Rita Lee Jones de Carvalho (31 December 1947 – 8 May 2023), known as Rita Lee, was a Brazilian singer, songwriter, author, actress and television host. Dubbed the "Queen of Brazilian Rock", she stood out as one of the most influential figures in the country's popular music, recognised for her reinvention and versatility in musical production. She began her career in rock, but over the years explored psychedelia, pop rock, disco, new wave, pop, bossa nova and electronic music, promoting a pioneering hybridisation between international genres and domestic traditions. This trajectory enabled her to move beyond the underground circuit of the 1960s and 1970s and achieve widespread success with romantic ballads in the 1980s.

Born and raised in São Paulo, she began her musical journey in 1963, joining the Tulio's Trio and, later, the Teenage Singers (which would become Os Seis). She rose to domestic prominence as the vocalist and instrumentalist of the Tropicália group Os Mutantes. She achieved solo stardom with the album Fruto Proibido (1975), recorded with the band Tutti Frutti and regarded as an essential milestone in the history of Brazilian rock, serving as a reference for generations of guitarists. In 1976, she established a romantic and creative partnership with the multi-instrumentalist and composer Roberto de Carvalho, with whom she co-wrote most of her repertoire. Together, they revolutionised pop music in Brazil and released a series of commercially highly successful albums, including Rita Lee (1979), Rita Lee (1980), Saúde (1981) and Rita Lee & Roberto de Carvalho (1982), the last of which is one of the best-selling Brazilian albums of all time. Her compositions, marked by sharp irony and advocacy for female autonomy, became constant presences in the charts, with songs such as "Ovelha negra", "Agora só falta você", "Mania de você", "Lança-perfume", "Baila comigo", "Saúde", "Banho de espuma", "Flagra", "Desculpe o auê", "Erva venenosa", "Amor e sexo" and "Reza".

Her visibility was reinforced through year-end specials on TV Globo—Rita Lee Jones (1980), Rita Lee Jones (1981), O Circo (1982), Rita Lee e Roberto de Carvalho (1985) and Rita Lee Especial (1995)—and through her work as a presenter on programmes such as TVLeezão (1991), Saia Justa (2002) and Madame Lee (2005). As a writer, she published 11 books during her lifetime and two posthumously, with particular note for her first autobiography, which sold seventy times the average print run of a book in Brazil. She also presented radio programmes and appeared in films and series, winning the award for Best Male Performer at the Rio Cine Festival in 1994 and the Troféu Calunga for Best Supporting Actress in 2006. A committed vegan, she defended the rights of animals, women and the LGBT community.

With more than 55 million records sold, Lee is the most commercially successful female Brazilian artist in history and one of the best-selling Latin music artists of all time. A pioneer in large-scale domestic tours, she became the first Brazilian singer to perform in gymnasiums and stadiums, attracting 500,000 spectators over a three-month period with the highly successful Tour Brasil 83. Among her distinctions are 12 Brazilian Music Awards, four APCA Awards, three Troféus Imprensa, two Latin Grammys and the honorary prize from the União Brasileira de Compositores (UBC). She was also listed by Rolling Stone Brasil among the greatest Brazilian voices and artists of all time.

Life and career

Early life and career beginnings

thumb|left|upright=0.7|Lee as a child, in a family photo.

Rita Lee Jones was born on 31 December 1947 in São Paulo, the youngest daughter of Charles Fenley Jones, a Brazilian-born dentist of American descent—his Confederate ancestors from Alabama and Tennessee had settled in Santa Bárbara d'Oeste after the US Civil War—and Romilda Padula, a pianist of Italian origin from Molise. Her two older sisters were Mary Lee and Virgínia Lee Jones; their father gave all three daughters the compound middle name "Lee" in honor of Confederate general Robert E. Lee. Although her parents initially intended to name her Bárbara after Saint Barbara, at the baptism they chose Rita to honour her maternal grandmother Clorinda, who was known as Rita.

