Title: Ben Holt papers, 1981-1988
ID: 1000/HOLT_1010
Primary Creator: Holt, Ben (1955-1990)
Extent: 7.0 Boxes. More info below.
Date Acquired: 00/00/1992
Forms of Material: Operas
Ben Holt, a baritone who sang with the Metropolitan and New York City opera companies, was only 34 years old when he died in 1990 of Hodgkin’s disease. He was born in Washington, D.C. in 1955 and first performed at the age of 8 at Takoma Elementary School, in their production of Mendelssohn’s Elijah. Holt graduated cum laude from Jeb Stuart High School in Fairfax County in 1973, then went to the Oberlin College Conservatory of Music, winning a scholarship two years later to the Juilliard School’s Opera program. Early in his career he won the top prize and audience award at the Friday Morning Music Club Annual International Competition, and later the Independent Black Opera Singers awards, as well as numerous other awards and fellowships. The Young Concert Artists International Auditions also sponsored an extensive national tour in 1980.
Holt is best known for playing the title role Malcolm in Anthony Davis’s opera, X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X, in the 1986 New York City Opera company world premiere production. He made his Metropolitan Opera debut in 1985 as Schaunard in Puccini’s La Bohème. Other major operatic roles included Josiah in Thea Musgrave’s Harriet, the Woman Called Moses, Porgy in Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess, and Randall Ware in Ulysses Kay’s Jubilee.
A popular recitalist, he often programmed work by black composers and arrangements of spirituals; he appeared in the Kennedy Center’s 1979 National Black Music Colloquium and Competition presentation of composition finalists. In 1981 Holt made his Carnegie Hall debut, and went on to perform with a number of major orchestras in his brief career, including the New York Philharmonic, the National Symphony, and Canada’s Tafelmusik.
The annual Ben Holt Memorial Scholarship Fund was established in 1996 at the Juilliard School of Music to help support students of African and/or Native heritage, and an annual concert series in his name (patterned after the Lois G. Wright Memorial Concert Series) was begun in 1992 under the auspices of musicologist Dominique-René De Lerma, with the goal of increasing public visibility of promising young minority concert artists and composers.
Repository: Center for Black Music Research
Alternate Extent Statement: 7 boxes, 17 volumes, 13 posters, 7 linear feet of sound recordings (LP discs)
Access Restrictions: None
Use Restrictions: None
Physical Access Note: Includes scores, sheet music, posters, LPs, reel-to-reel tapes, cassette tapes
Acquisition Source: Mayme Wilkins Holt
Finding Aid Revision History: Finding aid edited by Adam Melville, March 6, 2018.