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Alumnae Achievement Awards
2009
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Barbara Lea '51
Jazz Vocalist Foremost interpreter of “The
American Songbook”
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Barbara Lea ’51 (Barbara Leacock)
is one of the most widely respected and admired interpreters
of the classic American popular song. An uncompromising
jazz singer with style and taste, she has been called “one
of the greatest singers of our time” by the New
York Times. Her long career has taken her from cabarets
and concert stages in Boston to recording studios and
the theatres across the world.
Her professional career started upon
graduation and her early recordings were met with immediate
critical
acclaim. In 1956, Ms. Lea won the DownBeat International
Critics’ Poll Award as the best new singer. During
her career, Ms. Lea has played with Marian McPartland,
George Wein, and Bobby Hackett. In 1978, she appeared
on the groundbreaking public radio show American Popular
Song with Alec Wilder. The program won a Peabody Award
and was responsible for the resurgence in her career
- leading to albums, performances, and rave notices by
the New Yorker, The New York Times, and The Nation.
Although Ms. Lea was an authoritative interpreter of
Porter, Gershwin, Rodgers & Hart, and Noel Coward,
in her recordings and performances she has made sure
to include some lesser-known composers that she felt
deserved attention. Her 1996 album, Fine and Dandy,
highlighted works from women songwriters whom she felt
never got sufficient exposure. Her most recent CD,
issued in 2007, “Do You Know What it Means to
Miss New Orleans?” was recorded with the Bob
Havens Jazz Band in New Orleans post Hurricane Katrina.
Ms. Lea has recorded over 450 songs throughout her
career.
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Duke Ellington
and Barbara Lea |
Wellesley Graduation,
1951 |
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Barbara Lea at the Provincetown Art Association, Provincetown, MA
August 2003
Dick Miller, piano (and concert organizer) |
For more information about the Alumnae
Achievement Awards, please contact us by email at specialprograms@alum.wellesley.edu or
call the Alumnae Association at 781-283-2331. |