Spend the Summer with ALOUD

This summer, our critically-acclaimed ALOUD series welcomes memoirists, musicians, poets, novelists, journalists and others to the historic downtown Central Library and beyond for an exciting season of conversations, readings, and performances.

Eddie Huang (c) Emerson JacoHIRES AS JPEG
Photo by Emerson Jaco.

Starting the season off with a bang, on Thursday, Jun. 2, ALOUD presents Eddie Huang – chef, food personality, bestselling Fresh Off the Boat author, and inspiration behind the hit television show of the same name – at the Aratani Theatre in Little Tokyo. In a conversation with Fresh Off the Boat star Constance Wu, Huang discusses his brash new memoir, Double Cup Love, about family, food, and broken hearts. DJ SOSUPERSAM kicks off the evening with a pre-show set. Tickets available at lfla.dev/aloud.

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On Tuesday, Jun. 7, acclaimed novelist Judith Freeman shares her arresting, lyrical new memoir set in the patriarchal cloister of Utah in the 1950s and 1960s and the circumstances that informed her course to becoming a writer, with fellow novelist Michelle Huneven.

 


 

credit Urvi Nagrani

Writer Yaa Gyasi brings her debut novel, Homegoing – the sweeping account of the many descendants of two half-sisters born in 18th-century Ghana – to ALOUD on Thursday, Jun. 9, for a conversation with comparative mythologist and Afro-Future feminist scholar Ayana A.H. Jamieson.

 


 

Guitar

On Monday, Jun. 20, songwriters, authors, and multi-GRAMMY Award winners Rosanne Cash and Joe Henry share a special evening of music and conversation, reflecting on the intersection of poetry and song.


 

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Award-winning journalist Ben Ehrenreich discusses his new book, The Way to the Spring, and his vivid reporting from Palestine with writer and former Jerusalem correspondent for The New Yorker Amy Wilentz on Wednesday, Jun. 29.

 

Typewriter Keys

In partnership with PEN Center USA, on Thursday, Jul. 7, ALOUD presents the culminating event of PEN’s 2016 Emerging Voices Fellowship to mark the program’s 20th anniversary with readings from this year’s Fellows: Marnie Goodfriend, Jian Huang, Wendy Labinger, Natalie Lima, and Chelsea Sutton.


 

 

eileen-maggieOn Tuesday, Jul. 12, groundbreaking poets and friends Eileen Myles and Maggie Nelson join ALOUD to read both poetry and prose, discuss their radical and genre-bending work, and as Myles says, to “let thoughts rip.”


 

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On Thursday, Jul. 14, ALOUD presents a live broadcast (on KPFK 90.7) of rare 1960s recordings of author and civil rights advocate James Baldwin, followed by a conversation with KPFK host Brian DeShazor and two writers deeply influenced by Baldwin’s work: novelist Nina Revoyr and Melvin L. Rogers, Associate Professor of Political Science and African-American Studies at UCLA.


 

Ice Floats

Writer Gretel Ehrlich reports on the devastating effects of climate change in Greenland and the effort to share the news at last fall’s Paris climate talks – dashed when terrorists struck the city – in a dialogue with journalist Neal Conan on Tuesday, Jul. 19.


 

Sm and Honey in car

And closing out ALOUD’s twenty-third season, on Tuesday, Jul. 26, artist Sally Mann takes the stage of the Writers Guild Theater in Beverly Hills to discuss family, race, mortality, the American South, and her critically acclaimed and National Book Award finalist work, Hold Still: A Memoir with Photographs. Mann will be in conversation with New York Times-bestselling author Anthony Marra.Tickets available at lfla.dev/aloud.

 

Reservations for the Summer 2016 are now open to the public at lfla.dev/aloud. Tickets to “An Evening with Eddie Huang” and “An Evening with Sally Mann” are also on sale at lfla.dev/aloud. Become a Member of the Library Foundation and receive special discounts to ticketed offsite events!

