UBUNTU Center of Chicago

UBUNTU Center of Chicago UBUNTU Center of Chicago – The Center for SGL-LGBT African Americans, a Community, Historical, Literary, Cultural, Educational, Civic and Social Center.

UBUNTU Center of Chicago – The Center for SGL-LGBT African Americans, a Chicago non-profit business, founded in 2013. The Center aim is to continue to implement, exhibit, archive SGL-LGBT affirming programs, services, projects and special events; and to partner with other African Americans archive organizations and allies. In 2015 The Center of Chicago will open and provide the SGL-LGBT and allied

community a safe space in Chicago to discuss, learn and share History, Art, Literature, Film, and Music of Same Gender Loving people of African descent.

SAME GENDER LOVING MAN IN BLACK HISTORYTONY JACKSON Tony Jackson (1876-1921), a pioneer in early20th-century popular mus...
02/26/2026

SAME GENDER LOVING MAN IN BLACK HISTORY
TONY JACKSON
Tony Jackson (1876-1921), a pioneer in early20th-century popular music. He brought musical influences from his native New Orleans to Chicago, gained fame as a talented and colorful performer, mentored such jazz figures as Jelly Roll Morton, wrote the 1916 hit “Pretty Baby,” and lived as an openly gay man when that was rare.

Ragtime legend Tony Jackson was born into poverty in New Orleans on June 5, 1876.
At age 10, he constructed a kind of harpsichord out of backyard junk, tuned it, and used it to reproduce hymns he heard in church. At 13, he got his first job playing piano off-hours at a honky-tonk. By 15, he was considered one of the best musicians in town and soon was one of the most sought-after entertainers in Storyville, yet he continued to face serious challenges in New Orleans both as an African American and as a gay man.

Seeking greater freedom, he came to Chicago in 1912. His influence on Chicago’s music scene was immense. Jackson helped to lay the foundation for Chicago’s reputation as a jazz capital, bringing the musical culture of his birthplace to nightspots and cabarets throughout Chicago’s South Side. Jackson found acceptance along the Stroll, the African American nightclub district around the intersection of State and 35th streets. Jackson was part of the vibrant subculture of Chicago’s Bronzeville neighborhood, where LGBT communities flourished in the early 1900s and aided in making it in many ways Chicago’s version of the Harlem Renaissance.

Jackson’s profound musical talent was matched by his skills as a showman. He is remembered for dancing an impressive high-kicking cakewalk while playing. His voice was also exceptional: He could sing ballads, blues, and even opera from soprano to baritone. Jackson wrote many tunes but sold most of the rights for a minimal amount, and many were stolen outright from him. Indeed, some well-known Tin Pan Alley tunes were actually written by Jackson. Songs that have been attributed to him include “Michigan Water Blues” and “The Naked Dance.” One song published under his own name was “Pretty Baby” (1916), which was reportedly written in its original form as a tribute to his male companion with suggestive double-entendres. Eventually, the song was rewritten with lyrics suitable to general audiences.

Jackson’s influence extended beyond his skills as musician and showman. Even his personal sartorial style came to define the archetypical image of the ragtime pianist: gray derby, ascot with diamond stickpin, a checkered vest, and sleeve garters. However, in his later Chicago years, Jackson often performed in an immaculately tailored tuxedo.

Sadly, Jackson’s musical virtuosity was never recorded, but his influence may be discernible in recordings by younger musicians he inspired, such as Jelly Roll Morton, Clarence Williams, and Steve Lewis.

He continued to perform at South Side cabarets until his early death on April 20, 1921, at age 44.

SAME GENDER LOVING MAN IN BLACK HISTORYESSEX HEMPHILL American poet and writerEssex Hemphill (April 16, 1957 – November ...
02/26/2026

