Post by blackcrowheart on Jun 4, 2007 20:41:05 GMT -5
Diane Burns, Native American Lower East Side poet
By Sarah Ferguson
www.thevillager.com/villager_198/dianeburnsnative.html
<http://www.thevillager.com/villager_198/dianeburnsnative.html>
Slowly people drifted into the parish room at St. Mark's Church on
Jan. 27 to celebrate the life of Native American poet and longtime Lower
East Side resident Diane Burns. They were reluctant, it seemed, to
remember the light that burned inside Burns was gone, and that she drank
herself to death at age 50, leaving behind a beautiful 15-year-old
daughter with shy almond eyes and a scattering of poems so fierce they
continue to churn up in literary anthologies two decades later.
Maybe the light inside Burns burned too brightly?
Consider the opening lines of her first and only book of poetry,
"Riding the One-Eyed Ford," published in 1981:
Our people
slit open the badger
to see the tomorrows
in its blood.
Now
look at me
and see what our
tomorrows hold
Illustrated with her own fine pen-and-ink drawings, that slim collection
established Burns as a formidable presence in the New York poetry scene
and beyond. Though she didn't publish much more than that, her
witty, sardonic takes on Native stereotypes are still cutting enough to
be taught alongside more famous contemporaries like Sherman Alexie:
I am Tequila Mockingbird. Yes, I am related to Isaiah Mockingbird, and
yes, I am that face in the moon on the cover of the Carson's record
album. And the Marshmallow beer girl, and that's me on every stick
of Land O'Lakes butter… I can trace my lineage back to the
beginning of time when the world was nothing but a scrap of mud on the
tip of a loon's nose.
(from her 1993 essay
"Tequila Mockingbird")
Born in 1956 in Lawrence, Kan., to a Chemehuevi father and an Anishinabe
mother, Burns was raised with her two brothers in Riverside, Cal., where
her parents got work teaching at a Native American boarding school. When
she was about 10 years old, the family moved to the Lac Corte Oreilles
reservation in Hayward, Wis., then on to Wahpeton, N.D., when her
parents began teaching at another boarding school there.
"Even in grade school, she was always writing and drawing,"
recalls Diane's mother, Rose Burns. "In third grade she won the
first-place prize for her poem, `A Pencil Can Travel.'"
Evidently, Diane discovered early on that writing could be a ticket to
elsewhere. She spent her senior year of high school at the American
Indian Art Institute in Santa Fe, N.M., then got a scholarship from
Barnard College, with the aim of becoming a lawyer.
She dropped out of Barnard her senior year — no one remembers why.
Perhaps the life of a poet seemed more enthralling. In a videotaped
interview with Emilio Murillo for his Manhattan cable show, "Earth
Bird," Burns described how she came into her profession somewhat by
accident, when the American Indian Community House called up looking to
book a Native American poet for an event they were hosting.
"I didn't have anything, so I stayed up all night scribbling and
ended up onstage with Audre Lorde," Burns recalled. "I actually
got paid $50. I'm the only poet I know who got into the field for
money," she joked.
Burns moved to the East Village in the late '70s and quickly became
enmeshed in the Downtown arts scene.
"I used to run into Diane all the time on Avenue B back in the day
when I could see, and she was a very attractive lady," recalls Steve
Cannon, the now-blind publisher of A Gathering of the Tribes magazine.
Beyond her striking features, which got Burns work as a model, people
were immediately impressed by the force of her words.
"She was like a fresh wind, the clarity of her work was so
beautiful," says Josh Gosciak, founder of the multicultural poetry
journal "Contact," who was one of the first to publish
Burns's work. "A lot of young Native Americans were coming on
the scene in New York and also breaking into film and publishing. It was
an exciting period. We haven't seen anything like it since."
"It was a total explosion," says Bowery Poetry Club founder Bob
Holman, remembering the first time he heard Burns read in 1980. "All
of us down here thought our scene had everything in the world we needed.
But Diane literally blew the lid off our little place and set it up as a
whole new encampment."
In those days, many poets in the 'hood were earning salaries with
benefits under the federal CETA (Comprehensive Employment and Training
Act) program, which President Reagan immediately canned when he came
into office. Former Cover magazine publisher Jeff Wright remembers
traveling around with Burns as part of a state-funded CETA spinoff
called POET (Poets' Overland Expeditionary Troupe), staging readings
at schools and community centers across New York.
I'm American royalty
Walking around with a hole in my knee
I'm a hopeful aborigine
Trying to find a place to be
Oh East Village, ai yi yi yi yi yi yi.
