AM Saarinen Production Bios

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

AM Saarinen Production Bios Press Contact: Natasha Padilla, WNET, 212.560.8824, [email protected] Press Materials: http://pbs.org/pressroom or http://thirteen.org/pressroom Websites: http://pbs.org/americanmasters , http://facebook.com/americanmasters , @PBSAmerMasters , http://pbsamericanmasters.tumblr.com , http://youtube.com/AmericanMastersPBS , http://instagram.com/pbsamericanmasters , #AmericanMastersPBS American Masters Eero Saarinen: The Architect Who Saw the Future Premieres nationwide Tuesday, December 27 at 8 p.m. on PBS (check local listings) Production Bios Peter Rosen Producer and Director Peter Rosen has produced and directed over 100 full-length films and television programs which have been distributed worldwide and have won awards at all the major film festivals. He has worked directly with some of the most important figures in the arts such as Leonard Bernstein, Yo-Yo Ma, Beverly Sills, Sherrill Milnes, Stephen Sondheim, Alexander Godunov, Midori, Martha Graham, Plácido Domingo, Van Cliburn, Claudio Arrau, Byron Janis, I. M. Pei, Nobuyuki Tsujii, and Garrison Keillor. He won the prestigious Directors Guild of America (DGA) Award in 1990 for his production Here to Make Music: The Eighth Van Cliburn International Piano Competition . The show also won a Primetime Emmy Award in 1990, and was called “enriching and inspiring” by New York Daily News . He was again nominated for the DGA Award in 1998 for his film, First Person Singular: I. M. Pei . The Cliburn: Playing on the Edge , with KERA/PBS, sponsored by ExxonMobil, won the prestigious Peabody Award in 2001. Recent international primetime broadcasts of Rosen’s films include Touching the Sound on blind pianist Nobuyuki Tsujii; There Will Be Music on composer and oil man Gordon Getty; 50 Years of Gold , celebrating the 50 th anniversary of the Van Cliburn Piano Competition; American Masters – Jascha Heifetz: God’s Fiddler , which won the Echo Klassik Award, Japanese Record Academy Award, and the Audience Award at the San Diego Film Festival; A Surprise in Texas , on the 13th Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, which won the Gramophone Magazine Award and Best Documentary at the Beverly Hills Film Festival, amongst other honors; The Byron Janis Story , on the pianist’s battle against crippling arthritis; American Masters — Garrison Keillor: The Man on the Radio in the Red Shoes ; Shadows in Paradise , on Europe’s musical exiles who fled Hitler for Southern California; In the Key of G: The Gilmore International Keyboard Festival for PBS; Master of the House , a film broadcast on PBS as part of the Metropolitan Opera’s tribute to Joseph Volpe; A Workshop for Peace , an hour-long documentary commissioned by the United Nations on its 60 th anniversary; Great Conversations in Music , commissioned by the Library of Congress; and Who Gets to Call it Art? , a feature-length documentary on curator Henry Geldzahler. In the 2003-2004 television season, Rosen produced and directed the feature-length documentary Khachaturian about the Russian-Armenian composer on the occasion of the 100 th anniversary of his birth. Shown in theatres and on television worldwide, the film won the Best Documentary Award at the Hollywood Film Festival. Other films for PBS include The Hollywood Bowl: Music Under the Stars , a co-production with WDR German Television; A Thousand Years of Music and Spirit , taped in Krakow; and Once Upon a Sleigh Ride , a documentary on American composer Leroy Anderson. Highlights of previous television seasons include Enrico Caruso: Voice of the Century and The Museum on the Mountain , on I. M. Pei’s new Miho Museum in Kyoto. This program won the Gold Medal at the 1998 New York Film and Television Festival. Midori Live at Carnegie Hall ; If I Were A Rich Man , a portrait of Jan Peerce; and Playing for Peace , a 60-minute documentary about Middle East peace, which aired nationally on PBS. Rosen’s earlier productions include Carnegie Hall at 100: A Place of Dreams (PBS), Reflections: Leonard Bernstein (BBC) and Omnibus (ABC, 1986). In 1985, he produced and directed American Masters – Rubinstein Remembered and Toscanini: The Maestro (1988) for Great Performances , both of which were broadcast on PBS and internationally. Rosen earned a B.Arch. from Cornell University and B.F.A. and M.F.A. from Yale University. He served at Yale University as a fellow at Trumbull College and an instructor in the art department. Rosen lives in New York City, where he was born and raised. Eric Saarinen, ASC Director of Photography and Co-producer Eric Saarinen, ASC, is one of America’s most admired commercial directors and cinematographers. His work as a director of photography encompasses 15 theatrical features, including Albert Brooks’ Lost in America , The Hills Have Eyes , and Exploratorium , Oscar nominee for Best Documentary, Short Subject. His commercial work directing and shooting hundreds of television commercials garnered 13 Clios, six AICP Awards, two Gold Hugos, and virtually every major advertising award, including the Grand Prix at Cannes for the World’s Best Commercial of the Year for Jeep’s “Snowcovered” (1994) spot. This marked the first time an automobile commercial won the prestigious award and the spot was later voted one of the Top 10 Best Automotive Commercials in the past 25 years by the Art Directors Guild One Show. Saarinen is the son of architect and designer Eero Saarinen. His mother, Lily Saarinen, was a sculptor, artist and educator. She was also a member of the first women’s Olympic Ski Team. His grandfather was the acclaimed Finnish architect and designer, Eliel Saarinen. Charles and Ray Eames were his godparents. Saarinen’s early life was spent at the Cranbrook Art Institute (Bloomfield Hills, Mich.). Every day he was surrounded with the beauty and inspiration of this rarified world while his grandfather and father helped to create the campus, along with their collaborators and friends: the Eames, Harry Bertoia, Carl Milles, Florence Knoll, Harry Weese, Ralph Rapson, Marianne Strengell and many more. He earned his B.A. at Goddard College and M.A. in filmmaking at UCLA. Saarinen started his career directing and producing films focused on art. Projects included those for the Museum of Modern Art, Gemini G.E.L. and Pepsi’s Expo ’70 Pavilion in Japan. Music videos were also a mainstay: Joni Mitchell, Jimi Hendrix, George Benson, Al Jarreau, the Bee Gees, Pat Metheny, Neil Young and Peter Tosh, to name a few. An overarching theme to Saarinen’s life has been his love of the road less traveled. Drawn to the unexpected, the unfamiliar, and the unknown, he selects projects for the quotient of adventure they promised. Saarinen has an uncanny ability to pick a moment. His natural curiosity and yearning for the new landed him in the midst of some of the most significant historical events in modern American history: traveling with Jane Fonda and Donald Sutherland in the midst of American political turmoil to U.S. barracks across Asia; the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago during the riots; filming the Altamont concert with the Rolling Stones for Gimme Shelter (1970); and documenting a frightened Robert Kennedy at the Ambassador Hotel right before he was shot. His remarkable adventures, and his powerful footage documenting them, continued. He spent three months on board Jacques Cousteau’s seaplane in the Sea of Cortez, and another three months living on the ocean floor with the Glomar Challenger deep sea drilling project. Saarinen’s early career culminated with the film Symbiosis for The Land pavilion at Epcot at the Walt Disney World Resort. Natural and ancient man-made wonders of the world were filmed in 70 mm, revealing the history of man’s relationship with the environment. The last time these lenses were used, and then carefully preserved, was for Lawrence of Arabia . Although only 16 minutes long, Saarinen circumnavigated the globe two-and-a-half times during the 13-month shoot. The film was seen by approximately 28 million people during its 13-year run. After