Kathleen Battle: A Voice to Remember!

Kathleen-Battle-9202119-1-402

Today we celebrate the life of Kathleen Battle. Kathleen Deanna Battle is an American operatic light lyric-coloratura soprano singer. Battle initially became known for her work within the concert repertoire through performances with major orchestras during the early and mid-1970s. She made her opera debut in 1975. Battle expanded her repertoire into lyric soprano and coloratura soprano roles during the 1980s and early 1990s. Everyday is Back History.

Alicia+Keys+Kathleen+Battle+2008+American+Bw47U5eByOWl

Battle was born in Portsmouth, Ohio, Battle attended Portsmouth High School. She was then awarded a scholarship to the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music where she studied voice with Franklin Bens and also worked with Italo Tajo. There she majored in music education for her undergraduate degree. Battle went on to gain her master’s degree in Music Education as well. In 1971 Battle embarked on a teaching career in Cincinnati, taking a position at a Cincinnati inner-city public school. While teaching 5th and 6th grade music, she continued to study voice privately. She later studied singing with Daniel Ferro in New York.

young -kathleen-battle

In 1972, she was still teaching and per the advice of a friend auditioned for the conductor Thomas Schippers in Cincinnati. Her performance there on July 9, 1972 marked the beginning of her professional career. During the next several years, Battle would go on to sing in several more orchestral concerts in New York, Los Angeles, and Cleveland. In 1973 she was awarded a grant from the Martha Baird Rockefeller Fund for Music to support her career.

kathleen battle recording

Thomas Schippers then introduced Kathleen Battle to his fellow conductor James Levine who selected Battle to sing in Mahler’s Symphony No. 8 at the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra’s May Festival in 1974. This was the beginning of a friendship and close professional association between Battle and Levine. Their relationship would last for 20 years and resulted in several recordings and performances in recital and concert performances, including engagements in Salzburg, Ravinia, and Carnegie Hall. Battle made her professional operatic debut in 1975 as Rosina in Rossini’s The Barber of Seville with the Michigan Opera Theatre. She made her New York City Opera debut the following year as Susanna in Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro, and in 1977 made both her San Francisco Opera debut as Oscar in Verdi’s Un ballo in maschera and her Metropolitan Opera debut as the Shepherd in Wagner’s Tannhäuser. The latter performance was conducted by James Levine. Battle made her Glyndebourne Festival debut (and UK debut) singing Nerina in Haydn’s La fedeltà premiata in 1979.

kathleen battle and james levine

Throughout the 1980s, Battle performed in recitals, choral works and opera. Her work continued to take her to performance venues around the world. In 1980 she made her Zürich Opera debut as Adina in Donizetti’s L’elisir d’amore. In 1982, she made her Salzburg Festival debut in Così fan tutte, followed three days later by an appearance in one of the Festival’s Mozart Matinee concerts. In 1985, she was the soprano soloist in Mozart’s Coronation Mass at St. Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican, conducted by Herbert von Karajan. That same year she made her Royal Opera debut as Zerbinetta in Ariadne auf Naxos. In 1987 Karajan invited Battle to sing Johann Strauss’ Voices of Spring for the Vienna New Year’s Day concert, the only time Karajan conducted the internationally televised annual event, and the first time a singer had been engaged for such a contribution[citation needed]. In opera she sang a variety of roles including Oscar at Lyric Opera of Chicago and a highly acclaimed Semele at Carnegie Hall.

kathleen battle performing

During this period, she received three Grammy awards for her recordings: Kathleen Battle Sings Mozart (1986), Salzburg Recital (1987), and Ariadne auf Naxos (1987). Battle’s 1986 collaboration with guitarist Christopher Parkening entitled Pleasures of Their Company was nominated for the Classical Album of the Year Grammy award. She also received the Laurence Olivier Award (1985) for her stage performance as Zerbinetta in Ariadne auf Naxos at the Royal Opera House, London. Critical response to Battle’s performances had rarely varied throughout the years following her debut. In 1985, Time Magazine, pronounced her “the best lyric coloratura soprano in the world”

kathleen-battle-300x300

The 1990s saw projects ranging from a concert program and a CD devoted to spirituals to a recording of baroque music, from performances of complete operas to recitals and recordings with jazz musicians. In 1990, Battle and Jessye Norman performed a program of spirituals at Carnegie Hall with James Levine conducting.[18] In the same year, she returned to Covent Garden to sing Norina in Don Pasquale and performed in a series of solo recitals in California, as well as appearing at the Hollywood Bowl with the Los Angeles Philharmonic”. Battle’s Carnegie Hall solo recital debut came on April 27, 1991 as part of the hall’s Centennial Festival. Accompanied by pianist Margo Garrett, she sang arias and songs by Handel, Mozart, Liszt, Rachmaninoff, Gershwin and Richard Strauss, as well as several traditional spirituals. The contralto Marian Anderson, who had ended her farewell tour with a recital at Carnegie Hall in April 1965, was in the audience that night as Battle dedicated Rachmaninoff’s “In the Silence of the Secret Night” to her. The recording of the recital earned Battle her fourth Grammy award. Another first came in January 1992 when Battle premiered André Previn’s song cycle Honey and Rue with lyrics by Toni Morrison. The work was commissioned by Carnegie Hall and composed specifically for Battle.