(from "Alphabet City Serenade")
"She was like an Indian princess living on the Lower East Side,"
says Wright. "She was like the best bad girl that ever lived, and
when she walked around she made everyone else wild. I fell in love with
her immediately, like everyone else. But I was always afraid to get too
close, because of the dark side."
Besides a thirst for liquor, Burns landed a dope habit early on, and
never really shook it. She didn't seem to wrestle with her demons so
much as accommodate them, though her 1981 poem "Booze 'N'
Loozing Blues" hints at the pain she felt inside:
No one can tell you
ahead
of time
What
It's like
To sweat & shake
& cold turkey
and be Afraid
to stay
awake and
Afraid
to
sleep
and
Afraid
to not do
either.
Of course back then it seemed like everyone was high on one thing or
another, and for many years, Burns was the life of the party.
In 1988, she was among a rather illustrious group of writers —
including Allen Ginsberg, Joy Harjo and Pedro Pietri — invited to
Nicaragua to take part in the Ruben Dario Poetry Festival, sponsored by
the Sandinista government. (Poet Tom Savage remembers Burns pulling out
an "enormous gun" on the plane. "It was just amazing to me;
it was so bizarre.")
The Sandinistas revered poetry and welcomed the group like foreign
dignitaries, especially Burns, who Holman recalls was "sort of the
star of our little troupe down there."
"Little did they know what trouble they were getting into,"
Holman laughs. Apparently Burns and Pietri got so soused at the
presidential palace that Pietri interrupted a meeting between the
Sandinista government and the Soviet ambassador to look for his shoes.
They then convinced Minister of Culture Ernesto Cardenal to marry them
and took off honeymooning, much to the dismay of Pietri's wife back
in New York and members of the American Indian Movement, who called up
Holman worried Burns had been kidnapped.
I don't care if you're married I still love you
I don't care if you're married
After the party's over
I will take you home in my One-Eyed Ford
Way yah hi yo, Way yah hi yo!
(from "Big Fun," 1981)
For many years, Burns carried on giving readings at the Nuyorican Poets
Café and hanging out at local bars.
"She was one of the smartest people I ever knew. We met at the
Village Idiot," says Steve Ruona, who lived with Burns from 1991 to
2002 and fathered their daughter, Britta.
Steve Cannon credits her with helping him launch Tribes magazine and
gallery from his ramshackle brownstone on E. Third St.
"When my house burned down in 1990, I was half-blind and didn't
have the money to fix the d**n thing up, so Diane got her husband Steve
to put this house back in order," says Cannon. "She would come
over here through thick and thin, scrambling for money, calling people,
helping me set things up. That's what kept this place going all
those years. The only reason A Gathering of the Tribes exists 15 years
later is because of Diane Burns."
Cannon also kept Burns going, paying her to keep the books even when
others considered her a lost cause. In her latter years as her drinking
worsened and she lost custody of Britta, Diane drifted from couch to
couch, even berthing for a while with the Hare Krishnas on First Ave.
"They've taken me on as a project," she joked to friends.
Burns kept her sense of humor and her pride through it all, and unlike
most folks with bad habits, she never stole.
"Kind," "loving," "modest," "warm but not
effusive," "private," "funny," "not one to be
captured" — these were some of the words people offered up at
the memorial as folks struggled to reconcile Diane's startling
talent and her steadfast presence on the scene with the sorry place she
ended up.
Though she'd complained of excess fluids in recent weeks, friends
say her collapse on Nov. 29 was unexpected. She was taken to Beth Israel
Hospital, where she fell into a coma and died of kidney and liver
failure on Dec. 22.
If her daughter Britta is any measure, her life was far from hopeless.
Britta is now studying acting and has a job performing skits as a teen
advocate for Planned Parenthood three days a week.
Cannon says he's hoping to collect Burns's unpublished writings
into a book — she was supposedly working on a satirical novel about
a Native American beauty queen. Some of her film and poetry reviews can
be found on the Tribes Web site, www.tribes.org.
After she died, her family held a three-day funeral on the reservation
in Wisconsin, with a feast and prayers sung in her tribal tongue.
"You have to stay with the body for the whole time, so on the last
night I played poker with her brothers till 5 a.m.," laughs Ruona.
"I lost $100, but I know Diane would have been happy to know we were
playing poker.
She always wanted people to have a good time."
The Bowery Poetry Club, at 308 Bowery at Bleecker St., is hosting a
"Praise Day" for Diane Burns on Feb. 21 at 6 p.m., with readings
by Joy Harjo and many others.
