Current:Home > MyCyndi Lauper inks deal with firm behind ABBA Voyage for new immersive performance project -AssetLink
Cyndi Lauper inks deal with firm behind ABBA Voyage for new immersive performance project
View
Date:2025-04-26 07:03:45
STOCKHOLM (AP) — Legendary pop icon Cyndi Lauper, who rose to fame in the 1980s with hits such as “Time After Time” and “Girls Just Want To Have Fun,” has entered a partnership with the Swedish masterminds behind the immersive virtual concert ABBA Voyage.
The partnership announced Thursday by the Pophouse Entertainment Group co-founded by ABBA singer Björn Ulvaeus, involves the acquisition of a majority share of the award-winning singer-songwriter’s music. The aim is to develop new ways to bring Lauper’s music to fans and younger audiences through new performances and live experiences.
Lauper said she agreed to the sale, for an undisclosed amount, when it became apparent the Swedish company wasn’t just in it for the money. “Most suits, when you tell them an idea, their eyes glaze over, they just want your greatest hits,” Lauper told The Associated Press at the Pophouse headquarters in Stockholm earlier this month. “But these guys are a multimedia company, they’re not looking to just buy my catalog, they want to make something new.”
Four decades after her breakthrough solo album, the 70-year-old Queens native is still brimming with ideas and the energy to bring them to stage.
Lauper said she’s not aiming to replicate the glittery supernova brought to stage in ABBA Voyage where stupefying technology offers digital avatars of the ABBA band members as they looked in their 1970s heyday, but rather an “immersive theater piece” that transports audiences to the New York she grew up in.
“It’s about where I came from and the three women that were very influential in my life, my mom, my grandmother and my aunt,” she said.
Lauper has long advocated for women’s rights and gender equality, and her 1983 hit “Girls Just Want to Have Fun,” reinvented by other female artists through the years, has become a feminist anthem. Lauper seems humbled by this responsibility.
It was during the large Women’s March in 2017 following the inauguration of Donald Trump where she saw protesters with signs reading “Girls just want to have fun(damental rights)”that gave her the impetus to raise money for women’s health. So far, she has raised more than $150,000 to help small organizations that provide safe and legal abortions.
“I grew up with three women. I saw the disenfranchisement very clearly. And I saw the struggles, I saw the joy, I saw the love,” she said. “And it made me come out with boxing gloves on.”
Lauper hopes the new show can bring the memories of those women back to life a little, along with “the reasons I sang certain songs, and the things that I wrote about.”
veryGood! (26279)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- AP Top 25: No. 3 Washington, No. 5 Oregon move up, give Pac-12 2 in top 5 for 1st time since 2016
- Dwayne Johnson and Lauren Hashian Serve Up Sweet Musical Treat for Thanksgiving
- Ukraine is shipping more grain through the Black Sea despite threat from Russia
- Vance jokes he’s checking out his future VP plane while overlapping with Harris at Wisconsin airport
- Suzanne Shepherd, Sopranos and Goodfellas actress, dies at 89
- Prosecutors decry stabbing of ex-officer Derek Chauvin while incarcerated in George Floyd’s killing
- Dogs gone: Thieves break into LA pet shop, steal a dozen French bulldogs, valued at $100,000
- Golf's No. 1 Nelly Korda looking to regain her form – and her spot on the Olympic podium
- Shania Twain makes performance debut in Middle East for F1 Abu Dhabi concert
Ranking
- Olympic disqualification of gold medal hopeful exposes 'dark side' of women's wrestling
- Marty Krofft, of producing pair that put ‘H.R. Pufnstuf’ and the Osmonds on TV, dies at 86
- Mega Millions winning numbers for Black Friday drawing; Jackpot at $305 million
- 2 deaths, 28 hospitalizations linked to salmonella-tainted cantaloupes as recalls take effect
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Indiana fires football coach Tom Allen despite $20 million buyout
- One of world’s largest icebergs drifting beyond Antarctic waters after it was grounded for 3 decades
- Schools in Portland, Oregon, reach tentative deal with teachers union after nearly month-long strike
Recommendation
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
4 found dead near North Carolina homeless camp; 3 shot before shooter killed self, police say
Destiny's Child Has Biggest Reunion Yet at Beyoncé’s Renaissance Film Premiere
Indiana fires football coach Tom Allen despite $20 million buyout
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Republicans want to pair border security with aid for Ukraine. Here’s why that makes a deal so tough
5, including 2 children, killed in Ohio mobile home fire on Thanksgiving, authorities say
Criminals are using AI tools like ChatGPT to con shoppers. Here's how to spot scams.