Cyndi Lauper - Biography
Cyndi Lauper was one of the biggest stars of
the early MTV era, selling five million copies of her debut album, She's So
Unusual, as well as scoring a string of four Top Ten hits from the record,
including the major hits "Girls Just Want to Have Fun" and "Time
After Time." Lauper's thin, girlish voice and
gleefully ragtag appearance became one of the most distinctive images of the
early '80s, which helped lead her not only to the top of the charts, but also
to stardom. Throughout
Born in
Following the breakup of the group, Lauper sang in local clubs and restaurants. In 1983, her
manager and boyfriend David Wolff managed to secure her a contract with
Portrait. At the end of the year, she released her debut album, She's So
Unusual. Helped by heavy MTV support of the album's first single/video
"Girls Just Want to Have Fun," She's So Unusual became a major hit in
the spring of 1984, eventually climbing to number four on the U.S. charts; it
would wind up going platinum five times, as well as becoming a hit in the U.K.
and Europe. "Girls Just Want to Have Fun" peaked at number two, while
its follow-up, the ballad "Time After Time," reached number one; two
other songs, "She Bop" and "All Through the Night," went
Top Ten.
With the success of She's So Unusual under her belt, Lauper
was an official star, yet she wasn't able to maintain her popularity. During
1985 she worked on her follow-up album; her only release of the year was
"The Goonies 'R' Good Enough," the theme
song from the children's adventure film The Goonies. Her
second album, True Colors, appeared in the fall of
1986, and while it was successful -- the title track went to number one, while
the album peaked at number four and went platinum -- its softer, adult
contemporary sound lost Lauper some fans.
Lauper's career continued to lose momentum, as her
feature film debut in 1988's comedy Vibes bombed. A Night to Remember, her
third album, was released to weak reviews in 1989, and although it spawned the
Top Ten hit "I Drove All Night," it suffered from disappointing
sales, peaking at number 37. The next year, she severed her relationship with
Wolff and married actor David Thornton.
After taking a few years off, Lauper returned in 1993
with Hat Full of Stars, an album where she co-produced and co-wrote all of the
tracks. The record stiffed, peaking at 112. The following year, the hits
compilation Twelve Deadly Cyns...and Then Some was
released in the