Late opera star Jessye Norman’s US hometown honours her life
AUGUSTA, Ga. — International opera star Jessye Norman never forgot her home in a small Southern U.S. city. And Augusta, Georgia, never forgot the woman who grew up among many musical influences to become one of the few black opera singers to gain worldwide acclaim.
Augusta is holding four days of memorials for Norman, one of the world’s greatest sopranos, who died Sept. 30 at 74. Two days of visitation began Thursday. On Friday, the city is renaming a street for her outside the Jessye Norman School of the Arts, which she opened in 2003 to provide free fine arts education to disadvantaged children.
Her funeral follows Saturday and a benefit concert for the school is Sunday.
“That voice. Oh, it was beautiful. The way she could control it — high and low — was just amazing. And it just reached out and embraced you,” said Adrena Johnson, whose parents went to school with Norman. “And she made a difference in everything she did.”