Chavela Vargas (born April 17, 1919, San Joaquín de Flores, Costa Rica—died August 5, 2012, Cuernavaca, Mexico) was a Costa Rican-born Mexican singer who blended ferocity and warmth in her dramatic and revolutionary interpretations of Mexico’s ranchera songs. Ranchera music was typically sung in a sentimental style by men accompanied by guitars, trumpets, and other instruments, but Vargas performed in a stripped-down fashion with only a guitar and sang with raw emotion.
Vargas immigrated to Mexico as a teenager and launched her singing career in the 1940s in Mexico City. She dressed in men’s pants and ponchos, smoked cigars, and drank to notorious excess. She became close friends with artists Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo, and Kahlo was one of the many women with whom Vargas was rumoured to have had affairs. In 1961 Vargas released Noche Bohemia (“Bohemian Night”), the first of more than 80 recordings. She struggled with alcohol problems, however, and vanished from the stage in the 1970s.
Vargas reemerged in the early 1990s and launched a remarkable international comeback, championed by Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar, who used her music in several of his films. Vargas formally announced her homosexuality (previously an open secret) in her autobiography, Y si quieres saber de mi pasado (2002; “And If You Want to Know About My Past”). She received a lifetime achievement award from the Latin Recording Academy in 2007.