By Sarah Ferguson
www.thevillager.com/villager_198/dianeburnsnative.html
<http://www.thevillager.com/villager_198/dianeburnsnative.html>
Slowly people drifted into the parish room at St. Mark's Church on
Jan. 27 to celebrate the life of Native American poet and longtime Lower
East Side resident Diane Burns. They were reluctant, it seemed, to
remember the light that burned inside Burns was gone, and that she drank
herself to death at age 50, leaving behind a beautiful 15-year-old
daughter with shy almond eyes and a scattering of poems so fierce they
continue to churn up in literary anthologies two decades later.
Maybe the light inside Burns burned too brightly?
Consider the opening lines of her first and only book of poetry,
"Riding the One-Eyed Ford," published in 1981:
Our people
slit open the badger
to see the tomorrows
in its blood.
Now
look at me
and see what our
tomorrows hold
Illustrated with her own fine pen-and-ink drawings, that slim collection
established Burns as a formidable presence in the New York poetry scene
and beyond. Though she didn't publish much more than that, her
witty, sardonic takes on Native stereotypes are still cutting enough to
be taught alongside more famous contemporaries like Sherman Alexie:
I am Tequila Mockingbird. Yes, I am related to Isaiah Mockingbird, and
yes, I am that face in the moon on the cover of the Carson's record
album. And the Marshmallow beer girl, and that's me on every stick
of Land O'Lakes butter… I can trace my lineage back to the
beginning of time when the world was nothing but a scrap of mud on the
tip of a loon's nose.
(from her 1993 essay
"Tequila Mockingbird")
Born in 1956 in Lawrence, Kan., to a Chemehuevi father and an Anishinabe
mother, Burns was raised with her two brothers in Riverside, Cal., where
her parents got work teaching at a Native American boarding school. When
she was about 10 years old, the family moved to the Lac Corte Oreilles
reservation in Hayward, Wis., then on to Wahpeton, N.D., when her
parents began teaching at another boarding school there.
"Even in grade school, she was always writing and drawing,"
recalls Diane's mother, Rose Burns. "In third grade she won the
first-place prize for her poem, `A Pencil Can Travel.'"
Evidently, Diane discovered early on that writing could be a ticket to
elsewhere. She spent her senior year of high school at the American
Indian Art Institute in Santa Fe, N.M., then got a scholarship from
Barnard College, with the aim of becoming a lawyer.
She dropped out of Barnard her senior year — no one remembers why.
Perhaps the life of a poet seemed more enthralling. In a videotaped
interview with Emilio Murillo for his Manhattan cable show, "Earth
Bird," Burns described how she came into her profession somewhat by
accident, when the American Indian Community House called up looking to
book a Native American poet for an event they were hosting.
"I didn't have anything, so I stayed up all night scribbling and
ended up onstage with Audre Lorde," Burns recalled. "I actually
got paid $50. I'm the only poet I know who got into the field for
money," she joked.
Burns moved to the East Village in the late '70s and quickly became
enmeshed in the Downtown arts scene.
"I used to run into Diane all the time on Avenue B back in the day
when I could see, and she was a very attractive lady," recalls Steve
Cannon, the now-blind publisher of A Gathering of the Tribes magazine.
Beyond her striking features, which got Burns work as a model, people
were immediately impressed by the force of her words.
"She was like a fresh wind, the clarity of her work was so
beautiful," says Josh Gosciak, founder of the multicultural poetry
journal "Contact," who was one of the first to publish
Burns's work. "A lot of young Native Americans were coming on
the scene in New York and also breaking into film and publishing. It was
an exciting period. We haven't seen anything like it since."
"It was a total explosion," says Bowery Poetry Club founder Bob
Holman, remembering the first time he heard Burns read in 1980. "All
of us down here thought our scene had everything in the world we needed.
But Diane literally blew the lid off our little place and set it up as a
whole new encampment."
In those days, many poets in the 'hood were earning salaries with
benefits under the federal CETA (Comprehensive Employment and Training
Act) program, which President Reagan immediately canned when he came
into office. Former Cover magazine publisher Jeff Wright remembers
traveling around with Burns as part of a state-funded CETA spinoff
called POET (Poets' Overland Expeditionary Troupe), staging readings
at schools and community centers across New York.
I'm American royalty
Walking around with a hole in my knee
I'm a hopeful aborigine
Trying to find a place to be
Oh East Village, ai yi yi yi yi yi yi.
