Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Robert B. Nemiroff. . . (m. 1953; div. 1962) . Lorraine Vivian Hansberry (May 19, 1930 – January 12, 1965) was an American playwright and writer. [1] She was the first African-American female author to have a play performed on Broadway. Her best-known work, the play A Raisin in the Sun, highlights the lives of black Americans in Chicago ...

  2. Feb 20, 2020 · She drank too much, died early of cancer, loved some wonderful women, and yet lived with an unrelenting loneliness. She was intoxicated by beauty and enraged by injustice. (2-3)

    • Carl Gregg
    • Hansberry Studied Art.
    • She Wrote Letters to The Ladder Magazine on LGBT issues.
    • Hansberry Coined The Phrase to Be Young, Gifted and Black.

    Before she began her career as a dramatist, Hansberry studied art at three institutions: the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where she took art classes in 1948 but left before graduating; the University of Guadalajara in Mexico, where she took a painting-focused workshop in 1949; and Chicago’s Roosevelt University, where she had more art classes i...

    Hansberry was gay, but although she discussed her sexuality with some in her private life, according to The New Yorker, “it was never a public matter in her lifetime”— she lived in New York, where homosexuality was then illegal. “She wasn’t out in the traditional sense,” Hansberry biographer Imani Perry told NPR in 2018. “It would have been very di...

    By 1964, Hansberry was experiencing severe health issues; it turned out she was suffering from pancreatic cancer, but Nemiroff and her doctors chose not to disclose her diagnosis to her because they believed it would be better if she didn’t know. Hansberry was dying of the disease when she left the hospitalwhere she was being treated on May 1, 1964...

  3. The first in-depth documentary on the playwright, journalist and activist Lorraine Hansberry is presented by American Masters. See trailer and photos of the trailblazer who died at age 34.

  4. Oct 1, 2021 · On January 12, 1965, Hansberry died of cancer of the pancreas at University Hospital in New York City, leaving behind several unfinished works. To keep her rich literary legacy alive, Robert Nemiroff, her ex-husband and the executor of her estate, adapted from Hansberry’s writings and posthumously published To Be Young, Gifted and Black ...

  5. Aug 16, 2023 · In 1964, the same year The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window opened, Hansberry was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. She died on January 12, 1965.

  6. People also ask

  7. Apr 14, 2021 · Hansberry died in 1965, at 34, of cancer. The fact still feels intolerable, almost unassimilable — her death not merely tragedy but a kind of theft.

  1. People also search for