DEBRA FAULK
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CIVIC ARTIST IN RESIDENCY

10/27/2021

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The stand out comedienne, who stands up for you!

7/2/2021

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DEBRA FAULK on WUKY  91.3FM

5/17/2021

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https://www.facebook.com/NANCY-GREEN-Being-Aunt-Jemima-The-Pancake-Queen-Kentucky-Chautauqua-101893057826680
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THE DEBRA FAULK STORY

5/6/2021

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https://madmagz.com/magazine/1883239?fbclid=IwAR0esolxjCOEi7q0O6Lz_LBVaaLNOQ2_ccx4UVf574aLfWULxlMe1D3L2hk#/page/16
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the  Debra  faulk  story

4/7/2021

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A mag created with Madmagz.

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VIRTUAL PERFORMANCES 2021

1/12/2021

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DEBRA F. FAULK portrays NANCY GREEN
in "Being Aunt Jemima - The Pancake Queen"

1834-1923
Script by: BO LIST   Costume by: ROBERT HAVEN
NANCY GREEN became one of the first prosperous African American women in the U.S. Green was born enslaved in Montgomery County, Kentucky, in 1834. While in Kentucky she worked for the Walker family and moved with them to Chicago just after the Great Fire, in 1872. Eight years later, Nancy Green became "Aunt Jemima." Businessman R.T. Davis had purchased a pre-mixed, self-rising recipe for pancakes and wanted an "Aunt Jemima," a character from minstrel shows which were popular at the time, to be the face of his pancakes. "Aunt Jemima" would be a friendly, animated, African American cook who served a wealthy white family. Playing the role of "Aunt Jemima" gave Green financial independence few African Americans and few women experienced at the time. She used her wealth as a means to empower her community. She was particularly active in her church, leading missionary trips, investing in anti-poverty programs for African Americans, and advocating for equal rights. Though her work depended on a derogatory racial stereotype, her financial success demonstrates how black Americans could sometimes play on and use such images to their advantage.
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BE SAFE & SAFE HOME 2020

4/12/2020

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march 6 - 7, 2020

3/5/2020

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MARCH 2 - 3, 2020 @ BIG SANDY COMMUNITY & TECHNICAL COLLEGE

2/24/2020

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BLACK HISTORY MONTH 2020

2/13/2020

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