Carol Brice

American opera singer

DBpedia resource is: http://dbpedia.org/resource/Carol_Brice

Abstract is: Carol Brice (April 16, 1918 – February 15, 1985) was an American contralto. Born in Sedalia, North Carolina, she studied at Palmer Memorial Institute and later at Talladega College in Talladega, Alabama, where she received a Bachelor of Music in 1939. She continued her studies at the Juilliard School of Music from 1939 to 1943. She attracted considerable attention for her role in a 1939 production of The Hot Mikado at the New York World's Fair, where she worked with Bill "Bojangles" Robinson. Brice made her recital debut in 1943, that year becoming the first African-American to win the Walter Naumburg Award. Her concerts often featured the piano accompaniment of her brother, Jonathan Brice. In 1945 she taught briefly at Black Mountain College. She was the featured contralto on the February 5, 1946 recording of Manuel de Falla's El Amor Brujo conducted by Fritz Reiner with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra. (Columbia Masterworks MM-633, 3 12" 78 RPM discs. Also LP ML-2006). Her performances on Broadway included the role of Kakou in the original 1959 cast of Saratoga, the role of Maude in a 1960 revival of Finian's Rainbow, the role of Catherine Creek in the original 1971 musical production of The Grass Harp, and the role of Maria in a 1976 revival of Porgy & Bess. Her opera performances included roles in Clarence Cameron White's Ouanga and Marc Blitzstein's Regina. Brice began teaching at the University of Oklahoma at Norman in 1974. She later founded the non-profit Cimarron Circuit Opera Company in Oklahoma with her husband, the baritone Thomas Carey. She supported lynching victim Isaiah Nixon's widow financially after Nixon was killed in 1948. Brice died in Norman, Oklahoma of cancer, survived by her husband, brother, two children and six grandchildren.

Wikimedia Commons category is Carol Brice

Born 1918-04-16 in Sedalia (Q2024847)
Died 1985-02-15 in Norman (Q40347)

Carol Brice is …
instance of (P31):
humanQ5

External links are
P1728AllMusic artist IDmn0001400738
P268Bibliothèque nationale de France ID13942389v
P6723BlackPast.org IDaah/brice-carol-1918-1985
african-american-history/brice-carol-1918-1985
P973described at URLhttps://www.masterworksbroadway.com/artist/carol-brice/
P1953Discogs artist ID2066788
P7704Europeana entityagent/base/23199
P2163FAST ID1499535
P6722FemBio ID4313
P646Freebase ID/m/04ghdyt
P227GND ID134602552
P8591Grove Music Online IDA2234539
P1220Internet Broadway Database person ID33003
P213ISNI0000000120301968
P244Library of Congress authority IDno91010196
P434MusicBrainz artist ID1bd43ceb-37ee-48c4-9f1a-7fcaf24e0d36
P5882Muziekweb performer IDM00000086001
P950National Library of Spain IDXX5092172
P691NL CR AUT IDxx0180414
P3368Prabook ID2489247
P3430SNAC ARK IDw62j71wp
P214VIAF ID88077249
P10832WorldCat Entities IDE39PBJp64TxMqgx9pgK4r9QH4q
P1553Yandex Music artist ID129394

P27country of citizenshipUnited States of AmericaQ30
P1343described by sourceThe African American Almanac, Eleventh EditionQ40683479
Biographical Dictionary of Afro-American and African MusiciansQ51333926
Obálky knihQ67311526
Notable Black American WomenQ105958972
P69educated atJuilliard SchoolQ503246
Talladega CollegeQ7680006
P108employerUniversity of OklahomaQ640652
P172ethnic groupAfrican AmericansQ49085
P734family nameBriceQ25654444
BriceQ25654444
BriceQ25654444
P735given nameCarolQ18201469
CarolQ18201469
P1303instrumentvoiceQ17172850
P1412languages spoken, written or signedEnglishQ1860
P106occupationopera singerQ2865819
P21sex or genderfemaleQ6581072
P412voice typecontraltoQ37137

The articles in Wikimedia projects and languages

      Category:Carol Bricewikimedia
Arabic (ar / Q13955)كارول برايسwikipedia
Egyptian Arabic (arz / Q29919)كارول برايسwikipedia
      Carol Bricewikipedia
      Carol Bricewikipedia

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