Rita Lee Siblings: All About Mary and Virgínia Lee Jones

Rita Lee PHOTO/Gbet
Rita Lee was a groundbreaking Brazilian singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, actress, writer, and television presenter, widely celebrated as the “Queen of Brazilian Rock.”
Born Rita Lee Jones on December 31, 1947, in São Paulo, Brazil, she became one of the most influential figures in the country’s music scene, blending rock, psychedelia, pop, and Brazilian rhythms over a six-decade career that sold more than 55 million records.
She passed away on May 8, 2023, at the age of 75 in her hometown of São Paulo after battling lung cancer.
Siblings
Rita Lee grew up in a musically inclined middle-class family in São Paulo’s Vila Mariana neighborhood.
She was the youngest of three daughters born to Charles Fenley Jones, a Brazilian-born dentist of American descent whose Confederate ancestors from Alabama and Tennessee had settled in Santa Bárbara d’Oeste after the American 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 middle name “Lee” in honor of Confederate general Robert E. Lee.
Career
Rita Lee’s career began in the mid-1960s when she co-founded the seminal psychedelic rock band Os Mutantes with brothers Arnaldo and Sérgio Dias Baptista.
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The group became a cornerstone of the Tropicália movement, collaborating with icons like Gilberto Gil and Caetano Veloso, and fusing British and American rock influences with Brazilian elements in a bold, experimental style that challenged the military dictatorship’s cultural norms.
After leaving Os Mutantes in 1972 (or around 1973 in some accounts), she pursued a solo path, initially backed by the band Tutti Frutti, delivering hits that mixed rock, disco, and pop.
Her creative partnership with Roberto de Carvalho from the late 1970s onward produced some of her most iconic work, including albums and songs like “Mania de Você,” “Lança Perfume,” and “Ovelha Negra.”
She explored various genres over the years, from new wave and bossa nova to electronic music, while maintaining a candid, humorous, and liberated persona that resonated with audiences.
Rita also acted, hosted television programs, and continued releasing music into the 2000s, with her album 3001 marking a notable late-career highlight.
She retired from live performances in the early 2010s due to health concerns but left a lasting legacy through her recordings and cultural impact.
Accolades
Rita Lee received 12 Brazilian Music Awards, three APCA Awards, three Troféus Imprensa, and two Latin Grammys, including one for Best Portuguese Language Rock Album with 3001 in 2001.
In 2022, she was honored with the Latin Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award (or Musical Excellence Award) for her body of work.
Additional recognitions include the APCA Grand Critics’ Prize for Popular Music and an honorary prize from the União Brasileira de Compositores.
Her influence extended beyond awards; she was regarded as Brazil’s most successful female recording artist by sales and helped shape the sound of Brazilian rock while championing freedom, feminism, and artistic rebellion during turbulent political times.
Her autobiography became the best-selling non-fiction book in Brazil in 2017, further cementing her role as a thoughtful chronicler of her era.
