March 27, 2026

Maria Mazziotti Gillan on Her Poetry Legacy: Part 3

Maria Mazziotti Gillan was interviewed by Arianne Bakelmun for Visions, the newspaper of Passaic County Community College, just before her retirement as Executive Director of the Poetry Center.
This is a third excerpt from "A Fireside Chat on Legacy: From Immigrant Roots to the Retirement of Maria Mazziotti Gillan." 


"She had good examples in her parents. Her father immigrated from Italy first, and he “didn't have two cents in his pocket.” He worked in the U.S. digging roads, as a janitor, and was a rebel leader of the Union. Additionally, he had a lot of literary ambitions himself. Maria often fixed his English in the many letters he wrote to the editor. Because of his Union affiliation, Maria’s mother was denied entry to the U.S. and had to make the trip later, in steerage, six months pregnant. “She was so sick,” Maria adds. Yet her father was really intelligent, she emphasizes, and her mother very practical.

Even as he aged, Maria remembers her father retaining his radical political activism. He demanded to march on Washington over thirty years ago, when Reagan was president. However, at that point, he was in a wheelchair, and a march on Washington was out of his reach.
MMG: He wanted to say, "Hey, what are you doing? This is America!" (laughs) And he saw what could go wrong in the country because they saw it in Italy. So he knew how quickly you lose your freedom, which I feel is slipping away from us now. And we're sitting here like a bunch of dingbats.
Her parents loved this country, and Maria shares her father’s deep concern.
MMG: That's a wonderful thing about this country, that the immigrants were able to contribute so much. And so I hate what's happening now. This hatred of immigrants is more than I can bear.
Her mother, meanwhile, never discouraged Maria from bringing her book to the dinner table. She thought Maria’s poetry ambitions were crazy. Yet, her mother bought Maria her first typewriter.
MMG: She went out and bought a Smith Corona portable typewriter, in a pink case, for me. It took her a year. She sewed coats in a factory; she was paid twenty-five cents an hour. She put it on layaway. She kept paying them fifty cents a week until she had it, and she gave it to me.
Unlike many of her peers, Maria’s parents never pushed her to work at a factory or marry young.
MMG: [My mother] wanted me to do what I wanted to do.
Maria mirrors their love, intelligence, work ethic, and care for Americans and the larger world.
AB: How do you hope what you've built here would be an antidote to the closed-minded view of immigrants?

MMG: I hope my poetry is. I get letters from all over the world. I get letters from all over the country. Garrison Keillor read a lot of my poems on the Writers Almanac. And I was on All Things Considered and a couple of other NPR programs. So I get letters from people on top of a mountain in Montana, where I've never been, responding to my work [about the immigrant experience] because I think we are a country of immigrants. As a consequence, we have to make room. Because immigrants built the country.

AB: I read your poem [Shame is the Dress I Wear]. You talk about the experience of being a little [immigrant] girl. I’m wondering how you think that little girl would see you now.

MMG: She'd be fainting…I didn't talk! I was afraid of everybody. I was like a little chicken. But she's there inside me. Sometimes I'm surprised by finding she's still there.

Maria relays the memory of reading her poetry at Trinity College, seeing all the faculty dressed in tweeds, little sweaters, and nylons, looking the very picture of American WASP. 

Maria, in her dress printed with big flowers, uncovered that day how much she still felt like that small, shame-filled girl.
AB: So, what would you say to your younger self about what you've created?

MMG: I'd say, look at it! You didn’t think I can do it! I did it! (gleeful, peeling laughter) That's what I’d have to say. Pull up your big boy pants and get going! And my mother's idea was you could fall on the ground with a broken leg, and she would say, it's all in your mind, stand up. You can do it. And that is serving me in very good stead. I mean, I have broken a lot of things, but I have gotten up again.
Maria certainly has done what she and others never could have imagined. At a family dinner once, her cousin—the first in the family to go to college—asked sixteen-year-old Maria what she planned to do after graduation.
MMG: He was expecting me to say, “secretary.” I said, “I want to be a poet.”And he said, "Well, that is the most impractical ambition I've ever heard.” And you know, he called me about 10 years ago, and he said, " I'm very sorry I said that. I remember saying that, and you did it.”

AB: What did that mean to you to hear that?

