
Ten years after her murder, the Tejano icon lives on
Whether or not Selena changed Tejano's status quo, she certainly changed the genre
My short, happy friendship with Selena
How I learned to stop worrying and love the Tejano princess
Collective recordings of Selena span a number of genres
Pictures of Selena throughout her career, and after her death

Pictures of Selena throughout her career, and after her death

A promotional photograph for the three-disc
Anthology: A 30 Song Retrospective, released in 1998.

Selena performs at the 1993 Houston Livestock
Show & Rodeo, setting an attendance record.

Selena performs at the 1994 rodeo.

Selena performs at Astroworld in July 1994.

Selena sings at Corpus Christi's Cunningham
Elementary School in November 1994.

Selena's Grammy award, for her 1993
album Selena Live, is on display at the
Selena Museum in Corpus Christi.

Selena shows off the costumes that she designed for her concerts.

Selena records at a Corpus Christi studio in February 1995.

A bronze bust covers Selena's gravesite in Corpus Christi.

A monument on Corpus Christi Bay honors Selena.

The Selena Museum in Corpus Christi attracts
about 100 visitors per week, including 6-year-old
Eunice Garcia who came with family members
from Austin and Chihuahua, Mexico.

A portrait of Selena sits on the porch of a house in north Houston.

Spectators at the Low and Slow Classic Car Show in
San Antonio stop by a car memorializing Selena.

Becky Lee Meza and Jennifer Lopez appear at a press
conference in June 1996 to announce that they
would play Selena in a movie about her life.

Selena's story hit the stage in 2000 with Selena Forever,
starring Veronica Vazquez as Selena.

Selena's brother, A.B. Quintanilla, shows off a tattoo
of his sister as his band, Los Kumbia Kings, arrives
at the Latin Grammy Awards in 2000.

Edward James Olmos, from left, Myrka Dellanos, Abraham Quintanilla,
Bobby Pulido and Suzette Quintanilla announce plans for the
Selena Vive! all-star concert.