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A Classy Filipina Diva! from ms. Saigon to fame http://groups.yahoo.com/group/asianamericanartistry/message/5495 http://groups.yahoo.com/group/asianamericanartistry/message/5699 http://groups.yahoo.com/group/asianamericanartistry/message/5676 http://groups.yahoo.com/group/asianamericanartistry/message/5711 http://groups.yahoo.com/group/asianamericanartistry/message/5817 http://groups.yahoo.com/group/asianamericanartistry/message/5731 new-05-04.html#lea-salonga INTERNET NEWS, February 2, 2005 (For additional information, Cast at age 18 in the title role of the original London and New York She launches a U.S. concert tour on February 12, the night before Salonga says that as a child she dreamed of becoming a psychiatrist. Salonga says she was pleased to be asked to host Harmony in Produced by Oblate Media and Communication Corporation with funding The Bishop's document continues to call the Asian/Pacific Islander Featured in the program are: Most Rev. Mar Jacob Angadiath, Bishop She's won a Tony, an Olivier, Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle Lea Salonga made her professional debut at the age of 7 in Repertory
Philippines' production of The King And I and has since appeared in Cat
On A Hot Tin Roof, Fiddler On The Roof,
The Rose Tattoo, Annie, The Sound Of Music, The
Goodbye Girl, Paper Moon and The Fantasticks. At the age of 10 she began
her recording career and received a gold record for her first album Small
Voice. She has also hosted her own musical television show, Love, Lea,
and opened for Stevie Wonder during his concerts in Mani la. In 1989,
Lea went to London to play the role of Kim in the hit musical Miss Saigon
for which she received a Laurence Olivier Award, and in 1991 went on to
portray that role on Broadway where she garnered the Tony, Drama Desk
and Outer Critics Circle A wards. While in Miss Saigon Lea recorded the
singing voice of Jasmine for the Walt Disney animated hit Aladdin, and
soon after recorded the role of Tuptim in a new recording of The King
And I with Julie Andrews, Ben Kingsley and the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra.
In 1993 Lea played the role of street waif Eponine in the Broadway production of Les Miserables, then flew to Los Angeles to perform the song "A Whole New World" at the 65th Annual Academy Awards, where the song won an Oscar. In the same year she released her self-titled international debut album with Atlantic Records, which has gone platinum and gold in parts of Southeast Asia.
Two years ago Lea played the role of Eliza Doolittle in Repertory Philippines' My Fair Lady and the role of the Witch in Singapore Repertory Theatre's Into The Woods. She was also the opening act for Frank Sinatra's Manila concerts, then performed at the Hollywood Bowl in a concert entitled Arabian Nights at the Hollywood Bowl as part of World Cup Week 1994.
From December 1994-February 1995 Lea played the role of Sandy Dumbrowski in Team Image Entertainment's production of Grease in Manila, and appeared in a special concert called The
Music Of Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schonberg with other Filipino arti sts performing selections from the musicals Les Miserables and Miss Saigon. She made her US television film debut when she played the role of Geri Riordan in Hallmark Hall Of Fame's Redwood Curtain on ABC with Jeff Daniels and John Lithgow. Currently her voice can be heard in a new single recorded with Peabo Bryson called "How Wonderful We Are" which is part of a new album called People, which also includes selections by other artists such as Vanessa Williams, Al Jarreau and Chaka Khan.
She made yet another appearance at the Hollywood Bowl this summer in a concert called Music Tells A Tale, appearing with Tyne Daly and Reese Holland. Lea was chosen to play the role of Eponine in the Les Miserables 10th Anniversary Concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London on October 8, 1995, and performed with Colm Wilkinson, Michael Ball, Ruthie Henshall and Judy Kuhn, among others. She will also be the singing voice of the lead for a new Walt Disney animated film called The Legend Of Mulan. Last November 1995 in Manila, she performed in a concert called Music and Miracles for the benefit of the victims of Typhoon Angela, and early this year returned to London's West End as Eponine in Les Miserables.
Lea has performed for former President and Mrs. George Bush, HRH Queen Elizabeth II and President Bill Clinton.
To read the rest of this article by Jeffrey Chew, which includes all the Awards/Recognition, performances (including the roles and shows) and her film/television performances, please enter HERE.
If you want to read the transcripts of the various Internet Chats that Lea have had, just click
HERE,
HERE or
HERE. To view some pictures
of Lea in Ms. Saigon, feel free to enter the
THE PICTURE ZONE.
OTHER LEA WEBSITES ARE THE FOLLOWING
LATEST NEWS:
Visit HERE to read about her leading role in David Henry Hwang's new "Flower Drum Song." NOTE: Jose Llana, Charlene Caaarebeo, Robert Pendilla and Jennifer Paz are the other Filipinos in the cast.
After Flower Drum Song, her staging of "Proof" by Atlantis Productions will occuring during January 2002. Bobby Garcia is the director of Lea's performance in this "non-musical" / straight play - her first since her appearance in "The Bad Seed" for Reportory Philippines when she was nine.
In February 2002, Lea will have two concerts at the PICC with (hopefully) Martin Neivera as her special guests.
In 2002, she will participate in promoting her latest album, "Songs from the Screen" with BMG Records. The music was recorded live from a concert with the Manila Philharmonic Orchestra in September 2000 with Gerald Salonga as the music director/conductor.
Her television commercial for the clothing company Bayo will be seen.
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