Oscar Micheaux honored on stamp for early work as film director, screenwriter, producer
By APTuesday, June 22, 2010
New stamp honors pioneering black filmmaker
WASHINGTON — Pioneer filmmaker Oscar Micheaux was honored Tuesday on a new U.S. postage stamp.
The 44-cent stamp is the latest in the agency’s Black Heritage stamp series. It was released at ceremonies in New York and is on sale nationwide.
Michaeux was a director, screenwriter, producer and distributor who was involved in more than 40 films chronicling the experience of African Americans.
“His films not only entertained, they left audiences with a sense of encouragement, hope and inspiration,” postal vice president Delores Killette said in a statement.
According to a biography prepared by the NAACP, Micheaux was born near Metropolis, Ill., in 1884 and began writing stories while homesteading a farm in South Dakota.
He formed his own publishing company to sell his books and later formed a film company after begcoming intrigued with movies.
He was the first African-American to produce a movie and later introduced the actor Paul Robeson in 1924.
Michaeux died in 1951.
Online: beyondtheperf.com/.
Tags: African-americans, Arts And Entertainment, Movies, North America, United States, Washington