
Lance David Henson
2004
Lance
David Henson’s career as a poet began at Oklahoma College of Liberal
Arts when he published his first book, “Keeper of Arrows,” in 1971
while a student. He is now a poet with an international reputation
having published 17 books of poetry, half in the U.S. and half abroad.
His poetry has been translated into 25 languages and he has read and
lectured in nine countries.
On
Oct. 16, 2004, Henson was named to the Alumni Hall of Fame at the
University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma in Chickasha.
“I am pleased to be included in the Hall of Fame. USAO was an
enthralling experience for me. My first book, “Keeper of the
Arrows,” was published there when I was a sophomore. That book began
my career.”
Born in Washington, D.C. in 1944, he is Cheyenne, Oglala and
French. He was reared on a farm near Calumet, Oklahoma, by his great
aunt and uncle, Bertha and Bob Cook. His great uncle was the
groundskeeper for Chapter One of the Native American Church of Oklahoma.
Lance was the last of five boys reared by this couple. He grew up living
the Southern Cheyenne culture.
He served in the U.S. Marine Corps after high school during the
Vietnam War. After his graduation from USAO in 1972, he earned a MFA in
creative writing from the University of Tulsa. His attendance was
supported by a Ford Foundation Fellowship.
After 10 years of conducting poetry workshops through the Artist
in Residence program of the State Arts Council of Oklahoma, Lance began
to travel, working both in the U.S. and in Europe.
His readings include the One World Poetry Festival in Amsterdam,
the International Poetry Festival in Tarascon, France, and the Geraldine
Dodge Poetry Festival in New Jersey. He has co-written two plays, one of
which, “Winter Man,” had a successful run at the La MaMa
Experimental Theatre Company. His play, “Coyote Road,” played to
sell out audiences in Versailles, France in December 2001. A new remix
of a jazz and poetry CD titled “Another Train Ride” (1999) has
appeared in collaboration with Brian Eno, titled “The Wolf and the
Moon” (2001).
Lance represented the United States Information Service as a
Featured Lecturer in Singapore, Thailand, New Guinea and New Zealand in
1993. He has also represented the Southern Cheyenne Nation at the
European Free Alliance in Leeuwarden, Netherlands and at the United
States Indigenous Peoples Conference in Geneva in 1988. He returned to
speak at another conference there in 1997.
Awards include a residency in 1995 at the Millay Colony for the
Arts; poet-in-residence at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque,
1993; in residence at the Mad River Theater in West Liberty, Ohio, where
the play “Coyote Road,” co-authored with Jeff Hooper, was performed.
Two of his books, “Cheyenne Sketchbook” and “Another Distance”
were among the five poetry finalists in the 1992 Oklahoma Book Awards
sponsored by the Oklahoma Center for the Book.
His literary project, “Words From The Edge,” has been funded
again for a spring 2005 tour. He also has speaker status as an NGO at
the UN, Geneva.
Lance is a member of the Cheyenne Dog Soldier Society, the Native
American Church and the American Indian Movement (AIM). He has
participated in Cheyenne Sun Dance on several occasions as both dancer
and painter.