HiSTORYALIVE 2015 864.244.1499 • The Greenville Chautauqua Society, Greenville, SC • www.greenvillechautauqua.org • June Chautauqua Festival 10 days 2 weekends 3 cities 30 free shows June 12-21 Live s! Show Table of Contents America at the Movies 2 Schedule 3 About the Performers 4 Walt Disney 6 Mary Pickford 8 Gordon Parks 10 Orson Welles 12 What is Chautauqua 14 Presented by: Greenville Chautauqua Society, Greenville SC Buncombe County Public Libraries, Asheville, NC Spartanburg County Public Libraries, Spartanburg SC Gordon Parks, Orson Welles , Walt Disney, Mary Pickford E Greenville Chautauqua 11 Rock Side Ct Greenville, SC 29615 (864) 244-1499 greenvilleCHAUTAUQUA.org Board of Directors Duff Bruce Steve Davis Pat Grills Chip Lee Lynda Morrison Marge Scieszka Jim Smeaton Terri Steck Kimberly Witherspoon Advisory Board Dirk Holleman, FAC Dr. Matteel Jones, GTC Beverly Stroud, GTAA Accountant James H. Stuckey, Jr. Staff Sally Potosky, President George Frein, Artistic Director Caroline McIntyre, Administrator Larry Bounds, Asst Artistic Director Kathy Sowell, Communications Asheville Chautauqua Buncombe County Libraries and Friends of the Library Info: Abby Moser, Chairman (828) 250-6484 abby.moser@buncombecounty.org Celeste Baldwin Gil Elliott Bob & Jean Etter Steven Fazio Laura Gaskin Marilyn Lonon Ed Sheary Tammy Silver Judy Thompson Spartanburg Chautauqua Spartanburg County Public Libraries Todd Stephens, Director Christen Bennett, Coordinator Amanda Newman, Info (864) 285-9013 www.infodepot.org verybody goes to the Movies. It’s an American industry, an American art form, an American export and an American way of life. That’s why this year at Chautauqua you will experience America’s story through the voices of four movie pioneers – Mary Pickford, the woman who made Hollywood, Orson Welles the boy wonder who created Citizen Kane, Gordon Parks, the first African American Hollywood film director, and Walt Disney whose films whispered in our childhood ears that yes, our dreams can come true. They each started out as youngsters self-taught – not held back or afraid of what they didn’t know. From age 7 on, Mary Pickford was her family’s sole support. At age 16 Orson Welles, Gordon Parks and Walt Disney each left school and went out to seek their fortune – Welles by choice, Parks by destitution and Disney to join World War I. No one taught them their trade – they created it. Actors were just nameless faces before Mary Pickford’s talent and business sense made “Pickford” the name that sold the movies. Gordon Parks was just a Pullman porter with a pawnshop camera when he taught himself how to use it as a weapon against poverty and racism. Orson Welles was just 24 when he arrived on the RKO lot with no movie or camera experience, yet prepared to make a film masterpiece. Like Steve Jobs and Bill Gates, Walt Disney started in a garage with friends. They are the stuff dreams and determination are made of. Pickford came from vaudeville, Welles from radio, Parks from photojournalism, and Disney from the illustrator’s drawing board. But their vision and their stories didn’t stop there. They developed multiple talents. They took over their films as Director, Producer, Actor, and Screenwriter. As movies in America increasingly became an industry focused on profit, they each bucked the Hollywood Studio system to maintain their own vision of film art. But most of all they are remembered as storytellers, and their movies are 2 remembered as a place of imagination and dreams, a uniquely American story. Stories have different kinds of endings. When the talkies came out, no one wanted to see America’s Sweetheart grow up. 40-year-old Mary Pickford became a recluse, yet she died with a multi-million dollar estate. Orson Welles spent his life using every talent he had to raise funds to make Film into an art form that made audiences think, and much of his work still awaits release. After making millions for the studios with his Shaft black action hero films, Gordon Parks walked away from lucrative Blaxploitation movies to make relevant movies outside Hollywood, compose music, write poetry, create visual art and earn 50 honorary doctorates. Walt Disney, who wielded an unmatched influence over the childhood of all living generations, amassed a worldwide Entertainment Empire – but never forgot it all started telling stories of a little mouse. n From the Editor Come to Chautauqua this June. Come for a day, a weekend, or a week. You can meet all four characters on either weekend or throughout the week. But don’t miss it! Note: This original production can be seen only in Greenville, Asheville and Spartanburg – this June! Sincerely, Sally Potosky, President Funded in part by a grant from the Metropolitan Arts Council, which receives funding from the City of Greenville, BMW Manufacturing Company, LLC, Michelin North America, Inc., SEW Eurodrive and the South Carolina Arts Commission with support from the National Endowment for the Arts and the John and Susan Bennett Memorial Arts Fund of the Coastal Community Foundation of SC. Festival Schedule June 12-21 Greenville, SC Fri 6/12 7:30p Walt Disney Tent at Greenville Tech Sat 6/13 9:00a Walt Disney Discussion Artists Guild Gallery 2:00p Gordon Parks* Greenville Tech, Bldg 104 7:30p Mary Pickford Tent at Greenville Tech Sun 6/14 2:00p Making Gone with the Wind 3:30p Fine Arts Center @ WHHS 7:30p Orson Welles Tent at Greenville Tech Mon 6/15 11:30a Walt Disney* Younts Center, Fountain Inn 11:30a Gordon Parks Nicholtown Baptist Church Tue 6/16 11:30a Mary Pickford Centre Stage Wed 6/17 11:30a Orson Welles The Kroc Center 7:30p Walt Disney Trailblazer Amphitheater TR Thu 6/18 9:00a Orson Welles Discussion Artists Guild Gallery 11:30a Gordon Parks The Kroc Center So many ways to experience Chautauqua The festival takes place in Greater Greenville, Spartanburg and Asheville. All of the shows can be seen multiple times. Bring a picnic and enjoy the evening – outdoors in Greenville, Asheville, and Travelers Rest Experience the magic under the Chautauqua Tent in Greenville Enjoy shows indoors, daytime in Greenville, evenings in Spartanburg Meet a performer for coffee and discussion in Greenville Some shows in Greenville will be sign-interpreted. Fri 6/19 9:00a Mary Pickford Dicussion Artists Guild Gallery 7:30p Walt Disney Falls Park, bring lawn seating Sat 6/20 9:00a Gordon