Notas del episodio
At 15, a brilliant student turns in a 20-page paper on Napoleon. His teacher refuses to believe he wrote it, accuses him of plagiarism, and fails him. Rather than plead with a system that has already decided who he is, the boy drops out, hides it from his mother, and educates himself every day at the Carnegie Library. That dropout grew up to win two Pulitzer Prizes.
This deep dive traces the life, work, and immense cultural legacy of playwright August Wilson, the theater's poet of Black America. We follow how a biracial kid from Pittsburgh turned the everyday conversations of his neighborhood into one of the most ambitious literary achievements in American history.
- How being an outsider in both Black and white worlds gave him a near-photographic ear for dialect and the poetry of struggle
- The $10 stolen typewriter, the nap ...Â