It feels like yesterday. But really it was 51 years ago this month, when a Brooklyn native left Virginia and returned to New York to pursue a career in music, unaware she was about to become one of the defining voices not just for women in rock, but ’80s rock as a whole.
We’re talking, of course, about Pat Benetar, who would help shape the sound of MTV-era radio with a string of power ballads, new wave, and arena-rock hits that blended power, precision, and attitude.
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Teaming with guitarist and producer Neil Giraldo, whom she married in 1982 and has remained married to ever since (❤️), Benetar broke through with her 1979 debut album, In the Heat of the Night. The single “Heartbreaker” introduced her powerhouse vocals to a wider audience and set the stage for what came next. In August 1980, “You Better Run” made history as the second-ever video played on MTV, while “Hit Me With Your Best Shot” pushed Benetar further into mainstream success.
But it was her 1983 pop-rock anthem, “Love Is a Battlefield,” that marked her ultimate takeover. Written by Holly Knight and Mike Chapman, the song was originally conceived as a ballad — slow, restrained, melodic. However, that is not how Benetar heard it.
“When Mike and I first heard [the finished version] we were horrified,” Knight told Songfacts. “We hated it, because it was so different. But then it became such a huge hit.”
Benetar’s version transformed the song into a driving pop-rock anthem, powered by urgency and defiance. Released on her Live From Earth album, the song became her biggest international hit, reaching No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100and topping the Rock Tracks chart. It also earned Benetar a Grammy Award and helped cement her status as one of MTV’s defining stars, boosted by the track’s iconic “runaway video.”
Since its release, the song’s cultural footprint has only grown. It’s appeared in films like 13 Going On 30, Small Soldiers, and Prom Pact, and has resurfaced in television series including Stranger Things, Drop Dead Diva, and Rivals. Decades later, it remains a future on “best of the ’80s” and Pat BenatarEssentials rankings alike.
What began as a rejected ballad became an MTV-era defining hit — and a reminder that sometimes the biggest hits arrive when you change the plan entirely. Consider the war won.
Related: 1981 Timeless Anthem Inspired by Janis Joplin Became One of Rock’s First No. 1 Hits








