Sophy Burnham | |
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Born | Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. | December 12, 1936
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Alma mater | Smith College University of Florence |
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Sophy Burnham (born December 12, 1936) is an American author, playwright, essayist and poet.
She was born Sophy Tayloe Doub to Sophy Tayloe Snyder and George Moffett Cochran Doub. Her father was Assistant Attorney General for the civil division of the Department of Justice during the second term of president Dwight D. Eisenhower. [1] She attended Garrison Forest School in Owings Mills, Maryland from grammar school through grade 9, and Foxcroft School in Middleburg, Virginia for grades 10–12, where two of her aunts, her mother, her sister, and her cousin had attended as well. [2] Foxcroft was at the time a girls' military and equestrian boarding school with strict discipline. [3] For her senior commencement one of the Joint Chiefs of Staff reviewed the military drill. She made her debut to Baltimore society in 1954 at the Bachelors Cotillion. [4]
She attended Smith College, took her 1957 junior year abroad in Florence, Italy at the University of Florence, and graduated with a degree in Italian in 1958, cum laude , writing a thesis in Italian on the author Italo Svevo, and what is reality? [5] [6] In her 20s she began to experience the phenomena that led her later to write A Book of Angels and many other books. [7]
Upon graduation, and beginning in 1959, Burnham worked for the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC. By the time she left in 1964, she had been promoted to the rank of assistant curator for the Smithsonian Museum Service. [8]
After moving to New York City with her husband and baby, she began freelancing for magazines. From 1964 on she wrote, including cover stories, for such publications as The New York Times Magazine , New York , Vogue , Reader's Digest of Japan and South America, Redbook , Ms. , Town & Country , and Esquire . [9] She joined the New York-based feminist group, Media Women, participated in the Ladies Home Journal sit-in of 1970, and many of her articles had a feminist twist. [10] [11] [12] An influential cover story for New York magazine about the Manhattan art scene led to publication in 1973 of her first book, The Art Crowd, which became a New York Times bestseller and an alternate selection of the Book of the Month Club. [13] From 1972 to 1974 she held her second job, as an associate editor at David McKay Publications in New York. Later in the 1970s having moved back to Washington D.C., she wrote The Landed Gentry: Passions and Personalities Inside America’s Propertied Class as well as two plays, Penelope and The Study, and two children's books, Buccaneer—illustrated by Miki Eagle—and The Dogwalker. [14]
She has always been active in public arts, and was a founding member and past chairman of the Board of The Studio Theatre in Washington, DC. [15] She served on the Octagon Committee of the American Institute of Architects Foundation, and was a founding member of the D.C. Humanities Council, the regranting arm of the National Endowment for the Humanities, where she served for two years as vice-chair. [16]
After a spiritual revelation on Machu Picchu on March 28, 1979, documented in Chapter 4 of her 1997 book The Ecstatic Journey ("The Revelation on Machu Picchu"), she returned to the States, where her marriage ended. [17] She wrote six more books in the 1980s but did not publish one for the next ten years, although she continued to publish many articles.
In 1990 Burnham's A Book of Angels: Reflections on Angels Past and Present and True Stories of How They Touch Our Lives, was published by Ballantine Books. It became an international bestseller, and it has been translated into 25 languages. In it she recounts stories of angels across time and cultures. [18] She also tells her own story of encountering an angel during a ski accident in Val d'Isère, France. [19] Although an experienced skier, conditions were not ideal and she found herself in peril. A man dressed all in black skied past her husband, came to her aid, and then mysteriously disappeared. [20]
A Book of Angels was first of a cultural phenomenon of books, TV programs, films about angels, and of people who claimed to see angels. [21] [22] Literary critic Harold Bloom credited Burnham's book with starting the craze. [23] [24] Merchandise was abundant, including an explosion of angel candles, books, cards, posters, and spiritual paraphernalia. [25] [26] [27]
Burnham spent the next decade giving interviews, talks, and workshops both in the U.S. and abroad. A Book of Angels is sometimes conflated with a play that came after it, Tony Kushner's 1993 Angels in America , about the AIDS crisis, as part of a phenomenon of angel awareness. [28] The author herself attributed the interest in the spiritual to the approach of the new millennium. She has said that "Once people heard other people’s stories, they dared to believe and to tell about their own experiences. It was not that angels were intervening more frequently, but that these inexplicable moments were more easily recognized." [29]
Although Burnham's oeuvre is broad and encompasses many themes from art to horses, land, psychology, animals, architecture and the Classics, she remains best known for A Book of Angels. [30] She continues to publish widely, including two more books about angels, Angel Letters in 1991, and in 1993, The President's Angel, a novel. She has published seven subsequent books, both novels and non-fiction, all concerning the spiritual or mystical, along with more plays and essays.
