BIOGRAPHY

Often
hailed as "the
Mexican Madonna,"
Gloria Trevi was
not only one of
the most daring
and cutting-edge
Latin stars of
the ‘80s
and ‘90s;
she may very well
be the most controversial
figure in the
history of Latin
pop and rock en
español.
In the late ‘90s
and early 2000s,
the Mexican singer's
name was repeatedly
dragged through
the mud because
of a major sex-related
scandal; Mexican
law enforcement
officials accused
Trevi and manager/ex-husband
Sergio Andrade
of sexually abusing
and imprisoning
adolescent girls--and
in the Latin American
media, the Trevi/Andrade
scandal has been
as huge a story
as the O.J. Simpson
trial was in the
United States
in the mid-‘90s
(minus the racial
element). Regrettably,
the abundance
of sordid, disturbing
headlines surrounding
Trevi and Andrade
have often overshadowed
the importance
of her sometimes
sociopolitical
music, which could
be quite challenging
and provocative.
Trevi
was born Gloria
de los Angeles
Treviño
on February 15,
1970 in Monterrey,
Mexico, an industrial
city in the northern
part of the country.
The singer had
a rough childhood;
she was quite
poor, and her
parents (both
of whom allegedly
mistreated her)
divorced when
she was 10. But
none of those
things discouraged
Trevi from becoming
seriously interested
in the arts. As
a pre-teen, she
studied ballet
dancing and learned
to play the piano;
eventually, she
learned to play
the drums as well.
Trevi was not
only interested
in Latin music;
she was seriously
into American
and British rock
and listened to
Led Zeppelin,
the Doors, Deep
Purple, Pat Benatar
and Janis Joplin
(among others)
extensively. Against
her mother's wishes,
Trevi left home
when she was only
12 and moved from
Monterrey to Mexico
City to pursue
a career in the
arts. At first,
life in Mexico
City was a struggle
for Trevi, who
survived by doing
everything from
singing on the
streets for money
to selling tacos;
she also taught
aerobics for awhile.
But her career
started to take
off when, in 1984,
a 14-year-old
Trevi met producer
Sergio Andrade,
who was about
28 at the time
and went on to
become her manager
and mentor as
well as her husband.
After briefly
singing with the
all-female group
Boquitas Pintadas
in the mid-‘80s,
Trevi became a
full-time solo
artist and, with
Andrade's help,
recorded her debut
solo album, Que
Hago Aqui?, in
1989. Released
on an independent
Mexican label,
that album and
its lead single
"Dr. Psiquiatra"
(which made it
to 1 on the Latin
charts) were a
smash--and in
1990, Trevi landed
a deal with RCA/BMG's
Latin division.
By 1993, she had
sold more than
five million albums
overall. The Mexican
Madonna was selling
out large venues
all over Latin
America, where
she embraced mostly
Spanish-language
material but also
performed covers
of songs by Zeppelin,
the Doors and
other English-speaking
rockers on stage.
Between her albums,
live performances
and racy pin-up
calendars (which
sold millions
of copies), someone
who had been dirt
poor as a child
had become one
of Mexico's wealthiest,
most affluent
and famous women.
Even
in the early ‘90s--long
before her well
publicized run-in
with the law--Trevi
was extremely
controversial.
The thing that
made her so shocking
to social conservatives
in Mexico and
other Latin American
countries was
her image--an
image as defiantly
and blatantly
sexual as Prince
or Madonna. Like
Madonna--who she
has often been
compared to--and
Prince, Trevi
promoted sexual
freedom in a very
in-your-face way.
Trevi wasn't the
only female artist
of Mexican descent
who was often
compared to Madonna
in the ‘90s;
the late tejano
star Selena (a
bilingual Chicana
from Texas) was
also described
as one of Madonna's
Mexican counterparts.
But Selena, for
all her sex appeal,
was never as controversial
or over-the-top
as Trevi, whose
live performances
went out of their
way to shock,
taunt and offend
social conservatives.
Trevi's antics
included wearing
a bandolier of
condoms across
her bare chest
and bringing young
male fans on stage
so that she could
strip them down
to their underwear.
But there was
more to Trevi
than shock value
and titillation--much,
much more. Her
material often
had a decidedly
feminist outlook,
and she brought
a sociopolitical
perspective to
topics like out-of-wedlock
pregnancies, drugs
and abortion.
Upsetting social
conservatives
was exactly what
Trevi set out
to do; in many
respects, she
was the Mexican
equivalent of
a Riot Grrrl.
Some Latino journalists
have compared
her to Irish agitator
Sinead O'Connor--a
very outspoken
feminist--and
Trevi was often
quoted as saying
that she hoped
to run for president
of Mexico someday.
In fact, one of
her pin-up calendars
depicted her as
a nude presidential
candidate.
The
singer's career
was seriously
interrupted in
the late ‘90s,
when Mexican law
enforcement officials
accused Trevi,
manager/ex-husband
Andrade and choreographer/backup
singer Maria Raquenel
Portillo, a.k.a,
Mary Boquitas,
of corrupting
minors, sexual
abuse and kidnapping.
The authorities'
main witness was
singer Karina
Yapor, who was
only 12 when,
in 1996, she left
her native Chihuahua
to live with Trevi
and Andrade in
Mexico City. Yapor
went to them for
musical training,
but Mexican officials
alleged that Trevi
and Portillo (who
recorded a solo
album for Sony's
Latin division
in 1995) brought
the aspiring singer
to Mexico City
in order for her
to have sex with
the much older
Andrade. Yapor
was only 13 when
she became pregnant--allegedly
by Andrade--and
she has since
written a book
about her experiences
with Trevi and
Andrade, who she
accused of "horrible
physical and psychological
abuse." Subsequently,
the case against
them became even
stronger when
two other aspiring
Mexican singers,
Karola de la Cuesta
and her sister
Katia de la Cuesta,
came forward and
made allegations
of sexual abuse
against Trevi
and Andrade. Trevi
hired the de la
Cuesta sisters
as backup singers
when they were
still adolescents;
Mexican police
have alleged that
Trevi was actually
recruiting them
for Andrade's
sexual pleasure.
