Pilar "Pilita" Garrido Corrales (August 22, 1939 â April 12, 2025) was a Filipino singer, actress and comedian. She was known for her distinctive backbend when singing and was popularly referred to as the "Greatest singer in the Philippines" and "Asia's Queen of Songs" for her vocal style and longevity.
Corrales recorded 135 albums throughout her six-decade career. Her recordings were mainly in English and Filipino, while on occasion she recorded songs in Spanish and Cebuano. Lauded for her sweet voice and iconic singing style, Corrales was one of the first superstars in the Philippines and became one of the first female artists to reach the top of the Australian pop charts. In 1963, her single "A Million Thanks to You" became one of few songs by a local artist to reach the number one position on the "Hits of the World" listing for the Philippines compiled by Billboard. "A Million Thanks to You" and other signature hits by Corrales, including "Kapantay ay Langit", have since become standards. She was a recipient of the prestigious 'Lifetime Achievement Award' by the Philippine Association of the Record Industry (PARI) for introducing Filipino musical artistry to a global audience.
Her success would later extend to film and television, where her show An Evening with Pilita is considered as one of the standards in Philippine broadcasting history.
Pilar Corrales was born in Lahug, Cebu City on August 22, 1939, to José Corrales de Zaragoza and MarÃÂa Garrido Manzano. The second of six siblings, she grew up in a "conservative [and] affluent home" in Cebu City. Her "upper-class and mestizo Spanish" family speaking primarily Cebuano, with Spanish being her "second mother tongue". Her father José Corrales is a Spanish mestizo from Ermita, Manila and her mother Maria Garrido is a Spanish immigrant from Granada.
Her cousin, Annie Corrales, was Miss Philippines in 1957 and married businessman Eddie Woolbright. After completing her studies at Colegio de la Inmaculada Concepción in Cebu, she began attending Colegio Mayor de Padre Poveda, a finishing school in Spain, in 1955, one of the first Cebuanas to do so. She returned to the Philippines following her father's death from a heart attack in 1956. With the loss of her father's income, her mother began taking in boarders, and Corrales took a secretarial course. Corrales said that had her father not died when he did, she never would have become a singer.
Corrales' "vocal production [was] medial rather than frontal...with a consistent use of head resonation," resulting in a "rounded, covered quality rather than a bright timbre". Her vocal delivery was "on pitch with a notable absence of slides, glides, or bending the pitch," and she used vibrato "for any duration longer than a quarter note". She maintained her vocal technique across songs of different genres; for example, her performances of "Ang dalagang Pilipina" were not sung in the song's traditional bel canto style.
Corrales recorded songs in Spanish in the early 1960s and songs in English, Tagalog, and Cebuano during the 1970s under Vicor Music Corporation.
In 1958, Corrales began her recording career after arriving in Australia for a brief period. She first appeared on Australian television on the show From Outer Space, and later appeared on The Bobby Limb Show and In Melbourne Tonight. She became a star of the Victoria Television circuit and her first hit, "Come Closer to Me", became part of a collection on which she was billed as one of the "Grand Dames of Victorian Radio and Television". She also recorded at least three LPs in the late 1950s and early 1960s: Pilita with Arthur Young: Pilita Tells the Story of Love (1959), I'll Take Romance (1960) and This Is Pilita under Astor Records. Being one of the pioneers of Australia's early television years, a street was named after her in Victoria. The Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) featured Corrales and several pioneering female artists in Australia in the 2nd episode of the highly acclaimed TV special, Love is in the Air.
Corrales returned to Manila in 1963 to pursue a career in the Philippine music industry. That same year, she recorded her hit "A Million Thanks to You". Her Philippine career began when she hosted a radio program La Taverna over DZPI where she sang Spanish songs and played the guitar. She performed regularly in stage shows at the Manila Grand Opera House. In 1966, she opened for The Beatles during their concert at Manila's Rizal Memorial Stadium. By 1967, she was hosting the TV program An Evening With Pilita on Channel 3.'
Corrales appeared in movies, most of them musicals. Her film debut was a lead role in the 1967 film Miss Wawaw and was followed by 11 films for the next two years.
In 1972, Corrales' career exploded with the release of her album Philippine Love Songs, a compilation of pop covers of traditional songs, through Vicor Music. The album became a best seller. Among the songs on the album was "Kapantay ay Langit", George Canseco's Filipino translation of "You're All I Love". That year, she also performed at the inaugural Tokyo Music Festival, where she won the Best Performer award. At the 2nd edition of the festival in 1973, she won the award for Best Singer.
Aquarius Records Philippines produced a compilation of Pilita's Spanish songs on CDs like Noche de Ronda and Vaya Con Dios. Her signature song A Million Thanks to You by Alice Doria-Gamilla was translated into seven languages. She eventually recorded songs composed by Filipino composers like , George Canseco, Willy Cruz, Ryan Cayabyab and several others.
Corrales frequently performed for Seeing Stars with Joe Quirino on IBC-Channel 13 after the martial law years (1972âÂÂ1981), where she demonstrated her range as a performer of Spanish, English, Cebuano and Tagalog music.
Through the personal invitation of Sammy Davis Jr., Corrales became the first Filipino to sing at Caesars Palace in the late 1970s, during which she sang Spanish, English, Cebuano, and Tagalog songs, all conducted and arranged by Ryan Cayabyab.
By 2006, she operated a restaurant bar in Greenhills named Pilita's.
In 2006, Corrales was selected by Associated Broadcasting Company (now TV5 Network) and FremantleMedia to be one of the celebrity judges for the first-ever nationwide search for the Philippine Idol together with Ryan Cayabyab and rapper Francis Magalona. She was a judge in the first Asian Idol held in Indonesia, representing Philippine Idol.
Corrales had two children, Jackie Lou Blanco and Ramon Christopher Gutierrez, who also became actors. Corrales was married in 1963 to the Spanish executive businessman Jose Blanco and separated while Jackie Lou was still a child. Jose died in 1979.
Corrales gave birth to her second child, Ramón Christopher Gutierrez, in 1971, known to be the father of Janine Gutierrez. Ramón Christopher's father is Filipino actor Eddie Gutierrez. Corrales also had an adopted son, VJ. In September 2001, Corrales married Paraguayan/Australian businessman Carlos López.
Corrales died in her sleep at her residence on April 12, 2025. She was 87. On May 4, Corrales was posthumously conferred with the Presidential Medal of Merit from President Bongbong Marcos for her services to the arts.