Anthony Anderson (baritone)

Anthony D. Anderson (born circa 1998 in Washington, D.C.) is an American operatic baritone singer.

Early life

Anderson is the youngest of seven children; his father was killed in a drive-by shooting when he was 3 years old.[1] Since then he lived with his mother, Charlene Anderson, and his other siblings. He attended the DC Prep charter school which was a turning point for him in his life. It challenged him academically and focused him in pursuing a higher education. Here he was also introduced to the City Kids Wilderness Project. After spending six summers and extracurricular activities of outdoor training with them, he had been instilled with a firm moral compass. He graduated from Duke Ellington School of the Arts where he found his desire of singing and devoted himself towards opera. Over the years he learned skills in areas such as language in Italian and found he had a natural affinity towards German. With a passion that most could not fully understand, he had become alienated from his friends. He worked at a Chipotle but was fired for working too slowly.[2] He attended Virginia Commonwealth University until June 2017, when he was forced to drop out because he could not afford $9,000 that student loans did not cover, thus he was not able to re-enroll unless the debt was paid. Anderson has been accepted into the Juilliard School, Johns Hopkins University's Peabody Institute, and Oberlin Conservatory of Music with full scholarships.[3]

Career

He has been featured on the Today show.[4] Anderson has performed at the Supreme Court of the United States for the Horatio Alger Association.[1] He performed professionally at the Fort Worth Opera.[3] Anderson currently studies at the Oberlin Conservatory to further his education and hone his skills as an musician under the direction of Timothy LeFebvre. He is scheduled to graduate in the Spring of 2022.

gollark: Run 1/100th of Chrome?
gollark: Which you actually can run on other systems, at the cost of more work and possibly brokenness.
gollark: If you buy an Apple product, then as well as rather high-markup unrepairable/unupgradeable hardware (which often has really stupid flaws), you get their software.
gollark: I've heard that their support and warranty is not actually very good unless you pay even more.
gollark: Yes, that would be even more of a waste of money.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.