Rebekah Del Rio Dies: Singer In Iconic ‘Mulholland Drive’ Scene was 57
She was not on the list.
Rebekah Del Rio, the singer-songwriter whose performance of a Spanish-language cover of Roy Orbison’s “Crying” made for an indelible scene in David Lynch‘s 2001 film Mulholland Drive, died June 23 at her home in Los Angeles. She was 57.
Her death was confirmed by her nephew Dan Coronado in a
Facebook post. A cause of death has not been disclosed.
“We really were blessed to have a beautiful day with her 2 Sundays ago and I’m so grateful my kids will remember how special it was to hear her God-given talent,” Coronado wrote.
Born July 10, 1967, in Chula Vista, CA, Del Rio began
performing to critical acclaim in San Diego before moving to Los Angeles in
1989. Her recording of “Llorando,” the title given to her Orbison cover, was
brought to Lynch’s attention by their mutual agent, and the director arranged a
meeting where Del Rio performed the song for him.
An impressed Lynch wrote a scene for Del Rio in Mulholland
Drive, a rejected TV pilot he was adapting into a feature film. The scene was
set in the Club Silencio, and featured Del Rio singing “Llorando” a cappella.
Enchanting the Club Silencio audience with a powerfully emotional performance,
Del Rio’s character faints (or worse) and crumples to the stage floor as the
song hits its crescendo. When the singing continues, it’s revealed she had been
lip-syncing.
The startling scene brought Del Rio to a national audience. She subsequently found work on soundtracks for Southland Tales, Sin City, Man on Fire and Streets of Legend.
Del Rio reunited with Lynch when the director wrote a scene in Twin Peaks: The Return for her and Moby in which the two performed in a roadhouse.
In addition to the various soundtracks, the singer’s albums
include Nobody’s Angel (1994), All My Life/Toda Mi Vida (2003) and Love Hurts
Love Heals (2011).

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