Sharon Bridgforth is a Black lesbian writer, playwright, performer, and theatrical jazz artist. She was born on May 15, 1958, in Chicago, and raised by her mother in South Central, Los Angeles. After attending Saint Mary's College in Moraga, California from 1975 to 1976, she worked as a radio intern for KPFK 90.7 FM and a production assistant for MGM Studios. In 1982, she gave birth to her daughter, artist Sonja Perryman.
After graduating from California State University, Los Angeles, with a Bachelor's degree in Creative Writing and Broadcast Media in 1985, Bridgforth began working as a family-planning counselor at Planned Parenthood of Santa Monica. In 1989, she moved from Los Angeles to Austin, Texas, where she worked for the Austin/Travis County Health and Human Services Department as a disease intervention specialist, STD tester, counselor, HIV outreach worker, and educator until 1998. From 1993-1995, she also served as director of The Wrap It Up Show, a call-in radio show on KAZI 88.7 FM sponsored by Planned Parenthood of Austin for teenagers to discuss safe sex.
Bridgforth first began writing poetry at the age of fifteen, and continued to develop her style throughout her early career. In 1992, she wrote and directed shadows...that which is cast to the side, a "choreofilm", combining poetry, performance, and video recording; the following year, she wrote and produced sepia's blues, a dramatic video presentation. From 1994 to 1997, she worked as a freelance journalist for the Austin American-Statesman. In 1993, Bridgforth began writing the bull-jean stories, a collection of theatre pieces, poems and short stories which she deemed a "performance novel". She submitted "that beat" for does your mama know?: An Anthology of Black Lesbian Coming Out Stories in 1995, which was published in 1997 by RedBone Press, an independent publisher for Black gay and lesbian writers founded by Lisa C. Moore. That year, Bridgforth's poem "sonata blue" was anthologized in Má-Ka: Diasporic Juks: Contemporary Writing by Queers of African Descent, while excerpts of her work for root wy'mn Theatre Company, lovve/rituals and rage and dyke/warrior-prayers, were featured in KenteCloth: Southwest Voices of the African Diaspora. In 1998, the bull-jean stories was published by RedBone Press to critical acclaim; it won the 1998 Lambda Literary Award for Best Book by a Small Press, and was nominated for the Lambda Literary Award for Best Lesbian Fiction and the American Library Association Award for Best Gay/Lesbian Book. Bridgforth herself was voted the Best Author/Poet in The Austin Chronicle "Best of Austin" Readers Poll for 1999 and 2000.
Bridgforth established the Finding Voice method of creative writing in 1999, which she developed into a workshop series and later expanded into a web radio show on 91.7 KVRX Radio Caracol. In 2002, she helped organize the inaugural Fire and Ink: A Writers Festival for GLBT People of African Descent, the first national conference for Black LGBT writers helmed by Lisa C. Moore. Bridgforth returned to Fire and Ink III: Cotillion as a performer and panelist guest in 2009. In 2003, she co-edited voices for racial justice: eliminating racism, empowering women with Jennifer Margulies as part of the Racial Justice Program of the YWCA of Greater Austin.
love/conjure blues, Bridgforth's second performance novel, was published in 2004 and won an Urban Spectrum Black Book Award. In 2007, she directed the love/conjure blues Text Installation, a multimedia project of short films with live narration and music based on the novel. In 2010, Bridgforth published Experiments in a Jazz Aesthetic: Art, Activism, Academia, and the Austin Project, co-edited with Omi Osun Joni L. Jones and Lisa L. Moore. Bridgforth's writing has additionally been anthologized in Roll Call: A Generational Anthology of Social and Political Black Literature and Art; Spirited: Affirming the Soul and Black Gay/Lesbian Identity; Voices Rising: Celebrating 20 Years of Black Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Writing; First Person Queer: Who We Are (So Far); and solo/black/woman: scripts, interviews, and essays.
Notably, Bridgforth's career in theater and the performing arts began in 1990, when Word of Mouth Women's Theatre adapted her handwritten poems into sonnata blue, a one-woman show starring Starla Benford. In 1992, she wrote Voices in the Dark, a dramatic poem performed by the Voices in the Dark Repertory Theatre Company, an all-Black female company directed by Tommye Myrick. In 1993, Bridgforth founded the root wy'mn Theatre Company, an all-Black female Austin-based theatre troupe that combined poetry, dance, and music into performance pieces centered on the experiences of Black women. Bridgforth served as the company's playwright and artistic director from 1993 to 1998, working with Lori Wilson, the company manager, and frequently collaborating with performer Sonja Parks. root wy'mn toured nationally with lovve/rituals & rage (1993), no mo blues (1995), and dyke/warrior-prayers (1997) from 1993-1998, performing at Frontera@Hyde Park Theatre, the Michigan Womyn's Music Festival, the Out on the Edge Festival of Lesbian and Gay Theater, Randolph Street Gallery, the Urban Institute for Contemporary Arts, and Walker Art Center's Dyke Nite. The company was voted Best Theatre of the South in The Austin Chronicle "Best of Austin" 1996 Critics' Poll. Bridgforth disbanded root wy'mn in 1998 to focus on her writing career.
In 1998, Bridgforth collaborated with Laurie Carlos, international theatre pioneer, who directed blood pudding at Frontera@Hyde Park Theatre. She was awarded a grant from the Theatre Communications Group/National Endowment for the Arts for the 2000 playwright-in-residence award at Frontera@Hyde Park Theatre, where she wrote and produced con flama. That year, she also held workshops at the Esperanza Peace and Justice Center in San Antonio. In 2002, Bridgforth became an anchor artist for the Austin Project, a ten-week program for female scholars, artists, and activists held at the Center for African and African American Studies at the University of Texas at Austin. She was subsequently named artist-in-residence at the Austin Latino Lesbian/Gay Organization (ALLGO), a Texas organization for queer people of color, and was later appointed ALLGO's artist director in 2004. In 2003, she collaborated with her daughter, Sonja Perryman, on amniotic/flow, a spoken-word and music CD.
In 2005, Bridgforth was diagnosed with cervical cancer and underwent a radical hysterectomy. Her next multimedia theater piece, delta dandi, was commissioned by Women and Their Work through a Creation Fund Award granted by the National Performance Network in 2007, and premiered at the Long Center for the Performing Arts in 2009. Bridgforth has been a resident playwright at New Dramatists since 2009. She founded the Theatrical Jazz Institute, which was produced by the Theatre School at DePaul and Links Hall in Chicago from 2011 to 2012. In 2013, she premiered River See, a theatrical jazz performance installation funded as part of the 2012 National Performance Network Creation Fund. Her awards include the 2001 YWCA Woman of the Year in Arts and Communications and the 2008 Alpert/Hedgebrook Residency Prize. She most recently received a 2016 Creative Capital Award to fund dat Black Mermaid Man Lady, a series of interactive community-based events that include oracle readings, performance installations, workshops, processionals, and tiny house building projects.