Through The Lookingglass (Theatre)

Chicago’s Lookingglass Theatre has become one of the city’s most respected theatre companies. But in its 15 years, the company has camped out in a variety of spaces. Now it’s moving into “a newly renovated performance space in the Water Tower Water Works. The site, in the heart of the Magnificient Mile, where thousands of people, locals and tourists alike, will pass by daily, gives the company perhaps the highest visibility of any theater in town…”

The Buddy System

Seventy-five-year-old Buddy Zamoiski officially steps down as chairman of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, after 15 years at that organization’s helm. Zamoiski has a spectacular talent for talking money out of people for his various causes. “Except for Joseph Meyerhoff (who built the symphony a fancy new hall), Zamoiski probably is more responsible for the orchestra’s relative financial stability than anyone in its 86-year-history.”

City Lights Burns Bright

San Francisco’s iconic bookstore City Lights turns 50. “Since emerging as a center for the Beat movement, it has become a purveyor of poetry, alternative political views, hard-to-find novels and literature by Third World writers. In a retail landscape dominated by Borders, Barnes & Noble and Amazon.com, City Lights remains an independent bastion of literary possibility. The soft-spoken, grandfatherly Ferlinghetti, 84, is uneasy with words like icon, even though City Lights helped launch the Beat movement by publishing Allen Ginsburg’s `Howl’ in 1956. The spry, bearded poet and publisher can only guess why the store, which he founded with Peter D. Martin, has endured. ‘We survived by creating an intellectual center, a literary meeting place’.”

US: Most Iraqi Artifacts Now Accounted For

US officials say that estimates of Iraqi artifacts stolen from the Iraq Museum were grossly overestimated and that most of the art has been recovered. “Initial estimates after the war ended in April suggested that as many as 170,000 pieces, including the Nimrud treasures, were lost or stolen during the sacking of the museum, according to U.S. officials. They now say 3,000 pieces remain unaccounted for and may have disappeared into the shadowy world of black market antiquities trading.”

Lincoln Center’s New Opportunity

So what will become of Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher Hall after the New York Philharmonic leaves? Lincoln Center says there’s a big opportunity and management envisions “new uses sweeping and small, including hosting the world’s top orchestras, staging festivals, introducing interactive technology to audiences and emphasizing youth education programs. The hall ‘is now a blank canvas, and we have a palette of musical colors that we’re going to paint on that canvas’.”

The Yentob Effect

Alan Yentob is a rarity – a famous TV exec. “He chalks up his 35th year at the BBC this year. He has risen relentlessly. He has made celebrated films for Omnibus, created Arena, run Music and Arts, BBC2 and BBC1. Then in 1997, when he stopped controlling BBC1, it was as if the Corporation didn’t know what to do with him. They gave him a job called director of programmes in production, which had you genuinely scratching your head. Now his title is director of drama, entertainment and CBBC, which, in his translation, ‘is essentially the creative director of the BBC’.”

Controversy Over Cleaning David

“Italy’s art world is in a flap as experts quarrel over how to preserve the priceless cultural icon. In 2004, it will be 500 years since the 4-metre-high statue depicting the courageous, naked young biblical hero was unveiled in Piazza della Signoria, the square that remains Florence’s lifeblood. The block of marble itself is even older. Now, one of Italy’s leading restorers has thrown down her tools — chamois cloth, silky soft brush, cotton swabs and an eraser — in a spat with other experts over how to clean David.”

Gehry – Man Of Many Projects

“At the age of 74, architect Frank Gehry shows absolutely no sign of slowing down. At any given moment, there are perhaps 30 projects at various stages of development being worked on by the 103 people in the Gehry office. Two major events dominate the life of the white-haired genius who started life as Frank Goldberg in Toronto in 1929 and moved to Los Angeles 18 years later.”

Jane Alexander: On Saving The NEA

Jane Alexander is back performing on a Washington stage again. “It’s possible, though, that her four-year run as NEA chairman, during the political tumult dubbed the Culture Wars, will prove to be her most memorable local performance. It had everything: hostile congressmen vowing to take the NEA apart, life-or-death budget battles year after year, angry artists urging defiance. ‘Jane kept it alive and reinstated a sense of credibility for the agency.’ Alexander is proud of its survival. A weakened agency can be strengthened again, she reasoned at the time. But ‘if it had gone under, it’s doubtful it would have been revived within 20 years. Certainly not in this climate.’ Could she have done anything more, or differently? Arts supporters doubt it. The consensus is that Alexander salvaged what could have been salvaged.”