Dr. Maya Angelou In Conversation with Dr. Johnnetta B. Cole - National Portrait Gallery
In collaboration with Smithsonian colleagues from the National Museum of African Art, the National Portrait Gallery hosted an event on Saturday, April 5, 2014 in which both museums paid tribute to Maya Angelou, one of the most revered authors in the United States. Angelou, whose eighty-sixth birthday was April 4—the day before—commented on what she considered was one of her great achievements over eight decades—patience. "You can only have patience if you have courage," she stated, adding that "Reverend [Martin Luther] King had great patience." During the event at the McEvoy Auditorium in the Donald W. Reynolds Center, a portrait of Angelou by Atlanta-based artist Ross Rossin was unveiled. Assisting Portrait Gallery director Kim Sajet and NMAfA director Johnnetta Cole in the unveiling was Angelou's friend and protégé Oprah Winfrey, and former ambassador Andrew Young. Angelou discussed the works and humanity of Martin Luther King at length; King, who was killed on Angelou's fortieth birthday, was a great friend of the author and a colleague in the fight for civil rights. Of him she also noted, "People can only do what they know to do. Reverend King did what he knew to do. He was compassionate; he was kind." Angelou spoke at length on civil rights, and her discussion culminated in the observation that the fight for rights includes work on behalf of all protected classes (protected class is the legal term used to describe a group of people who are protected from discrimination by federal law), regardless of gender, race, religion, and individuals with physical and mental challenges. "We need more people involved in the civil rights movement—civil rights, not just race rights." Read more about the event, on our blog: http://face2face.si.edu/my_weblog/201... Artwork: Maya Angelou / Ross R. Rossin / Oil on canvas, 2013 / National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; gift of Andrew J. Young Foundation; © Ross R. Rossin

NMAfA Director Johnnetta Betsch Cole in conversation with Maya Angelou

Maya Angelou & James Baldwin in Conversation | THIRTEEN

How to Develop Courage When Life Gets Hard | Maya Angelou

Maya Angelou at the 2nd Annual HRC National Dinner

Maya Angelou with George Plimpton | 92Y/The Paris Review Interview Series

Living Self-Portrait: Katharine Graham - National Portrait Gallery

All Access with Linsey Davis: Wynton Marsalis

Why Rose Kennedy's Marriage Was a 60-Year Silent Hell

Maya Angelou interview (1993)

James Baldwin - The Struggle of The Artist (1969)

Jim Crow of the North | Redlining and Racism in Minnesota | Full Documentary

Maya Angelou - All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes - Part 1

Maya Angelou on Being a Black Woman in America | THIRTEEN

Maya Angelou interview | Civil Rights | Afternoon plus | 1984

Saidiya Hartman and Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor| Scenes of Subjection

Morning Devotion That Will Change Your Life || Dr. Maya Angelou

Maya Angelou: Mystical, Magical, Musical and Lyrical at 92Y in 1971

Dr. Bernice A. King was Shocked by Info She Discovered about her Mother, Coretta, after she'd Passed

Dr Frances Cress Welsing The Relationship between Black Men and White Women Full Interview 1973

