Cyndi Lauper
Cyndi Lauper was born in New York City, New York, United States on June 22nd, 1953 and is the Pop Singer. At the age of 71, Cyndi Lauper biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, songs, movies, and networth are available.
At 71 years old, Cyndi Lauper has this physical status:
Life and career
Lauper was born in Brooklyn, New York City, to a Catholic family. Fred, her father, was of German and Swiss descent. Catrine (née Gallo) (1930-2022), a young mother of Italian descent (from Sicily), was of Italian descent (from Sicily). Fred (nicknamed Butch) and Ellen, Lauper's younger brother, Fred (nicknamed Butch), as well as her older sister, Ellen. When Lauper was five years old, her parents divorced. Her mother remarried and divorced once more.
Lauper grew up in Queens' Ozone Park neighborhood, and as an infant, listened to such artists as The Beatles and Judy Garland. She began writing songs and playing an acoustic guitar that had been given to her by her sister at age 12.
Lauper experimented with a variety of hair colors and eccentric clothing, and took a friend's suggestion to spell her name as "Cyndi" rather than "Cindy." Peers were yelling her and throwing stones at her because of her unique sense of style.
Lauper attended Richmond Hill High School but was suspended after she later earned her GED. She left home at 17 years old to escape her abused stepfather's intent to study art. Her ride took her to Canada, where she and her dog Sparkle spent two weeks in the woods searching for herself. She later moved to Vermont, where she took art classes at Johnson State College and supported herself in odd jobs. Lauper delivered the commencement address at Northern Vermont University - Johnson, the academic institution that now includes Johnson State. The honorary degree of Doctor of Letters was given to her at this prestigious event.
Lauper performed as a singer with various cover bands in the early 1970s. Doc West, as well as Janis Joplin, covered disco songs as well as Janis Joplin. Flyer, a later band, was active in the New York metropolitan area, performing hits by bands including Bad Company, Jefferson Airplane, and Led Zeppelin. Despite being on stage, Lauper was not content to sing covers. Lauper lost her vocal cords in 1977 and took a year off from performing. Doctors told her that she would never sing again, but she regained her voice with the support of vocal coach Katie Agresta.
Lauper's boss Ted Rosenblatt introduced saxophone player John Turi in 1978. Turi and Lauper formed Blue Angel, a live band formed by Turi and Lauper, and they also produced a demo tape of original music. Steve Massarsky, the Allman Brothers Band's manager, heard the tape and loved Lauper's voice. He bought Blue Angels' contracts for $5,000 and became their manager.
Lauper was accepted as a solo artist but ultimately dropped out because she wanted the band to be included in any contract she made. Blue Angel was eventually signed to Polydor Records and released a self-titled album on the label in 1980. Lauper hated the album cover, claiming that it made her look like Big Bird, but Rolling Stone magazine later ranked it as one of the top new wave album covers (2003). Despite critical praise, the album did not sell well (It went lead), and the band disbanded up (It went lead). The Blue Angels' founder, Massarsky, suffered and fired him as their boss, prompting him to resign. Lauper was forced to declare bankruptcy after he filed an $80,000 lawsuit against them. Lauper's voice was temporarily lost due to an inverted cyst in her vocal cord.
Lauper spent time after Blue Angel's demise, working in supermarket stores, waitressing at IHOP (which she resigned after being demoted to hostess when the boss sexually assaulted her), and singing in local clubs. El Sombrero was one of her most popular gigs. Lauper's music critics who saw her perform with Blue Angel thought she had a lot of potential due to her four-octave singing range. Lauper met David Wolff, who took over as her manager and had her sign a recording deal with Portrait Records, a Epic Records subsidiary.
Lauper's debut on October 14, 1983, She's So Unusual, her first solo album. The album became a worldwide hit, peaking at No. 106. The United States is ranked 4th in the United States and ranked fifth in eight other nations. Eric Bazilian and Rob Hyman (of The Hooters), Rick Chertoff, Richard Termini, and Peter Wood were the primary studio musicians. Lauper's hybrid punk style, which was created by stylist Patrick Lucas, made her a following among teenagers and experts, in part due to her unique punk style.
Lauper co-wrote four songs on She's So Unusual, including "Time After Time" and "She Bop." Lauper did not write the lyrics on the songs she did not write, but the lyrics were also modified a little. "Girls Just Want to Have Fun" is the case. Lauper found the original songs to be misogynistic, so she rewrote the song as an anthem for young women.