seeing the evocative piece and realizing what Saarinen’s vision could bring to the world of broadcast commercials, a friend proposed a new breed of commercial production company, and together they formed Plum Productions. During Plum’s successful 27-year run, Saarinen traveled the world as a director and cameraman and became one of the most highly- awarded advertising director/cinematographers with hundreds of television commercials to his credit. Saarinen is a director/cameraman in the Directors Guild of America (DGA) and was the first director of photography ever to be inducted into the American Society of Cinematographers (ASC) for “Extraordinary Achievement in the Field of Television Commercials.” He has also been inducted into the Finnish Society of Cinematographers (AFC). He lives in Los Angeles, California. Michael Kantor Executive Producer For more than two decades, award-winning filmmaker Michael Kantor has created outstanding arts programs for television. He joined American Masters as the series’ executive producer in April 2014 during its 28 th season on PBS, and founded its theatrical imprint American Masters Pictures in January 2016. American Masters Pictures was represented by three films at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival: Norman Lear: Just Another Version of You , Maya Angelou: And Still I Rise and Richard Linklater – dream is destiny . Prior to joining American Masters , his PBS documentary series Superheroes: A Never-Ending Battle (2013), hosted by Liev Schreiber, was nominated for an Emmy Award. Random House published the companion book. Kantor’s Peabody Award-winning film Broadway Musicals: A Jewish Legacy (2013) aired as part of the Great Performances series on PBS. Narrated by Joel Grey, it included performances by Matthew Broderick, Kelli O’Hara, David Hyde Pierce, Marc Shaiman and many other Broadway talents. In 2012, Kantor produced The Thomashefskys: Music and Memories of a Life in the Yiddish Theater with Michael Tilson Thomas, which aired on PBS and was nominated for a Primetime Emmy.
Recommended publications
  • Cds by Composer/Performer
    CPCC MUSIC LIBRARY COMPACT DISCS Updated May 2007 Abercrombie, John (Furs on Ice and 9 other selections) guitar, bass, & synthesizer 1033 Academy for Ancient Music Berlin Works of Telemann, Blavet Geminiani 1226 Adams, John Short Ride, Chairman Dances, Harmonium (Andriessen) 876, 876A Adventures of Baron Munchausen (music composed and conducted by Michael Kamen) 1244 Adderley, Cannonball Somethin’ Else (Autumn Leaves; Love For Sale; Somethin’ Else; One for Daddy-O; Dancing in the Dark; Alison’s Uncle 1538 Aebersold, Jamey: Favorite Standards (vol 22) 1279 pt. 1 Aebersold, Jamey: Favorite Standards (vol 22) 1279 pt. 2 Aebersold, Jamey: Gettin’ It Together (vol 21) 1272 pt. 1 Aebersold, Jamey: Gettin’ It Together (vol 21) 1272 pt. 2 Aebersold, Jamey: Jazz Improvisation (vol 1) 1270 Aebersold, Jamey: Major and Minor (vol 24) 1281 pt. 1 Aebersold, Jamey: Major and Minor (vol 24) 1281 pt. 2 Aebersold, Jamey: One Dozen Standards (vol 23) 1280 pt. 1 Aebersold, Jamey: One Dozen Standards (vol 23) 1280 pt. 2 Aebersold, Jamey: The II-V7-1 Progression (vol 3) 1271 Aerosmith Get a Grip 1402 Airs d’Operettes Misc. arias (Barbara Hendricks; Philharmonia Orch./Foster) 928 Airwaves: Heritage of America Band, U.S. Air Force/Captain Larry H. Lang, cond. 1698 Albeniz, Echoes of Spain: Suite Espanola, Op.47 and misc. pieces (John Williams, guitar) 962 Albinoni, Tomaso (also Pachelbel, Vivaldi, Bach, Purcell) 1212 Albinoni, Tomaso Adagio in G Minor (also Pachelbel: Canon; Zipoli: Elevazione for Cello, Oboe; Gluck: Dance of the Furies, Dance of the Blessed Spirits, Interlude; Boyce: Symphony No. 4 in F Major; Purcell: The Indian Queen- Trumpet Overture)(Consort of London; R,Clark) 1569 Albinoni, Tomaso Concerto Pour 2 Trompettes in C; Concerto in C (Lionel Andre, trumpet) (also works by Tartini; Vivaldi; Maurice André, trumpet) 1520 Alderete, Ignacio: Harpe indienne et orgue 1019 Aloft: Heritage of America Band (United States Air Force/Captain Larry H.
