Basic Achievement of Arms
of Lee Thurman Lumbley colour version
BLAZON: Argent on a Fess engrailed Gules between three
Popinjays proper gorged Gules three Bezants.
HERALDISTS: Geoffrey Kingman-Sugars and Lee Lumbley
REGISTRATIONS: Burkes Peerage and Gentry International Registry of Arms and
the United States Heraldic Society
DESIGN RATIONALE
Genealogical sources in Provo, Utah corroborate an ancestral relationship to
Henry Lumley, younger brother of
Richard Lumley, later 1st Earl of
Scarborough, but no original documents have been identified to date. As
Henry and his first wife Elizabeth appeared in a family bible dating circa
1800, Henry’s family history has been a subject of study in this armiger's
family for generations. To create proper armorial bearings with current
genealogical evidence according to the law of arms, the shield is
differenced by, first, "a Fess engrailed" referencing the crossing of the
Atlantic by the armiger's ancestors, and second, "three Bezants" referencing
the establishment of the armiger's ancestors in Virginia during the reign
William III, of Orange, and Mary II. Several Lumley families use Popinjays
or Parrots in their arms and the tradition has been carried on in this
instance as well.
All works completed between March
and May 2010.
Lee Lumbley is originally
from Texas and attended Rice University in Houston and The Julliard School
in New York. His artistic résumé includes careers as a film and television
producer, composer, and operatic tenor.
As a producer, Mr. Lumbley’s projects included the films:
Last Flight to Savannah (2004) with American director Robert Pietri,
The Real Ones (2003) with American director Henry Lee, Under the
Willow Tree (2003) with Chinese director Sen-I Yu, El Ricon de
Venezuela (The Venezuelan Corner) (2003) with Venezuelan director
Reyther Orgeta, The end side of a carousel (2003) with Chinese
director Ming Chen, music video: For Reasons Unexplained (2004) for
Sony artist Casey Stratton with Trinidadian director Vashti Anderson, and
PBS television series Sesame Street (2003-4).
As a composer, he studied with Normal Nelson at West Texas
State University and Paul Cooper at Rice University. Mr. Lumbley’s first
major work, Angel Dances - A Dancework in Eight Segments was written
in tribute to American choreographer Mark Morris and recorded in 1996 along
with Tango M, scored for orchestra. In 1997, his Hodie Christus
natus est was premiered by the San Jacinto College Choir in Houston,
Texas. Lee’s concerto for piano and orchestra L'hommage a la nuit was
composed in 1999 for the Queen Elisabeth of Belgium International Piano
Competition and recorded in 2002 along with Symphony of Myself, his
first symphony. In 2003, his Sonata per pianoforte and Aria per un giorno
primaverile (Song for a Spring Day) was written for solo piano and
recorded. He also served as artist-in-residence for the Opera/Music Theater
Institute in Washington, DC and as guest composer/lecturer at San Jacinto
College in Houston, Texas.
As an operatic tenor, Mr. Lumbley studied voice with soprano
Elsa Porter, protégé of Dame Eva Turner, mezzo-soprano Frances Bible, and
tenor Denes Striny. His last performance credits include the Amalfi Coast
Music Festival, the Ravello Music Festival, the Badia di Cava Music
Festival—all in Italy, and the Bryant Park Young Performers Series in New
York. His other credits include the Amarillo Symphony Orchestra, the Houston
Grand Opera, the Houston Symphony Orchestra, the American Vocal Ensemble,
the Hilliard Ensemble, the National Cathedral Choir of Men and Boys, and
many others.
Mr. Lumbley’s operatic roles included U.S. Naval Lt. B.F.
Pinkerton in Puccini's Madama Butterfly, Rinnucio in Puccini's
Gianni Schicchi, Mario Cavaradossi in Puccini's Tosca, the title role in
Bernstein's Candide, Faust in Gounod's Faust, Il Duca di Mantua in
Verdi's Rigoletto, Nemorino in Donizetti's Il elisir d'amor,
and many others. In 1995, he received the BRAVO! award for his
contributions to the vocal arts.
Mr. Lumbley’s broadcast credits include the NBC Presents, PBS
Great Performances, Discovery Channel, ABC National Radio, NPR
National Public Radio, GMTV in the United Kingdom, and Italian
National Television.
Beyond his artistic endeavors, Lee enjoyed significant careers in two other
areas. First, Mr. Lumbley was an arts administrator with Houston's Alley
Theater, Houston Ticket Center (Houston Grand Opera, Houston Symphony
Orchestra, Houston Ballet Foundation, and Society for the Performing Arts),
and later, the Washington, D.C. based Troika Organization.
Second, he was a consultant and advisor in the field of legal technologies
and practice support for Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue in Washington, DC, and
Amster, Rothstein & Ebenstein, and Schulte, Roth & Zabel, LLP, in New York
in a broad range of practice areas including White House investigations, US
Senate investigations, SEC civil and criminal investigations, tobacco
litigation, general corporate litigation, mergers and acquisitions, and
intellectual property.
Mr. Lumbley’s other affiliations include Phi Eta Sigma
National Honor Society, Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Professional Music Fraternity,
AIDS Foundation of Houston, the Design Industries Foundation for AIDS (DIFFA),
1989 Outstanding Young Men of America, Washington Cultural Alliance,
American Guild for Musical Artists, 1993 Inaugural Committee for President
Bill Clinton, Gay Men's Health Crisis, the Volunteers of America, National
Society of the Sons of the American Revolution (SAR), American Heraldry
Society, the International Association of Amateur Heralds, where he is an
Associate Fellow, and New England Historic Genealogical Society.