The Legacy of Marian Anderson

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Legacy of Marian Anderson Date: Thursday, April 4th, 2013, 12:30pm Place: Hillwood Commons Lecture Hall Speaker: Marc Courtade newyorker.com Marian Anderson was one of the most celebrated singers of the twentieth century. She became an important figure in the struggle for black artists to overcome racial prejudice in the United States during the mid-twentieth century. In 1939, the Daughters of the American Revolution refused permission for Anderson to sing to an integrated audience in Constitution Hall. Instead, with the aid of Eleanor Roosevelt, Anderson performed a critically acclaimed open-air concert on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on Easter Sunday, April 9, 1939. She sang before a crowd of more than 75,000 people and a radio audience in the millions. In 1955, Anderson broke the color barrier by becoming the first African-American to perform with the Metropolitan Opera. In 1958 she was officially designated delegate to the United Nations, a formalization of her role as "goodwill ambassador" of the U.S., and in 1972 she was awarded the UN Peace Prize. Anderson may have been a reluctant participant in the civil rights movement, but greatness was thrust upon her. A generation of African-American singers is indebted to her for blazing the trail towards equality. About the Speaker... Marc Courtade is Business Manager for Tilles Center for the Performing Arts at Long Island University, and Producer and Artistic Director of Performance Plus!, a pre-performance lecture series. He is a frequent lecturer for the Hutton House Lectures, specializing in Musicals and Opera courses, and Adjunct Professor in the Arts Management curriculum. An avid performer, Marc has appeared in numerous productions throughout Long Island. Please note: This event is free and open to the public. The event is sponsored by the LIU Post library and partners and is made possible through the support of the National Endowment for the Humanities Long Island University-Post Campus, 720 Northern Boulevard, Brookville, NY 11548 or Prof. Manju Prasad Rao 516-299-2868 Image Credit: Hulton Archive/Archive Photos/Getty Images/Universal Images Group.
Recommended publications
  • Honorary Degree Recipients 1977 – Present
    Board of Trustees HONORARY DEGREE RECIPIENTS 1977 – PRESENT Name Year Awarded Name Year Awarded Claire Collins Harvey, C‘37 Harry Belafonte 1977 Patricia Roberts Harris Katherine Dunham 1990 Toni Morrison 1978 Nelson Mandela Marian Anderson Marguerite Ross Barnett Ruby Dee Mattiwilda Dobbs, C‘46 1979 1991 Constance Baker Motley Miriam Makeba Sarah Sage McAlpin Audrey Forbes Manley, C‘55 Mary French Rockefeller 1980 Jesse Norman 1992 Mabel Murphy Smythe* Louis Rawls 1993 Cardiss Collins Oprah Winfrey Effie O’Neal Ellis, C‘33 Margaret Walker Alexander Dorothy I. Height 1981 Oran W. Eagleson Albert E. Manley Carol Moseley Braun 1994 Mary Brookins Ross, C‘28 Donna Shalala Shirley Chisholm Susan Taylor Eleanor Holmes Norton 1982 Elizabeth Catlett James Robinson Alice Walker* 1995 Maya Angelou Elie Wiesel Etta Moten Barnett Rita Dove Anne Cox Chambers 1983 Myrlie Evers-Williams Grace L. Hewell, C‘40 Damon Keith 1996 Sam Nunn Pinkie Gordon Lane, C‘49 Clara Stanton Jones, C‘34 Levi Watkins, Jr. Coretta Scott King Patricia Roberts Harris 1984 Jeanne Spurlock* Claire Collins Harvey, C’37 1997 Cicely Tyson Bernice Johnson Reagan, C‘70 Mary Hatwood Futrell Margaret Taylor Burroughs Charles Merrill Jewel Plummer Cobb 1985 Romae Turner Powell, C‘47 Ruth Davis, C‘66 Maxine Waters Lani Guinier 1998 Gwendolyn Brooks Alexine Clement Jackson, C‘56 William H. Cosby 1986 Jackie Joyner Kersee Faye Wattleton Louis Stokes Lena Horne Aurelia E. Brazeal, C‘65 Jacob Lawrence Johnnetta Betsch Cole 1987 Leontyne Price Dorothy Cotton Earl Graves Donald M. Stewart 1999 Selma Burke Marcelite Jordan Harris, C‘64 1988 Pearl Primus Lee Lorch Dame Ruth Nita Barrow Jewel Limar Prestage 1989 Camille Hanks Cosby Deborah Prothrow-Stith, C‘75 * Former Student As of November 2019 Board of Trustees HONORARY DEGREE RECIPIENTS 1977 – PRESENT Name Year Awarded Name Year Awarded Max Cleland Herschelle Sullivan Challenor, C’61 Maxine D.
