| After her Broadway debut in Stephen Sondheim’s
              Merrily We Roll Along, she was nominated for a Tony Award for her
              performance in Baby. Of this experience, Ms. Callaway shared with
              Supreme Master Television, “It was an incredible role and
            great music.
 In fact, the score was written by David Shire, 
              who has written the song that I’m singing for Loving the 
              Silent Tears. So I’m thrilled to be doing something of 
              his, because I adore him, and he’s an incredible composer.” 
              For five years she starred as Grizabella in Cats, 
              and was featured in the original casts of Miss Saigon, 
              The Three Musketeers, and The Look of Love. 
              She was awarded an Emmy Award for hosting Ready to Go, 
              a live daily children’s program on CBS in Boston. Ms. Callaway 
              has established a stellar career as a concert and recording artist, 
              and worked with acclaimed artists Burt Bacharach, Dionne Warwick, 
              and Stevie Wonder. 
              Having released four solo albums, Ms. Callaway is also 
              a singing voice for many animated movies, such as Beauty and 
              the Beast, Aladdin and the King of Thieves, The Return of Jafar, 
              Lion King II: Simba’s Pride, and Anastasia, 
              which received an Academy Award nomination for the song she 
              sang, “Journey to the Past.” 
             
               
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                        You 
                        can move heaven and earth. You can change demons
 into the Angels of Love.
 Why,
 O Greatest of all Magicians,
 Didn’t You change this monkey mind?
  —Excerpt 
                        from Silent Tears poetry collectionBy Supreme Master Ching Hai
 Formosa - 1980s
 |  |  In 2010, at Supreme Master Television’s 4th anniversary 
              concert, Gifting Peace, Liz Callaway mesmerized the audience 
              with her rendition of “Dream in the Night,” based on 
              Supreme Master Ching Hai’s poem and with music by 2-time Oscar 
              winner Al Kasha. After Al Kasha was inspired to create a musical 
              based on the poetry collection Silent Tears by Supreme Master 
              Ching Hai, the opportunity arose for Ms. Callaway to be a part of 
              it. She said, “The reason I’m doing this is I had a 
              really nice time doing the TV special. I’m impressed about 
              a lot of things. It’s a huge production. The pedigree of talent. 
              Everyone coming together in the spirit of community and this message. 
              In addition to people’s great talent, I think that everyone 
              seems like a very special soul. People aren’t here just because 
              they can sing. I think there is something more. I think it’s 
              their spirit.” 
              Speaking of the new musical’s through line, she 
              explained, “It’s about the inner search for peace. And 
              I read the script, it’s about an older woman and this young 
              man who are on this train, and both of them are lost souls. And 
              I don’t even know if they know that they’re searching 
              for something, but I guess that’s what we’re all doing, 
              trying to be the best that we can be and find inner peace and understanding.” 
              With her having an upcoming tour that will take her Down 
              Under, it seems most serendipitous for Ms. Callaway to have represented 
              Australia in her role in Loving the Silent Tears. “I 
              love Australia, and I’m actually going there in January, so 
              it’s meant to be that I’m doing this,” she recounted. 
              “I was there three years ago and I sent a message to a girl 
              friend of mine in Melbourne. I sent her the lyrics and I said, ‘Can 
              you do me a favor, can you speak it for me with your accent?’” 
                The name of Ms. Callaway’s solo song was “Monkey 
              Mind.” Through the use of the set, costume, and dancers, the 
              audience was transported to another continent while Ms. Callaway 
              conveyed her interpretation of it. She shared prior to the show, 
              “It is someone trying to come to peace, and wants to be at 
              peace. It’s beautiful poetry and great music, it’s very 
              fun. They tell me that the dancers are going to be doing free-form 
              things behind me. There’s the didg’ [didgeridoo] in 
              the song. The scene will be of me on the Outback and [the costume] 
              is very Australian but with a little bling (flashy jewelry), just 
              because we are going to be at the Shrine Auditorium.” 
              The show gave Ms. Callaway the opportunity to musically 
              reunite with Academy and 2-time Grammy Award-winning composer David 
              Shire. She enthused, “He has really captured the essence, 
              I think, of Australia. The music is very joyful, and it’s 
              very uplifting and exciting.” 
              Regarding Supreme Master Ching Hai’s poetry, Ms. 
              Callaway expressed, “As someone who has never written, 
              I admire people who write. The poetry is beautiful. Everything is 
              very inspiring, and in particular, I think, it’s someone coming 
              to terms and being inspired to be a better person and to be a better 
              human being in the world. I travel a lot internationally but just 
              to have everyone in one room from different cultures and different 
              experiences, but all sharing a love of music, and the message of 
              this piece, it was very nice. It was very special.” 
              It was indeed a very special and memorable event with 
              the vocal contribution of Ms. Callaway and the all-star cast conveying 
              the yearning of humanity for a Higher Power as expressed in Supreme 
              Master Ching Hai’s profound poetry.    
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