Birth Date: | 15 October 1974 |
Birth Place: | Toronto, Ontario |
Occupation: | Spoken word artist, motivational speaker |
Years Active: | 1993 - present |
Education: | Dr Norman Bethune Collegiate InstituteMacklin Public School |
Party: | New Democratic Party |
Dwayne Morgan is a Canadian spoken word artist, motivational speaker and event organizer based in Toronto, Ontario.
Morgan began his career as a spoken word artist in 1993.[1] He is the founder of Up From The Roots Entertainment, which was established in 1994 to promote the positive artistic contributions of African Canadian and urban influenced artists. He received both the African Canadian Achievement Award for Youth Achievement, and the Harry Jerome Award for Excellence in the Arts in 1998.[2] Morgan has self-published two chapbooks and three full volumes of his poetry.
As a producer, Morgan has now produced over 100 events, the largest of which are the annual spoken word concerts When Brothers Speak, When Sisters Speak, and the Toronto International Poetry Slam. When Brothers Speak was established in 1999, and has retained its status as North America’s largest and longest-running showcase for black male spoken word artists. The event serves as a platform to celebrate the voices, stories, talents, and experiences of Black male spoken word artists.[3] When Sisters Speak, founded in 2000 is North America’s largest and longest-running showcase of Black, female, spoken word artists.[4]
Morgan collaborated with Driftwood Studios to film Three Knocks, a ten-minute film based on his domestic violence poem of the same name, which premiered at the 2006 Reel World Film Festival in Toronto.
He was a member of the 2007 Toronto Slam Team formed by Up From The Roots. The team finished second at the 2007 Canadian Festival of Spoken Word in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Morgan was the host of Diasporic Music, a monthly spoken word show on CKLN-FM, and is an advice columnist in the free daily paper, 24 Hours, in Toronto. He is also a Toronto regional representative on the board of directors for Spoken Word Canada, and is an active member of the Spoken Word Arts Network (SWAN).
Morgan was inducted into the Scarborough Hall of Fame in 2013.[5]
Morgan was nominated as the candidate of the New Democratic Party in Scarborough North for the 2018 Ontario general election.[6] He placed second, to the incumbent Progressive Conservative candidate, Raymond Cho.
In 2024, he was appointed to the Order of Ontario.[7]