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Famous Figures

Historical and fictional figures mapped to the sixteen values.

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Vitality · OECF
writer 20th century

Maya Angelou

Her public presence, which combined documented suffering with insistent celebration of life, and her described capacity to fill rooms with her energy, reflect a Vitality orientation in which aliveness is both a personal practice and a gift to others.

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Vitality · OECF
athlete 20th century

Muhammad Ali

His exuberant self-proclamation, his poetry, his public personality that treated boxing as theatre, and his documented capacity to energise everyone in his vicinity, reflect a Vitality orientation applied to athletic and public life simultaneously.

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Vitality · OECF
musician 20th century

Josephine Baker

Her performances, which brought uninhibited physical joy and celebratory aliveness to audiences across racial and national boundaries, and her documented courage in treating her own vitality as a political statement, reflect the Vitality orientation fully expressed.

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Vitality · OECF
artist Contemporary

Robin Williams

His improvisational performances, characterised by generosity of comic energy and genuine delight in making others laugh, reflect a Vitality orientation in which aliveness is shared rather than performed and the other's joy is the real aim.

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Vitality · OECF
fictional 20th century fiction

Zorba the Greek

Kazantzakis's character is the most explicit literary expression of the Vitality orientation: he dances at funerals, eats with full attention, and treats each moment as worth the complete investment of his physical and emotional energy.

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Vitality · OECF
artist 20th century

Lucille Ball

Her physical comedy, which required and expressed total bodily commitment to each moment, and her documented capacity to energise every set she worked on, reflect a Vitality orientation applied to the craft of comedy.

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Vitality · OECF
mythological Ancient

Dionysus

The Greek god of wine and ecstasy represents the Vitality orientation at its mythological root, the principle that shared aliveness, expressed through celebration, collective feeling, and the dissolution of ordinary social boundaries, is itself sacred.

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Vitality · OECF
fictional Renaissance fiction

Falstaff

Shakespeare's great comic figure is defined by his total investment in the pleasures of the present moment, eating, drinking, companionship, and jest, making him one of literature's most detailed portraits of the Vitality orientation in full expression.

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Vitality · OECF
fictional 20th century fiction

Pippi Longstocking

Lindgren's character treats every situation as an opportunity for play and celebration, energises every person she encounters, and refuses the social domestication that would reduce her aliveness, making her a Vitality figure of great cultural resonance.

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Vitality · OECF
fictional 20th century fiction

Tigger

The only thing defined about Tigger's identity is his bouncing, his infectious energy, and his incapacity for diminishment, making him children's literature's most direct expression of Vitality as a character trait.

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Vitality · OECF
artist 20th century

Frida Kahlo (vitality)

Her documented insistence on celebrating and painting her life with full intensity despite chronic pain, her legendary parties, and her refusal to allow suffering to diminish her engagement with existence, reflect a Vitality orientation of extraordinary determination.

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Vitality · OECF
musician 20th century

James Brown

His performances, characterised by total physical commitment, infectious rhythmic energy, and documented capacity to transform audience energy, reflect a Vitality orientation applied to musical performance as a communal event.

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Vitality · OECF
writer 20th century

Zora Neale Hurston (vitality)

Her documented personality, which brought explosive life to every social context she entered, and her literary celebration of Black folk culture's aliveness, reflect a Vitality orientation that refused the respectability politics that would have required her to diminish.

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Vitality · OECF
artist 20th century

Pablo Picasso (vitality)

His documented capacity for energising the social and artistic circles around him, his relentless production, and his treatment of every period of life as containing full creative possibility reflect a Vitality orientation applied to the life of the working artist.

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Vitality · OECF
writer Renaissance

Rabelais

His Gargantua and Pantagruel, with its celebration of bodily appetite, comic excess, and the full range of human pleasure, is the founding literary text of the Vitality orientation applied to written form.

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Vitality · OECF
politician Ancient

Cleopatra (vitality)

Ancient sources from Plutarch onward describe her capacity to command complete attention not through physical beauty alone but through a quality of animated presence that made everyone in her company feel they had her total engagement.

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