From starting her career in the Philippines, Lea Salonga has made a name around the world. But beyond charming the globe with her crystalline voice, she is a Filipina icon who carries many historic achievements under her belt, such as being the first Asian actress to win a prestigious theater award and being inducted into Walt Disney’s Hall of Fame.
There are indeed a lot of reasons to be proud of Lea Salonga. Below, we list down 11 of these Lea Salonga facts, from her achievements in musical theater to her dedication to Filipino culture, that will make you admire the multi-faceted icon.
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Image credit: @msleasalonga via Instagram
While most popular female singers in the Philippines are known for their birits, Salonga is remarkable for her controlled ‘pure, rich, and creamy’ vocal range. In her rendition of Reflection for Disney’s Mulan (1998), for example, critics noted how she can navigate intricate high notes, balancing head voice and chest register.
She’s also a master of controlling her vibrato, a singing technique she discovered she could use when she was just 12 years old. It’s characterized by a slight variation in pitch, volume, and tone.
Image credit: @msleasalonga via Instagram
Salonga is also a vocal coach, appearing on The Voice Kids and regularly advising singers on Twitter on how they can also develop their signature style. According to her, it might take some time to find a voice’s sweet spot, but it’s a place where “sonic heaven and the limits of physical comfort meet.”
Her rise to international fame began when she won Best Actress at the Tony Awards in 1991 for playing the lead role of Kim in Miss Saigon (1989-2001), making history as the first Asian actress to win this award for Broadway theater performers.
In the musical, Kim is a Vietnamese woman who falls in love with a US soldier during the Vietnam War. Her performance won praise from the New York Times, whose reviewer Frank Rich described how “the actress keeps sentimentality at bay by slowly revealing the steely determination beneath the gorgeous voice”.
Image credit: @MsLeaSalonga via Twitter
Aside from her historic Tony win, she also holds the Olivier, Drama Desk, Outer Critics Circle, and Theatre World Awards among her many musical theater credentials.
Image credit: via Miss Saigon Wiki
Her role in Miss Saigon would eventually open up doors for her – and other Asian artists on Broadway – to play more Asian characters on stage such as Mei Li in Flower Drum Song (2001-2003) and Kei Kimura in Allegiance (2012-2016).
Image credit: via CHISMS.net
Salonga was recognized as a Disney Legend in 2011 because she sang for not one, but two Disney leading ladies. She first lent her voice to lead Disney characters by singing A Whole New World with Brad Kane for Princess Jasmine in the animated film Aladdin (1992).
Image credit: via Aladdin Wiki
The song, written by fellow Disney Legends Alan Menken and Tim Rice, garnered two big awards – an Oscar and a Golden Globe.
She again provided the singing voice for a lead Disney character in 1998, singing Reflection for the character Fa Mulan in the animated film Mulan. Her bittersweet rendition of the song written and composed by Matthew Wilder and David Zippel was also notable, garnering a Golden Globe nomination for Best Original Song in 1999.
Salonga as Eponine
Image credit: LSFP via YouTube
Her career is indeed filled with historic firsts, as she is also the first Asian to portray the characters of Eponine and Fantine in Les Misérables, one of the most popular musicals in the field of theater and based on the French novel written by Victor Hugo.
Image credit: Broadway World
During the musical’s ‘90s run across theaters around the world, she played the ragged street-dweller Eponine and sang On My Own for the role. She returned for the musical’s 2007 revival as Fantine, an abandoned woman forced to look for her child Cosette.
Salonga performing in Cincinnati Music Hall
Image credit: via LeaSalonga.com
Given her illustrious career in theater, she is no stranger to the musical stages of Broadway in New York and the West End in London. But she has also performed in musical concerts across the world such as the Sydney Opera House, the O2 Arena in London, Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, and Carnegie Hall in New York. Her concert tours across the United States and the United Kingdom are always sold out.
Image credit: Michael Cassel Group via Facebook
Singers such as Celine Dion, Barbara Streisand, Mary J. Blige, and Elton John have also graced these historic concert venues.
Image credit: @msleasalonga via Instagram
Even big government officials were once in the same room with Salonga as her audience. One of them is Hillary Clinton, whom she’s met many times and established a long-running friendship with.
