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BeitragVerfasst: 28.01.2014, 20:51 
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Uhtred's warrior maiden
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Die gute Mary hat vermutlich DIE Maxime für uns hier alle - muss ich glatt noch einmal zitieren :heartthrow: :

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I tell you ... EVERYBUDDY should have a DOSE of Our Richard in their lives. It's better than a shot of caffeine or adrenalin!


Das haben wir doch schon immer vermutet, oder? :mrgreen: :heartthrow:

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BeitragVerfasst: 28.01.2014, 20:54 
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Wie recht sie hat! :mrgreen: :daumen:

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BeitragVerfasst: 28.01.2014, 23:18 
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Arianna hat geschrieben:
Die gute Mary hat vermutlich DIE Maxime für uns hier alle - muss ich glatt noch einmal zitieren :heartthrow: :

Zitat:
I tell you ... EVERYBUDDY should have a DOSE of Our Richard in their lives. It's better than a shot of caffeine or adrenalin!


Das haben wir doch schon immer vermutet, oder? :mrgreen: :heartthrow:

Oaky hat geschrieben:
Wie recht sie hat! :mrgreen: :daumen:

:win: Ich reihe mich mal in den Kreis der nickenden Damen ein. :ja: :ja: :ja:

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Danke, liebe Boardengel, für Eure privaten Schnappschüsse. :kuss:


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BeitragVerfasst: 29.01.2014, 08:23 
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Richard's favourite bedtime storyteller
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Ich auch :D

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Bild I will be always your LucasGirl
and yes, I love Francis, Daniel & Raymond,2
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FD: 'You see me now, Yes
That's how you feel to see me
Do you feel me now? Yes'


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BeitragVerfasst: 30.01.2014, 07:24 
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Quelle: http://www.flickr.com/photos/viviane212/11991546686/

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Sorry Richard und danke an Jessie für die wundervolle Sig!

Thanks to Tumblr for my avatar!


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BeitragVerfasst: 30.01.2014, 07:27 
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Uhtred's warrior maiden
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Oh, danke Redluna :kuss: !

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Zuletzt geändert von Arianna am 30.01.2014, 07:34, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.

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BeitragVerfasst: 30.01.2014, 07:28 
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Richard's favourite bedtime storyteller
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:aww: toll - :thankyou: wir können ja nicht genug von unserem Mann bekommen... LOL

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Bild I will be always your LucasGirl
and yes, I love Francis, Daniel & Raymond,2
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FD: 'You see me now, Yes
That's how you feel to see me
Do you feel me now? Yes'


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BeitragVerfasst: 30.01.2014, 08:07 
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Percy's naughty little barfly

Registriert: 28.05.2008, 07:48
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Gestern kam die neue Nummer des "New Criterion", einer amerikanischen Politik- und Kulturzeitschrift, die ich abonniert habe. Und was sehe ich auf der ersten Seite, noch vor der Inhaltsangabe? Eine Werbung für das 92 Y Unterberg Poetry Center, diese Jahr 75 und in einer schicken Gegend gelegen - 92nd Street Y, Lexington @ E92nd St 8) "Hans down the smartest audience in the Western hemisphere. It laughs when youre funny, growls when you're stupid, and afterwards asks for your email address and prmises to wrtie" sagt ein Dichter namens Gary Shteyngart.

Das Proust Happening ist am Programm, Andere Gäste sind diese Saison u. a. Tom Stoppard, der über Pinter redet, Joyce Carol Oates, Paul Auster und Isabel Allende.

