- Born
- Birth nameKeala Joan Settle
- Nicknames
- Ti K.
- Lala
- Height5′ 3″ (1.60 m)
- Keala Joan Settle (born November 5, 1975) is an American actress and singer. Settle originated the role of Norma Valverde in Hands on a Hardbody, which ran on Broadway in 2013, and was nominated for the Outer Critics Circle Award, Drama Desk Award, and Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical. In 2017, she portrayed Lettie Lutz, a bearded lady, in the musical film The Greatest Showman. The song "This Is Me" from the film, principally sung by Settle, won the 2018 Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song, and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song.
Settle was born in Hawaii, the eldest of five children of Susanne (née Riwai), who is of Maori descent from New Zealand, and British-born David Settle. She is a graduate of Kahuku High School (class of 1993), and an alumna of Southern Utah University. Settle made her Broadway debut in 2011 in Priscilla, Queen of the Desert as Shirley and in the ensemble.
Settle originated the role of Norma Valverde in Hands on a Hardbody, a musical which ran briefly on Broadway in 2013, and is based on the 1997 documentary about real people competing to win a new truck. The TheatreMania reviewer wrote: "Settle, as Norma, steals every scene she's in. The spectacularly bizarre lead-in to her big number, 'Joy of the Lord,' is more difficult to pull off than most Shakespearean monologues, and her solo vocals reveal a soulful, oversized gospel range that drives the Holy Spirit straight to the back of the theater. When she tearfully realizes what her faith in God may have wrought, it stings like a chigger bite. Settle's touching performance should go on the shortlist for every Best Featured Actress prize in town." For this role, Settle was nominated for the Outer Critics Circle, Drama Desk, and Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical. Additionally, she was awarded the Theatre World Award for Outstanding Broadway or Off-Broadway debut performance during the 2012-13 theatrical season.
Settle played the role of Madame Thenardier in the revival of Les Misérables, starting in March 2014, and ending on March 1, 2015. Settle originated the role of Becky in the musical Waitress, which opened on Broadway on April 24, 2016, at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre after premiering at the American Repertory Theater in August 2015. Settle played the role of Tracy Turnblad in the national tour of Hairspray. In the review of the tour stop at the Kennedy Center in 2005, the Washington Post reviewer wrote: " As for Settle, she is a fine Tracy, even if she looks too old for graduate school, let alone high school." She appeared in the national tour of the Lincoln Center production of South Pacific as Bloody Mary, starting in 2009. The reviewer for the Pioneer Press, Massachusetts, wrote: "Better cast is Keala Settle, who plays the conniving Tonkinese trader lady Bloody Mary with a rolling gait, the venom of viper and-buried deeply but achingly visible in strategic moments-the maternal fierceness of a lioness." In November through December 2012, Settle played the role of Mrs. Fezziwig in the Pioneer Theatre Company (Salt Lake City) production of the musical A Christmas Carol. She played the role of the Narrator in Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat at the Ogunquit Playhouse, Ogunquit, Maine from July 31 to August 25, 2013. Settle performed in the Encores! concert staging of Violet on July 17, 2013 with Sutton Foster, but did not move on to the Broadway revival due to taking the role Madame Thénardier in the revival of Les Misérables; she was replaced in Violet by Annie Golden. Settle discussed her career path, noting that "...I really am not a musical theatre performer. I'm more an R&B singer and have been doing that my whole life. My mother is-well, was-also an R&B singer, in New Zealand....I was too busy wanting to sing backup or doing studio work singing chorus stuff, and singing backup for Gladys Knight in Vegas." Further, after her run in Hairspray, she stated that she "...didn't know how to live in that world..." and so for several years worked backstage with designers until she was cast in South Pacific. In 2017, Settle portrayed Lettie Lutz, a bearded lady, in the biographical musical drama The Greatest Showman, alongside Hugh Jackman, Zac Efron, and Zendaya. The song "This Is Me" from the film, principally sung by Settle, won the 2018 Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song, and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song. On December 22, 2017, she released an extended play called Chapter One.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Anonymous
- ParentsSusanne Settle (Riwai)David Settle
- RelativesSibling(Sibling)Sibling(Sibling)Sibling(Sibling)Sibling(Sibling)
- Gender / Gender identityFemale
- A week prior to singing at the Oscars 2018, Settle had lost half of her body's motor functions due to a mini-stroke - one that would lead doctors to diagnose her with a rare cerebrovascular disorder known as Moyamoya disease. Trouble first started for Settle in the weeks leading up to the Oscars. She had been on a non-stop worldwide promotional tour for The Greatest Showman (2017) and its chart-topping soundtrack, a process that left her immune system compromised and her patience, understandably thin. Stepping into a rehearsal space in Burbank, California, on February 24th, Settle's stress levels were high - so much so that she ended up having a nervous breakdown on set. Collapsing into tears, she suddenly felt a shooting pain in her skull and noticed the right side of her body go completely numb. Settle had suffered from a transient ischemic attack (TIA), a "mini-stroke" that produces similar symptoms of a larger stroke, often as a warning of impending trouble. Her facilities were back within 20 minutes of the TIA's dissipation, but a series of brain scans over the next few days in the hospital showed that her problem was much worse. Half of Settle's brain was actually blocked from blood flow and oxygen for years due to collated carotid arteries (the major blood vessels in the neck that supply blood to the brain, neck, and face). To compensate, her brain had created tiny blood vessels at the base to supply it with blood (their shape earning the name "Moyamoya disease," Japanese for "puff of smoke"). Those weak vessels were now completely dried out. Subsequently, they snapped. She was put on anti-seizure medications, children's aspirin, and encouraged to stay hydrated to maintain blood flow. Four days later, Settle was in front of millions of viewers - singing what she calls, "the song that almost killed me." 10-hour bypass brain surgery to correct the problem finally came on April 27, after a 5-week pre-op process. The operation provided alternative blood flow to the right side of her brain for the first time ever. Moyamoya disease is not curable. Though surgery has provided Settle with significant stroke-risk reduction, she will be on medication for the rest of her life.
- After being cast to play the bearded lady Lettie Lutz in the 2017 film The Greatest Showman (2017), actress-singer Settle researched polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). PCOS is an endocrine disease in women that can overproduce the male hormone testosterone, which in some extreme and rare cases, can trigger the growth of excess body and facial hair. This likely was the affliction of Settle's character, and there still is no cure for the disease.
- Mother, Susanne, is a native of New Zealand, and is of Maori descent. Father, David, was born and raised in Alden, England.
- She was awarded the 2011 Back Stage Garland Award for Performance in a Musical for "South Pacific" in a Lincoln Center Theater production at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles, California.
- Is of Maori & English descent.
- About the 'This Is Me' dance number in The Greatest Showman: We actually had all of Janet [Jackson]'s dancers, all of Pink's dancers, all of Beyoncé's dancers and all of Gaga's dancers backing me up in 'This Is Me.' So when we did that first rehearsal, I cried [to them], 'You are making my dreams come true right now.'
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content