Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Acclaimed mezzo soprano, 79

- By Emily Langer The Washington Post

Barbara Smith Conrad, an acclaimed mezzo soprano who died May 22 at 79, sang on the most illustriou­s stages of theworld, from New York’s Metropolit­an Opera to the Vienna State Opera. But it was the stage upon which she did not perform — as a 19-year-old student at the University of Texas at Austin in 1957 — that propelled her to national attention as a musical talent and unexpected figure in the civil rights movement.

Conrad had grown up in the northeaste­rn Texas town of Center Point, a “rural black community,” as she described it, with “rich-red soil, beautiful fields of cotton, corn, potatoes.” After training her voice at her family’s Baptist church, she enrolled in the music programatU­Tin1956. It was the first year black students were accepted as undergradu­ates.

During her first year on campus, Conradwas chosen to play Dido, the queen of Carthage, opposite a white student as her lover in a production of the Baroque composer Henry Purcell’s opera “Dido and Aeneas.” The interracia­l pairing was a controvers­ial, even shocking choice for a university in the throes of desegregat­ion. Marian Anderson, the celebrated African American contralto, had broken the color barrier at theMet only two years earlier.

Conrad’s casting drew the ire of whiteUTstu­dents, who menaced her in phone calls, and segregatio­nists in the Texas state legislatur­e, who agitated about withdrawin­g funds for the university if she was not replaced in the production. When university officials submitted to the legislatur­e’s demands, Conradwas publicly gracious, allowing that administra­tors were “trying to achieve the most harmonious fulfillmen­t of integratio­n at the university.”

Privately, she would later reveal, shewas devastated.

“I felt such pain,” she told aUniversit­y ofTexas alumni magazine in 1998. “Inside I cried for years. You rarely saw a tear. And it was swallowing those tears that I thinkwas themost costly for me. It would have been better if Iwould have screamed and ranted and raved.”

Harry Belafonte, the singer, actor and civil rights activist, offeredto pay forConrad’s education at another university if she wished to transfer. But Conrad remained at UT-Austin until her graduation in 1959.

“After the first shock and hurt had passed,” the Austin American-Statesman quoted her as saying, “I began to realize that the ultimate success of integratio­n at the university was much more important thanmy appearance in the opera.”

Belafonte later invited Conrad to audition in New York. The trip was financed by Eleanor Roosevelt, who as first lady in 1939 had arranged for Anderson to sing on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial after the Daughters of the American Revolution turned her away from Constituti­onHall becauseof her race.

By 1965, Conrad was appearing with the New York City Opera in the lead female role of George Gershwin’s “Porgy and Bess,” an opera to which she would return throughout her career. At the Met’s company premiere of “Porgy and Bess” in 1985, she appeared as Maria.

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