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Gray Eminence On
NJN's State
of the Arts
Friday, June 17 at 8:30 pm ; rebroadcast
at 11:30 pm
STATEWIDE – State of the Arts , NJN's
award-winning, half-hour arts magazine, invites you to start
your weekend exploring the artistic and cultural sides of
New Jersey . On June 17, the series takes a look at legendary
artists and musicians with careers that span generations.
This encore presentation tells the story of four eminent
artists, none of whom are resting on their laurels.
Gray Eminence airs on Friday,
June 17, at 8:30 pm with a rebroadcast at 11:30
pm .
• Milton Babbitt
Milton Babbitt played jazz and
wrote Broadway show music before dedicating himself to composing
with the mid-twentieth century serial technique. Babbitt
took the form to new heights, applying serialism to rhythm,
timbre, dynamics and pitch. He is a founder and member of
the Committee of Direction for the Electronic Music Center
of Columbia-Princeton Universities and has taught at both
Princeton University and the Juilliard School of Music. Now
in his late eighties, Babbitt reflects back on his career.
Also interviewed is pianist Robert Taub, who plays a Babbitt
composition. According to Taub, Babbitt is receiving more
commissions now than ever before.
• Jerry Herman
Jerry Herman, the legendary Broadway
composer and lyricist ( Hello Dolly , Mame , Mack
and Mabel , La
Cage Aux Folles ), first fell in love with the musical
theater as a boy growing up in Jersey City — and the love
affair continues. State of the Arts previews
scenes from an upcoming documentary about Herman, produced
by Amber Edwards: Jerry Herman – The Best of Times. Now
in his mid-seventies, and with a revival of his 1983 smash La
Cage Aux Folles , Herman's enthusiasm is undiminished,
and very much evident as he coaches young singers in a rehearsal
studio. Additional commentary from longtime friends and colleagues
Carol Channing, Charles Nelson Reilly, director Arthur Laurents,
lyricist Fred Ebb and composer Charles Strouse helps reveal
the craftsmanship behind Herman's seemingly simple, ebullient
songs.
• Peter Stroud
In the 1930s in New York City , Peter
Stroud helped establish the American Abstract Artists (AAA),
a group formed to counter the popular view that abstract
painting and sculpture were only happening in Europe .
Discouraged by the lack of representation of American artists
in a survey of Cubism and abstraction at the Museum of Modern
Art , the AAA organized their first show with 39 artists
in April 1937. Their pamphlets, lectures, forums and annual
exhibitions increased the appreciation and popularity of
American abstract art. The group dissolved as the United
States was drawn into World War II, but began to reorganize
around 1950. Its members continue to act as stewards of abstract
art in America . Stroud, a resident of Princeton , talks
about his art and the importance of the AAA in his career.
The segment also features an interview with Don Voisine,
the current AAA president.
• Tom Malloy
Tom Malloy, a Trenton-based artist,
began his career at an age when most people think of retiring.
After working in the Roebling Mills and as a lay preacher,
he turned to art — painting scenes of Trenton and the surrounding
farmland, familiar to him since his childhood. The uniqueness
of his watercolors, depicting landscapes and city scenes,
attracts a loyal audience of collectors. State of the
Arts visits
Malloy in his studio, finding out just how the artist incorporates
his memories into his work.
State of the Arts is streamed on the web site at
www.njn.net . The program is closed captioned.
State of the Arts is the recipient of 23 regional
Emmy Awards including a 2005 New York Emmy and a 2004 Mid-Atlantic
Emmy. Funding is provided by the New Jersey State Council
on the Arts and the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation. The series
producer is Susan Wallner and the executive producer is Nila
Aronow.
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