Miami Herald

Aide to mayor doesn’t miss a beat when singer suddenly is needed for national anthem

- BY DOUGLAS HANKS dhanks@miamiheral­d.com Douglas Hanks: 305-376-3605, @doug_hanks

Gail Seay was in the audience watching the ceremony featuring her boss, Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, when an awkward silence filled the City Commission chambers.

The police officer expected to sing the national anthem that morning didn’t come to the microphone when called, sparking panic among Suarez’s staff until they remembered Seay could sing.

“I was standing at attention,” Seay recalled Friday afternoon. “Then they all went: Gail, go!”

So Seay, dressed in a pink blazer and matching pearls, hustled to the microphone, faced the audience and delivered what appeared to be a flawless rendition of “The StarSpangl­ed Banner.”

“It was just from the heart, from the spirit,” said Seay, deputy director of constituen­t affairs in Suarez’s office.

She’s a regular singer, leading the choir at her church every Sunday.

Seay also grew up around music, with brothers who made careers as musicians and a nephew who penned songs on a Beyoncé album.

There was no immediate explanatio­n for what happened to the original anthem singer, a regular at ceremonial Miami events, beyond there being a logistical mix-up that wasn’t discovered until the time came for the song.

Seay said she wasn’t nervous having to sing on the spot, without the words to the anthem before her. She’s sung it enough that the lyrics come easily, including twice before for Suarez events. She said one was a Fourth of July celebratio­n at a park where Suarez was the orchestra’s guest conductor.

As he started his State of the City speech, Suarez broke from the script to comment on Seay’s surprise performanc­e.

“There’s a moment that you see something’s wrong,” Suarez told the audience. “And then, of course, Gail, who is a member of my staff, steps up. And you hear her. And you think: God is perfect.”

 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com ?? Emcee José Pañeda, the Spanish-language voice of the Miami Heat, talks with Gail Seay, the mayor’s deputy director of constituen­t affairs, before she jumped in Friday to sing the national anthem at the State of the City address.
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com Emcee José Pañeda, the Spanish-language voice of the Miami Heat, talks with Gail Seay, the mayor’s deputy director of constituen­t affairs, before she jumped in Friday to sing the national anthem at the State of the City address.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States