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Anne Brown

Anne Brown (August 9, 1912 – March 13, 2009)[1] was an American lyric soprano for whom George Gershwin rewrote the part of "Bess" into a leading role in the original production of his opera Porgy and Bess in 1935.[2]

Anne Brown
Born
Annie Wiggins Brown

(1912-08-09)August 9, 1912
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
DiedMarch 13, 2009(2009-03-13) (aged 96)
Oslo, Norway

She was also a radio and concert singer. She settled in Norway in 1948 and later became a Norwegian citizen.

Early life and career (1912–1936) edit

A native of Baltimore, Maryland, Annie Wiggins Brown was the daughter of Dr. Harry F. Brown, a physician, and his wife, the former Mary Allen Wiggins.[3] Her father was the grandson of a slave and her mother's parents were of black, Cherokee Indian, and Scottish-Irish origins.[4] She had three sisters, Henrietta, Mamie, and Harriet.[5][6]

As an African-American, she was not allowed to attend a Roman Catholic elementary school in her native Baltimore.[7] She trained at Morgan College and then applied to the Peabody Institute, but was rejected from the school due to her race.[8]

Brown then applied to the Juilliard School in New York at the encouragement of the wife of the owner of The Baltimore Sun.[7] She was admitted to Juilliard when she was 16, becoming the first African-American vocalist to attend there. She studied singing with Lucia Dunham and was awarded Juilliard's Margaret McGill scholarship when she was 20 years old.[4] At the age of nineteen she married a fellow Juilliard student, but the marriage soon ended in divorce.[4][9]

In 1933, she was a second-year graduate student at Juilliard. She learned that George Gershwin was going to compose an opera about African Americans in South Carolina. She decided to write him a letter, which led to Gershwin's secretary calling her to come and sing for him. After singing several classical arias and the spiritual "A City Called Heaven" for Gershwin, Brown was frequently invited by the composer to come down and sing parts of the opera for him as he was composing the work's music. As a result, the role of Bess grew from a secondary character, like it was in DuBose Heyward's novel Porgy, to one of the opera's leading roles.[4] Brown recalled that:

[Gershwin] would telephone and say, 'I've finished up to page 33 or so. Come down; I want you to sing it. When can you come down?' 'When I get out of school today,' I would say. I'd always start off singing "Summertime". I loved it so. Then I would sing whatever he had written since the last time I'd been there, whatever the roles might be – sometimes I even sang Sportin' Life, sometimes we sang duets together. I knew that opera before I went onstage, not only the songs. I wound up playing about 500 performances in the original and then the 1942 revival. I can tell you what every instrument played. Finally, in our last days of rehearsals in New York before heading up to Boston for previews, George took me to lunch. 'Come on,' he said, 'I'm going to buy you an orange juice.' Then, when we were seated, he made this announcement. I remember his words exactly because they thrilled me so. 'I want you to know, Miss Brown,' he said, 'that henceforth and forever after, George Gershwin's opera will be known as Porgy and Bess.[4]

Brown took part of opera history when she sang Bess for the world premiere of Porgy and Bess at the Colonial Theatre in Boston on September 30, 1935 – the try-out for a work intended initially for Broadway where the opening took place at the Alvin Theater in New York City on October 10, 1935.[10] The production was directed by Rouben Mamoulian and ran on Broadway for 124 performances. Olin Downes in The New York Times praised Brown's performance as "a high point of interpretation."[7] Critical responses to the work were mixed; some reviewers were uncertain as to whether or not Porgy was a folk opera, musical comedy, jazz drama, or something completely different. Others expressed concerns over the use of "negro stereotypes". Brown said, "My father was very displeased. He thought that those were the old cliches of black people – dope peddlers, near-prostitutes; he especially didn't like his daughter showing her legs and all that. I thought that DuBose Heyward and Gershwin had simply taken a part of life in Catfish Row, South Carolina, and rendered it superbly."[4]

Following the show's run on Broadway, a United States tour started on January 27, 1936, in Philadelphia and traveled to Pittsburgh and Chicago before ending in Washington, D.C., on March 21, 1936. During the Washington run, the cast—as led by Todd Duncan— protested segregation at the theater. Brown said of her role in the protest, "I told them: 'I will not sing at the National. If my mother, my father, my friends, if black people cannot come hear me sing, then count me out.' I remember Gershwin saying to me, 'You're not going to sing?' And I said to him, 'I can't sing!'"[4] Eventually management gave in to the demands, resulting in the first integrated audience for a performance of any show at the National Theatre. When the curtain came down on the final performance of Porgy and Bess, segregation was reinstated.[11]

