Английская Википедия:Anita Patti Brown
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Anita Patti Brown (born about 1870, died December 27, 1950) was an American concert singer. She was sometimes billed as "the Bronze Tetrazzini".[1]
Early life
Patsie Bush[2] or Patsie Dean[3] was born in Georgia, and raised in Chattanooga, Tennessee.[4][5] She trained as a singer in Chicago,[6] and later studied in Europe with Victor Beigel.[7]
Career
Brown made her Chicago debut in 1903,[8] at the Chicago Opera House. She sang in Nashville in 1909, assisted by the Fisk Quartette.[9] She was described as "one of the most noted singers of the Race" when she appeared in Pittsburgh in 1911.[10] She sang at a benefit concert in Alabama in 1913.[11] In 1913 she appeared at the annual Atlanta Colored Music Festival, as featured soloist alongside Roland Hayes.[12] In 1914 she sang in a concert of Black composers in Chicago, sharing the bill with pianist Robert Nathaniel Dett and others.[13]
Brown sang in New York and Dallas in 1915.[14] She toured in South America[15] and the British West Indies,[16] and made a recording for Victor, in 1916.[17] She gave a concert at Poro College in St. Louis in 1918,[18] and after World War I toured with a military band.[4] She sang at church events in Spokane in 1921[19] and 1923.[20] Her 1922 Los Angeles appearance prompted a reviewer to note that she was "a genuine prima donna" with "a dulcet voice of rare soprano altitude".[21] She sang in Chattanooga in 1929.[2] In 1934, she was featured at the annual meeting of the National Association of Negro Musicians, held in Pittsburgh.[22]
In 1920, Brown began "Patti's Brazilian Toilette Luxuries", a mail-order business selling cosmetics and perfume.[23][24] In 1923, she successfully sued a Chicago drug store for refusing her service.[25] In the 1930s, she taught voice students at her Chicago studio.[3]
Personal life
Patsie Bush (or Patsie Dean) married Chicago choral director Arthur A. Brown. She died at home in Chicago in 1950, about 80 years old,[4][8] though her Chicago Tribune obituary gave her age as 65 years.[26]
References
External links
- A 1920 recording of Anita Patti Brown, singing "Villanelle" by Dell'Acqua; on YouTube
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- Английская Википедия
- 20th-century African-American women singers
- 20th-century American singers
- American sopranos
- African-American businesspeople
- Musicians from Chattanooga, Tennessee
- 1870 births
- 1950 deaths
- Year of birth uncertain
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