- Born
- Birth nameCelina Consuela Gabriella Carvajal
- Height5′ 7½″ (1.71 m)
- Lena Hall (Celina Consuela Gabriella Carvajal) is an American actress, singer, and songwriter. Hall is a Tony Award winner and Grammy nominee who appears opposite Jennifer Connelly in TNT's science-fiction epic Snowpiercer (2020). Following her Tony-winning Broadway run in 'Hedwig and the Angry Inch,' Hall toured North America alongside Josh Groban on his "Stages" tour and portrayed the dual starring roles of Hedwig and Yitzhak in 'Hedwig' in Los Angeles (LA Drama Critics Circle nomination) and San Francisco. She originated the role of Nicola in the Tony-winning musical 'Kinky Boots,' and can be seen on HBO's Girls (2012) and Amazon Prime's Good Girls Revolt (2015), and heard voicing the role of Countess Coloratura in an episode of My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic (2010) (The Mane Attraction (2015)). Hall's most recent stage appearance was starring with Marisa Tomei in Lincoln Center Theater's 'How to Transcend a Happy Marriage.' In February 2018, Hall received widespread critical acclaim for her performance of the title role in the feature film Becks (2017), which won the U.S. Fiction Award at the LA Film Festival.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Jonathan Miller
- ParentsCarolyn CarvajalCarlos Carvajal
- RelativesCalliope Carvajal(Sibling)
- Gender / Gender identityFemale
- Had her tonsils removed at age 26, which made her voice change at the same time that she joined a rock band, The Deafening. Hall stated that it was good because it forced her to sing in ways other than musical theater and classical. It forced her to find the grittiness and the Janis Joplin stuff, in a way that she wouldn't hurt her voice, so that she could perform for an hour and still be fine, so she's really grateful for that because it made her more of a diverse performer and singer.
- Sang for Pope John Paul II at Candlestick Stadium for over 50,000 people when she was 7-year-old. [1987].
- Changed her professional name from Celina Carvajal to Lena Hall in 2013, stating that she had created it for her music persona and now wanted to use it for her acting career as well. "Lena Hall" is just two shortenings of her first name,Celina, and last name, ("jal" from Carvajal). She later found out that her birth surname, Carvajal, is actually a stage name taken seven generations back and kept as a family name.
- Her parents are Carlos Carvajal, a choreographer, and Carolyn (née Houser) Carvajal, a prima ballerina. In the 1970s, her father started the San Francisco Dance Spectrum, and is the current co-artistic director of the San Francisco Ethnic Dance Festival, while her mother danced with the San Francisco Ballet for 29 years.
- Is a former ballet dancer. Was a soloist ballerina in a children's company and went to France to study ballet on full scholarship. When she was 12 years old, her sister performed in the musical '42nd Street' with the Young People's Teen Musical Theatre Company in San Francisco, and when Lena saw her sister on stage, she told her parents that she wanted to quit ballet and joined the company that her sister was in. She did shows with the company from when she was 12 to 17 years old.
- [on her name change - Broadway.com, July 2013] I came up with the name Lena Hall a couple of years ago. It was an idea for my rock persona, but the response for that name was so good. Multiple people in the industry suggested I have one name for everything. [Lena Hall] is just two shortenings of my first name and my last name. So Lena Hall is Celina Carvajal. It seemed like an easier way of people getting to know me. Lena Hall is a nice symmetrical name, and it reminds people of Lena Horne, who was a singer. And when people hear my name, I want them to think of a singer.
- My tonsils were taken out when I was 26. They were huge! It kind of changed my life completely, because my voice changed and at the time I had just joined this band [The Deafening]. It was good because it forced me to sing in ways other than musical theater and classical. It forced me to find the grittiness and the Janis Joplin stuff, in a way that I wouldn't hurt my voice, so that I could perform for an hour and still be fine. So, I'm really grateful for that, and for my band. It made me much more of a diverse performer and singer.
- Well, originally I was supposed to be a prima ballerina. When I was little, I was a little phenomenon: I was a soloist in a children's company and I went to France to study ballet on full scholarship. Then when I was twelve, I saw my sister in 42nd Street performing with The Young People's Teen Musical Theatre Company in San Francisco and when I saw her on stage, I was just like, "I want to do that!" [Lena Laughs] That was usually how it was, whatever my sister did, I wanted to do, but seeing her in 42nd Street really meant a lot to me. I loved everything about it. So, I told my parents that I wanted to quit ballet at the age of twelve, and they didn't let me stop but I joined the company that my sister was in and I did shows from when I was twelve to about seventeen. Also, I went to an arts high school where I was in the dance and vocal program.
- [on growing up in San Francisco and feeling a strong connection to her Filipino heritage] I'm a quarter Filipino, which is different than Darren [Criss]. I think Darren is half Filipino. But I do remember always feeling like a part of the club. I have a ton of friends in San Francisco who are part Filipino and part white. David Greenbaum is one of them and he and I, we did theatre together. I was in a band called Generation Nation with him and we were all Filipino. Almost all of us were all Filipino so it was kind of like this club to be a part of.
- I don't know a ton about my Filipino heritage, but I know that my family in the Philippines is basically seven generations of artists. My father is first generation in San Francisco and my father's father-he immigrated to San Francisco from the Philippines. My dad, to this day, still makes Lumpia and it is by far the best thing I've ever eaten in my life. Unfortunately, now that I'm a vegan, I don't eat any meat, but when I did eat meat, boy did I eat that Lumpia like nobody's business. My dad would make them so well.
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