Stan Rice
Poet, painter, husband of novelist Anne Rice
Born in Dallas, Rice met his future wife in a high school journalism class.
They married in 1961 and enrolled at San Francisco State U., where he went on to become assistant director of the Poetry Center and later headed the creative writing department.
In 1988, the couple moved to New Orleans, where he eventually opened the Stan Rice Gallery.
In "Prism of the Night," a 1992 biography of Anne Rice, she said of her husband: "He's a model to me of a man who doesn't look to heaven or hell to justify his feelings about life itself. His capacity for action is admirable. Very early on he said to me, 'What more could you ask for than life itself?'"
Publishing house Alfred A. Knopf's Victoria Wilson, who edits Anne Rice's novels and worked with Stan Rice on his 1997 book, "Paintings," said Rice refused to sell his artwork. "The great thing about Stan is that he refused to play the game as a painter, and he refused to play the game as a poet," Wilson said.
Rice's seven poetry collections attracted numerous honors, including the Edgar Allan Poe Award of the Academy of American Poets, the Joseph Henry Jackson Award and a writing fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts.
In addition to his wife, survivors include a son, his mother, a brother and two sisters.














