She was born in Havana, Cuba in 1925. She was told by her grandmother that she could sing before she could talk. Her grandmother use to laugh and tell the family that she practiced her singing at night. (She was
thought to have cried most of the night.) Cruz’ work in radio during the 1940’s in Cuba led to her
fame and she traveled
throughout Latin America with a female band. She won her first
award singing on an
amateur hour TV show. Cruz sang a
version of a
tango song that was very
popular in Cuba.
In the 1950’s Celia Cruz joined the Sonora Mantancera as a lead female singer. Then she was
able to go to the Tropicana, the best
establishment for Cuban music. If you performed at the Tropicana, you had made it in the singing world of Cubans.
She then went to Mexico for a one year
contract right before Fidel Castro took over Cuba. She and her band never returned. Cruz moved to New York in 1961. By this time she was a well- known Cuban singer and
independent from her band. She became known as the “Salsa Queen” due to her
style of music. During the 1990’s she gained greatpopularity among the younger generations, as her music reappeared. Cruz has been honored by five Presidents of the United States. She died of
brain cancer in 2003, but her music and
legend continue to
thrive throughout the world.