Iconic US author, poet Maya Angelou dies at 86

May 29, 2014

Tributes continue to flow to Maya Angelou, the beloved African-American author and civil rights activist who died aged 86.

WASHINGTON - Maya Angelou, the beloved African-American author and civil rights activist renowned for a searing memoir charting her childhood in the racially segregated South, died Wednesday.
 
Angelou, 86, was best known for the first instalment of her memoirs "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings," the first non-fiction best-seller by an African-American woman.
 
A friend of slain civil rights hero Martin Luther King, she was widely respected in the United States and abroad as a strong voice for both black people and women.
 
Her son Guy Johnson said his mother "passed quietly in her home" in Winston-Salem, North Carolina and expressed thanks that "her ascension was not belabored by a loss of acuity or comprehension."
 
"She lived a life as a teacher, activist, artist and human being. She was a warrior for equality, tolerance and peace," he said.
 
President Barack Obama led the tributes, hailing Angelou as "one of the brightest lights of our time - a brilliant writer, a fierce friend, and a truly phenomenal woman."
 
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Obama honours Angelou
 
Former President Bill Clinton, who invited Angelou to give a reading at his 1993 inauguration, said America had "lost a national treasure."
 
"The poems and stories she wrote and read to us in her commanding voice were gifts of wisdom and wit, courage and grace," Clinton said in a statement.
 
Angelou had reportedly been in poor health, and had cancelled a scheduled appearance in Texas where she was to have accepted an honor later this week.
 
'Listen to yourself' 
 
"Listen to yourself and in that quietude you might hear the voice of God," she wrote in what would become her last message on her @DrMayaAngelou Twitter account, posted on May 23.
 
Born Marguerite Annie Johnson on April 4, 1928, in Saint Louis, Missouri, Angelou experienced hardship from an early age -- her parents' breakup, racial segregation and, at the age of seven or eight, rape at the hands of her mother's boyfriend.
 
She moved to San Francisco during World War II to study dance and acting, where she also held down a number of odd jobs -- including a stint as the city's first black female cable car conductor -- to support herself and a baby son.
 
In the early 1950s she briefly married a Greek sailor named Anastasios Angelopulos. She tweaked his surname to come up with her own professional name, which she first used as a calypso dancer.
 
The same decade found Angelou on the stage, performing in off-Broadway theater and in a touring production of "Porgy and Bess." At the same time she became increasingly involved in the nascent civil rights movement, getting to know many of its key figures.
 
Travelled abroad 
 
In the 1960s she traveled abroad, spending much of that tumultuous decade in Egypt and Ghana.
 
Upon returning to the United States, the African-American author James Baldwin encouraged her to put pen to paper with her remarkable life story -- encouragement that led to the publication of "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings," which covered the first 17 years of her life.
 
A small library of books and poems would follow, as well as a screenplay (the 1972 Swedish-American drama "Georgia, Georgia") and an Emmy-nominated turn on the breakthrough US television miniseries "Roots" in 1977.
 
Angelou's recording of one of her most famous poems, "On the Pulse of the Morning," at Clinton's 1993 presidential inauguration went on to win a Grammy award.
 
Praised as a Renaissance woman, Angelou made her debut as a director with the 1998 film "Down in the Delta," about a young big-city drug addict dispatched to the ancestral home in rural Mississippi where she discovers her family roots.
 
She also published cook books and, in 1996, narrated a Sesame Street children's film titled "Elmo Saves Christmas."
 
Barack Obama presented Angelou with the nation's highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, in 2011.
 
For many years Angelou taught American studies at Wake Forest University, a small liberal arts college, where students remembered her beginning classes by speaking Arabic, French or Latin.
 
She herself never went to college.
 
AFP

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