Article

Portia White

Portia May White, contralto, teacher (born 24 June 1911 in Truro, NS; died 13 February 1968 in Toronto, ON). Portia White was the first Black Canadian concert singer to win international acclaim. She was considered one of the best classical singers of the 20th century. Her voice was described by one critic as “a gift from heaven.” She was often compared to the celebrated African American contralto Marian Anderson. The Nova Scotia Talent Trust was established in 1944 specifically to enable White to concentrate on her professional career. She was named a “person of national historic significance” by the Government of Canada in 1995.
Portia White, contralto, teacher, 15 January 1946.

Family Background

Portia White was the third of 13 children born to William A. White, whose parents had been enslaved in Virginia, and Izie Dora White, who was descended from Black Loyalists in Nova Scotia. William White was the second Black Canadian admitted to Acadia University. He graduated with a degree in Theology in 1903. He later became the first Black Canadian to receive a Doctorate of Divinity from Acadia University. He also helped form the No. 2 Construction Battalion — the first and only all-Black battalion in Canadian military history. He served in the unit as the only Black chaplain in the British army during the First World War. Following the war, he moved the family to Halifax, where he became pastor of the Cornwallis Street Baptist Church.

Early Years and Education

Portia White began singing in the church choir under her mother’s direction at age six. By the age of eight, she was singing the soprano parts from the opera Lucia di Lammermoor. She was determined to become a professional singer and walked 16 km a week for music lessons.

White started her teacher training at Dalhousie University in 1929. After graduating, she became a schoolteacher in Black Nova Scotian communities such as Africville and Lucasville.

Voice Training and Professional Performances

In the 1930s, White took voice lessons as a mezzo-soprano with Bertha Cruikshanks at the Halifax Conservatory of Music. She also sang on devotional radio broadcasts hosted by her father. She competed in the Halifax Music Festival and won the Helen Kennedy Silver Cup in 1935, 1937 and 1938. The Halifax Ladies' Musical Club provided a scholarship for White to study with Ernesto Vinci at the Halifax Conservatory of Music in 1939. Under Vinci, White began to sing as a contralto.

White gave a handful of recitals at Acadia University and Mount Allison University in 1940. She made her formal debut at age 30 at Toronto's Eaton Auditorium on 7 November 1941. Reviewing her performance in the Globe and Mail, Hector Charlesworth wrote that she sang “with pungent expression and beauty of utterance.” Writing in the Evening Telegram, Edward Wodson said White had a “coloured and beautifully shaded contralto… It is a natural voice, a gift from heaven.”

White resigned her teaching position in 1941 and continued to give concerts in Canada. She had many difficulties obtaining bookings because of her race. (See Racism; Prejudice and Discrimination.) She reached the high point of her career with a widely acclaimed recital at New York’s Town Hall on 13 March 1944. She was the first Canadian to perform there. The Nova Scotia Talent Trust was established in 1944 specifically to enable White to concentrate on her professional career. Two more Town Hall concerts followed in 1944 and 1945.

In 1945, White signed with Columbia Concerts Inc., the largest artist agency in North America. She toured North America with Columbia Concerts. But following a tour of Central and South America in 1946, she began experiencing vocal difficulties as well as problems with her management. In 1948, she toured the Maritimes and sang in Switzerland and France, but soon retired from public performance. In 1952, she moved to Toronto to undertake further studies with Gina Cigna and Irene Jessner at the Royal Conservatory of Music.

Later Career and Teaching

White began teaching voice in Toronto. She taught both privately and at Branksome Hall, a school for girls. Her private students over the years included Dinah Christie, Anne Marie Moss, Lorne Greene, Don Francks and Robert Goulet.

By the mid-1950s, she sporadically resumed her singing career. She sang only a few concerts in the 1950s and 1960s; one was before Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip at Charlottetown’s Confederation Centre of the Arts on 6 October 1964. White’s final public performance took place in July 1967 at the World Baptist Federation in Ottawa.

Recordings

Portia White did not make any studio recordings. Her voice can be heard in several concert recordings, though, including a song recital titled Think on Me (1968). Library and Archives Canada acquired from the White family audio recordings of her performances in New York and Moncton, New Brunswick, in 1944 and 1945. From these, Analekta released two songs on Great Voices of Canada, Volume 5 (1994).

Legacy and Tributes

White’s nephew, award-winning folk musician Chris White, released the CD First You Dream (1999); he co-produced it with White's niece, Dr. Laurie White. A documentary by Sylvia Hamilton, Portia White: Think on Me, was broadcast on CBC TV in 2001.

In 1995, White was named a “person of national historic significance” by the Government of Canada. Canada Post issued a stamp bearing her image in 1999. In 2004, a life-sized sculpture of her was carved from a tree in front of Truro’s Zion Baptist Church. The Portia White Prize is awarded each year by the Nova Scotia Arts Council to an outstanding Nova Scotian in the arts. The inaugural recipient of the award in 1998 was White’s great-nephew, the writer George Elliott Clarke. The Nova Scotia Talent Trust presents the Portia White Scholarship Award to exceptional vocalists. It also named its annual gala concert in her honour. At the East Coast Music Awards in 2007, White was posthumously awarded the Dr. Helen Creighton Lifetime Achievement Award.

In 2016, White was one of the women considered by the Bank of Canada to be featured on a new $10 banknote. The honour ultimately went to fellow Nova Scotian Viola Desmond. (See also Women on Canadian Banknotes.) In February 2018, an exhibit was launched at the Don Heights Unitarian Congregation in North York, Ontario, to commemorate 50 years since White’s death. The exhibit, Celebrating Portia White... 50 Years On, was organized and curated by White’s niece, Sheila White, and was introduced by Clarke. The exhibit consisted of portraits, photographs, recordings and personal items, such as a copy of The Book of American Negro Spirituals that was given to White by architect Andrew Cobb, and a rare piece of sheet music by American composer W.C. Handy. The exhibit was also held at the Colchester Historeum in White’s hometown of Truro from May to November 2019 before being housed at the Black Cultural Centre for Nova Scotia.

Many of White’s documents and personal belongings are held at Library and Archives Canada, the National Gallery of Canada, the Black Cultural Centre for Nova Scotia, the Ontario Black History Society and Dalhousie, and Acadia and Stanford universities.

Family Connections

Portia White has had several other notable family members in addition to Chris White, George Elliott Clarke and her father, William White. Her brother Bill White was a composer and social activist. He was the first Black Canadian to run for federal office; he represented the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) in the Toronto constituency of Spadina in 1949. He was made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1970. Another brother, Jack White, was a noted labour union leader. He was one of the first Black Canadians to run for provincial office in Ontario. A nephew of White's, Donald H. Oliver, served in the Senate of Canada for 22 years. A niece, Sheila White, is a noted political consultant and commentator.

A version of this entry originally appeared in the Encyclopedia of Music in Canada.