Closer Weekly

GLORIA ESTEFAN

THE GRAMMY AWARD WINNER OVERCAME CHALLENGES BY FOLLOWING HER OWN BEAT

- — Louise Barile, with reporting by Lexi Ciccone and Jaclyn Roth

The singer has always relied on the power of music to help her overcome life’s toughest challenges.

With husband Emilio Estefan cheering her on, a glowing Gloria Estefan accepted her medal at the 2017 Kennedy Center Honors in early December on a night she calls “magical.” The internatio­nal superstar is the first Cuban-American to receive the prestigiou­s award for her contributi­on to the arts. “To be the first in anything at this point in life is a beautiful thing,” notes Gloria. “I am incredibly honored.”

The singer has received lots of praise during her four decades in entertainm­ent, but she insists music hasn’t just been a vocation for her — it’s been salvation. From her childhood in revolution-era Cuba to her early struggles to succeed while remaining true to herself, through marriage, motherhood and an accident that almost ended her career, Gloria has always turned to her guitar to help make sense of life. “Music was always a personal thing for me,” the singer, 60, explains to Closer. “It’s not like I set out to be famous. I just love music.”

That passion helped Gloria endure a rough start in Cuba where the revolution­ary government jailed her father, Jose Fajardo. Upon his release, the family fled to the U.S. but suffered another setback when Jose became debilitate­d after contact with Agent Orange during his U.S. military service. “My mama had to work, so I cared for my dad and younger sister,” recalls Gloria, who was 12.

She escaped into music, joining her future husband Emilio’s band at 17. “He was my boss and then we fell in love,” she confides of the man she married in 1978. Success, however, didn’t come easily; the recording industry didn’t know what to make of the couple or their group, Miami Sound Machine. “They wanted us to change our last name and our sound,” Emilio, 64, tells Closer. They resisted by retaining their Latin flavor and broke out with “Conga” in 1985. In the years since, Gloria’s sold more than 100 million records and won seven Grammys.

GETTING BACK ON HER FEET

While music brought prosperity, it also helped Gloria survive heartbreak. In 1990, the singer was nearly paralyzed after a truck hit her tour bus. Told that she’d probably never walk again or bear more children, Gloria persevered. “People take life for granted,” says Emilio, who remained at his wife’s side during her recovery. “He didn’t leave me alone — he’d sit me up, lay me down, bathe me,” recalls Gloria, who eventually regained her ability to walk and welcomed daughter Emily, now 23, four years after the crash. “It brought us closer on every level,” says Gloria, and she and Emilio will celebrate their 40th anniversar­y in September.

Today, the star still enjoys singing, though her favorite audience is her grandson, Sasha, 5, the child of her son, Nayib, 37. Meanwhile, the story of her life with Emilio continues to thrill audiences in On Your Feet!, a musical that recently left Broadway to tour the world. But Gloria remains humble. “I don’t see myself as anything other than a very fortunate woman,” she tells Closer. “I’ve been able to live my life close to the person I love, made a beautiful family and been able to live making music and entertaini­ng people.”

“We wanted to succeed with who we were.”

— Gloria

 ??  ?? Gloria sang “Coming Out of the
Dark,” when she returned to performing
in 1991.
Gloria sang “Coming Out of the Dark,” when she returned to performing in 1991.
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