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[[File:Cynthia Crane.jpg|thumb|Cynthia Crane (2009).]]
[[File:Cynthia Crane.jpg|thumb|Cynthia Crane (2009).]]


'''Cynthia Crane''' (born 1936) is a New York City-based [[jazz]] and [[cabaret]] singer who has performed locally for forty years. She has been reviewed by the ''[[New York Times]]'', ''Jazz Now'', ''[[Jazz Times]]'', ''Daily [[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' and ''[[Time Out New York]]''. John S. Wilson, in the ''New York Times'', called her "Polished and compelling."<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1990/02/11/arts/reviews-music-cynthia-crane-cabaret.html John S. Wilson, "Reviews/Music; Cynthia Crane, Cabaret"], ''New York Times'', February 11, 1990.</ref> In 2009 she became a victim in the [[Bernard Madoff]] financial fraud scheme and was forced to sell her 1855 Greenwich Village Brownstone and 1909 [[Steinway & Sons|Steinway]] grand piano as a result.<ref>[http://www.nydailynews.com/money/2009/03/14/2009-03-14_bernard_madoff_victim_singer_cynthia_cra.html "Bernard Madoff victim, singer Cynthia Crane robbed of Steinway piano"], ''Daily News'', March 15, 2009.</ref>
'''Cynthia Crane''' (born 1936) is a New York City-based [[jazz]] and [[cabaret]] singer who has performed locally for forty years. She has been reviewed by ''[[The New York Times]]'', ''Jazz Now'', ''[[Jazz Times]]'', ''Daily [[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' and ''[[Time Out New York]]''. John S. Wilson, in ''The New York Times'', called her "Polished and compelling."<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1990/02/11/arts/reviews-music-cynthia-crane-cabaret.html John S. Wilson, "Reviews/Music; Cynthia Crane, Cabaret"], ''The New York Times'', February 11, 1990.</ref> In 2009 she became a victim in the [[Bernard Madoff]] financial fraud scheme and was forced to sell her 1855 Greenwich Village Brownstone and 1909 [[Steinway & Sons|Steinway]] grand piano as a result.<ref>[http://www.nydailynews.com/money/2009/03/14/2009-03-14_bernard_madoff_victim_singer_cynthia_cra.html "Bernard Madoff victim, singer Cynthia Crane robbed of Steinway piano"], ''Daily News'', March 15, 2009.</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 13:51, 30 July 2017

Cynthia Crane (2009).

Cynthia Crane (born 1936) is a New York City-based jazz and cabaret singer who has performed locally for forty years. She has been reviewed by The New York Times, Jazz Now, Jazz Times, Daily Variety and Time Out New York. John S. Wilson, in The New York Times, called her "Polished and compelling."[1] In 2009 she became a victim in the Bernard Madoff financial fraud scheme and was forced to sell her 1855 Greenwich Village Brownstone and 1909 Steinway grand piano as a result.[2]

References

Official website