    [Show full text]
  • American Heritage Day
    American Heritage Day DEAR PARENTS, Each year the elementary school students at Valley Christian Academy prepare a speech depicting the life of a great American man or woman. The speech is written in the first person and should include the character’s birth, death, and major accomplishments. Parents should feel free to help their children write these speeches. A good way to write the speech is to find a child’s biography and follow the story line as you construct the speech. This will make for a more interesting speech rather than a mere recitation of facts from the encyclopedia. Students will be awarded extra points for including spiritual application in their speeches. Please adhere to the following time limits. K-1 Speeches must be 1-3 minutes in length with a minimum of 175 words. 2-3 Speeches must be 2-5 minutes in length with a minimum of 350 words. 4-6 Speeches must be 3-10 minutes in length with a minimum of 525 words. Students will give their speeches in class. They should be sure to have their speeches memorized well enough so they do not need any prompts. Please be aware that students who need frequent prompting will receive a low grade. Also, any student with a speech that doesn’t meet the minimum requirement will receive a “D” or “F.” Students must portray a different character each year. One of the goals of this assignment is to help our children learn about different men and women who have made America great. Help your child choose characters from whom they can learn much.
    [Show full text]
  • WGC Library Catalogue
    Book Title Author (Last name, FirstAuthor name) Category Secondary Category Status Daughters of the Dreaming Bell, Diane Diane Bell Anthropology top shelf For Their Triumph and For Their Tears Bernstein, Hilda Hilda Bernstein Anthropology top shelf Women of the Shadows: The Wives and Mothers of Southern Italy Comelisen, Ann Ann Comelisen Anthropology top shelf Women of Deh Koh Fredi, Erika Erika Fredi Anthropology top shelf Women and the Anscestors: Black Carib Kinship and Ritual Kerns, Virginia Virginia Kerns Anthropology top shelf Sex and Temperament in Three Primitive Societies Mead, Margaret Margaret Mead Anthropology top shelf Murphy, Yolanda & Women of the Forest Robert Yolanda Murphy & Robert Murphy Anthropology top shelf Woman's Consciousness, Man's World Rowbotham, Sheila Anthropology top shelf Exposures: Womem and Their Art Brown, Betty Ann & Raven,Betty Arlene Ann Brown and Arlene Raven Art top shelf Crafting with Feminism Burton, Bonnie Bonnie Burton Art top shelf Feminist Icon Cross-Stitch Fleiss, Anna and Mancuso,Anna Lauren Fleiss and Lauren Mancuso Art Reel to Real: Race, Class, and Sex at the Movies hooks, bell bell hooks Art Sociology top shelf Displaced Allergies: Post-Revolutionary Iranian Cinema Mottahedeh, Negar Negar Mottahedeh Art top shelf Representing the Unrepresentable: Historical Images of National Reform from the Qajars Mottahedeh, Negar Negar Mottahedeh Art Middle Eastern Studies top shelf Sex, Art, and American Culture Paglia, Camile Camille Paglia Art top shelf Women Artists: Recognition and Reappraisal
    [Show full text]
  • Called to the Mall an Anthology of Stories About the National Mall Edited by Louise Parker Kelley
    Called to the Mall An Anthology of Stories about the National Mall edited by Louise Parker Kelley Published by Shining Stars Montessori Academy Public Charter School of Washington, D.C., and the National Mall Coalition Called to the Mall © September 25, 2017 by Shining Stars Montessori Academy Public Charter School and the National Mall Coalition, of Washington, D.C. Second Edition, January 2018. Title page photograph courtesy of Carol Highsmith They Came: from Peacesong DC, Chapter 26, reprinted with permission © 2017 Carolivia Herron Graphic of John Lewis © 2017 Jackie Urbanovic Cover Design by Jackie Urbanovic, Donovan Simpson, Tariq Timberlake, Amanda Gary, Byron Johnson, Sia Rosalia Amhmadu, and Louise Parker Kelley. All rights reserved. www.shiningstarspcs.org Shining Stars Montessori Academy Public Charter School 1240 Randolph Street NE Washington, D.C. 20017 ISBN 978-1-938609-41-1 Called to the Mall is an anthology of original essays and graphics about the National Mall in Washington, D.C. by Washington area public school students and adults. COVER PHOTO: The colorful plan on the cover is the 1901-1902 McMillan Commission Plan for the National Mall, which is the basis for the Mall we know today, stretching from the Capitol Building to the Washington Monument westward to the Lincoln Memorial. This Plan developed and extended the original 1791 L’Enfant Plan for Washington, D.C., with the National Mall at its center. In both visionary plans, the Mall’s monuments, public buildings, and open landscape were intended to embody America’s founding principles and provide public space for use by the American people.