MMG: Oh, God. Because his voice was in my head. The idea is that you're too poor. Poor people are not poets. They work at a job, and they get married. Women, especially, get married when they're 17 or 18. I knew I wasn't getting married. I knew I was going to college. Whatever I had to do to get there, I was going to go to college. And I was gonna try to be a poet."


Maria Mazziotti Gillan's newest poetry collection is When the Stars Were Still Visible (2021). Other recent publications are the poetry and photography collection, Paterson Light and Shadowand the poetry collections What Blooms in Winter and The Girls in the Chartreuse Jackets, a pairing of her poems with her paintings.
Maria's artist website is MariaMazziottiGillan.com and her poetry website is MariaGillan.com.

March 24, 2026

Poem: Today I Celebrate My Body



"Today I Celebrate My Body" is a poem from Maria Gillan's What Bloom in Winter collection. It focuses on the "blooms" that occur even in the "winter" of aging and physical decline. It highlights the shift from taking health for granted to finding joy in the smallest movements.

Today I Celebrate My Body

Today I celebrate my body,
that body that suddenly couldn’t move,
the hand that couldn’t hold a pen or open a cap,
that body that couldn’t turn over in the bed.
Each new thing I can do—
close my hand around the pill bottle,
hold a book, write my name—
I celebrate. I even celebrate my faltering step,
my one leg dragging.
These and other movements we take for granted
until we can no longer do them,
and only then, do we learn gratitude.






Maria Mazziotti Gillan's newest poetry collection is When the Stars Were Still Visible (2021). Other recent publications are the poetry and photography collection, Paterson Light and Shadowand the poetry collections What Blooms in Winter and The Girls in the Chartreuse Jackets, a pairing of her poems with her paintings.
Maria's artist website is MariaMazziottiGillan.com and her poetry website is MariaGillan.com.

March 20, 2026

A Reading with Edvige Giunta



This is a reminder that our upcoming Distinguished Poets Series Reading with Edvige Giunta is on Saturday, March 21,
from 2:30 PM – 3 PM.

Edvige Giunta is the author of Writing with an Accent: Contemporary Italian American Women Authors and coeditor of six anthologies, including The Milk of Almonds: Italian American Women Writers on Food and Culture and Talking to the Girls: Intimate and Political Essays on the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, recipient of the 2023 Susan Koppelman Awrad for Best Anthology in Feminist Studies in American and Popular Culture, just published in Italy by Iacobelli as Le ragazze della Triangle. Her memoirs, essays, poems, and interviews appear in anthologies, journals, and magazines. At New Jersey City University, where she is Professor of English, she teaches courses on the memoir and a course on the Triangle fires as well as other literature and writing classes.
Her website is edvigegiunta.com

Please share our YouTube link, which will go live once the reading begins
at 2:30 pm (ET) that day 

https://www.youtube.com/live/pFDBpP60-6s?si=XZ-uLLi3OC1WxnE0





Maria Mazziotti Gillan's newest poetry collection is When the Stars Were Still Visible (2021). Other recent publications are the poetry and photography collection, Paterson Light and Shadowand the poetry collections What Blooms in Winter and The Girls in the Chartreuse Jackets, a pairing of her poems with her paintings.
Maria's artist website is MariaMazziottiGillan.com and her poetry website is MariaGillan.com.

March 17, 2026

Maria Mazziotti Gillan on Her Poetry Legacy: Part 2


Maria at the Great Fall of Paterson
Photo: Mark Hillringhouse

Maria Mazziotti Gillan was interviewed by Arianne Bakelmun for Visions, the newspaper of Passaic County Community College, just before her retirement as Executive Director of the Poetry Center.
This is a second excerpt from "A Fireside Chat on Legacy: From Immigrant Roots to the Retirement of Maria Mazziotti Gillan." 

From her first secretary, who didn’t know the alphabet, to another who refused to sit and would do the entirety of the job standing, Maria reminisces on the humble beginnings of her Poetry Center. 

At first, she was afforded just five work-study students in lieu of employees. She speaks lovingly about how it expanded to a crew of employees, including Alin Papazian’s handling the grants, Jane Hall’s work as Art Gallery Coordinator, and Susan Amsterdam’s Theater and Poetry Project.