Later life and career: 1937–2009 edit

 
Anne Brown receiving Peabody Award, 1998

After her appearance as the first Bess, Brown returned to Broadway in the 1937 musical revue Pins and Needles. This was later followed by an appearance in the 1939 Broadway play Mamba's Daughters in the roles of Gardenia and the "Lonesome Walls" Singer. Brown sang Bess in several revivals of Porgy and Bess during this time, including the 1942 Broadway revival. She also sang Bess for the Decca Records album Selections from George Gershwin's folk opera Porgy and Bess and sang some of Bess's music in an appearance in the 1945 Gershwin biography film Rhapsody in Blue.

Brown toured Europe as a concert artist from 1942 to 1948. Brown said that she left the United States because of continued racial prejudice. As she told The New York Times in 1998, "We tough girls tough it out. I've lived a strange kind of life—half black, half white, half isolated, half in the spotlight. Many things that I wanted as a young person for my career were denied to me because of my color".[4] She also noted, regarding her light complexion, "Though there is no place on earth without prejudice. In fact, a French journalist wrote an article during one of my tours there asking: 'Why does she say she is colored? She's as white as any singer. It's just a trick to get people interested.' Can you imagine? Of course I was advertised as 'a Negro soprano.' What is 'a Negro soprano'?"[4] She also stated that she felt her singing was better received in Europe because she mainly sang works by European composers, such as Brahms, Schubert, Schumann, and Mahler.[7]

In 1948, Brown settled in Oslo, Norway and became a Norwegian citizen after marrying skier Thorleif Schjelderup, a medalist at the 1948 Winter Olympics. He was her third husband, and like her previous marriages, their union ended in divorce. The marriage to Schjelderup was her third, his second. She had married for the first time at 19, eloping with a medical student, F. H. Howard, in New York and keeping the marriage secret from her father for two years; the union ended two years after that. Her second marriage in 1938 to C. C. Pettit[12][13] produced her daughter, Paula, who was born in 1939.[14] She had a second daughter, Vaar Inga, born in 1951 (the name means "springtime" in Norwegian), with Schjelderup, who also adopted Paula.[15] Paula Schjelderup rarely saw her father, because of her parents’ poor relationship. Instead, Schjelderup considered Brown’s husband, Thorleif Schjelderup, to be her father figure.[14]

Brown continued working as a professional musician into the 1950s, mostly working as a concert singer and recitalist. She did. however, appear in a few more operas, like Gian Carlo Menotti's The Medium and The Telephone. Her career as a singer was cut short due to problems with asthma; she no longer sang professionally after 1955. (She sang at the Teatro Colón in October 1955.) At this point, she embarked on a second career as a voice teacher. Among her students were actress Liv Ullmann, soprano Elizabeth Norberg-Schulz, ballad singer and former Minister of Culture Åse Kleveland, jazz singer Karin Krog,[16] and opera singer Trond Halstein Moe. On October 9, 1980, Brown was interviewed for an article written by James A. Standifier called, "Reminiscences of Black Musicians".[17] Brown also staged several operas in France and Norway. Brown was a guest of honor at the gala opening of the Oslo Opera House on April 12, 2008. She resided in Oslo up until her death in 2009 at age ninety-six.[7] Her interment was at Vår Frelsers gravlund.

It is not clear if she maintained her United States citizenship as well.[7] Her papers and personal artifacts are housed in the Amistad Research Center at Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana.

Awards edit

In 1998, Anne Brown received the George Peabody Medal for Outstanding Contributions to Music in America from the Peabody Institute, the institution that had denied her music education 70 years earlier. She was also made an honorary citizen of Baltimore in 1999. In 2000, she was awarded Norway's Council of Cultures Honorary Award.[7]

Sources edit

  • The Music of Black Americans: A History. Eileen Southern. W. W. Norton & Company; 3rd edition. ISBN 0-393-97141-4
  • Jablonski, Edward and Lawrence D. Stewart. The Gershwin Years. Garden City, New Jersey: Doubleday & Company, 1973. Second edition. ISBN 0-306-80739-4
  • Anne Brown, "I Gave Up My Country For Love", Ebony, November 1953
  • Anne Brown Interview, "Reminiscences of Black Musicians", American Music, Summer 1986
  • Anne Brown, Sang fra frassen gren (memoir, aka Songs From a Frozen Branch), Aschehoug, Oslo, 1979

