New York, NY (Top40 Charts) On Sunday, Feb 5, composer Germaine Franco made history as the first woman of color to win the Grammy® for Best Score
Soundtrack for Visual Media for her spectacular work on Disney's Encanto. This win follows her historic Oscar nomination from last year, and her win for Outstanding Score for a Studio Film fro the Society of Composers and Lyricists. In her Grammy speech she thanked the musicians of Encanto - many who were also playing on stage for the Grammy's band, and all of the musicians who are making beautiful music so that the world will be a better place.
Germaine is the first woman to score a Disney animated feature film with 2021's Encanto, for which she won a Grammy for Best Score
Soundtrack for Visual Media & received an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Score, plus an SCL Award for Outstanding Original Score, an
Annie Award for Best
Music in a Feature (shared with Lin-Manuel Miranda), a Variety Artisan Composer Award, and a Golden
Globe nomination for Best Original Score. The soundtrack album to Encanto, which featured 27 tracks of Franco's original music, was a huge commercial success and topped the Billboard Charts for nine weeks worldwide. Germaine co-wrote and produced five of Coco's six original songs with co-director, Adrian Molina, including "Un Poco Loco" and "Proud Corazón."
In 2018, Univision celebrated her work as one of "15 Latinas Who Are Changing The World As We Know It," alongside Rita
Moreno and Emma Gonzalez. Franco scored Kung Fu
Panda Land of Awesomeness for Universal Studios Beijing, which garnered an SCL Award nomination for Outstanding Original Score for
Interactive Media. In 2020 she scored two No.1 Netflix films, Work It, directed by
Laura Terruso, and The Sleepover, directed by Trish Sie. She co-wrote and produced the main title theme song for the hit Nickelodeon show The Casagrandes. In 2019, Franco scored
Little and Dora and the Lost City of Gold. Additional scores include Tag, directed by Jeff Tomsic, and Dope, directed by Rick Famuyiwa. Her work is heard in concert halls around the world including the Walt Disney Concert Hall with The Los Angeles Master Chorale, The Puerto Rico Symphony, The Dallas Symphony Orchestra, The
National Symphony Orchestra, The
Chicago Philharmonic, among others.