    [Show full text]
  • JOHN FOSTER DULLES PAPERS PERSONNEL SERIES The
    JOHN FOSTER DULLES PAPERS PERSONNEL SERIES The Personnel Series, consisting of approximately 17,900 pages, is comprised of three subseries, an alphabetically arranged Chiefs of Mission Subseries, an alphabetically arranged Special Liaison Staff Subseries and a Chronological Subseries. The entire series focuses on appointments and evaluations of ambassadors and other foreign service personnel and consideration of political appointees for various posts. The series is an important source of information on the staffing of foreign service posts with African- Americans, Jews, women, and individuals representing various political constituencies. Frank assessments of the performances of many chiefs of mission are found here, especially in the Chiefs of Mission Subseries and much of the series reflects input sought and obtained by Secretary Dulles from his staff concerning the political suitability of ambassadors currently serving as well as numerous potential appointees. While the emphasis is on personalities and politics, information on U.S. relations with various foreign countries can be found in this series. The Chiefs of Mission Subseries totals approximately 1,800 pages and contains candid assessments of U.S. ambassadors to certain countries, lists of chiefs of missions and indications of which ones were to be changed, biographical data, materials re controversial individuals such as John Paton Davies, Julius Holmes, Wolf Ladejinsky, Jesse Locker, William D. Pawley, and others, memoranda regarding Leonard Hall and political patronage, procedures for selecting career and political candidates for positions, discussions of “most urgent problems” for ambassadorships in certain countries, consideration of African-American appointees, comments on certain individuals’ connections to Truman Administration, and lists of personnel in Secretary of State’s office.
    [Show full text]
  • Recommended Reading List for Black History Month
    Recommended Reading List for Black History Month Reading List Disclaimer The fact that a book is listed on this page does not mean that BJU Press endorses its entire contents, its author, or its publisher from the standpoint of ethics, philosophy, theology, or style. In order to provide a useful service to our customers, we have included books on this list which may be appropriate for youth and which contain content that is relevant to African American history. If you choose to use any of these books, you may want to read the book first or read and discuss the book’s contents with your child. If you have comments, suggestions, or questions, please e-mail us. Dust of the Earth—by Donnalynn Hess Amos Fortune, Free Man—by Elizabeth Yates Uncle Tom’s Cabin—by Harriet Beecher Stowe Meet Addy: an American girl—by Connie Porter God's Trombones: Seven Negro Sermons in Verse—by James Weldon Johnson Amazing Grace—by Mary Hoffman Up From Slavery—by Booker T. Washington I Thought My Soul Would Rise and Fly: the Diary of Patsy, a Freed Girl—by Joyce Hansen With the Might of Angels: the Diary of Dawnie Rae Johnson—by Andrea Davis Pinkney Heroes in Black History: True Stories from the Lives of Christian Heroes—by Dave and Neta Jackson Black Wings: Courageous Stories of African Americans in Aviation and Space History—by Von Hardesty American Patriots: Answering the Call to Freedom—by Rick Santorum Marian Anderson: a Great Singer—by Patricia and Frederick McKissack The Poems of Phillis Wheatley—by Julian D.
    [Show full text]
  • Marian Anderson Award Gala Performance Assembles World
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Laura Feragen, 215-793-0310| [email protected] Jesson Geipel, 215-893-3136| [email protected] MARIAN ANDERSON AWARD GALA PERFORMANCE ASSEMBLES WORLD-RENOWNED TALENT TO HONOR JAMES EARL JONES Operatic Tenor Lawrence Brownlee and Rising Star Christian Eason to Join the Stage with The Philadelphia Orchestra PHILADELPHIA (November 8, 2012) – The Marian Anderson Award today announced that it has assembled world-renowned talent to honor this year’s recipient, James Earl Jones, at a Gala Concert on Monday, November 19, 2012, at the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts at 8:30 p.m. The evening will include performances by international sensation Lawrence Brownlee and local rising star Christian Eason, as well as The Philadelphia Orchestra under the baton of Assistant Conductor Cristian Macelaru. Performing a musical tribute will be international jazz, pop and R & B recording artist Jean Carne, appearing with Emmy Award winning composer/ arranger/musical director and keyboardist Bill Jolly. The Concert will be hosted by celebrated actor and Screen Actors Guild Award-recipient Terrence Howard, with a special appearance by critically acclaimed actress and Tony Award-winner Phylicia Rashad, “This year’s performers are nothing short of extraordinary,” said J. Patrick Moran, executive director of the Marian Anderson Award. “All possess a dedication to their art, which speaks to the life of Ms. Anderson and the mission of the Award.” Lawrence Brownlee is one of the most consistently sought-after operatic tenors on the international scene. He is praised for the beauty of his voice, his seemingly effortless technical agility, and his engaging dramatic skills.