Lee grew up in the middle-class Vila Mariana neighbourhood, where she lived until the birth of her first child. She later described the area as holding many of her fondest memories. She attended the French-Brazilian Liceu Pasteur, becoming fluent in Portuguese, English, French, Spanish, and Italian. In 1968 she briefly enrolled in the Social Communication course at the University of São Paulo alongside the future actress Regina Duarte, but dropped out the following year.

As a child she studied classical piano with Magda Tagliaferro. Initially she dreamed of becoming an actress or veterinarian; her father hoped she would follow him into dentistry. Her early musical tastes were shaped by both US rock and roll—particularly Elvis Presley, the Beatles, and the Rolling Stones—and the Brazilian classics her parents played at home, including João Gilberto, Cauby Peixoto, Angela Maria, Maysa Matarazzo, and Carmen Miranda. then formed an all-female vocal group, the Teenage Singers, who appeared at school parties. In 1964 they merged with a male trio, the Wooden Faces, to create the Six Sided Rockers; the band soon changed its name to Os Seis and released a single. After three members left, Lee and brothers Arnaldo and Sérgio Dias Baptista continued as Os Bruxos. In 1966, shortly before their television debut on O Pequeno Mundo de Ronnie Von (TV Record), presenter Ronnie Von—prompted by a suggestion from producer Alberto Helena Júnior inspired by the science-fiction novel O Império dos Mutantes by Stefan Wul—proposed the name Os Mutantes. The trio immediately adopted it.

1966–72: Os Mutantes and early solo albums

thumb|Os Mutantes in 1969; from left: Arnaldo Baptista, Lee and Sérgio Dias.

thumb|Os Mutantes in 1971

For six years, Lee was a core member of the pioneering tropicalista band Os Mutantes, alongside Arnaldo Baptista and Sérgio Dias. She contributed lead vocals, flute, and percussion, while occasionally playing synthesizer, banjo, and autoharp. Lee also experimented with unconventional sound sources, such as a pest-control spray pump to create effects in the track "Le premier bonheur du jour", and served as the group's primary lyricist.

The band released six studio albums between 1968 and 1972. Their self-titled debut (1968) is widely regarded as a landmark of Brazilian music, blending psychedelia, tropicalismo, and avant-garde elements to produce enduring hits including "A minha menina", "Dom Quixote", "Balada do louco", "2001 (Dois mil e um)", and "Ando meio desligado". Lee married bandmate Arnaldo Baptista in 1968; the couple separated in 1972, with their divorce finalized in 1977.

While still with Os Mutantes, Lee recorded two solo albums featuring backing from her bandmates. Build Up (1970), her debut, included several songs co-written with Arnaldo; it originated as the setlist for a private corporate event organized by the Fenit company in São Paulo. The album yielded her first solo single, "José", a Portuguese-language cover of Georges Moustaki's "Joseph" (previously recorded by Nara Leão). Her second effort, Hoje É o Primeiro Dia do Resto da Sua Vida (1972), was credited solely to Lee because Os Mutantes had already released an album that year, and their Philips contract prohibited additional releases under the band name. Os Mutantes performed and recorded the material, but only Lee appeared on the cover and received billing.</blockquote>

In a 2007 interview, Arnaldo confirmed: "I kicked Rita out of Os Mutantes."

1973–78: Tutti Frutti and national recognition

thumb|left|250px|upright|Tutti Frutti in 1974; from left: Paulinho Braga, Lee Marcucci, Luis Sérgio Carlini, Lee and Lúcia Turnbull.

In 1973, Lee formed the folk rock duo Cilibrinas do Éden with guitarist Lúcia Turnbull. They performed only once at the Phono 73 festival before disbanding. Lee then joined Lisergia, featuring guitarist Luis Sérgio Carlini, bassist Lee Marcucci, drummer Paulinho Braga, and Turnbull. In addition to lead vocals, she played piano, synthesizer, harmonica, and guitar.