    [Show full text]
  • 2020-Commencement-Program.Pdf
    One Hundred and Sixty-Second Annual Commencement JUNE 19, 2020 One Hundred and Sixty-Second Annual Commencement 11 A.M. CDT, FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 2020 2982_STUDAFF_CommencementProgram_2020_FRONT.indd 1 6/12/20 12:14 PM UNIVERSITY SEAL AND MOTTO Soon after Northwestern University was founded, its Board of Trustees adopted an official corporate seal. This seal, approved on June 26, 1856, consisted of an open book surrounded by rays of light and circled by the words North western University, Evanston, Illinois. Thirty years later Daniel Bonbright, professor of Latin and a member of Northwestern’s original faculty, redesigned the seal, Whatsoever things are true, retaining the book and light rays and adding two quotations. whatsoever things are honest, On the pages of the open book he placed a Greek quotation from the Gospel of John, chapter 1, verse 14, translating to The Word . whatsoever things are just, full of grace and truth. Circling the book are the first three whatsoever things are pure, words, in Latin, of the University motto: Quaecumque sunt vera whatsoever things are lovely, (What soever things are true). The outer border of the seal carries the name of the University and the date of its founding. This seal, whatsoever things are of good report; which remains Northwestern’s official signature, was approved by if there be any virtue, the Board of Trustees on December 5, 1890. and if there be any praise, The full text of the University motto, adopted on June 17, 1890, is think on these things. from the Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Philippians, chapter 4, verse 8 (King James Version).
    [Show full text]
  • 201201-Kakm-Early Morning
    schedule available online: January 2012: Early Morning alaskapublic.org Midnight 12:301:00 1:30 2:00 2:303:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 Coldplay Frontline: Independent Lens: Washington Need To Sun 1/1 Live! Beale Street on New Year's Eve (start 11pm) The Undertaking These Amazing Shadows Week Know Masterpiece Classic: Great Performances: From Vienna: Live From Lincoln Center: Mon 1/2 Downton Abbey - Part 4 The New Year's Celebration 2012 Bernstein and Gershwin Martin Luther: Antiques Roadshow: Masterpiece Classic: Great Performances: Tue 1/3 Sky Island Driven to Defiance Tulsa, OK - Hour 1 Downton Abbey - Part 4 Hugh Laurie: Let Them Talk Frontline: Egypt's Golden Empire: Egypt's Golden Empire: Martin Luther: Antiques Roadshow: Wed 1/4 Opium Brides The Warrior Pharaohs Pharaohs Of The Sun Driven to Defiance Tulsa, OK - Hour 1 Nature: NOVA: NOVA: Egypt's Golden Empire: Egypt's Golden Empire: Thu 1/5 Birds of the Gods Deadliest Volcanoes Deadliest Earthquakes The Warrior Pharaohs Pharaohs Of The Sun Independent Lens: Frontline: NOVA: Nature: Fri 1/6 This Old House Hour Taking Root Opium Brides Deadliest Volcanoes Birds of the Gods Washington Need To Great Performances: Tavis Smiley Reports: Antiques Roadshow: Sat 1/7 This Old House Hour Week Know Celebrate Gershwin Dudamel Tulsa, OK - Hour 1 NOVA: Frontline: Independent Lens: Great Performances: Washington Need To Sun 1/8 Deadliest Volcanoes Opium Brides Taking Root Celebrate Gershwin Week Know Masterpiece Classic: Tavis Smiley Reports: Great Performances: Antiques Roadshow: Nature: Mon 1/9 Downton
    [Show full text]
  • The Design and Construction of Furniture for Mass Production