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The Library Store reopens!

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After four long months, The Library Store will finally reopen to the public on Friday, April 29.

With a sleek new design by Cory Grosser + Associates, the new store will feature a new layout, new fixtures, and even more merchandise for shoppers, including new custom jewelry, original Los Angeles Public Library-themed items (Socks! Totes! T-shirts! Coasters!), and more.

During the closure, Library Store staffers have been working with new vendors like Thimble Press, Sugar Paper Los Angeles, Greenwich Letterpress, and others to update the collection of eclectic and literary gifts that customers have grown to love in the past 23 years.

Continuing the grand reopening celebration, on Saturday, April 30, The Library Store will participate in the second annual, nationwide Independent Bookstore Day.

During the day, shoppers will enjoy free coloring pages for children and temporary tattoos (while supplies last), exclusive Independent Bookstore Day merchandise, and book signings with authors Laura Lacamara (Dalia’s Wondrous Hair) and Stephen Gee (Los Angeles Central Library: Art and Architecture).

And of course, despite its new look and feel, all proceeds from The Library Store will continue to benefit the Los Angeles Public Library.

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Navigating Dual Worlds with Pulitzer Prize Winner Viet Thanh Nguyen

“I am a spy, a sleeper, a spook, a man of two faces. Perhaps not surprisingly, I am also a man of two minds. I am not some misunderstood mutant from a comic book or a horror movie, although some have treated me as such. I am simply able to see any issue from both sides,” begins Viet Thanh Nguyen’s debut novel, The Sympathizer. Nguyen understands a lot about navigating dual worlds. Born in Vietnam, he came to the United States as a refugee in 1975 with his family. The Sympathizer—which was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for fiction yesterday!—is set during the aftermath of the fall of Saigon and follows an undercover communist agent posing as a captain in the Southern Vietnamese Army.

Nguyen

 

Nguyen, an associate professor of English and American Studies and Ethnicity at the University of Southern California, is deeply interested in illuminating the Vietnamese perspective of a war that has been mostly told through an American voice. Beyond teaching and exploring these themes through fiction, he is also the author of two works of nonfiction: Race and Resistance: Literature and Politics in Asian America, and Nothing Ever Dies: Vietnam and the Memory of War, which will be published this April. Before sharing the ALOUD stage on Tuesday, May 24 with his mentor Maxine Hong Kingston, we asked Nguyen about the challenges of confronting history through storytelling.

What first made you want to write about Vietnam?
Nguyen:
I read and watched a great deal of American literature and film about the Vietnam War as I was growing up. By the time I entered college, I knew that one of the signal features of this body of work was that it did not include many meaningful roles for Vietnamese people. In other words, what Americans called the Vietnam War was really, for them, an American war. The Vietnamese were unimportant except as the backdrop for a civil war in the American soul, where Americans fought Americans. I found that deeply insulting and troubling, given that this was a war fought in Vietnam that had cost 3 million Vietnamese lives (compared to 58,000 American ones). In effect, this was a war where, for the first time in history, the losers got to write the history of the war for the world. I was determined to both insert Vietnamese perspectives into this distorted American narrative and to challenge the assumptions of American culture as well.

 

How has your perspective on the history of this war evolved over the course of your writing?
Nguyen:
At first, I thought that what I wanted to do was to tell Vietnamese stories and fill in the gaps of American stories about the Vietnam War, Vietnam, and Vietnamese people. Eventually I realized that this was a limited and mistaken ambition. The Vietnam War was not only set in Vietnam, and did not only involve Vietnamese and Americans. Both Vietnam and America prefer to remember the war in that way because it contains the meanings of the war, and because it allows for a neat possibility of reconciliation between us-and-them. In reality, it was a regional and global war that pulled in Laos and Cambodia and many other countries that provided troops, bases, and contractors. It was a war that began well before American involvement and lasted well after Americans left. It cost 3 million Laotian and Cambodian lives as a direct consequence of Vietnamese and American actions. Although my novel doesn’t really deal with this, my nonfiction work, Nothing Ever Dies: Vietnam and the Memory of War, explores Laos and Cambodia as well as South Korea. South Korea was poorer than South Vietnam in the 1960s, but used American payments for its troops and chaebol (Hyundai, Daewoo, and the like) to begin its transformation into a global power. All this is part of the history of the Vietnam War as a total war that many would rather forget, or know nothing about.