Parks Discussion Artists Guild Gallery 2:00p Mary Pickford* Greenville Tech, Bldg 104 7:30p Gordon Parks Tent at Greenville Tech Sun 6/21 2:00p Making Gone with the Wind 3:30p Fine Arts Center 7:30p Orson Welles* Tent at Greenville Tech * Sign interpreted shows Under the Chautauqua tent (Greenville evenings) Spartanburg, SC Headquarters Library 151 South Church Street, Spartanburg, SC 29306 Mon 6/15 7:00p Tue 6/16 7:00p Wed 6/17 7:00p Thu 6/18 7:00p Mary Pickford Walt Disney Gordon Parks Orson Welles Asheville, NC Warren Wilson College – Morris Pavilion, outdoors 701 Warren Wilson Rd, Swannanoa, NC 28778 Mon 6/16 7:00p Tue 6/17 7:00p Wed 6/18 7:00p Thu 6/19 7:00p Orson Welles Gordon Parks Mary Pickford Walt Disney Cool pavilion for Asheville shows $4 $4 $4 $4 Maps and info on our website or scan this code. 3 Making Gone with the Wind, The Characters an illustrated talk Walt Disney He had a vision of who America was, who America is, and who America can be. presented by Leslie Goddard Larry Bounds, Greenville, SC Mary Pickford Before Valentino or Chaplin, she was the world’s first movie superstar. Leslie Goddard, Chicago IL Seventy-five years after its blockbuster Orson Welles His cinematic magic was amazing. Citizen Kane has been called the greatest film of all time. George Frein, Fort Worth, TX Gordon Parks Through his camera lens, he exposed both poverty and joy. Charles Pace, Texarkana, TX 4 premiere in 1939, Gone with the Wind continues to inspire passionate devotion. With ticket sales since 1939 translated into contemporary dollars, it is the world’s all-time box-office champion. American Film Institute members voted it the most popular film of all time. You’ll learn the story of how Gone With the Wind was made, including the two-year search for Scarlett O’Hara, the pioneering special effects, and the perfectionistic drive of visionary producer David O. Selznick. You’ll explore the accuracy of the movie’s history and its lasting influence in shaping popular understanding of the American Civil War. What accounts for this movie’s remarkably enduring popularity? This special event can be seen Sunday afternoons, in Greenville only. Scholar Performers “The Cinema is an invention without a future” Larry Bounds (Walt Disney) has appeared as a Chautauqua scholar since 2005 in memorable presentations as Harry Houdini, Winston Churchill, Albert Einstein, and Davy Crockett. A National Certified Teacher of Advanced Placement high school English, he holds a B.A. in theater andd M.S. in Education. When not reading about the lives and works of America’s most intriguing and productive citizens or teaching at the award winning Wade Hampton High School in Greenville, Larry also serves on the Executive Committee of Piedmont Area Mensa. He appeared as a professional magician throughout the ‘70s with Ripley’s Believe It or Not! larrycrystal.com - Lumiere, inventor of portable motion picture camera (1894) Little did Lumiere know that “the movies” would grow from penny arcades to palatial theaters where masses could see a newsreel, cartoon, and 2 feature films at an affordable price. Technology enabled the art form, but it took artists to see the possibilities. Major studios grew to fund the expensive production. Today, lower cost digital technology has enabled small independent filmmakers again. 1880-90s Motion Picture Camera developed 1900-1920’s Silent Film Era Longer stories, edited films, cinematic techniques, large studios, star system US film center moved to California (Hollywood) D.W. Griffith‘s epic, Birth of a Nation, (1915) John Ford, pioneer film techniques, films on location Oscar Micheaux, African American film director The Jazz Singer (1927) intro to talkies George Frein (Orson Welles) our artistic director, is retired, but working as a Chautauqua scholar/performer. He reads a lot, as a book’s author. In recent years George has read Mr. Citizen as Harry Truman; MobyDick as Herman Melville; Memories, Dreams, Reflections as Carl Jung; Gettysburg Address as Lincoln; Birds of America as Audubon; Mont Saint Michel and Chartres as Henry Adams; Correspondence with Thomas Jefferson as John Adams; A Modell of Christian Charity as John Winthrop; You’re Only Old Once as Dr. Seuss; Adventures of Huckleberry Finn as Mark Twain. This year, George has been going to the movies to see films – as Orson Welles. 1930s-40’s Golden Age of Hollywood Hays Production code, Sound, Color, Film Noir Snow White (1937) first US feature animation Gone With The Wind, Wizard of Oz, Stagecoach (1939) Citizen Kane (1941) revolutionizes movie story telling 1950-60’s Rise of TV Abolition of Hays Production Code Ben-Hur, Psycho, James Bond, 2001: Space Odyssey 1970-today Blockbusters to Indie films Leslie Goddard (Mary Pickford and Making of Gone with the Wind) is a full-time historical interpreter and public speaker who has been portraying famous women of the past for more than ten years. Her roster of notable women includes more than a dozen figures, including Bette Davis, Jane Austen, Clara Barton, Amelia Earhart, and Jackie Kennedy. She holds a Ph.D. from Northwestern University in U.S. history and American studies, as well as a master’s degree in theater from the University of Illinois. A former museum director, she is the author of two books on Chicago history and presents more than 240 programs annually for museums, libraries, schools, clubs, and other organizations. lesliegoddard.info Charles Pace (Gordon Parks) began performing Chautauqua programs in 1991 with The Great Plains Chautauqua Society. He explores how African-American leaders have helped advance democracy in America through Frederick Douglass, Booker T. Washington, W. E. B. Du Bois, Langston Hughes, and Malcolm X. Pace has been on the program staff at The University of Texas at Austin (B.A.) and has taught at University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Purdue University (M.A.) and Centre College of Kentucky. Charles Everett Pace lives in Texarkana, Texas, and performs nationally. His latest work is Taking the Lead: Creative Leadership Training for Today’s Students. Clockwise from top: Larry Bounds, Leslie Goddard, George Frein, Charles Pace 5 Walt Disney by Larry Bounds If you can dream it, you can do it. W “The difference between winning and losing is most often not quitting.” Walt Disney (1901-1966) 1911 moves from farm in Marcelene, Missouri