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    Categories: Entertainmentlife

Homeless Opera Singer Performed At Her First Concert After Her Video Went Viral


A Homeless woman, Emily Zamourka, from Los Angeles went viral in a video captured in a subway station, has performed her first gig.

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The 52-year-old singer performed at the unveiling of Historic Little Italy sign in downtown San Pedro before a live audience that praised her with uproarious applause.

The Russian-born singer has performed only one song, the same Puccini aria she performed in the viral video she became famous for. 

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She thanked the audience after her performance and also raised awareness about the homelessness crisis in California. 

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‘I’m so glad I could touch your hearts with my voice. thank you so much for all this that’s happening right now, I really thank you, I’m so overwhelmed,’ she said.  

‘I’m not a professional singer, but I’m very critical to how I’m going to sound or how I’m going to perform,’ she said to NBC after her performance. 

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‘It has to be delivered right. It’s not easy, so that’s why today I will apologize in front of everybody because they probably thought I’m going to bring a [bigger] repertoire or something. It’s going to be the same song that they know me from the subway [for],’ she added. 

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Zamourka has been homeless in Los Angeles for two years but she got famous when an LAPD officer posted a video of her singing at a Metro Purple Line station in Koreatown on social media showing her singing the breathtaking aria on September 26, 2019. 

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She said she ended up in the streets after her violin, which she used to play in the streets for money, was broken by a vandal.

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She went to LA City Councilman Joe Buscaino’s office hosted the Little Italy event and offered her to sing a song for him. His office says they’re also working on finding her housing.

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After went viral, Grammy-nominated producer Joel Diamond announced he wanted to sign a record deal with her.

‘I actually wrote a deal memo to her and I don’t even know her,’ Diamond, the CEO, and president of Silver Blue Records said to Good Morning America. ‘I’ve never done that my entire life. It’s crazy.’

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He said he wants to produce a combination of classical plus electronic dance music with her and wants to title it Paradise. 

‘I have two tracks ready to go that I’ve been holding. I didn’t have an artist so that’s like the perfect fit,’ he said.

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A GoFundMe page to help Zamourka get her a new violin has surpassed $72,000 towards the goal of $75,000. 

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Zamourka moved from Russia to the US 24 years ago and became homeless when she suffered serious health problems and had to pay for her medical bills.

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Zamourka’s revealed that her life derailed two years ago when a vandal destroyed her violin, and with it, her means of making money.

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‘It was my treasure, and it was my income, too. It was everything,’ Zamourka said to ABC, adding the violin was worth $10,000.

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‘That’s when I became homeless. When I could not actually pay any of my bills and could not pay any more of my rent,’ Zamourka said to NBC.

 

 

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