SAME GENDER LOVING MAN IN BLACK HISTORY
ESSEX HEMPHILL American poet and writer
Essex Hemphill (April 16, 1957 – November 4, 1995) was an openly gay American poet and activist. He is known for his contributions to the Washington, D.C. art scene in the 1980s, and for openly discussing the topics pertinent to the African-American gay community.
Biography
*Early life
Essex Hemphill was born April 16, 1957, in Chicago, Illinois, to Warren and Mantalene Hemphill, and was the second eldest of five children. Early in his life, he moved to Washington D.C. where he attended Ballou High School. He began writing poetry at the age of fourteen, writing about his own thoughts, family life, and budding sexuality. After graduation, he enrolled at the University of Maryland in 1975 to study journalism. Though he left college after his freshman year, he continued to interact with the D.C. art scene: performing spoken word, working on journals, and beginning to publish his first poetry chapbooks. He would go on to achieve his degree in English at the University of the District of Columbia.
Career
In 1979, Hemphill and his colleagues started the Nethula Journal of Contemporary Literature, a publication aimed at showcasing the works of modern black artists. One of his first public readings was arranged by Nethula co-editor E. Ethelbert Miller at Howard University’s Founder Library where he performed beside and befriended filmmaker Michelle Parkerson. He also performed at other institutions, including Harvard University, University of Pennsylvania, and the University of California at Los Angeles.
In 1982, Essex Hemphill, Larry Duckett, his close friend, and Wayson Jones, his university roommate, founded the spoken word group called "Cinque," which performed in the Washington D.C. area. Hemphill continued performing his rhythmic, spoken word poetry, and in 1983, received a grant from Washington Project for the Arts to perform an "experimental dramatization" of poetry entitled Murder on Glass, alongside Parkerson and Jones. Hemphill also began publishing his own collections of poetry during this time, beginning with Diamonds Was in the Kitty and Some of the People We Love (1982), and followed by the more favorably reviewed Earth Life (1985) and Conditions (1986). He would garner more national attention when his work was included in In the Life (1986), an anthology of poems from black, gay artists, compiled by Hemphill's good friend, lover, and fellow author, Joseph F. Beam. His poetry has been published widely in journals, and his essays have appeared in Obsidian, Black Scholar, CALLALOO, and Essence among others. In 1986, Hemphill received a fellowship in poetry from the National Endowment for the Arts.
Essex Hemphill also made appearances in a number of documentaries between 1989 and 1992. In 1989, he appeared in Looking for Langston, a film directed by Isaac Julien about poet Langston Hughes and the Harlem Renaissance. Hemphill also worked with Emmy award-winning filmmaker Marlon Riggs on two documentaries: Tongues Untied (1989) which looked into the complex overlapping of black and q***r identities, and Black is... Black Ain't (1992) which discussed what exactly constitutes "blackness."
After Beam's death from AIDS in 1988, Essex Hemphill and Beam's mother worked conjointly in order to publish his sequel to In the Life. The second manuscript was published in 1991 under the title Brother to Brother: New Writings by Black Gay Men, which archived the works of about three dozen authors, including Hemphill himself. Writing about Hemphill and Beam in his book, Evidence of Being: The Black Gay Cultural Renaissance and the Politics of Violence, Darius Bost notes that Hemphill moved in with Beam's mother to help finish the anthology, taking on domestic tasks in exchange for room and board. He writes that Hemphill said in an interview that the anthology “was produced in the ‘context of confronting AIDS and the death around us. It's almost like a fierce resistance that says, ‘Before I die, I'm going to say these things.’’ Hemphill also wrote a poem dedicated to Beam after his death titled “When My Brother Fell,” and dedicated his 1986 poem “Heavy Corners” to him. In 1990, he gave a speech at the OutWrite conference (where he was the only Black panelist), which eventually became the introduction to the anthology. Brother to Brother would go on to win a Lambda Literary Award.