References edit

  1. ^ NTB/NRK (13 March 2009). "Anne Brown has died" (in Norwegian and English). NRK. from the original on 16 March 2009. Retrieved 2009-03-13.
  2. ^ Bob Mondello (25 August 2022). "Remembering Anne Brown, Gershwin's original Bess". National Public Radio. Retrieved 7 December 2022.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-06-07. Retrieved 2012-06-29.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Barry Singer (March 29, 1998). "THEATER; On Hearing Her Sing, Gershwin Made 'Porgy' 'Porgy and Bess'". New York Times. Retrieved 2009-03-25.
  5. ^ Biography of Anne Brown at afrovoices.com
  6. ^ 1920 United States Federal Census.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Douglas Martin (March 16, 2009). "Anne Brown, Soprano Who Was Gershwin's Bess, Is Dead at 96". New York Times. Retrieved March 6, 2022.
  8. ^ "Obituaries: Actors Dom DeLuise and Beatrice Arthur; mezzo Margreta Elkins; soprano Anne Brown, Gershwin's original Bess; composer Lukas Foss dies at 86". Opera News. Vol. 74, no. 1. July 2009. Retrieved June 20, 2009.
  9. ^ Black Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia" (Carlson Publishing, 1993).
  10. ^ Jablonski & Stewart, pp. 227–229.
  11. ^ Porgy and Bess, the Library of Congress American Memory project, Today in History: September 2.
  12. ^ The National Archives at St. Louis; St. Louis, Missouri; Record Group Title: Records of the Selective Service System; Record Group Number: 147
  13. ^ New York City Department of Records and Information Services;New York City, NY Marriage Licenses.
  14. ^ a b "Anne Brown". The HistoryMakers. Retrieved March 6, 2022.
  15. ^ McLellan, Joseph (January 12, 1994). "THE BESS YEARS OF HER LIFE". The Washington Post.
  16. ^ Biography of Karin Krog at karinkrog.no
  17. ^ A. Standifier, James (1986). "Reminiscences of Black Musicians" (PDF). American Music. 4 (2): 194–205. doi:10.2307/3051981. JSTOR 3051981. Retrieved April 25, 2022.

External links edit

  • Anne Brown at the Internet Broadway Database  
  • Anne Brown at IMDb
  • Anne Brown – A Spotlight on the Soprano who Debuted Gershwin’s Bess from the Schubert Club (includes clips of her performances)
Awards
Preceded by Recipient of the Norsk kulturråds ærespris
2000
Succeeded by

