After a seven-day battle with respiratory problems, the legendary openly lesbian singer Chavela Vargas passed away today, August 5, in Cuernavaca, Mexico. The world-renowned Costa Rican-born Mexican singer came out as a lesbian at the age of 81.
In her decades-long career, she produced 80 albums and appeared in films such as Pedro Almodovar's "The Flower of My Secret" and Julie Tymor's "Frida".
At 14, Vargas left her native Costa Rica and moved to Mexico to pursue musical career opportunities. There she challenged mainstream gender norms and was famous for her public liaisons with women, including a brief affair with painter Frida Kahlo. Notably, she purposely did not change the gender in songs written by Mexico's most famous male songwriters.
As Andrés Duque reported in Blabbeando, for this year's Latin America and Spain's Lesbian Visibility Day on April 26 , Vargas tweeted an image of herself along with a caption that said "Proud to be the way I am," and also "Lets raise our voices since we're not invisible."
Orgullosa de ser como soy. twitter.com/ChavelaVargas/…
— Chavela Vargas (@ChavelaVargas) April 26, 2012
For her courage and beyond brilliant talent, Chavela Vargas, you will be truly be missed.