South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Singer longs for Hawaii getaway

- By Jae-Ha Kim For more from the reporter, visit www.jaehakim.com.

Last year, Sarah Brightman had to cancel her tour due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. But this holiday season, the British singer known for her work in “Cats” and “The Phantom of the Opera,” will kick off her U.S. tour (https:// sarahbrigh­tman.com/ tours/) on Nov. 26.

But she’ll be back home in time for Christmas. “My traditions always include my family,” Brightman said. “There can be more than 22 of us around a table — it’s a large family with all the nieces, nephews, friends and my siblings. On Christmas Eve, my mother normally holds a party. There is always the Christmas Day of eating turkey and British Christmas pudding, mince pies — all the usual Christmas things. We even enjoy Boxing Day, which many places around the world do not have.

It is a very British thing. We have a large buffet for lunch with yet even more family and friends. That is really our Christmas tradition. We also have all the other things that most families celebrate with the decorating of the tree and unwrapping of presents.”

The soprano’s firstever Christmas special from London, “Sarah Brightman: A Christmas Symphony,” is currently airing on PBS stations.

Q: Do people freak out when you go Christmas caroling and they realize it’s you?

A: Even if people know that I am there, the experience is always more about the Christmas message.

It’s about the birth of Jesus Christ, it’s about the three kings … so all of that kind of thing usually goes out the window whether you have a singing star there singing with everybody or not. People just enjoy the message of what we are singing about and maybe the fruit punch or whatever you are drinking on that evening. So, no, I have never experience­d anyone freaking out.

Q: What was a memorable holiday trip for you?

A: One New Year’s Eve — it was actually the millennium coming into 2000 — I was in Hong Kong and I was performing at (Happy Valley Racecourse) where the horse racing goes on right in the middle of Hong Kong. I was asked to be the guest performer and represent Hong Kong at that monumental time, and it was amazing. I was singing on a very high sort of mountain in the middle of this horse-racing venue, there were thousands of people and we all celebrated the new year in that way.

Q: You’ve told me you’d love to get to India someday. Where else would you like to visit?

A: I want to go to Hawaii! I have never been there! When I was very young, my uncle got married to this very glamorous lady who was an airline hostess, who managed to arrange tickets to Hawaii for their honeymoon. People in those days didn’t travel that far. We are talking about the ’60s here. We knew that Hawaii was some magical group of islands and they flew all the way there from little England. I was absolutely fascinated and thought, “One day, I will be able to get to Hawaii.” That is where I want to go!

Q: Besides walking around a new city, what’s the best way to explore a new destinatio­n?

A: I always follow the food because I love food! (Laughs) Most singers do! So, when you follow the cuisine, you generally get to see all of the culture that is going on. So, if you go to an interestin­g restaurant or street vendor, you will find yourself in an interestin­g square, and that square could be a palace, or a store or an art gallery.

 ?? OLIVER SOMMERS ?? Sarah Brightman plans on ringing in the new year in the South of France.
OLIVER SOMMERS Sarah Brightman plans on ringing in the new year in the South of France.

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