anne, brown, other, people, named, disambiguation, august, 1912, march, 2009, american, lyric, soprano, whom, george, gershwin, rewrote, part, bess, into, leading, role, original, production, opera, porgy, bess, 1935, bornannie, wiggins, brown, 1912, august, 1. For other people named Anne Brown see Anne Brown disambiguation Anne Brown August 9 1912 March 13 2009 1 was an American lyric soprano for whom George Gershwin rewrote the part of Bess into a leading role in the original production of his opera Porgy and Bess in 1935 2 Anne BrownBornAnnie Wiggins Brown 1912 08 09 August 9 1912Baltimore Maryland United StatesDiedMarch 13 2009 2009 03 13 aged 96 Oslo Norway She was also a radio and concert singer She settled in Norway in 1948 and later became a Norwegian citizen Contents 1 Early life and career 1912 1936 2 Later life and career 1937 2009 3 Awards 4 Sources 5 References 6 External linksEarly life and career 1912 1936 editA native of Baltimore Maryland Annie Wiggins Brown was the daughter of Dr Harry F Brown a physician and his wife the former Mary Allen Wiggins 3 Her father was the grandson of a slave and her mother s parents were of black Cherokee Indian and Scottish Irish origins 4 She had three sisters Henrietta Mamie and Harriet 5 6 As an African American she was not allowed to attend a Roman Catholic elementary school in her native Baltimore 7 She trained at Morgan College and then applied to the Peabody Institute but was rejected from the school due to her race 8 Brown then applied to the Juilliard School in New York at the encouragement of the wife of the owner of The Baltimore Sun 7 She was admitted to Juilliard when she was 16 becoming the first African American vocalist to attend there She studied singing with Lucia Dunham and was awarded Juilliard s Margaret McGill scholarship when she was 20 years old 4 At the age of nineteen she married a fellow Juilliard student but the marriage soon ended in divorce 4 9 In 1933 she was a second year graduate student at Juilliard She learned that George Gershwin was going to compose an opera about African Americans in South Carolina She decided to write him a letter which led to Gershwin s secretary calling her to come and sing for him After singing several classical arias and the spiritual A City Called Heaven for Gershwin Brown was frequently invited by the composer to come down and sing parts of the opera for him as he was composing the work s music As a result the role of Bess grew from a secondary character like it was in DuBose Heyward s novel Porgy to one of the opera s leading roles 4 Brown recalled that Gershwin would telephone and say I ve finished up to page 33 or so Come down I want you to sing it When can you come down When I get out of school today I would say I d always start off singing Summertime I loved it so Then I would sing whatever he had written since the last time I d been there whatever the roles might be sometimes I even sang Sportin Life sometimes we sang duets together I knew that opera before I went onstage not only the songs I wound up playing about 500 performances in the original and then the 1942 revival I can tell you what every instrument played Finally in our last days of rehearsals in New York before heading up to Boston for previews George took me to lunch Come on he said I m going to buy you an orange juice Then when we were seated he made this announcement I remember his words exactly because they thrilled me so I want you to know Miss Brown he said that henceforth and forever after George Gershwin s opera will be known as Porgy and Bess 4 Brown took part of opera history when she sang Bess for the world premiere of Porgy and Bess at the Colonial Theatre in Boston on September 30 1935 the try out for a work intended initially for Broadway where the opening took place at the Alvin Theater in New York City on October 10 1935 10 The production was directed by Rouben Mamoulian and ran on Broadway for 124 performances Olin Downes in The New York Times praised Brown s performance as a high point of interpretation 7 Critical responses to the work were mixed some reviewers were uncertain as to whether or not Porgy was a folk opera musical comedy jazz drama or something completely different Others expressed concerns over the use of negro stereotypes Brown said My father was very displeased He thought that those were the old cliches of black people dope peddlers near prostitutes he especially didn t like his daughter showing her legs and all that I thought that DuBose Heyward and Gershwin had simply taken a part of life in Catfish Row South Carolina and rendered it superbly 4 Following the show s run on Broadway a United States tour started on January 27 1936 in Philadelphia and traveled to Pittsburgh and Chicago before ending in Washington D C on March 21 1936 During the Washington run the cast as led by Todd Duncan protested segregation at the theater Brown said of her role in the protest I told them I will not sing at the National If my mother my father my friends if black people cannot come hear me sing then count me out I remember Gershwin saying to me You re not going to sing And I said to him I can t sing 4 Eventually management gave in to the demands resulting in the first integrated audience for a performance of any show at the National Theatre When the curtain came down on the final performance of Porgy and Bess segregation was reinstated 11 Later life and career 1937 2009 edit nbsp Anne Brown receiving Peabody Award 1998 After her appearance as the first Bess Brown returned to Broadway in the 1937 musical revue Pins and Needles This was later followed by an appearance in the 1939 Broadway play Mamba s Daughters in the roles of Gardenia and the Lonesome Walls Singer Brown sang Bess in several revivals of Porgy and Bess during this time including the 1942 Broadway revival She also sang Bess for the Decca Records album Selections from George Gershwin s folk opera Porgy and Bess and sang some of Bess s music in an appearance in the 1945 Gershwin biography film Rhapsody in Blue Brown toured Europe as a concert artist from 1942 to 1948 