Philippa schuyler biography definition
Philippa Duke Schuyler was an.!
Schuyler, Philippa Duke (1931–1967)
African-American pianist and composer whose well-known compositions include "Manhattan Nocturne" (1943), "Rhapsody of Youth" (1948), and "Nile Fantasy" (1965). Name variations: Felipa Monterro y Schuyler; Felipa Monterro.
Able to read and write at the age of two and a half, a pianist at four, and a composer by five, Philippa was often compared to Mozart.
Born in 1931 in Harlem, New York; died on May 9, 1967, in a helicopter crash in Vietnam; daughter of Josephine "Jody" Cogdell Schuyler (an artist and writer who used maiden name Josephine Cogdell) and George Schuyler (a journalist); privately educated in New York.
Selected writings:
Adventures in Black and White (1960); Who Killed the Congo?
(1962); Jungle Saints (1963); (with Josephine Cogdell) Kingdom of Dreams (1966); a fifth book, Good Men Die, was published posthumously (1968).
Philippa Schuyler was born in Harlem in 1931 to interracial parents who were convinced that their differing racial backgrounds would produce an extraordinary child.
Josephine Cogdell , a white writer, and George Schuyler, a promin