Cyndi Lauper: A Memoir by
Cyndi Lauper
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I was extremely lucky to hear Cyndi Lauper live in 1989 in Chile, at the national stadium. I dragged my cousin to see her, and we waited for like three hours for it to start but I don't regret a thing. It was in the 'galusha', so I saw almost nothing, but the energy was incredible; and I probably ended up hoarse.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PEABI...
She has undoubtedly been one of the most influential artists of our generation, in the way she dresses and in the way she makes music.
Cyndi Lauper's biography is handled as if it were a radio interview or rather like she was talking to you in a everyday converstion. She talks about her life, and at several points she rambles, jumping from one topic to another, which is a little difficult to follow at first. Like most great artists, her life was difficult (I have yet to meet anyone famous whose life was honey and roses), born in Queens to a family she describes as lower middle class; however, her mother worked two jobs, and her stepfather also worked, from whom she fled at age 17 because he was a sexual predator. What stands out for me in this period is that she has many difficulties in school, especially in English, which seems to indicate learning or concentration difficulties. Despite this, she tried to continue in school several times because of her love of art, she wanted to paint at that time, but at the same time she loved fashion and everything that is visual art. But when she left home, without money or education, she often found herself almost on the streets, doing any job (at which she almost never lasted) and often going hungry. And she being a victim of sexual assault.
As she tells it, almost by chance she started singing as part of other artists' choirs, and her lack of proper education in this is so clear that she ended up losing her voice twice, before becoming famous, which she only achieved when she was 30 years old, which is a late age for a pop singer.