Signed by Philips, they recorded their debut album, which the label withheld for being excessively alternative and due to censorship. Forced by contract to return to the studio, the group released Atrás do Porto Tem uma Cidade in 1974. Producer Marco Mazzola, hired without the band's approval, heavily altered the arrangements, causing widespread dissatisfaction. During a meeting at Phonogram, after an internal report noted poor commercial performance despite promotion, Lee insulted the executives and was expelled from the label.

Fruto Proibido reached stores in June 1975 through Som Livre, blending hard rock, blues, and glam rock. Widely regarded as one of Lee's masterpieces and a landmark of Brazilian rock, the album was ranked by Paste as the 12th best of 1975. Rolling Stone Brasil called it "the first Brazilian rock album that did not sound like a version of its English source material" and placed it 15th among the "100 Greatest Brazilian Music Records" list. peaking at number six between LPs on the year-end NOPEM chart, with over 700,000 copies sold to date. Four tracks received videos on TV Globo's Fantástico—"Ovelha negra", "Agora só falta você", "Esse tal de Roque Enrow", and "Dançar pra não dançar"—turning the first three into major hits. Its innovative staging and striking costumes further distinguished the shows.

thumb|upright=0.7|Lee performing during the Babilônia show (1978)

In 1976, the band released Entradas e Bandeiras, produced by Pena Schmidt, with singles "Coisas da vida" and "Corista de rock". Absent during mixing, Lee was displeased by the album's heavy emphasis on Carlini's guitars. Transferred to Hipódromo women's prison, she was visited by Elis Regina, who demanded medical care for pregnancy complications and stayed until the bleeding stopped. After a month and a half in detention, she received a one-year house arrest sentence and a fine. She served it at her parents' home in Vila Mariana, permitted only to perform at night. In 1978, Babilônia was released as the fourth and final Rita Lee & Tutti Frutti album, producing hits "Jardins da Babilônia", "Eu e meu gato", and "Miss Brasil 2000" and selling 150,000 copies. who renamed the group Rita Lee & Cães e Gatos for the promotional tour.

1979–83: Pop phase and partnership with Roberto de Carvalho

In 1979, following the end of the band Tutti Frutti, Lee formed a compositional and stage partnership with Carvalho. The collaboration marked her definitive transition from rock to a more accessible, commercial pop sound. The record sold approximately 800,000 copies and established Lee as Brazil's first pop superstar. The title track became a massive hit after featuring in a commercial for Ellus jeans, while "Chega mais" served as the opening theme for the telenovela of the same name. That same year, Lee appeared on the TV Globo special Mulher 80, which celebrated the leading female singers of Brazilian music.

thumb|upright=0.7|left|Lee performing during the Lança-perfume show (1981)

Her popularity surged further with the September 1980 release of the next album, also titled Rita Lee but widely known as Lança-perfume. The record brought Lee her first significant international breakthrough, particularly in French-speaking countries, where it reached the top 10 in Switzerland, Belgium, and France, selling more than 60,000 copies in the latter. It also performed strongly in Argentina, selling 200,000 copies and peaking at number seven, while in Brazil sales exceeded one million. By the end of 1981, Lee was featured on the cover of Exame magazine for her success amid the Brazilian music industry's crisis and was recognized as the country's best-selling female artist. later being re-recorded by various artists in French, Italian, Spanish, German, and Hebrew. "Baila comigo" gained further prominence as the opening theme of the telenovela of the same name. while the promotional tour received the Best Show award from the APCA Popular Music Award.

At the end of 1981, strategically timed for the Christmas shopping season, the album Saúde was released. Despite this, Veja magazine described it as "the most intriguing and innovative album of her career." the album featured the characteristic carnival-influenced style of the partnership. Although it received 400,000 pre-orders and was supported by a year-end TV Globo special, sales were lower than expected, with only about 30,000 additional copies sold by October 1982. The album still achieved platinum certification, charted in Uruguay, and reached the top five in Portugal. Lee later attributed the comparatively weaker commercial performance to the absence of a major promotional tour, noting that illness had prevented her from traveling to state capitals for shows.

