
Annetta Monroe has enjoyed a storied career performing as a classical concert artist throughout the U.S. and Canada, and as a featured soprano soloist with both the renowned Norman Luboff Choir and the Oratorio Society of New York at Carnegie Hall. She also spent a great deal of time as a session singer on motion picture and television recordings produced for movie studios that included Universal, MGM and 20th Century Fox.
Formerly the Coordinator of Voice and Associate Professor in the Music Department at the University of South Florida in Tampa, and now Professor Emeritus, Annetta performed as soloist with the USF Orchestra and Chorus, and for many years was a regular featured soloist for USF's School of Music Scholarship Concerts. She was also a soloist for a variety of choral and orchestral organizations throughout the Florida including the Florida Orchestra and the University of Miami, as well as at organizations within the Tampa Bay community-at-large.
Annetta received her musical training from the prestigious Oberlin College Conservatory of Music and the Mozarteum Academy of Music in Salzburg, Austria, and at Columbia University.
Annetta is considered a legend at BTP for another reason: she was a member of the cast of mid-1960s schoolchildren who performed on the original recording of "It's A Small World (After All)," for the United States portion of the song that has become an indelible part of the now-legendary attraction found at Disneyland, Walt Disney World and other Disney parks around the globe.