Search This Blog

Followers

Saturday, April 12, 2014

On Easter 1939 (April 9) -- one woman's songs helped lead to a post-racist America

OPINION piece for McGlatchey News Service: It was 75 years ago that Marian Anderson gave her famous outdoor performance at the Lincoln Memorial. The concert, known today as the "Freedom Concert," occurred on Easter Sunday, April 9, 1939. It was a moment of great symbolic importance for racial progress in the United States. Marian Anderson, born in Philadelphia in 1897, was a child prodigy as a vocalist. She trained at an early age with the legendary Italian voice teacher Giuseppe Boghetti. Anderson so impressed Boghetti that he allowed her to sing in the New York Philharmonic when she was still a teenager. He also took Anderson to Europe to sing, where her reputation only grew larger. By 1936, Anderson was so well known that President Franklin Roosevelt and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt invited Anderson to sing at the White House. It was Eleanor Roosevelt who played a major role for Anderson three years later in the Freedom Concert. That landmark day all began when Anderson's manager, Sol Hurok, and Howard University sought to arrange a concert for her at Constitution Hall in Washington. However, the Daughters of the American Revolution, the organization that owned the venue, refused to permit it. The hall did not allow black artists to perform and also had segregated seating arrangements. Constitution Hall was Jim Crow Hall. Eleanor Roosevelt, an ambivalent member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, denounced the organization and resigned publicly. She then worked to help arrange Anderson's concert at the Lincoln Memorial. She wanted the event to draw attention to racism as a national issue. The concert became a major statement against racial prejudice. Some 300 prominent individuals signed up as sponsors for the event. Actress Katherine Hepburn, unable to attend, famously sent a telegram announcing her support and sponsorship. Justices from the U.S. Supreme Court attended the performance, as did members of Congress. Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickes granted permission for the concert. He also introduced Anderson, saying: "In this great auditorium under the sky, all of us are free. When God gave us this wonderful outdoors and the sun, the moon and the stars, he made no distinction of race, or creed, or color." The concert drew an unprecedented 75,000 people, half of which were African-American. The crowd was so large it almost encircled the reflecting pool. With Eleanor Roosevelt's intervention, NBC radio decided to broadcast the performance so millions more could hear it. Anderson began the concert with a stirring rendition of "America." She sang "Ave Maria," among other numbers. And she closed with "Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen." OPINION : A landmark Easter concert 75 ago" by Brian Gilmore

No comments: