George Shirley
George Shirley
Contributor
BIOGRAPHY

George Shirley, one of America’s most versatile tenors, has performed more than 80 operatic roles in his nearly 60-year career and done so with the world’s most renowned conductors, including Solti, Klemperer, Stravinsky, Ormandy, von Karajan, Colin Davis, Böhm, Ozawa, Leinsdorf, Boulez, DePreist, Lewis, Dorati, Bernstein, and Maazel. He was the first African American tenor and second African American male to sing leading roles with the Metropolitan Opera, where he remained for 11 years as leading artist. He is the Joseph Edgar Maddy Distinguished University Emeritus Professor of Music (Voice) at the University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance, and in 2011, with the aid of the Videmus Foundation, he established the George Shirley African American Art Song & Operatic Aria Competition for high school and college students. He has recorded for RCA, Columbia, Decca, Angel, Vanguard, CRI, and Philips, and he received a Grammy Award in 1968 for his role of Ferrando in the prize-winning RCA recording of Mozart’s Cosi Fan Tutte. (Photo provided by George Shirley)

Primary Contributions (1)
George Shirley as Don Ottavio
Theater is an art form wherein make-believe is of the essence. Playacting is distinctive in its manner of penetrating the human psyche and manipulating the emotions of the audience. The agents of influence are the players, the scenery, and the costumes employed in creating a faux reality powerful…
READ MORE
Publications (1)