Before “Lost in Your Eyes” became a Billboard No. 1 hit, Debbie Gibson debuted it the old-fashioned way — performing it live on tour in 1988. Back then, without social media, the best way to see if a song would hit was right there on stage. 

At the time, Gibson was already one of pop’s rising young stars. Her 1987 debut album, Out of the Blue, produced four Billboard Hot 100 top 10 hits, including the self-written smash “Foolish Beat.” 

With that single, she became the youngest female artist to write, produce and perform a No. 1 hit on the Hot 100. Still, she couldn’t wait to share what she felt was her next big song. 

“I was so excited about this song that I couldn’t wait to perform, so I did a sneak preview live on tour way before it was ever released,” Gibson recalled to Billboard.

And her instincts paid off. Released as the lead single from her 1989 sophomore album, Electric Youth, “Lost in Your Eyes” soared to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, where it remained for three consecutive weeks beginning with the chart dated March 4, 1989. 

The momentum carried over to the album charts. A week later, Electric Youth began a five-week run at No. 1 on the Billboard 200. 

In the March 11, 1989 issue of Billboard, columnist Paul Grein noted that Gibson had become the first female teen artist ever to hold the No. 1 pop album and single simultaneously — an accomplishment previously achieved by legends such as Stevie Wonder, Olivia Newton-John, Elton John, Billy Joel and George Michael.

As for how she pulled it off at just 17, Gibson explained that it simply came naturally. “I remember the day I got home from school and sat at the piano and this song poured out of me,” she recalled. 

“It really was a composite of different things going on in my puppy love high school love life and I barely stopped to change a note or a word. It was simply my job to transcribe what the universe was dropping in. I was so excited about this song that I couldn’t wait to perform, so I did a sneak preview live on tour way before it was ever released.”

Beyond its chart success, “Lost in Your Eyes” stands as one of the quintessential love ballads of the ‘80s, remaining a favorite for weddings and anniversaries. 

Electric Youth went on to produce four Hot 100 hits. After “Lost in Your Eyes,” Gibson returned to the top 20 with the title track, “No More Rhyme” and the fan favorite “We Could Be Together.”

Gibson’s Billboard success has continued in recent years. In 2021, she released The Body Remembers, her first album of all-new material in two decades, landing on Billboard’s Top Current Albums and Top Album Sales charts. 

A year later, her seasonal collection Winterlicious reached the top 20 of the Top Holiday Albums chart. 

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