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| THREE HOUR-LONG
AUDIO COMPOSITIONS |

Project Title: Three hour-long audio compositions
Recipient
Organization: Bay Area Radio Drama
Lead Artist: Lawrence Ferlinghetti
Genre and Date Awarded: Literary
Arts, June 2004
To be Completed: April 2006
San Francisco’s first poet laureate, Lawrence Ferlinghetti,
will collaborate with Bay Area Radio Drama and Earwax Productions
to produce a series of three original hour-long audio compositions.
In these programs, Ferlinghetti will juxtapose autobiography, commentary,
and poetry in a highly personal acoustic exploration of “the
sounds of American consciousness today.” The pieces will
be broadcast on public radio nationally and internationally, and
available through the Internet.
Lawrence Ferlinghetti has had long experience with the oral and
audio medium. Beginning with public readings, poetry and jazz,
drama performances, and radio presentations, in recent years he
has worked several times with the project’s audio artists—Earwax
Productions’ sound designer Jim McKee and Bay Area Radio
Drama’s Director, Erik Bauersfeld. Their prior association
has led to Ferlinghetti’s new interest in exploring the audio
medium as a way of portraying his literary works and ideas through
conversation, reading, and memories; as well as through the use
of locations and brief dramatic sketches. Sound from three locations—the
sea and waterfront, the canyons of Big Sur, and urban life in San
Francisco—will serve as primary elements for each program.
In particular, the series seeks to convey his vision of poetry
as a force, with oral messages and imagery that can help liberate
the American consciousness from the impact of commercialism in
all the media.
Lawrence Ferlinghetti is among the major literary figures of the
second half of the 20th Century. One of the initial publishers
of the Beat Generation poets, he also has published more than 30
books of his own works. Recently his City Lights Bookstore has
officially been declared a Historical Landmark. His writing enjoys
an international following.
Established in 1986 by Erik Bauersfeld, Bay Area Radio Drama’s
(BARD’s) mission is to develop audio art works for radio,
Internet, libraries, and other venues. The National Endowments
for the Humanities and for the Arts have funded many Bay Area Radio
Drama projects including an “Eugene O’Neill Radio Series,” seven
plays under the direction of José Quintero, with sound design
by Randy Thom, and an eighth directed by Edward Hastings. BARD
also has produced original radio dramas by more than 30 Bay Area
writers and theater artists including Sam Shepard, Susan Griffin,
Ed Bullins, and Ellen Sebastian Chang. The productions have had
national and international distribution.
Erik Bauersfeld has been producing, writing, and performing radio
drama for over 40 years and will direct the Ferlinghetti programs.
The collaboration also will engage Bay Area sound designer Jim
McKee, a two-time Peabody Award winner. His Earwax recording facility,
founded in 1984, produces original sound design for all media,
with projects ranging from Hollywood movies to interactive museum
installations. Other collaborators will be drama critic, playwright,
and producer Irene Oppenheim; musician and composer Wieslaw Pogorzelski,
Artistic Director of Poet’s Theater; and Maria Gilardin,
founder and director of TUC Radio.
LEAD ARTIST
Lawrence Ferlinghetti
A prominent voice of the wide-open poetry movement that began
in the 1950s, Lawrence Ferlinghetti has written poetry, translation,
fiction, theater, art criticism, film narration, and essays. Often
concerned with politics and social issues, Ferlinghetti’s
poetry countered the literary elite’s definition of art and
the artist’s role in the world.
Ferlinghetti was born in Yonkers, New York, in 1919. Following
his undergraduate years at the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill, he saw service in the United States Navy in World
War II as a ship’s commander. He received a Master’s
degree from Columbia University in 1947 and a Doctorate from the
University of Paris (Sorbonne) in 1950. From 1951 to 1953, settled
in San Francisco, he taught French in an adult education program,
painted, and wrote art criticism. In 1953, with Peter D. Martin,
he founded City Lights Pocket Bookshop, the first all-paperbound
bookshop in the country, and by 1955 he had launched the City Lights
publishing house.