    [Show full text]
  • Black History Program
    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY This program was sponsored by the U.S. Department of the Interior’s (DOI) Special Emphasis Observance Committee and the National Park Service. OBSERVANCE MONTH PROGRAM It was also made possible through the following Bureaus: Offi ce of the Secretary Minerals Management Service United States Offi ce of Surface Mining Department of the Interior U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Bureau of Land Management The National Park Service Bureau of Reclamation Bureau of Indian Affairs Sidney Yates Auditorium U.S. Geological Survey 1849 C Street, NW Washington, DC Special Thanks to: Special Ceremonial Dedication of Historic Grand Piano in memory of the Tuesday, February 24, 2004 DOI Offi ce of Educational Partnerships late Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Mark Oliver, Director 10:00 AM Interior, and the late Marian Anderson, Sylvia Jones Distinguished Opera Singer. Jacqueline Griffi n-Smith DOI National Business Center (NBC) National Theme: Dave Matthews, Offi ce of Security “Brown v. Board of Education” Rob Jones, Creative Communication Service (50th Anniversary) Tami Heilemann, Creative Communication Service Marianne Gately John Nyce Debra Glass, Acquisition Services Maurice Banks National Park Service Committee Linda S. Green, Observance Program Coordinator Charles Riggins Beverly McKnight Musical George McDonald Performance Vincent deForest by Kim Butler Peter Hanes Lady Byron Patra Lee and Jazz Natalie Rozier Trio Lynette Walden Tamia Williams Rosa Wilson Other Supportive Organizations Black History Month image courtesy of Lady Byron WUSA-TV Channel 9 Mahogany Limousine Services, Inc. One America. http://www.oneamerica.net Elegance Motor Coach Tours Chimes Maintenance Services Secretary of the Interior Harold L.
    [Show full text]
  • FEDERAL REGISTER VOLUME 34 • NUMBER 104 Friday, May 30,1969 • Washington, D.C
    FEDERAL REGISTER VOLUME 34 • NUMBER 104 Friday, May 30,1969 • Washington, D.C. Pages 8345-8684 PARTI (P a rt II begins on page 8601) Agencies in this issue— The President Atomic Energy Commission Budget Bureau . Civil Aeronautics Board Commodity Credit Corporation Comptroller of the Currency Consumer and Marketing Service Defense Department Education Office Engineers Corps Federal Aviation Administration Federal Communications Commission Federal Maritime Commission Federal Power Commission Federal Reserve System Federal Trade Commission Food and Drug Administration Indian Claims Commission Interstate Commerce Commission National Park Service Navy Department Packers and Stockyards Administration Securities and Exchange Commission Detailed list of Contents appears inside. No. 104r—Pt. I----1 MICROFILM EDITION FEDERAL REGISTER 35mm MICROFILM Complete Set 1936-67,167 Rolls $1,162 Vol. Year Price Vol. ‘ Year Price Vol. Year Price 1 1936 $8 12 1947 $26 23 1958 $36 2 1937 10 13 1948 27 24 1959 40 3 1938 9 14 1949 22 25 1960 49 4 1939 14. 15 1950 26 26 1961 46 5 1940 15 16 1951 43 27 1962 50 6 1941 20 17 1952 35 28. 1963 49 7 1942 35 18 1953 32 29 1964 57 8 1943 52 19 1954 39 30 1965 58 9 1944 42 20 1955 36 31 1966 61 10 1945 43 21 1956 38 32 1967 64 11 1946 42 22 1957 38 Order Microfilm Edition from Publications Sales Branch National Archives and Records Service Washington, D.C. 20408 ?ONAI_4^(V Published daily, Tuesday through Saturday (no publication on Sundays, Mondays, or on the day after an official Federal holiday), by the Office of the Federal Register, National FEDERALÄREGISTER Archives and Records Service, General Services Administration (mail address National AreaA__ ono Code 202\ ïïE -J?1934 ,<£■phone 962-8626 Archives Building, Washington, D.C.
