When Lyric Opera of Kansas City announced it would stage Porgy and Bess for the first time in its history, baritone David Morgans didn’t hesitate.

A Liberty, Missouri native now based in New York, Morgans said he “jumped” at the opportunity — not only to perform in one of the most significant American operas ever written, but to do it at home. The production has allowed him to spend time with his mother while returning to the region that shaped both his life and his voice.

Morgans plays Mingo, a key figure in the Catfish Row community and a prominent presence within the opera’s choral world. While Porgy and Bess centers on the love story between Porgy and Bess, it is also very much an ensemble piece — one that relies on the collective voice of the community to tell a fuller story of survival, faith and resilience.

From High School Stage to New York

Morgans’ path to opera began in high school. Cast in school plays and musicals, he quickly realized that singing the words came far more naturally than memorizing spoken scripts.

After college, he moved straight to New York, where his career began to take shape. Living in Washington Heights was also a cultural shift. 

Making Opera Feel Accessible

Opera can feel intimidating for many audiences, especially those who didn’t grow up exposed to it. Morgans, 33, understands that hesitation — and challenges it.

This production of Porgy and Bess is sung in English, with projected supertitles to follow along. And unlike concerts or Broadway shows, opera singers perform without microphones, relying solely on trained voices to carry over a full orchestra.

That raw, unamplified sound is part of what Morgans loves about the art form. Opera, he says, is about emotion in its purest form — a human voice telling a story with no electronic filter.

And for first-time audiences, the music itself will feel familiar. Songs like “Summertime,” “It Ain’t Necessarily So,” and “I Got Plenty O’ Nuttin’” have lived far beyond the opera house, woven into American music for generations.

Originally written as a full-scale opera by George Gershwin in 1935, Porgy and Bess later grew in popularity through shorter Broadway-style adaptations, leading many Americans to think of it as a musical. Today, it is widely recognized as one of the most important American operas ever composed — blending classical form with jazz, blues and spiritual influences.

A Changing Opera Landscape — With Work Still to Do

Morgans has been fortunate to build a career during a moment when more Black stories are finding space on opera stages. He has performed in several major works within this growing repertoire, including operas by Terence Blanchard, whose work has reshaped contemporary American opera.

Blanchard — widely known outside opera for his collaborations with filmmaker Spike Lee — made history as the first Black composer to have an opera staged at the Metropolitan Opera in New York. His operas blend classical structure with jazz, blues and modern storytelling, creating work that speaks directly to Black experience in America today.

Image of David Morgans
Liberty, Mo., native David Morgans joins a national principal cast as Mingo in Lyric Opera’s production of Porgy and Bess.

A Production Rooted in Community

Lyric Opera’s Porgy and Bess brings together an all-star principal cast from around the country, including baritone Eric Greene as Porgy and soprano Michelle Bradley as Bess. At the same time, the production features a substantial local chorus made up of young Black opera singers from the Kansas City area.

He describes the production as visually stunning, with sets that shift dramatically — particularly during the storm scene — bringing Catfish Row vividly to life.

The costumes are designed by Paul Tazewell, who made history as the first African American man to win an Academy Award for costume design for Wicked.

For a singer who left Liberty to build a career on some of the world’s biggest stages, returning home for Porgy and Bess is more than another role. It’s a full-circle moment.


If You Go

The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess
Presented by Lyric Opera of Kansas City

Dates:
7:30 p.m., Sat., Feb. 28

7:30 p.m., Fri., March 6

2 p.m., Sun., March 8 

Location:
Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts
1601 Broadway Blvd., Kansas City, MO

Tickets:
Available through the Lyric Opera of Kansas City box office at kcopera.org or by calling the Kauffman Center ticket office.

Meet the Artists of Porgy and Bess

Monday, March 2, 2026, 6:00–7:30 pm

Black Archives of Mid-America
1722 E 17th Terrace, Kansas City, MO 64108

Learn more about their careers, their unique experiences bringing this iconic opera to life, and the stories behind their performances. A Q&A session will follow.
Dr. Roger Williams, Dedicated Lyric Opera patron and ambassador Dr. Roger Williams moderates this conversation, with: Michael Ellis Ingram, conductor; Michelle Bradley, Bess; Eric Greene, Porgy. 

RSVP @ https://donate2.app/WaMvlb

Since 1996, Bonita has served as as Editor-in-Chief of The Community Voice newspaper. As the owner, she has guided the Wichita-based publication’s growth in reach across the state of Kansas and into...

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