Langston Hughes

Langston Hughes

  • Birthday: 1901-02-01
  • Deathday: 1967-05-22
  • Place of birth: Joplin, Missouri, USA

Biography

An influential American writer from the early to mid 20th century. Beginning with the publication of "The Negro Speaks of Rivers" in 1921, Hughes first captured the public's imagination as a poet. A versatile writer, Hughes was also adept in writing short stories, novels, plays, and non-fiction. His work often focused on the lives of ordinary people and frequently employed humor, social commentary, and folk wisdom in his writing. In the late 1930s he began writing for Hollywood, but his time there was short lived due to a variety of factors, not least of which was the racism prevalent in the industry at that time. During his lifetime, he received one feature film credit for writing "Way Down South" (1939) with Clarence Muse. In the early 1960s, his play "Black Nativity" was produced for British television.

Filmography

Looking for Langston

1989

As Himself (archive footage)

Production

Way Down South

1939

As Writer

Cora Unashamed

2000

As Story

The Blood of Jesus

1941

As Poem

Black Nativity

2013

As Theatre Play

The Strolling '20s

1966

As Writer

Kurt Weill: Street Scene

2019

As Lyricist

The Pocketbook

1980

As Original Story

After Midnight

2021

As Writer

Rhythm of Africa

1947

As Screenplay

Mulat

1962

As Theatre Play

Kurt Weill: Street Scene

1993

As Lyricist

Thank You, M'am

1977

As Story

Black Blues

1968

As Original Story

Nationtime

1972

As Writer

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