February 10, 1927 Mary Violet Leontyne Price, operatic soprano, was born in Laurel, Mississippi. Price earned her Bachelor of Arts degree from Central State College in 1948 and her first important stage performance was in the 1952 production of “Falstaff.”
Mary Violet Leontyne Price – February 10th in African American History
Tags: Broadway, Central State College, February 10, Grammy Award, Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, Kennedy Center Honors, NAACP, National Medal of Arts, opera, Presidential Medal of Freedom, Spingarn Medal
John Birks “Dizzy” Gillespie – January 6th in African American History
Tags: composer, Down Beat Jazz Hall of Fame, Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, January 6, Kennedy Center Honors, National Endowment for the Arts, National Medal of Arts, October 21, singer
January 6, 1993 John Birks “Dizzy” Gillespie, jazz trumpeter, bandleader, singer, and composer, died. Gillespie was born October 21, 1917 in Cheraw, South Carolina. By the age of four, he had started to play the piano. He also taught himself to play the trombone and the trumpet. His first professional job was with the Frank […]
January 4th in African American History – Grace Bumbry
Tags: Kennedy Center Honors
January 4, 1937 Grace Bumbry, considered one of the leading mezzo-sopranos of her generation, was born in St. Louis, Missouri. At the age of 17, Bumbry won a competition singing the aria “O don fatale” but was denied the first-place prize scholarship to the local music conservatory because it did not accept black students.
October 18th in African American History – Charles Edward “Chuck” Berry
Tags: Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, Kennedy Center Honors, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, singer, songwriter
October 18, 1926 Charles Edward “Chuck” Berry, guitarist, singer and songwriter, was born in St. Louis, Missouri. Berry made his first public performances while he was still in high school and by early 1953 was performing at popular clubs in East St. Louis, Illinois. In 1955, Berry recorded “Maybelene” which sold over a million copies […]
June 10th in African American History – Ray Charles
Tags: blues, gospel music, Grammy Award, Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, Hollywood Walk of Fame, Jazz Hall of Fame, Kennedy Center Honors, National Medal of Arts, R&B, Rhythm & Blues Hall of Fame, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
June 10, 2004 Ray Charles, pioneering R&B, gospel, blues and country musician, died. Born Ray Charles Robinson on September 23, 1930 in Albany, Georgia, Charles began to lose his sight at the age of five and was completely blind by the age of seven. In 1943, he began to perform around Tallahassee and Jacksonville, Florida. […]
May 21st in African American History – Katherine Mary Dunham
Tags: Broadway, choreographer, dancer, Distinguished Service Award, educator, Kennedy Center Honors, National Medal of Arts
May 21, 2006 Katherine Mary Dunham, dancer, choreographer, author, educator, activist, and “Matriarch and Queen Mother of Black Dance,” died. Dunham was born June 22, 1909 in Glen Ellyn, Illinois. She became fascinated with dance at a young age and while in high school started a dance school for young black children. Dunham studied dance […]
May 16th in African American History – Sammy Davis, Jr.
Tags: Army, Broadway, dancer, Emmy Award, Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, International Civil Rights Walk of Fame, Kennedy Center Honors, NAACP, singer, Spingarn Medal
May 16, 1990 Sammy Davis, Jr., singer, dancer, film, and stage actor, died. Davis was born December 8, 1925 in New York City. He began performing almost as soon as he could walk as part of the vaudeville Mastin Troupe. After serving in the army, in 1955 Davis recorded his first album, “Starring Sammy Davis, […]
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Other African American History Posts
- December 31st in African American History – Roberto Clemente Walker
- October 31st in African American History – Frederick Stanley McGriff
- December 13th in African American History – Eric Marlon Bishop (Jamie Foxx)
- Sarah Lois Vaughan – April 3rd in African American History
- December 7th in African American History – Marjorie Stewart Joyner
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