Brown said that she left the United States because of continued racial prejudice As she told The New York Times in 1998 We tough girls tough it out I ve lived a strange kind of life half black half white half isolated half in the spotlight Many things that I wanted as a young person for my career were denied to me because of my color 4 She also noted regarding her light complexion Though there is no place on earth without prejudice In fact a French journalist wrote an article during one of my tours there asking Why does she say she is colored She s as white as any singer It s just a trick to get people interested Can you imagine Of course I was advertised as a Negro soprano What is a Negro soprano 4 She also stated that she felt her singing was better received in Europe because she mainly sang works by European composers such as Brahms Schubert Schumann and Mahler 7 In 1948 Brown settled in Oslo Norway and became a Norwegian citizen after marrying skier Thorleif Schjelderup a medalist at the 1948 Winter Olympics He was her third husband and like her previous marriages their union ended in divorce The marriage to Schjelderup was her third his second She had married for the first time at 19 eloping with a medical student F H Howard in New York and keeping the marriage secret from her father for two years the union ended two years after that Her second marriage in 1938 to C C Pettit 12 13 produced her daughter Paula who was born in 1939 14 She had a second daughter Vaar Inga born in 1951 the name means springtime in Norwegian with Schjelderup who also adopted Paula 15 Paula Schjelderup rarely saw her father because of her parents poor relationship Instead Schjelderup considered Brown s husband Thorleif Schjelderup to be her father figure 14 Brown continued working as a professional musician into the 1950s mostly working as a concert singer and recitalist She did however appear in a few more operas like Gian Carlo Menotti s The Medium and The Telephone Her career as a singer was cut short due to problems with asthma she no longer sang professionally after 1955 She sang at the Teatro Colon in October 1955 At this point she embarked on a second career as a voice teacher Among her students were actress Liv Ullmann soprano Elizabeth Norberg Schulz ballad singer and former Minister of Culture Ase Kleveland jazz singer Karin Krog 16 and opera singer Trond Halstein Moe On October 9 1980 Brown was interviewed for an article written by James A Standifier called Reminiscences of Black Musicians 17 Brown also staged several operas in France and Norway Brown was a guest of honor at the gala opening of the Oslo Opera House on April 12 2008 She resided in Oslo up until her death in 2009 at age ninety six 7 Her interment was at Var Frelsers gravlund It is not clear if she maintained her United States citizenship as well 7 Her papers and personal artifacts are housed in the Amistad Research Center at Tulane University in New Orleans Louisiana Awards editIn 1998 Anne Brown received the George Peabody Medal for Outstanding Contributions to Music in America from the Peabody Institute the institution that had denied her music education 70 years earlier She was also made an honorary citizen of Baltimore in 1999 In 2000 she was awarded Norway s Council of Cultures Honorary Award 7 Sources editThe Music of Black Americans A History Eileen Southern W W Norton amp Company 3rd edition ISBN 0 393 97141 4 Jablonski Edward and Lawrence D Stewart The Gershwin Years Garden City New Jersey Doubleday amp Company 1973 Second edition ISBN 0 306 80739 4 Anne Brown I Gave Up My Country For Love Ebony November 1953 Anne Brown Interview Reminiscences of Black Musicians American Music Summer 1986 Anne Brown Sang fra frassen gren memoir aka Songs From a Frozen Branch Aschehoug Oslo 1979References edit nbsp United States portal nbsp Norway portal nbsp Biography portal nbsp Society portal nbsp Music portal nbsp Art portal NTB NRK 13 March 2009 Anne Brown has died in Norwegian and English NRK Archived from the original on 16 March 2009 Retrieved 2009 03 13 Bob Mondello 25 August 2022 Remembering Anne Brown Gershwin s original Bess National Public Radio Retrieved 7 December 2022 Biography of Anne Brown at thehistorymakers com Archived from the original on 2008 06 07 Retrieved 2012 06 29 a b c d e f g h i Barry Singer March 29 1998 THEATER On Hearing Her Sing Gershwin Made Porgy Porgy and Bess New York Times Retrieved 2009 03 25 Biography of Anne Brown at afrovoices com 1920 United States Federal Census a b c d e f g Douglas Martin March 16 2009 Anne Brown Soprano Who Was Gershwin s Bess Is Dead at 96 New York Times Retrieved March 6 2022 Obituaries Actors Dom DeLuise and Beatrice Arthur mezzo Margreta Elkins soprano Anne Brown Gershwin s original Bess composer Lukas Foss dies at 86 Opera News Vol 74 no 1 July 2009 Retrieved June 20 2009 Black Women in America An Historical Encyclopedia Carlson Publishing 1993 Jablonski amp Stewart pp 227 229 Porgy and Bess the Library of Congress American Memory project Today in History September 2 The National Archives at St Louis St Louis Missouri Record Group Title Records of the Selective Service System Record Group Number 147 New York City Department of Records and Information Services New York City NY Marriage Licenses a b Anne Brown The HistoryMakers Retrieved March 6 2022 McLellan Joseph January 12 1994 THE BESS YEARS OF HER LIFE The Washington Post Biography of Karin Krog at karinkrog no A Standifier James 1986 Reminiscences of Black Musicians PDF American Music 4 2 194 205 doi 10 2307 3051981 JSTOR 3051981 Retrieved April 25 2022 External links editAnne Brown at the Internet Broadway Database nbsp Anne Brown at IMDb Anne Brown A Spotlight on the Soprano who Debuted Gershwin s Bess from the Schubert Club includes clips of her performances Awards Preceded byFinn Carling Recipient of the Norsk kulturrads aerespris2000 Succeeded byKjartan Slettemark Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anne Brown amp oldid 1218511824, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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