Felicia Coleman-Evans made her Carnegie Hall debut as featured soloist in tribute to the great Leontyne Price and her solo debut at the prestigious La Scala, touring with Sue Conway and her Victory Singers.
She performed in David Fanshawe’s “African Sanctus,” and “The Ties That Bind” by composer Robert Morris. In addition, her vocal music has been shared at President Jimmy Carter’s Inaugural Prayer Breakfast, the Congressional Black Caucus, the United States Legislative Staff, the 25th Reunion of the March on Washington, and the First Midwest Symposium of the Assassination of John F. Kennedy.
Coleman-Evans has performed in churches, conventions for the National Baptist USA, Inc., National Women’s Radio and Television, Thomas Dorsey’s National Convention of Gospel Choirs and Choruses, Edwin Hawkins Music and Arts Seminar, National Association of Negro Musicians, and other organizations, including those of the late Rev. Clay Evans and the Fellowship Missionary Baptist Church; civil rights leader, Rev. Jesse L. Jackson; and comedian-activist the late Dick Gregory.