She was educated at the historic Brainerd Institute in Chester, where her parents and her grandparents had also been educated,[6] growing up in a house across the street from the school.[7] Her sister Sarah Mildred Ayers Smith was valedictorian of the class of 1937,[7] whilst Allen graduated in 1939 as a member of the final graduating class from the institution.[8] Whilst at school there, she studied Latin and French[9] and learned to play concert piano.[10]
She married dentist Andrew Arthur Allen Sr. in New York City[15] and they had four children: jazz trumpet musician Andrew Arthur "Tex" Allen Jr.;[16] actress and dancer Debbie Allen;[17] regional president of TD Bank Hugh Allen;[9] and actress Phylicia Rashad.[18][19] The couple divorced in 1954 after nine years of marriage due to being "manifestly incompatible."[20] She is known as "Ma Turk" by her family and her daughter Debbie named her own daughter Vivian Nixon after Allen.[21]
Allan has attended high-profile Hollywood events with her daughters, including the unveiling of Debbie's star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1991 and the 65th Academy Awards in 1993.[22]
Poetry
Allen's poetry is usually written in the form of prose paragraph with frequent use of dashes and ellipses.[15] One of her earliest poems, "Spice of Dawn" (1952), was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1953.[22][23]
Her 1957 book-length poem "Hawk" (1957)[1] was an allegory of freedom, personal struggle and responsibility set in space during 2052.[15][11] The poem foreshadowed the first successes in space travel,[24] published just 11 weeks before the launch of Sputnik I (the first artificial satellite sent from Earth into orbit).[25] It earned praise from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA),[24] who have described Allen as "a distinguished woman of Apollo, whose remarkable contributions significantly advanced our understanding of space exploration."[26] There are enlarged reproductions of select lines exhibited at the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas.[11] The poem was formally published for the first time by Clemson University Press in 2023,[1] based on an exemplar of the original self-published version held in the University of Wisconsin-Madison Special Collections.[27]
In 1964, her poetry was included in Langston Hughes' collection New Negro Poets, USA.[28][29] In 1971, she began publishing a literary magazine, The Adept Quarterly.[15]
Allen was also a playwright. She wrote "Bow Boly" about an angel who comes to earth for a mission that it becomes entangled with,[15] and in 1973 wrote "The Marriage Ceremony," which explored communal or "tribal" involvement in African-American marriage ceremonies.[30]
Academic
Allen also had an academic career, becoming the librarian[4] and first African-American faculty member at Rice University,[31] Houston, Texas, in 1966.[12]
In 1973, she collaborated with the Harris County Community Association and a group of certified teachers to produce the program “Workshops in Open Fields.” It aimed to educate preschool children in the arts.[11] She also mentored young black artists, including the filmmaker Carroll Parrott Blue.[32]
Mexico
Allen lived in Texas for over forty years.[2] She moved with her children to Mexico for a year to give them the opportunity to have new experiences away from the "racist" American south.[10][18][33] Her children learned to speak Spanish and attended ballet performances by Mexican dancers.[2] Her daughter Debbie danced with the Ballet Nacional de Mexico.[17][34]
In Mexico, Allen studied Greek literature, the Mayan culture,[10] and Mesoamerican Math-Astronomy.[12]
New York and ADEPT
In 1984, Allen moved to New York where she founded the ADEPT New American Museum of the Southwest in Mount Vernon,[5][28][35] organising community arts projects for the local black community,[36] supporting underrepresented minority artists, and stressing the contributions of both African-Americans and Indigenous American peoples to the arts.[5]
In 1994, Allen was honored by the National Council of Negro Women for her "progressive thinking" and for the "positive image she projects" for black women.[40]
Allen's daughter Phylicia purchased the 12-acre property which the Brainerd Institute once occupied in 1999.[41] Allen became the founding director of the Brainerd Institute Heritage,[9] supported by the Chester Historical Society, and aiming both to preserve the history of a school that helped shape her but also to commemorate the long struggle of black Americans to provide their children with a good education.[7] Work to restore the structural integrity of Kumler Hall was completed in 2012.[42] Literacy summer programs were launched in 2017,[43][44] and free dance classes have been held in partnership with the Debbie Allen Dance Academy.[6]
In 2007, Allen and her daughters received the Arts Honor from the Jack and Jill of America Foundation.[45] In 2008, Allen was awarded a Medal of Honor by Winthrop University.[46]
Allen became a centenarian in 2023.[9][25] A 100th birthday party was held on the grounds of the Brainerd Institute where her daughter Phylicia read "Hawk" with musical accompaniment from the Claflin University Choir.[50] Another celebration event was held at the Rhimes Performing Arts Center in Los Angeles,[25] with readings and performances by celebrities including Angela Bassett, Jesse Williams, Alexis Floyd, Cory Henry, and her daughter Debbie Allan, amongst others.[1]
This page is based on this Wikipedia article Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.