In 1982, the duo released their self-titled album Rita Lee & Roberto de Carvalho, commonly known as Flagra. Its main tracks had strong impact: "Flagra" served as the opening theme for the telenovela Final Feliz, while "Cor-de-rosa choque" was written for the Globo program TV Mulher and required revision by federal censorship due to references to menstruation. The album achieved exceptional commercial success, earning double platinum certification in Brazil and silver in Portugal. It sold two million copies overall and ranked as the second best-selling album in Brazil in 1983.

At the end of 1982, Lee and Carvalho previewed their upcoming tour with two shows at Ginásio do Ibirapuera in São Paulo, which were recorded for TV Globo's year-end special O Circo. The Tour Brasil 83, held in gymnasiums and stadiums across the country, was inspired by the Rolling Stones' 1981 American tour, which the couple had attended. The tour inaugurated the era of Brazilian megashows, attracting 500,000 spectators in just three months—a record for national tours at the time. The production featured sophisticated set design, elaborate lighting, and multiple costume changes, making it the largest spectacle ever produced in Brazil up to that point. Due to the high costs, the final revenue was considered disappointing, totaling around 80 million cruzeiros.

During the tour, the duo released the international album Baila Conmigo in April 1983, consisting of Spanish-language versions of their biggest hits. The album sold 80,000 copies in Mexico within one month and reached eighth place in Argentina. A music video for the title track was filmed in Mexico, and the song climbed into the top five in Argentine singles sales.

1983–90: Post-commercial peak and decline of the duo

After the most successful tour of her career, Lee and Carvalho released their third duo album, Bombom, in 1983. Recorded with contributions from Toto members Steve Lukather and Mike Porcaro, the album contained explicit content that provoked strict censorship from Brazil's military regime. Two tracks were scratched on initial vinyl pressings to prevent playback, public performances and radio airplay were banned, and sales were restricted to buyers over 18. Despite poor reception from the duo themselves and from critics, who labeled it a fiasco, Bombom still achieved double platinum certification in less than four months. At the height of the negative reception, Lee announced she would not release a new album in 1984. The label responded with Rita Hits, a collection of remixes, to prevent a full hiatus. She later blamed her performance on a hangover after celebrating with Carvalho at the Copacabana Palace and refused to return for the second weekend. Though better received than Bombom, it sold just over 500,000 copies and ended the duo's streak of major radio hits. Years later, "Vítima" found new success as the theme for the telenovela A Próxima Vítima.

thumb|upright=0.7|right|Lee photographed during her Tour 87/88, in 1987

After leaving Som Livre in 1986, Lee created the radio program Radioamador on 89 FM A Rádio Rock with Antônio Bivar. Using the pseudonym Lita Ree, she hosted the show and performed multiple characters. Concerned that children's media ignored issues such as global warming, animal protection, and mining dangers, she began writing children's books. Her first, Dr. Alex, launched a series using stories to introduce these topics. She then signed with EMI and released Flerte Fatal in May 1987. The album sold better than its predecessor, with 500,000 pre-orders and platinum certification. Its lead single "Pega rapaz" restored her radio presence. After Estadão suggested she was in "creative menopause," Lee cut all ties with the press. She and Carvalho then embarked on what would be her last large-scale tour, which drew around 250,000 spectators. A recording from the Maracanãzinho in Rio de Janeiro, directed by Nelson Motta, aired as a year-end special on Rede Manchete. The show featured banners reading "Camisinha já" and "Diretas ontem" descending to the stage.

