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This is not your usual book of poetry. It was designed to be a...conversation of poetry among three very different but truly related poets, Anita Vélez-Mitchell, grandmother and mother, Gloria Vando, mother and daughter, and Anika Paris, daughter and granddaughter.The work of each woman has been divided among common subjects and placed in relation to work of the other two women, forming a poetic conversation or plática, the poetic equivalent of pulling up a chair and sitting with a cup of tea or coffee to listen to the three generations of women talking together about the important issues of their lives and often laughing together.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This is not your usual book of poetry. It was designed to be a...conversation of poetry among three very different but truly related poets, Anita Vélez-Mitchell, grandmother and mother, Gloria Vando, mother and daughter, and Anika Paris, daughter and granddaughter.The work of each woman has been divided among common subjects and placed in relation to work of the other two women, forming a poetic conversation or plática, the poetic equivalent of pulling up a chair and sitting with a cup of tea or coffee to listen to the three generations of women talking together about the important issues of their lives and often laughing together.
Autorenporträt
ANITA VELEZ-MITCHELL is a poet, writer, and performer. During the 1950s and '60s, she performed on The Ed Sullivan Show, in Carnegie Hall, in night clubs as a solo artist, and on tour throughout the United States with Marina Svetlova for Columbia Concerts. In the fifties, she formed The Anita Velez Dancers, with choreography by Herbert Ross, and toured the Hilton Hotel chain from Puerto Rico, Santo Domingo, and Cuba to the United States and Canada. Her dance career culminated in 1963 as Anita in West Side Story, returning in 1972 as dance coach for the Lincoln Center revival. She has acted in numerous plays, from Michael Todd's 1944 Broadway production of Mexican Hayride to the 2006 world premiere of The Ballad of Eddie and Jo by David Sard (directed by Lorca Peress at the Hudson Guild Theatre). Her awards include: Puerto Rico's Julia de Burgos Poetry Prize for her bilingual, book-length poem, Primavida: Calendar of Love (1986, Mairena Press); Association of Puerto Rican Writers and Poets Award; University Press Award; Prince of Asturias Award for Belles Lettres; Partners in Education Award; Center of Ibero-American Poets and Writers awards in four separate genres (short story, poetry, essay, and drama); Isaac Perez Award (1994); Thanks Be To Grandmother Winifred Foundation Grant for her short film on Julia de Burgos; "2000 Woman of the Year Award" from the National Conference of Puerto Rican Women in the USA. Her published work in literary magazines and anthologies includes bilingual poems, short stories, plays, essays, and translations, her novella Loco de Amor: A Vieques Tale (2006, published by the Committee for the Puerto Rican Day Parade and given to 500 participants). A production of her play A Newyorican Tale premiered for Danisarte at Julia de Burgos Center in 2009. She is the subject of two documentary films, Anita Vélez: Dancing Through Life and No Brief Candle. She received a Proclamation, Anita Vélez-Mitchell Day, from New York City (2006), and has addressed the United Nations General Assembly on behalf of Vieques, Puerto Rico In 2010 she received the Outstanding Women Award from El Diario newspaper.