First lady Michelle Obama and media magnate Oprah Winfrey will be among
the speakers honoring poet, author and civil rights champion Maya Angelou at a
private memorial service in North Carolina on Saturday.
Former President Bill Clinton is also scheduled to attend the
tribute at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, where Angelou taught for
three decades, the school said.
Angelou wrote the poem "On the Pulse of Morning" and
read it at Clinton's first presidential inauguration in 1993. She was 86 when
she died at her home on May 28.
Angelou was best known for her 1969 autobiography "I Know Why
the Caged Bird Sings," about growing up in the segregated South. That
pioneering work helped give black women writers a literary voice and became a
reading list staple in American classrooms.
The memoir was among a body of work including more than 30 books
of fiction and poetry produced by Angelou during her prodigious career. She was
also a Tony-nominated stage actress, Grammy Award winner for three spoken-word
albums, civil rights activist, streetcar conductor, Calypso singer, dancer,
movie director and playwright.
In 2011, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the country's highest
civilian honor, was bestowed upon her by President Barack Obama. After her
death, President Obama said he and the first lady cherished the time they had
spent with Angelou, for whom the president said his sister was named.
Winfrey called Angelou her "mentor, mother/sister and
friend." Angelou served as a professor of American Studies at Wake Forest
since 1982, and had planned to teach a course on race, culture and gender this
fall, the university said.
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