In 1988, Lee published her second children's book, Dr. Alex e os Reis de Angra, about villains kidnapping a princess to build nuclear power plants. Lee later said she was not proud of it and wished it had never been made. Despite the lukewarm response, she won the first Sharp Music Award for Best Pop/Rock Female Singer. In May 1989, she contributed the title song to the film Better Days Ahead, winning a Sharp Award for Best Film Soundtrack. In 1990, she published Dr. Alex na Amazônia, in which the character fights rainforest destruction, fires, and threats to animals and indigenous communities. It sold 400,000 copies, peaked at number five on the national best-sellers chart in 1992, along with the APCA Popular Music Award for Best Show.

In 1992, Lee portrayed Raul Seixas in the short film Tanta Estrela por Aí…, directed by Tadeu Knudsen. Her performance earned her first acting award: Best Male Performer at the 10th Rio Cine Festival.

Returning to Som Livre, Lee embraced rock 'n' roll again with her self-titled 1993 album, popularly known as Todas as Mulheres do Mundo. The release won her the Sharp Award for Best Pop/Rock Female Singer; at the ceremony, she received a standing ovation and emerged as the most discussed personality of the night. For three months, she also served as a columnist for Jornal da Tarde of the Grupo Estadão. In 1995, preparing to open for the Rolling Stones at Hollywood Rock, she underwent emergency detoxification treatment. During the Rio de Janeiro performance, she appeared dressed as Mary, mother of Jesus, and sang an Ave Maria while performing the title track, as a homage to the band's first show in Brazil. The gesture provoked nationwide controversy for its use of Catholic imagery in a song about female empowerment, drawing condemnation from the Archdiocese of Rio de Janeiro, which called it an affront to the population's religious sentiments. Later that year, she resumed her collaboration with Carvalho on the A Marca da Zorra show—the duo's first major production since the late 1980s.

In 1996, Lee swept three Sharp Awards in one evening: Best Female Singer, Best Pop/Rock Album (for the live recording of the previous tour), and Best Show. Speaking to the press, she said: "Deep down, for someone whose work has always been heavily criticized, it feels really good to finally be recognized." She also became the first woman to win the Shell Music Award in the prize's 16-year history. Surgery involving titanium pins in the jaw and silicone implants in the lips resolved the injury, but it initially impaired her speech, threatened her singing voice, and caused a permanent 40% hearing loss in her right ear. In the wake of the accident, the couple formalized their civil marriage; Lee began signing as Rita Lee Jones de Carvalho and appeared with her husband and children on the cover of Caras magazine.

thumb|upright=0.7|Lee during the Balacobaco show (2004)

In 1997, she was the main honoree at the tenth Sharp Awards—sharing the spotlight with Fernanda Montenegro at the Shell Theater Awards—in a tribute featuring performances by Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, Ney Matogrosso, Zélia Duncan, Fernanda Abreu, and Joyce, who composed the new song "Minha gata Rita Lee" for the occasion. The album Santa Rita de Sampa represented one of the most anticipated comebacks of the 1990s; its title derived from Lee's self-description as "the patron saint of unusual things, often considered profane." Lee once again took home the Sharp Award for Best Pop/Rock Female Singer.

In September 1998, she released her third live album, Acústico MTV, which featured reinterpretations of earlier hits and two new tracks. Certified platinum for both CD and DVD, with 650,000 copies sold, it was widely regarded as one of the strongest entries in the series. Promotion included appearances on Programa Livre and Hebe, along with the Meio Desleegada tour, which visited multiple states and concluded in May 1999 with a performance for 100,000 spectators at Ibirapuera Park in São Paulo.

3001 (2000), featuring collaborations with Tom Zé and Itamar Assumpção, An international tour (2000–2001) aired as a Rede Bandeirantes special with guests Caetano Veloso, Zélia Duncan, Paula Toller, and Pato Fu. Lee recorded Beatles covers for Aqui, Ali, Em Qualquer Lugar (2001; released internationally as Bossa 'n Beatles), blending bossa nova, rock, and forró. The record reached number one in Argentina, earned platinum certification there, and led to a sold-out concert at Buenos Aires' Luna Park that was widely regarded as her consecration in the country.

