Jemimah Wright explores the extraordinary life of Cher as the superstar celebrates her 80th birthday — from Hollywood fame and endless reinvention to the ancient Christian faith woven through her Armenian roots.
At 80 years old, having celebrated the milestone birthday on May 20, 2026, Cher remains one of the most recognisable women on the planet. With her glossy black hair, razor-sharp wit and seemingly ageless appearance, she has become a cultural phenomenon as much as a singer or actress.
Born Cherilyn Sarkisian in California in 1946, Cher is proudly of Armenian heritage through her father, John Sarkisian, whose family roots trace back to Armenia. That heritage carries a remarkable spiritual history. Armenia is widely recognised as the first nation to adopt Christianity as its state religion, doing so in AD 301, centuries before much of the Western world embraced the faith.
I have a special love for Armenia, having taken youth groups out for a few years running to help on Christian camps for children in the town of Zorovan. It was there we learned that the Armenian Church became central not only to the nation’s worship but to its survival, preserving identity through centuries of persecution, displacement and suffering.
That suffering reached its darkest point during the Armenian genocide of 1915, when an estimated 1.5 million Armenians were killed under the Ottoman Empire
That suffering reached its darkest point during the Armenian genocide of 1915, when an estimated 1.5 million Armenians were killed under the Ottoman Empire, forcing many survivors to flee across the world. Like countless Armenian families, Cher’s ancestors were part of a diaspora shaped by trauma, resilience and faith. The Armenian Christian story also continued in America through figures such as Demos Shakarian, whose family escaped persecution before he later founded the Full Gospel Business Men’s Fellowship International in California – an organisation I know well, as my Dad was the European director at one point. It was, and is, a movement where Christian businessmen shared their testimonies at dinners – inviting their friends and colleagues to have a meal and hear the good news of Jesus.
Though Cher has never publicly embraced Christianity in a clear or traditional sense, she has spoken openly about God and spirituality over the years.
Though Cher has never publicly embraced Christianity in a clear or traditional sense, she has spoken openly about God and spirituality over the years. “I only answer to two people, myself and God,” she apparently once said. Elsewhere, she admitted her discomfort with exclusivist religion, saying: “I have a problem with religion that makes it so, like, ‘We are the chosen ones.’” In later life she has also expressed interest in Buddhism and meditation, appearing more spiritually curious than doctrinally committed. Yet the Christian heritage of Armenia still forms part of the backdrop to her story — a faith carried through exile, persecution and survival.
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Her rise to fame began in the 1960s alongside then-husband Sonny Bono. As Sonny and Cher, the pair became famous for hits such as I Got You Babe, with Cher’s distinctive contralto voice setting her apart from the sweeter pop vocals of the era. What followed was a career that constantly defied expectations. While many artists fade after one successful decade, Cher reinvented herself repeatedly, conquering music, television, film and even dance music across six decades.
She won an Academy Award for Moonstruck, released global hits such as Believe, and became a fashion icon in the process. Each reinvention seemed to arrive just as critics were ready to dismiss her. In many ways, Cher’s enduring youthfulness has less to do with her appearance and more to do with her refusal to become stuck in the past.
Perhaps, then, the most meaningful thing Christians could pray for Cher as she enters her ninth decade is not simply health or continued success, but that she would come to deeply know the faith of her forefathers, the ancient Christian hope that sustained generations of Armenians through suffering, exile and survival. Beneath the glamour, fame and mythology surrounding her life is a woman made in the image of God, still deeply loved by Him. And unlike earthly youth, that love never fades.
https://www.womanalive.co.uk/opinion/cher-at-80-the-armenian-christian-roots-behind-the-woman-rumoured-to-never-age/21550.article
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