Onstage — whether literal or social — she performs a kind of quiet sovereignty. Her voice is calibrated to the exact temperature of attention required: warm enough to solicit confession, cool enough to withhold surrender. Audiences leave altered, carrying back with them a detail they didn’t have before: a line, a look, a cadence that rearranges how they speak to the people they love. She is an editor of atmospheres, a composer whose work registers less as a sequence of hits than as an enduring shift in tone.