(from "Alphabet City Serenade")
"She was like an Indian princess living on the Lower East Side,"
says Wright. "She was like the best bad girl that ever lived, and
when she walked around she made everyone else wild. I fell in love with
her immediately, like everyone else. But I was always afraid to get too
close, because of the dark side."
Besides a thirst for liquor, Burns landed a dope habit early on, and
never really shook it. She didn't seem to wrestle with her demons so
much as accommodate them, though her 1981 poem "Booze 'N'
Loozing Blues" hints at the pain she felt inside:
No one can tell you
ahead
of time
What
It's like
To sweat & shake
& cold turkey
and be Afraid
to stay
awake and
Afraid
to
sleep
and
Afraid
to not do
either.
Of course back then it seemed like everyone was high on one thing or
another, and for many years, Burns was the life of the party.
In 1988, she was among a rather illustrious group of writers —
including Allen Ginsberg, Joy Harjo and Pedro Pietri — invited to
Nicaragua to take part in the Ruben Dario Poetry Festival, sponsored by
the Sandinista government. (Poet Tom Savage remembers Burns pulling out
an "enormous gun" on the plane. "It was just amazing to me;
it was so bizarre.")
The Sandinistas revered poetry and welcomed the group like foreign
dignitaries, especially Burns, who Holman recalls was "sort of the
star of our little troupe down there."
"Little did they know what trouble they were getting into,"
Holman laughs. Apparently Burns and Pietri got so soused at the
presidential palace that Pietri interrupted a meeting between the
Sandinista government and the Soviet ambassador to look for his shoes.
They then convinced Minister of Culture Ernesto Cardenal to marry them
and took off honeymooning, much to the dismay of Pietri's wife back
in New York and members of the American Indian Movement, who called up
Holman worried Burns had been kidnapped.
I don't care if you're married I still love you
I don't care if you're married
After the party's over
I will take you home in my One-Eyed Ford
Way yah hi yo, Way yah hi yo!
(from "Big Fun," 1981)
For many years, Burns carried on giving readings at the Nuyorican Poets
Café and hanging out at local bars.
"She was one of the smartest people I ever knew. We met at the
Village Idiot," says Steve Ruona, who lived with Burns from 1991 to
2002 and fathered their daughter, Britta.
Steve Cannon credits her with helping him launch Tribes magazine and
gallery from his ramshackle brownstone on E. Third St.
"When my house burned down in 1990, I was half-blind and didn't
have the money to fix the d**n thing up, so Diane got her husband Steve
to put this house back in order," says Cannon. "She would come
over here through thick and thin, scrambling for money, calling people,
helping me set things up. That's what kept this place going all
those years. The only reason A Gathering of the Tribes exists 15 years
later is because of Diane Burns."
Cannon also kept Burns going, paying her to keep the books even when
others considered her a lost cause. In her latter years as her drinking
worsened and she lost custody of Britta, Diane drifted from couch to
couch, even berthing for a while with the Hare Krishnas on First Ave.
"They've taken me on as a project," she joked to friends.
Burns kept her sense of humor and her pride through it all, and unlike
most folks with bad habits, she never stole.
"Kind," "loving," "modest," "warm but not
effusive," "private," "funny," "not one to be
captured" — these were some of the words people offered up at
the memorial as folks struggled to reconcile Diane's startling
talent and her steadfast presence on the scene with the sorry place she
ended up.
Though she'd complained of excess fluids in recent weeks, friends
say her collapse on Nov. 29 was unexpected. She was taken to Beth Israel
Hospital, where she fell into a coma and died of kidney and liver
failure on Dec. 22.
If her daughter Britta is any measure, her life was far from hopeless.
Britta is now studying acting and has a job performing skits as a teen
advocate for Planned Parenthood three days a week.
Cannon says he's hoping to collect Burns's unpublished writings
into a book — she was supposedly working on a satirical novel about
a Native American beauty queen. Some of her film and poetry reviews can
be found on the Tribes Web site, www.tribes.org.
After she died, her family held a three-day funeral on the reservation
in Wisconsin, with a feast and prayers sung in her tribal tongue.
"You have to stay with the body for the whole time, so on the last
night I played poker with her brothers till 5 a.m.," laughs Ruona.
"I lost $100, but I know Diane would have been happy to know we were
playing poker.
She always wanted people to have a good time."
The Bowery Poetry Club, at 308 Bowery at Bleecker St., is hosting a
"Praise Day" for Diane Burns on Feb. 21 at 6 p.m., with readings
by Joy Harjo and many others.