | Lillian (voice) | Episode: "War of the Words" |
| 2005 | Higglytown Heroes | School Nurse Hero (voice) | Episode: "Two Bees or Not Two Bees" |
| 2011 | The Killing Game | Sandra Duncan | Television film |
| 2011 | The Judds | Herself | Executive producer, 6 episodes |
| 2013 | Nearlyweds | Renee | Television film |
| 2013 | Window Wonderland | Rita Dorentella | Television film |
| 2014 | An Evergreen Christmas | Honey | |
| 2021 | Ruby | Catherine Landry | Television film |
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