TED WILLIAMS III (writer, 1619: THE JOURNEY OF A PEOPLE), is a performing artist and educator who lives to inspire. He has taught Political Science at Wright College, Chicago State University, and currently is the Chairman of the Social Sciences Department at Kennedy-King College. He holds degrees in Public Policy Studies from the University of Chicago and Rutgers University and is the former host of WYCC-PBS Television's THE PROFESSORS weekly talk show. He has provided political commentary for BET-TV, WGN-TV, NBC-TV, UPFRONT WITH JESSE JACKSON, PRI's SMILEY AND WEST, WVON radio, and a host of additional media outlets. He has also appeared in commercials for companies including Empire Carpet, Six Flags, Cheerios, and Subway; and recently appeared in the films HUMAN ZOOS, THE CHRISTMAS THIEF, NBC's CHICAGO PD, and Showtime's THE CHI. Moreover, he is the creator of the productions 1619: THE JOURNEY OF A PEOPLE, TORN the Musical, and of the book THE WAY OUT: CHRISTIANITY, POLITICS, AND THE FUTURE OF THE AFRICAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY. 1619 was funded by the Illinois Arts Council and was nominated for the 2020 August Wilson Award for the Best Writing of a Musical, by the Black Theater Alliance Awards. He is also a contributor to the Third World Press text, Not Our President and a former candidate for the Chicago City Council. Williams is currently an Illinois Humanities Road Scholar and was appointed by Illinois Governor JB Pritzker to serve on the state's Reparations Commission. He considers his most important work his role as a mentor to young people and as a husband and father to Roslyn and their three beautiful children, Gabrielle, Amaris, and Ted IV. NTOZAKE SHANGE (writer, FOR COLORED GIRLS WHO HAVE CONSIDERED SUICIDE/WHEN THE RAINBOW IS ENUF). Ntozake Shange (1948-2018) was an American author of plays, poetry, and fiction noted for their feminist themes and racial and sexual anger. In addition to FOR COLORED GIRLS, Shange created a number of other theatre works that employed poetry, dance, and music (known as "choreopoems") while abandoning conventions of plot and character development. One of the most popular of these was her 1980 adaptation of Bertolt Brecht's MOTHER COURAGE, featuring a Black family in the time of the American Civil War. Some of Shange's other works for the stage are WHERE THE MISSISSIPPI MEETS THE AMAZON (1977), Three Views Of Mt. Fuji (1987), and THE LOVE SPACE DEMANDS: A CONTINUING SAGA (1992). Shange's poetry collections included NAPPY EDGES (1978) and RIDIN' THE MOON IN TEXAS (1987). She also published the novels SASSAFRASS, CYPRESS & INDIGO (1982), about the diverging lives of three sisters and their mother; the semiautobiographical BETSEY BROWN (1985); and LILIANE: RESURRECTION OF THE DAUGHTER (1994), a coming-of-age story about a wealthy Black woman in the American South. In addition, Shange wrote a number of children's books, including WHITEWASH (1997), DADDY SAYS (2003), and ELLINGTON WAS NOT A STREET (2004). CARLIS L. MOODY, JR. (writer/performer THE MOODY EXPERIENCE: MUSIC BEYOND THE MARGINS). is Senior Pastor of Evanston's Faith Temple Church of God in Christ and a Grammy Award-winning singer and songwriter who is keeping the spirit of traditional gospel music alive. He has written over 100 songs for traditional and contemporary gospel artists such as, Shirley Caesar, Olanda Draper, Babbie Mason, Melinda Watts, J Moss, Excelsior, and Milton Brunson & the Thompson Community Singers. Pastor Carlis has four Grammy Awards to his credit, one of which is for "Through God's Eyes," two Stella Awards, one Gospel Music Workshop Award, and numerous awards for legendary songs like "I'm Available To You," recorded by the Milton Brunson's Thompson Community Singers. He is active as a choral conductor, director, writer, composer, arranger, clinician, and pianist, who teaches throughout the United States and abroad and has taken his compositions to over 39 countries. At age 16, Pastor Carlis was appointed Music Director at Faith Temple Church in Evanston, Illinois. He faithfully served in this capacity for over 30 years. DAEL ORLANDERSMITH (writer, BEFORE THE FLOOD) is an American actress, poet and playwright. Orlandersmith was a Pulitzer Prize finalist and Drama Desk Award nominee for Outstanding Play and Outstanding Actress in a Play for YELLOWMAN in 2002. THE BLUE ALBUM, in collaboration with David Cale, premiered at Long Wharf Theatre in 2007. Bones was commissioned by the Mark Taper Forum, where it premiered in 2010. She wrote and performed the solo memoir play FOREVER at the Kirk Douglas Theatre, the Long Wharf, New York Theatre Workshop, Portland Center Stage in 2016 and the Abbey Theatre in Dublin. In 2016, Orlandersmith wrote and performed UNTIL THE FLOOD, commissioned by St. Louis Repertory Theatre. It was later produced at Rattlestick Playwrights Theater, Milwaukee Repertory Theatre, ACT Seattle and Goodman Theatre. Orlandersmith has toured extensively with the Nuyorican Poets Café (Real Live Poetry) throughout the United States, Europe and Australia. YELLOWMAN and a collection of her earlier works have been published by Vintage Books and Dramatists Play Service. She attended Sundance Institute Theatre Lab for four summers and is the recipient of a New York Foundation for the Arts Grant, The Helen Merrill Award for Emerging Playwrights, a Guggenheim and the 2005 PEN/Laura Pels Foundation Award for a playwright in mid-career. She is the recipient of a Lucille Lortel Foundation Playwrights Fellowship and an Obie Award for BEAUTY'S DAUGHTER.
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