Donate to the Registry,
January 4

Grace Bumbry
This date celebrates the birth of Grace Bumbry, an African-American opera singer, in 1937.

She was born Grace Ann Bumbry in St. Louis, Missouri. She studied music at Boston University, Northwestern University, and the Music Academy of the West. She has has performed as both a soprano and a mezzo-soprano. While at Northwestern she became the student and protégé of Lotte Lehmann, a famous German-born opera diva.

Bumbry made her operatic debut in 1960 with the Paris Opera Company as Amneris in Verdi's "Aïda." In 1961, she became the first Black woman to sing the role of Venus in Richard Wagner's "Tannhäuser" at the Wagner Bayreuth Festival.

She made her United States debut in the same role at the Chicago Lyric Opera in 1963. She also has played leading roles in Verdi's "MacBeth," Strauss's "Salome," and Gershwin's "Porgy and Bess." Bumbry has also performed as a concert artist and her voice has been praised for its wide range and rich color.

Reference:
African Americans/Voices of Triumph
by Dr. Henry Louis Gates Jr.
Copyright 1993, TimeLife Inc.

 

    

The African American Registry®, 
a resource on African American History,
is a 
501(c) (3) non-profit education organization
Our Mailing address is  
P.O.  Box  19441
Minneapolis, MN  55419
Fax:  (612) 825-0598
Email us at
info@aaregistry.org

The African American Registry® Copyright 2005, 2006
Privacy Policy