to Kansas City; delivers newspapers for his father 1918 drives an ambulance in France in WWI 1920 experiments with animation 1923 establishes animation studio in Hollywood with brother Roy hen we think of Walt Disney, visions of Mickey Mouse, Disneyland (or Walt Disney World), and animated princesses fill our minds. For those who remember his Sunday night Wonderful World of Disney, he is the host himself, a kindly uncle visiting our homes through the television. But Disney’s effect on America and his personal reflection of America’s values and culture are far more pervasive in our current society. His successes were grander, and, even his failures were destined to become successes, far beyond the all too brief span of his life. Disney lived the American Dream and helped all of us define what that dream is today. His fascinating career in American movies would stretch from the silent film era to the age of television and manned space travel. Walt Disney would: • be nominated for 59 Oscars, winning 26 – more than anyone in history • create the iconic Mickey Mouse after having had his earlier successful cartoon star Oswald the Lucky Rabbit stripped away from his control, something he would be careful to never allow to happen again • perform as Mickey’s voice 1928 creates Mickey Mouse to replace Oswald the Lucky Rabbit • originate the story lines and most of the bits of business (comic action) for classic Disney films 1933 The Three Little Pigs cartoon produces the theme song of the Great Depression • form an international merchandising empire based on his imaginative images 1937 produces Snow White (First animated feature film and highest grossing film of all time – until Gone with the Wind in 1939) 1954 hosts television program with tie-ins to Disney films and events 1955 opens Disneyland 1965 announces plans for Disney World 1966 dies from lung cancer As a boy whose childhood was often soul-crushing labor and routine, Disney read the rags-to-riches stories of Horatio Alger and Charles Dickens and found his escape and future success through his imagination, creating a world he preferred to the world he found around him. His films would allow others that same escape. Like Steve Jobs or Bill Gates, Disney started in a garage with friends. When he found an audience for his ideas, he expanded to a dozen and then thousands of full time employees who were selected not only for their talents but for their willingness to improve those talents. And like those other entrepreneurs, he invested in his community, supporting the arts and culture. • sway the American military to focus on building air power resources just prior to our entry into WWII with his film Air Power • anticipate the important role television would play in promoting the film industry when most studio heads saw TV as a threat to their business • turn a childhood interest in trains into a backyard hobby and a theme park extravaganza • spend most of his life on the verge of bankruptcy because every dime his ideas earned was reinvested in his next big idea. 6 Apart from his dreams and his determination to succeed, what was the secret of Disney’s great success and what does that reveal about America itself? He understood his audience, the American public. He understood the rough edges of American humor, our sentimentality, our universal acceptance of the idea that the little guy can win even when the odds seem insurmountable, and our belief in the basic goodness or decency of us all and the optimism that eventually the good will always win out. GOOD ReadS The Animated Man: a life of Walt Disney by Michael Barrier, 2007, an authoritative history of Disney – one of the best. The Wonderful World of Disney Television: a complete history by Bill Cotter, 1997 – Just what it says. The Art of Walt Disney: from Mickey Mouse to the Magic Kingdoms by Christopher Finch, 1973 – a beautiful, colorful text of the creative images of the Disney Studios. “All our dreams can come true, if we have the courage to pursue them.” Walt Disney: a biography by Barbara Ford, 1989 – a young person’s narrative of Disney’s life, an enjoyable read. - Walt Disney These foundational notions of his would prove so successful that, although several of Disney’s films like Pinocchio, Bambi, and Fantasia were first released to very poor box office receipts, they would stand the test of time and all become not only great commercial successes but examples of iconic American cinema. Whether in portraying the importance of the American nuclear family (So Dear to My Heart, Old Yeller), our appreciation of the natural world (Seal Island, The Living Desert) or a glorification of national myths (Johnny Tremain, Davy Crockett, Pecos Bill), Disney in both animation and live action revealed and reveled in the American mindset. His celebration of Americana continued with the construction of amusement parks that were wholesome, clean, educational, and fun. He honored the small town values and lifestyle of his Marcelene, Missouri, youth along Disneyland’s Main Street and envisioned the exciting potentials of space exploration, mass transit, and communication at EPCOT (the Experimental Prototype Community Of Tomorrow). They were a past remembered by Disney and a future foreseen by him. While the American film industry benefitted from Disney Studios’ developments in animation, improvements in sound processing, delivery, and synchronization, advancements in camera technology, and innovations for film commercialization through merchandising tie-ins, Walt Disney himself wanted America to remember him simply as, “a storyteller.” And in that capacity, he told the story of who America was, who America is, and who America can be. n “Laughter is timeless; Imagination has no age; Dreams are forever.” - Walt Disney Walt Disney: the triumph of American imagination by Neal Gabler, 2006 – current standard Disney reference, though some corrections are needed. The Revised Vault of Walt by Jim Korkis, 2012 – more fun - fascinating details. The Book of the Mouse by Jim Korkis, 2013 – anecdotal fun. The Disney Films by Leonard Maltin, 2000 – an encyclopedic reference to Disney films, regularly updated since the 1970s by a well-recognized critic. Walt Disney: an American Original by Bob Thomas, 1994 – a blend of anecdotal biographical history. The Illusion of Life: Disney Animation by Ollie Johnston