Five cover songs appear on the album, including The Brains' latest wave hit "Money Changes Everything" (No. Prince's "When You Were Mine" ranked 27 on the Billboard Hot 100, with Prince's "When You Were Mine" at number 27. Lauper was the first female artist to receive four consecutive Billboard Hot 100 top five hits from one album on the album. The LP has been in the Top 200 charts for more than six weeks, and has since sold 16 million copies around the world.
At the 1985 Grammy Awards, Cyndi was named Best New Artist. She's So Unusual has also been nominated for Album of the Year, Record of the Year, Best Female Pop Vocal Performance ("for "Girls Just Want to Have Fun"), and Year of the Year (for "Time After Time"). At her award presentation, she wore almost a pound of necklaces. It also earned the Grammy for Best Album Package, which was also awarded to Janet Perr, the art director.
The video for "Girls Just Want to Have Fun" at the inaugural MTV Video Music Awards in 1984, made Lauper an MTV staple, and made it into a MTV staple. The video featured professional wrestling manager "Captain" Lou Albano, as Lauper's father, and her real-life mother, Catrine, as her mother, as well as her niece, her brother Butch, and her dog, Sparkle. Lauper appeared on the front pages of Rolling Stone magazine, Time, and Newsweek in 1984-85. She appeared on People's front page twice and was named as a Woman of the Year in 1985 by Ms. magazine Woman of the Year.
Lauper performed in the United States in 1985 for Africa's famine relief fund-raising album "We Are the World," which has sold more than 20 million copies since then.
In the inaugural Wrestling Federation's "Rock 'n' Wrestling Connection" exhibition, Lauper performed with professional wrestler Hulk Hogan, who performed her "bodyguard" and would later appear in numerous "Rock 'n' Wrestling Connection" appearances and served as herself in a number of the World Wrestling Federation's "Rock 'n' Wrestling Connection" exhibitions, as herself and as the manager of Wendi Richter. As a youth, Dave Wolff, Lauper's boyfriend and boss, was a wrestling fan as a child and engineered the rock and wrestling links.
Lauper released "The Goonies 'R' Good Enough" on 1985, from the soundtrack to the movie The Goonies and an accompanying video starring several wrestling stars. The album debuted at number ten on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, peaking at number ten.
Lauper received a nomination at the 1986 Grammy Awards for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance for "What a Thrill," the following year (for the album track "911") and another in 1988, Best Long Form Music Video for Cyndi Lauper in Paris.
In 1986, Lauper's True Colors was released on her second album. It came in at No. 202 on Billboard 200. The 42-year-old record reached its fourth peak, while the four others reached their fourth highest level.
Lauper appeared on Billy Joel's album The Bridge in 1986 with a song called "Code of Silence." She is credited with writing the songs with Joel, and she performs a duet with him. Lauper performed the theme song for the series Pee-wee's Playhouse in the same year as "Ellen Shaw." David Wolff produced Cyndi Lauper in Paris in 1987. The show was broadcast on HBO.
Lauper made her film debut in August 1988 in the quirky comedy Vibes, starring Jeff Goldblum, Peter Falk, and Julian Sands. Lauper, a South American, was a narrator on a quest for a city of gold. The film was directed by Deborah Blum and Tony Ganz, with David Wolff as associate producer. Lauper took a few classes in finger waving and hair styling at the Robert Fiancé School of Beauty in New York and worked with a handful of Manhattan psychics to prepare for the position. The film failed and was poorly received by critics, but it would later be regarded as a cult classic.
For the Vibes soundtrack, Lauper produced "Hole in My Heart (All the Way to China), but the song was not included. A music video was released, a high-energy, comedic adventure, and a romp through a Chinese laundry. The song debuted at No. 2 on the charts. On the US charts, 54 is the highest, but Australia did better, with a ranking of No. 1 on the charts, but it was ranked No. 42. 8.
A Night to Remember – Lauper's third album, was released in 1989. The No. 1 hit on the album was the No. 124. "I Drove All Night" was originally recorded by Roy Orbison three years before his death on December 6, 1988. Lauper received a Grammy Award for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance at the 1990 Grammy Awards for "I Drove All Night," but A Night to Remember's album sales dropped. "My First Night Without You" was one of the first songs to be closed-captioned for the hearing impaired.
Lauper performed the Beatles song "Hey Bulldog" and the John Lennon song "Working Class Hero" in Liverpool in May 1990, as a result of his Yoko Ono friendship. She also participated in Ono and Lennon's "The Peace Choir," which is a new interpretation of Lennon's "Give Peace a Chance".
Lauper married actor David Thornton on November 24, 1991.
