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Maya
Angelou
April 4, 1928 - |
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Internationally respected poet, writer and
educator,
Maya Angelou was born Marguerite Johnson on April
4, 1928 in St. Louis, Missouri. She spent her formative
years shuttling between St. Louis, the tiny, totally
segregated town of Stamps, Arkansas, and San Francisco
where she realized her ambition of becoming that city's
first black streetcar conductor. |
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In 1959, at the request of Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr., Maya Angelou became the northern coordinator for the
Southern Christian Leadership Conference. From 1961 to
1962 she was associate editor of The Arab Observer
in Cairo, Egypt, the only English-language news weekly in
the Middle East, and from 1964 to 1966 she was feature
editor of the African Review in Accra, Ghana. She
returned to the U.S. in 1974 and was appointed by Gerald
Ford to the Bicentennial Commission and later by Jimmy
Carter to the Commission for International Woman of the
Year. She accepted a lifetime appointment in 1981 as
Reynolds Professor of American Studies at Wake Forest
University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. In 1993,
Angelou wrote and delivered a poem, "On
The Pulse of the Morning," at the inauguration for
President Bill Clinton at his request. |
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The first black woman director in Hollywood, Angelou
has written, produced, directed, and starred in
productions for stage, film, and television. In 1971, she
wrote the original screenplay and musical score for the
film Georgia, Georgia, and was both author and
executive producer of a five-part television miniseries
"Three Way Choice." She has also written and produced
several prize-winning documentaries, including
"Afro-Americans in the Arts," a PBS special for which she
received the Golden Eagle Award. Maya Angelou was twice
nominated for a Tony award for acting: once for her
Broadway debut in Look Away (1973), and again for
her performance in Roots (1977). |
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