Oprah Politely Checked Someone Who Tried To Interrupt Her Tribute To Maya Angelou

BY Erika Marie 12.3K Views
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Maya Angelou, Oprah Winfrey
A fan told Oprah she didn't have the right to call the poet by her first name.

All Oprah Winfrey wanted to do was honor her late friend Maya Angelou on what would have been the legendary poet's 91st birthday, but folks just wouldn't let her be great. Earlier today, Oprah shared a tender photo of herself with Angelou. The two ladies were enjoying a laugh as Angelou sat in a chair with Winfrey on the floor, leaning her head on Angelou's' lap.

She captioned the photo by writing, "Maya would have been 91 today! This is my favorite picture of us. Even in death I feel the 'unbroken continuity' of her mother-sister-friendship referenced in the Henry Scott Holland canon." She continued her remembrance by including a famed poem by Holland: "Death is nothing at all. I have only slipped away to the next room. I am I and you are you. Whatever we were to each other,  That, we still are. Call me by my old familiar name. Speak to me in the easy way, which you always used. Put no difference into your tone. Wear no forced air of solemnity or sorrow."

It all seemed friendly enough, but a fan slid in her comments to tell Winfrey that she should watch herself calling Angelou by her first name. "Ms. Angelou to you Oprah," a user named @polo.daily said. "You have no license to call her Maya. She will always be Ms. Angelou." In classy clap back fashion, Winfrey made time to respond to the comment. "She actually gave me permission after the 2nd or 3rd visit to her home to call her 'Maya.' Believe me I've witnessed when other folk did NOT have that permission." Winfrey and Angelou met back in 1970 and were friends for decades.

Many people came to Winfrey's defense and asked the user why they felt the need to address the media mogul by her first name while checking her for doing the same. Others weren't so sympathetic to Winfrey, saying that they still have an issue with her over she hosted the After Neverland interview with the Leaving Neverland Michael Jackson accusers, Wade Robson and James Safechuck.

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Just hours after Angelou passed away back in 2014, Winfrey wrote a loving message about her. "She was there for me always, guiding me through some of the most important years of my life," Winfrey said. "The world knows her as a poet but at the heart of her, she was a teacher. ‘When you learn, teach. When you get, give’ is one of my best lessons from her."


About The Author
Since 2019, Erika Marie has worked as a journalist for HotNewHipHop, covering music, film, television, art, fashion, politics, and all things regarding entertainment. With 20 years in the industry under her belt, Erika Marie moved from a writer on the graveyard shift at HNHH to becoming a Features Editor, highlighting long-form content and interviews with some of Hip Hop’s biggest stars. She has had the pleasure of sitting down with artists and personalities like DJ Jazzy Jeff, Salt ’N Pepa, Nick Cannon, Rah Digga, Rakim, Rapsody, Ari Lennox, Jacquees, Roxanne Shante, Yo-Yo, Sean Paul, Raven Symoné, Queen Naija, Ryan Destiny, DreamDoll, DaniLeigh, Sean Kingston, Reginae Carter, Jason Lee, Kamaiyah, Rome Flynn, Zonnique, Fantasia, and Just Blaze—just to name a few. In addition to one-on-one chats with influential public figures, Erika Marie also covers content connected to the culture. She’s attended and covered the BET Awards as well as private listening parties, the Rolling Loud festival, and other events that emphasize established and rising talents. Detroit-born and Long Beach (CA)-raised, Erika Marie has eclectic music taste that often helps direct the interests she focuses on here at HNHH. She finds it necessary to report on cultural conversations with respect and honor those on the mic and the hardworking teams that help get them there. Moreover, as an advocate for women, Erika Marie pays particular attention to the impact of femcees. She sits down with rising rappers for HNHH—like Big Jade, Kali, Rubi Rose, Armani Caesar, Amy Luciani, and Omerettà—to gain their perspectives on a fast-paced industry.