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Todd Duncan was one of the
groundbreaking figures in American art-song, as the
first Black performer to join the New York City Opera,
and also the original Porgy in
George Gershwin's
Porgy and Bess.
Born
Robert Todd Duncan
in Danville, KY, he earned a B.A. from Butler University
in Indianapolis, and an M.A. from Teacher Collegew at
Columbia University, before joining the music department
faculty at Howard University in Washington, D.C. |
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He began his operatic
career in 1934 with a production of Mascagni's
Cavalleria Rusticana with the
Aeollian Opera,
and sang with various black opera companies, in the days
when that stage was still as segregated as most others
in the world of high art. The music critic Olin Downes,
who had seen Duncan perform, urged
George Gershwin
to audition Duncan in 1935, when he was trying to cast
the role of Porgy in his opera Porgy and Bess.
The composer had already auditioned more than 100
baritones but offered Duncan the part after hearing him
sing 12 bars of an aria from an Italian opera.
Ironically, Duncan wasn't enthusiastic about accepting
the role—he identified
Gershwin as a
Tin Pan Alley composer, of popular songs, whereas his
repertory and preference lay with the works of
Schubert,
Schumann and
Brahms.
He heard what
Gershwin had
written, accepted the part, and sang 124 performances of
Porgy and Bess in 1935, and did it in revival in
1937 and 1942. Porgy and Bess opened up concert
stages to Duncan throughout the United States while he,
in turn, opened up the world of art-music to Black
performers. He joined the
City Opera in
1945, making his debut in
Leoncavallo's
Il Pagliacci, the first Black singer ever to sign
with the company, and the first Black performer ever to
work in an opera with an otherwise all-white cast. His
work heralded the desegregation of that part of the
musical world.
Duncan left Howard
University in 1945, as his operatic and concert career
demanded ever more of his time. In 1949, he played the
role of the Zulu minister in the
Maxwell Anderson-Kurt
Weill musical Lost In The Stars.
As a recitalist, Duncan sang more than 2000 performances
in 56 countries over a period of 40 years, and was in
constant demand for operatic productions and the
theatrical stage. He made a recording of the key songs
from Porgy and Bess with
Anne Brown, the
original Bess, for Decca in the early 1940's.
Duncan later returned to Washington, D.C.
and also joined the faculty of the Curtis Institute in
Philadelphia, becoming a renowned teacher. |