In 1992, Hemphill published his largest collection of poetry and short stories, entitled Ceremonies: Prose and Poetry, which included recent work, but also selection from his earlier poetry collections, Earth Life and Conditions. The next year, the anthology would be awarded the National Library Association's Gay, Le***an, and Bisexual New Author Award, the Stonewall Book Award for Literature, and a Pew Charitable Trust Fellowship in the Arts. In 1993, he was a visiting scholar at the Getty Center.
Death
In the 1990s, Hemphill would rarely give information about his health, although he would occasionally talk about "being a person with AIDS." It was not until 1994 that he wrote about his experiences with the disease in his poem "Vital Signs." He died on November 4, 1995, of AIDS-related complications.
Legacy
After his death, December 10, 1995 was announced by three organizations (Gay Men of African Descent (GMAD), Other Countries, and Black Nations/Q***r Nations?) to be a National Day of Remembrance for Essex Hemphill at New York City's Le***an and Gay Community Services Center. Cheryl Dunye dedicated her 1996 film Watermelon Woman to Hemphill.
In his essay "(Re)- Recalling Essex Hemphill" in Words to Our Now, Thomas Glave, pays tribute to Hemphill's life, focusing on the lasting effects of his actions. Glave writes:
In this now, we celebrate your life and language Essex. So celebrating, we know that we re-call you in what is largely, to borrow from another visionary, a 'giantless time.' The sheer giantry of your breathing presence has passed. Now present and future warriors—ourselves and others—will be compelled to learn, as you did and made manifest, that all hauls toward truth—toward venality; ardor, not arrogance; forthrightness, not cowardice.
In 2014, Martin Duberman wrote Hold Tight Gently: Michael Callen, Essex Hemphill, and the Battlefield of AIDS in which Duberman documents the life of Essex Hemphill, along with author and activist, Michael Callen. The book would go on to win the Lambda Literary Award for LGBTQ Nonfiction.
In June 2019, Hemphill was one of the inaugural fifty American “pioneers, trailblazers, and heroes” inducted on the National LGBTQ Wall of Honor within the Stonewall National Monument (SNM) in New York City’s Stonewall Inn. The SNM is the first U.S. national monument dedicated to LGBTQ rights and history, and the wall's unveiling was timed to take place during the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall riots.
Works
Themes
Much of Hemphill's poetry and spoken word was autobiographical and portrayed his experiences as a minority in both the African-American and LGBT communities.
He wrote pieces such as "Family Jewels," which conveyed his frustrations about white bigotry, specifically within the gay community. In his essay "Does Your Momma Know About me?" Hemphill criticizes photographer Robert Mapplethorpe's The Black Book, which showcased pictures of the pen*ses of black men. Hemphill argued that excluding the faces of the black male subjects demonstrated the fetishism of African Americans by whites in the gay community.
The poems and essays in Ceremonies address the sexual objectification of black men in white culture, relationships among gay black men and non-gay black men, HIV/AIDS in the black community and the meaning of family. He also goes on to critique both the institutionalized patriarchy, and dominant gender identities within society.
Hemphill repeatedly invoked loneliness throughout his work. Loneliness in Hemphill's work is a traumatic feeling, a constant sense of rejection. Many of the men returned home after being rejected by white gay communities, only to be rejected within black communities as well. In Hemphill's poetry, he portrays loneliness as a collective feeling. He defined loneliness as a sense of being, marked by suffering without public recognition. A sense of separation from the public creates a social longing because even though the journey is lonesome, fighting against that journey not to kill you, as Hemphill said in one of his poems, makes you yearn for community and support.
Essays
• (essay in) Patrick Merla (ed.), Boys Like Us: Gay Writers Tell Their Coming Out Stories, Avon Books. 1996
• (essays in) Thomas Avena (ed.), "Life Sentences: Writers, Artists, and AIDS", Mercury House. 1994
• Ceremonies: Prose and Poetry, 1992; Cleis Press, 2000, ISBN 9781573441018
• Conditions: Poems, Be Bop Books, 1986
Anthologies
• In the Life
• Gay and Le***an Poetry in Our Time
• Art Against Apartheid
• Men and Intimacy
• High Risk
• New Men
• New Minds
• Natives
• Tourists and Other Mysteries
• (ed.) Brother to Brother: New Writings by Black Gay Men, 1991; RedBone Press, 2007, ISBN 9780978625115
Appearances
• Looking for Langston (1989)
• Tongues Untied (1989)
• Black Is...Black Ain't (1994)
• Narrator: Out of the Shadows, AIDS documentary

