Award winning playwright, actress, poet Helena D. Lewis is
a passionate performer gifted with keen insight. A slam veteran, Ms. Lewis
was a Nuyorican Poet's Cafe 2000 semi-finalist and member
of the Nuyorican Poets Cafe 2000 National Slam Team, which
placed third at the National Poetry Slam in Providence, Rhode Island.
Ms. Lewis is also a Soul Cafe 2000 finalist, Hottest Poets MTV Networks
2002 finalist, and winner of the Stephen Sondheim Slam Production at
the Public Theater in New York City. Ms. Lewis has performed
at numerous universities and colleges across the country including, Cornell
University, DePauw University, Princeton University, Kansas State University,
Yale University, and has been featured on Good Day New York, NJN
News Network Spoken Word Cafe, 98.7 KISS FM, Suburban Essex, Montclair
Times and can be seen on the Peabody Award winning series, "Russell
Simmons Presents Def Poetry" on HBO. Her one-woman show, "Just
Me," an autobiographical work that chronicles her social
service work with HIV positive prostitutes and male prisoners, debuted
at the 2002 Downtown Urban Theater Festival in New York
and has since been performed at the Roar Theater Festival in
New York, SpokenWorks Theater Festival in New York, Dixon
Place in New York, Rutgers University, Bowery
Poetry Club in New York, Nuyorican Poets Café,
and Luna Stage in Montclair, New Jersey. Her second one-woman
show, "Call Me Crazy," won Best Short at the 2006
Downtown Urban Theater Festival at the legendary Cherry
Lane Theater in New York City. In 2004, after a sold-out performance
of "Just Me" at the Luna Stage,
Ms. Lewis was offered the opportunity to direct and write a series of shows
mixing poetry with stand-up comedy and monologues, which she conceived
and entitled "More Than Words," for the theater's
2005 season of the series, "Phases." Ms. Lewis
most recently worked with Darrin Henson and Vanessa
Williams in "Dreams Do Travel" and
is featured in "Art of Resistance" performing
her poem "Social Service Blues," which was part
of the 2006 Whitney Biennial at the Whitney Museum in
New York City. Ms. Lewis performed at the 2004 National Hip-Hop
Political Conferencealong with Wyclef Jean and
was chosen to perform along with Savion Glover and Reg
E. Gaines at the Nuyorican Poets Cafe 30th Anniversary
on Broadway at Town Hall. She also co-hosted the 2003 and 2005 Midnight
Poetry Jams at the National Black Theater Festival in
North Carolina with Malcolm-Jamal Warner. Ms. Lewis has
performed Off-Broadway in "Snippets: Which
Way To Broadway?" at Primary Stages and
performed and wrote for "Snippets" in Connecticut.
In addition, she has performed at New Jersey Performing Arts Center
(NJPAC) as part of the "Sacred Circle Cafe" in
2005. Ms. Lewis is currently a member of the troupe HerStory,
a multi-cultural cast of female performers that is presently touring the
United States. She can be seen in the Hip-Hop horror movie, "Golddigger
Killer," which won Best Narrative Feature at the Odyssey
Awards, "What Goes Around Comes Around," the
television pilot for "Freshman Seminar" playing
the role of Professor Cassandra Moore, and is a featured artist in "Art
of Love & Struggle: Women in Hip-Hop."
In addition to her career as a preformer, Ms. Lewis is a Certified
Alcohol and Drug Counselor (CADC) and HIV/AIDS Health Educator
who developed, implemented and supervised a drop-in center for drug-addicted
prostitutes for the Community At Risk Reduction (CARR) Program in Newark,
New Jersey. She also spoke at the 2004 New Jersey Woman and AIDS
Network Annual HIV/AIDS Symposium and her work with prostitutes
has been featured on New Jersey News Network. Ms. Lewis
currently works at a Department of Corrections (DOC) Community
Release Program for women and spent three years working on a CDC/HRSA
Correctional Demonstration Project providing prevention case management
to HIV positive male inmates. She also lectures on developing community
based organizations, the dynamics of drug addiction and prostitution and
effective street outreach to individuals at high risk for HIV/AIDS.
