Irene Cara, the singer and actress perhaps best-known for her Oscar-, Golden Globe- and Grammy Award-winning hit “Flashdance ... What a Feeling,” which she co-wrote and performed for the 1983 film “Flashdance,” has died. She was 63.
Cara’s publicist, Judith A. Moose, announced her passing in a statement via social media, writing in part, “This is the absolute worst part of being a publicist. I can’t believe I’ve had to write this, let alone release the news. Please share your thoughts and memories of Irene. I’ll be reading each and every one of them and know she’ll be smiling from Heaven. She adored her fans.”
The cause of death has not been revealed.
This is the absolute worst part of being a publicist. I can't believe I've had to write this, let alone release the news. Please share your thoughts and memories of Irene. I'll be reading each and every one of them and know she'll be smiling from Heaven. She adored her fans. - JM pic.twitter.com/TsC5BwZ3fh
— Irene Cara (@Irene_Cara) November 26, 2022
Cara skyrocketed to fame in 1980 with her hit “Fame,” which won as Oscar and Golden Globe Award for best original song from the film of the same name. Cara also co-starred in the cult classic film about New York’s High School for the Performing Arts as student Coco Hernandez. A second song from the movie’s soundtrack, the piano-driven ballad “Out Here On My Own,” which Cara also performed, became a worldwide hit for the singer.
Cara was born in New York City on March 18, 1959. She began her show business career in the 1970s with a recurring role on the PBS kids series “Electric Company.” Her other film roles include 1976’s “Sparkle” and the 1989 animated feature “Happily Ever After” in which she voiced the character Snow White.
In the 1990s, Cara starred as Mary Magdalene opposite Ted Neeley as Jesus and Styx frontman Dennis DeYoung as Pontius Pilate in the national touring production of the stage musical “Jesus Christ Superstar,” which played the Chicago Theatre in 1993.
More to come....