Salonga sang for her in Manila in the mid-’90s, then in 2000, Clinton presented her and her Miss Saigon co-star Luoyong Wang to the Better Chinatown Association’s Asian American Heritage awards. They met again at the Children’s Museum of Manhattan in 2016, a meeting that Salonga documented on her Instagram account.
Aside from performing for Clinton, she has also had the honor to sing for 6 Philippine presidents, from Ferdinand Marcos to Benigno S. Aquino III, 3 US presidents, and even for royalty such as Diana, Princess of Wales, and Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.
Image credit: Lea Salonga via Facebook
We’ve known her for her usual tragic roles on stage, but in the revival of the musical Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street in 2019, she showed her acting chops as the villain, proving her versatility as an actress. She played the role of Mrs. Nellie Lovett, a baker who turns the corpses of Sweeney Todd (played by Jett Pangan)’s victims into meat pies for money.
The musical is a Tony Award-winning production that first ran on the stages of Broadway and West End in 1979 and 1980, respectively. It has since then been followed by various revivals and there was also a film adaptation in 2007 starring actors you’ll recognize, such as Johnny Depp (as Sweeney) and Helena Bonham Carter (as Mrs. Lovett).
Image credit: ABS-CBN Star Cinema via YouTube
Many younger fans may not know that in between her performances in theaters across the world, she was also charming the big screen back in her homeland. She starred alongside Aga Muhlach in two films, Bakit Labis Kitang Mahal (1992) and Olivia Lamasan’s enduring film Sana Maulit Muli (1995) which highlights the challenges of couple Agnes (Salonga) and Jerry (Muhlach) in their long-distance relationship.
In real life, the two actors have stayed good friends over the years, to the kilig of fans. For instance, Muhlach even shared in a letter, which went viral in 2017, about how Salonga was to him ‘the one that got away.’
Image credit: via LeaSalonga.com
While Salonga has been an international name, she doesn’t forget to look back at her roots. Her album Bahaghari (2017), which she produced alongside National Artist for Music Ryan Cayabyab, features the diverse languages of Filipinos, from Tagalog to Bisaya.
It includes traditional Filipino folk songs, such as Leron Leron Sinta and Bahay Kubo, which we’ve all listened to while growing up in school.
Image credit: Philippine Daily Inquirer
You’d think someone of Lea’s stature wouldn’t be familiar with things popular these days, but the Broadway queen is actually an avid pop culture fan at heart. For instance, she’s followed the plot of Game of Thrones and Star Wars over the years and is a fan of the K-Pop boy group BTS.
And just like any fangirl would, she talks about them a lot on her Twitter account and even asked her followers about BTS when she first saw them performing on ABC’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve in 2018.
Besides being a fangirl on Twitter, she also writes about her favorites in her column in the Philippine Daily Inquirer. During the COVID-19 pandemic, for example, she wrote about how BTS’s Dynamite has become a dose of positivity in a challenging time.
Image credit: via Smart Parenting
As iconic as her Disney princesses, it’s not surprising there’s a children’s book about Lea Salonga’s life story, Princess Lea. Her life is nothing short of an aspirational fairy tale and young dreamers can be inspired by her story – a six-year-old Filipina who dared to dream and shoot for the stars. Now, she’s a world-renowned multi-faceted artist.
Princess Lea was launched in 2013 and was written by former Esquire Philippines and Town & Country Philippines editor-in-chief Yvette Fernandez. It was illustrated by children’s book artist, Nicole Lim.
Lea Salonga indeed sets an example of what it is to be a versatile talent who can crossover to and from diverse fields. Her achievements have become milestones that opened doors for Filipino and Asian talents in general to be recognized around the world.
Catch her in West End’s Old Friend musical until January 2024, or see her on a solo show across the UK for her Stage, Screen & Everything In Between tour in June 2024.
If you want to be more inspired, check out these trailblazing Filipinos creating their path in the international scene, Golden Globe & BAFTA nominee Dolly de Leon and the first Filipina F1 driver Bianca Bustamante.
Cover image adapted from: @msleasalonga via Instagram, via CHISMS.net.
Article originally published on 27 October 2020 by Addie Pobre. Last updated by Gly Parañal on 15 December 2023.
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