Orbiting opera: Space tourist Sarah Brightman to sing Andrew Lloyd Webber on ISS

British soprano Sarah Brightman.(Reuters / Toby Melville)

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Phantom of the Opera star Sarah Brightman is undergoing training at Space City in Moscow while working on a song with her former husband Andrew Lloyd Webber, which she will perform on the International Space Station (ISS).

The British soprano is due to blast off on a Soyuz spacecraft on
September 1, and will spend 10 days on the ISS.

Brightman, 54, told reporters at a press conference in London
that going to space is something she dreamt about as a child in
the 1960s.

“We thought we were going to be astronauts. Even down to our
serial packets there were things about space and what we were
going to do. So for me to have got this far and to have got to be
able to have a taste of what I felt at that time and to be part
of the future is an amazing thing,”
she said.

She did not give away much information about which songs she will
be singing while stationed 420 kilometers above Earth. However,
she did say that she and Andrew Lloyd Webber have started working
on the music, and are trying to work out technical challenges.

“To sing in microgravity is a very different thing to singing
down here,”
she said. “We use the Earth to ground
ourselves when we sing and the air around us. This is going to be
very different. I’m trying to find a piece that is beautiful and
simple in its message, as well as not complicated to sing.”

Brightman wants to connect with other musical talents on Earth –
possibly a choir, another singer, or an orchestra.

She explained that her training in Moscow is quite demanding,
with a six o’clock start followed by lectures, four hours of
Russian lessons, and survival and physical training. This
includes undergoing practical and physical approaches to
exercise, and skills in medicine and emergency operating
procedures. She is thought to have paid around $51 million for
the trip.

READ MORE: Soprano in space: ‘Phantom of the
Opera’ star trains for ISS flight in Russian forest

The first space tourist was US entrepreneur Dennis Tito, who made
his flight in 2001 for $20 million. The most recent tourist to
the ISS was Cirque du Soleil co-founder Guy Laliberte, who paid
$40 million for the trip in 2009.

The only other woman to have taken a tourist ride into space was
Iranian-born American engineer Anousheh Ansari, the co-founder
and chairwoman of Prodea Systems. Her flight took place in 2006
and cost her $20 million.

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