Maya Angelou
Poet, author, playwright, teacher, actor and director Maya Angelou was born
with the name Marguerite Johnson in 1928. Raised mostly by her grandmother
in
rural Stamps, Arkansas, the writer's childhood experiences, which included
rape at the age of eight and a period of muteness, inspired her famous work,
"I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings" (1970).
Prior to gaining notoriety for the autobiography that uncovered economic,
racial and sexual oppressions, Angelou lived and worked in San Francisco. It
was not until the late 1950s that she began writing and acting in New York.
Stage performances took her around the world. While in Ghana, she met a
political dissident that later became her husband.
When Angelou returned to the United States, she wrote several screenplays
and
became the first African-American woman to have a feature film adapted from
one of her own stories. After the publication of "I Know Why the Caged Bird
Sings," many novels and volumes of poetry followed.
In 1981, Angelou became a professor of American studies at Wake Forest
University, where she still teaches today. Among numerous honors, Angelou
was
invited to compose and deliver her poem, "On the Pulse of Morning," at the
inauguration of President Clinton in 1993.
Check out these sites for more about this "Phenomenal Woman."
- The Official Site of Dr. Maya Angelou
Offers a biography, a complete listing of Angelou's lifetime achievements and the latest news.
- Interview with Mother Jones
Check out this 1995 talk with Maya Angelou. In her own cadence and style,
Angelou discusses her famous presidential poem, social and economic issues facing
the nation, spirituality and more.
- Down in the Delta
IMDb's cast list and still shots of the 1998
film directed by Angelou that logs three generations of black life.
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