Compilation albums Para Sempre and Novelas (2001–2002) followed, the latter collecting her telenovela themes. Lee joined GNT's Saia Justa (2002) alongside Fernanda Young and Marisa Orth. Balacobaco (2003) sold 550,000 copies behind the hit "Amor e sexo" and marked her return to major commercial success with a studio album of entirely new material—her first major seller since the late 1980s. In 2004, she performed for over 200,000 at São Paulo's Vale do Anhangabaú during the city's 450th-anniversary celebrations.

2010–2019: Retirement from touring, Reza, and literary career

In October 2010, Lee premiered her Etc... show, opening in Belo Horizonte and reviving several hits that had long disappeared from her repertoire. The tour traveled across Brazil and extended to Buenos Aires, where she performed at the Teatro Gran Rex. Around this time, after receiving a cell phone as a gift from one of her sons, she joined Twitter and quickly became an active user, amassing some 670,000 followers. Her sharp, humorous posts earned her the nickname "the crazy woman of Twitter" in the press.

In January 2012, during an Etc... concert at Circo Voador in Rio de Janeiro, Lee announced her retirement from live shows, citing physical fragility. When asked about the decision, she explained: "It was 47 years nonstop on the road, I deserve to slack off […]." In a later interview with Fantástico, Lee revealed she had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder. Carvalho noted that the condition, which was still not properly treated at the time, had contributed to the incident, explaining that "it was a phase when the right medication was still being sought."

thumb|upright=0.7|left|Lee during the Etc... show, May 2011

After nine years without new studio material—her last album had been Balacobaco (2003)—Lee released Reza in April 2012. The album received a modest critical response; Commercially, however, it performed strongly: the title track swiftly overtook Michel Teló's "Ai, se eu te pego" as the top-selling song on the Brazilian iTunes Store, joined the soundtrack of the telenovela Avenida Brasil, and ranked among the year's most consumed albums in the country. Her final concert came in early 2013 before an audience of around 35,000 at Vale do Anhangabaú in São Paulo, during celebrations for the city's 459th anniversary. Later that year, she featured on Sérgio Britto's "Purabossanova", which won her the Contigo! Music Award for Best Song. From then on, she focused primarily on literary work.

To mark 50 years in her career, she published Storynhas with Companhia das Letras, in collaboration with cartoonist Laerte Coutinho. The book collected 76 short stories inspired by her Twitter posts. At the book-signing event at Shopping Iguatemi in São Paulo, she appeared with short, choppy hair showing gray strands, having abandoned her signature red dye. She said she was "loving being a homemaker" and wanted to "stay anonymous."

In 2016, she released her first autobiography, Rita Lee: uma autobiografia, through Globo Livros. The book sold more than 200,000 copies—roughly seventy times the average print run for a book in Brazil—and received unanimous critical acclaim. It won the APCA Literature Award in the Biography/Autobiography/Memoir category, while Lee herself received the Grand Prize of the Critics for her overall contribution to Popular Music. The autobiography ultimately sold over 350,000 copies. In 2017, she published the children's and young adult collection Dropz, featuring 61 illustrated stories on diverse themes. She said the book was written in just three months, without pressure or a fixed routine. In 2018, she released FavoRita, co-authored with Guilherme Samora, which gathered rare photographs, documents of songs censored during the military dictatorship, fashion highlights, and a new cover photo essay. In 2019, she returned to children's literature 27 years after Dr. Alex e o Oráculo de Quartz (1992) with Amiga ursa: uma história triste, mas com final feliz. The project ultimately did not materialize, although she reiterated her intention to record a new album, describing it as "a good idea." In 2021, the duo Anavitória featured Lee on their album Cor, where she recited a passage by Simone de Beauvoir on the track "Amarelo, azul e branco". That May, at age 73, she received a routine medical examination and was diagnosed with a primary tumor in her left lung. Doctors initially gave her three to four months to live. As treatment progressed, the cancer metastasized, and she began chemotherapy.

