In the 1980s, New York was bustling with activity when Bill Harris arrived to produce plays at the New Federal Theatre and manage for Jazzmobile.
In his early years, he worked with art world leaders as well as venues that drew in major stars like Abbey Lincoln and even Denzel Washington.
However, it wouldn’t be long before Detroit beckoned him home, and it was there that he penned “Yardbird Suite, Side One: 1920-1940: A Biopoem: Fictionalized Accounts of Events Real and Imagined from the Life of Charles Yardbird Parker,” a Lotus Poetry Series about jazz legend Charlie Parker, an electrifying biographical piece that revealed his unique poetic technique and later won the Naomi Long-Madditt Poetry Award.
From there, Harris made the transition to penning more suspenseful stories, writing “I Got to Keep Moving,” about migration from Alabama to Michigan, a memorable piece that saw the world of Acorn, Alabama, and its past become a psychological mirror of Detroit’s complicated present – a tale of survival, reinvention, and memory.
Before retiring, Harris taught creative writing at Wayne State and held readings and workshops for emerging writers throughout Detroit.
He was not some groundbreaking literary professor with groundbreaking ideas, but rather, a distinguished literary coach who took students beyond cliches to truths – often referencing Detroit’s resilience in his lectures.
It was this time spent in service to others that would win Harris the Kresge Foundation’s Eminent Artist Award in 2011, which garnered him a small cash prize and spotlighted a man who had dedicated his entire career to inspiring a new generation of Detroit creatives.
In essence, it was the city’s way of saying thank you.