Research Catalog

Maya Angelou papers.

Title
  1. Maya Angelou papers.
Published by
  1. 1927 - 2009, bulk 1961 - 2009.
Supplementary content
  1. Finding aid
Author
  1. Angelou, Maya

Items in the library and off-site

Filter by

Displaying 1-20 of 367 items

StatusContainerFormatAccessCall numberItem location
Status
How do I pick up this item and when will it be ready?
Containerbox 362FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 362Item locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 361FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 361Item locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 360FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 360Item locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 359FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 359Item locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 358FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 358Item locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 357FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 357Item locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 356FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 356Item locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 355aFormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 355aItem locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 355FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 355Item locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 354FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 354Item locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 353FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 353Item locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 352FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 352Item locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 351FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 351Item locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 350FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 350Item locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 349FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 349Item locationOffsite
Status

Not available - In use until 2024-04-29 - Please for assistance.

Containerbox 348FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 348Item locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 347FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 347Item locationOffsite
Status

Not available - In use until 2024-05-22 - Please for assistance.

Containerbox 346FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 346Item locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 345FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 345Item locationOffsite
StatusContainerbox 344FormatMixed materialAccessRequest in advanceCall numberSc MG 830 box 344Item locationOffsite
View all 367 items

Details

Description
  1. 200.83 linear feet (408 boxes)
Summary
  1. Maya Angelou (1928-2014) was one of the most renowned and celebrated voices in American literature. She was a poet, memoirist, novelist, educator, dramatist, producer, actress, dancer, historian, filmmaker, and civil rights activist. In the mid-fifties, Angelou toured Europe with a production of the opera "Porgy and Bess". She studied modern dance with Martha Graham, danced with Alvin Ailey on television variety shows and, in 1957, recorded her first album, "Calypso Lady" In 1958, she moved to New York, where she joined the Harlem Writers Guild, acted in the historic Off-Broadway production of Jean Genet's "The Blacks" and wrote and performed"Cabaret for Freedom". She also worked for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), under Martin Luther King Jr.'s leadership. In the early 1960s, she moved with her son to Africa, where she lived and worked for various news outlets, as a journalist, in Egypt and Ghana. Inspired by James Baldwin to write her story, Angelou published her first book, "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings"(1969) to international acclaim and enormous popular success. Her published verse, non-fiction, and fiction include more than 30 bestselling titles, such as "Gather Together in My Name" (1974), "And Still I Rise" (1978), and "I Shall Not Be Moved" (1990). Among her accomplishments, Angelou wrote the screenplay and composed the score for the 1972 film "Georgia, Georgia". Her script, the first by an African American woman ever to be filmed, was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. She made numerous television and film appearances, in Alex Haley's "Roots" (1977) and John Singleton's "Poetic Justice" (1993), among others. The feature film, "Down in the Delta", was Angelou's directorial debut. Angelou composed and read her poem "On the Pulse of the Morning" at President William (Bill) Clinton's first inaugural ceremony in 1993. Angelou served on two presidential committees; was awarded the Presidential Medal of Arts in 2000 and the Lincoln Medal in 2008; and has received three Grammy Awards. Despite never attending college, she received over thirty honorary degrees from universities across the nationa. Angelou died in 2014, leaving a legacy of artistry for generations to come.
  2. The Maya Angelou papers consist of original manuscripts, computer generated typescripts, galleys, and proofs of published work such as "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings", "Hallelujah the Welcome Table", "I Shall Not Be Moved", "A Song Flung Up to Heaven", "Heart of a Woman", and "All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes", among others, as well as manuscripts for unpublished work and dozens of poems. Additionally, there is personal and professional correspondence with such notable figures as James Baldwin, Ruby Dee and Ossie Davis, Mari Evans, Rosa Guy, Coretta Scott King, Abbey Lincoln and Max Roach, Julian Mayfield, Malcolm X, and her editors, to name a few. Also significant are requests to read or perform her work at universities and other organizations, and material related to various organizations' boards and committees on which she participated. Additionally, there are office files; teaching material, such as syllabi and reading assignments; and materials pertaining to Angelou's Hallmark greeting card series. There are a large number of subject files on various individuals, organizations, geographic locations, publications, and schools. Lastly, there is a considerable amount of material about Angelou and includes newspaper clippings, magazine articles, reviews, and other printed material regarding her publications and appearances.
Subject
  1. Angelou, Maya
  2. Angelou, Maya
  3. Baldwin, James, 1924-1987
  4. Evans, Mari, 1919-2017
  5. Guy, Rosa
  6. Mayfield, Julian, 1928-1984
  7. Sanchez, Sonia, 1934-
  8. Walker, Alice, 1944-
  9. X, Malcolm, 1925-1965
  10. African American actresses
  11. African American authors
  12. African American entertainers
  13. African American poets
  14. African American women authors
  15. African American women motion picture producers and directors
  16. African American women poets > 20th century
  17. African Americans in motion pictures
  18. African Americans in the motion picture industry
  19. Autobiography > African American authors
  20. Black author
  21. Poets, American > 20th century
  22. Poets, Black > United States
Genre/Form
  1. Letters.
  2. Manuscripts.
  3. Memoirs.
  4. Scripts (documents)
  5. screenplays.
Call number
  1. Sc MG 830
Access (note)
  1. Fan mail is closed until 2030. Photographs and prints held by the Photographs and Prints Division are unavailable pending processing.
Source (note)
  1. Purchase, Maya Angelou Foundation, 2008.
Location of other archival materials (note)
  1. Maya Angelou Film and Theater collection, Wake Forest University
Author
  1. Angelou, Maya, creator.
Title
  1. Maya Angelou papers.
Production
  1. 1927 - 2009, bulk 1961 - 2009.
Type of content
  1. text
  2. still image
Type of medium
  1. unmediated
Type of carrier
  1. sheet
Restricted access
  1. Fan mail is closed until 2030. Photographs and prints held by the Photographs and Prints Division are unavailable pending processing.
Location of other archival materials
  1. Maya Angelou Film and Theater collection, Wake Forest University
  2. Materials Separated from the Resource: Transferred to the Art and Artifacts Division: Gavel and paperweight from President Clinton; gavel made from wood from Clinton's inaugural stand; "Colored" and "White" toilet signs; Pacific State Association Daughters of IBPOE of W sash; "Mammy" brand label; "Do Not Stand Idly By Save Darfur" green bracelet; "I Have a Dream" medal; Marvtastic Society pin; National Organization for Women pin; Christmas in Washington ornament; Horizon's Day '90 pin (with Angelou's photograph); "Still We Rise!" pin; Thurgood Marshall stamp pin. Transferred to the Moving Image and Recorded Sound (MIRS) Division: audio and moving image materials. For more information, please contact the division at schomburgaudiovisual@nypl.org or 212-491-2270. Transferred to the Jean Blackwell Hutson Research and Reference Division: 3 books. Transferred to the Photographs and Prints Division: 1 paige box and 1 archival box of photographs, mostly of Angelou at various events and appearances (includes two albums from Hallmark events; 1 album from an event sponsored by Oprah Winfrey; various individual snapshots; postcard images from Stamps, Arkansas)
Source
  1. Purchase, Maya Angelou Foundation, 2008.
Connect to:
  1. Finding aid
Research call number
  1. Sc MG 830
View in legacy catalog