Marian Anderson did not let anyone down. She not only used her very unusual gift for extreme
excellence in opera, receiving international acclaim, but used her very
unusual gift for grace and morality in the confrontation with baseness
and racism.
She used a cash award
from the city of Philadelphia to start an award for young people. Not
for young people only of her race or profession, but young people of her
humanitarian dispositions.
Even when accosted by
racism in her own country, such as separate accomodations while
touring, she was the perfect lady. The most famous incident of racism
was in the nation's capitol when she requested to rent a certain hall
for a concert in 1939. The Daughters of the American Revolution, who
owned the hall, refused to rent to her because they had a segregationist
policy. The First Lady at the time, Eleanor Roosevelt, resigned from
the DAR because of their attitude, and arranged for Marian Anderson's
now famous concert on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial twenty-five
years before Dr. King's speech there. I could also be a member of the
DAR from three out of four of my grandparents, but would rather not for
the same reasons.
American Experience Biography: Marian Anderson
Eleanor Roosevelt and Marian Anderson |
Easter morning 1939 |
Marian Anderson's Easter Sunday
Lincoln Memorial concert on April 9, 1939 from the UCLA Film &
Television Archive's "Hearst Metrotone News Collection."
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