August Wilson

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August Wilson
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August Wilson

August Wilson (April 27, 1945October 2, 2005) was a Pulitzer Prize-winning American playwright. His singular achievement and literary legacy is a cycle of ten plays, each set in a different decade, depicting the comedy and tragedy of the African-American experience in the 20th century.

Contents

Biography

Born Frederick August Kittel in Pittsburgh's Hill District, fourth of six children of Frederick Kittel, an immigrant German baker who seldom spent time with his family, and Daisy Wilson Kittel, an African-American cleaning woman from North Carolina. Earlier, his maternal grandmother walked from North Carolina to Pennsylvania in search of a better life. Wilson's mother raised her children in a Bedford Avenue two-room apartment behind a grocery store. This poor neighborhood was inhabited by black Americans, Italians, and Jews. Daisy supported her family as a cleaning lady.

Wilson changed his name to honor his mother, when his father died in 1965. That same year he discovered the blues as sung by Bessie Smith and bought a typewriter for twenty dollars and started writing poetry.

During Wilson's teen years, his mother married David Bedford, and the Bedford family moved from the Hill to a then predominantly white working-class neighborhood, Hazelwood (Pittsburgh), in the late 1950s. There, they encountered racial hostility; bricks were thrown through a window at their new home.

Wilson was the only black student at Pittsburgh Central Catholic High School in 1959; threats and abuse drove him away, but Connelley Vocational High School proved unchallenging. He dropped out of Gladstone High School in the 10th grade in 1960 when a teacher accused him of plagiarizing a 20-page paper on Napoleon.

Wilson made such extensive use of the Carnegie Library to educate himself that they later awarded him a degree, the only such one they have awarded. Wilson, who had learned to read at age four, began reading black writers there at age 12 and spent the remainder of his teen years educating himself by reading Ralph Ellison, Richard Wright, Langston Hughes, Arna Bontemps, and others.

By this time, Wilson knew that he wanted to be a writer, but this created tension with his mother, who wanted him to become a lawyer. She forced him to leave the family home and he enlisted in the United States Army for a three-year stint in 1962, but left after one year and went back to working odd jobs such as a porter, short-order cook, gardener, and dishwasher.

In 1968, Wilson co-founded the Black Horizon Theater in the Hill District of Pittsburgh along with fellow resident Rob Penny, who went on to become associate professor of Africana studies at the University of Pittsburgh. Wilson served as a scriptwriter and director for the next ten years. Among his early efforts there was Jitney, which he revised more than two decades later as part of his 10-play cycle on twentieth century Pittsburgh.

Wilson married for the first time to Brenda Burton in 1969. That same year, his stepfather David Bedford died. His oldest daughter, Sakina Ansari Wilson, was born January 22, 1970. The marriage ended in 1972.

In 1976 Dr. Vernell Lillie, founder of the Kuntu Repertory Theatre two years earlier, directed Wilson's The Homecoming. That same year Wilson saw Sizwe Bansi Is Dead at the Pittsburgh Public Theater, his first professional play. Wilson and Penny also started the Kuntu Writers Workshop to bring writers together in a meaningful discussion and to assist writers with getting published and/or produced. Both organizations are still active to this day.

In 1978 Wilson moved to Saint Paul, Minnesota at the suggestion of his friend director Claude Purdy, who helped him secure a job writing educational scripts for the Science Museum of Minnesota. In 1980 he received a fellowship for the Minneapolis Playwrights Center.

In 1981 he was married for the second of three times to Judy Oliver, a social worker. They divorced in 1990. That same year Wilson moved to Seattle.

On August 26, 2005, he told his hometown newspaper, The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, that he had been diagnosed with liver cancer in June of 2005 and given 3 to 5 months to live. He died on October 2, 2005 at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle, Washington. He was buried in Greenwood Memorial Cemetery in suburban Pittsburgh on October 8, 2005.

Wilson was married three times, and had two daughters: Sakina Ansari, from his first marriage and Azula Carmen with his wife, costume designer Constanza Romero.

Literary works

Wilson's most famous plays are Fences (1985) (which won a Pulitzer Prize and a Tony Award), The Piano Lesson (1990) (a Pulitzer Prize and the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award), Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, and Joe Turner's Come and Gone.

The Pittsburgh Cycle

In 2005, August Wilson completed a ten-play cycle, nine of which are set in Pittsburgh, chronicling the African-American experience in the 20th century. These are:

Awards and tributes

  • 1985: New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Play, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom
  • 1985: Tony Award nomination for Best Play, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom
  • 1987: Drama Desk Award for Outstanding New Play, Fences
  • 1987: New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Play, Fences
  • 1987: Pulitzer Prize for Drama, Fences
  • 1987: Tony Award for Best Play, Fences
  • 1988: Literary Lion Award from the New York Public Library
  • 1988: New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Play, Joe Turner's Come and Gone
  • 1988: Tony Award nomination for Best Play, Joe Turner's Come and Gone
  • 1990: Drama Desk Award for Outstanding New Play, The Piano Lesson
  • 1990: New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Play, The Piano Lesson
  • 1990: Tony Award nomination for Best Play, The Piano Lesson
  • 1990: Pulitzer Prize for Drama, The Piano Lesson
  • 1992: American Theatre Critics' Association Award, Two Trains Running
  • 1992: New York Drama Critics Circle Citation for Best American Play, Two Trains Running
  • 1992: Tony Award nomination for Best Play, Two Trains Running
  • 1996: New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Play, Seven Guitars
  • 1996: Tony Award nomination for Best Play, Seven Guitars
  • 1999: National Humanities Medal
  • 2000: New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Play, Jitney
  • 2000: Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Off-Broadway Play, Jitney
  • 2001: Tony Award nomination for Best Play, King Hedley II
  • 2004: The Freedom of Speech Award at the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival.

Playbill magazine announced September 2, 2005, that Broadway's Virginia Theatre will be renamed for Wilson on October 17, 2005. This will be the first Broadway theatre to bear the name of an African-American.

External links

Further reading

  • August Wilson: A Casebook (Casebooks on Modern Dramatists, Volume 15), edited by Marilyn Elkins, Garland Publishing (November 1, 1999), ISBN 0815336349
  • The Dramatic Vision of August Wilson by Sandra Shannon, Howard University Press (1995)
  • August Wilson and Black Aesthetics by Sandra Shannon, Palgrave MacMillan (2004)
  • August Wilson's Fences: A Reference Guide by Sandra Shannon, Greenwood Publishing (2003)
  • "Playwright August Wilson dies at 60". CNN. Retrieved Oct.3, 2005.
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