Still in 2021, her son João curated three volumes of the project Rita Lee & Roberto – Classix Remix, which compiled 42 tracks remixed by various DJs from her original repertoire. The volumes were released between April and June. Around the same time, she released "Change", a collaboration with Carvalho and electronic producer Gui Boratto. The dance-pop song, sung in English and French, marked her first release in nine years and was later included in the soundtrack of the telenovela Um Lugar ao Sol. Reflecting on the track, Lee said: "[…] enough of suffering, it is time to spread our little wings and attract joy."

At the beginning of 2022, Lee continued her children's book series Dr. Alex with the fifth installment, Dr. Alex & Vovó Ritinha: uma aventura no espaço, which explored themes of religiosity and the importance of the planet. After 11 months of treatment, involving more than 30 sessions of radiotherapy and chemotherapy, April examinations revealed that one of the tumors—which she had nicknamed "Jair" in reference to then-president Jair Bolsonaro, a frequent target of her criticism — had disappeared. It was also announced that she was writing Rita Lee: outra autobiografia, the second volume of her memoirs, covering her experiences during the pandemic and cancer treatment. From then on, Lee's public appearances were limited to occasional photos shared by her husband and sons on social media, along with brief interactions with fans. but on medical advice she did not attend the ceremony. That same month, she appeared on the cover of Rolling Stone Brasils digital edition, which included an exclusive photo shoot by Samora and an unpublished interview. In it, she declared: "I prefer to be called 'patron saint of freedom' rather than 'queen of rock,' which I find somewhat tacky." It was then announced that Rita Lee: outra autobiografia would be released on 22 May by Globo Livros. In the book, Lee detailed her cancer treatment. Her final public appearance on social media came in April, when her husband and son João shared photos of her watching the "Palco Rita Lee" tribute episode of the television program Altas Horas, which featured performances by Céu, Paulo Ricardo, Tiago Iorc, Zezé Motta, and her son Beto.

Death

Around the night of 8 May 2023, Lee's condition worsened again, and she passed away surrounded by family at her home, at the age of 75, from lung cancer. The following morning, the family publicly confirmed her death. Her death spurred a resurgence of her albums and books on the charts. The farewell was planned by Lee herself, who specified the venue, the decoration, its open-to-the-public nature, and the color of her attire. Family members, close friends, and public figures such as Xuxa, Serginho Groisman, Pedro Bial, and Maria Rita offered condolences on site. The event drew approximately 6,000 fans, who lined up to pay their final personal respects, many carrying items associated with the artist, such as vinyl records and her own books. During the transfer of her body for cremation later that night, admirers chanted "Rita, eu te amo" ("Rita, I love you") and sang the classic "Ovelha negra" in farewell.

Lee had expressed a wish for her body to be cremated and her ashes scattered in her garden. Carvalho chose, however, not to fully honor this request during his lifetime, intending instead for their ashes to be mixed together; currently, they are kept at the couple's residence in a spherical urn placed atop a kind of domestic shrine.

A prophecy recorded by the artist herself on the final page of her first autobiography drew media attention:

<blockquote>"When I die, I can imagine the words of affection from those who detest me. Some radio stations will play my songs without demanding payola, colleagues will say I'll be missed in the music world, maybe they'll even name a dead-end street after me. The fans, those sincere ones, will wave my album covers and sing 'Ovelha negra', the TVs will already have a summary of my career ready to air on the news and a little note in some magazines' obits. On social media, some will say: 'Huh, I thought the old lady had already died, lol.' No politician will dare show up at my wake, since I never appeared on any of their platforms and I'd rise from the coffin to boo them. Meanwhile, there I'll be, soul present in heaven, playing my autoharp and singing to God: 'Thank you Lord, finally sedated.'"</blockquote>

According to the newspaper Correio Braziliense, Lee left an estate estimated at around 30 million reais, consisting of assets that generate copyright royalties, along with businesses, real estate, and various investments.

