VOA常速英语:学生们在国会大厦纪念非洲裔美国歌手玛丽安安德森
教程:2014年04月VOA常速英语  浏览:980  
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    Students Honor African-American Singer Marian Anderson

    The high school students at the U.S. Capitol headlined an event honoring African-American singer Marian Anderson, who overcame racial prejudice 75 years ago.

    With the help of President Franklin Roosevelt and his wife, Marian Anderson was allowed to perform at an open air concert on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in April 1939. It would be among many racial barriers she would break.

    Anderson's concert was organized after she was refused permission to sing at a nearby Constitution Hall because she was black. Following a public outcry 75,000 people instead attended a free concert at the Lincoln Memorial.

    Anderson was already well known in Europe in the 1930s, but this concert broadcast around the United States heightened her fame.

     

    "She opened the world to this idea of concert singing, and she also brought the history of the Negro spiritual which until then has been like a community-type song," said Washington Performing Arts Society Music Director Stanley Thurston.

    Anderson also became an important figure in the American civil rights movement and for black artists who faced racial discrimination.

    Alice McClellan remembers the first time she saw Anderson sing at the 1963 March on Washington.

    "It made you believe in equal rights, and it made you speak out even when you wouldn't have," she said. "It made you raise your voice and be aware of all people, not just blacks, for all people.

    Anderson became the first black to perform at the Metropolitan Opera in New York in 1955 and went on to sing at the Carnegie Hall, the White House and at presidential inaugurations.

    Now, decades later, young people are learning about Anderson and the songs she helped popularize.

    Vocalist Annisse Murillo says she's grateful for the opportunity to honor Anderson and follow in her footsteps.

    "She inspired me to sing my way," she said. "You don't have to fight with words or get angry.

    These young artists say it's important to learn both about Anderson's music and how it helped bring change to an entire nation.

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