Hat Full of Stars, Lauper's fourth album, was released in June 1993 and received critical praise, but she was largely unsupported by her label, but it was unsupported commercially. The album, which featured topics such as homophobia, spousal abuse, racial violence, and abortion, only sold less than 120,000 copies in the United States and peaked at No. 1. On the Billboard charts, 112 is 112nd. Julia Stiles, then-unknown, appears as the young Cyndi in the album's video "Sally's Pigeons."
Lauper's return to acting in 1993 was back to acting as Michael J. In Life with Mikey, Fox's ditzy secretary takes the spotlight. Marianne Lugasso of Mad About You has also received an Emmy Award for her role in the sitcom Mad About You.
Declyn Wallace Lauper Thornton, a nan's son, was born on November 19, 1997, Lauper was born. Sisters of Avalon, her fifth album, was released in Japan in 1996 and 1997. With the help of Jan Pulsford (Lauper's keyboard player) and producer Mark Saunders, the album was written and produced. Some of the songs in Sisters of Avalon addressed controversial topics, as in Hat Full of Stars. The song "Ballad of Cleo and Joe" explored the challenges of a drag queen's double life. The song "Say a Prayer" was written for a friend of hers who had died of AIDS. In the film of the same name, "Unhook the Stars" was used. The launch in America was unsuccessful without assistance from her label, and the Billboard album chart fell by a week on the Billboard album chart, with No. 1 at No. 188. This collection also received a lot of acclaim, including People magazine, which said it was "90s nourishment for body and soul." Lauper sets a scene that makes us care and gives us hope."
Lauper appeared in "Wild Barts Can't Be Broken" as an animated version of herself on January 17, 1999, performing the National Anthem to the tune of "Girls Just Want to Have Fun." Do You Believe? Lauper opened for Cher's Do You Believe? Wild Orchid is on tour. She appeared in Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle and The Opportunists. "I Want a Mom That Will Live Forever" is a film by Rachel Coveney, who appeared on the soundtrack of the 2000 animated film Rugrats in Paris: The Movie.
Lauper appeared on The television show Women in Rock, Girls with Guitars, starring Ann Wilson of Heart and Destiny's Child on October 12, 2000. From September 30 to October 31, 2001, a CD of the songs performed was exclusive to Sears stores, primarily as a fundraiser for breast cancer.
The Essential Cyndi Lauper, Sony's best-of-CD, was released in 2002. At Last (formerly Naked City), Lauper's first album with Sony/Epic Records, was also released in 2003. For "Unchained Melody," he received one nomination at the 2005 Grammy Awards: Best Instrumental Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist(s). The campaign was also a commercial success, grossing 4.5 million dollars in a row.
Lauper appeared at Save the Music Foundation's benefit concert Divas Live 2004, alongside Ashanti, Gladys Knight, Jessica Simpson, Joss Stone, and Patti LaBelle in April 2004.
Jenny debuted as Jenny in the Tony-nominated The Threepenny Opera on Showtime in 2005, directing a commercial for the Totally 80s version of the board game Queer as Folk in 2005. In the VH1 Classics special Decades Rock Live, Shaggy, Scott Weiland of Velvet Revolving/Stone Temple Pilots, Pat Monahan of Train, Ani DiFranco, and The Hooters performed. On McKay's Pretty Little Head album, she performed "Message To Michael" with Dionne Warwick and "Beecharmer" with Nellie McKay.
Lauper was inducted into the Long Island Music Hall of Fame on October 16, 2006. On an episode of The Backyardigans, she appeared on "Lady in Pink" as a guest performer.
Bring Ya to the Brink, Lauper's sixth studio album, was released in the United States on May 27, 2008.
The True Colors Tour and a Christmas duet with Swedish band The Hives were among the 2008 shows on display. In Sweden, the album was released as a CD single and a 7" vinyl. Lauper appeared on "Girls Night Out" while lining it with Rosie O'Donnell in the United States.
Lauper performed "Slumdog Millionaire" together with Wyclef Jean on November 17, 2009, the Late Show with David Letterman.
Mattel introduced a Cyndi Lauper Barbie doll as part of their "Ladies of the 80s" collection in January 2010.
Lauper appeared on NBC's The Celebrity Apprentice in March 2010, landing in sixth place.
Memphis Blues, Lauper's 7th studio album, was released on June 22, 2010 and debuted on Billboard Blues Albums at No. 1 in the United States. 1, and at No. 1; Billboard's Top 200: 26 on the Billboard Top 200. The album remained No. 1 on the charts. Memphis Blues was nominated for Best Traditional Blues Album at the 2011 Grammy Awards for 14 weeks in a row.
