Baltimore Sun Sunday

Oprah Winfrey’s career in the spotlight

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check used to pay for a visit to a New York salon to straighten her hair the same year (at the suggestion of her managers) is also featured in the display case near a head shot of Winfrey, who was sporting a natural afro. On the check, she sums up the disastrous experience in three words: “Hair fell out.”

After a year as a news anchor, she began co-hosting “People Are Talking” with Richard Sher in 1978, commemorat­ed in the exhibit with a “People are Talking” tote bag and a contract Winfrey signed in 1980 to begin her new job. WJZ offered her $75,000 to $95,000 for her new position, with the opportunit­y for more should the show be syndicated. A video installati­on in the exhibit shows clips from her time on the TV show.

A commenceme­nt speech Winfrey delivered at Goucher College in 1981 is also featured in a museum display case. Winfrey boldly titled it “THE FEMALE FACTOR/ POWER AND POWERLESS,” which begins by discussing how intimidate­d she was about speaking at the college, but later ramps up to female empowermen­t, according to curators.

A beauty-makeover feature on Winfrey from a January 1982 issue of the Sun Magazine also makes an appearance. A couple of years later, Winfrey would move to Chicago, where she would host “AM Chicago,” which catapulted her into her 25-year reign as host of “The Oprah Winfrey Show.”

Memorabili­a from “AM Chicago,” later renamed “The Oprah Winfrey Show,” include a journal entry from Winfrey, describing her wonderment and feeling of greater purpose just hours before it become nationally syndicated. she wrote. “...

Lonnie G. Bunch III, the museum’s founding director; Rhea L. Combs, the museum’s curator of photograph­y and film; and the museum’s exhibition­s curator, Kathleen M. Kendrick, said it was their hope to capture Winfrey’s goal of greater purpose in the exhibit. The trio worked with scholars from various discipline­s to shape the exhibit to depict Winfrey’s history of speaking candidly about women and race; her experience­s with sexual abuse, weight gain and body image; and the evolution from TV host to media mogul and pop culture icon.

Winfrey donated at least $13 million to the museum, which also has a theater named after her, but Bunch said curators were adamant about maintainin­g the exhibit as the museum’s project.

"We drew a very hard, bright line to say that this was not a show done for Oprah [or] done by Oprah. It's a show which wrestles with broader questions," he said, adding that Winfrey would likely see the exhibit for the first time before the opening.

Highlights of “The Oprah Winfrey Show” section of the exhibit include an awe-worthy wall, filled with the 4,561 titles of every show Winfrey recorded over 25 years; original set furniture said to have seated nearly 400 guests; and the nostalgia-inducing highlight reel, including reactions to the O.J. Simpson verdict, Winfrey’s introducti­on of her “steady boyfriend” Stedman Graham, a memorable duet with musical icon Tina Turner, the introducti­on to Oprah’s book club, and Winfrey’s visit to New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

Other must-see items include Winfrey’s desk at Harpo Studios, Emmy awards and picks from her closet over the years, including the black Versace gown she wore to the Golden Globes earlier this year as the first black woman to accept the Cecil B. DeMille Award, which is also featured in the museum.

Toward the end, the exhibit looks at Winfrey’s influence and impact on pop culture, a realm where, as the actress Reese Witherspoo­n once put it, her name alone can be used as a verb, an adjective and a feeling.

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