:mrgreen: 8)


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BeitragVerfasst: 30.01.2014, 10:39 
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Danke für das Bild, Redluna! :daumen: :kuss: Und nun wissen wir auch endlich, wie die Anweisung von Di Trevis lautete. :lol: :lol: :lol:

Nietzsche hat geschrieben:
Gestern kam die neue Nummer des "New Criterion", einer amerikanischen Politik- und Kulturzeitschrift, die ich abonniert habe. Und was sehe ich auf der ersten Seite, noch vor der Inhaltsangabe? Eine Werbung für das 92 Y Unterberg Poetry Center, diese Jahr 75 und in einer schicken Gegend gelegen - 92nd Street Y, Lexington @ E92nd St 8) "Hans down the smartest audience in the Western hemisphere. It laughs when youre funny, growls when you're stupid, and afterwards asks for your email address and prmises to wrtie" sagt ein Dichter namens Gary Shteyngart.

Das Proust Happening ist am Programm, Andere Gäste sind diese Saison u. a. Tom Stoppard, der über Pinter redet, Joyce Carol Oates, Paul Auster und Isabel Allende.

:mrgreen: 8)

Ja, es gibt schwerere Strafen als an einer Lesung beteiligt zu sein, die bei 92nd Street Y stattfindet. ;) Es ist aber schon interessant, was wir alle so mit einem Mal bewusst wahrnehmen, was wir ansonsten einfach an uns "vorbeirauschen" lassen würden, nicht wahr?

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BeitragVerfasst: 30.01.2014, 10:44 
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Percy's naughty little barfly

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Ja, wer weiß, wie oft schon Werbung für das Theater eingeschaltet war. Ich muß direkt alte Jänner-Nummern durchblättern!


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BeitragVerfasst: 30.01.2014, 11:27 
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Und wenn einem die Augen geöffnet sind und man zudem nicht mehr nur RA-orientiert auf die News achtet, dann findet man immer mehr. :lol: Ich habe meine Hoffnung, dass das Event doch noch einmal eine Erwähnung in einer Sammelreview der NY Times oder einem Jahresrückblick von ihnen o. ä. findet, noch nicht aufgegeben. Der Termin stand scheinbar noch viel länger fest, als bisher vermutet. Neben dem Artikel vom November 2013, über den wir vor ca. 10 Seiten gesprochen haben, wird die Lesung sogar schon am 18.07.13 von der NY Times genannt:

Zitat:
July 18, 2013, 12:01 pm
92nd Street Y Reading Series Announces 75th Anniversary Season

By JENNIFER SCHUESSLER

Philip Roth, Donna Tartt, E.L. Doctorow, Derek Walcott, Colum McCann, Paul Auster and Elizabeth Gilbert are among the dozens of literary luminaries on the roster for the 2013-2014 season of the 92nd Street Y’s Unterberg Poetry Center, which marks its 75th birthday this year.

The poetry center, which hosted the world premiere of Dylan Thomas’s “Under Milk Wood” in 1953, will also offer a number of musical and theatrical firsts. On opening night, Sept. 30, the pianist Emanuel Ax and the actor Patrick Stewart will give the New York premiere of their rendering of “Enoch Arden,” a setting of Tennyson’s epic poem by Richard Strauss. And on Jan. 16 the center will present a staged reading of Harold Pinter’s unfilmed 1972 screenplay based on Proust’s “Remembrance of Things Past,” which has never been publicly read or performed in the United States.

The season will also feature some remembrance of the poetry center’s own illustrious past, which began on Oct. 26, 1939, with a reading by William Carlos Williams. A special online series to be posted throughout the season, “75 at 75,” pairs recordings of 75 historic readings with commentaries by contemporary writers. (First up: Colm Toibin on Elizabeth Bishop and Rick Moody on W.G. Sebald.) “Love the Words,” an exhibition set to open on Sept. 25, will draw on previously unseen photographs and correspondence from T.S. Eliot, Marianne Moore, Wallace Stevens and others held in the center’s archives.

Among the artifacts is a letter from Philip Roth written in April 1993, shortly after his first appearance marking his 60th birthday, in which he promised to return for his 70th.

“I’ll bet we get the same audience,” wrote Mr. Roth, who turned 80 in March. “But please, not the same hors d’euvres. But then by 2003 maybe I can spell it!”


http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/18/92nd-street-y-reading-series-announces-75th-anniversary-season/?_php=true&_type=blogs&_r=0

Und auch Forbes kündigte die Lesung im Zusammenhang mit dem Jubiläumsjahr bereits im August 2013 an - im Text und zusätzlich als Bildunterschrift ("The Unterberg Poetry Center will present the U.S. premiere of the dramatic presentation of Proust's "Remembrance of Things Past" by playwright and occasional actor Harold Pinter, shown here in performance in 2006"). Interessant finde ich hier auch, welche Bedeutung dem Veranstaltungszentrum zugemessen wird:

Zitat:
8/30/2013 @ 10:14AM |432 views
Patrick Stewart, Philip Roth, Tom Stoppard To Celebrate 75th Anniversary Of 92nd Street Y Poetry Center


The Poetry Center at the 92nd Street Y in New York is celebrating its 75th anniversary with special programs and new online readings by legendary authors, with commentary by prominent fans.

Launched in 1939 with a reading by poet William Carlos Williams, the programming of the Unterberg Poetry Center has grown from a season of eight readings to some 30 events annually, a lecture series, writing courses and outreach to New York City public high school students and adult literacy students.

Among its most famous events have been debuts of novels by Truman Capote and Kurt Vonnegut, and Dylan Thomas leading the cast of the 1953 premiere reading of Under Milk Wood.

Modern poets, writers and critics who have read here include W. H. Auden, T. S. Eliot, Robert Frost, Langston Hughes, Marianne Moore, Margaret Atwood, Saul Bellow, Anthony Burgess, Umberto Eco, Ralph Ellison, David Mamet, Arthur Miller, Octavio Paz, Harold Pinter, Tennessee Williams and Susan Sontag.

Bernard Schwartz, director of the center, said its mission has always been to “create a space for writers and readers to get together, with poetry, fiction, playwrights, journalists, essayists and critics. It’s a very enriching experience for a lot of people.”

Or, as American poet Kay Ryan once said, “If your instrument is words, the 92nd St. Y is Carnegie Hall.”

The Y, which has been recording the center’s programming since the late 1940’s, launched a free digital archive of it in 2005. As part of the 75th anniversary celebration, the center is posting readings on the archive that have never been released before, with responses by prominent contemporary writers.

Online so far are an essay by Brian Boyd about a 1964 reading by Vladmir Nabokov; an essay by Rick Moody about a 2001 reading by W. G. Sebald; A. L. Kennedy commenting on a 1949 reading by E. E. Cummings; and Colm Toibin discussing a 1977 reading by Elizabeth Bishop. The original readings are posted with the essays.

Upcoming online offerings will include Pico Iyer on a 1966 Leonard Cohen program; Donna Tartt commenting on a 1954 reading by novelist Carson McCullers and playwright Tennessee Williams of McCullers’ work; and Jamaica Kincaid discussing John Cheever’s novel, The Swimmer. In addition, Cynthia Ozick, who has attended the center’s programs since the 1950’s, will discuss her experiences there as well as readings in the 1950’s by Auden, and playwright Tom Stoppard will talk about fellow playwright Pinter.

“That kind of interaction—who’s in the audience, who’s on stage—is unique to the Poetry Center. It speaks to its longevity and legacy, and distinguishes us from any other organization that offers literary events,” Schwartz said.

“The stage of the Y has historically cast a spell. It means something to writers of today to read in such as space,” he added.

He also said the center’s digital archive has “enhanced the literary conversation between writers and readers in much broader strokes and in ways we weren’t able to do before.”

The center also will offer special, live programming in New York to commemorate its 75th anniversary, kicking off on September 30 with a performance by actor Patrick Stewart and pianist Emanuel Ax of Enoch Arden, Richard Strauss’ setting of the epic Tennyson poem. In January it will present the U.S. premiere of Pinter’s dramatic presentation of the Proust novel, Remembrance of Things Past.

Among writers reading their work during the upcoming season will be T. C. Boyle, Billy Collins, Philip Roth, Tartt, Allan Gurganus, Amy Tan, E. L. Doctowow, Isabel Allende, Gary Shteyngart, Joyce Carol Oates. Paul Auster, John Ashbery, Derek Walcott and Edna O’Brien.


http://www.forbes.com/sites/janelevere/2013/08/30/patrick-stewart-philip-roth-tom-stoppard-to-celebrate-75th-anniversary-of-92nd-street-y-poetry-center/

Ich konnte mich gerade nicht so richtig entscheiden, was ich auslasse. Deshalb habe ich die Artikel ausnahmsweise ungekürzt herüber geholt. :oops:

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Danke, liebe Boardengel, für Eure privaten Schnappschüsse. :kuss:


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BeitragVerfasst: 30.01.2014, 11:32 
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Percy's naughty little barfly

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Wow, toll, danke, Laudine! :hurra: :hurra: :blum:


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BeitragVerfasst: 30.01.2014, 12:34 
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Uhtred's warrior maiden
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Danke auch von mir :kuss:! Dieses Kulturzentrum hat es in sich! Was man allein in den yt-Kanälen entdecken kann, finde ich hochinteressant!

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BeitragVerfasst: 30.01.2014, 13:03 
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Danke für Pic und Infos :kuss: .

Das Profil ist auch immer wieder" to die for " :ohnmacht: .


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BeitragVerfasst: 30.01.2014, 13:51 
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Da es Euch zu interessieren scheint, habe ich noch einen Bericht für Euch - diesmal aus der Sicht eines Autors:

Zitat:

Unterberg Center Turns Seventy-Five

by Jonathan Vatner


November/December 2013

11.01.13

As a hallowed stage for world-class readings, the Unterberg Poetry Center at the 92nd Street Y in New York City has been compared by a host of writers to venues such as Madison Square Garden (Paul Muldoon), Carnegie Hall (Kay Ryan), Buckingham Palace (Frank McCourt), and Yankee Stadium (Sherman Alexie). Ian Mc-Ewan called it “probably the best place to give a reading on the planet.” Now in its seventy-fifth year, the venerable venue will be celebrating the milestone with a season of special programming that kicks off this fall.


The Poetry Center was founded in 1939 by William Kolodney, the educational director of the 92nd Street Young Men’s and Young Women’s Hebrew Association in New York City, to encourage and enhance the writing and understanding of poetry. The center offered classes on writing and reading poetry, and for fifty cents a ticket New Yorkers could hear William Carlos Williams, W. H. Auden, Marianne Moore, or Langston Hughes read their work.

The center has since expanded its programming to include fiction and nonfiction, and the number of classes and events has multiplied, but its mission remains the same: in a world of shrinking attention spans and constant distraction, to serve as a haven for writing.

“We offer a kind of oasis where concentration and attention are rewarded,” says Bernard Schwartz, the director of the Poetry Center. “The modern world is left at the door—which is not to say we are old fashioned.”

Like the act of writing itself, the yearlong anniversary celebration will be introspective and generous: Schwartz and his colleagues have scoured the center’s archives for historical gems—images, documents, and recordings—to be presented publicly over the course of the year.

First up is an exhibition called Love the Words, a collection of more than eighty photographs, letters, and other ephemera detailing the center’s history and inner workings, which runs at the 92nd Street Y’s Weill Art Gallery until November 25. Visitors can see the center’s first brochure, an early expense report listing pricey phone calls to noted poets, and letters from writers about their upcoming and recent readings.

Some of the most notable artifacts include several letters of John Malcolm Brinnin, the director of the center from 1949 to 1956, which were borrowed from his archive at the University of Delaware. Truman Capote wrote Brinnin of his troubles finding a ship from Paris in time for his reading. T. S. Eliot explained that he was nervous his repertoire wasn’t big enough to justify another reading. Arthur Miller asked to be reminded as the date of his reading approached, in case he forgot. Elizabeth Bishop declined an invitation, apologizing for being a bad reader.

“The idea that you’d invite a writer to read is totally normal today,” Schwartz says. “Decades ago that wasn’t necessarily true, and some reacted with less than full enthusiasm.” Highlights among the exhibit’s photos, some never before seen, include Tennessee Williams reading with Carson McCullers; a young Seamus Heaney relaxing backstage; Allen Ginsberg reading with his father, Louis; Philip Roth with his arm around his friend Saul Bellow; and Dylan Thomas, whose battle cry “Love the words,” uttered backstage before the premiere of his play Under Milk Wood at the center in 1953, inspired the exhibition’s title.

The Poetry Center is also offering an anniversary gift to those outside New York: a free collection of seventy-five historic audio and video recordings from the institution, selected and introduced by luminaries of the present. A handful are already available for streaming online at 92yondemand.org, including a 1949 E. E. Cummings reading with an accompanying essay by novelist A. L. Kennedy, and Vladimir Nabokov’s penultimate public reading (of mostly poetry), in 1964, introduced by Bryan Boyd, one of his biographers. Another highlight is Pablo Neruda’s first U.S. reading, from 1966, described by translator Edith Grossman. The seventy-five pairings will be posted a few at a time throughout the 2013–2014 season.

The anniversary year will boast a rich lineup of readers, too, including Philip Roth (October 24), Colum McCann (December 16), Joyce Carol Oates and Claire Messud (February 13, 2014), John Ashbery (April 3), and Derek Walcott (April 9). In January, Harold Pinter’s eponymous play based on Proust’s Remembrance of Things Past, first produced in London in 2000, will see its U.S. debut on the Unterberg stage.

“Stepping onto that stage feels like a great big homecoming,” says Gary Shteyngart, who will read from his forthcoming memoir, Little Failure (Random House), at the center on February 3. “It’s the most enthusiastic audience I’ve ever read for.”

Novelist Rivka Galchen, who has headlined at the center and has both taken and led classes there, recalls seeing Saul Bellow read at Unterberg not long before he died. “The auditorium had that sort of magic that evening,” she says, “with the bare, large stage and Bellow under the bright light, and even the balcony full of us, who had probably spent many hours alone with his books. His voice wasn’t at its best, but somehow he still had, well, the duende with him.”

Among the nearly twenty writing workshops and seminars offered at the Poetry Center next spring are a class on memoir taught by Mark Doty and one on fiction led by Susan Choi. Such courses—which have proven useful to poets and writers of all levels as an alternative or supplement to MFA programs—have produced several distinguished alumni, including Galchen and Shteyngart. Galchen recalls watching Joyce Johnson line-edit one of her paragraphs, making it twice as good. As for Shteyngart, he took a class with Sigrid Nunez in the late 1990s. Not yet having committed to an MFA program but seeking feedback on his first novel-in-progress—which would become The Russian Debutante’s Handbook (Riverhead, 2002)—Shteyngart was drawn by the institution’s cultural cachet. “Getting feedback from Sigrid was great,” he says. “I had some stupid titles for the book. One was ‘The Pyramids of Prague.’ Sigrid said, ‘Oh, no.’”

The center’s annual “Discovery”/Boston Review Poetry Contest has also offered important recognition for emerging poets since 1952, when an unknown John Ashbery won the inaugural prize. Ashbery will help judge the 2014 contest, along with three other former winners. Four poets will each receive five hundred dollars, publication in the Boston Review, and a reading on the Unterberg stage. The submission deadline is January 24.

The perks are enviable, but the power of the prize—much like that of the Poetry Center itself—is also intangible. In a 1975 letter to Brinnin, included in Love the Words, Ashbery wrote that the prize “gave me the courage I needed then to continue writing.”

Jonathan Vatner is a fiction writer living in Brooklyn, New York. He is the staff writer for Hue, the alumni magazine of the Fashion Institute of Technology.


http://www.pw.org/content/unterberg_center_turns_seventyfive

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