Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta was born on March 28, 1986, in New York City, the daughter of Joseph Germanotta, a successful internet entrepreneur, and Cynthia Germanotta. She grew up in the Upper West Side in a Catholic Italian-American household where music was serious: she began piano lessons at four, was playing by ear at five, and was performing her first original song before she was fourteen. She attended the Convent of the Sacred Heart, an elite private school on the Upper East Side, and was accepted to the Tisch School of the Arts at NYU at seventeen — one of a tiny number of applicants admitted early to the conservatory program. She left Tisch after her first year with her parents' agreement, believing that she would learn more by performing in Lower East Side clubs and writing pop music than she would in school.
Her early years in New York's club scene were a period of rapid artistic development and some personal difficulty — she has spoken publicly about an experience of sexual assault at nineteen by a music producer, and about the fibromyalgia that would later be diagnosed after years of mysterious pain. She developed the Lady Gaga persona through her work with music producer Rob Fusari, who reportedly coined the name as a reference to Queen's 'Radio Ga Ga.' She was signed to Interscope Records in 2007 and released 'Just Dance' in 2008, a song that became a global hit and established her immediately as one of the most distinctive creative voices in pop music — the combination of exceptional melodic instinct, theatrical visual imagination, and INFJ's characteristic desire to use art as a vehicle for genuine psychological and social content.
The years 2008–2013 produced a sequence of albums and performances — The Fame, The Fame Monster, Born This Way, ARTPOP — that established Gaga as the most significant pop artist of her generation. Born This Way (2011) and its title track, which addressed LGBTQ+ identity through the language of unconditional self-acceptance, became a cultural and commercial phenomenon: the album sold one million copies in its first five days, and the song became an anthem of the LGBTQ+ rights movement. Her Super Bowl LI halftime performance in 2017 — in which she descended from the stadium roof on a cable while performing a medley of her songs — was watched by 117 million viewers and became one of the most discussed halftime shows in the event's history. Her performance in Bradley Cooper's A Star Is Born (2018) demonstrated a dramatic range that surprised even those who recognized the theatrical quality of her music videos.
Gaga's INFJ quality is most visible in the way her most celebrated work is always simultaneously personal and universal — she takes what is most specific and potentially most shameful about her own experience (sexual assault, chronic pain, identity anxiety, outsider status) and transforms it into art that functions as permission for millions of people to acknowledge their own corresponding experience. This is the INFJ's essential artistic gesture: the deep dive into personal truth that surfaces as collective recognition. Her commitment to mental health advocacy through the Born This Way Foundation, her transparency about her own diagnoses and treatment, and her sustained investment in using her platform for purposes beyond self-promotion reflect the INFJ's characteristic sense of responsibility toward those who receive the vision.