The bookstore has served for half a century as a meeting place
for writers, artists, and intellectuals. City Lights Publishers
began with the Pocket Poets Series, through which Ferlinghetti
aimed to create an international, dissident ferment. His publication
of Allen Ginsberg’s Howl in 1956 led to his arrest
on obscenity charges, and the trial that followed drew national
attention to the San Francisco Renaissance and Beat movement writers.
(He was overwhelmingly supported by prestigious literary and academic
figures, and was acquitted.) This landmark First Amendment case
established a legal precedent for the publication of controversial
work with redeeming social importance.
Ferlinghetti’s paintings have been shown at various galleries
around the world, from the Butler Museum of American Art to the
Palace of Exhibitions in Rome. In San Francisco, his work can regularly
be seen at the George Krevsky Gallery at 77 Geary Street.
Ferlinghetti was named San Francisco’s Poet Laureate in
August 1998, and he used his post as a bully-pulpit from which
he articulated the “voice of the people.” His San
Francisco Chronicle columns, “Poetry as News” could
be read on the City Lights Web site: www.citylights.com.
His Coney Island of the Mind (1958) has been translated
into nine languages, and there are nearly 1,000,000 copies in print.
His most recent books are A Far Rockaway of the Heart (1997)
and How to Paint Sunlight (2001), published by New Directions,
New York. He also published two novels, HER (1960) and Love
in the Days of Rage (1988). He has received many awards, including:
the Los Angeles Times’ Robert Kirsch Award, the
Bay Area Book Reviewers’ Association’s Fred Cody Award
for Lifetime Achievement, the National Book Critics Circle Ivan
Sandrof Award for Contribution to American Arts and Letters, the
American Civil Liberties Union’s Earl Warren Civil Liberties
Award, and several others in Italy. In 2003 he received the Authors’ Guild
Lifetime Achievement Award and the Poetry Society of America’s
Robert Frost Medal; and he was inducted into the American Academy
of Arts & Letters.
OTHER COLLABORATING ARTISTS
Erik Bauersfeld
Professional Experience
- Director of Drama and
Literature, Pacifica KPFA, Berkeley, California (1962-1991)
- Director of Special
Projects, Pacifica KPFA, Berkeley, California (1991-2004)
- President and Director
of Projects, Bay Area Radio Drama (1986-2004)
Recent Productions
- “Locations 1,” funded by the National Endowment
for the Arts; “Locations 2,” funded by the Creative
Work Fund. Two series of original works based on and recorded
at specific acoustical Bay Area locations with writers Helen
Cline, Ellen Sebastian, John O’Keefe, Ed Bullins, Millicent
Dillon, Irene Oppenheim, Gary Soto, Millicent Dillon, Lawrence
Ferlinghetti, and Randy Thom (Co-produced with WDR Köln.
Other Selected Productions
- The Eugene O’Neill
Radio Project, funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Executive director, Erik Bauersfeld. The plays were directed by
José Quintero with commentaries by Travis Bogard and broadcast
nationally by National Public Radio. Several were selected for
international broadcast by the BBC London, WDR Köln, and Australian
Radio. Included were O’Neill’s four one-act sea plays
(S.S. Glencairn); Hughie (with its original cast, Jason
Robards and Jack Dodson); The Emperor Jones (with Joe
Morton), and The Hairy Ape (George Dzundza). Sound design
was by Randy Thom. A final program, O’Neill’s Lazarus
Laughed, the first full-length production of the play was
directed by American Conservatory Theatre director Ed Hastings
with sound design by Jim Mckee (Earwax Studios) and Barney Jones
as Chorus Director. The music was written and directed by Lou Harrison.
