Thirty-five years ago, in the fall of 1986, women with rock foundations and pop sensibilities were doing quite well on the charts. Three acts in particular were drawing sizable attention\u2014and they were all singing on the same album: Cyndi Lauper\u2019s True Colors, which featured backing vocals by the Bangles and \u2019Til Tuesday\u2019s Aimee Mann.\nIt turns out these women had more than that brief coincidence in common. Lauper, Mann and the Bangles came up at the same postpunk, new-wave moment in \u201980s pop. And they fought many of the same battles: record-label machinations\u2026a media that stoked rivalries, whether or not they existed\u2026and a sexist music industry that repeatedly underestimated their skills. In this Hit Parade episode, Chris Molanphy recounts how these women emerged from distinctive rock scenes\u2013\u2013from punk-era New York and Boston, to L.A.\u2019s Paisley Underground\u2014then outgrew them. They found critical and commercial acclaim and remain influential decades later, in a variety of media, from Hollywood to Broadway. What forces were they up against, and how did they fight to define themselves?\xa0\nPodcast production by Asha Saluja.\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices