Helen Phillips (soprano)
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Helen L. Phillips (8 December 1919 – 27 July 2005)[1] was an American dramatic lyric soprano who broke through racial barriers as a concert singer and—almost in passing—on the opera stage.
Biography
She was born in St. Louis, Missouri, the daughter of a Baptist minister, the Rev. James Phillips. She attended Sumner High School in St. Louis and Lincoln University in Jefferson City, Missouri,[2] and did graduate studies in music and in sociology at Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee.
At the age of 14, she was one of the soloists at the dedication of the Municipal Auditorium in St. Louis. She was the first black singer to perform with the
Among the stories she recounted about her world travels was an episode on the
Throughout the 1940s and 1950s, she was primarily a concert singer, touring the United States, Europe, Africa, and South America. She was noted for her interpretation of German Lieder and Negro spirituals, and fluent in German, she toured Austria and West Germany for the State Department after World War II. She made her Town Hall debut in 1953, and she was in a production of Show Boat in 1954.[2]
Retiring from the stage, she became a teacher and vocal coach. She died, age 86, from heart disease at the Isabella Geriatric Center in Manhattan.[2]