    Rochester Institute of Technology RIT Scholar Works Theses 5-30-1986 The design and construction of furniture for mass production Kevin Stark Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.rit.edu/theses Recommended Citation Stark, Kevin, "The design and construction of furniture for mass production" (1986). Thesis. Rochester Institute of Technology. Accessed from This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by RIT Scholar Works. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses by an authorized administrator of RIT Scholar Works. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ROCHESTER INSTITUTE OP TECHNOLOGY A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of The College of Fine and Applied Arts in Candidacy for the Degree of MASTER OF FINE ARTS The Design and Construction of Furniture for Mass Production By Kevin J. Stark May, 1986 APPROVALS Adviser: Mr. William Keyser/ William Keyser Date: 7 I Associate Adviser: Mr. Douglas Sigler/ Date: Douglas Sigler Associate Adviser: Mr. Craig McArt/ Craig McArt Date: U3{)/8:£ ----~-~~~~7~~------------- Special Assistant to the h I Dean for Graduate Affairs:Mr. Phillip Bornarth/ P i ip Bornarth Da t e : t ;{ ~fft, :..:..=.....:......::....:.:..-=-=-=...i~:...::....:..:.=-=..:..:..!..._------!..... ___ -------7~'tf~~---------- Dean, College of Fine & Applied Arts: Dr. Robert H. Johnston/ Robert H. Johnston Ph.D. Date: ------------------------------ I, Kevin J. Stark , hereby grant permission to the Wallace Memorial Library of RIT, to reproduce my thesis in whole or in part. Any reproduction will not be for commercial use or profit. Date : ____5__ ?_O_-=B::;..... 0.:.......-_____ CONTENTS Thesis Proposal i CHAPTER I - Introduction 1 CHAPTER II - An Investigation Into The Design and Construction Process Side Chair 2 Executive Desk 12 Conference Table 18 Shelving Unit 25 CHAPTER III - A Perspective On Techniques Used In Industrial Furniture Design Wood 33 Metals 37 Plastics 41 CHAPTER IV - Conclusion 47 CHAPTER V - Footnotes 49 CHAPTER VI - Bibliography 50 ILLUSTRATIONS Page I.
    [Show full text]
  • Piano Concerto Honoring Memory of Cliburn, Turk Is Sunday, May 5
    MAY 2013 Annual Dance Concert is Friday, May 3 PERFORMANCE SHOWS OFF DANCE SKILLS OF KC STUDENTS The broad range of dance and performance; and Shelley skills of the Kilgore College Wayne for tap and jazz. Dance Department can be Tickets are $10, $5 for seen at the department’s students with KC identification. annual Spring Dance Concert, Tickets will go on sale at set for 8 p.m. Friday, May 3, in 6:30 p.m. the night of the Van Cliburn Auditorium on performance at the auditorium’s the Kilgore campus. box office. The choreography Tickets can be purchased by is a collaboration of the cash or check only – no credit students and instructors: cards accepted. Cathy Beckman for ballet, For more information, Above: (From left to right) Kelci Bjornlie, Lauren Cabrera, Ashlee Cloud, Meg Funderburk, modern dance technique, contact Beckman at (903) 983- Angie Gonzalez, Jazzlyn Howard, Jennifer Jones, Leisha Kastner, Macy Lopez, Heather improvisation/composition 8633. Prince, Caroline Roberts and Simon Weaver. Photo by O. Rufus Lovett Piano concerto honoring memory of Cliburn, Turk is Sunday, May 5 The Kilgore College Piano the memories of Van Cliburn Division will host a special and Anne Dean Turk than to concert in memory of two host a first-class piano concert great contributors to the music in their memory?” said Sandra community – Van Cliburn and Siler, KC piano instructor. Anne Dean Turk. “The legacies they left not The free concert is set for only Kilgore College, but also 3 p.m. Sunday, May 5, at Van the music community world- Cliburn Auditorium on the wide, will never be forgotten.
