Student Diversity Events
This calendar presented by
Center for Student Diversity
[PAST EVENT] Africana First Friday with Ntozake Shange
November 6, 2015
12pm - 1pm
Location
Boswell Hall (formerly Morton Hall), Room 314100 Ukrop Way
Williamsburg, VA 23185Map this location
Ntozake Shange?was born Paulette Williams in Trenton, New Jersey. In 1971 she changed her name to Ntozake Shange. Ntozake means "she who comes with her own things,? in Xhosa and Shange means "she who walks like a lion,? in Zulu. Her father was an Air Force surgeon and her mother was an educator and a psychiatric social worker. The Williams were upper middle class African Americans whose love of the arts contributed to an intellectually stimulating childhood for Shange and her three siblings. Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, Chuck Berry, and W. E. B. Du Bois were among the frequent guests at her parents' house.
In 1966 Shange enrolled at Barnard College. She attempted suicide several times. Nonetheless, she graduated Cum Laude in American Studies in 1970 and entered the University of Southern California at Los Angeles, where she earned a Master's Degree in American Studies in 1973.
While living in California and teaching humanities and women's studies courses at Mills College in Oakland, the University of California Extension, and Sonoma State College, Shange began to associate with poets, teachers, performers, and black and white feminist writers who nurtured her talents. Shange and her friends began to perform their poetry, music, and dance in and around the San Francisco Area. Shange also danced with Halifu Osumare's company. Upon leaving the company, she began collaborating with Paula Moss on the poetry, music, and dance that would become For Colored Girls. Moss and Shange left California for New York and performed For Colored Girls in a Soho jazz loft and later in bars in the lower East Side. Producer Woodie King Jr. saw one of these shows and helped director Oz Scott stage the choreopoem Off-Broadway at the New Federal Theatre where it ran for eight weeks. Afterwards, which it moved to the New York Shakespeare Festival, Public Theatre, and then to the Booth Theatre.
In addition to her plays, she has written poetry, novels, and essays. She has taught at California State College, the City College of New York, the University of Houston, Rice University, Yale, Villanova, and New York University. Among her many awards are two Obie?s, a Los Angeles Time Book Prize for Poetry, and a Pushcart Prize. She has also been honored as a Living Legend by the National Black Theatre Festival and was honored by the Zora Neale Hurston House and Columbia University.
Ms Shange has 3 honorary PhD?s from Oberlin, Haverford and the University of Missouri, St Louis.
In 1966 Shange enrolled at Barnard College. She attempted suicide several times. Nonetheless, she graduated Cum Laude in American Studies in 1970 and entered the University of Southern California at Los Angeles, where she earned a Master's Degree in American Studies in 1973.
While living in California and teaching humanities and women's studies courses at Mills College in Oakland, the University of California Extension, and Sonoma State College, Shange began to associate with poets, teachers, performers, and black and white feminist writers who nurtured her talents. Shange and her friends began to perform their poetry, music, and dance in and around the San Francisco Area. Shange also danced with Halifu Osumare's company. Upon leaving the company, she began collaborating with Paula Moss on the poetry, music, and dance that would become For Colored Girls. Moss and Shange left California for New York and performed For Colored Girls in a Soho jazz loft and later in bars in the lower East Side. Producer Woodie King Jr. saw one of these shows and helped director Oz Scott stage the choreopoem Off-Broadway at the New Federal Theatre where it ran for eight weeks. Afterwards, which it moved to the New York Shakespeare Festival, Public Theatre, and then to the Booth Theatre.
In addition to her plays, she has written poetry, novels, and essays. She has taught at California State College, the City College of New York, the University of Houston, Rice University, Yale, Villanova, and New York University. Among her many awards are two Obie?s, a Los Angeles Time Book Prize for Poetry, and a Pushcart Prize. She has also been honored as a Living Legend by the National Black Theatre Festival and was honored by the Zora Neale Hurston House and Columbia University.
Ms Shange has 3 honorary PhD?s from Oberlin, Haverford and the University of Missouri, St Louis.