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From her outrageous fashion to chart-topping dance-pop anthems, Lady Gaga epitomizes the ambitious performer unafraid to push creative boundaries. Ranking among the best-selling musical artists in history with 12 Guinness World Records, Gaga carved space redefining artistry for a new generation of outsiders. This is her story. 1986-2004: Formative Years Born Stefani Germanotta on March 28, 1986, she grew up in Manhattan as the eldest child of Cynthia and internet entrepreneur Joseph Germanotta. A piano prodigy from age 4, Gaga attended the Convent of the Sacred Heart school where she played lead roles in productions like Adelaide in “Guys and Dolls.” Though bullied for her eccentricities, young Stefani found refuge in creative arts and spent weekends performing in NYC clubs as a teenager. By 17 she was admitted early to Tisch School of the Arts at NYU before dropping out at 19 to pursue music professionally. Her college boyfriend inspired the name “Lady Gaga” after the Queen song “Radio Ga Ga.” 2005-2007: Career Beginnings Lady Gaga spent years hustling as an unsigned artist and songwriter, refining her sound and building her team called “Haus of Gaga.” She absorbed diverse influences ranging from David Bowie and Queen to Madonna and the Scissor Sisters. As one of the only female artists producing her own electronic dance tracks, Gaga cut her teeth in small clubs while penning songs for established artists to pay bills in hopes of being signed someday herself. Her flair for fashion also attracted creative collaborators early on. Paired with emerging designer friends specialized in leather, fishnets and spike studs, Gaga cultivated an androgynous electropop aesthetic unlike anything in pop. The more Gaga merged trashy glam fashion with pulsing darkwave beats, the more her captivating performances made waves across downtown NYC clubs, building key industry buzz. In 2007 hip producer Akon discovered Gaga’s three-song demo and promptly signed her to his label Kon Live Distribution under Interscope. She dropped out of a touring production to migrate to Los Angeles so Akon and producer RedOne could nurture her debut album vision to fruition. 2008: The Fame Release Brings Stardom On August 19, 2008, Lady Gaga's first studio album “The Fame” dropped led by cornerstone singles “Just Dance” and “Poker Face.” The infectious dance tracks showcased her knack for catchy melodies with a quirky theatrical spin. Media and clubgoers quickly gravitated toward this colorful new persona and pop fantasy world she created around themes of sex, money and self-image. “The Fame” album went on to sell 15 million copies worldwide. Its glossy visual aesthetics in music videos directed fame-hungry youth culture yet sagely warned about its darker facets too. Lead singles hit #1 across global charts, gaining Gaga opening slots on arena tours with New Kids on the Block and the Pussycat Dolls. Suddenly this pop outsider emerged leading the vanguard and defining a new cultural decade to come. 2009-2011: Becoming a Global Icon Lady Gaga spent 2009 promoting “The Fame” around the world before dropping a surprise extended play sequel “The Fame Monster” right before embarking on her first headlining tour “Monster Ball.” Hit singles “Bad Romance” and “Telephone” featuring Beyoncé continued displays of her avant garde fusion of Deep House beats with sugary choruses - now accentuated by her increasingly avant-garde fashion. From elevated shoulder pads and gravity-defying heels to raw meat dresses and gigantic egg incubation vessels at red carpet events - Lady Gaga constantly challenged taboos around identity, sexuality and presentation through her sci-fi couture. And her Little Monster fans passionately embraced the invitations for bold self-expression her art extended across the globe. By 2010, Gaga stood as the most followed person on social media, named by Time as among the world’s most influential people. Achieving such intense fame at 24 fueled growing pains, however. Incessant touring exhausted Lady Gaga with damaged relationships, loneliness, substance struggles and worsening mental illnesses in her late 20s. But true to form, the pop maverick converted such tumult toward her craft - entering her most theatrical, introspective era yet in 2013. 2013-2014: Shifting Toward Experimentation The year 2013 brought Lady Gaga’s highly anticipated third studio album “ARTPOP,” catapulting an EDM-infused multimedia experience accompanying a feature-length film, mobile app and more. Lyrically “ARTPOP” revealed more intimate insecurities than ever before amidst swirling sonic psychosis and vocal acrobatics. From pop art rave anthems like “Applause” to tear-stained confessions like “Dope” - Gaga threw open vulnerable doors on the darker sides of fame. If “ARTPOP” as an album confused some expecting safer radio fare, no such concern plagued her 2014 jazz duets project with ...