and Frank Thomas 1981 – reveals the designs and methods behind Disney artwork. The Musical World of Walt Disney by David Tietyen, 1990 – explores the important role music played in the Disney creations. Security. Stability. Strength. Since 1907. CBL has a strong history of being a safe and secure place for citizens in the local community to grow their savings and build their dreams. waltdisney.org – The website of the Disney Family Museum in San Francisco. It details Disney’s life and presents a variety of changing programs associated with Disney’s career and contributions. disney.com – Official website of the Disney Studios and all things Disney. CBLGreer.com 229 Trade Street | Greer, SC | 877-2054 7 Mary Pickford by Leslie Goddard First Cinema Superstar B “Talking pictures are like putting lip rouge on the Venus de Milo.” Mary Pickford (1892-1979) 1892 born Gladys Smith in Toronto, Canada 1900 debuts onstage; soon touring with her family in plays 1907 adopts name Mary Pickford; debuts on Broadway 1909 film debut with Biograph Company 1914 achieves superstardom with Tess of the Storm Country 1916 negotiates unprecedented film salary of $10,000/week 1919 co-founds United Artists 1920 marries film star Douglas Fairbanks; opens Pickford-Fairbanks Studio 1929 wins best actress Academy Award for Coquette (a talkie) 1933 retires from acting after more than 200 films efore there was Garbo, before there was Valentino or even Chaplin, there was Mary Pickford. She was the world’s first cinema superstar. There was simply no cult of the movie star celebrity before her. In a career which spanned twentythree years from 1909 to 1933, she achieved a fame scarcely imaginable before – or since. More than just the queen of the cinema, she was the most famous woman in America and around the world. (Silent films had a universality that disappeared with the arrival of spoken dialogue) She was also a powerful movie mogul who founded and ran her own production studio. With help from her mother Charlotte, Pickford negotiated ground-breaking contracts including a spectacular deal in 1916 that gave her $10,000 a week, fifty percent of her film profits, and her own production company. Today, astonishingly, she is often overlooked by film buffs. Partly, this is because Pickford’s films were unavailable for decades. Afraid of being ridiculed, she retained the copyright to many of her films with the intention of destroying them. Thank goodness she didn’t, and many have survived. Moreover, she never successfully broke away from little-girl roles. Although she played many adult characters, fans particularly adored her as a girl. She portrayed girls as young as ten years old in films such as The Poor Little Rich Girl (1917), Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1917), and Pollyanna (1920). Reluctant to disappoint the public, Pickford continued taking on adolescent roles until well into her thirties. Perhaps the main reason Pickford is overlooked is that she belonged to the silent era. Although she had modest hits with her few talkies, even winning an Academy Award for Coquette (1929), her four talkies were not as successful as her silent films had been, and she retired from acting in 1933. 8 After that, she withdrew from the world. Devastated by her mother’s death in 1928 and her divorce from her second husband Douglas Fairbanks in 1936, she retreated into her Hollywood home, Pickfair, where she lived with her third husband Buddy Rogers and their two adopted children. She died a reclusive alcoholic, largely forgotten. Forgetting her is more than just unfortunate. It obscures her celebrity, which is almost unfathomable today. From about 1914 to 1928, she was probably the most-discussed film star in the world. Motion picture magazines rarely failed to include an article on her. When she and Fairbanks honeymooned abroad in 1920, they were literally mobbed – in England, in Japan, in Sweden, everywhere. At one event, Fairbanks had to hoist her onto his shoulders for safety. Back in California, their home Pickfair became the center around which Hollywood social life “We were pioneers in a brandnew medium. Everything’s fun when you’re young.“ – Mary Pickford GOOD ReadS The Woman Who Made Hollywood by Eileen Whitfield, 1997. A great biography for those who know little about Pickford. Relies heavily on the autobiography Sunshine and Shadows, but nonetheless, well-researched and places Pickford’s life and work nicely in the context of her times. Mary Pickford: Queen of the Movies edited by Christel Schmidt, 2013. A groundbreaking collection of essays by top authors, co-published by the Library of Congress. Sheds new light on many overlooked aspects of Pickford’s life and career. Includes gorgeous rare photographs. Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks revolved. When she cut her famous long curls into a stylish bob, it made national headlines. Overlooking Pickford also overlooks her talent. At a time when film actors still used elaborate, stylized gestures borrowed from the theater, Pickford brought an easy naturalness to her roles. Her young girls are spunky and mischievous, prone to mud fights and sight gags. As one critic noted, Lillian Gish is remembered as the woman on the ice floe – the woman in peril – but Mary Pickford is the woman who would tramp out to the ice floe to rescue you. Pickford’s first major film successes came in the early 1910s, when cinema was still new. Her work in Tess of the Storm Country (1914) has been called “the first great performance of feature film.” Fifteen years later, in the late 1920s, she was still a top box-office draw. Pickford was just as successful as a film producer and distributor. By the late 1910s, she was overseeing every aspect of her films, from script to direction. In 1919, she co-founded United Artists with Fairbanks, Charlie Chaplin, and D.W. Griffith, and the following year, she co-founded Pickford-Fairbanks Studio. Few other actors, not to mention women, have ever so fully controlled the production and distribution of their own films. In short, Mary Pickford’s achievements are legendary. She and Fairbanks were the first to have their hand and footprints officially set in concrete outside Grauman’s Chinese Theater. She helped found the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 1927, and in 1976, the Academy awarded her a Lifetime