Anderson, Regina M.married name Regina M. Andrews , pseudonym Ursala (Ursula) Trelling(born May 21, 1901, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.—died February 5, 1993, Ossining, New York) American librarian, playwright, and patron of the arts whose New York City home was a salon for Harlem Renaissance writers and artists. Anderson attended several colleges, including Wilberforce University in Ohio and the University of Chicago. She received a Master of Library Science degree from Columbia University and worked as a librarian in the New York Public Library System, for which she produced lecture and drama series and arts exhibitions, from the early 1920s to 1967. The Harlem apartment she shared with two other women became an important meeting place for African American artists and intellectuals in the early 1920s. In 1924 Anderson helped organize a dinner at the Civic Club, attended by such notable authors as W.E.B. Du Bois, Jean Toomer, Countee Cullen, and Langston Hughes, that helped launch the Harlem Renaissance. Later that year she helped Du Bois found the Krigwa Players, a company of black actors performing plays by black authors; it was based at the 135th Street Public Library, where Anderson worked. The Krigwa Players evolved into the Negro Experimental Theatre
(also known as the Harlem Experimental Theatre), which in 1931
produced Anderson's one-act play Climbing
Jacob's Ladder, about a lynching that happened while people
prayed in church. The next year the theatre produced her one-act
play Underground, about the
Underground Railroad. Both plays were written under her pseudonym.
The Negro Experimental Theatre served as an inspiration to
little-theatre groups around the country, and it was especially
influential in the encouragement of serious black theatre and of
black playwrights. Anderson also coedited the
Chronology of African-Americans in New York,
1621–1966 (1971; with Ethel Ray Nance). |