Repercussion

Lee's death received international coverage, appearing in English-, Spanish-, French-, and German-language newspapers, and triggered a significant surge in demand for her recorded and literary works. The following day—10 May—Lee ranked as the fourth most-streamed artist in Brazil and the sixth in Portugal on Spotify, with twelve tracks entering the top 50 of the platform's Daily Viral Songs in Brazil. The song "Ovelha negra" reached sixth place—marking her highest-ever position on the chart—followed, in descending order, by "Mania de você", "Coisas da vida", "Desculpe o auê", "Minha vida", "Saúde", "Agora só falta você", "Lança-perfume", "Doce vampiro", "Reza", and "Coisas da vida (ao Vivo)". In the week of 5 to 11 May, four albums from Lee's discography entered the Weekly Top Albums Brazil on Spotify: the compilation Lança Perfume e Outras Manias led at 17th place, followed by Mania de Você at 39th, while Acústico MTV and Fruto Proibido made the top 200.

In the publishing sphere, Rita Lee: uma autobiografia (2016) became the best-selling book in Brazil between 8 and 14 May 2023, according to BookInfo data. The work also topped the overall Amazon list—the country's leading book retail platform—and the nonfiction category in Veja magazine, with FavoRita (2018) ranking in the top 10. On the PublishNews list—which tracks sales exclusively in physical bookstores—the 2016 volume reached first place in the week of 15 to 21 May. On 22 May 2023, Globo Livros released Rita Lee: outra autobiografia, which, still in pre-sale, hit fifth place among Amazon's best-sellers and rose to the top of the overall list within just three days. In Veja magazine's annual 2023 retrospective, Rita Lee: outra autobiografia headed the list of the year's best-selling nonfiction books, while the previous autobiography placed sixth. Overall, the artist's literary works have sold more than one million copies.

Posthumous releases

In January 2011—one year before announcing her retirement from live performances—Lee began work on the album Bossa 'n Movies. Intended as a sequel to her 1991 live album Bossa 'n Roll, it was to feature Portuguese-language versions, written by Lee herself, of famous movie themes reinterpreted in bossa nova style. However, she prioritized the original-songs album Reza (2012) and set Bossa 'n Movies aside after recording vocals for just two tracks.

One of them, "Voando"—Lee's Portuguese version of Domenico Modugno and Franco Migliacci's Italian song "Volare"—was premiered by Globo's Fantástico program on 9 June 2024, thirteen years after recording. The single was released the following day, credited to Lee and Roberto de Carvalho, who served as musical producer, arranger, and sole performer on guitar, bass, programming, and keyboards. It won the 2025 Brazilian Music Awards in the Audiovisual Project category.

On 8 May 2025—two years after Lee's death—the documentary Rita Lee: Mania de Você premiered on HBO Max. Directed by Guido Goldberg and produced by Argentina's Mandarina Contenidos, the film presents an intimate portrait of Lee's life and career through exclusive interviews, archival footage, and testimonies from family, musicians, and celebrities including Gilberto Gil and Ney Matogrosso. A highlight is the reading of a letter Lee wrote to her family shortly before her death, reflecting on her journey and legacy. Directed by Oswaldo Santana and co-directed by Karen Harley, the film eschews celebrity interviews and biographical narration in favor of Lee's own voice, drawn from her career-spanning interviews and self-filmed home videos. It offers a personal glimpse into her reclusive later years, showcasing her garden (tended by Roberto de Carvalho), miniature collection, paintings, pet marmosets, dog, and cats. The film quickly became the most-viewed Brazilian documentary in cinemas for the year, surpassing 50,000 admissions.

Legacy