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Staceyann Chin is a working artist. A resident of New York City and a
Jamaican National, she has been a practicing poet since 1998. From the
rousing cheers of the Nuyorican Poets' Cafe to one-woman shows Off-
Broadway to poetry workshops in Denmark and London, Chin credits the long
list of "things she has done" to her grandmother's hard-working history and
the pain of her mother's absence.
NYU, Pace, Willamette, Holy Cross, Harvard, Cornell, University of Illinois,
University of New Hampshire, University of Miami, University of California at
San Diego, Boston University, Grinnell College, these are only few of the
"institutes of higher education" at which she has shared the stories
surrounding her coming.
Chin was the winner of the 1999 Chicago People of Color Slam; first runner-
up in the 1999 Outright Poetry Slam; winner of the 1998 Lambda Poetry
Slam; a finalist in the 1999 Nuyorican Grand Slam; winner of the 1998 and
2000 Slam This!; and winner of WORD: The First Slam for Television. She
has also been featured by cable access programs in Brooklyn and Manhattan
as well as many local radio stations including, WHCR and WBAI. The Joseph
Pap Public Theatre has featured this young poet on more than one occasion,
and Staceyann has enjoyed great success internationally, with much lauded
performances in London, Denmark, Germany, and New York's own Central
Park- Summer Stage.
In 1999, Staceyann took the American Amazon Slam title in Aarhus,
Denmark. Denmark so loved the young writer on her American Amazon Tour
that her personal history, photo and work graced the cover of the national
Newspaper The Politiken as well as the controversial, and spicy, Ekstra
Bladet. Since then, many more Danish Newspapers have voiced their opinion
of the poet from Montego Bay, Jamaica: The Information, Retorik Magasinet,
and Berlingske.
Various American publications, including the magazines A, Everybody,
Mosaic, Curve, Venus, The New York Foundation for the Arts' (NYFA's) FYI,
and Jane, as well as the newspapers, the New York Newsday, The Village
Voice, and Drum Voices have featured Staceyann. The myriad of journals and
Newsletters in which her work has appeared also include, The Shades
Newsletter, GMAD magazine, the New York Blade, The Monsoon, and the
Black women's magazine, Personal Personals.
Her individual performances warranted her work being published in the New
York Times, the Washington Post, and the Pittsburgh Daily. Her work was
also featured on "60 Minutes." Her poems can be found in her first chapbook,
Wildcat Woman, as well as in the one she now carries on her back, Stories
Surrounding My Coming, as well the anthologies, Skyscrapers, Taxis and
Tampons (out-of-print), Poetry Slam, and most recently, Role Call.
"Hands Afire", Staceyann's first one-woman show ran for ten weeks at the
Bleecker Theater in the Summer of 2000. The same Off-Broadway Theater
welcomed the 2nd Show, "UNSPEAKABLE THINGS" in the summer of 2001
before she took it to Copenhagen for a week long run. Next year, London,
Helsinki, and Norway are in the pipelines for the show.
Chin has also been the subject of on-screen ventures. The film Staceyann
Chin was released in theaters in Denmark in 2001. It was also aired on the
Danish National Television station. Between the Lines, a documentary that
explores the notion of being Asian and woman and writer, is the latest to
feature Staceyann.
In 2002, Staceyann was nominated for the Rolex Mentor and Protege Art
Initiative where she was considered as a possible protege for Toni
Morrison.
Right now she is looking forward to the airing of a performance she did on
HBO's Def Poetry Jam. She is rehearsing, traveling, and fighting for time to
work on a collection of her own works, her much-anticipated, many-storied
memoir, and room to breathe.
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