SAME GENDER LOVING WOMAN IN BLACK HISTORYLena Waithe (born May 17, 1984) is an American actress, producer, and screenwri...
02/25/2026

SAME GENDER LOVING WOMAN IN BLACK HISTORY
Lena Waithe (born May 17, 1984) is an American actress, producer, and screenwriter. She is the creator of the Showtime drama series The Chi (2018–present) and the BET comedy series Boomerang (2019–20) and Twenties (2020–21). She also wrote and produced the crime film Queen & Slim (2019) and is the executive producer of the horror anthology series Them (2021–present).

Waithe gained recognition for her role in the Netflix comedy-drama series Master of None (2015–2021), and became the first African-American woman to win the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series in 2017 for writing the show's "Thanksgiving" episode, which was loosely based on her personal experience of coming out to her mother. She has also appeared in Steven Spielberg's 2018 adventure film Ready Player One and the HBO series Westworld. In 2023, she received a nomination for Best Play at the 76th Tony Awards, her production work on the sketch-comedy play Ain't No Mo'.

Waithe was named one of Time magazine's 100 Most Influential People of 2018; and was included on Fast Company's Q***r 50 list in 2021 and 2022.

Early life and education
Waithe was born in Chicago, Illinois. Her father, Lawrence David Waithe, died when she was fifteen. Her paternal great-grandfather, Winston Waithe, emigrated from Barbados to Boston in 1921; his family, descended from sugar plantation slaves, was from Christ Church, Barbados. Though acting was not originally among her ambitions, she knew from the age of seven that she wanted to be a television writer and received strong family support for her writing from her single mother and grandmother. Her parents had divorced when she was three. Waithe and her sister grew up on the South Side of Chicago until Waithe was 12; she attended a local, mostly African-American elementary magnet school, Turner-Drew, but moved to Evanston and finished middle school at Chute Middle School. She graduated from Evanston Township High School and earned a degree in cinema and television arts from Columbia College Chicago in 2006, praising faculty playwright Michael Fry for his teaching and encouragement. Seeking more ways to involve herself in the television and film industry, she also worked at a movie theater, at a Best Buy, and at a Blockbuster.

Career
Having arrived in Los Angeles, Waithe secured a job as an assistant to the executive producer of Girlfriends, a long-running sitcom. Soon after, she landed a minor role in Lisa Kudrow's The Comeback. She later became a writer for the Fox television series Bones, a writer for the 2012 Nickelodeon sitcom How to Rock, and a producer on the 2014 satirical comedy film Dear White People. Waithe wrote and appeared in the YouTube series "Twenties", produced by Flavor Unit Entertainment and optioned in 2014 by BET. In addition to writing and directing the short film "Save Me", which was shown at several independent film festivals, Waithe wrote the 2013 web series "Hello Cupid" and the 2011 viral video S**t Black Girls Say.

In 2014, Variety named Waithe one of its "10 Comedians to Watch". In August 2015, Showtime commissioned a pilot for an upcoming series, The Chi, written by Waithe and produced by Common, which tells a young urban Black-American man's coming-of-age story. As the show's creator, Waithe wanted to mine her experience growing up on the South Side and experiencing its diversity to craft a story that paints a more nuanced portrait of her hometown than is typically shown. Similarly, she extended her influence to support the Black-American community in the entertainment industry through her role as co-chair of the Committee of Black Writers at the Writers Guild.

In 2015, Waithe was cast in the Netflix series Master of None after meeting creator and lead actor Aziz Ansari who, with Alan Yang, had originally written Denise as a straight, white woman with the potential, according to Waithe, to evolve into one of the main character's love interests: "For some reason, [casting director] Allison Jones thought about me for it, a Black gay woman." Ansari and Yang rewrote the script to make the character more like Waithe: "All of us actors play heightened versions of ourselves." She said, "I don't know if we've seen a sly, harem pants-wearing, cool Topshop sweatshirt-wearing, snapback hat-rocking le***an on TV." She also said, "I know how many women I see out in the world who are very much like myself. We exist. To me, the visibility of it was what was going to be so important and so exciting."

In 2017, Waithe and Ansari won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series for the season 2 episode "Thanksgiving". She became the first African American woman to win an Emmy in that category. Waithe described the episode as based on her coming out experience as a le***an. During her Emmy speech, she sent a special message to her LGBTQIA (Le***an, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Q***r, Intersex, and Asexual) family discussing how "The things that make us different—those are our superpowers." She ended her speech by recognizing her journey as a Black woman, saying, "Thank you for embracing a little Indian boy from South Carolina and a little q***r Black girl from the South Side of Chicago." Waithe also developed an autobiographical drama series, The Chi. Out Magazine named Waithe the Out100: Artist of the Year on November 8, 2017.

