User:Sydstewart

Syd Stewart is an American born published performance poet, actor and writer. A winner of various poetry slams and competitions, was featured in the Langston Hughes documentary called Hughes’ Dream Harlem, which aired on the cable networks BLACKSTARZ, was a featured poet on BET’s Lyric Café and starred in a feature film called “Everyday People” which premiered at the Sundance Film festival, the prestigious New Director’s Film Festival at Lincoln Center and aired on HBO.

Stewart has performed her poetry on New York’s WBLS and WBAI, on Miami’s Hot 105.1, on Virginia’s 103 Jams, at Medgar Evers College, Wiley College, BMCC, NYU, Adelphi University, Columbia University, CAM, Lehigh University, Harlem Book Fair, Rush Arts/The Corridor Gallery, at Atlanta’s Black Expo and The National Black Arts Festival where she performed a tribute to Dr. Maya Angelou and Cicely Tyson. After her performance, Dr. Angelou was in tears and speechless. Sydnee has performed on stage with hip hop artists Amir from The Roots and has Amel Larreux. She was the producer and curator for “Harlem Is…at The Museum of The City of New York and “Rhyme, Rhythm, Griots and Song” a teen poetry jam at Pace University. performed with her live band alongside Sonia Sanchez, Ursula Rucker and Vernon Reid for DEF Poetry at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. She regularly performs in Los Angeles.

Stewart, a member of the esteemed service oriented sorority, Delta Sigma Theta, is the Founder and Executive Director of a non-profit organization called Better Youth, Inc. (www.betteryouth.org), which uses poetry and the arts to inspire young people with self-esteem and self-confidence. Better Youth has worked with the NYC Housing Authority to offer film and music after-school workshops to teens and children and with The Ronald MacDonald House in NYC. Better Youth is also a Community Partner with R&B sensation Usher and his Camp New Look and New Look Foundation. Better Youth facilitates literary and film workshops in Watts, California.

At present, Stewart is completing her second book of prose and poetry with an accompanying musical poetry album; has been featured in The New York Times, Variety, Jane and People Magazines, She has published works in the following publications: African Voices, Rolling Out, QBR Magazine, The Lasting Joy (1998), America at the Millennium (2000), Signifyin’ Harlem (2002/2003), and Under a Quicksilver Moon