
The home of the Philadelphia Orchestra was formerly known as Verizon Hall, but when the naming contract expired earlier this year, arts leaders and husband and wife Richard Worley and Leslie Anne Miller donated $25 million to the Philadelphia Orchestra and the Kimmel Center to buy the hall’s naming rights.
After the ceremony, Miller said that having Marian Anderson’s name emblazoned on the building is a step forward for equity in the arts in Philadelphia.
“By permanently affixing her name to this hall and sending the signal that this is a hall for everyone, the Kimmel Center is finally where we have been trying to get it to be for 21 years since its opening,” she said. “This is the people’s center.”
Born in 1897, Anderson, an internally renowned contralto, broke barriers throughout her life and career. In 1939, she gave a historic concert at the Lincoln Memorial after being told she couldn’t sing at Washington, D.C.’s Constitution Hall because of her race. More than 75,000 people attended and millions more listened to the performance on the radio.
In 1955, Anderson became the first Black singer to perform a lead role at the Metropolitan Opera. Throughout her life, she received numerous honors, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the Congressional Gold Medal and a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. She died in 1993 at the age of 96.

Pennsylvania state legislators and Philadelphia City Council members announced that Saturday is Marian Anderson Day, both in Philadelphia and throughout the commonwealth.
Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle Parker spoke, touting the historical importance of the day.
“What is so significant, I must say as a Black woman who has lived at the intersection of race and gender, my entire life, is that it is one thing to get a round of applause for your work, but it is another to have your legacy cemented in history and acknowledged for celebration across the world,” Parker said.
Matías Tarnopolsky, president and CEO of the Philadelphia Orchestra, said it was a “profoundly moving” day.
“The fact that the great civic leaders of Philadelphia and the commonwealth are here to embrace this civic gesture in this way, speaks volumes,” he said. “Marian Anderson was a great artist, a Civil Rights icon and Philadelphian. This is the first concert hall to bear her name now known as the Marian Anderson Hall, home of the Philadelphia Orchestra. It means so much about the Civil Rights Movement, which couldn’t have happened without music. It means so much about the importance of art and music in our community.”
Ginette DePreist, representing Marian Anderson’s family and relatives, received a Liberty Bell medal from Mayor Parker and other city officials. DePreist said she was “humbled” to represent the legendary singer she knew as “Aunt Marian,” and said Anderson’s legacy lives on through her art.

Tarnopolsky said that having Marian Anderson’s legacy honored in such a public and permanent way is one piece of an ongoing effort to ensure Black artists are represented and celebrated.
“Our music director Yannick Nézet-Séguin, musicians of the orchestra, and our whole team, have been working on expanding the repertoire for classical music and the representation of Black artists on the stage. So you’ll see performances of the music of Florence Price, William Grant Still, Margaret Bonds and many others,” Tarnopolsky said. “We ask ourselves the question, if others decades before us had made different decisions, what would our programs look like today?”
Tarnopolsky said he also hopes more people are inspired to learn about Marian Anderson’s life and work.
“If we can change the world, one person at a time through the example of Marian Anderson, then I think we’ve succeeded,” he said.
Worley said he hopes the name change will also inspire continued support for the Philadelphia Orchestra and the Kimmel Center going forward.

Included in the music program are two songs — ”My Country, ‘Tis of Thee” and Florence Price’s “My Soul’s Been Anchored in the Lord” — which Anderson sung at the historic 1939 concert at the Lincoln Memorial.
Marian Anderson will also be honored with a statue, which will be unveiled next year outside the Academy of Music.
Celebrating the Dedication of Marian Anderson Hall in Philadelphia
By Pamela Wright, President General, Daughters of the American Revolution
I was so honored to join with other DAR members on June 8 in Philadelphia, PA, for a historic celebration as The Philadelphia Orchestra rededicated its home at the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts in honor of the legendary contralto and civil rights icon Marian Anderson.
We were touched to receive a special invitation letter from the President and CEO of the Philadelphia Orchestra and Ensemble Arts, Matias Tarnopolsky, in which he wrote: “The renaming will take place 85 years after Marian Anderson sang at the Lincoln Memorial after being denied access to Constitution Hall by the Daughters of the American Revolution because of her race. Recognizing this injustice, the DAR has since worked to pay tribute to Ms. Anderson’s legacy, establishing a Marian Anderson Legacy Fund and Legacy Scholarship, and focusing on efforts to create a more inclusive and diverse organization. It is with these actions in mind that I invite you to join us on June 8, 2024, at 2:00 PM, for the official unveiling ceremony of Marian Anderson Hall.”

It was an incredibly joyful and powerful day honoring the magnificent Marian Anderson who will forever be a part of our organization’s history. It was also impactful that so many of the organizers and attendees of the event told us how meaningful it was for DAR to have such a strong presence at the ceremony and be a supporter of the gala celebration.
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