battle singing

For the remainder of the decade, she worked extensively in the recording studio and on the concert stage. She was a featured guest artist on the May 1994 album Tenderness, singing a duet, My Favorite Things, with Grammy-winning jazz vocalist Al Jarreau. In 1995 she presented a program of opera arias and popular songs at Lincoln Center with baritone Thomas Hampson, conductor John Nelson, and the Orchestra of St. Lukes.[30] She also released two albums in 1995: So Many Stars a collection of folk songs, lullabies, and spirituals (with accompanying live concert performances) with Christian McBride and Grover Washington, Jr. (with whom she had performed in Carnegie Hall the previous year and Angels’ Glory, a Christmas album with guitarist Christopher Parkening, a frequent collaborator.[In 1997 came the release of the albums Mozart Opera Arias and Grace, a collection of sacred songs. In October 1998, she joined jazz pianist Herbie Hancock on his album Gershwin’s World in an arrangement of Gershwin’s Prelude in C♯ minor. December 1999 saw the release of Fantasia 2000 where she is the featured soprano in Elgar’s Pomp and Circumstance performed by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and conducted by long-time collaborator James Levine. In solo recitals she performed in cities including Los Angeles, New York, Cincinnati, and Chicago in programs that featured art songs from a variety of eras and regions, opera arias, and spirituals.

battle

Battle has continued to pursue a number of diverse projects including the works of composers who are not associated with traditional classical music, performing the works of Vangelis, Stevie Wonder, and George Gershwin. In August 2000, she performed an all-Schubert program at Ravinia. In June 2001, she and frequent collaborator soprano Jessye Norman, performed Vangelis’ Mythodea at the Temple of Olympian Zeus in Athens, Greece. In July 2003 she performed at the Ravinia Chicago Symphony Orchestra Gala with Bobby McFerrin and Denyce Graves. In 2006 she and James Ingram sang the song They Won’t Go When I Go in a Tribute to Stevie Wonder and she began including Wonder’s music in her recitals. In July 2007 she debuted at the Aspen Music Festival performing an all-Gershwin program as part of a season benefit. In October 2007, at a fundraiser for the Keep a Child Alive Charity, Kathleen Battle and Alicia Keys performed the song Miss Sarajevo written by U2’s Bono.

kathleen-battle1

On April 16, 2008, she sang an arrangement of The Lord’s Prayer for Pope Benedict XVI on the occasion of his Papal State visit to the White House. This marks the second time she sang for a pope. (She first sang for Pope John Paul II in 1985 as soprano soloist in Mozart’s Coronation Mass.) Later that year, she performed “Superwoman” on the American Music Awards with Alicia Keys and Queen Latifah. Since that time she has appeared in the occasional piano-voice recital, including a recital of works by Schubert, Liszt, and Rachmaninoff in Costa Mesa, California accompanied by Olga Kern (February 2010) and a recital in Carmel, Indiana accompanied by Joel A. Martin (April 2013).

Kathleen_battle

Battle has received six honorary doctorates from American universities. They include: the University of Cincinnati, Westminster Choir College, Ohio University, Xavier University, Amherst College, and Seton Hall University. She also received a NAACP Image Award – Hall of Fame Award, 1999.

Kathleen Battle is an accomplished woman. She is another black women who shows with her accomplishments that no goal is far from our reach. She is a woman who knows her worth. Her talent and all she has gained shows us black women that we too can become what we want. We too have to believe in ourselves and know our worth. We are more than the negative depictions of failure, complacency, and stereotypes that are portrayed. We are limitless black women, There is nothing we can not do and achieve just like Kathleen Battle.

Alicia+Keys+Kathleen+Battle+2008 Queen Latiffah

Model, business woman, advocate = Ophelia DeVore-Mitchell!

devore

Today we celebrate the life of Ophelia DeVore-Mitchell. Mitchell is a former model and a businesswoman. She was one of the first black models in the world. She took her experience as a model and created her own business to afford black models and entertainers with more opportunities. EVERYDAY is black history.

Mitchell was born in the small town of Edgefield, South Carolina. She attended segregated schools as a child but eventually went to live with an aunt in New York City, where she graduated from Hunter College High School before going on to major in mathematics at New York University. During this time, DeVore-Mitchell began doing occasional modeling jobs and became one of the first non-white fashion models in the United States. She modeled for many magazines and publications including Ebony Magazine.

opheila devore ebonyIn 1946 she enrolled in the Vogue School of Modeling, which until that time had excluded women of color. Later that year, she, and her colleagues created and founded the Grace Del Marco Modeling Agency as a way to help create opportunities for models of color. In 1948 she created The Ophelia DeVore School of Self-Development and Modeling. This school taught young black women to learn etiquette, self-presentation and confidence. Students also learned ballet, etiquette, poise etc.

opheila charm school

Students at Charm School.

