Sarah Brightman, space tourist, hopes to sing on space station (VIDEO)

GlobalPost

Sarah Brightman, best known for her renditions of Andrew Lloyd Weber classics and a duet with Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli, has booked her ticket into space.

The 52-year-old British performer has purchased a ticket to fly to the International Space Station next year, BBC reported.

“This voyage is a product of a dream, my dream. Finally, it can be a reality. I am more excited about this than anything I have done in my life to date,” she said today in Moscow, according to BBC.

Brightman must prepare for six months next year at Star City cosmonaut training center in Russia.

She will become the seventh celebrity to embark on the voyage, according to BBC.

Brightman, who booked her trip through Vienna-based Space Adventures, and two others will fly aboard the Soyuz capsule.

More from GlobalPost: Astronaut builds Lego model of International Space Station while on actual ISS (VIDEO)

The timing of the voyage has yet to be determined, but her training will begin after a 2013 tour to promote her album “Dreamchaser,” The Associated Press said.

Brightman is also a UNESCO ambassador, and she hinted she might perform in space to draw awareness to the cause, the AP said.

Brightman had to pass a physical and psychological exam in order to enter the training program.

One of her early hits was “I Lost My Heart to a Starship Trooper,” in 1978.

She also starred in Weber’s productions of “Cats” and “Phantom of the Opera” in London.

Weber and Brightman married in 1984, but divorced 6 years later.

The last famous space tourist was Cirque du Soleil founder Guy Laliberte, who paid $35 million for his ticket.

More from GlobalPost: Astronauts watch Olympics from space station

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