    [Show full text]
  • Collection of Television Press Kits, 1958, Ca
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c87082fc No online items Finding Aid for the Collection of television press kits, 1958, ca. 1974-ca. 2004 Finding aid prepared by Arts Special Collections staff; machine-readable finding aid created by Caroline Cubé. UCLA Library Special Collections Room A1713, Charles E. Young Research Library Box 951575 Los Angeles, CA, 90095-1575 (310) 825-4988 [email protected] © 2012 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Finding Aid for the Collection of 1908 1 television press kits, 1958, ca. 1974-ca. 2004 Title: Collection of television press kits Collection number: 1908 Contributing Institution: UCLA Library Special Collections Language of Material: English Physical Description: 9.5 linear ft.(19 boxes and 1 flat box.) Date (inclusive): 1958, ca. 1974-2004 Abstract: This collections documents a variety of television show genres broadcast on networks such as ABC, CBS, NBC, HBO, PBS, SHOWTIME, and TNT. Physical location: Stored off-site at SRLF. Advance notice is required for access to the collection. Please contact UCLA Library Special Collections for paging information. Restrictions on Access Open for research. STORED OFF-SITE AT SRLF. Advance notice is required for access to the caollection. Please contact UCLA Library Special Collections for paging information. Restrictions on Use and Reproduction Property rights to the physical object belong to the UC Regents. Literary rights, including copyright, are retained by the creators and their heirs. It is the responsibility of the researcher to determine who holds the copyright and pursue the copyright owner or his or her heir for permission to publish where The UC Regents do not hold the copyright.
    [Show full text]
  • Grants? Did You Know That If You’Ve Received a Grant from the Arizona Commission on the Arts, You May Have Indirectly Received $$ from NEA?
    Welcome!! Thanks – Arizona Commission on the Arts Thanks—Bob Booker, Executive Director of the AZ Commission and Thanks—Jim Ballinger, Executive Director of the Phoenix Art Museum and member of the National Council on the Arts Audience Questions: How many applied to the NEA? How many received NEA grants? Did you know that if you’ve received a grant from the Arizona Commission on the Arts, you may have indirectly received $$ from NEA? How many served on an NEA grant panel? Today would like to share general information about: • Who we are and what we do. • Will guide you through NEA funding categories and, • Share tips on preparing what we hope will be a successful application 1 Let’s begin with Who we Are: NEA established as an independent federal agency by Congress 1965 Our Mission is to Advance: • Artistic excellence, creativity and innovation in the arts • For the benefit of individuals and communities NEA is single largest national public funder of the arts. Awarded more than $4 billion in grants since inception 2 Now, I’d like to introduce full scope of NEA’s Signature Programs 3 NEA provides: 1. Financial awards to eligible organizations and, 2. We recognize artists and arts organizations through several programs. We: • Award Direct Grants • Foster State and Regional Partnerships • Maintain Leadership Initiatives • Present Literature Fellowships Recognition Awards • Administer Lifetime Honorifics 4 Direct Grants constitute 60% of NEA’s grant funding. We support projects of artistic excellence and artistic merit in a wide range of artistic disciplines. In NEA’s current fiscal year, we have awarded 17 direct grants of $435,000 throughout the state of ARIZONA.
