Oprah Winfrey, Harry Belafonte honoured by Harvard

October 01, 2014 08:38 am | Updated April 18, 2016 09:06 pm IST - CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts

Oprah Winfrey accepts a W.E.B. Du Bois Medal at the Hutchins Center Honours at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Oprah Winfrey accepts a W.E.B. Du Bois Medal at the Hutchins Center Honours at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Oprah Winfrey and performer-activist Harry Belafonte were among those honoured at Harvard University on Tuesday at its annual celebration of African American culture.

The university’s Hutchins Center for African and African American Research presented its annual W.E.B. Du Bois Medals to eight people at the ceremony. Other recipients included British architect David Adjaye, civil rights hero U.S. Rep John Lewis; 12 Years a Slave director Steve McQueen, Grey’s Anatomy and Scandal creator Shonda Rhimes, and movie producer Harvey Weinstein.

The medal has been awarded since 2000 and is Harvard’s highest honour in the field of African and African American Studies. Ms. Winfrey also accepted a posthumous award for author and poet Maya Angelou, whom she has called a mentor. The billionaire television host, producer and philanthropist said one of her fondest memories of Angelou, who died earlier this year, was sitting at her table and eating biscuits.

Ms. Rhimes, creator of hit TV shows with black female protagonists, said it shouldn’t be so unusual, in this day, to expect characters on television shows to “look like the rest of the world”. In a recent Associated Press interview about her new ABC show, How To Get Away With Murder , starring Viola Davis as a criminal lawyer and law professor, Ms. Rhimes said “Why did it take somebody black to talk about being black?”

Mr. Belafonte recalled his days in the civil rights movement with figures such as Martin Luther King Jr. and actor Paul Robeson. Mr. Lewis, who was presented a Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2010 by President Barack Obama, was introduced on Tuesday by Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick.

Introducing the other honourees were novelist Jamaica Kincaid, Harvard sociologist William Julius Wilson, Harvard President Drew Gilpin Faust, Harvard Graduate School of Design Dean Mohsen Mostafavi, and American Repertory Theater’s artistic director Diane Paulus.

Du Bois, a scholar who founded the National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People, a leading civil rights group, was born in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, and graduated from Harvard. Selections from his writings were read at the ceremony.

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