In the 1960s, a group of three women reigned over the Motown musical empire and America’s charts. The Supremes that featured Mary Wilson, Florence Ballard and Diana Ross seduced with their pop singles such as Baby Love and Stop! In the Name of Love and their glamorous sophisticated allure but also stood as symbols of black achievement at the height of the civil rights movement. Diana Ross who had promptly become the leader of the group was widely rumored to be pushy and ferociously ambitious and thus decided to go solo in 1969. In the 1970s and early 1980s, the American singer epitomized disco glamour with her luxurious silk gowns, sequined mini-dresses as well as her decadent platform shoes and furs while she turned into an iconic soul diva, long before a certain Beyoncé Knowles. And a true diva she was: with tales of tantrums and disputes tarnishing her reputation. No surprise many believed Michael Jackson’s Dirty Diana hit was directed to the temperamental superstar: he always denied…