Thursday, February 2, 2012

Camilla Williams , Black Opera Star , Dies At 92


Indianapolis --- Camilla Williams , believed to be the first African-American woman to appear with a major U.S. opera company has died . She was 92.
 
Williams died Sunday at her home in Bloomington , her attorney , Eric Slotegraaf , said Monday .She died of complications from cancer , said Alain Braker , a spokeman for the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music , where Williams was a professor emeritus of voice .
 
Williams' debut with the New York City Opera on May 15 , 1946 , was thought to make her first African-American singer to appear  at New York's more prestigious Metropolitan Opera.
 
In her City Opera debut , Williams sang what would bec ome her signature role , Cio-Cio-San , in Puccini's "Madama Butterfly." She displayed  "a vividness and subtlety unmatched by any other artist who has assayed the part here in many a year," according to a New York Times review of the performance .
 
She also appeared with the City Opera that season as Nedda , in Leoncavallo's "Pagliacci." The following year she performed the role of Mimi , in Puccini's "La Boheme," and in 1948 she sang the title role of Verdi's "Aida."
 
Williams first appeared overseas in 1950 in a concert tour of Panama , the Dominican Republic and Venezuela . She also appeared as Cio-Cio-San with  the London Sadler's Wells Opera in 1954 and later that same year as the first black artist to sing a major role with the Vienna State Opera .
 
Williams , the daughter of a chauffeur , was introduced to "Madame Butterfly," Mozart and other classical works at age 12 while growing up in Danville , Va. A Welsh voice teacher came to the segregated city to teach at a school for white girls  and taught a few black girls at a private home . By that time she had been singing at Danville's Calvary Baptist Church for four years .
 
"My grandparents and parents were self-taught musicians ; all of them sang, and there was always music in our home ," she wrote for her entry in the first edition of "who'Who in the World."
 
A graduate of Virginia State College , she was teaching third grade and music in Danville schools in 1942  when she was offered a scholarship from the PHiladephia Alumni Association of her alma amter for vocal training in Philadephia where she studied under Marion  Szekely-Freschi and worked as an usher in a theater /
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Alifetime member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People , she performed in her hometown of Danville in 1963 to raise funds to free jailed civil rights demonstrators and sang at the 1063 civil rights march in Washington,D.C. immediately before the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King , Jr. gave his "I Have A Dream" speech . She also sang at King's Nobel Peace Prize ceremony the following year . The Chicago Defended lauded her in 1951 for bringing democracy to opera .
 
In 1950 she married Charles Beavers , a fellow Danville native  and a defense attorney whose clients included Malcolm X . He died in 1970 . The couple did not have children .
 
Williams retired from opera in 1971 and taught at Brooklyn College , Bronx College and Queens College until becoming the first African-American professor of voice at Indiana University . In 1983 , as a guest professor  at Beijing's Central Conservatory , she became that school's first black professor . She retired from teachin g in 1997.
 
A memorial service has been scheduled at the First United Methodist Church in Bloomington On February 18 . 

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