Current:Home > InvestTrailblazing opera star Grace Bumbry dies at age 86 -InvestPioneer
Trailblazing opera star Grace Bumbry dies at age 86
View
Date:2025-04-19 12:19:28
Opera star Grace Bumbry has died at the age of 86. The celebrated singer, who led an illustrious, jet-setting career, broke the color barrier as the first Black artist to perform at Germany's Bayreuth Festival.
Bumbry died May 7 in a Vienna hospital, according to her publicist. She suffered an ischemic stroke last year and never fully recovered.
Bumbry was part of a pioneering generation of Black women opera stars that included Leontyne Price, Shirley Verrett and Jessye Norman, all of whom followed the path blazed by Marian Anderson.
As a child, Bumbry was taken by her mother to see Anderson perform in her hometown, St. Louis. It was an event that changed her life, she told NPR in 1990.
"I knew I had to be a singer," Bumbry said. "I studied piano from age 7 until I was 15 but I wanted to...seriously become a singer of classical music." At age 17, Bumbry sang for Anderson, who was impressed enough to recommended the young singer to her high-powered manager, Sol Hurok.
In 1954, the teenager won a radio talent competition and a scholarship to study at the St. Louis Institute of Music. But because the school was segregated, Bumbry was not allowed to take classes with white students, which Bumbry's mother declined. Later, after she appeared on Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts, offers from schools flooded in. Bumbry enrolled at Boston University, later transferring to Northwestern University and finally moving to California to study with the legendary German soprano Lotte Lehmann at the Music Academy of the West.
Bumbry's operatic debut came in 1960, in no less a venue than the storied Paris Opera, where she sang the role of Amneris in Verdi's Aida. Her Parisian success came, in part, through the help of Jacqueline Kennedy who, with the American Embassy in Paris, secured Bumbry an audition at the Opera.
Her triumph opened the doors to Germany's Bayreuth Festival. In 1961, Bumbry became the first Black artist to sing at the spiritual home of Richard Wagner, performing the role of Venus in the composer's Tannhäuser. Casting a Black American instead of a Nordic blonde at the renowned festival was met with skepticism and racism from opera purists and the German media.
Bumbry ignored the controversy. On the production's opening night, her performance was met with a 30-minute standing ovation and 42 curtain calls. Critics hailed her as the "Black Venus."
But after great success as a mezzo-soprano, especially in operas by Verdi, Grace Bumbry shocked the opera world by committing to singing mostly as a soprano in the 1970s.
"I think I'm the only singer ever in history to have made a career as a leading mezzo-soprano and all of a sudden, in midstream, change to soprano," Bumbry told NPR in 1990.
Over the rest of her 60-year career, Bumbry would toggle between both ranges, says Naomi André, a music professor at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
"She sang between roles that one person normally doesn't sing," André observes. "Her voice had this incredible smooth creaminess and strength in places that you wouldn't always expect in the same voice. An incredibly gorgeous sound."
A gorgeous sound that was also a summoning for the next generation of Black singers and performers.
veryGood! (82249)
Related
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Updated COVID booster shots reduce the risk of hospitalization, CDC reports
- Popular COVID FAQs in 2022: Outdoor risks, boosters, 1-way masking, faint test lines
- Perceiving without seeing: How light resets your internal clock
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- Mass. Court Bans Electricity Rate Hikes to Fund Gas Pipeline Projects
- Pennsylvania Ruling on Eminent Domain Puts Contentious Pipeline Project on Alert
- Brain Scientists Are Tripping Out Over Psychedelics
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Popular COVID FAQs in 2022: Outdoor risks, boosters, 1-way masking, faint test lines
Ranking
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- The White House Goes Solar. Why Now?
- 18 Grossly Satisfying Beauty Products With Instant Results
- Coast Guard Plan to Build New Icebreakers May Be in Trouble
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Henrietta Lacks' hometown will build statue of her to replace Robert E. Lee monument
- New York City mandates $18 minimum wage for food delivery workers
- Billionaire investor, philanthropist George Soros hands reins to son, Alex, 37
Recommendation
Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
Dakota Pipeline Was Approved by Army Corps Over Objections of Three Federal Agencies
Boat captain twice ambushed by pod of orcas says they knew exactly what they are doing
Officials kill moose after it wanders onto Connecticut airport grounds
Bodycam footage shows high
Thousands of dead fish wash up along Texas Gulf Coast
Lily-Rose Depp Confirms Months-Long Romance With Crush 070 Shake
In North Carolina, more people are training to support patients through an abortion