Since 2018, Waithe has provided the voiceover of the tagline of AT&T commercials. The same year, she became the first Black q***r woman on the cover of Vanity Fair magazine. Waithe also founded her production company, Hillman Grad Productions. This production company provides opportunities to aspiring filmmakers and establishes diverse and inclusive stories that celebrate the underrepresented.

Waithe wrote and produced the road trip-crime film Queen & Slim, starring Jodie Turner-Smith and Daniel Kaluuya, and directed by Melina Matsoukas. It was released on November 27, 2019, by Universal Pictures. This film focuses on powerful social issues such as systemic racism, police brutality and oppression. It has been depicted as a “a meditation on a system of justice that treats innocent people as outlaws,” or “a bourgeois representation of the struggle against police oppression." Queen & Slim won a BET Award for Best Movie (2020), Florida Film Critics Circle Award (2019) as well as other awards.

In 2020, Waithe lent her voice to the Pixar animated film Onward, portraying the cyclops police officer Specter, the first q***r animated character in Disney history.

She focuses on recruiting more people of color and q***r artists for her film and television projects. In 2020 her production company, Hillman Grad Productions, opened a mentoring and training program with financial support from the Froneri ice-cream company. More recently, she signed a deal with the Warner Bros. TV Group in order to develop a TV version of Hoop Dreams.

Personal life
Waithe is a masculine-presenting le***an. She became engaged in 2017 to Alana Mayo, a content executive. They married in 2019 in San Francisco. On January 23, 2020, Waithe and Mayo announced that they had separated after two months of marriage. In November 2020, Mayo filed for divorce from Waithe; the single status of both was restored on May 24, 2021, with agreement for spousal support, and dividing up of property and other assets.

Waithe has described her family as "lazy Christians" and said in 2018, "I'm a huge believer in God, and Jesus Christ, and that God made me and all those things. And I try to just be a good person. I think that is the base of my religion, is to be good, is to be honest."

02/20/2026
https://youtu.be/05hgPwaJFUc?si=dqgkknkKsp1Gmjv2SAME GENDER LOVING MUSIC IS BLACK HISTORY Chicago House music, originati...
02/20/2026

https://youtu.be/05hgPwaJFUc?si=dqgkknkKsp1Gmjv2
SAME GENDER LOVING MUSIC IS BLACK HISTORY
Chicago House music, originating in the early 1980s from Black and SGL-LGBTQ+ underground club scenes, is a foundational genre of electronic dance music characterized by 4/4 rhythms, soulful vocals, and heavy basslines. Pioneers like Frankie Knuckles and Marshall Jefferson created this sound using drum machines, with the genre thriving today through venues like Smart Bar and the annual Chicago House Music Festival.

Key Aspects of Chicago House
Origin: Developed in the late 1970s and 1980s by Black DJs in Chicago.
Characteristics: Known for a "four-to-the-floor" beat, electronic drums (like the Roland TR-808 and 909), and soulful, gospel-influenced vocals.

Pioneers: Frankie Knuckles ("Godfather of House"), Jesse Saunders, Marshall Jefferson, Ron Hardy, and Larry Heard.
Subgenres: Includes deep house and acid house.
Where to Experience House Music in Chicago
Chicago House Music Festival (2026): Scheduled for August 27–30 at the Chicago Cultural Center and Millennium Park.

Venues: Smart Bar (Lakeview), Spybar (River North), Primary Nightclub (Gold Coast), and Podlasie Club (Avondale) are key spots.
The genre remains deeply embedded in the city's culture, continually celebrated for its history of social, musical, and community liberation.

Chicago’s secret is very much out in the open now: house music DJs headline clubs and festivals from London to Cape Town. But this electronic dance music was...

SAME GENDER LOVING MAN IN BLACK HISTORY MR. IMAGINATIONGregory Warmack, better known as Mr. Imagination (March 30, 1948 ...
02/20/2026

SAME GENDER LOVING MAN IN BLACK HISTORY

MR. IMAGINATION
Gregory Warmack, better known as Mr. Imagination (March 30, 1948 – May 30, 2012), was an American outsider artist. He worked in a variety of forms and his work often made use of sandstone and bottlecaps and other repurposed materials.
Mr. Imagination
Born March 30, 1948 - Maywood, Illinois
Died May 30, 2012 (aged 64) - Atlanta, Georgia

Biography
The third child in a family of nine, Warmack grew up in the Chicago area and had no formal training as an artist, though he began making art objects in his childhood. In the 1970s he made and sold art at street fairs. While in Chicago in 1978, he was shot in the stomach during a mugging and lapsed into a coma. During his hospitalization, he had a spiritual vision which he described as "very peaceful, almost as if I was traveling through history and looking at ancient civilizations." The incident spurred Warmack to renew his focus on art and broaden his scope, and shortly after he began using the name Mr. Imagination.