While waiting for a delayed flight at Aeroparque Newbery in Buenos Aires, Lauper made international news in March 2011 for an impromptu appearance of "Girls Just Want to Have Fun." A video was also posted on YouTube later this week.
She launched two Christmas singles exclusive to iTunes in November 2011. The first release was a Blues-inspired recreation of Elvis Presley's classic "Blue Christmas," and the second was a new interpretation of "Home for the Holidays," a duet with Norah Jones. Lauper made her first appearance for WWE in 27 years in June 2012 to celebrate WWE Raw's 1000th episode to honor "Captain" Lou Albano.
Lauper appeared at Besey Johnson's 40th anniversary Retrospective Fashion show in September 2012. She also wrote a best-selling book in New York City that chronicled her struggle with child violence and depression.
Lauper wrote and wrote the book "Kinky Boots," the Broadway musical Kinky Boots. Kinky Boots, a 2006 independent film, was based on the musical. It opened in Chicago in October 2012 and on Broadway at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre on April 4, 2013. At the 63rd annual Outer Critics Circle Awards in May, she received Best Score for Kinky Boots. The 2013 Tony Awards were dominated by the musical, with 13 nominations and six honors including Best Musical and Best Actor. She was named Best Original Score in the competition. Lauper was the first female to win alone in this category. Kinky Boots' Broadway debut ended on April 7, 2019, after a six-year run and 2,507 regular performances. It is the longest-running Broadway musical in history. On Broadway, it earned $297 million.
Lauper started touring America and Australia in the summer of 2013. She's So Unusual, her debut album's 30th anniversary, was released. The show featured a combination of fan favorites and the complete She's So Unusual collection. She appeared on 36 dates of Cher's Dressed to Kill Tour, which began on April 23, 2014. On a website interview, Lauper announced the launch of a new album.
Lauper hosted the Grammy Pre-Telecast at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on Jan. 26, where she later accepted a Grammy for Kinky Boots (Best Musical Theater Album).
Lauper released the 30th Anniversary Edition of She's So Unusual on Epic Records On April 1 (March 1 in Europe), the original album's first edition was released. It also included three new remixes. The Deluxe Version featured bonus tracks including demos and a live recording as well as a 3D cut-out of the bedroom featured in the 'Girls Just Want to Have Fun' music video, which also included a reusable sticker set.
Lauper appeared on the finale of America's Got Talent on September 17, 2014. Lauper re-recorded "Reality Colors" in a mashup with Sara Bareilles' "Brave" on September 25, raising hopes and funds for children fighting cancer. The project had raised over $300,000. Until October, the fund had raised over $300,000.
In October 2014, Lauper was included in the Songwriters Hall of Fame's nomination list. Also during October, Lauper's fourth consecutive 'Home for the Holidays' benefit concert for homeless gay youth was announced. Bill Cox, 50 Cent and Laverne Cox were among the acts, with 100% of the net proceeds going to True Colors United.
Lauper appeared on the crime show Bones as Avalon Harmonia in March 2015.
On The Today Show in July 2015, Lauper spoke about her work with Novartis and the National Psoriasis Foundation as well as her own five years with psoriasis. Seymour Stein, a singer, also announced a collaboration with Rolling Stone, which she later told Rolling Stone that it was a country album coproduced by Tony Brown.
Kinky Boots debuted at the Adelphi Theatre in London's West End on September 15, 2015.
Benny Mardones and Robert Tepper, songwriters, sued Lauper for including elements from their song "Into the Night" on Kinky Boots' final song "Raise You Up" on August 30, 2017. According to a letter sent by Mardones' counsel in August 2019, all sides concerned have agreed in principle to settle the lawsuit. At the time, no further details were given.
Lauper revealed in January 2016 that she would debut a new album on May 6, 2016. Detour was one of her interpretations of early country classics. The news was aided by the unveiling of her "Heartaches by the Number" by Harlan Howard's "Heartaches by the Number" and a live broadcast on Skyville Live with Kelsea Ballerini and Ingrid Michaelson. "Funnel of Love" by Wanda Jackson appeared on February 17, 2016.
Lauper was nominated for an Olivier Award in February 2016 for her contribution to the UK production of Kinky Boots, as well as Stephen Oremus, the man in charge of the arrangements. This production's album was nominated for the Best Musical Theater Album Award in January 2017.
