Iconic 90s girl band member reveals she’s now homeless and has been living in her car for three years

Dawn Robinson, a founding member of the R&B girl-group En Vogue, just revealed that she’s homeless and has been living in her car for the past three years.

The 58-year-old singer told fans how she has fallen on hard times in a heartbreaking video posted to YouTube on Tuesday.

It comes just weeks after her former band announced that they would be embarking on a lucrative European tour, even gushing about bringing back a different member to the group, calling her their ‘sister.’ 

But Dawn, who first quit the band in 1997, has a much less glamorous reality which she explained to fans. 

‘If you guys were with me, what in 2020, I did like 105K interviews and in the interim I was living with my parents in [Las] Vegas and that was wonderful until it wasn’t. I love my mom [Barbara Alexander] but she became very angry and [she was taking] a lot of her anger out on me. 

‘I was her target all the time and I was like, “I can’t deal with this.” Like, I respect her too much. I didn’t understand it I still don’t, It hurt me.’

The eight-time Grammy nominee’s manager offered her to stay at his $1,700/month apartment in Los Angeles, but there was ‘not enough room’ for her since they both owned dogs (her 16-year-old dog Max has since passed away).

‘So it turned into, “Okay, I’m going to put you in a hotel for the night.” And that one night turned into eight months [at $3K/month]. Oh my God, you guys I was like, “No, this is unacceptable,”‘ Dawn scoffed.

Dawn Robinson (L, pictured in 1990), a founding member of the R&B girl-group En Vogue, just revealed that she’s homeless and has been living in her car for the past three years

'I said it, oh my gosh, it's out!' the 58-year-old singer marveled in her YouTube vlog Tuesday

‘I said it, oh my gosh, it’s out!’ the 58-year-old singer marveled in her YouTube vlog Tuesday

By 2022, Robinson researched ‘car life’ culture and decided to give it a shot: ‘I felt free. I felt like I was on a camping trip. It just felt like it was the right thing to do.’

The Connecticut-born belter spent her first night in her car in Malibu – most likely the Paradise Cove Mobile Home Park – which she called ‘scary.’

‘But then as I got to know what to do in my car and how to do it, like, how to cover my windows and you don’t talk to certain people,’ Dawn noted.

‘You’re careful of telling people that you’re alone, as a woman especially, and I’m a celebrity [so] I don’t just divulge that to people.’

Robinson immediately enjoyed ‘the sense of freedom’ that she felt: ‘I felt like I was on a camping trip. I just felt like it was the right thing to do. I didn’t regret it. You know, a lot of celebrities have lived in their cars.’ 

Indeed, there’s a long list of celebrities who fell on hard times over the years including Hilary Swank, Jewel, Steve Harvey, Kelly Clarkson, Sam Worthington, Drew Carey, Suze Orman, and Tyler Perry. 

But don’t pity the lyric soprano as living in her car was a choice she needed to make to ‘go through this fire’ and she has her brother Evin, assistant Niecy, and ‘forever mother-in-law’ to lean on.

‘You may have heard of something called the dark night of the soul,’ Dawn explained.

The eight-time Grammy nominee moved in with her parents in 2020 until her mother Barbara Alexander took 'a lot of her anger out on me'

'I was her target all the time and I was like, "I can't deal with this." Like, I respect her too much. I didn't understand it I still don't, It hurt me'

The eight-time Grammy nominee moved in with her parents in 2020 until her mother Barbara Alexander took ‘a lot of her anger out on me’

By 2022, Robinson researched 'car life' culture and decided to give it a shot: 'I felt free. I felt like I was on a camping trip. It just felt like it was the right thing to do'

By 2022, Robinson researched ‘car life’ culture and decided to give it a shot: ‘I felt free. I felt like I was on a camping trip. It just felt like it was the right thing to do’

‘That’s when you go through like a period of isolation, a period of separating yourself from family and friends, and I’m definitely I’m in the trenches of this right now. [But] I wouldn’t trade my experiences and what I’ve gone through for the world.’

Proving she still has her sense of humor, Robinson laughed: ‘Just so you guys know, I have a gym membership and I shower there. I’m a Funky Diva but I’m not funky!’

The Free Your Mind hitmaker has been proudly filming her journey for a future documentary and envisions her eventual resurgence.

