Woodruff-Stone History - Person Sheet
Woodruff-Stone History - Person Sheet
NameWilliam Charles SHRINER
Birth25 Oct 1920, Texas, Harris County, Houston
Death8 May 2016, Indiana, Monroe County, Bloomington
FatherWilliam Reising SHRINER Jr. (1892-1978)
MotherAlta Mae STONE (1894-1995)
Spouses
FatherWilliam Francis GUYNES (1888-1979)
MotherLeah Ella BUCKNER (1889-1971)
Marriage30 May 1943, Texas, McLennan County, Waco
FatherDonald Jack COOK (1915-2005)
MotherMarion Elizabeth McCAULEY (1916-2012)
Obituary notes for William Charles SHRINER
C. Wm. Shriner/ Obituary
Charles William Shriner, a member of The Greatest Generation who became a nationally-broadcast opera singer performing   on the top stages all over the world, died on May 8th in Bloomington, Indiana.  Mr. Shriner was a Professor of Voice at Indiana University for thirty years until his retirement in 1985.  Prior to his appointment to the Music School faculty he was a leading baritone with the New York City Opera, Fort Worth Civic Opera, Houston Grand Opera and the NBC Opera Theater.  He sang leading roles in Mary Wives of Windsor, La Boheme, the Marriage of Figaro, Cosi Fan Tutte, Carmen, Faust, Romeo et Juliette, Rape of Lucretia, Parsifal, The Valkyrie and Die Fledermaus.   He also appeared as MacHeath in the Carnegie Hall revival of The Beggars Opera.  
He made his concert debut at Times Hall in New York in 1951 and was signed by National Concert Artists Corporation to appear in Civic Music programs throughout America.  For the next few years he sang concerts in forty-two of the then forty-eight states.  In addition to Mr. Shriner’s work in opera and he was one of the first of the so-called “serious singers” to move with ease to the light opera and musical theater stages.  His appearances at Washington’s Wolf Trap, St. Louis’ Muni, and Kansas City’s Starlight theater and others were noted for their vocal and histrionic brilliance.  He sang leading roles in Annie Get Your Gun, Roberta, Rio Rita, Naughty Marietta, Carousel, New Moon, Desert Song , and Rose Marie. 
He was born in Houston, Texas on Oct. 25th, 1920, and began his musical studies in Texas.   In 1938 he was part of the first graduating class from the then new Mirabeau B. LaMar High School.  While he was in high school, he played violin, bass horn and trumpet.  He was a graduate of Baylor University, earning a Bachelor of Music degree in 1942 and a Bachelor of Arts in 1943.  During this time he married his first wife, Ms. Billie Guynes and had three children: Ms. Deborah Shriner Casati, Ms. Diana Shriner, and Mr. Charles Williiam Shriner, Jr.    While at Baylor, Mr. Shriner studied Voice with Robert Hopkins.  He also studied with Paul Reimers, head of Voice Dept. of the Julliard School of Music, and Ms. Clytie Mundy, New York City,  and was coached by Otto Herz, Thomas Martin, Desiree Defrere, Arpad Sandor and Felix Wolfes.   
Mr. Shriner was a veteran of World War II.  Commissioned as an ensign in October, 1943, he was detailed on the U.S.S. Ancon, an amphibious command ship, aboard which the now famous battle recording by NBC broadcaster George Hicks was made during the D-Day invasion at Omaha Beach.  Hicks interviewed Mr. Shriner while he was under fire as the twin battery gunnery officer.  Hicks’s broadcast also recorded Mr. Shriner shooting down the first German plane by a surface vessel on D-Day.  When the first Mrs. Shriner opened the Fifth War Bond drive, the record and transcription of Hicks’s broadcast were auctioned, raising more than $100,000. Later, Mr. Shriner participated in the Okinawa invasion in the Pacific Theater.  He resumed his musical career after his discharge in 1946.  
In addition to his three children, two grandchildren (Anthony and Christopher Casati) and three great-grandchildren, Mr. Shriner is survived by his wife, Christine Margaret Cook Shriner, whom he married in 1972.
Last Modified 18 Apr 2020Created 31 Jul 2020 using Reunion for Macintosh
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