Costume, Theater
Costume, Theater
Costume, Theater

Costume, Theater

Object number2016.75.3
Date1941-1962
MediumCotton; Synthetic fabric; Thread
Credit LineTransfer from Library of Congress, Gift of Barbara Edwards Lee
DescriptionDress costume. Periwinkle blue fabric bodice with black criss-cross fabric strips down white fabric chest. White and periwinkle blue balloon sleeves. Blue skirt with yellow fabric strip around bottom. Floor-length. Short-sleeve. Opening at center of proper left side of dress.Dimensions55.9999 in. (142.2 cm)
Historical NotesPart of a collection of costumes from the National Negro Opera Company. The company was founded by Mary Caldwell Dawson in 1941 and was active until 1962. This costume was used in productions of Verdi's Aida and Dett's The Ordering of Moses. Born in North Carolina, Mary Cardwell moved to Pittsburgh with her family in 1901, and first learned to sing in her church choir. She graduated from the New England Conservatory of Music with degrees in voice and piano in 1925 and aspired to a career in the opera. But she found few opportunities. She returned and settled in Pittsburgh after she got married, opening the Cardwell Dawson School of Music, from which she taught many fine vocalists. Seeking to create opportunities for her students, she first formed the nationally celebrated Cardwell Dawson Choir and toured the country in the 1930s. But convinced that African American singers needed the greater opportunities that an Opera Company could provide, she founded the National Negro Opera Company in 1941.
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