Lauper appeared on "Swipe to the Right" from Electronica 2: The Heart of Noise by French producer Jean-Michel Jarre in May 2016. This second album of the Electronica project is based on interviews with musicians related to electronic music (Tangerine Dream, Moby, Pet Shop Boys, etc.). (i.e.)
Dex Lauper, her son, was the first act on her Detour Tour in October 2016.
Lauper appeared on Austin City Limits' 42nd season in January 2017, performing some of her greatest hits alongside Detour's country tunes. On PBS, the episode aired.
Lauper was announced in March 2018 that together with co-"Time After Time" writer Rob Hyman, we would produce the score for the 1988 film Working Girl, starring Melanie Griffith and Sigourney Weaver. She joined Hyman because she wanted "the music to sound like the 80s." Christopher Ashley, a Tony Award-winning actor, will direct the musical. The 2021/2022 season marks the debut of the musical by a developmental stage.
Lauper exclusive to Grandin Road exclusively created her own Christmas collection, 'Cyndi Lauper Loves Christmas,' which is available from September 2018. "I've always loved Christmas, and it reminds me to find some joy in the little things," Lauper said.
On December 8, 2018, Beacon Theatre in New York hosted an annual Home For The Holidays performance.
In an episode of the television series Magnum P.I., a Lauper guest appeared as a lawyer. "Sudden Death," the episode, which was titled "Sudden Death," aired on October 22, 2018.
On November 15, 2018, it was announced that Lauper would be named Icon Award at the Billboard's 13th annual Women in Music Festival in New York City. "The entire world acknowledges Cyndi Lauper's pop music, but more importantly, she has used her unbridled talent to soar beyond music, promote positive change in modern life, and become a true icon," Billboard's editorial director Jason Lipshutz says.
In the Canadian computer-animated film Racetime, the song "Together" was included. Lauper, a French writer and actor, narrates the English translation in the film's original title, La Course des tuques.
Lauper performed at the opening of Stonewall 50 – WorldPride NYC 2019, on June 26, 2019. Lauper, the Hollywood Bowl orchestra conducted by Thomas Wilkins, appeared at two concerts on July 12 and 13, 2019 at the Hollywood Bowl.
The "Japanese Singles Collection – Greatest Hits" collection includes all Laupers' singles released in Japan from 1983 to 1995 in chronological order. The second disc includes 26 music videos. For the first time on DVD, nine of these nine films are available. The album was released on September 6, 2019, nine days after its initial Japanese release.
Lauper will appear alongside Jane Lynch in the upcoming Netflix comedy film "kind of The Golden Girls for today" in September 2019. There were no updates on this initiative as of March 2021.
At the 62nd annual Grammy Awards Show held in Los Angeles on January 26, 2020, Lauper performed a chorus from the album "I sing the Body Electric" of the 1980 film Fame. Ben Platt, Camila Cabello, Debbie Allen, who appeared in the original film, and others were among the others. It was a farewell to long-time Grammy Awards television producer Ken Erhlich. After a four-decade career of directing the show, he resigned.
Lauper performed in an online fundraising concert on April 23, 2020, to raise funds for LGBTQ nightlife workers who were struggling financially due to the coronavirus pandemic. Lauper called the show "Reality Colors" to close. The concert was sponsored by the Stonewall Inn Gives Back nonprofit group of the historic Greenwich Village gay bar. Kate Pierson, Our Lady J, Rufus Wainwright, and Darren Hayes were among the many performing artists on display.
Lauper performed on a "Eve of Destruction" finalist Casey Abrams on a cover version of the song 'Eve of Destruction" in November 2020.
Shea Diamond's track 'Blame it on Christmas' featured Lauper in November 2021 as a guest vocalist. The following month, an official video was released.
On April 1, Lauper appeared at the 2022 MusiCaresPerson of the Year Tribute Exhibition in honour of Joni Mitchell.
Alison Ellwood would produce a Lauper retrospective film in May 2022. The scheme is now in production, but no date has been set for publication. Let The Canary Sing be the title of this career-spanning documentary released by Sony Music Entertainment.
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Cyndi Lauper’s Son Dex Accused Of Disturbing Sexual Assault That Made Victim 'Terrified' For Her Life
Cyndi Lauper‘s son Declyn “Dex” Lauper Thornton is in legal trouble… AGAIN.
On Tuesday, the iconic pop star’s son was hit with a sexual assault lawsuit by a former girlfriend who claims he tried to force her to give him oral sex and manhandled her. The woman filed the suit anonymously as a Jane Doe, but she spoke to the New York Post in a phone interview to open up about the terrifying incident.