‘I mean society tends to look down on people for living off-grid when I tell you off grid is exactly what a lot of people are going to start doing,’ said Dawn, urging her fans to do something ‘scary.’

‘Would I have an apartment right now if I had a choice? I would. I’m not going to lie, but am I glad that I did this. Absolutely proud of what I’ve accomplished out here.’

Robinson auditioned for En Vogue in 1989 and reportedly first quit in 1997 over contract disputes before returning for stints with the group in 2005 and 2008-2011. 

Robinson reportedly first quit En Vogue in 1997 over contract disputes before returning for stints with the group in 2005 and 2008-2011 and 2019.

‘When Dawn left the group, it derailed their momentum,’ producer Thomas McElroy told Wax Poetics last November.

Robinson auditioned for En Vogue in 1989 and reportedly first quit in 1997 over contract disputes before returning for stints with the group in 2005 and 2008-2011 and 2019 (pictured in 1991)

Robinson auditioned for En Vogue in 1989 and reportedly first quit in 1997 over contract disputes before returning for stints with the group in 2005 and 2008-2011 and 2019 (pictured in 1991)

Producer Thomas McElroy told Wax Poetics last November: 'When Dawn left the group, it derailed their momentum. It changed the dynamic of the group. It affected their relationship with the record company, and how much confidence they had in the group'

Producer Thomas McElroy told Wax Poetics last November: ‘When Dawn left the group, it derailed their momentum. It changed the dynamic of the group. It affected their relationship with the record company, and how much confidence they had in the group’

He continued: 'The legacy is in place, but there was so much that was unfulfilled that I felt could have happened. Even to this day, I feel bad that all the girls aren't together, reaping the benefits of their legacy'

He continued: ‘The legacy is in place, but there was so much that was unfulfilled that I felt could have happened. Even to this day, I feel bad that all the girls aren’t together, reaping the benefits of their legacy’

Founding member Cindy Herron-Braggs added: 'Dawn has just decided she doesn't want to work with us again' (pictured February 16)

Founding member Cindy Herron-Braggs added: ‘Dawn has just decided she doesn’t want to work with us again’ (pictured February 16)

On February 16, En Vogue brought back founding member Maxine Jones (2-R) - who quit in 2001 to focus on motherhood - to perform with them at the 74th NBA All-Star Game alongside Rhona Bennett (who joined in 2004), Terry Ellis, and Cindy

On February 16, En Vogue brought back founding member Maxine Jones (2-R) – who quit in 2001 to focus on motherhood – to perform with them at the 74th NBA All-Star Game alongside Rhona Bennett (who joined in 2004), Terry Ellis, and Cindy

Terry (R) said: 'We've simply never stopped working. It's a blessing that our fans have been very accepting of whatever version of En Vogue they were getting, and that they have allowed us to continue working. So thank you, Jesus, and thank you to our fans'

Terry (R) said: ‘We’ve simply never stopped working. It’s a blessing that our fans have been very accepting of whatever version of En Vogue they were getting, and that they have allowed us to continue working. So thank you, Jesus, and thank you to our fans’

‘It changed the dynamic of the group. It affected their relationship with the record company, and how much confidence they had in the group. And I said it often: they are En Vogue. Yes, we built and we conceptualized it, but they are their own brand now.

‘The legacy is in place, but there was so much that was unfulfilled that I felt could have happened. Even to this day, I feel bad that all the girls aren’t together, reaping the benefits of their legacy.’

Founding member Cindy Herron-Braggs added: ‘Dawn has just decided she doesn’t want to work with us again.’ 

On February 16, En Vogue brought back founding member Maxine Jones – who quit in 2001 to focus on motherhood – to perform with them at the 74th NBA All-Star Game alongside Rhona Bennett (who joined in 2004), Terry Ellis, and Cindy. 

En Vogue still averages 1.9M monthly listeners on Spotify, they have 26M YouTube views, and they’ve sold over 20M records.

The Funky Divas have had many hit songs including Hold On, Free Your Mind, Never Gonna Get It, Giving Him Something He Can Feel, Don’t Let Go, and Whatta Man (feat. Salt N Pepa).

The ladies are booked and busy with their next gig happening March 28 at the Thunder Valley Casino Resort in Lincoln, CA.

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