The infant school teacher who picked six-year-old Hayley Westenra out
of her class to take the lead singing part of Little Star in the school
Christmas play certainly knew what she was doing. After the
performance the teacher took her bemused parents aside and
informed them their daughter had perfect pitch.

Within ten years of that first star-spot the Christchurch-born prodigy
would be one of the world's most exciting singing sensations, with a
crate full of platinum discs; and singing duets with the greats, heroes
like Andrea Bocelli, Jose Carreras and Bryn Terfel and to audiences
including everyone from the Queen (three times in one week!), Tony
Blair and George Bush to fans at the Sydney Opera House, Wembley
Stadium, Carnegie Hall and the Royal Albert Hall. She also recently
sang at the unveiling of the monument to the sacrifice made by New
Zealand forces in the Second World War in the presence of the Queen,
Tony Blair and the New Zealand Prime Minister, Helen Clark.

Born the eldest daughter of a gemologist, an expert in precious
stones, with a mother who has turned her hand to everything up to
and including photographic duties for her daughter, Hayley followed
up her infant school performance with parts in major productions of
musicals like Annie, La Boheme and The Sound of Music. But it was as
a child busker that things really started to take off for Hayley.

Like most girls her age, Hayley was into her after-school clubs, her
ballet, and her sports. She entered the odd talent show (usually
winning). Her first busking experience was when she and a group of
mates found they didn't have enough lunch money and decided they'd
earn it singing for local shoppers (they ate very well that day!). The
experience was an eye-opener for Hayley, who, while still only 11,
started staking a pitch and regaling anyone who would listen not only
with her voice but her violin. "I soon noticed I would get quite a crowd
when I was singing but when I started to play the violin, they drifted
off," she laughs now.

And the crowds that would surround the busking pre-teen were her
first fan base, asking her for CDs she hadn't even got round to
recording yet. No problem. With the help of her mum, Hayley had some
CDs run off and would deliver them personally to the tourists who had
seen her perform at their hotels. But demand outstripped their almost
unit-by-unit production and soon an impressed friend of her parents
stumped up a massive $5,000 for Hayley and her mum, whose
photographs were on those almost home-made CDs, to get a proper
batch burned.

With boxes of the CDs to hand, Hayley and her mum decided they
might as well send some to record companies and were soon asked by
Universal Records in New Zealand to come in for meetings. The CD,
with its mix of classical, folk and traditional Maori songs, was so
impressive Universal decided there wasn't much they wanted to
change apart from the production values. The result was Hayley's first
album, which went triple platinum immediately turning her into New
Zealand's fasting-selling artist.

After a Christmas album (platinum, of course), it was decided that
Hayley needed a world stage and so, having signed with Decca in
London, she recorded Pure. The record company were confident they
had something pretty special on their hands, but even they cannot
have expected the reaction to Pure when it was released when Hayley
was still just 15.

Selling faster than any other "classical" debut in history in the UK,
Pure was a sensation: twelve times platinum in her native New
Zealand, where it is the biggest-selling record of all time having spent
18 weeks at No.1 in the pop album charts. The success was replicated
in the UK, where it went triple platinum (900,000), Australia, where it
went platinum and in Japan, where it is the best-selling classical
record in the country's history.

Hayley remained unfazed, in that way teenagers have, even though
the success meant she had to leave school, resettle in London and
start touring the world, adding her voice to major movies like Al
Pacino's "Merchant of Venice" and Terrence Malick's "The New World"
and performing in legendary venues to the most famous people on the
planet, followed everywhere by "star is born"-type headlines. And she
still had to study for her GCSEs in her downtime!

Now at 19, Hayley's found herself growing as a person and moving on.
"I'm enjoying my new independence" she concurs, "fortunately
enough I'm quite an independent person and I don't mind my own
company. It would be nice to spend more time with family and friends,
my time with them is never long enough." There is always time for a bit
of retail therapy though. "I do love shopping, but I'm also quite frugal
which kind of puts a stop to it most of the time", she laughs, "however,
my one weakness is jeans - I love Diesel jeans! I'm a real jeans, t-shirt
and boots kinda girl."

Her real passion however, remains the same - music. A fan of artists
right across the board from John Legend to Andrea Bocelli and
Placido Domingo to Stevie Wonder, Kate Bush and Joni Mitchell.

2007 sees Hayley releasing her third album in which she interprets the
traditional songs of her native New Zealand, of Ireland, from where her
family moved to New Zealand in 1850, and interpretations of opera
arias that have passed into popular ownership. "It's an eclectic mix of
songs," says Hayley, "but the thread running through is that most of
these songs have stood the test of time; they're very poignant, have a
sense of history and they mean a lot to me. The new songs that I've
chosen or helped to create are hopefully in the same great tradition of
songs that get passed down through the generations."

As well as the new album - and very complimentary to it - Hayley is
joining the tour of Celtic Woman, a group made up of four Irish
vocalists and an Irish fiddle player. "I filmed an American PBS TV
special with them," says Hayley who loves Celtic music and is proud of
her Celtic roots (it might be why her voice suits that music so well).
"And I'm going on tour with them across America. We all have solos
and there are some ensemble numbers, which are going to be really
fun as I'm not used to working in a group. It'll be a new audience and
it's always exciting when you reach out to more people with your
music."

With all of this going on, Hayley still manages to be one of the
youngest ever Ambassadors for UNICEF and is planning a second trip
to Ghana. "Meeting young people that are the same as me but with
such a different world of opportunity has a profound affect on you. I
aspire to be a singer, which seems so unessential compared with their
simple desire for a regular cup of clean water. You can't go
somewhere like that, meet those people and come back unchanged,"
she says. Since her first trip, Hayley has set up "Hayley's Bikes for
Ghana", a project that has already provided 6,000 bikes for children in
Ghana so they can attend school and find a better future (for more
details: www.unicef.org.nz).

She's is also involved in the Women's Environmental Network, a group
that raises awareness of environmental issues affecting women. It's
become a fixation. And we've seen how fixations tend to take hold of
Hayley. Studying the environmental problems of our times is
something Hayley spends most of her "free" time doing, and is keen to
contribute towards highlighting the dangers of pollution, global
warming, and nutrition issues.

You wonder if she ever regrets all this. All the fame, the success, the
travelling around the world, the work. Wouldn't she like to stay still for
a while, hang out a little? "You don't walk away from opportunities like
these," she laughs, looking at you as if you're mad. "This is what
people dream of." Having circled the globe many times, Hayley's fallen
for the charms of the UK, setting up her temporary base here. "I love
being an honorary Brit if I can call myself that," she smiles. "I consider
London to be my second home - it's an exciting, fantastic multi-cultural
city." The only time this comes into question is when her beloved All
Blacks rugby team come to the UK, being their honorary mascot, she
steps up to sing the New Zealand anthem with the greatest of pride
and her thoughts drift back to her home in the "land of the big white
cloud".
Hayley Westenra
New Zealand's Finest Export
Biography
Hayley's Latest CD
Winter Magic
Is Available Now
Name: Hayley Westenra
Birth name: Hayley Dee Westenra
Birth Date: April 10, 1987
Birth Place: Christchurch, New Zealand
Parents: Jill and Gerald Westenra
Siblings: younger sister, Sophie & a
younger brother, Isaac
Height: 5'5" (1.67 m)
Hobbies: Violin, Piano, Rock Climbing,
X-country running
Occupation: Singer
Genres: Classical, Pop, Celtic
Debut Album: Hayley Westenra (2001)