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Taylor Swift sued for trademark infringement over ‘Life of a Showgirl’

By Thomson Reuters Mar 30, 2026 | 11:03 AM

By Blake Brittain

March 30 (Reuters) – Pop megastar Taylor Swift was sued by a Las Vegas performer on Monday who said Swift’s latest hit album “The Life of a ​Showgirl” violates her trademark rights.

Maren Wade said in the ‌complaint that marketing for Swift’s album threatened to “drown out” her long-running “Confessions of a Showgirl” stage show and asked the court to block Swift from creating confusion with her album title.

Spokespeople for Swift and her label Universal ‌Music ​Group, also a defendant, did not immediately ⁠respond to a request ⁠for comment.

Wade’s attorney Jaymie Parkkinen said they “have great respect for Swift’s talent and success, but trademark law exists to ensure that creators at all levels can protect what they’ve built.”

“The ​Life of a Showgirl,” Swift’s 12th album, was released in October and shattered Spotify streaming records on its way to becoming ⁠the biggest-selling album of 2025.

Wade said ⁠in the complaint that she began writing her “Confessions ​of a Showgirl” column for Las Vegas Weekly in 2014.

She said ​she has since toured a stage show with the ‌same name featuring “candid and often humorous accounts of the challenges and absurdities of a career in the entertainment industry, from getting stuck inside a giant birthday cake to impersonating a Madonna ⁠impersonator.”

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office rejected Swift’s application last year for a federal “Life of a Showgirl” trademark covering “musical performances and live entertainment ⁠services,” citing potential ‌confusion with Wade’s pre-existing “Confessions of a Showgirl” ⁠trademark.

Wade said in the complaint that Swift’s continued ​use ‌of the “Life of a Showgirl” name “drowns out” her ​trademark “until consumers ⁠begin to assume that the original is the imitation.”

“What Plaintiff had built over twelve years, Defendants threatened to swallow in weeks,” Wade said.

Wade requested a court order blocking Swift’s use of her “Showgirl” brand and unspecified monetary damages.

(Reporting by Blake Brittain in Washington; Editing ​by Kevin Liffey)