Revella Hughes (1895-1987)

August 11, 2023 
/ Contributed By: Lisa Roy

West Virginia counties|

West Virginia counties|Revella Hughes

Image courtesy WaterproofPaper.com|Record label and picture of Revella Hughes

Revella Hughes was a soprano singer, composer, musician, recording artist, and the first female choral director for a Broadway production. She was known as The Colored Nightingale, The Prima Donna of the Musical Stage, and The Sophisticated Lady of the Organ. 

Revella Hughes was born on July 27, 1895, to George Hughes (the first Black postal worker in Huntington, West Virginia) and Anna B. Page Hughes (piano teacher, seamstress, painter, and potter). Revella played piano and started singing at age five. By age ten, she played violin. Her musical training included Hartshorn Memorial College and undergraduate and graduate degrees in Music and Music Education from Howard and Northwestern Universities, respectively. Her senior recital, the Saint-Saens G Minor Concerto, was with the Washington Concert Orchestra. Revella taught music at the Washington Conservatory of Music, the School of Expression, and voice, violin, and piano at the South Carolina State A&M College.

Hughes met her husband Layton Wheaton when he played football at Howard University, a dentist in New York, and the son of J. Francis Wheaton (attorney, orator, politician). Wheaton and Hughes married in 1920 and were divorced by 1923. Her career as a professional musician started in 1918 in Washington, D.C., as a lyric soprano and pianist. Revella was encouraged to move to New York to study voice, where she initially stayed with Adam Clayton Powell, Sr., and his family. The first artist to record for the first Black-owned record label, Black Swan, Revella recorded six songs, among them At DawningWith the Coming of TomorrowAh! Wondrous Morn, Thank God for a Garden.

Hughes starred in Edward Frye and Arthur Moss’ 1922 Dumb Luck. The following year, she was the choral director for the Broadway revue of Noble Sissle and Eubie Blake’s Shuffle Along, followed by a leading role in James P. Johnson’s production of Runnin’ Wild, in which Hughes introduced the Charleston dance. Revella worked with Cab Calloway, Fats Waller, Duke Ellington, Paul Robeson, Marian Anderson, and Roland Hayes. She allegedly taught voice to Josephine Baker. Revella was allegedly the first Black woman to perform at a New York City Central Park Concert in 1921.

She was one of the few Black artists on the B.F. Keith circuit, and performed on the CBS Radio Network, Regal Theatre in Chicago as a soloist. Hughes also arranged music and was part of the Bon Bons (women’s quartet) and the Hughes (women’s trio). In 1932, she was appointed Supervisor of Music for Huntington’s Black schools and organized the Douglass High School band. 

Upon her mother’s death, Hughes returned to New York and worked in lounges and nightclubs. She played the Hammond for the show An Informal Hour of Music, she also transcribed and arranged Negro spirituals and other music for organ and piano. Performing and arranging for Gypsy Markoff’s WWII USO tour, she traveled to Europe and the Middle East. After her retirement in 1955, Hughes performed for the Universal Jazz Coalition.

Hughes was recognized by the New York Times 1980, Third Annual Salute to Women in Jazz, and the Howard University New York and New Jersey Alumni groups and Department of Music. She received her honorary Doctor of Music from Marshall University in 1985 and the Alumni Achievement Award from Howard University in 1987.

Revella Hughes died in New York on October 24, 1987, at 91.

Author Profile

Dr. Lisa Roy is the newly appointed Executive Director for the Colorado Department of Early Childhood. The Department will manage Colorado’s new universal preschool program, serving 4-year-olds statewide starting in the summer of 2023. The Department will also manage comprehensive programs and services for young children, families and early childhood professionals, utilizing a “one-stop shop” application process.

Dr. Roy previously served as the director of program development for the Buffett Early Childhood Institute and as the executive director of early childhood education for Denver Public Schools. She has volunteered and worked in non-profit and government roles supporting families with young children for over 30 years.

Additional information:

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Boards Dr. Roy has served on include: Emily Griffith Foundation, Denver Early Childhood Council, Afterschool Alliance, KIPP Colorado, Mental Health Center of Denver, Tony Grampsas Youth Crime Prevention and Intervention, and Denver Welfare Reform.
Dr. Roy’s current memberships include: National Association for the Education of Young Children, Colorado Women’s Forum, and Golden Key Society
Dr. Roy was recently honored with the Harmon Award for Early Childhood Mental Health from the Colorado Association for Infant Mental Health.
Dr. Roy has presented several times a year at local (Omaha and Nebraska for the last few years, and Denver and Colorado for more than three decades), as well as National webinars and conferences.
Dr. Roy writes for pleasure as a literary nonfiction and historical writer primarily. Dr. Roy’s writings include:
Prairie Pioneer, Essay Daily – January 31, 2022
Submit, Ouch, Revise, Resubmit, Brevity Blog – December 30, 2021
Summer of ’68: Crab Feast, The Linden Review – December 7, 2021
Various articles with Blackpast.org, Blackpast.org – January 12, 2020
Salsa Soul and Spirit Book Review, Taylor and Francis Online – January 29, 2015

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Roy, L. (2023, August 11). Revella Hughes (1895-1987). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/revella-hughes-1895-1987/

Source of the Author's Information:

Castro, J. E. (2021, Oct 12) Lost Huntington: Remembering Revella Hughes. The Herald Dispatch.

McGinty, D. E. (Spring 1988) Conversation with Revella Hughes: From the Classics to Broadway to Swing. The Black Perspective in Music (16:1), pp. 81-104.

NY Times Obituary (27 Oct. 1987). Section D, page 34. https://www.nytimes.com/1987/10/27/obituaries/revella-hughes.html

Further Reading