![]() |
| Marian Anderson: Her Voice Became Famous Around the World | |
07 January 2006 |
(THEME)
VOICE ONE:
I'm Shirley Griffith.
VOICE TWO:
And I'm Steve Ember with People in America in VOA Special English. Today, we begin the first of two reports about singer Marian Anderson.
(MUSIC)
VOICE ONE:
A tall black woman is singing in a concert hall. Her eyes are closed. She
is not looking at the crowd of people sitting silently before her. But she feels
their presence. She tries to make the music touch their minds and hearts. Her
deep, powerful voice reaches out to all parts of the concert hall.
She finishes, and there is a long silence. Then the people clap and cheer. They call out for another song. And they call out her name: Marian Anderson.
VOICE TWO:
Marian Anderson was an American. But she found success in Europe before
finding it in her own country. She was born in eighteen ninety-seven in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She grew up surrounded by poverty. Yet she
remembered her family as a happy one.
The Andersons were deeply religious and involved in their church. It was in church where Marian first began to sing in public. She was six years old. The songs she sang were spirituals -- the religious songs that African Americans sang as slaves. The songs are about suffering, and the hope of a better life after death.
VOICE ONE:
Marian's interest in music grew as she got older. When she was eight, her
father brought home an old piano. She never thought she would be able to play
it. One day, however, she heard piano music coming from an open window. She
looked inside the house. There she saw a woman, playing ever so beautifully. Her
skin was dark, like Marian's. She knew then that if another black woman could
play the piano so could she.
![]() |
| Marian Anderson |
The Andersons were too poor to pay someone to teach Marian. So she was able to teach herself only a few simple songs. Her voice remained her most important musical instrument.
VOICE TWO:
Marian's father died when she was ten years old. She had to go to work to
help support her family. She continued to sing at church on Sunday. Soon, other
churches heard of the young girl with the beautiful, deep voice. They invited
her to sing for them. Marian accepted. She began singing in African-American
churches all over Philadelphia.
VOICE ONE:
At about this time, several people told Marian that she should have a
voice teacher. They told her that a beautiful voice can be destroyed if it is
not trained. Marian said she always sang naturally, without any thought of how
she did it. She realized that she would need some training.
The people in Marian's church were very proud of her. They wanted to help, even though many of them were as poor as the Anderson family. They collected enough money to pay for a few voice lessons. She went to a local music school in Philadelphia.
VOICE TWO:
A group of girls was waiting to enter the school. Before Marian could
enter, however, a young white woman who worked in the school told her to go
away. "We do not take black people here," she said. Marian was shocked. Never
before had anyone insulted her because of her race. Years later, she remembered
her feelings:
VOICE ONE:
"I just looked at the woman. I was shocked that such words could come
from someone so young. I did not understand how a person surrounded by the joy
of music could not have some of its sense and beauty inside her. It was as if a
cold and horrible hand had touched me. I had never heard such brutal words. My
skin was different, but not my feelings. "
VOICE TWO:
Marian Anderson was to hear those hateful words many times again during
her life.
(MUSIC)
VOICE ONE:
Marian Anderson continued to sing at churches and special gatherings. Her
singing became more widely known. But she still felt that her voice needed
training. Finally, a friend promised to help her meet a well-known voice
teacher. The teacher was Giuseppe Boghetti. Only the best singers in
Philadelphia were his students.
Marian went to see Mister Boghetti. She was nervous, because she wanted to please him. He told her that he already had too many students. He made it clear that he would listen only because he knew her friend. Marian's nervousness disappeared when she began to sing. The song she chose was one she knew best. It was called "Deep River".
(MUSIC)
VOICE TWO:
Mister Boghetti sat quietly when Marian finished. There were tears in his
eyes. Finally, he said: "You will start training at once. I will need just two
years with you. After that, you will be able to go anywhere and sing for
anybody. "
Marian Anderson was very happy. Her friends agreed to help pay for her lessons. Mister Boghetti taught her how to control and direct her voice. He also taught her how to breathe correctly. Marian learned to sing classical music -- the songs of the great European composers.
(MUSIC)
VOICE ONE:
Marian Anderson grew to love opera, because it joined singing and acting.
But Mister Boghetti advised her not to choose opera as a way to make a living.
He knew that black singers in America were not permitted to sing with white
opera groups. Instead, he told her she could be successful by singing in concert
theaters. She followed his advice.
In nineteen twenty-four, Anderson sang in New York City for the first time. In those days, a singer had to be recognized in New York to be successful everywhere else. She sang in one of the most important concert theaters in the city -- Town Hall.
She sang some spirituals and some classical music. She wanted to make sure she would be judged as a singer who happened to be black -- not as a black singer.
(MUSIC)
VOICE TWO:
Marian Anderson's town hall concert was not successful. Few people came
to listen. The next day, newspapers sharply criticized her. They said she sang
the European music without feeling or understanding. Anderson was crushed. She
decided to return to Philadelphia. She thought about never singing again.
(MUSIC)
VOICE ONE:
This program was written by Shelley Gollust. It was produced by Lawan Davis. I'm Shirley Griffith.
VOICE TWO:
And I'm Steve Ember. Join us again next week for People in America in VOA Special English. We continue the story of Marian Anderson and how she went on to gain great success as a singer.