Alanis Nadine Morissette was born on June 1, 1974, in Ottawa, Ontario, to Alan James Morissette, a Canadian Armed Forces officer, and Georgia Mary Ann, a teacher of Hungarian origin. A child prodigy, she began acting at age nine on the Canadian children's television show You Can't Do That on Television and released her first single at nine. Her first two albums — Alanis (1991) and Now Is the Time (1992) — were Canadian-market dance-pop, successful domestically but conventional in conception. At eighteen, she moved to Los Angeles and began collaborating with producer Glen Ballard.
The album that emerged from that collaboration — Jagged Little Pill (1995) — became one of the best-selling albums in history, eventually selling over 33 million copies worldwide. It arrived in a cultural moment that was waiting for it: the mid-1990s post-grunge landscape where young women had been handed several years of male anger and were ready for a female counterpart. 'You Oughta Know' — visceral, specific, unsparing in its rage — was unlike anything that had been commercially released by a woman in mainstream rock to that point, and it changed the parameters of what female artists in rock could express.
Morissette's ENFP character is visible throughout her career in the combination of intense personal authenticity and genuine curiosity about others: she has spoken extensively about her therapy, her eating disorder, her experiences of sexual abuse by older men when she was a young industry figure, and her spiritual practice — with the ENFP's characteristic willingness to make the private public when doing so might help others with similar experiences. Her subsequent albums — Supposed Former Infatuation Junkie (1998), Under Rug Swept (2002), So-Called Chaos (2004), Flavors of Entanglement (2008) — each explored different dimensions of her inner life with a sustained autobiographical seriousness unusual in commercial pop-rock.
Morissette's cultural legacy extends far beyond album sales: she was one of the first major artists to speak publicly about sexual abuse in the music industry, doing so decades before the #MeToo movement made such disclosures more common. Jagged Little Pill's Broadway adaptation (2018), which incorporated her themes of abuse, eating disorders, and sexual identity into a narrative form, demonstrated the album's continuing relevance and added a new chapter to its cultural life. She continues to perform and record, her voice — still one of the most distinctive in rock — and her willingness to interrogate her own experience remaining as central to her artistic identity as they were in 1995.