 

What are the differences for you in exploring this war through fiction versus nonfiction? What have you learned from each creative endeavor?
Nguyen:
In fiction, I can say all kinds of things that would be hard for me to say in nonfiction. In nonfiction, I need footnotes and documentation to support even the smallest claim. In fiction, I can say the most provocative things and leave them there for the reader to confront. That’s very liberating. Still, my fiction is deeply informed by the years of research I did for my nonfiction, both in terms of concrete work on Southeast Asian and American memories, and in terms of the theoretical thinking I did about memory, ethics, inhumanity, and representation. All those ideas that are implicit in my fiction, helping me immeasurably to make certain kinds of aesthetic decisions, are explicit in my nonfiction.

The Sympathizer Book Cover

My nonfiction was shaped by my fiction, too. I took everything I had learned about narrative, characterization, plot, rhythm, and style and brought it into writing my nonfiction, which is infused with the emotion, passion, and intuition that are key to fiction. I mean for The Sympathizer and Nothing Ever Dies to be read side by side as the fictional and scholarly bookends of a critical project about our capacity to be both human and inhuman at the same time.

Nothing Ever Dies Book Cover

At ALOUD, you’ll be in conversation with the masterful Maxine Hong Kingston. What’s your relationship to Maxine and how has her writing influenced you? What do you look forward to speaking with her about?
Nguyen:
Maxine was my first creative writing instructor in college. I applied for her nonfiction writing seminar and was admitted along with thirteen other students. Either she has forgotten or she has charitably never mentioned it to me, but I was a terrible student. I would fall asleep every single day in class, even when I was sitting only a couple of feet away from her. Eventually I realized I needed to inject myself with caffeine immediately before and during class. At the end of the semester, she wrote me a note and recommended that I seek help from the university’s excellent counseling services, as I seemed deeply alienated. She was most likely right. I mention this to point out that college students shouldn’t always be judged too harshly. I look the other way on the occasions when students fall asleep in my class. I have faith that teaching can have long-term consequences on students who may not even be cognizant of it at the time.

Kingston

In Maxine’s case, I have found her work to be persistently powerful even though in college I found it somewhat bewildering. I use The Woman Warrior every time I teach an Asian American literature course and think that it is an important template for ethical storytelling. I cite that and China Men’s “The Brother in Vietnam” and The Fifth Book of Peace in my forthcoming Nothing Ever Dies, because throughout these works there is a consistent critique of power and an idealistic demand for peace that sets a high mark for any writer and critic who deals with war. In Maxine’s writing there is an awareness that war is always a total experience, one that works through the complicity of the people, not just the actions of soldiers, generals, and politicians. I want to talk to her about what it means to be a writer and an activist; how to think through the specific demands of a piece of writing while also thinking globally; and how to work at the seam of art and politics in an American publishing and writing world where that conjunction is often devalued.

 

 

As a writer, scholar, and critic, you conduct a lot of research. How have libraries shaped your work and inspired a love for books?
Nguyen:
The San Jose Public Library system was my second home as a child, particularly the Main Library (now called the Martin Luther King, Jr. Library). My refugee parents worked 12 to 14 hour days, seven days a week, and I saw little of them. I heard even less, as they were too tired to talk to me and my native tongue had withered to almost nothing. I had adopted English and took great comfort in it. I spent hours in the library and by ten years of age was taking the bus to and from home to the library by myself every weekend. I read everything there, including things I shouldn’t have. I read above my age level, from All Quiet on the Western Front when I was in the sixth grade, to Larry Heinemann’s brutal Vietnam War novel Close Quarters when I was an adolescent. Scenes from that book scarred my memory. I hated that book until I had to write my own novel and realized that Heinemann was right—if you are dealing with atrocity, then don’t editorialize, don’t sentimentalize. Make the reader feel the hurt. Make the comfortable uncomfortable. Libraries are the great repository of uncomfortable ideas, and I benefitted from the freedom to roam and expose myself to them.