The Theater and Poetry Project was an entity unto itself, putting on forty theater performances a year. Maria finds meaning in having done this for the children of Paterson.
MMG: I grew up here. [As an adult, returning,] I thought this is no different. It’s worse than when I was here growing up, where there were no extra-curricular activities. There were no field trips, no trips to the theater.
Money limited the options for families in Paterson. So, Maria started the theater program with grants that made its magic accessible.
MMG: [When I was thirteen] I had a cousin who went to school in New York and worked at NBC. And she got tickets for South Pacific and took me for my birthday. And when we got in the theater, they turned the lights down and they turned the lights on the stage. All of a sudden, I thought, there's another life! There's a life that can be made of poetry, words, language, music! There's another life! And so, it really threw open a door. I always told her, you really saved my life when you did that. Because that might not have been important to you, but to me, at 13, it was very important.
,The Theater and Poetry Project lives on though Maria laments at the grants that have been cut, limiting the scope of their productions. In fact, she has some choice words and names names but cautions me with a laugh, “Don’t put that in!”

Maria and consultant Lisa Coll-Nicolaou have built the program back up, and they have now expanded into Jersey City and South Orange with goals of growing it in other counties. 

Maria's legacy includes national and international projects including book awards, poetry contests, a magazine, and a YouTube channel. Maria was also at the helm of Paterson Literary Review.
MMG: I wanted it to be elegant. Paterson Literary Review sounds serious. I started the reading series first. I didn't have any money. So I would have my friends read for nothing. Doing me a favor. And then I got a grant from the state council in 1980 for $2,500
From there, she was able to hold contests with prizes and payment. As time went on, the readings included William Stafford, Lucille Clifton, Alan Ginsberg, and Amiri Baraka.

Maria is used to navigating this ebb and flow with her characteristic perseverance and humor. When she first started out she was sensible about her dreams.
MMG: I knew I could not be a poet unless I found a way to support myself. I wasn't so impractical that I thought I could just walk on a stage in New York City and be accepted. No! I knew I had to find a way to support myself, and I did work for Social Security Administration—boring job—for a year and a half. I was losing my mind. It was the only time in my life that I couldn't write. So I said, “You have to do something. You have to do something about this.” I saw an ad for a teaching job at Caldwell College. I called up, and I went for an interview, and I was so shy, I was so afraid. I mean, I went there, I was shaking, and they hired me!  And I had never taught before.
Maria found that old styles of lecturing did not work for her. She arranged her class to sit in a circle to discuss ideas, books, and what struck them as important. The students loved her. 

The symbolic circle of desks became a core tenet she repeated, later at SUNY-Binghamton University. 
Here, the students wrote, “the most wonderful risk-taking poems. We would be crying. We would have to hand out tissues in class.”

Her inclusivity and making space for all voices remain essential to the Poetry Center to this day.

However, soon after marriage, she felt pressure to have children. She loves her children. Yet, to that pressure, today she would have said, “No, no, no!”

After just getting the grip on teaching, Maria had a hard time leaving her beloved job. Even when her children were babies, she wrote college review books as they napped and was published by Simon & Schuster.
MMG: I never stop. I mean, it's not like I'm ever going to just lie down and say, I'm not doing anything. Because I had a different idea of what I was going to do. It was scary to get back into teaching after being away so long.
Maria credits her mother-in-law with telling her, “You have nothing to be afraid of. You were a wonderful teacher. You'll be a wonderful teacher. Now, go, do what you have to do.”

Maria’s re-entry into teaching began with a high school class, the only time she’s ever hated teaching. So, she picked up jobs as an adjunct professor. At one point, she taught at eight different schools for very little money.
MMG: I would have done it for free to be honest. I really loved to teach. I've been very lucky. I love teaching, and I got to do it. I love writing and creating programs, and I got to do it. I love being a mother and a grandmother, and that's a lovely thing. I've been really, really fortunate. I love going to other countries to read my poetry. I love going to other states to read my poetry. I've been all over the United States and Europe reading my poems.



Maria Mazziotti Gillan's newest poetry collection is When the Stars Were Still Visible (2021). Other recent publications are the poetry and photography collection, Paterson Light and Shadowand the poetry collections What Blooms in Winter and The Girls in the Chartreuse Jackets, a pairing of her poems with her paintings.
Maria's artist website is MariaMazziottiGillan.com and her poetry website is MariaGillan.com.