    [Show full text]
  • Bertoia Press Release
    HARRY BERTOIA’S INFLUENTIAL STUDIO JEWELRY AND SOUND SCULPTURE EXPLORED IN TWO EXHIBITIONS OPENING MAY 3 AT MAD Atmosphere for Enjoyment: Harry Bertoia’s Environment for Sound Bent, Cast & Forged: The Jewelry of Harry Bertoia May 3–September 25, 2016 Press Preview: Monday, May 2, 2016, 5 pm NEW YORK, NY (April 26, 2016)—From May 3 to September 25, 2016, the Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) presents two exhibitions focused on prolific artist, designer, and sculptor Harry Bertoia (1915–1978) that highlight the distinct practices that bookended his illustrious career. Atmosphere for Enjoyment: Harry Bertoia’s Environment for Sound explores the sounding sculptures collectively referred to as Sonambient, their installation in Bertoia’s stone barn, and their legacy as sound art, while Bent, Cast & Forged: The Jewelry of Harry Bertoia introduces the lesser-known jewelry works that, in many ways, are the predecessors of his internationally acclaimed sculpture and furniture designs. “Harry Bertoia is a perfect subject for the Museum of Arts and Design,” says Shannon R. Stratton, MAD’s William and Mildred Lasdon Chief Curator. “His prolific practice has pushed the boundaries of art, design, and craft. Whether it was kinetics in jewelry, the monotype as drawing, or the creation of a sound environment as an artwork, Bertoia worked across 2 COLUMBUS CIRCLE NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10019 P 212.299.7777 MADMUSEUM.ORG disciplines and scales fluidly and with inventiveness. The impact of his work is tremendous, and transcends specific art and design fields to influence architects and sculptors as readily as sound designers and musicians.” Atmosphere for Enjoyment: Harry Bertoia’s Environment for Sound In the 1960s, Bertoia began exploring the potential relationship between sculpture and sound, and eventually created a significant oeuvre that would crown his life’s work.
    [Show full text]
  • Geoffrey Baer, Who Each Friday Night Will Welcome Local Contestants Whose Knowledge of Trivia About Our City Will Be Put to the Test
    From the President & CEO The Guide The Member Magazine Dear Member, for WTTW and WFMT This month, WTTW is excited to premiere a new series for Chicago trivia buffs and Renée Crown Public Media Center curious explorers alike. On March 26, join us for The Great Chicago Quiz Show hosted by 5400 North Saint Louis Avenue Chicago, Illinois 60625 WTTW’s Geoffrey Baer, who each Friday night will welcome local contestants whose knowledge of trivia about our city will be put to the test. And on premiere night and after, visit Main Switchboard (773) 583-5000 wttw.com/quiz where you can play along at home. Turn to Member and Viewer Services page 4 for a behind-the-scenes interview with Geoffrey and (773) 509-1111 x 6 producer Eddie Griffin. We’ll also mark Women’s History Month with American Websites wttw.com Masters profiles of novelist Flannery O’Connor and wfmt.com choreographer Twyla Tharp; a POV documentary, And She Could Be Next, that explores a defiant movement of women of Publisher color transforming politics; and Not Done: Women Remaking Anne Gleason America, tracing the last five years of women’s fight for Art Director Tom Peth equality. On wttw.com, other Women’s History Month subjects include Emily Taft Douglas, WTTW Contributors a pioneering female Illinois politician, actress, and wife of Senator Paul Douglas who served Julia Maish in the U.S. House of Representatives; the past and present of Chicago’s Women’s Park and Lisa Tipton WFMT Contributors Gardens, designed by a team of female architects and featuring a statue by Louise Bourgeois; Andrea Lamoreaux and restaurateur Niquenya Collins and her newly launched Afro-Caribbean restaurant and catering business, Cocoa Chili.
    [Show full text]
  • View PDF Online
    MARLBORO MUSIC 60th AnniversAry reflections on MA rlboro Music 85316_Watkins.indd 1 6/24/11 12:45 PM 60th ANNIVERSARY 2011 MARLBORO MUSIC Richard Goode & Mitsuko Uchida, Artistic Directors 85316_Watkins.indd 2 6/23/11 10:24 AM 60th AnniversA ry 2011 MARLBORO MUSIC richard Goode & Mitsuko uchida, Artistic Directors 85316_Watkins.indd 3 6/23/11 9:48 AM On a VermOnt HilltOp, a Dream is BOrn Audience outside Dining Hall, 1950s. It was his dream to create a summer musical community where artists—the established and the aspiring— could come together, away from the pressures of their normal professional lives, to exchange ideas, explore iolinist Adolf Busch, who had a thriving music together, and share meals and life experiences as career in Europe as a soloist and chamber music a large musical family. Busch died the following year, Vartist, was one of the few non-Jewish musicians but Serkin, who served as Artistic Director and guiding who spoke out against Hitler. He had left his native spirit until his death in 1991, realized that dream and Germany for Switzerland in 1927, and later, with the created the standards, structure, and environment that outbreak of World War II, moved to the United States. remain his legacy. He eventually settled in Vermont where, together with his son-in-law Rudolf Serkin, his brother Herman Marlboro continues to thrive under the leadership Busch, and the great French flutist Marcel Moyse— of Mitsuko Uchida and Richard Goode, Co-Artistic and Moyse’s son Louis, and daughter-in-law Blanche— Directors for the last 12 years, remaining true to Busch founded the Marlboro Music School & Festival its core ideals while incorporating their fresh ideas in 1951.
