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Parks, Suzan-Lori

originally spelled Susan-Lori Parks

(born 1964, Fort Knox, Kentucky, U.S.) American playwright who in 2002 became the first black woman playwright to win a Pulitzer Prize (for Topdog/Underdog, 2001). She received a MacArthur Foundation fellowship in 2001.

Parks, who was writing stories at age five, had a peripatetic childhood as the daughter of a military officer. She attended Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Massachusetts (B.A. [cum laude], 1985), where James Baldwin, who taught a writing class there, encouraged her to try playwriting. She wrote her first play, The Sinner's Place (produced 1984), while still in school. She won Obie Awards for her third play, Imperceptible Mutabilities in the Third Kingdom (produced 1989), and for her eighth, Venus (produced 1996), about a South African Khoisan woman taken to England as a sideshow attraction. Parks's other plays include The Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World (produced 1990); The America Play (produced 1994), about a man obsessed with Abraham Lincoln; and In the Blood (produced 1999), which updates Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter. Parks also wrote screenplays (Girl 6, 1996) and radio plays (Pickling, 1990). Her writing has been praised for its wild poetry, its irreverence, its humour, and its concurrent profundity. Her first novel, Getting Mother's Body, was published in 2003.

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