Celia Cruz, the 'Queen of Salsa,' Dies at 77
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Celia Cruz, the Cuban-born singer who went from singing in Havana nightclubs to become the "Queen of Salsa," died Wednesday, her publicist said.
Cruz, who was 77, died of a brain tumor. She had surgery for the ailment
in December but her health faltered. She died at her home in Fort Lee,
N.J., according to
her publicist, Blanca Lasalle.
In the 1950s, Cruz became famous with the legendary Afro-Cuban group
La Sonora Matancera. She left Cuba for the United States in 1960, and was
credited with
bringing salsa music to a broad audience.
Cruz, who recorded more than 70 albums and had more than a dozen Grammy
nominations, won best salsa album for "La Negra Tiene Tumbao" at the last
year's Latin
Grammy Awrds. Among her other best-known recordings are "Yerberito
Moreno" and "Que le Den Candela."
Called the "Queen of Salsa" and the "diva of Latin song," Cruz remained
energetic late into her career. At last year's Latin Grammys, she showed
up wearing a frothy
blue-and-white headpiece and a tight red dress and gave a hip-shaking
performance.
Cruz's alliance with fellow salsa star Tito Puente garnered her some
of the biggest success in her career. In 1987, she was honored with a star
on Hollywood's Walk of
Fame, and several years later, the city of Miami gave Calle Ocho, the
main street of its Cuban community, the honorary name of Celia Cruz Way.
Cruz also received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Smithsonian
Institution and in 1994, President Clinton honored her with an award from
the National
Endowment of the Arts.