Achievement Award. In 1999, the American Film Institute named her one of the top twenty-five greatest American female screen legends. n Sunshine and Shadows by Mary Pickford, 1955. Pickford’s autobiography. Written in a breezy style that captures the essence of her likeability. It’s not unvarnished history (she holds back at times and tidies up some stories), but still, a compelling image of her life. Mary Pickford, America’s Sweetheart by Scott Eyman, 1990. Written by a former film critic, this readable, well-researched biography celebrates her achievements and doesn’t shy away from her failings, including her alcoholism and decades-long feud with Charlie Chaplin. American Silent Film. by William Everson, 1998. For those who want to learn more about silent films, this is the definitive work. Covers nickelodeons of the early 1900s through the first talkies in the late 1920s. Wellresearched but also readable. Watch Mary Pickford If you’ve never seen a Mary Pickford movie, start with Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1917) or Daddy Long-Legs (1919). Both are definitive Pickford films and showcase her talent for both comedic gags and evocative pathos. If you’re converted by then, check out the classic Stella Maris (1918), which many consider the high point of her career. Then, watch Tess of the Storm Country (1914), the movie that made Pickford an international superstar. DAVID A. MERLINE, JR. TAXATION LAW ESTATE PLANNING AND PROBATE LAW MERLINE & MEACHAM, P.A. ATTORNEYS AT LAW 812 E NORTH ST 864/242-4080 P.O. BOX 10796 GREENVILLE SC 29603 dmerlinejr@merlineandmeacham.com 9 Gordon Parks by Charles Pace The Power and the Poetry Behind the Pictures The opening scene of Gordon Parks’ “I suffered evils, but without allowing them to rob me of the freedom to expand.” Gordon Parks (1912-2006) 1937 Buys his first camera in a pawn shop 1941-44 wins a Julius Rosenwald Fellowship with the Farm Security Administration 1944-48 Freelance photographer for Vogue and Standard Oil 1948-68 Life Magazine’s first black photojournalist. 1963 The Learning Tree, semi-autobiographical novel 1969 The Learning Tree, movie - producer, director, screenwriter 1971 Shaft, director 1972 Shaft’s Big Score! director and composer 1974 The Super Cops, director 1976 Leadbelly, director 1984 Solomon Northup’s Odyssey, TV production, director and screenwriter 1987 Moments Without Proper Names, director, screenwriter and composer 1989 Martin, ballet dedicated to Martin Luther King Jr, director and composer movie The Learning Tree (1969) couldn’t be more pure Americana – a young boy in a wheat field passing a summer day watching ants. A threatening mid-west tornado portends a coming-of-age story. Which it is – and isn’t. Gordon Parks returned to his birthplace, Fort Scott Kansas, to make The Learning Tree, the first Hollywood studio film to be directed by an African American. Based on his semi-autobiographic novel, the film tells of a boy’s growingup year. Behind the bucolic images lies another reality – 1920’s Kansas, a brutal, hostile place where racial discrimination was the norm. Gordon Parks, internationally famous photojournalist, had chosen a movie camera as his weapon against poverty and racism. When his mother died, Parks roamed the country taking any job available to a black teenager without a high school diploma – busboy, Civilian Conservation Corps, jazz piano player. He had worked up to Pullman porter when he first saw Dorothea Lange’s photos of the Depression in a left behind magazine. Their power fascinated him, and at age 25 he bought his first camera for $12.50 at a pawnshop –a 35mm Voigtländer Brilliant. Entirely self-taught, he became a free-lance fashion photographer. Four years after he bought his first camera, his Chicago ghetto photos won him a Julius Rosenwald fellowship at the Farm Security Administration where Parks learned from his boss, mentor and friend, Roy Stryker: “First, create the story in your mind, and then capture the images that logically express the idea . . . If you don’t have anything to say, your photographs are not going to say much.” Parks found he had a lot to say. He became what The New York Times writer John Wranovics called - a “oneman wrecking crew” of American racial boundaries. After leaving Washington he moved to Harlem and free-lanced as photographer for Vogue and Standard 10 Oil leading to a job as Life magazine’s first black photojournalist. He would work for Life for over twenty years and created some of its most powerful photo essays: “Harlem Gang Leader,” “Show Girls at work and play,” “A Fierce and Tender Eye, Gordon Parks on poverty’s dire toll.” As photographer and friend to the rich and famous, Gloria Vanderbilt, Ingrid Bergman, Malcolm X, Muhammad Ali, Marilyn Monroe, Bette Davis and Marlon Brando all came into his camera’s eye. He told Black Panther militant Eldridge Cleaver, “You have a 45mm automatic pistol on your lap, and I have a 35mm camera on my lap, and my weapon is just as powerful as yours.” Thus, when Parks turned Fort Scott Kansas into a “Hollywood back lot” to make the first studio film by an African American – his skill with the camera was that of a master. But beyond the camera, he knew how to “think in terms of images and words.” He had already proven that “they can be mighty powerful when they are put together properly.” From the beginning of American cinema, there were black independent films. Between 1919-1933 Oscar Michaeux alone produced and distributed GOOD ReadS A Hungry Heart: A Memoir by Gordon Parks, 2005 – My first choice for one to read. It is his latest award-winning memoir published two years before his death. “Weapon of Choice” by John Wranovics, 2006 – is a New York TImes book review of A Hungry Heart by Gordon Parks. Voices in the Mirror: An Autobiography by Gordon Parks, 1990 – Insight into his ideas about photography, as well as, insights into his thoughts on Hollywood. This is his second most recent autobiography outside of the Hollywood system more than thirty films by and about black America. Then in 1929 when King Vidor cast an all black film Hallelujah! blacks began to find work in Hollywood. However, the realistic representations of black life depicted in independent black films were unfortunately replaced by Hollywood with stereotypes. By the late 1960’s white flight to the suburbs left the inner cities of the