US #5555 – Wilson was the 44th honoree in the Black Heritage Series.

On April 27, 1945, a boy named Frederick August Kittel Jr. was born in a two-room apartment in Pittsburgh’s Hill District. No one in that neighborhood could have guessed he would one day have a Broadway theater named after him. He would grow up to become August Wilson, one of the most celebrated playwrights in American history.

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2021 First-Class Forever Stamp - Black Heritage: Imperforate August Wilson
US #5555a – Imperforate Wilson Stamp

The Hill District was an ethnically diverse neighborhood where his family lived in two rooms with an outdoor toilet and no hot water. His mother, Daisy Wilson, was Black; his father, Frederick Kittel, was a German immigrant baker who was mostly absent from the family. Daisy supported her children on welfare checks and wages from housecleaning jobs. She later remarried a man named David Bedford, and in 1958 the family moved to the predominantly white suburb of Hazelwood.

# 4866 - 2014 91c Literary Arts: Ralph Ellison
US #4866 Invisible Man taught Wilson to write dialogue with an ear tuned to real speech. He spent years in Hill District bars and coffeehouses doing exactly that — scribbling overheard phrases onto napkins.

The move proved painful. Wilson and his family were the target of racial threats in Hazelwood. At the private Central Catholic High School, he endured constant bullying and transferred to Connelly Trade School, then to Gladstone High School. At Gladstone, a teacher accused him of plagiarizing an excellent paper he had written about Napoleon Bonaparte. Rather than trying to prove himself, he quit school altogether at the age of 15.

US #4386 – Wilson discovered Wright at age 12 in the Carnegie Library’s “Negro” section. Reading Wright convinced him that Black writers could succeed without compromising their culture.

For the next several years, Wilson educated himself at the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh during school hours, unbeknownst to his mother. He read Ralph Ellison, Richard Wright, Langston Hughes, and Arna Bontemps. His fascination with language made him an avid listener, and he soaked up conversations he overheard in coffee shops and on street corners, using the tidbits of conversations to construct stories in his head.

US #3557 – Hughes was the first writer who made Wilson want to pick up a pen himself. His poetry proved that the everyday language of Black America was worthy subject matter.

In 1965, after his father’s death, he changed his name to August Wilson to honor his mother. That same year, he made another discovery that would shape everything he wrote. He bought a stolen typewriter for $10 — which he often pawned when money was tight. He worked a variety of jobs, began writing poetry, and discovered Bessie Smith and the blues. At Pittsburgh’s St. Vincent de Paul second-hand store, he uncovered a collection of old records that changed the trajectory of his work. He would later describe the blues as “the best literature that we blacks have created since we’ve been here” and call it “our sacred book.”

#2854 - 1994 29c Blues and Jazz Singers: Bessie Smith
US #2854 – In 1965, Wilson heard Smith’s “Nobody in Town Can Bake a Sweet Jelly Roll Like Mine” and listened to it 22 straight times. He called it a “baptism” — the moment he knew Black American culture was worth building a life’s work on.

Wilson never formally studied theater. He often explained that he got his education from the “Four Bs”: the blues, the art of painter Romare Bearden, the writing of poet Amiri Baraka, and the writing of poet Jorge Luis Borges.

In 1968, along with his friend Rob Penny, Wilson co-founded the Black Horizon Theater in the Hill District of Pittsburgh. He had no directing experience and no formal training. He recalled finding a book called The Fundamentals of Play Directing at the library and simply checking it out. After moving to St. Paul, Minnesota in 1978, he began writing in earnest. His play Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom was accepted by the National Playwrights Conference in 1982, where he met Lloyd Richards, the dean of the Yale School of Drama. Richards directed the first six of Wilson’s Broadway productions.

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2011 First-Class Forever Stamp - Romare Bearden (1911-1988)
US #4566-69 – August Wilson counted Romare Bearden among his “Four Bs” of inspiration. Bearden’s art helped shape Wilson’s rich vision of Black American life.

The work that followed was unlike anything American theater had seen. Wilson’s ten-play Pittsburgh Cycle — one play for each decade of the 20th century — combined historical fact, comedy and gritty realism with spiritual and supernatural elements of African and African American culture. All but one of the plays were set in Pittsburgh. Fences won the Pulitzer Prize and a Tony Award in 1987. The Piano Lesson won a second Pulitzer in 1990. Wilson became one of only seven American playwrights ever awarded two Pulitzer Prizes.

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1994 29c Blues & Jazz Singers: "Ma" Rainey
US #2859 – Wilson’s interest in Rainey began with Bessie Smith — Smith had learned her craft directly from Rainey. His play Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom became the work that launched his Broadway career.

The Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh — the institution that had served as his informal university — later awarded him an honorary high school diploma. After his death from liver cancer on October 2, 2005, the Virginia Theatre on Broadway was renamed the August Wilson Theatre. The boy from the two-room flat had left his name on the street where American theater lives.

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