Before Oprah Winfrey became an iconic dispenser of TV healing, Maya Angelou, one of Oprah's BFFs, led a life that exemplified the conversion of poison into medicine. In her many books, including her 1969 bestseller, "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings," Angelou turned negative experiences such as assaults and insults into inspiration. The result has been stratospheric success as a poet, actor and public speaker, not to mention educator, director and playwright.
"We can all do that, if we really decide to be our own advocates," she said recently by phone from her home in Winston- Salem, N.C., adding a caveat: "It's impossible to think you're going to help somebody if you're not able to help yourself. It's like the African saying: 'Be careful when a naked person offers you a shirt.'"
At 84, Angelou has age-appropriate ailments, including arthritis, which she pronounces as if it were a cartoon villain: Arthur Ritis. And she no longer drives. But her wit remains tack-sharp and she continues to write and speak.
She comes to the Twin Cities on Tuesday for a talk at the State Theatre. Her theme will be courage -- "the courage to be kind, to be courteous, to listen to someone else who may call God a different name than you call God, if she or he calls God at all," she said. "I'm trying to be a Christian, which is like trying to be a Jew or a Muslim or Buddhist or Shintoist, for that matter. It's not something that you achieve, then sit back and be pleased about. It's something that you're always striving for. I'm always amazed when people walk up to me and say, 'I'm a Christian.' I go, 'Already?'"
Up to the moment
Angelou is up on the latest technology, with an iPod that has R&B, classical and country music (she writes country songs). Her Facebook page has nearly 4 million Likes. And she is known for playing card games on her laptops.
She has stayed with the times even though she was born in St. Louis at a time when radio was king. She was an up-close-and-personal participant in many important historical episodes over the past eight decades, as the nation threw off the shackles of segregation. She worked with the Rev. Martin Luther King as the northern coordinator of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. (His assassination on April 4, 1968, occurred on her 40th birthday.)
Angelou's celebrated status also comes from her dozens of books of autobiography, poetry and essays. "Caged Bird," her first autobiography, has sold more than 4 million copies. "The Heart of a Woman," her fourth autobiography, was an Oprah Book Club selection, and poetry collections such as "Still I Rise" and "Just Give Me a Cool Drink of Water 'fore I Die" are taught in schools across the nation. She crafted and memorably read the poem "On the Pulse of Morning" at the 1992 inauguration of President Bill Clinton, and was awarded the presidential Medal of Freedom in 2011.