(1987-1995)
- Hörspiel/USA Project: in
collaboration with WDR Klön, The Goethe Institute, and KPFA-FM
Pacifica Radio, BARD produced seven modern radio dramas translated
by Robert Goss, including: Houses, Jurgen Becker; Ophelia, Gerhard
Ruhm (directed by Klaus Schöning); Centropolis, Walter
Adler; The Other and I, Gunter Eich. Sound design for
the plays by Jim Mckee. (1987-1991)
- BARD series, including The
Horla, adapted by Guy de Maupassant story (sound by Jim
Mckee); and Object Piece, Drury Pifer (sound by Randy
Thom) (1992)
- “Art on Film Conference” (Metropolitan
and Getty Museums) Moderated panel on sound in relation to art
(1991)
- “PrixItalia,” represented
National Public Radio, President of Radio Drama Jury, Perugia,
Italy (1990)
- European Broadcasting
Union, represented NPR at conference, Florence, Italy (1990,
1987)
- Sound Design Conference,
In association with Randy Thom and Lucasfilm’s Skywalker
Sound Studios presented a conference for 50 American radio producers
(1989)
- “Mind’s Eye
Theatre,” contributed to many productions, including a
three hour version of Dracula by Bram Stoker (1988)
- Babbitt, 29
half-hour installments of Sinclair Lewis’s novel, performed
by the Los Angeles Theatre Works for KCRW-FM in Santa Monica;
editing and sound production with Jim Mckee, Earwax Productions
(1987)
- “Tales from the Shadows,” in
collaboration with Jim Mckee and Earwax Studios, adapted and
produced a series of 13 bizarre classics by Dostoyevsky, Gogol,
Poe, Lovecraft, Kafka, Bierce, and others for KCRW-FM in Santa
Monica and others; distributed by NPR and Pacifica (1987)
Jim McKee
Profile
- Jim McKee is currently an active owner of Earwax Productions,
Inc., located in San Francisco, which he co-founded in 1983.
He received his Master of Fine Arts from The Center for Contemporary
Music at Mills College in Oakland, California, and his Bachelor
of Music Education from Shenandoah Conservatory of Music in
Virginia. In addition to his sound design work, he has lectured
at YLE Radio in Helsinki, Finland, the Institute for the Advancement
of Journalism in South Africa, Western Public Radio, San Francisco
State University, RTé Radio Ireland, UMCK, IATSE, CCAC,
and The College for Recording Arts.
Experience
- As a sound designer, composer, engineer, and technical producer,
McKee works primarily with computers, samplers, and tape, using
concrete sound elements and human voice to build impressionistic
and abstract sound environments. Works are generally designed
in collaboration with film producers, playwrights, radio producers,
performance artists, and product designers using multi-track
recording, samplers, digital editing, computer synthesis, and
a wide variety of studio processing techniques. His experience
includes mixing, engineering, and sound design for nationally
broadcast television and radio—commercial and drama; and research and production
for interactive, multimedia, and DVD/CD-ROM. Radio credits include: “Locations,” for
Bay Area Radio Drama, “Lost and Found Sound” for National
Public Radio’s “All Things Considered,” as well
as feature programs for “Radio Atelier,” Finish Broadcasting, “New
American Radio,” “Soundprint,” and Public Radio
International. Film credits include: Cast Away, Final Fantasy, IMAX
films; Whales and Yellowstone for Destination
Cinema; special effects sound design for Bram Stoker’s
Dracula and The Secret Garden; and, most recently,
design and mix for The Danube Exodus, The Rippling Currents
of the River, a multi-screen interactive exhibit presented
at the Getty Research Center in Los Angeles in collaboration with
The Labyrinth Project at the University of Southern California.
Awards
- As a partner in Earwax Productions, Inc. since 1983, McKee
enjoys, along with two other partners, the reputation of having
been voted best sound design team in San Francisco. Earwax also
has won honors from The Bay Area Critics Circle Awards, Northern
California Broadcasters, and Association of Independents in Radio;
as well as grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and
an Academy Award for Francis Ford Coppola’s production
of Bram Stoker’s Dracula,
for which McKee contributed design concepts and sound effects along
with the sound team of Columbia Pictures and American Zoetrope.
Clients
- Clients include: American Zoetrope, LucasFilm LTD, Pathe/MGM
Entertainment, Cannon Films, National Public Radio, Bay Area
Radio Drama, West German Radio, South Africa Broadcasting Corporation,
The Kitchen Sisters, Finnish Broadcasting, Destination Cinema,
Apple Computer, Inc., MTV, Colossal Pictures, Banana Republic,
Goodby, Silverstein & Partners,
Landor & Associates, Magic Theatre, Simon and Schuster, Clark
Shoes, Royal Viking Lines, Visible Interactive, CAPS Software,
Sacramento Convention & Visitor’s Bureau, Mondo Media,
National Wildlife Federation, Meta Design, Sea Studios, and many
others.
