May 31 ~ Signature of Civilizations
Art is the signature of civilizations.”
— Beverly Sills

Beverly SillsOpera soprano Beverly Sills (1929–2007) was born Belle Miriam Silverman on this day in Brooklyn, New York, and nicknamed “Bubbles” as a child for her exuberant personality.

“My mother told me I could do and be anything I wanted if I was willing to work hard for it. She was right,” she once said. It was more than encouragement—it was a seed of belief planted with love. The kind of wisdom that shapes a life. The kind our mothers give us, hoping we’ll carry it forward and bloom.

“I’ve always tried to go a step past wherever people expected me to end up,” she added.

Sills joined the New York City Opera in 1955. Her expressive, flexible voice and charisma led to a 30-year career, over 70 roles, and 18 albums that gained her worldwide fame.

She became a familiar face beyond opera, charming audiences as a frequent guest on The Carol Burnett Show, The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, and even The Muppet Show.

“There are no shortcuts to any place worth going,” she once said—another pearl from a woman who lived her art with purpose.

After retiring from the stage in 1980, Beverly Sills turned her voice toward advocacy, becoming a tireless champion and fundraiser for the arts she loved. She led major opera companies, raised millions, and brought new audiences to classical music.

“I’m not happy, I’m cheerful,” she explained. “A happy person has no cares at all. A cheerful person has cares but has learned how to deal with them.”That resilient spirit, full of sparkle and steel, was her true aria.

She lived her art with purpose and passed along its light. Her final lesson? “There are no shortcuts to any place worth going.” And how lucky we are that she showed the way—fearless, funny, and full of grace.

Beverly SillsCheerfulness is strength that bubbles. 🫧✨