Rita Coburn
Award-Winning Director, Writer, and Producer
CMG Speaks presents Rita Coburn
Rita Coburn
Award-Winning Director, Writer, and Producer
"Never let an offense get in the way of a great opportunity."
- Tammie Jo Shults
Social Media
About Rita Coburn
Rita Coburn is a Peabody and Emmy Award-Winning Director, Writer, and Producer of radio, television, and film. Beginning her career as a producer and writer for various news outlets across the U.S., Coburn went on to produce for the likes of The Oprah Winfrey Show, Oprah Radio, Apollo Live!, and Walt Disney Productions. In 2016, “Maya Angelou: And Still I Rise,” which was co-directed and co-produced by Coburn, premiered at the 2016 Sundance Festival and went on to win a Peabody Award in 2017. Coburn directed “Marian Anderson: The Whole World in Her Hands,” which premiered nationwide on February 8 2022 on PBS American Masters.
Coburn’s value is such that she bridges the gap between generations and preserves African-American history. Through her work, she uniquely addresses topics from a multi-generational lens with a passion for impacting others through the untold stories of prominent figures and key ideals relevant to African-American culture.
Speaking Topics
- How African American narratives resonate across continents, genres, and disciplines.
- Example: W.E.B. Du Bois is well known for his scholarly works, but he also wrote Dark Princess, blending romance, political intrigue, and Pan-Africanist ideals.
- Rita Coburn’s range of content spans literature, biography, documentary, and oral history.
- Ideal for: Academic conferences, literary festivals, arts and culture events, international forums.
- Keynote on resilience, leadership, and cultural impact.
- Explores strategies for overcoming obstacles and building enduring influence.
- Perfect for: Women’s Month, Black History Month, Corporate Women’s Leadership Programs, Women’s Organizations.
- Also aligns with events: African American Music Appreciation Month, Juneteenth Celebrations, Literary or Book Festivals, National Poetry Month, and other arts and culture celebrations.
- Leverages experience interviewing authors and translating life stories into visual narrative.
- Includes insights from work with Toni Morrison, Amy Tan, Maya Angelou, and others.
- Ideal for: Academic conferences, media workshops, arts organizations.
- Explores how art, literature, and film illuminate history, inspire activism, and drive social change.
- Examines the responsibility of artists to challenge societal norms, provoke dialogue, and amplify marginalized voices.
- Examples: Maya Angelou’s poetry, contemporary hip-hop, African American literature.
- Ideal for: Cultural institutions, social justice forums, educational conferences, arts organizations.
- Lessons in leading creative and administrative teams from “Good to Great,” sustaining long-term projects, and navigating cross-cultural environments.
- Draws on international experiences in Cape Town, France, Columbia University, and other global settings.
- Ideal for: Nonprofits, media companies, corporate leadership programs, international workshops.
- Rita’s story of sustaining a 40-year career across industries, adapting to change, and balancing art with leadership.
- Highlights strategies for maintaining authenticity, focus, and perseverance in high-pressure creative fields.
- Ideal for: Arts organizations, corporate leadership programs, professional development events.
- Focuses on intergenerational mentorship and collaboration.
- Combines lessons from teaching, master classes, and mentorship experiences with figures like Dr. Maya Angelou.
- Explores how different age groups can work together with humility, openness, and shared purpose.
- Ideal for: Educational institutions, arts organizations, corporate programs promoting mentorship or diversity.
- Explores what makes someone an icon and how ordinary people live extraordinary lives.
- Draws on the lives of Maya Angelou, Oprah Winfrey, and other cultural figures.
- Highlights universal principles of purpose, perseverance, and authenticity.
- Ideal for: Leadership conferences, women’s programs, public speaking engagements focused on influence, legacy, and cultural impact.
Press Videos
Works by Rita Coburn
Meant to Be
In a novel reminiscent of the work of Maya Angelou and Ntozake Shange, Rita Coburn Whack tells the story of how a young woman’s spiritual awakening leads her to maturity and self-fulfillment.
In a novel reminiscent of the work of Maya Angelou and Ntozake Shange, Rita Coburn Whack tells the story of how a young woman’s spiritual awakening leads her to maturity and self-fulfillment.
When Meant to Be opens, thirteen-year-old Patience Jan Campbell is called upon to read and interpret her favorite scripture for the church congregation: “I think this scripture means that children know every shut eye ain’t sleep and every head bowed ain’t praying, so grown-ups ain’t fooling us or God. . . . So nobody should hold a child back from God just ’cause they may be having trouble finding Him.”
But a traumatic experience causes Jan to stumble and lose her “voice.” Unable to turn to those around her, she calls for her grandmother Hannah—who died before Jan was born—in prayer. Unbeknownst to Jan, Hannah does come, and through her wise eyes we follow Jan into her early twenties as she moves to the big city, goes to college, and begins a career. A reflective father, a misunderstood mother, a sage aunt, and two pivotal lovers all build emotional bridges that help Jan progress on her journey to womanhood.