Maria Gilardin
RESUME HIGHLIGHTS
Professional Experience
- Founder and director
of TUC Radio (Time of Useful Consciousness), an independent radio
production and distribution organization (1992-present)
- Founding producer, “Making
Contact,” a weekly public affairs program on 125 stations
via satellite (1994)
- Independent producer
of radio broadcasts, documentaries, and radio dramas. Active
in recording of concerts, conferences, voice and sound effects,
and studio productions of documentaries and plays (1980-present)
- Associate producer,
Bay Area Radio Drama (1988-present)
- Adjunct faculty teaching
classes in alternative media, Arts and Social Change Department,
New College of California, (1988-90)
- Program Host, “Midnight
becomes Electric,” KPFA Radio (1986-1992)
- Instructor, co-director
of a multi-media play on the impact of automobiles, San Francisco
State University (1987-88)
Recent Radio Productions
- Weekly half-hour radio
program in distribution on the Pacifica KU Satellite to over
50 radio stations. Topics include: science, globalization, the
World Trade Organization, the environment, and the arts. Mini-documentaries
are produced on location on Indian reservations and in senior
homes (1998-present)
- Radio Drama series, “Locations” with
Bay Area Radio Drama, recorded live in African American churches,
office buildings, supermarkets, at the local farmers’ market,
on Baker Beach, and in the East Bay bus terminal. Prior to that,
associate producer on the Hörspiel series, a co-production
with WDR, Germany.
Irene Maupin Oppenheim
RESUME HIGHLIGHTS
Playwright, Journalist, Teacher
- This Daunting Task, consultant/writer,
a video production with issues of reconciliation between Germans
and Jews (2004)
- “Weights,” dramaturg,
Mark Taper Forum New Works Festival, Los Angeles, California
(2001)
- Adjunct Professor, Humanities/English,
Los Angeles Trade-Technical College (1995-99)
- “Locations,” creative
consultant to Bay Area Radio Drama for a series of four works
for radio (1999)
- Other Voices Project,
Playwright, Mentor, Market Taper Forum, Los Angeles, California
(1997)
- Instructor/Producer,
series of writing workshop performances featuring artists with
disabilities, under a grant from the California Arts Council
(1997)
- The Last Session, Producer,
a musical written and performed by a songwriter with AIDS (1996)
- Threepenny Review, regular
contributor to Berkeley-based literary magazine
- Firehouse Theater Company,
Artistic Director, Los Angeles, California
- Member, Dramatists Guild
Playwriting/Producing
- An award-winning playwright. Stage dramas and plays for radio
produced in Germany, New York, Washington, D.C., Baltimore, San
Francisco, and Los Angeles
Periodical Publications
- Articles, essays, and reviews have appeared in numerous publications,
including, among others: The Los Angeles Times, New York Times,
Village Voice, San Francisco Chronicle, Dance Magazine, American
Theater Magazine, and The Sunday Independent, Johannesburg,
South Africa.
Prizes, Honors, Anthologies, Stage Productions
- Alpert Award in the
Arts nominee, CalArts, Los Angeles, California (1999)
- “In Transit,” production
of radio drama, National Public Radio (1996)
- “Waitressing,” essay
in Passages, St. Martin’s Press (1995)
- “Mover & Shaker” Award,
Independent Living Center S., California (1995)
- “Funeral of the Green
Clown,” production at Wings Theater, New York, New York
(1992)
- New Play Series, Horizon
Theater, Washington, DC (1992)
- Artist-in-the-Community
Grant, Los Angeles Cultural Affairs Department, Los Angeles,
California (1990-91)
- “Funeral of the Green
Clown,” LATC, Long Beach City Theater, Long Beach, California
(1990)
- “Outstanding Individual
Contribution” Award, Media Access (1989)
- California Arts Council
Artist-in-Residence, Mark Taper Forum, Los Angeles, California
(1988-89)
Fellowships
- Fellowship in drama criticism,
The Critic’s Institute, O’Neill Theater Center, Waterford,
Connecticut (1977)
LINKS
www.citylights.com
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