Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

CHICAGO DAILY NEWS: LAST WEEK IN HISTORY

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In 1961, opera singer Leontyne Price broke barriers when she became the first Black singer to headline at the Metropolit­an Opera in New York. Her standing ovation went on for 35 minutes.

A year earlier, the famed singer (who was born Feb. 10, 1927) stepped onto the stage of the Lyric Opera in Chicago and — unsurprisi­ngly — brought the house down in the title role of “Aida,” but she nearly missed her cue.

According to an Oct. 13, 1960, article in the Chicago Daily News, Price underwent an emergency appendecto­my while in Vienna, “and has not recovered as rapidly as had been hoped.” Margherita Roberti took on the title role in her absence for the first two performanc­es, but neither critic at both the Daily News and the Chicago Sun-Times were impressed with her performanc­e, and anxiously awaited Price’s return.

Their wishes came true. Price rejoined the cast and performed to a sold-out audience on Oct. 22, 1960, according to the Sun-Times.

Both the Daily News and the Sun-Times ran reviews of the Oct. 22 show the following day; neither could find fault in Price’s singing.

Price sang “with great vocal beauty, intensity and intelligen­ce,” reviewer Don Henahan at the Daily News wrote, but some of her movements felt awkward.

“She still chooses to move about in an unlovely crouch at times, and has no idea what to do with her hands or arms except when singing,” he continued. “Then problems seem to disappear for her.”

As this was the Lyric’s third production of “Aida” in its history, Henahan noted that the company had “finally produced a good one.”

Over at the Sun-Times, reviewer R.M.C. called Price’s voice “the perfect Aida voice, powerful in moments when power is essential, silken when called upon to purr, and filled with the dark intensity of passion.”

Despite her surgery, the acclaimed singer “was tremendous,” R.M.C. wrote. “Miss Price, a veritable lioness who asks no quarter and gives none, will upstage or outmaneuve­r any singer who falls into her trap.”

Decades later, Price wrote and published a storybook version of “Aida” for children. Her book inspired Elton John and Tim Rice’s updated take on the musical, and it nearly became a Disney movie.

 ?? SUN-TIMES LIBRARY ?? Leontyne Price in 1965.
SUN-TIMES LIBRARY Leontyne Price in 1965.

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