Entertainment News
2006-12-23
"Mexico's
Madonna" wins over the gays
When Mexico's
scandalous pop diva GloriaTrevi—once the country's
highest-paid performer and known as ''Mexico's
M
When Mexico's
scandalous pop diva GloriaTrevi—once the country's
highest-paid performer and known as ''Mexico's
Madonna''—left jail, she handed out fliers to
promote herself.
The hard work is
paying off: Two years later, Trevi has shot to worldwide
superstardom.
Her comeback
album, Como nace el universo, or How the
Universe Was Born, went platinum in the United
States and received a Latin Billboard award nomination for
best album.
The single
''Todos me miran,'' or ''Everyone Is Looking at Me,'' whose
video depicts a gay man coming out, hit number 1 on the
Mexican Billboard chart. These days, Trevi has become
an icon for gay men on both sides of the border,
dubbed the ''Gay Queen.''
''Conservatives
criticize [gays], but then they wear the clothes they
design, listen to the music that they have made so popular,
and use the makeup that they create,'' Trevi told the
Associated Press in a recent interview.
Trevi rose to
stardom in the 1990s when her songs about sexual
independence won over thousands of teenage fans, making her
one of Latin America's biggest stars.
Then the bottom
fell out: In 2000, Trevi, along with her manager, Sergio
Andrade, and backup singer Maria Raquenel Portillo were
arrested and accused of luring young girls into their
entourage with promises of stardom and then sexually
abusing them.
The three were
detained in Brazil, where all had fled to avoid
prosecution. They were extradited to Mexico, where a second
backup singer was already being held.
After almost five
years in Brazilian and Mexican prisons, Trevi was
acquitted of charges of kidnapping, rape, and corruption of
minors.
The 38-year-old
singer, who has always maintained her innocence, left
jail with her son, Angel Gabriel, now 4, and the memory of
losing a baby girl who died shortly after being born
there. Last year she gave birth to her second son,
Miguel Armando, and says she may have more children.
Trevi no longer
talks about her time in jail, but the experience
transformed her from a Mexican teen idol into an
international star with fans in their 20s and 30s. And
although she has tamed her wild lioness mane and toned
down her raunchy image—doing away with ripped
tights—Trevi hasn't lost her spunk. She still
lets loose on stage, grabbing her crotch and cracking
whips.
''My fans like
the rebel in me,'' she said in a recent interview.
She's even
managed to strike a fine balance between her rebel girl
image and her new life as an activist mother,
broadening her appeal.
Trevi also
started a foundation, named Ana Dalai after her baby who
died, to provide money and support to jailed mothers,
saying she has firsthand knowledge of their
difficulties. On Monday she returned to the Chihuahua
prison where she was held and handed out toys and medicine
to inmate mothers.
She has become a
vocal defender of the gay community. The song ''Everyone
Is Looking at Me,'' which she said is based on a friend's
experience, was a favorite at sold-out shows during
Trevi's recent tour of major gay clubs from New York
to Los Angeles.
Her album How
the Universe Was Born is a testament to
Trevi's and her fans' fight against social taboos and not
being influenced by others, and she has said ''Everyone Is
Looking at Me'' also relates her own feelings of being
rejected by certain sectors of society. She said she
hopes her music inspires people to stay true to
themselves.
''Artists and,
above all, 'La Trevi' teach us, especially women, about
all the sides of ourselves: the sexy one, the showoff, the
passionate one, the mother, the superhero,'' she said,
adding, ''My rebelliousness more than anything has a
cause.... I never have been an anarchist, I've always
had goals and always have acted out of love.'' (Istra
Pacheco, AP)
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