Amiri Baraka's birth name is Jones, Everett LeRoi.
The cast of Fried Shoes Cooked Diamonds - 1979 includes: Amiri Baraka as himself Gregory Corso Allen Ginsberg as himself Timothy Leary as himself Peter Orlovsky
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The cast of Strange Fruit - 2002 includes: Amina Baraka as herself Amiri Baraka as himself Don Byron as himself Hazel Carby as herself Michael Denning as himself Henry Foner as himself Milton Gabler as himself Billie Holiday as herself Farah Jasmine Griffin as herself Honey Kassoy as herself Bernie Kassoy as himself Abbey Lincoln as herself Michael Meeropol as himself Robert Meeropol as himself Jeffrey Melnick as himself Rich Rusk as himself Pete Seeger as himself Dorothy Thigpen as Narrator Cassandra Wilson as herself
The cast of The Boys of Baraka - 2005 includes: Devon Brown as himself Darius Chambers as himself Richard Keyser as himself Justin Mackall as himself Montrey Moore as himself Romesh Vance as himself
Amiri Baraka was born on October 7, 1934.
Amiri Baraka's talent is poem writing or a professional writer.
Amiri Baraka's birth name is Jones, Everett LeRoi.
He is alive.
he still a live
"Sacred words" could save black people according to poet Amiri Baraka.
Yes, Amiri Baraka wrote a poem titled "Biography." It is a reflective piece that examines his own life and experiences.
The parents of writer Amiri Baraka were Coyt Leverette Jones and Anna Lois. He had nine children and also served for three years in the U.S. Armed Services.
US poet Amiri Baraka was 79 years old when he died on January 9, 2014 (born Everett LeRoi Jones, October 7, 1934).
writer of poetry, drama, fiction, essays, and music criticism.
Dutchman' by Amiri Baraka tells the story of a confrontation aboard a New York City subway train. The encounter is between a well dressed black businessman and a seductive white female passenger. She teases and provokes him until he lets loose an eloquent, but emotional, tirade about the effects of centuries of oppression. The encounter escalates and ends with the woman stabbing the man to death.
Lloyd W. Brown has written: 'The Troilus figure in English comedy' 'Amiri Baraka' -- subject(s): African Americans in literature, Criticism and interpretation