 

Learn more about this upcoming ALOUD program.

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Head of the Class

On a Tuesday morning this past January, Central Library’s Taper Auditorium filled with the flashes of cameras, the uplifting lull of “Pomp and Circumstance,” and a royal blue tide of caps and gowns. But this was not your typical graduation ceremony.

High School Ceremony

“This is a city of second chances—Los Angeles defines itself that way. We are not a city that cares where you come from, or where your parents come from, or what your first language was, the color of your skin, your gender,” said Mayor Eric Garcetti addressing the first class of 28 graduates from the Los Angeles Public Library’s pioneering Career Online High School. “What we care about is your dreams and what you want to accomplish in life. You’ve already shown yourself to be people who embrace the idea of a second chance. This library system was there at the right moment to be the enabler of your hard work. We opened the door up, but you today have walked through that door,” said the Mayor.

Mayor Eric Garcetti’s Advice to Graduates:

  1. Be fearless
  2. Be humble
  3. Learn how to listen
  4. Lead with love

In an effort to address the spreading epidemic of high school dropouts—nearly 40 million adults across the country and half of the adult population in L.A.—the Los Angeles Public Library teamed up with Career Online High School, an 18-credit, career-based high school completion program designed to prepare students for the workforce. This first-ever collaboration between an accredited online program and a public library offers adult learners better access to a flexible, supportive environment for completing their degree.

 

“This program is the dramatic and powerful example of how the Library is all about lifelong learning and empowerment and how public libraries can play a very important role in the workforce and economic development,” said City Librarian John Szabo. Since kicking off in March 2014, over 150 students have enrolled in the program.

 

“It’s beneficial for numerous reasons—from helping students go on to college programs, apply for scholarships, get promotions at current jobs, or learn new skills for their careers—we’ve witnessed how it can provide new opportunities and instill a feeling of accomplishment and self-worth in the participants,” explained Brian Cunningham, LAPL librarian and the project coordinator for Career Online High School.

 

Through the help of the Library Foundation, every student accepted to the program receives a grant to cover his or her studies. Antoine Merritt, one of the graduates, had struggled to find an affordable, accredited program that could accommodate his work schedule. “I was promised a promotion at work into a new department once I showed them that I was committed to my education and completed college coursework,” said Merritt, who after finishing his online high school degree in September 2014 was greenlighted to begin training in his new department while pursuing a degree in electronics at Pierce College. He’s also become an ambassador for the Library’s program—his niece just began working on her high school degree last month. “This program is changing my whole family’s life and giving us tools to help us grow and thrive,” he said.

 

Angie HS Ceremony

“If it were not for the Library I wouldn’t have gotten my high school diploma—I would have just let it go. I always wanted it, but was not in a position to take time away from work or my college courses to do so. It has given me the confidence that I was lacking because I was missing a big part of my educational goals,” said Angie Velasquez, graduate of Career Online High School, pictured above.

 

Gina Ruiz—the grandmother of a current high school student—has been an office manager for over 20 years, and between work and family never had the time to complete her degree. “There was always this barrier of not having the diploma. It kept me from certain promotions, attending college, and applying for scholarships,” Ruiz explained. After completing the program last August, she’s now enrolled at Northeastern University College of Professional Studies and hopes to go on to receive her Master’s degree and a Ph.D. The Library’s support of Ruiz’s education has continued beyond Career Online High School. A teacher from the program along with Cunningham wrote her letters of recommendation and she recently received a scholarship for college. Also, she has learned how to use other Library resources for her college research papers.

