MODEL COLLEGES/UPGRADED JUNIOR SECONDARY SCHOOLS COMMENCE E-REGISTRATION FOR YEAR 2025 ENTRANCE EXAMINATION. (PHOTOS). #PRESS RELEASE.

One Friday afternoon in May, Cyndi Lauper stepped out of her Upper West Side apartment building and into the streets of New York City. She wore glitter-encrusted glasses, sneakers with rainbow soles and a stack of beaded bracelets on each arm. A rice-paper parasol swung in her hand. As she walked, she examined the crowds and remarked when glints of interest caught her eye.
āOf course, up here itās fashion hell,ā she allowed of her tony neighborhood. And yet, every few blocks she rubbernecked at another womanās look, her famous New Yawk accent lifting and tumbling in pleasure at what she saw:
āLook at these dames, how cute are they?ā
āDid you love those pants? I kind of loved those pants.ā
āLook at this lady,ā she said, stepping off the curb and clocking a passerby. The woman moved nimbly, tomato-red streak in her silver hair, body draped in shades of fuchsia and cherry as she pushed the gleaming metal frame of a walker. āFabulous,ā Lauper exclaimed. āCome on!ā
At 70, the pop icon and social justice activist isnāt just charging back into the streets. On Monday, Lauper announced her final tour, the Girls Just Wanna Have Fun Farewell Tour, which will have her headlining arenas across North America from late October to early December. And āLet the Canary Sing,ā a documentary about her life and career that premiered at the Tribeca Festival last year, is streaming on Paramount+.
Lauper has not staged a major tour ā āa proper tour, thatās mineā ā in over a decade. But now her window of opportunity is closing, so sheās leaping through it. āI donāt think I can perform the way I want to in a couple of years,ā she said. āI want to be strong.ā
And until recently, when she finally agreed to sit for the director Alison Ellwood, she could not envision committing her life story to film. āI wasnāt going to do a documentary because Iām not dead,ā she said. More to the point, she did not feel particularly misunderstood. From the moment she danced across the city in the 1983 video for āGirls Just Want to Have Fun,ā she felt that she had articulated precisely what she wanted to say.
āEverything I wanted them to understand was in that video,ā she said of her fans. She has a lot of people who get her: The clip has been viewed on YouTube more than one billion times. Forty years later, she holds it up as a thesis, the key to decoding her artistic perspective and understanding everything that followed. After all, āYou never have to wonder where a New Yorker stands,ā she said. āTheyāll tell you, straight up.ā
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