Follow the sequins, technicolor tutu skirts and bewigged heads lining up outside of Tinley Park’s Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre, and you’ve found the gates welcoming you to firebrand Cyndi Lauper’s “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun Farewell Tour.”

With over 50 years in the industry — collecting Grammy, Emmy and Tony awards and a 2025 induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame — and just beyond the 40 years since the release of her debut album, 1983’s “She’s So Unusual,” the most eccentric of pop’s powerhouses gave a final bow on the second leg of her last arena tour for a packed house Tuesday night. She reveled in her biggest hits, funniest stories, and a grand production that she said has been decades of dreams and persistence in the making.

Ahead of this tour, which resumed in July after kicki

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