Everett McCorvey Named Chair of Kentucky Arts Council
Gov. Andy Beshear named Everett McCorvey, D.M.A., professor of voice in the University of Kentucky School of Music and director of UK Opera Theatre, the new chair of the Kentucky Arts Council at his Team Kentucky news conference Nov. 18. McCorvey is the first person of color named chair of the council.
McCorvey shared his excitement for the new position at last Thursday's announcement. “Thank you Gov. Beshear for this wonderful honor. It was the arts that got me up every day to go to school as a child in Alabama, so that I could participate in the band. When I came to Kentucky, I realized this state has a very rich history in the arts. With all of the economic development, with people coming into the Commonwealth, they’re going to want to have a place to go and visit the arts, to see all the wonderful places in Kentucky where the arts are happening. I am looking forward to serving on Team Kentucky.”
The Kentucky Arts Council is the state arts agency and is responsible for developing and promoting support for the arts in Kentucky. Strategically placed in the Tourism, Arts and Heritage Cabinet, the Kentucky Arts Council is publicly funded by the Kentucky General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, an independent agency of the federal government.
A highly accomplished tenor, McCorvey has performed in iconic venues both nationally and internationally, including the Metropolitan Opera, Kennedy Center and Radio City Music Hall in the U.S., the Teatro Comunale in Florence, Italy, and Queen Elizabeth Hall in London. Vocal excellence is the hallmark of his work with choirs and singers in concerts, master classes and workshops around the world. McCorvey has received the UK Libraries Medallion for Intellectual Achievement Award and a 2020 SEC Faculty Achievement Award. He also founded the American Spiritual Ensemble, a group of singers who perform spirituals and compositions of African American composers, and serves as artistic director of the National Chorale of New York City.
In addition to bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees from the University of Alabama, McCorvey studied Italian with Centro Linguistico Sperimentale, in Florence, Italy, and French diction at the Juilliard School in New York City. He joined the University of Kentucky faculty in 1991 and has been the director and executive producer for the highly acclaimed University of Kentucky Opera Theatre program since 1997. Read more about McCorvey here.
Credits
Whitney Hale (Public Relations & Strategic Communication)