In the 1970s and 1980s, Mr. Imagination worked extensively in sculptures carved from industrial sandstone and incorporating thousands of bottlecaps fastened to surfaces of the sculpted objects. He used paint, wood, nails, putty, and cement, and also incorporated found objects into his work, including vintage commercial items and discarded objects such as tools, household instruments, and mirrors. Many of his works were thematically influenced by African and Egyptian masks and dress.

Mr. Imagination's first solo exhibition was assembled in 1983 at the Carl Hammer Galleries in Chicago. He lived and worked in Chicago until 2001, when he relocated to Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. There he contributed pieces to Lehigh University's campus and the Zoellner Arts Center, worked with the Bethlehem Fine Arts Commission, and hosted workshops for children.
In January 2008 his home was destroyed in a fire, and shortly thereafter he moved to Atlanta, Georgia. He continued working and exhibiting in Atlanta until his death from a blood infection in 2012 at age 64.

Works and exhibits
Mr. Imagination's works were exhibited in shows throughout the United States, in places such as the Dallas Museum of Art, the African American Museum in Dallas, the Halsey Gallery at the College of Charleston in Charleston, South Carolina, the William Benton Museum of Art at the University of Connecticut, and at the Society for Contemporary Craft in Pittsburgh. He was also exhibited internationally, including in Venice and Paris. Several of his pieces are part of the collection of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, and he is also exhibited at the American Visionary Art Museum, the American Folk Art Museum, and the High Museum of Art. He was commissioned to make an eleven-foot-tall rendition of a Coca-Cola bottle for the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, a horned dinosaur in the DinoLand U.S.A. section of Disney's Animal Kingdom theme park, and decorated spaces for House of Blues venues in Orlando, Las Vegas, and Chicago. Among his other major works were a garden installation at the National Botanical Gardens, a globe piece at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, and a wall display for the transit building in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Absolut Vodka commissioned a rendition of their bottle in his style.

In 2009, Mr. Imagination was commissioned to decorate city planters in Salina, Kansas, but the city council halted the project mid-completion and removed the finished exteriors with jackhammers.
*

Smithsonian American Art Museum and Renwick Gallery
https://americanart.si.edu/artist/mr-imagination-gregory-warmack-5849
Mr. Imagination (Gregory Warmack)
A native Chicagoan, Mr. Imagination, began to carve figures from found pieces of industrial sandstone (a by-product of steel manufacturing)

Mr. Imagination (Gregory Warmack)
American Visionary Art Museum
https://www.ragoarts.com/artists/mr-imagination-gregory-warmack?sort_by=result&sort_order=desc
https://www.avam.org/artists/mr.-imagination-(gregory-warmack)
Mr. Imagination was born Gregory Warmack in Chicago in 1948, the third of nine children who gave church concerts together as the Warmack Singers.

Mr. Imagination (Gregory Warmack) follow artist
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Artist: Mr. Imagination (Gregory Warmack). follow artist. Items (20) · Auctions (9). house: all. all; Rago; Wright; LA Modern Auctions; Toomey & ...Read more

MR. IMAGINATION-GREGORY WARMACK

SAME GENDER LOVING MAN IN BLACK HISTORYWillard Francis Motley (July 14, 1909 – March 4, 1965) was an American author. Be...
02/19/2026

SAME GENDER LOVING MAN IN BLACK HISTORY

Willard Francis Motley (July 14, 1909 – March 4, 1965) was an American author. Beginning as a teenager, Motley published a column in the African-American oriented Chicago Defender newspaper under the pen-name Bud Billiken.
He worked as a freelance writer, and later founded and published the Hull House Magazine and worked in the Federal Writers' Project.
Motley's first and best known novel was Knock on Any Door (1947), which was made into a movie of the same name (1949).

