Top 49 Quotes & Sayings by LaChanze

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American actress LaChanze.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
LaChanze

Rhonda LaChanze Sapp, known professionally as LaChanze, is an American actress, singer, and dancer. She won the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical in 2006 for her role as Celie Harris Johnson in The Color Purple.

I'm from a part of Florida that is very close to Georgia in the panhandle area. I have a very colorful Southern family.
I always had a strong faith, and I always relied on God for a lot.
I totally believe in opportunities. I don't believe in accidents. I just don't. — © LaChanze
I totally believe in opportunities. I don't believe in accidents. I just don't.
When I make people laugh and I get to laugh, it does my spirit good.
As singers, we're always taught to sing forward and place everything in the front of our resonating chambers. Donna Summer always sang in that space and had it naturally. Her muscle memory, the way she was built - she was a natural singer.
I am working on music and telling my personal story and sharing my talent on stage.
As an actress who has performed in theater for over 17 years, my experience performing in 'The Color Purple' has been a truly life-changing journey.
Theater is structured. You're plugged into a system. It's relentless. You're expected to do certain things every day. You have your tasks.
Without faith, life is futile.
I can't stand adversity and stress and drama and tension. I can't function in that environment. If I have anything to say about it, we're going to get rid of it so that everyone can just relax and have a good time.
The majority of the roles I've played are women who have been either impoverished or subjugated in some way. So while I've been fortunate enough to have success because these roles exist, they are stereotypical roles.
That's capital L, small a - no space! - capital C, small h, a, n, z, e.
I was born in St. Augustine, Florida. I lived there till I was about 13, and then my family moved to Connecticut. I finished school there, and then I went to college in Philadelphia and came to New York in '87. I wasn't finished with school - I left school to go on the road.
You rarely see a musical being told about the life of a black woman. — © LaChanze
You rarely see a musical being told about the life of a black woman.
The theater community will always remain a big part of my life, and I hope to re-join the cast of 'The Color Purple' at some point down the road.
I believe in divine intervention.
I was a very ambitious, young actor, grateful and getting out there, working hard. I was single-minded in pursuit of my career. I am also the oldest of seven and had this extreme responsibility for everyone around me. I was a caregiver and not taking care of myself as much as I should have.
We all have to believe in something in order to exist successfully in this world and to enjoy our time here, which is short. I know that.
I'm not a Method actress. I work in the present, the day-to-day.
I really studied her singing, trying to see what it was about her that made her such a natural, incredible singer. Because sometimes as a singer, you really have to work to reach a certain note. And for Donna Summer, it seemed effortless.
As an actor, you go in your own personal life and pull from your personal life, so that's what I do.
It's still hard for me to think about Sept. 11 sometimes. I'm still angry. It's hard to watch my daughters, Celia and Zaya, grow up and know they'll never see their father. They'll always be 9/11 girls, and I wish I could shield them from that. Everyone has an immediate pity for them. It is a sad thing, but the girls are also so happy.
I have loved fiercely in my life - a few times.
I believe that everything is divinely inspired. Bad things happen - they do - but I also think that when these bad things happen, there's an equal and opposite force that is happening, and there is good.
I try to take time to find joy out of life, and I don't take a day for granted like I used to.
I have a very strong connection with God, very strong sense of my faith.
Naturally you want to be the best mom you can, but then also you want to be the best performer you can.
One of the greatest things about the theatre is how it can completely change the way you see the world around you. 'Dear Evan Hansen' did this for me.
I went to see 'Kinky Boots' to see my friend Billy Porter in his groundbreaking performance. But while backstage, I was hoping for a chance to meet this young, dynamic performer Annaleigh Ashford. Her comic timing was brilliant. And she is obviously a triple threat.
You know when you see a play and there is a character whom you know so well that you hate them and love them at the same time? That is Michael Potts' portrayal of Turnbo in August Wilson's 'Jitney.'
I think a lot of audience members don't realize the part that they play in live theatre. The audience actually has a mood. Sometimes they're tired and bored, and we have to wake them up and engage them.
I have a very interesting story to tell, and people always want to hear about it. They know I'm a 9/11 widow, and I always get comments on that and being an actor and raising my daughters by myself.
'Feeling Good' is a peek into my life through song. — © LaChanze
'Feeling Good' is a peek into my life through song.
I want to share the things I've done, the things I've survived, the things I've struggled through.
I'm an actress: I'm used to being independent, doing for myself.
I am an African-American woman of dark skin tone, and there are very specific roles that are usually given to African-American women of a darker hue. Let's start with 'Once on This Island': peasant girl. Let's go to 'The Color Purple': young girl, beaten. Let's go to 'Ragtime': Her baby's taken.
Time just goes on, and... it doesn't stop for anything.
Coming up through the theater in America, while I have had success, I have had success in certain types of roles.
The best thing about theatre is that every time we get onstage, the show is new.
Who doesn't love Donna Summer's music? It was part of my childhood, always heard around the house.
I'm a theatre doll, and I've always - since I'm out of school - have always been on stage.
'The Little Mermaid' is my favorite of the Disney animated features. And, I could not wait to see it on Broadway.
In my own one-woman show, 'Feeling Good,' I talk about my childhood and write a letter to my younger self in the show. The most important thing I would tell her is to trust my instincts. Just trust them. They're little whispers from God, I think. You've heard it a million times, but it's true: Listen to that inner voice.
I'm a Patti LuPone fan. She's incredible! I love Patti LuPone. I know people talk about her being difficult to work with sometimes. Whatever. — © LaChanze
I'm a Patti LuPone fan. She's incredible! I love Patti LuPone. I know people talk about her being difficult to work with sometimes. Whatever.
In my house, we couldn't listen to 'Love to Love You Baby.' It was way too salacious back in the day. I remember my mom would turn the station off when that song came on the radio. But, of course, I played my album to death in my bedroom, with the door closed.
I basically came from nothing and turned my life into something.
Dianne Reeves, a famous jazz singer, would be my biggest influence.
What I always liked best about myself was my resilience, especially in this business with all the 'no's,' the doors closed in my face.
I'm not religious, but I'm spiritual.
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