Hon. Derek Alton Walcott
Hon Derek Alton Walcott Print E-mail
Written by Margot Thomas   

 

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Derek Alton Walcott won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1992, the first individual from the English-speaking Caribbean to do so. His prize winning book (poem) Omeros - published in 1990 - tipped the scales in his favour.

Born at Castries, Saint Lucia on 23^rd January 1930 to Alix and Warwick Walcott he is the twin brother of Roderick Alden Walcott who is also a dramatist and writer. He has one older sister Pamela Walcott St. Hill. His mother was a school teacher and his father a civil servant and they belonged to the Methodist denomination.

Derek attended the Methodist Infant School and was awarded a Government Scholarship to St. Mary’s College when he was eleven years old. While at the college he was awarded a Silver Cup for Literature and went on to become the first Saint Lucian to be awarded a CD&W Scholarship to the University College of the West Indies in 1945.

He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree from Mona, Jamaica. When the Federation of the West Indies was inaugurated in Trinidad, it was Derek’s historical play Drums and Colors which was the highlight of the Festival of Arts in Port-of-Spain.

He went on to set up the Trinidad Theatre Workshop in Port-of-Spain and was able to produce his plays such as Dream on Monkey Mountain, Henri Christophe and The Joker of Seville.

In 1957 he was awarded a fellowship by the Rockefeller Foundation to study theatre in the United States. In 1970 he received a Commonwealth Fellowship to the Leeds University for six months and later that year a fellowship grant from the Andrew Wood Foundation to continue theatre work in Trinidad followed.

In 1972 he was awarded the Queen’s OBE for Literature and in 1973 was the first graduate of the University College of the West Indies to be awarded an Honorary Degree of Doctor of Letters.

Through the years he has received a number of awards for his work such as the Pegasus Award for Poetry, the Guinness Award for Poetry, the Hummingbird Gold Medal from Dr. Eric Williams and the Cholmondeley Prize for Poetry. He has also been short-listed as one of the persons recommended to be Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom on more than one occasion.

Walcott is truly a Caribbean man and attributes his success to his mother who was an amateur dramatist, his father who was an amateur artist, his mentor Harold Simmons who helped him with his painting and writing, his years in the St. Lucia Arts Guild which he helped to establish, the beauty of the flora and fauna of his homeland and his strong Protestant background.

After teaching at Boston University for a number of years, he has retired to his beautiful homeland of Saint Lucia where he continues to paint and write. In April 2010 he published his latest book of poems, White Egrets.