The Library of Congress >  Researchers >  Search Finding Aids  >  National Visionary Leadership Project interviews and conference collection, 1997-2009

National Visionary Leadership Project interviews and conference collection, 1997-2009

Contact UsHelpSearch All Finding Aids
Access restrictions apply.
ContainerContents
Series III: Interviews (continued)
Lloyd Richards oral history interview conducted by Renee Poussaint, 2004-04-06
AFC 2004/007: 096
Lloyd Richards was a Broadway actor, director and drama professor.
The interview includes Lloyd Richards' memories of growing up in Toronto, Canada and Detroit, Michigan where he attended Wayne State University and began to act in plays. He recalls serving as a Tuskegee Airman during World War II and moving to New York to take acting classes and start his theater career. He discusses meeting his wife Barbara and his friendship with Sidney Poitier. He also discusses becoming the first African American to direct a Broadway play, Lorraine Hansberry's "A Raisin in the Sun," and his work with playwright August Wilson.
Catalog Record: http://lccn.loc.gov/2010655495
BOX-FOLDER 11/118 Manuscripts
1 transcript (46 pages)
BOX-FOLDER 29/416 Graphic Images
35 photographs : color ; 4 x 6 in.
1 photograph : digital, jpeg files, color
Moving Images
5 videocassettes of 5 (Betacam SP) (150 min.) : sound, color ; 1/2 in. camera master
1 videocassette of 1 (DVCAM) (184 min.) : sound, color ; 1/4 in. edited master
AFC 2004/007: 096.MV.001
AFC 2004/007: 096.MV.002
AFC 2004/007: 096.MV.003
AFC 2004/007: 096.MV.004
AFC 2004/007: 096.MV.005
AFC 2004/007: 096.MV.006
Faith Ringgold oral history interview conducted by Renee Poussaint, 2004-03-12
AFC 2004/007: 097
Faith Ringgold was an artist, quilter and writer.
The interview includes Faith Ringgold's memories of growing up in Harlem, New York, attending the City College of New York and becoming an art teacher. She recalls quitting her teaching job to become a professional artist and the racism and sexism in the art world. She discusses her artwork with quilting, raising her daughters and writing the children's book, "Tar Beach."
Catalog Record: http://lccn.loc.gov/2010655529
BOX-FOLDER 11/119 Manuscripts
1 transcript (37 pages)
BOX-FOLDER 29/417 Graphic Images
25 photographs: color ; 4 x 6 in.
26 photographs : digital, jpeg files, color
Moving Images
7 videocassettes of 7 (Betacam SP) (210 min.) : sound, color ; 1/2 in. camera master
AFC 2004/007: 097.MV.001
AFC 2004/007: 097.MV.002
AFC 2004/007: 097.MV.003
AFC 2004/007: 097.MV.004
AFC 2004/007: 097.MV.005
AFC 2004/007: 097.MV.006
AFC 2004/007: 097.MV.007
Amelia Boynton Robinson oral history interview conducted by Renee Poussaint, 2002-12-16
AFC 2004/007: 098
Amelia Boynton Robinson was a civil rights activist in Alabama. She was also the vice president of the Schiller Institute.
The interview includes Amelia Boynton Robinson's memories of growing up in Georgia and attending the Tuskegee Institute. She discusses working in Alabama for the U.S. Department of Agriculture with sharecroppers, which led to her involvement in the civil rights movement. She recalls working for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) in Selma, Alabama and being attacked at the Selma to Montgomery Rights March. She also discusses her memories of other civil rights leaders and her work with the Schiller Institute. Robinson was also interviewed separately by a National Visionary Leadership Fellow.
Catalog Record: http://lccn.loc.gov/2010655472
BOX-FOLDER 11/120 Manuscripts
1 transcript (58 pages)
BOX-FOLDER 29/418 Graphic Images
2 photographs : color ; 4 x 6 in.
Moving Images
6 videocassettes of 6 (Betacam SP) (180 min.) : sound, color ; 1/2 in. camera master
1 videocassette of 1 (MiniDV) (60 min.) : sound, color ; 1/4 in. camera master
AFC 2004/007: 098.MV.001
AFC 2004/007: 098.MV.002
AFC 2004/007: 098.MV.003
AFC 2004/007: 098.MV.004
AFC 2004/007: 098.MV.005
AFC 2004/007: 098.MV.006
AFC 2004/007: 098a.MV.001
Rachel Robinson oral history interview conducted by Camille O. Cosby, 2005-05-31
AFC 2004/007: 099
Rachel Robinson was a nurse and the wife of Jackie Robinson.
The interview includes Rachel Robinson's memories of growing up in Los Angeles and attending UCLA, where she met her husband, Jackie Robinson. She recalls his baseball career in the Negro Leagues and his recruitment to be the first African American to play in the Major Leagues. She discusses her career as a psychiatric nurse, starting a development company for low income housing and the Jackie Robinson Foundation.