In the 1990s Burnham served as executive director of the Kennedy Center's Fund for New American Plays, working with Broadway producer Roger Stevens. [31] They funded theaters to produce new plays and playwrights to write them.
Award | Venue | Year |
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Best Magazine Feature | United States Horse Association | 1969 |
Daughter of Mark Twain | Mark Twain Society | 1974 |
Office of Advanced Drama Research Award ("Penelope") | University of Minnesota | 1976 |
Radio play award ("The Witch's Tale") | National Public Radio (NPR) | 1978 |
Third Prize, Episcopal Drama Award ("Penelope") | Episcopal Foundation for Drama | 1979 |
Award of Excellence ("Machu Picchu") | Communication Arts Magazine, Realités | 1980 |
Best Children's Radio Play ("Witch's Tale") | National Federation of Community Broadcasters | 1980 |
Grant, The University of Alaska, Juneau | Juneau Arts & Humanities Council | 1980 |
Grant | D. C. Arts & Humanities Council | 1980-81 |
First Prize ("Penelope") | Women's Theater Award, Seattle, Washington | 1981 |
Grant | The Helene Wurlitzer Foundation of Taos, New Mexico | 1981, 1983, 1991 |
Award for Service to the Humanities | Washington, DC Community Humanities Council | 1988 |
Who's Who of American Women | Marquis Who's Who | 1991-1998 |
Virginia Duvall Mann Award ("Snowstorms") | North Carolina Festival of New Plays | 1993 |
Who's Who in America | Marquis Who's Who | 1994–1995, 1997-1999 |
Finalist | Turnip Theatre Company Festival (New York) (The Meaning of Life) | 2002 |
Book of the Year Award (Love, Alba) | Foreword INDIEFAB | 2015 |
Albert Nelson Marquis Lifetime Achievement Award [32] | Marquis Who's Who | 2018 |
Top 50 Books of the Year | Spirituality+Health (magazine) | |
Member | The Cosmos Club |
On March 12, 1960, Sophy Tayloe Doub married journalist and author David Bright Burnham at Christ Episcopal Church in Georgetown, Washington, DC. [33] They have two daughters, Sarah Tayloe Burnham and Molly Bright Burnham (herself the author of children's books); and four grandchildren. The couple separated in 1981 and divorced in 1983. In 2019 Burnham, then in her 80s, wrote an article for the "Modern Love" column of The New York Times about the romantic interest of a man 30 years her junior. [34] She continues to write and as a physic and medium gives intuitive or psychic readings.
She lived for many years in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, DC, dividing her time between Washington and Taos, New Mexico. In 2020 she moved to Northampton, Massachusetts full-time. Among her good friends from the time when she lived in Taos is the bestselling writer and filmmaker Julia Cameron, author of The Artist's Way and many other books and films. [35]
She is a member of the Cosmos Club of Washington, DC, where she was very active when in town. She plays on its chess team against clubs in Washington, London, and Paris. She is an avid horsewoman. [36]
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Sophy Doub Burnham '58.
Burnham said she didn't grow up believing in miracles or angels, but an angel saved her life when she was 28.
Sophy Burnham, former Assistant Curator of the Smithsonian Museum Service.
Two persons who believe their lives were saved by angels describe their experiences and propose that angels exist in everyone's life.
Angels are hot little devils these days.
More than 40 shops or organizations across the country deal exclusively with angelic merchandise and more than five million books on angels have been sold in mainstream bookstores.
Five years ago only eight books about angels were in print. Now more than 150 angel books are available.
I decide to outflank [my censor] by phoning an ally. I choose Sophy Burnham, one of the finest writers I know.