    [Show full text]
  • From the Dust Bowl to Harlem the Arts in Depression-Era America by Dean Schneider
    E x p l o r i n g t h e A r t s From the Dust Bowl to Harlem The Arts in Depression-Era America by Dean Schneider hen I think of the Great Depression, the dust bowl first comes to mind; Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath, Dorothea Lange’s W“Migrant Mother,” Woody Guthrie wandering the country, guitar slung on his back; an image of grayness, heaviness, and hardscrabble existence. But the 1930s and 1940s were also Harlem, the Cotton Club, the Savoy Ballroom, and the swing era. It was Grant Wood’s American Gothic and his odes to lush land and vibrant Iowa farm life. In short, times were hard, but times were what they always are––full of life, determination, and the impulse to make art, music, and literature. Bonnie Christensen offers an image of folksinger and songwriter Woody Guthrie “strolling / In wheat fields waving” in her book Woody Guthrie. B o o k L i n k s J u n e / J u l y 2 0 0 3 43 What a rich education awaits leap from his pages. Robert Andrew there even was a cultural life in such children who are exposed to the Parker’s Jackson Pollock is captured a difficult time. But just as the New literature, art, and music of that mid-sling. Bill Robinson tap dances Deal government provided jobs and time, including the big band music across the cover of Leo and Diane food and initiatives that changed of Duke Ellington and Benny Dillons’ Rap a Tap Tap.
    [Show full text]
  • Document Resume
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 380 367 SO 024 584 AUTHOR Harris, Laurie Lanzen, Ed. TITLE Biography Today: Profiles of People of Interest to Young Readers, 1994. REPORT NO ISSN-1058-2347 PUB DATE 94 NOTE 444p.; For volumes 1-2, see ED 363 546. AVAILABLE FROM Omnigraphics, Inc., Penobscot Building, Detroit, Michigan 48226. PUB TYPE Guides Classroom Use Instructional Materials (For Learner) (051) Collected Works Serials (022) JOURNAL CIT Biography Today; v3 n1-3 1994 EDRS PRICE MF01/PC18 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Artists; Authors; *Biographies; Elementary Secondary Education; *Popular Culture; Profiles; Recreational Reading; *Role Models; *Student Interests; Supplementary Reading Materials ABSTRACT This document is the third volume of a series designed and written for the young reader aged 9 and above. It contains three issues and covers individuals that young people want to know about most: entertainers, athletes, writers, illustrators, cartoonists, and political leaders. The publication was created to appeal to young readers in a format they can enjoy reading and readily understand. Each issue contains approximately 20 sketches arranged alphabetically. Each entry combines at least one picture of the individual profiled, and bold-faced rubrics lead the reader to information on birth, youth, early memories, education, first jobs, marriage and family, career highlights, memorable experiences, hobbies, and honors and awards. Each of the entries ends with a list of easily accessible sources to lead the student to further reading on the individual and a current address. Obituary entries also are included, written to prcvide a perspective on an individual's entire career. Beginning with this volume, the magazine includes brief entries of approximately two pages each.
    [Show full text]
  • Trade Books' Historical Representation of Eleanor
    Eastern Illinois University The Keep Early Childhood, Elementary & Middle Level Faculty Research and Creative Activity Education April 2014 Trade books’ Historical Representation of Eleanor Roosevelt, Rosa Parks, and Helen Keller John H. Bickford III Eastern Illinois University, [email protected] Cynthia W. Rich Eastern Illinois University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://thekeep.eiu.edu/eemedu_fac Part of the Education Commons Recommended Citation Bickford, John H. III and Rich, Cynthia W., "Trade books’ Historical Representation of Eleanor Roosevelt, Rosa Parks, and Helen Keller" (2014). Faculty Research and Creative Activity. 29. http://thekeep.eiu.edu/eemedu_fac/29 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Early Childhood, Elementary & Middle Level Education at The Keep. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Research and Creative Activity by an authorized administrator of The Keep. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Social Studies Research and Practice www.socstrp.org Trade books’ Historical Representation of Eleanor Roosevelt, Rosa Parks, and Helen Keller John H. Bickford III Cynthia W. Rich Eastern Illinois University Common Core State Standards Initiative mandates increased readings of informational texts within English Language Arts starting in elementary school. Accurate, age-appropriate, and engaging content is at the center of effective social studies teaching. Textbooks and children’s literature—both literary and informational—are prominent in elementary classrooms because of the esoteric nature of primary source material. Many research projects have investigated historical accuracy and representation within textbooks, but few have done so with children’s trade books. We examined children’s trade books centered on three historical figures frequently incorporated within elementary school curricula: Eleanor Roosevelt, Rosa Parks, and Helen Keller.
    [Show full text]