    [Show full text]
  • WNET CORPORATE MEMBERSHIP Media with Impact Why WNET?
    WNET rEachEs 120 millioN pEoplE a moNTh so should you WNET CORPORATE MEMBERSHIP mEdia WiTh impacT Why WNET? For more than 50 years, WNET has been a chief producer and purveyor As the flagship public media provider for the New York City tri-state area of PBS programs, including the and most watched public television station in the nation, WNET’s family of popular documentary series Nature; companies shares a single vision—deliver smart, enriching, and innovative the seminal cultural biography series media experiences of lasting significance to the American public near and far. american masters; television’s only regular performance arts series Great Through channels THIRTEEN, WLIW21, NJTV and our signature PBS series, performances; the weekly news WNET reaches 120 million people a month who seek out quality programs magazine Need to Know; and children’s that educate, inspire, and entertain. on-air and online educational programs sid the science Kid, oh Noah!, and When you support WNET as a Corporate Member, you become a mission us. philanthropic partner in our mission and support a network of PBS stations that reaches 90 percent of American households each year. WNET highlights the tri-state’s unique culture and diverse communities through Please take a few minutes to discover the many ways we can say thank you NYC-arTs, reel 13, NJ Today, and the metroFocus for helping us deliver the very best in public media to millions nationwide. online newsmagazine . Thank you for considering Corporate Membership. FOR yOuR Business Demonstrate your commitment to educational media with a Corporate Membership and you’ll reach an engaged and appreciative audience Neal Shapiro, President & CEO of members and viewers.
    [Show full text]
  • L'amour De Loin
    Press Contacts: Harry Forbes, WNET 212-560-8027 or [email protected] Lee Abrahamian, Metropolitan Opera 212-870-7457 or [email protected] Press materials: http://pressroom.pbs.org or http://www.thirteen.org/13pressroom Website: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/gperf Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/GreatPerformances Twitter: @GPerfPBS Kaija Saariaho’s Acclaimed Contemporary Opera L’Amour de Loin Comes to Great Performances at the Met Sunday, April 2 at 12 p.m. on PBS Kaija Saariaho ’s L’Amour de Loin (“Love From Afar”), one of the most highly praised operas of recent years, airs on Great Performances at the Met Sunday, April 2 at 12 p.m. on PBS (check local listings). (In New York, THIRTEEN will air the opera at 12:30 p.m.) The production, with a libretto by Amin Maalouf, had its Met premiere earlier this season in a production directed by Robert Lepage and conducted by Susanna Mälkki in her Met debut. Lepage’s staging, which uses thousands of LED lights to create the sea that separates the opera’s distant lovers, is a co-production with L’Opéra de Québec, where it premiered to accolades in the summer of 2015. Susanna Phillips stars as Clémence, the Countess of Tripoli, opposite Eric Owens as Jaufré Rudel, a troubadour on a quest to find his perfect love, and Tamara Mumford as the Pilgrim who carries messages back and forth between them. Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho’s breakthrough opera has been described by the New York Times as “transfixing…a lushly beautiful score.” Commissioned by the Salzburg Festival, it was first seen in 2000.
    [Show full text]