As the strong-willed Nettie, Ms. Smith got to sing the rouser "June Is Bustin' Out All Over," as well as "This Was a Real Nice Clambake." Most famously, she originated the moving standard "You'll Never Walk Alone." He vocal work is preserved on the original cast album.
Ms. Smith repeated the role of Nettie on tour and in a 1949 revival of Carousel at City Center. Aside from Carousel, she had only one other Broadway role, in 1938's Great Lady, and spent the bulk of her career on the concert stage and in the opera. A contralto, she sang Dorabella in Così fan tutte, opening the Tanglewood opera house at Lenox, MA, in 1941. She also performed with the New Opera Company, the San Francisco Opera, and sang Bess in Porgy and Bess with conductor Leonard Bernstein.
In 1943, she won the Metropolitan Opera auditions, which led to her becoming the youngest person ever to sing the role of Erda in Wagner's Das Rheingold at that house.
Her career was short, however. She moved back to Owensboro, where she married surgeon Robert Smith in 1950 and raised two daughters, Robin and Nancy. After that, she taught voice for many years and served on local arts committees. Her husband died in 1959.
Ms. Smith is survived by two daughters.