And in 1999, another
teenage singer
who Trevi allegedly
recruited, Delia
Gonzalez, told
Mexican television
that Andrade forced
her to make a
pornographic movie
in San Diego,
CA and that he
"raped me
for nine months…He
would get mad
and spit on me,
he would strap
me, he would lock
me in a room."
Between Yapor,
Gonzalez, the
de la Cuesta sisters
and Andrade's
ex-wife Aline
Hernandez (who
made many of the
same allegations
of sexual abuse),
Mexican law enforcement
felt that the
case against Trevi
and Andrade was
incredibly damning.
Once praised by
social progressives
for encouraging
sexual liberation
and female empowerment,
Trevi found herself
being accused
of promoting sexual
enslavement and
female oppression.
Nonetheless, Trevi
still had her
share of diehard
fans who refused
to see her as
villain; some
fans have argued
that she was manipulated
by Andrade and
was very much
a victim herself.
But Trevi's detractors,
including Yapor
and Gonzalez,
have asserted
that she knew
exactly what she
was doing and
was a very willing
accomplice in
his alleged crimes.
The
Laredo Morning
Times quoted Hernandez
(who has often
described ex-husband
Andrade as a sadistic,
controlling misogynist)
as saying, "I
think Gloria arrived
as innocent as
the rest of us
were. If Gloria
contributed to
all this, it is
because (Andrade)
made her ill,
turned her, trained
her, educated
her in his way."
When
prosecutors accused
Trevi, Andrade
and Portillo of
crimes that were
major felonies
under Mexican
law, they denied
all charges and
ended up fleeing
to Brazil. In
early 2000, they
were apprehended
in Rio de Janeiro,
where they vowed
to fight extradition
back to Mexico.
Trevi was being
held in a Brazilian
federal prison
when she became
pregnant; at first,
she claimed to
have been raped
by a prison guard,
but Trevi subsequently
recanted that
story when DNA
tests proved that
Andrade was the
father of Angel
Gabriel (the baby
son she had given
birth to). Exactly
how Trevi became
pregnant with
Andrade's son
behind bars is
unclear; officially,
she was denied
conjugal visits,
although there
was speculation
that Trevi and
Andrade bribed
a guard (who arranged
for them to have
sex). Some Brazilian
prison officials
have alleged that
Trevi became pregnant
on purpose through
artificial insemination,
possibly because
she believed that
getting pregnant
would help her
avoid extradition.
The Brazilian
government wasn't
quick to hand
the alleged offenders
over to the Mexican
authorities; in
April 2000, a
Brazilian federal
court ruled that
the evidence against
them needed to
be studied extensively
before Brazil
could agree to
Mexico's extradition
request. But in
late 2002--after
almost three years
behind bars in
Brazil--Trevi,
Andrade and Portillo
finally agreed
to quit fighting
extradition and
returned to Mexico
to stand trial.
In Mexico, Trevi's
return was every
bit the media
circus that the
O.J. Simpson trial
had been in the
U.S., and some
Mexican intellectuals
argued that the
country's media
were paying way
too much attention
to her case--often
at the expense
of serious political
and social issues
that needed to
be addressed.
To be sure, the
return of Trevi,
Andrade and Portillo
was the top story
in the Mexican
media, just as
the Simpson case
had dominated
the U.S. media
in the mid-‘90s--and
like Simpson,
they had a "dream
team" of
high-priced defense
attorneys (at
least 12). In
late 2002 and
2003, Trevi awaited
trail in the Aquiles
Serdan prison
near Chihuahua.
On
November 27 of
2003, Andrade
was jailed in
the same facility
as Trevi, but
they were not
allowed to get
in contact there.
On
February 24, 2004,
Trevi was expecting
to be set free
by Mexico's justice
system. She was
denied freedom
at the time. After
she learned that
she would not
be allowed to
go free, she began
a hunger strike.
On September 21,
2004, Trevi was
acquitted and
set free by a
Mexican court,
citing a lack
of evidence in
the case. She
had spent nearly
five years incarcerated
in Brazil and
Mexico.
Trevi
began a new nation-wide
tour 'Trevolucion'
that was sold
out. The tour
played arenas
like El Palacio
de Los Deportes
in Mexico in front
of 14,000+ fans
as well as Arena
Monterrey with
12,000+ fans in
attendance. The
tour was cancelled
when she arrived
to Puerto Rico
after taking a
pregnancy and
testing positive.
In
2006 Trevi made
a huge impact
in the Latin music
industry along
with her career
with 'Todos Me
Miran' and 'Sufran
Que Solo Yo Gozo'
from her album
'La Trayectoria'
with Sony hit
the Latin charts
for weeks on Latin
Billboard.
Several
awards followed
the success of
her album 'La
Trayectoria' throughout
the US and in
Mexico.
In
2007 Trevi then
began 'La Trayectoria
Tour' and was
the headliner
at 'El Reventon
Super Estrella
2007' in Los Angeles,
CA
In
August 2007 Gloria
Trevi is currently
engaged to her
lawyer Armando
Gomez and wedding
plans are scheduled
for the beginning
of 2008.
On
October 7, 2007
the release of
her new cd 'Una
Rosa Blu'