Current:Home > NewsSignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center:Philadelphia Orchestra’s home renamed Marian Anderson Hall as Verizon name comes off -Prime Capital Blueprint
SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center:Philadelphia Orchestra’s home renamed Marian Anderson Hall as Verizon name comes off
Charles Langston View
Date:2025-04-06 00:44:14
The SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank CenterPhiladelphia Orchestra’s home is being renamed Marian Anderson Hall in honor of the pioneering Black American contralto, a rare case of an artist’s name replacing a corporation.
The orchestra’s auditorium in the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts was known as Verizon Hall from 1999 through 2023, as part of a $14.5 million contribution agreed to by Bell Atlantic Corp. before its name change in 2000 to Verizon Communications Inc.
Anderson, who died in 1993 at age 96, was born in Philadelphia and in 1955 became the first Black singer to appear at New York’s Metropolitan Opera. The renaming was announced Wednesday, a day after the 127th anniversary of her birth.
“Knowing Marion, she would be humble,” said her niece, Ginette DePriest, the wife of late conductor James DePriest. “She always used to say: ‘Don’t make any fuss about this,’ but I think that the fact that it’s her hometown that she adores — I think she would be obviously honored but mostly humbled by by this gesture.”
Richard Worley and wife Leslie Miller, who live in suburban Bryn Mawr, are underwriting the name change with a $25 million gift to the Philadelphia Orchestra and Kimmel Center, which united in 2021. Worley joined the orchestra’s board in 1997 and served as its president from 2009-20; Miller was on the Kimmel Center board from 1999-2008, serving as acting president.
“A tribute to Marian Anderson of this nature, we think it’s long overdue,” Miller said,. “She was an iconic artist and she fought discrimination at every turn with grace and grit and kept on going. She deserves this kind of recognition.”
Philadelphia orchestra CEO Matías Tarnopolsky made a presentation to the board in August 2022 to name the hall after Anderson.
“We feel that what we’ve done for the orchestra and other for Philadelphia institutions is well-enough known and well-enough recognized,” Miller said. “We just thought with a non-corporate name and a name in honor of someone that deserves the honor we might be able over time to raise more money for sustaining the hall than if we named it after an individual donor.”
A statue of Anderson is planned for the vicinity of the hall.
“We hope that in naming the hall Marian Anderson it will be an indication of the efforts that the orchestra is making to diversify its audiences, its programing, and in so doing, to be more relevant to all Philadelphians and beyond,” Miller said.
Tarnopolsky and music director Yannick Nézet-Séguin have in recent years programmed music written by Black Americans Florence Price, Valerie Coleman and William Grant Still.
“We have a lot of catching up to do,” Tarnopolsky said. “We began that journey several years ago and it’s ongoing and we feel like we’re making some really positive change. So what’s the logical next chapter is what we asked ourselves. And we thought about the legendary artist, civil rights icon and Philadelphian Marian Anderson.”
veryGood! (4)
Related
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- 'Napoleon' has big battles and a complicated marriage
- Germany’s defense minister is the latest foreign official to visit Kyiv and vow more aid for Ukraine
- Ukrainian hacktivists fight back against Russia as cyber conflict deepens
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- U.S. defense chief Lloyd Austin visits Ukraine to affirm support in war with Russia, now and in the future
- Mysterious respiratory dog illness detected in several states: What to know
- Nationwide recall of peaches, plums and nectarines linked to deadly listeria outbreak
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- EU will continue to fund the Palestinians as probe shows no money is reaching Hamas
Ranking
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Dancing With the Stars' Tribute to Taylor Swift Deserves Its Own Mirrorball Trophy
- NFL suspends Kareem Jackson for four games again after illegal hit on Joshua Dobbs
- Who won 'Love Island Games' 2023? This couple took home the $100,000 prize
- Sam Taylor
- Pennsylvania governor appeals decision blocking plan to make power plants pay for greenhouse gases
- Percy Jackson Star Logan Lerman Is Engaged to Ana Corrigan
- Wayne Brady gets into 'minor' physical altercation with driver after hit-and-run accident
Recommendation
Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
UN warns food aid for 1.4 million refugees in Chad could end over limited funding
US court denies woman’s appeal of Cristiano Ronaldo’s 2010 hush-money settlement in Vegas rape case
UnitedHealth uses faulty AI to deny elderly patients medically necessary coverage, lawsuit claims
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
A 2-year-old is dead and 8 people are missing after a migrant boat capsized off Italy’s Lampedusa
Dogs seen nibbling on human body parts at possible clandestine burial site in Mexico
Deaths from gold mine collapse in Suriname rise to 14, with 7 people still missing