Biography
Early life and career
Motley was born and grew up in the Englewood neighborhood, South Side, Chicago, in one of the few African-American families residing in that neighborhood at the time. The family was Catholic. His grandfather, Archibald Motley Sr. was a Pullman porter who raised him as a son. His grandmother Mary ("Mae") was a homemaker. Motley graduated from Lewis-Champlain grammar school, and Englewood High School.
He and the noted artist Archibald Motley Jr. were raised as brothers, although Archibald was in fact Willard's uncle; Willard's mother, Florence (known as "Flossie") moved to New York City after he was born and left him to be raised by her parents.

When he was 13, Willard was hired by Robert S. Abbott to write a children's column called "Bud Says," under the pen name, "Bud Billiken," for the Chicago Defender. Later, Willard traveled to New York, California and the western states, earning a living through various menial jobs, as well as by writing for the radio and newspapers. During this period, he served a jail sentence for vagrancy in Cheyenne, Wyoming. Returning to Chicago in 1939, he lived near the Maxwell Street Market, which was to figure prominently in his later writing. He became associated with Hull House, and helped found the Hull House Magazine, in which some of his fiction appeared. In 1940 he wrote for the Works Progress Administration Federal Writers' Project along with Richard Wright and Nelson Algren.

In 1947, his first novel, Knock on Any Door, appeared to critical acclaim. A work of gritty naturalism, it concerns the life of Nick Romano, an Italian-American altar boy who turns to crime because of poverty and the difficulties of the immigrant experience; it is Romano who says the famous phrase: "Live fast, die young and have a good-looking co**se!" It was an immediate hit, selling 47,000 copies during its first three weeks in print. In 1949, it was made into a movie starring Humphrey Bogart. In response to critics who charged Motley with avoiding issues of race by writing about white characters, Motley said: "My race is the human race." His second novel, We Fished All Night (1948), was not hailed as a success, and after it appeared Motley moved to Mexico to start over. His third novel, Let No Man Write My Epitaph, picks up the story of Knock on Any Door. Columbia Pictures made it into a movie in 1960. Ella Fitzgerald's music for the film was released on the album Ella Fitzgerald Sings Songs from the Soundtrack of "Let No Man Write My Epitaph".

Criticism
According to the citation statement for the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame awards, "Motley was criticized in his life for being a black man writing about white characters, a middle-class man writing about the lower class, and a closeted homosexual writing about heterosexual urges. But those more kindly disposed to his work, and there were plenty, admired his grit and heart.... Chicago was more complicated than just its racial or sexual tensions, and as a writer his exploration was expansive...." Motley was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2014.

Death and legacy
On March 4, 1965, Motley died of intestinal gangrene in Mexico City, Mexico.[3][4] Some sources say he was 52, giving his birthdate as July 14, 1912; however, the Vivian G. Harsh Research Collection of Afro-American History and Literature at the Chicago Public Library, which holds a selection of his papers, notes his date of birth as July 14, 1909. After his death, his adopted son, Sergio Lopez, said, "He let this illness go too long before getting proper medical treatment." Lopez also said that Motley had been working on a novel, tentatively titled My House Is Your House.

His final novel, posthumously published in 1966, was Let Noon Be Fair. Since 1929, Chicago has held an annual Bud Billiken Parade and Picnic (acknowledging his pen name during his early career at the Chicago Defender) on the second Saturday of August. The parade travels through the city's Bronzeville, Grand Boulevard and Washington Park neighborhoods on the south side. The bulk of Motley's archive is held in the University Libraries, Rare Books and Special Collections, at Northern Illinois University.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Novels
• Knock on Any Door, D. Appleton-Century Company, 1947; Northern Illinois University Press, 1989, ISBN 9780875805436
• We Fished All Night, Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1951
• Let No Man Write My Epitaph, Random House, 1958
• Let Noon Be Fair, 1966; Pan Books, 1969 – published posthumously.
Nonfiction
• The Diaries of Willard Motley, Iowa State University Press, 1979 – published posthumously, ISBN 9780813807058
Letters
• Willard F. Motley Papers, 1939–1951; Vivian G. Harsh Research Collection of Afro-American History and Literature, Chicago Public Library, 2002

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