Catalog Record: http://lccn.loc.gov/2010655513
BOX-FOLDER 11/121 Manuscripts
1 transcript (62 pages)
BOX-FOLDER 29/419 Graphic Images
50 photographs : digital, jpeg files, color
Moving Images
3 videocassettes of 3 (DVCAM) (192 min.) : sound, color ; 1/4 in. camera master
1 videocassette of 1 (DV) (186 min.) : sound, color ; 1/4 in. edited master
AFC 2004/007: 099.MV.001
AFC 2004/007: 099.MV.002
AFC 2004/007: 099.MV.003
AFC 2004/007: 099.MV.004
Dovey Roundtree oral history interview conducted by Renee Poussaint, 2003-02-22
AFC 2004/007: 100
Dovey Roundtree was a civil rights and criminal defense lawyer who overturned interstate bus segregation with the case Sarah Keys v. Carolina Coach Company.
The interview includes Dovey Roundtree's memories of growing up in Charlotte, North Carolina, and attending Spelman College and Howard University Law School. She discusses meeting Mary McLeod Bethune, who encouraged her to join the Women's Army Auxilary Corp during World War II. She recalls opening her law practice and winning the Sarah Keys v. Carolina Coach Company case and the Ray Crump murder trial in Washington, D.C.
Catalog Record: http://lccn.loc.gov/2010655473
BOX-FOLDER 11/122 Manuscripts
1 transcript (61 pages)
BOX-FOLDER 29/420 Graphic Images
3 photographs : digital, jpeg files, color
Moving Images
4 videocassettes of 4 (Betacam SP) (120 min.) : sound, color ; 1/2 in. camera master
AFC 2004/007: 100.MV.001
AFC 2004/007: 100.MV.002
AFC 2004/007: 100.MV.003
AFC 2004/007: 100.MV.004
Bill Russell oral history interview conducted by Camille O. Cosby, 2005-10-19
AFC 2004/007: 101
Bill Russell was a basketball player for Boston Celtics and the first African American NBA head coach.
The interview includes Bill Russell's memories of growing up in Louisiana and Oakland, California, where he played basketball in high school. He recalls attending the University of San Francisco on a basketball scholarship. He discusses playing for the Boston Celtics, the influence of his coaches, and his relationship with his daughter.
Catalog Record: http://lccn.loc.gov/2010655514
BOX-FOLDER 12/123 Manuscripts
1 transcript (59 pages)
BOX-FOLDER 29/421 Graphic Images
7 photographs : digital, jpeg files, color
Moving Images
5 videocassettes of 5 (Betacam SP) (150 min.) : sound, color ; 1/2 in. camera master
1 videocassette of 1 (DV) (186 min.) : sound, color ; 1/4 in. edited master
AFC 2004/007: 101.MV.001
AFC 2004/007: 101.MV.002
AFC 2004/007: 101.MV.003
AFC 2004/007: 101.MV.004
AFC 2004/007: 101.MV.005
AFC 2004/007: 101.MV.006
Betye Saar oral history interview conducted by Camille O. Cosby, 2005-10-21
AFC 2004/007: 102
Betye Saar was an artist known for her collages and assemblages of folk and stereotypical African American images.
The interview includes Betye Saar's memories of growing up in Los Angeles, taking art classes and attending the University of California, Los Angeles. She recalls raising her children, attending graduate school for printmaking and creating her most famous piece, "The Liberation of Aunt Jemima." She discusses the influence of mysticism on her work, teaching art at several universities and her daughters' art careers.
Catalog Record: http://lccn.loc.gov/2010655150
BOX-FOLDER 12/124 Manuscripts
1 transcript (83 pages)
BOX-FOLDER 29/422 Graphic Images
10 photographs : digital, jpeg files, color
Moving Images
4 videocassettes of 4 (Betacam SP) (120 min.) : sound, color ; 1/2 in. camera master
AFC 2004/007: 102.MV.001
AFC 2004/007: 102.MV.002
AFC 2004/007: 102.MV.003
AFC 2004/007: 102.MV.004
Sonia Sanchez oral history interview conducted by Camille O. Cosby, 2005-05-24
AFC 2004/007: 103
Sonia Sanchez was a poet, playwright and civil rights activist.
The interview includes Sonia Sanchez's memories of growing up in Birmingham, Alabama and Harlem, New York. She recalls attending Hunter College, studying African American literature from the Schomburg Library and joining the civil rights movement. She discusses teaching her first class on African American women, writing poems and starting the first Black Studies program in the nation at San Francisco State University.
Next Page »

Contents List