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Buddy Wakefield (born June 4, 1974) is an American spoken word artist, a three-time poetry slam world champion,[1][2] and the most toured performance poet in history.[3] His works have been released by Strange Famous Records (CD), Righteous Babe Records (CD), and Write Bloody Publishing (books). He has lived in Sanborn, New York; Baytown, Texas; Seattle, Washington; and Los Angeles, California.

2009 Elephant Engine High Dive Revival Tour
2009 Elephant Engine High Dive Revival Tour
Buddy Wakefield
BornKenneth Zane Beasley III
(1974-06-04) June 4, 1974 (age 48)
Shreveport, Louisiana
OccupationSpoken Word Performer, Poet, Producer, Actor, Screenwriter, Recording Artist
GenrePoetry
Literary movementPoetry Slam
Years active1998-present
Notable worksA Choir of Honest Killers, Gentleman Practice, Stunt Water, Run on Anything, Live at the Typer Cannon Grand
Website
buddywakefield.com

Biography


Buddy Wakefield (born Kenneth Zane Beasley III) was born in Shreveport, Louisiana,[4] then raised in Sanborn, New York and Baytown, Texas. He was adopted by a stepfather in 1980 and became Buddy Marshall Stevens. After eighteen years of no contact, Buddy chose his own legal last name, Wakefield, from the Weezer song My Name is Jonas, thinking that the second half of the song began "My name is Wakefield. I've got a box full of your toys." He later discovered that Weezer's Rivers Cuomo was not saying Wakefield, but rather Wepeel, the name of Cuomo's sled from childhood.

In 2001, Buddy left his position as executive assistant at a biomedical firm[5] in Gig Harbor, Washington, sold or gave away everything he owned, and moved into a Honda Civic to tour North American poetry venues.[6]

In 2004, and again in 2005, he won the Individual World Poetry Slam Championship title,[7] thanks to the support of anthropologist and producer Norman Lear. He was a member of several slam teams, including Team Long Beach in 2002, and Team Seattle in 2006 and 2007. Having not competed in poetry slam since 2008, he has gone on to build a significant following, and still considers performance poetry to be his day job while living in Los Angeles, and Porto, Portugal, pursuing acting and screenwriting for both television and film.

In addition to touring the world solo for two decades, Wakefield has also toured, performed with, headlined and opened for hip-hop, folk, and rock acts worldwide. As well, he was a core member of The Poetry Revival (2007-2010) with poets Derrick Brown, Anis Mojgani, Andrea Gibson and Cristin O'Keefe Aptowicz.[8] As of 2019, Wakefield has performed in every state in the U.S. except North Dakota, on purpose, as a nod to his most streamed single, "Convenience Stores."

In 2020, Wakefield founded Awful Good Writers and produced Heavy Hitters Festival, a summer-long series of online performances and workshops with a lineup boasting 40+ of the most beloved living spoken word artists, including Saul Williams, Mary Lambert, Sarah Kay, Beau Sia, Rudy Francisco, Sonya Renee Taylor, Sage Francis and others.


Poetry, Performance, Books and Records


Wakefield was the first author released on Write Bloody Publishing after its founder, Derrick C. Brown. He published five subsequent books with Write Bloody Publishing:[9] Some They Can't Contain (2004, originally The Wordsmith Press; reissued by Write Bloody Publishing), Live for a Living (2007, Write Bloody Publishing)[10], Gentleman Practice (2011, Write Bloody Publishing), Stunt Water: The Buddy Wakefield Reader 1991-2011 (2015, Write Bloody Publishing), and A Choir of Honest Killers (October 15, 2019, Write Bloody Publishing).

Wakefield also wrote and published a comical reference book with Stephen Snook, for backyard chicken keeping in urban and suburban environments: HENHOUSE: The International Book for Chickens and Their Lovers (2012, Write Bloody Publishing) ISBN 978-1-938912-05-4

Wakefield has released three full-length spoken word albums with best friend and producer Jon Berardi: A Stretch of Presence (1999) (co-produced with Levi Lyman), Run On Anything (2006) which was released by Strange Famous Records,[11] and Live at the Typer Cannon Grand (2009) which was released by Ani DiFranco's Righteous Babe Records.[12] DiFranco first became aware of Wakefield when her mother saw him perform at an art gallery in Buffalo, New York, and gave DiFranco a print out of Wakefield's website, saying, "You have to do something with this guy."[5] The album contains recordings of live performances, including several from Wakefield's numerous tours opening for DiFranco, as well as one studio-produced track.

On January 31, 2021 all contracts with Write Bloody expired, making Wakefield the sole owner of his entire body of work.


Influence


Though he has not competed in Poetry Slam since 2008, Wakefield has had a profound impact on the contemporary Poetry Slam movement, both in his performance and writing style, as well as how he has conducted his career. In her book, Words in Your Face: A Guided Tour Through Twenty Years of the New York City Poetry Slam, New York Times-bestselling author Cristin O'Keefe Aptowicz named Wakefield as "the modern poetry slam role model." She wrote,

...[Wakefield] sold everything he owned and toured the country, living out of his car when he wasn't crashing on couches. He was not the first slam poet to do this and certainly not the last, but he was definitely the most high-profile, and he really set the stage for what I like to call the "Troubadour Movement" in slam, the whole desire simply to tour, to reach out and be with your community.[13]


Discography



Bibliography



Anthologies



References


  1. Poetry Slam Inc. Website Announce of Wakefield's Repeat iWPS Championship Archived April 26, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  2. "2nd Poetry World Slampionship". www.rinibiemans.nl. Retrieved 2019-03-17.
  3. "Buddy Wakefield | Tour History". buddywakefield.com. Retrieved 2019-09-17. [verification needed]
  4. Artist Interview with Buddy Wakefield: Fine Line Magazine
  5. admin. "The Energy Engine of Buddy Wakefield: Arguably the Most Successful Spoken Word Poet on the Road – Splinter Generation". Archived from the original on 2016-03-22. Retrieved 2019-03-17.
  6. Official Buddy Wakefield Biography[permanent dead link]
  7. Individual World Poetry Slam
  8. Poetry Revival Tour Website
  9. Publishing, Write Bloody. "Write Bloody Publishing". Write Bloody Publishing. Retrieved 2019-09-17.
  10. Write Bloody Publishing website
  11. Three tracks from Run on Anything published in The Pedestal Magazine Archived April 26, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  12. Page on Righteous Babe Records website Archived November 1, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  13. Aptowicz, Cristin O'Keefe. (2008). Words in Your Face: A Guided Tour Through Twenty Years of the New York City Poetry Slam. Soft Skull Press. Page 354. ISBN 1-933368-82-9.





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