Biography - A Short Wiki
Emily Robison’s height and other measurements are visible in the table below. Check it out!
Emily Robison is an American songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and a founding member of the female country band the Dixie Chicks, whose album ‘Taking the Long Way’, won five Grammy Awards (including Album of the Year), and known for hit singles, including “Wide Open Spaces”, “You Were Mine”, “Landslide” and “Not Ready to Make Nice”. Emily plays banjo, guitar, dobro, lap steel, bass, mandolin, accordion, and sitar. Born Emily Burns Erwin on August 16, 1972 in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, to parents Paul Erwin and Barbara Trask, she grew up in Addison, a northern suburban town on the edge of Dallas, Texas. She has two older sisters, Julia and Martha. Martha is also a founding member of the band Dixie Chicks. Emily married country singer Charlie Robison in May 1999, and the couple had three children: Charles Augustus and twins Julianna Tex and Henry Benjamin before getting divorced in 2008. She later married to Martin Strayer, from whom she has a daughter, Violet Isabel Strayer.
Body Measurements Table
Look below and behold the body statistics of Emily Robison. The table covers bra size, height, weight, shoe size, and more!
Body shape: | Slim |
---|---|
Dress size: | 4 |
Breasts-Waist-Hips: | 32-24-33 inches (81-61-84 cm) |
Shoe size: | 9 |
Bra size: | 32A |
Cup size: | A |
Height: | 5′9″ (175 cm) |
Weight: | 121 pounds (55 kg) |
Natural breasts or implants: | Unknown |
Quotes
"It is amazing what people feel they have the right to tell you to your face when you're famous."
Emily Robison
"When I was at high school, I thought it'd be nice to go into Air Force Academy and fly jets, but that was a very brief dream. Ha, ha. I'm too lanky to fit in the cockpit."
Emily Robison
"Constant contact is what people require these days. It's tough on artists."
Emily Robison
"It's really hard to write personal songs. I'm not good at writing ditties because as far as writing hit songs that you pitch to the national artist, I just don't write that way."
Emily Robison
"Some people still believe you should just fall in line with what's going on - and that's scary. It makes a mockery of freedom of speech."
Emily Robison