 

The program serves a wide range of student needs. David Villena, originally from Mexico City, graduated from high school there, but when he moved to the U.S. in 2000, he could not find a program that would allow him to transfer his coursework and complete a full high school degree. On a visit to his neighborhood library, he learned about Career Online High School. “What else could I ask for? It was love at first sight,” said Villena, who completed his degree last April. Villena credits the Library’s encouragement as laying the foundation for taking future steps in his education. “An overall benefit of taking this online program is the fact that I came into contact with a new way to learn—that has given me a new tool to approach other online courses.”

 

The program is also now being modeled at 49 other libraries across this country and is expanding across the state. “We’re honored that the program that we helped design has been implemented at so many other library systems, continuing its impact. In fact, I’m currently mentoring 12 other library systems throughout the state as they work on rolling out Career Online High School later this year,” says Candice Mack, the interim principal librarian of Young Adult Services and project manager of Career Online High School.

Learn more about Career Online High School here.

All photos by Gary Leonard.

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Well-Versed for National Poetry Month

For fans of free and blank verse who will be celebrating all things poetry this April for National Poetry Month, the Library Foundation and ALOUD can help you get your poetry fix. This weekend Members of the Library Foundation will gather with participating authors of the Los Angeles Times Book Festival at the 5th Annual Book Drop Bash. Attending authors include U.S. Poet Laureate Juan Felipe Herrera, who will be receiving the 2015 Robert Kirsch Award for his literary contributions. You can also catch Herrera for a special evening of poetry at ALOUD on Wednesday, April 20th

Or find poetic inspiration at any time with the ALOUD video archives below– from a moving performance of America’s most quintessential ode, to politically charged “citizenry” verses, to consoling meditations. Click here for the full spring calendar with upcoming ALOUD poetry events.

 


Acclaimed poet and Pulitzer Prize finalist Elizabeth Alexander, who composed and delivered the 2009 inauguration poem for President Obama, offers a deeply felt meditation on the blessings of family, art and community following the death of her husband in her memoir, The Light of the World. Poet Kevin Young, author of ten books of poetry, winner of the Lenore Marshall Award and a finalist for the National Book Award, gathers twenty years of highlights from his extraordinary career in his new compilation Blue Laws: Selected & Uncollected Poems 1995-2015. Longtime friends Alexander and Young share the stage for poetry, companionship, and to discuss their newest works: lyrical forays into life’s passages through grief and joy.


 

Two powerful poets read from their work and discuss how poetry can become an active tool for rethinking race in America. Robin Coste Lewis reads from her poetry collection, Voyage of the Sable Venus, which lyrically catalogs representations of the black figure in the fine arts, with Claudia Rankine—a poet whose incendiary book, Citizen: An American Lyric—is a powerful testament to the individual and collective effects of racism in our often named “post-racial” society.

 



Philip Levine, the 18th Poet Laureate reads from his work and discusses life, literature, and his time in the Golden State with Robert Casper, Head of Poetry and Literature Center, Library of Congress.

 


 


“Song of Myself: Walt Whitman in Other Words” features a trilingual reading with Luis Alberto Ambroggio, Christopher Merrill and Sholeh Wolpé and musical performances by Sahba Motallebi.

 



The Poetry of America’s 2014 national series, “The Voice of Women in American Poetry,” celebrated an enormous literary heritage. Distinguished contemporary poets—both male and female—gathered in five cities around the country to pay tribute to the immense achievement of a wide range of poets. This Los Angeles program included poets Marilyn Chin on Ai, Toi Derricotte on Anne Sexton, and Percival Everett on Gertrude Stein.

