Marian Anderson
Marian Anderson (1897-1993) was a Philadelphia-born contralto whose voice and dignity helped break racial barriers in American classical music. One of the finest singers of the twentieth century, Anderson achieved international acclaim through performances that showcased her extraordinary vocal range and emotional depth. Her 1939 concert at the Lincoln Memorial became a landmark moment in civil rights history after the Daughters of the American Revolution denied her access to Constitution Hall because of her race. Anderson's career, from her South Philadelphia childhood to her status as the first African American to perform at the Metropolitan Opera, shows how artistic excellence and personal courage could challenge the racism that constrained American life.[1]
Philadelphia Childhood
Marian Anderson was born on February 27, 1897, in South Philadelphia, the eldest of three daughters of John Berkley Anderson and Anna Delilah Rucker Anderson. The family lived in a modest home. Music filled it constantly. Young Marian's extraordinary voice emerged early, attracting attention at Union Baptist Church, where she joined the choir at age six. The church community, recognizing her exceptional talent, would later raise funds to support her musical education. African American institutions did what white institutions wouldn't: they nurtured talent that had been shut out everywhere else.[2]
Anderson's father died when she was twelve. The family fell into difficult circumstances. Her mother took in laundry to support the children while Marian contributed by singing at churches and community events. Despite these challenges, Anderson pursued musical training with the determination her community supported. When she was denied admission to a local music school because of her race, a rejection that deeply wounded her, the community raised funds for private lessons with voice teachers including Giuseppe Boghetti, who'd guide her development for many years.[1]
Early Career
Anderson's early career combined growing success with constant confrontation with racism. She won a voice competition in 1925 that led to a performance with the New York Philharmonic, yet American concert halls remained largely closed to Black performers. Recognizing that opportunities in the United States were limited by prejudice, Anderson traveled to Europe in 1930, where she found audiences receptive to talent without regard to race. Her European performances earned critical acclaim, with conductor Arturo Toscanini declaring that hers was a voice "heard once in a hundred years."[2]
She returned to America in 1935 with a European reputation that commanded attention even from audiences conditioned by segregation. Anderson performed at Town Hall in New York to critical acclaim, launching a concert career that would make her one of America's most celebrated singers. Her accompanist and manager Sol Hurok booked her throughout the country, navigating the complex arrangements that segregation required. Separate hotels. Separate dining. Separate everything. Daily reminders of the barriers that her talent could transcend but not eliminate.[1]
Lincoln Memorial Concert
The Daughters of the American Revolution's refusal to allow Anderson to perform at Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C. in 1939 provoked national controversy that transformed a concert into a civil rights milestone. First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt resigned from the DAR in protest, generating publicity that brought the issue to national attention. Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes arranged for Anderson to perform instead at the Lincoln Memorial, where she sang before an integrated audience of 75,000 on Easter Sunday, 1939.[2]
This concert became one of the iconic moments of the civil rights movement. Through artistry, it demonstrated what arguments alone couldn't convey. Anderson opened with "America (My Country, 'Tis of Thee)," infusing the patriotic song with meaning that the segregated nation had denied. The performance, broadcast nationally by radio, reached millions who'd never heard Anderson sing and many who'd never questioned the racial arrangements that the concert challenged. The image of Anderson singing before Lincoln's statue became a symbol of the struggle for equality that would continue for decades.[1]
Metropolitan Opera
Anderson became the first African American to perform at the Metropolitan Opera on January 7, 1955, singing the role of Ulrica in Verdi's "Un ballo in maschera." Though she was 57 and past her vocal prime, the historic significance of breaking the Met's color barrier overshadowed any artistic limitations. The ovation she received demonstrated the audience's recognition that they were witnessing history. The breakthrough, though late in Anderson's career, opened doors for subsequent African American opera singers including Leontyne Price and Jessye Norman.[2]
Anderson continued performing until her farewell concert at Carnegie Hall in 1965, concluding a career that'd taken her from South Philadelphia churches to the world's greatest stages. She received numerous honors including the Presidential Medal of Freedom, Congressional Gold Medal, and Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. Her autobiography "My Lord, What a Morning" recounts her journey with the grace and dignity that characterized her public presence throughout her life.[1]
Legacy
Marian Anderson died on April 8, 1993, at her home in Portland, Oregon. Her legacy encompasses both her artistic achievement and her role in breaking barriers that'd excluded African Americans from classical music's highest institutions. One of the great voices of the twentieth century. One of history's essential figures. The Marian Anderson Award, established in Philadelphia in 1943, honors artists who combine artistic excellence with humanitarianism. Her childhood home in South Philadelphia bears a historical marker commemorating her origins in the city she always called home.[2]