A'Lelia Bundles on A'Lelia Walker, with Eric K. Washington
Schedule
Tue Sep 09 2025 at 06:30 pm to 07:30 pm
UTC-04:00Location
the Segal Theatre | New York, NY

About this Event
Dubbed the “joy goddess of Harlem’s 1920s” by poet Langston Hughes, A’Lelia Walker, daughter of millionaire entrepreneur Madam C.J. Walker and the author’s great-grandmother and namesake, is a fascinating figure whose legendary parties and Dark Tower salon helped define the Harlem Renaissance. After inheriting her mother’s hair care enterprise, A’Lelia would become America’s first high profile black heiress and a prominent patron of the arts. Joy Goddess takes readers inside her three New York homes—a mansion, a townhouse, and a pied-a-terre—where she entertained Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Paul Robeson, Florence Mills, James Weldon Johnson, Carl Van Vechten, W.E.B. DuBois, and other cultural, social and intellectual luminaries of the Roaring Twenties.
A’Lelia Bundles is the author of five books, including On Her Own Ground: The Life and Times of Madam C.J. Walker, a New York Times Notable Book about her entrepreneurial great-great-grandmother, is the fact-based biography that inspired Self Made, a fictional four-part Netflix series starring Octavia Spencer. A'Lelia is a board member of the March On! Festival, the Schlesinger Library on the History of Women at Harvard Radcliffe Institute, BIO (Biographers International), Columbia Global Reports and the National Archives Foundation. She founded the Madam Walker Family Archives, the largest private collection of Walker ephemera, photographs and correspondence. A’Lelia was a network television producer for thirty years, first at NBC News and then at ABC News, where she was Washington, DC deputy bureau chief and director of talent development.
Eric K. Washington was a Leon Levy Biography Fellow in 2015-16, when he worked on his book, Boss of the Grips: The Life of James H. Williams and the Red Caps of Grand Central Terminal (Liveright, 2019), which was lauded as “an illuminating chronicle” (Edward Kosner, WSJ) that invoked “a fitting exemplar of Harlem’s ambitious Black middle class” (PW). His book won Columbia University’s Herbert H. Lehman Prize for Distinguished Scholarship of New York History, the Guides Association of New York City’s GANYC Apple Award and special recognition from the Municipal Art Society of New York’s Brendan Gill Prize committee. He is a board member of the Biographers International Organization (BIO), and chairs its annual Frances "Frank" Rollin Fellowship, awarded for a biography-in-progress on an African American figure.
Where is it happening?
the Segal Theatre, 365 5th Avenue, New York, United StatesEvent Location & Nearby Stays:
USD 0.00
