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Triana

(22,666 posts)
Fri May 30, 2014, 01:30 PM May 2014

Maya Angelou on the Noble Story of Black Womanhood - FASCINATING

http://vimeo.com/96833430


Maya Angelou, who died yesterday at the age of 86, spoke with Bill on several occasions over the course of her life, but his first interview with her was filmed in 1973 in her cottage in Berkeley, California. At the time, Angelou, 45, was already an accomplished singer, dancer, poet, author, actress, editor, songwriter and playwright. As Bill noted in his introduction, this “gifted and very human woman” had “touched more bases than Henry Aaron. Yet, all these categories failed to do justice to the scope of her life.”

. . .

“Fighting for one’s freedom, struggling towards being free, is like struggling to be a poet or a good Christian or a good Jew or a good Muslim or good Zen Buddhist,” she tells Bill. “You work all day long and achieve some kind of level of success by nightfall, go to sleep and wake up the next morning with the job still to be done. So you start all over again.

“I don’t know if society doesn’t know who I am. And I mean I a woman, I a black, I human.

“I don’t know if I quite believe that. I think it knows and doesn’t itself want to cope. And that is the society’s problem, not mine.”


LINK:

http://billmoyers.com/2014/05/29/maya-angelou-on-the-noble-story-of-black-womanhood/
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Maya Angelou on the Noble Story of Black Womanhood - FASCINATING (Original Post) Triana May 2014 OP
Finally got to watch this ismnotwasm May 2014 #1
She was astounding. Triana May 2014 #2
Absolutely ismnotwasm May 2014 #3

ismnotwasm

(42,377 posts)
1. Finally got to watch this
Fri May 30, 2014, 07:28 PM
May 2014

One of the most powerful short interviews I've every seen, one that resonates-- thank you so much for posting

 

Triana

(22,666 posts)
2. She was astounding.
Fri May 30, 2014, 09:06 PM
May 2014

We really lost something very important now that her voice is gone. Amazing woman.

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