north largely black, including much of their movie audience. The black ticket buying public had box office clout. Seeing its potential, Kenny Hyman, Warner-Brother executive, became “the Branch Rickey of Hollywood” making Gordon Parks’ The Learning Tree, the Jackie Robinson story of film. In 1971, a cash-strapped MGM Studio asked Gordon Parks to direct Shaft, an action film with a black super-hero detective. Made for $1.24 million, Shaft grossed $11 million. It hauled MGM out of bankruptcy and gave birth to the ”Black Action Hero.” The next year Gordon Parks, Jr. (with support from papa Gordon Parks) directed Super Fly. Within two weeks of its release, it had grossed $12 million. That got Hollywood’s attention. Studios began a flurry of black male and female action films. Most were poorly written, acted, and produced. Julius Griffin, NAACP Hollywood-Branch president called these new black action heroes, “super males with vast physical prowess but no cognitive skills.” Tony Brown, dean of Howard University’s school of journalism criticized: “The blaxploitation films are a phenomenon of self-hate . . . Going to see yourself as a drug dealer when you’re oppressed is sick. Not only are blacks identifying with him, they’re paying for the identification . . . [this is] treason.” In contrast, James Earl Jones, actor, asserted: “If they’re going to put the damper on John Shaft, let them put it on John Wayne too, and they’ll find out that there are a lot of people who need those fantasies.” Gordon Parks, Sr. agreed, “It’s ridiculous to imply that blacks don’t know the difference between truth and fantasy and therefore will be influenced by these films in an unhealthy way.” After directing and writing the music for the sequel Shaft’s Big Score, even with two other sequels in the pipeline, Parks announced that they would make no more black action hero films. But by then, the number of black actors, writers, directors, and crew had increased significantly. Both The Learning Tree and Shaft were included in the Library of Congress National Film Registry. Parks, Sr. would go on to make five more movies including Solomon Northrup’s Odyssey (remade in 2014 as 12 Years a Slave.) Gordon Parks did not graduate from high school. He did produce, direct, write and compose music for ten films, and authored twenty books. Ten compilations of his poetry and photography have been published. And at his death, hanging on his wall, were fifty-three honorary doctorate degrees. n Half Past Autumn: a retrospective by Gordon Parks, 1997 – a retrospective view of the color and black and white photography of Parks and an insightful essay by Phillip Brookman: “Unlocked Doors: Gordon Parks at the Crossroads.” Black Films and Film Makers, Lindsay Patterson, Ed. 1975 “Something mighty there is inside a man that takes him from being the youngest of 15 children raised in Kansas poverty, something that lets him clear the cruel hurdles implanted by a racist society, something that permits not merely survival but mastery of all that he embraced. A poet, and a pianist, a classical music composer, and one very at home with the blues . . . a journalist, a novelist and a man with enough life that even three autobiographies cannot contain the whole, a painter of oils and water colors, and a photographer of street gangs and Paris boulevards . . . It is not simply that he was the first black man to do all these things, but that any man was able to do all these things and do them well.” - from The Great LIFE Photographers. 11 Orson Welles by George Frein Movie Magic – Art and Fakery Movies are expensive to make. A “A film is never really good unless the camera is an eye in the head of a poet.” Orson Welles (1915-1985) 1931 makes his stage debut at the Gate Theatre in Dublin 1936-41 popular radio drama star 1936 selected by John Houseman (WPA Federal Theatre Project) to direct Macbeth for the Negro Theatre Project in Harlem. 1937 Julius Caesar, Cradle Will Rock 1937 co-founds Mercury Theatre 1938 “War of the Worlds” stuns America – CBS radio, Mercury Theater on the Air 1940 Citizen Kane 1941 Oscar for best Screenplay. 1942 The Magnificent Ambersons 1942 It’s All true/ Four Men on a Raft unfinished documentary about Brazilian culture 1943 Journey into Fear 1946 The Stranger 1947 Lady from Shanghai. 1948 Macbeth 1949 Black Magic 1952 Othello 1955 Mr. Arkadin 1958 A Touch of Evil. 1962 The Trial 1965 Chimes at Midnight 1973 F for Fake 1970-76 Other Side of the Wind, unfinished, to be completed 2015 painter can purchase canvas and brushes for a few dollars, whereas a film director requires millions to make a movie. But, if successful at the boxoffice, movies can be profitable beyond anything a painter could ever hope for. And just here, at the intersection of cost and profit, the film artist in America is caught in a struggle between making art and making money. And this is true of no one more than Orson Welles. George Orson Welles was a genius – at least the family physician pronounced him a genius while he was still an infant. “The word genius was whispered into my ear while I was still mewling in my crib,” Welles said, laughing. “So it never occurred to me that I wasn’t until middle age.” Long before reaching middle age, he had a successful debut on the Dublin stage at 16; was a playwright at 17; acted in a Broadway production of Romeo and Juliet at 18; directed a critically acclaimed Macbeth at 20; produced Dr. Faustus for standing room only audiences at 21; formed the Mercury Theatre at 22; and was on the cover of Time magazine at 23. Welles was still only 23 when he produced, directed and starred in the Mercury Theatre on the Air, a series of weekly programs that featured radio versions of literary classics. One of the classics was H. G. Wells’ The War of the Worlds. Orson Welles produced it as a breaking news story in which men from Mars were reported to be invading New Jersey. Millions of unsuspecting dial-turners missed the beginning announcement that what followed was a radio play. They took it for a real news broadcast andpanicked, flooding police stationsaround the country with phone calls. The show made Welles a national celebrity. To capitalize on Welles’ sudden fame, RKO Pictures signed him, then just 24, to a contract which gave him complete artistic control to make a movie which he would write, direct, 12 produce, act in, and