 

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Coming Soon: A Very L.A. Spelling Bee

On Saturday, March 19, the Library Foundation of Los Angeles and the Los Angeles Public Library will host an unprecedented dual language English and Spanish spelling bee in the Mark Taper Auditorium of downtown’s historic Central Library. During this unique event hosted by author, lecturer, OC Weekly editor, and word expert Gustavo Arellano, participants of all ages (12+) will have the opportunity to compete in either or both languages while attendees experience live simultaneous interpretation from language justice collaborative Antena.

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As the competition heats up, guests throughout Central Library will also enjoy language-based activities in both Spanish and English, including a dictionary-themed puppet show, word games, and live poetry labs. This very special celebration of language is presented as part of the Foundation and Library’s month-long, city-wide project, Hollywood Is A Verb: Los Angeles Tackles the Oxford English Dictionary.

OED

“Day of the Dictionary” activities at Central Library:

10:30AM – KLOS Story Theater, Children’s Dept.
“The Magic Word” Puppet Show by Tree of Wonders (English)

11:00AM – 12:30PM – Mark Taper Auditorium
A Very LA Spelling Bee

11:30AM – KLOS Story Theater, Children’s Dept.
“The Magic Word” Puppet Show by Tree of Wonders (Spanish)

1:00PM – 3:00PM – 2nd Floor Rotunda
Interactive poetry lab by Melrose Poetry Bureau

2:30PM – 4:00PM – Mark Taper Auditorium
A Very LA Spelling Bee

2:30PM – KLOS Story Theater, Children’s Dept.
“The Magic Word” Puppet Show by Tree of Wonders (English)

3:30PM – KLOS Story Theater, Children’s Dept.
“The Magic Word” Puppet Show by Tree of Wonders (Spanish)

All day – Word Games!

 

If you would like to participate in the Bee, or attend and support your favorite speller, click here for more information. For those who can’t make it downtown on March 19, Los Angeles Public Library branches across the city will also be presenting a range of exciting language-based and dictionary-themed activities. To learn more about Hollywood Is A Verb, visit lfla.dev/oed.

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From the Archives: The Historic Architecture of the Oscars

With preparations for the 88th Academy Awards well underway this week, did you know that this star-studded event did not always take place in the epicenter of the Hollywood drag? Right around the corner from the downtown Central Library, the historic Millennium Biltmore Hotel was the founding site for the Oscars when the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences hosted a luncheon in its Crystal Ballroom in May of 1927. Between 1931 and 1977, eight Oscar ceremonies were held at the Biltmore, including the 50th Anniversary hosted by Bob Hope. Built by Schultze & Weaver, the architects behind New York City’s Waldorf Astoria and Park Lane Hotels, the ever glamorous Biltmore opened in October of 1923. With its hand painted fresco ceilings and 24 carat gold accents, here’s a look back at how the Biltmore hosted one of L.A.’s most lavish gatherings of the year–these archival images of the Academy Awards are courtesy of the Los Angeles Public Library’s Photo Collection.

 

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This photograph of the first organizational meeting of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences was taken in the Crystal Ballroom of Los Angeles’ Biltmore Hotel on May 11, 1927. Some of the Hollywood pioneers in this photo are Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks (the Academy’s first president), Louis B. Mayer, Jack L. Warner and Darryl F. Zanuck.

 


 

http://jpg1.lapl.org/00115/00115415.jpgPhotograph from the 4th annual Academy Awards event caption dated November 11, 1931, reads “Photo, taken at the banquet of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, shows Norma Shearer presenting a gold statuette to Marie Dressler as the academy‘s award for the best performance by an actress in 1931, her portrayal in ‘Min and Bill.’ At left is George Arliss, wearing a monocle and watching the ceremony. At right is Lionel Barrymore, who won the award for the best performance by an actor because of his work in ‘A Free Soul.'”

 

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Clark Gable receiving the Best Actor Award for his role in the film “It Happened One Night” at the 7th Annual Academy awards held at the Biltmore Hotel on February 27, 1935.

 

http://jpg1.lapl.org/pics50/00044979.jpgTwo photographs side-by-side showing winners of the 9th Annual Academy Awards. From left to right, