Diana Cavallo (1931-2017) was an American novelist, educator, playwright, and performer.
Diana Cavallo | |
---|---|
Born | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. | November 3, 1931
Died | June 17, 2017 Springfield, Pennsylvania, U.S. | (aged 85)
Education | University of Pennsylvania |
Spouse | Karl Hagedorn (1922–2005) |
Biography
editEarly life and education
editCavallo was born in Philadelphia in 1931, the daughter of Genuino and Josephine (Petraca) Cavallo. She grew up in an Italian neighborhood of South Philadelphia, where she attended public schools. Her grandparents, who lived with the family, spoke the Abruzzese dialect; Cavallo learned Italian from them, and later based two characters in her first novel on them.[1] As a teenager, she moved with her family to Upper Darby Township, Pennsylvania. She attended the University of Pennsylvania and spent time in Florence, Italy, as a Fulbright scholar.[2] She was a member of the Phi Beta Kappa Society.[1]
Career
editAfter graduation, Cavallo worked for a year at the Philadelphia State Hospital as a psychiatric social worker; this experience provided the background for her first novel, A Bridge of Leaves (1961). Written in New Hampshire on a MacDowell Colony fellowship, the novel depicts a young man's rite of passage to adulthood. She published a nonfiction book, The Lower East Side: A Portrait in Time, in 1971. Her short stories and other writings have appeared in a variety of journals and anthologies, including Helen Barolini's The Dream Book: An Anthology of Writings by Italian American Women (1985).[1]
After teaching in public schools in Philadelphia and Clifton, New Jersey, and at a private school in Brooklyn, New York, Cavallo taught creative writing at Drexel University and Queens College. From 1969 to 1973, she taught literature and creative writing at the University of Pisa as a Fulbright teaching fellow.[3] Starting in 1980, she taught creative writing at the University of Pennsylvania.[1]
Cavallo wrote fictionalized essays about the neighborhood where she grew up, and performed them as monologues on stages in South Philadelphia.[2] Her one-act play, Family Album, won a competition held by the Ethical Humanist Society of Philadelphia in 2011 and was performed there to a large audience; the play is about two sisters who become involved in controversy after one of them writes a book about their father's suicide.[4]
Personal life
editCavallo was married to the German-American artist Karl Hagedorn (1922–2005). She died in Springfield, Pennsylvania, on June 17, 2017.[2]
References
edit- ^ a b c d Bona, Mary Jo (2005). "Cavallo, Diana". In Nelson, Emmanuel Sampath (ed.). The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Multiethnic American Literature: A-C. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 403–404. ISBN 9780313330605.
- ^ a b c "Diana Cavallo Obituary". Philly.com. July 10, 2017. Archived from the original on October 5, 2017. Retrieved October 5, 2017.
- ^ Barolini, Helen (1985). "Diana Cavallo". The Dream Book: An Anthology of Writings by Italian American Women. New York: Schocken Books. pp. 180–186. ISBN 0-8052-3972-3.
- ^ "Third Annual One-Act Play Contest 2013". Ethical Humanist Society of Philadelphia. January 25, 2013.
Further reading
edit- Bona, Mary Jo (1999). "Remembering Their Names: The Developmental Journeys in Diana Cavallo's A Bridge of Leaves and Dorothy Bryant's Miss Giardino". Claiming a Tradition: Italian American Women Writers. SIU Press. pp. 93–125. ISBN 9780809322589.
- Cavallo, Diana (1999). "The Transformation of Experience in the Writing of Fiction". In Boelhower, William Q.; Pallone, Rocco (eds.). Adjusting Sites: New Essays in Italian American Studies. New York: Forum Italicum. pp. 267–273. ISBN 9781893127166.
External links
editDiana Cavallo in libraries (WorldCat catalog)