edit. At age 25, Orson Welles made Citizen Kane, often said to be the best American movie ever made and certainly a work of art. Welles tells the story of Charles Foster Kane through a series of flashbacks, as a reporter interviews people who knew Kane. We never see the reporter’s face. The camera always shoots over his shoulder so that we too can look for the true Kane. Critics loved it. It was nominated for nine Academy Awards. It failed at the box office, however, because the press tycoon, William Randolph Hearst, correctly took the picture’s fictional Charles Foster Kane as an unflattering portrait of himself. He refused to allow mention of the film in Hearst newspapers and ruthlessly campaigned against its distribution. What caught the attention of RKO stockholders was not the artistry of Citizen Kane but the money it lost. Never again would Welles be given the kind of artistic freedom he enjoyed while making his first movie. Welles first film after Citizen Kane, The Magnificent Ambersons (1943), was based on a Booth Tarkington novel about the decline of a wealthy American family. When a preview audience objected to the absence of a happy “ This is the biggest electric train set any boy ever had!’” - Welles, on seeing the RKO Studio lot for the first time. GOOD ReadS This Is Orson Welles: Orson Welles and Peter Bogdanovich, edited by Jonathan Rosenbaum, 1992 - Interviews with Welles, his own words on film-making and himself. My Lunches with Orson Welles: Conversations Between Henry Jaglom and Orson Welles, edited by Peter Biskind, 2013 - Welles corrects the record about his failure to make another Citizen Kane. ending, RKO rewrote and re-edited the film; “ruined it,” Welles said. Worse, producers in Hollywood passed around the rumor that Welles could not finish a film on time and within budget. His answer to the charge was to repress his own artistry and make a film with a straightforward, linear story that he produced on time and under budget. The movie was The Stranger (1946), about a former Nazi officer hiding out at an American boys’ school, waiting for a resurgence of the party in Germany. It made money at the box office, but Welles had compromised his art. After The Stranger, Welles made The Lady from Shanghai (1947) for Columbia Pictures, starring himself and his wife, Rita Hayworth. Although the studio wanted only a B movie thriller, and reedited it to make it one, Welles wanted to challenge American moviegoers to react to true film art. In spite of Columbia’s editing, it has become a Film Noir classic, famous for its final scene of a shoot-out in a funhouse hall of mirrors. The audience is never sure whether they are seeing the shooter or his “fake” mirror reflection. After Lady from Shanghai, Welles turned away from the Hollywood studio system. He had to seek individual investors and put in money of his own. But the result was a substantial body of work marked by high artistic merit. A Shakespearian actor himself, Welles created innovative film versions of Shakespeare’s plays: Macbeth (1948), Othello (1952), and a collage of five plays in The Chimes at Midnight (1965). Though American audiences were largely unenthusiastic, Welles got the grand prize for Othello at the 1952 Cannes Film Festival and two awards in 1966 for The Chimes at Midnight – the film Welles thought was his best work. In his middle age Welles continued to make films which challenged film audiences to think. Mr. Arkadin (1955) and Touch of Evil (1958) effectively embodied his belief: “The biggest mistake we have made,” he said, “is to consider that films are primarily a form of entertainment; they are only incidentally a form of entertainment. The film is the greatest medium since the invention of movable type for exchanging ideas and information.” This idea is especially evident In The Trial (1962), a film inspired by Franz Kafka’s great and difficult novel. What pleased Welles about this film was that it was rather well received, proving, he thought, that one could make and market a film on a serious topic - and a film which asked questions but gave no answers. Finally, Welles’ last film, and his only color film, F for Fake (1973), is the crowning expression of his belief that film art should make audiences think about what they are seeing on the screen, indeed, think about what life itself shows them. This is a must-see movie for those who enjoy Chautauqua, which has its own kind of artistic fakery – an audience talking to famous people from the past. Orson Welles appears in the film as himself, telling the story of two famous fakes; and then adds a surprise third fake of his own. He boldly tests his audience with a serious question about fakery: “But is it art?” He asks the question as a playful, even youthful genius of 58. n 13 Among the many biographies, the best, I think, is Orson Welles, a Biography by Barbara Leaming,1985 and 1995 - well researched and based on many interviews with Welles, it presents a factual account of his film work that was neglected by many previous writers. Simon Callow is writing a larger, three-volume biography. Two are published to date: Orson Welles: The Road to Xanadu,1996; Orson Welles: Hello Americans, 2006. The Films of Orson Welles by Charles Higham, 1970 - created the widely held view that, after making Citizen Kane, Welles could not finish a film for temperamental reasons. In My Father’s Shadow, A Daughter Remembers Orson Welles by Chris Welles Feder, 2009 - an intimate look at Welles BBC TV production, The Orson Welles Story, 1982 - the best of the many television interviews 2.75 hr. Orson Welles’s Last Movie: The Other Side of the Wind by Josh Karp, book release on April 21, 2015 - behind-the-scenes account about making the movie. The Other Side of the Wind, the movie - scheduled to be completed and released on May 6, 2015, the 100th anniversary of Welles’ birthday. C h a u ta u q u a then... and now... by John M. Harrison, Oakland Iowa by Tom Tiller, Greenville, SC F P rom August to August, we waited for Chautauqua to come back to Oakland. In the little western Iowa town where I grew up, Chautauqua was far and away the most exciting event of any year, a time when families from miles around brought their tents, their beds, their cooking equipment to the wooded park on the bank of the Nishnabotna River to be a part of that wonderful mixture of entertainment