Odie Hawkins has a every day ritual, befitting the writer of 38 novels, quite a few brief story collections and essays, and groundbreaking scripts for tv, movie, and radio.
“It’s an outdated factor I began doing … I neglect when,” says Hawkins, 87. “After I begin my time without work and my toes hit the ground, I clap my palms and name out loud, ‘Showtime!’”
“I get to have the first-row seat, all day lengthy,” says Zola Salena-Hawkins, his spouse of 27 years. “I by no means know what the day can be.”

“We all know it’s not going to be abnormal,” chimes in her husband.
With settings starting from the quadroon balls of 18th Century New Orleans to an account of literary Blaxploitation by a fictional publishing home, Hawkins’ works are removed from abnormal in any style. He was not too long ago honored for lifetime achievement – to this point – celebrating his work in nurturing Los Angeles writers and different contributions to the neighborhood on Could 31 on the AC Bilbrew Library. The occasion was hosted by the Bilbrew Writers’ Workshop and the Mates of AC Bilbrew Library, and Hawkins was awarded a proclamation from Supervisor Holly Mitchell.

A local of Chicago, Hawkins was one of many authentic members of the Watts Writers Workshop, based within the wake of the Watts Rebel in 1965 by Hollywood screenwriter Budd Schulberg. Hawkins was additionally a member of the Open Door Program that was created by the Writers Guild.

of America, West, Inc. Outstanding writers and screenwriters of the time, together with Louise Meriwether, John W. Bloch, Robert Lewin, Harlan Ellison, and Schulberg, served as instructors.
Hawkins’ first novel, “Ghetto Sketches,” was printed in 1972 and has turn out to be required studying at two universities. He takes satisfaction in being the originator of the Pan-African Occult style represented in his books, “The Snake, 20/20,” “Shackles Throughout Time,” and “The Snake Physician.”

Hawkins’ literary journey for the final six many years has included paying it ahead, educating inventive writing to highschool college students and adults, in addition to to inmates on the California Establishment for Males in Chino and San Quentin, in addition to the Bilbrew Writers’ Workshop, which he established in 2013.
Charles Chatmon, director of the Bilbrew Writers Workshop, says that the group is a “religious relative” of the Watts Writers Workshop. Their first anthology, “Wanting Again… Tales of Resilience” (https://bit.ly/4dIUzQt ) consists of tales by Hawkins and Salena-Hawkins.

“We’re attempting to assist other people in the neighborhood who wish to be writers,” says Chatmon, a journalist and novelist who leads workshops on getting printed. “We’re actually glad that Odie is our inspirational chief as a result of he has finished a lot in his lengthy profession. Odie’s story will assist encourage you to be the most effective.”
In 1980, Hawkins collaborated with “Roots” creator Alex Haley to co-write the teleplay, “The Older Sister,” an episode of Haley and Norman Lear’s sequence, “Palmerstown, U.S.A.” The episode went on to win an award from the NAACP. Within the late Seventies, Hawkins additionally wrote 50 scripts for this system, “Sears Radio Theatre,” and has been concerned in a number of tv and movie tasks in Ghana.
Hawkins and Salena-Hawkins are each licensed tai chi instructors on the Watts Towers Arts Middle and a number of other areas of their hometown of Lengthy Seaside. The couple have additionally created a YouTube sequence, “Moments in Time with Odie and Zola,” (https://bit.ly/4jytdO9) sharing their upbeat commentary on a wide range of topics, together with Odie’s works, literature, and tradition.
Hawkins additionally performs 11 devices, together with conga drums and the berimbau, a standard Angolan stringed instrument used within the Afro-Brazilian martial artwork of capoeira, of which he’s an teacher.
Hawkins is grateful for the steering of three aunts who raised him instead of his teenaged mom and father, a thief whom he credit for holding him out of jail, regardless of the techniques previous and current that disproportionately incarcerate individuals of colour.
“He stored me out of jail by telling me, ‘Do something you wish to, however don’t get caught,’” remembers Hawkins. “I went to [teach in] San Quentin and it was like going to Harlem [or] Africa. All of the individuals within the jail are Black and Brown individuals.
“Aunt Mary, Aunt Bessie, and Aunt Mamie, have been the individuals who educated me about what I needed to know as a younger Black man rising up in America – ‘Watch out, as a result of the police have carte blanche to shoot you.’ They have been the individuals who helped me to outlive.”
Hawkins considers his highschool years as the start of his skilled writing profession.
“In 1952, that’s eons away… for those who wished to speak to [a] younger woman, you’d drop her a romantic observe,” he says.
“A good friend of mine wished to fulfill [a girl], and stated, ‘I can’t write, what do I do?’ I stated, ‘I’ll write you a observe for her.’ He stated to me, ‘How a lot do you cost?’ I stated, ‘A greenback.’ I wrote the abnormal for a greenback; the extraordinary for 2 {dollars}; the exotique for 3 {dollars}; and the outrageous for 4 {dollars}.”
Hawkins’ newest mission is what he calls an autobiographical and biographical “collage,” with the working title of “Outdated.” The e book will deal with his personal bodily limitations and accidents – which he has efficiently stored at bay with an energetic way of life – the perceptions of getting older across the globe, and the American fixation with youth. Hawkins attributes his youthful ambition and longevity to his prolific profession and deep connections to the neighborhood by way of health, music, and artwork.
“You don’t have time to consider how outdated you might be till someone says, ‘lifetime achievement,’” he quips.
For a video highlighting the life and work of Odie Hawkins, go to https://bit.ly/4kOdbRC