Through the school she helped support the social and professional goals of more than 20,000 students. Some of her notable graduates include Diahann Carroll, Cicely Tyson, Gail Fisher, Susan Taylor, Gil Noble, Ellen Holly and Faith Evans.

Diahann Carroll with friends at the charm school

Diahann Carroll (middle) with friends at the charm school.

Mitchell then started marketing to non-white audiences to gain employment opportunities and the mainstream marketing of young black women models and entertainers. As part of this project, she produced a massive promotional campaign for Johnson & Johnson that launched the career of supermodel Helen Williams.

opheila devore and friends

Ophelia DeVore (right) with clients and friends (l-r) Joan Murry, Trudy Haynes, the Philadelphia news legend, actress and writer Ellen Holly and the great model Helen Williams

In 1955, DeVore-Mitchell and her models made history as hosts of ABC’s weekly television show, “Spotlight on Harlem.” It was the first television program in New York produced by and for African Americans. She made history again in 1959 and 1960 when two of her clients, Cecilia Cooper and LaJeune Hundley were the first Americans, black or white, to win titles at the Cannes Film Festival. In the 1960’s Mitchell created two of the first nationally known ethnic beauty contests in the U.S., developed a fashion column for the Pittsburgh Courier Newspaper and created a line of cosmetics specially formulated for people of color.

cecelia-winning-queen-of-the-cannes-film-festival

Cecelia Copper Winning Queen of The Cannes Film Festival

In 1985, Mitchell was appointed by President Reagan to the John F. Kennedy Center Committee on the Arts. She is the owner and publisher of The Columbus Times, a founder of The Black Press Archives at Howard University and was elected several times as the National Secretary of the National Newspaper Publishers Association. She has produced several New York City cable television shows, including the “Ophelia DeVore Show.” In 1991, assisted by her son James Carter, the two founded DeVore Carter Communications. DeVore-Mitchell continues to oversee all her enterprises and, at present, her development programs have touched more than 90,000 lives. For her outstanding service, she has received more than 200 awards and honors and was named one of the 75 black women who changed America in the “I Dream a World” series.

ophelia-in-scar

Mitchell modeling.

Ophelia DeVore-Mitchell is a an amazing woman whose accomplishments have helped revolutionize the African American women in the modeling and entertainment industry. She saw the lack of black women and men in the modeling and entertainment industry, and did something about it. Her two schools the Grace Del Marco Modeling Agency and The Ophelia DeVore School of Self-Development and Modeling helped pave the way for many models and entertainers. Lets honor her today. Mitchell’s schools and work with black men and women have helped create a positive platform of success for so many. She has advocated the existence of blacks in the modeling and entertainment industry. She is a woman that knows her worth and the worth of other black men and women was not limited to a few ads, or films. This is why she created her institutions and programs. She knew we could be more. Without her sacrifices, and efforts, many of us would be unable to work in these industries. Mitchell has helped make this possible for us. Family, never forget that you too, can issue change when you see that it is needed. We do not have to wait to be recognized or included. We can create our own institutions to prepare our own, to work in fields that have a lack of us. We all have a little bit of Ophelia DeVore-Mitchell within us. Once, we can realize that we are limitless, and not bound by circumstance, we can then immerse ourselves in everything we can are and can become. ~Know Your Worth~

devore 1

The Portrayal

970975_196223607206530_1261120896_n Remember, media is controlled by those who want certain images to be portrayed and certain beliefs to be spread and accepted. Look beyond, local news and find your own news. Yes, they want us to be viewed a certain way. Yes, negativity about us is disseminated more than the positive. However, we know the truth. We know who we are. We know what we are capable of. We know what we have done. We know what we continue to do.

thessalonika-arzu

Thessalonika Arzu-Embry is not an ordinary 14-year-old. She is getting ready to graduate from Chicago State University with a B.A. in Psychology. Read more about this amazing young lady here http://newsone.com/2635319/thessalonika-arzu-embry-graduates-college-at-14-video/

Understand that our portrayal is controlled by those who want us to continue to be deemed as inferior, violent, ignorant etc. However, we do not have to accept this portrayal. Use your life, accomplishments and struggle as a rebellion against the portrayal. Use your education as a vessel to others that the portrayal is false and that there are many positive stories of the greatness we do and are.

images

16 year old Temar Boggs saved five-year old Jocelyn Rojas from an abductor. Find this heroic but, not widely spread story here. http://tv.msnbc.com/2013/07/20/meet-temar-boggs-rescuer-of-a-kidnapped-little-girl/

Educate yourself, because we are not what they view us. We are what we make of ourselves. We are cloaked in strength and armed with the passion to succeed. We are implanted with resilience and determination. Do not let the neglect of the beauty of who we are and the negative portrayal of us negate who YOU are and WHAT you do. They do not define you, YOU DO! -M. Millie