and stimulation in a time when radio was mostly static, and the people in movies didn’t talk. The big tent where all action took place had to be put up and all the boys in town had to be there to watch it happen. As we grew older, we were sometimes even paid money to perform some of the menial tasks involved, though we’d have paid for the privilege had it been necessary. Next came the family tents which went up in the wooded area south of the big tent. People flocked in from farms and small towns within a thirty mile radius of Oakland to spend the whole time the Chautauqua lasted – sleeping there, eating there, socializing there. And then came all the star attractions – the preachers, the politicians, the lady elecutionists, the Swiss bell ringers, the gospel singers and the actors who transported us to other places. Billy Sunday would be there to sanctify us, and William Jennings Bryan would come to exhort us. Bohumil Kryl’s brass band would stir us, and string orchestras would soothe us. The acting companies made us laugh uproariously or sob in sorrow. We lived in a different world from the one in which we spent the other fifty weeks of the year. I’ve sometimes regretted that I didn’t take advantage of the chance to see Chautauqua from the other side of the footlights. One of the groups that presented those wonderful plays made me an offer to spend the summer of 1930 doing the circuit with them. My parents thought that, at 16, I was a little young for that sort of thing. Probably they were right, but .... repare to be astonished by the virtual presence of important historical figures. You can expect Will Rogers, for example, to speak to you about his own times. This vivid encounter between you and the performer leads Tom and Lucy Tiller enjoy a picnic to countless audience before a Chautauqua show. questions, followed by another barrage of questions after the performer sheds his period costume and answers as the scholar he is. The scholar may have a different answer for the same question. After the tent lights have dimmed at the close of a wonderful Chautauqua evening and folks walk back through the deepening dusk to their cars and home, it is likely that they will long remember, discuss and read about the important Americans they have seen, heard and talked with. That the performers were scholars in costume does not diminish their sense of actually brushing shoulders with great Americans. Young folks and old folks alike will have vivid memories of Thomas Jefferson, Rachel Carson, and Malcolm X. And some simplistic conceptions will have been shattered. In this time of sound bites, tweets, and talk radio, Chautauqua replaces misconceptions and distortions about our country with the words of those who were there. Chautauqua is a refreshing important dimension of the grand adventure of learning. When we say Chautauqua is an “Astonishing Journey into the Past”, we realize the “past” for Chautauqua is actually an important dimension of a larger present. Hearing Will Rogers, for example, talk about duplicity and corruption in politics, audiences quickly pick up on the relevance of his commentary. 14 What they say about Chautauqua “We love being Chautauqua volunteers. You meet such interesting people.” -Nan Brinsko and Ellen Weinberg Hear their stories in their own words. Photos by Christa Hanson and Mike Brinsko “We like to laugh, to be challenged, to be entertained, and delighted.” -Dr. Seuss Greenville Chautauqua 11 Rock Side Ct. Greenville, SC 29615 NONPROFIT ORG U.S. POSTAGE PAID GREENVILLE, SC PERMIT #1431 Save these dates for Greenville AshevilleSpartanburg June 12-21 June 15-18 June 15-18 Asheville NC Friends of Buncombe County Libraries, Inc. Buncombe County Public Libraries buncombecounty.org/library Morris Pavilion, Warren Wilson College spartanburg sc Spartanburg County Public Libraries Black Mountain East Asheville Enka-Candler Fairview Leicester North Asheville Oakley/So. Asheville Swannanoa Skyland/South Buncombe Weaverville West Asheville Boiling Springs Chesnee Cowpens Headquarters Inman Landrum Middle Tyger Pacolet Westside Woodruff Greenville Chautauqua Thanks to our sponsors and the Friends of Chautauqua We are grateful to all who have made Greenville Chautauqua possible: to the many generous sponsors and donors who enable us to keep our events free, and to the hard-working volunteers. And thanks to you, the audience, for your enthusiastic participation. It wouldn’t be Chautauqua without you! Connect with us info@greenvilleCHAUTAUQUA.org Past Festivals 1999 American Humorists Will Rogers, James Thurber, Langston Hughes, Mark Twain, Dorothy Parker 2000 Southern Writers Zora Neale Hurston, Katherine Anne Porter, Mark Twain, William Faulkner, Thomas Wolfe 2001 American Renaissance Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville, Louisa May Alcott, Walt Whitman, Henry David Thoreau, Frederick Douglass 2002 Conceived in Liberty Thomas Jefferson, Elizabeth Freeman, Alexander Hamilton, Henry Laurens, John and Abigail Adams 2003 American Autobiography Benjamin Franklin, Henry Adams, Eleanor Roosevelt, Mark Twain, Pauli Murray, Andrew Carnegie 2004 American Visions Martin Luther King, Jr, Eugene Debs, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Thomas Paine, John Winthrop 2005 The Civil War Ambrose Bierce, Mary Chesnut, Sam Watkins, John C. Calhoun, Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln 2006 Great American Journeys Mary Ingles, William Clark, Sequoyah, Herman Melville, Harriet Tubman 2007 The American Stage Houdini, Paul Robeson, Lillian Hellman, Will Rogers, Mark Twain 2008 America: The Land John J. Audubon, Teddy Roosevelt, James Beckwourth, Rachel Carson, Black Elk 2009 America in Crisis George Washington, Rosa Parks, Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, Abraham Lincoln 2010 American Imagination Ben Franklin, Thomas Edison, Emily Dickinson, Dr. Seuss, Langston Hughes 2011 Ideas that Changed America John Muir, Frances Perkins, Albert Einstein, W.E.B. Du Bois, Mark Twain 2012 They Came to America Winston Churchill, Golda Meir, Denmark Vesey, Carl Jung, Lafayette 2013 American Legends Davy Crockett, Susan B. Anthony, Herman Melville, Malcolm X 2014 Rising to the Occasion Clara Barton, Patrick Henry, Robert Smalls, Harry Truman www.greenvilleCHAUTAUQUA.org Greenville Chautauqua
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