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07.06.08 - Workshop
Six week workshop with Patricia Smith.
07.06.08 - Privately
Study Privately with Patricia Smith. Waiting List
07.06.08 - Real-Time
Study in real-time via chat-room with Patricia Smith. Waiting List
Patricia Smith

 

 




Patricia Smith

An award-winning poet, playwright, journalist and performer, Patricia Smith is a renaissance artist of undeniable and unmistakable signature. She has done it all, and she has done it fiercely and well--it began with the realization that the word, in all its glorious incarnation, was always her most faithful and unflinching ally.

As a performance poet: Smith has read her work at the Poets Stage in Stockholm, Rotterdam's Poetry International Festival, the Aran Islands International Poetry and Prose Festival, Expo 90 in Osaka, the Bahia Festival, the Sorbonne in Paris and on tour in Germany, Austria and Holland. In 2002, she took the stage at Carnegie Hall as part of jazz innovator Bill Cole's 60th birthday celebration. She has also performed in a number of major American academic and performance venues including Bumbershoot, the Writers Voice, South by Southwest Music Festival, the Bisbee Poetry Festival, St. Mark's Poetry Project, Black Roots at the Frederick Douglass Creative Arts Center, the Painted Bride, and on tour with Lollapalooza. Smith has shared the stage with Adrienne Rich, Sharon Olds, Allen Ginsburg, Walter Mosley, Joyce Carol Oates, Ntozake Shange, Gwendolyn Brooks and Galway Kinnell. She was featured in the nationally-released film "Slamnation," recently appeared on an episode of the HBO series "Def Poetry Jam," and performed the poem "Awakening" at the 1991 inauguration of Mayor Richard Daley in Chicago.

Smith is four-time national individual champion of the notorious and wildly popular poetry slam, an energized competition where poets are judged on the content and performance of their work. In 1997, she "tied" with Jimmy Santiago Baca for the Taos Poetry Circle World Heavyweight Championship of Poetry, in what organizers have called the bout's most controversial decision.

In 1998, Smith began collaborating with musicians in order to break new ground during her performances--an experiment which has led to two immensely rewarding alliances. She now frequently appears with her band Bop Thunderous; the group has just completed a self-titled debut CD. She is also a vocalist with Paradigm Shift, a stellar improvisational jazz group whose members have worked with Sonny Rollins, Charlie Parker and Miles Davis.

Recordings of Patricia Smith's work can be found on the CD "Always in the Head" (Wordsmith Press), as well as in the compilations "Grand Slam," "A Snake in the Heart" "By Someone's Good Graces" and "Lip." A short film of Smith performing the poem "Undertaker," produced by San Francisco's Tied to the Tracks Films, won awards at the Sundance and San Francisco Film Festivals and earned a prestigious Cable Ace Award as part of the Lifetime Network's first annual Women's Film Festival.

As a published poet: Smith is the author of three volumes of poetry--Close to Death (Zoland Books), Big Towns, Big Talk (Zoland Books) and Life According to Motown (Tia Chucha). In reviewing Close to Death for Library Journal, Louis McKee said, "...souls rage from the hellfire of the streets, and Smith effectively captures the language and urgency, the rhythms and fury." In her review of Big Towns in Choice, Maria Gillan wrote, "The voices that emerges in her poems is strong, fearless and passionate."

Smith's poems have been published in The Paris Review, TriQuarterly, AGNI and other literary journals, and in the anthologies Bum Rush the Page, The Garden Thrives, Children Remember Their Fathers, The Outlaw Bible of American Poetry, Aloud: Voices from Nuyorican Poets Café, Revival: Spoken Word from Lollapalooza, Unsettling America, Spirit and Flame and Power Lines. She has won the prestigious Carl Sandburg Award, as well as a literary award from the Illinois Arts Council and an honorary degree from the John Jay College of Criminal Justice.

Smith is currently compiling a book of collected works, as well as two new books, Cracked Love and Teahouse of the Almighty.

As a playwright/performer: In 2003, The Play Company in New York City produced "Professional Suicide," a one-woman show that got its start during the summer of 2001 while Smith was writer-in-residence at the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center in Waterford, Ct.

Selections from Smith's poetry volumes were previously adapted for the theater and presented as a solo performance piece, produced by Nobel Prize winner Derek Walcott and performed at both Boston University Playwrights Theater and the historic Trinidad Theater Workshop. Another play based on Life According to Motown was staged by Company One Theater in Hartford, Ct. and reviewed favorably in The New York Times.

As an author/journalist: Smith was the author of Africans in America, a chronicle of slavery in this country and the companion volume to the groundbreaking four-part PBS series. Publishers Weekly called Africans "a monumental research effort wed with fine writing...ultimately shaped by Smith's beautiful narrative," and Michelle Cliff of the San Jose Mercury News said, "With its vivid language and historical integrity, Africans in America is a major contribution to this country's written history."

Smith was a staff columnist for Ms. Magazine, as well as columnist-at-large for Afazi.com. Her essays will be featured in two upcoming anthologies: Convictions and Seasons of the Day: African-American Women on Motherhood.

A newspaper journalist for 20 years, Smith was most recently a city columnist at the Boston Globe. During her tenure as a reporter and columnist, she won honors from the National Society of Black Journalists, a distinguished writing award for commentary and column writing from the American Society of Newspaper Editors, and in 1998 she was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in commentary.

As a teacher and lecturer: Smith teaches writing during residences and conferences and speaks often in schools, hoping to foster a love for the energy of the written word. She has taught poetry and memoir writing at the Writers Voice in New York, and was an instructor in the Cave Canem program for African-American writers. Her favorite audience of all time was the 6th grade class at Lillie C. Evans Elementary School, Dade County, Miami.

Christopher Lydon interviews Online School of Poetry instructor Patricia Smith on NPR. You need Real Player to listen to the interview

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