Experts

Anna Deavere Smith

Actress / Playwright

A couple of athletes and Nelson Mandela. Read More

If our talents are distributed randomly, how do we use them fairly? Read More

Studying Shakespeare has given Anna Deavere Smith a deeper understanding of language and character. Read More

Anna Deavere Smith discusses the state of American theater and the lack of diversity both on stage and in the audience. Read More

Listening is the key to Anna Deavere Smith's creative process. Read More

Anna Deavere Smith says there isn't. Read More

Anna Deavere Smith talks about the quirks of an individual's language and voice. Read More

Anna Deavere Smith once got some good advice from Ethel Merman's son, and it has stuck with her ever since. Read More

Though she started off in linguistics, Anna Deavere Smith soon hit on theater as a way to study diversity and social change. Read More

As a child, Anna Deavere Smith attended an all-white summer camp, and felt out of place. Her young niece, fortunately, hasn't had such an experience. Read More

Anna Deavere Smith discusses her childhood and the legacy of segregation. Read More

Anna Deavere Smith calls on us to take individual action. Read More

Anna Deavere Smith talks about the importance of collaborating across the boundaries of class, race, nation and language. Read More

Anna Deavere Smith on the nobility of struggle Read More

At the core of today's big issues, Anna Deavere Smith says, is the question of justice. Read More

Anna Deavere Smith on the balance between the gifts of nature, and their just distribution. Read More

Anna Deavere Smith wants to know: what is the gap between understanding and action? Read More

Anna Deavere Smith takes her cues from Shakespeare's wordsmithing. Read More

Anna Deavere Smith talks about storytelling and the importance of theater in the community. Read More

Anna Deavere Smith talks about acting and how she uses language as a guide to identity. Read More

About Anna Deavere Smith

Anna Deavere Smith

Anna Deavere Smith is an actor, a teacher, a playwright, and the creator of an acclaimed series of one-woman plays based on her interviews with diverse voices from communities in crisis. She has won two Obie Awards, two Tony nominations for her play Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992, and a MacArthur Fellowship.

She was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for her play Fires in the Mirror. She has had roles in the films Philadelphia, An American President, The Human Stain, and Rent, and she has worked in television on The Practice, Presidio Med, and The West Wing. The founder and director of the Institute on the Arts and Civic Dialogue, she teaches at New York University and lives in New York City.

Connect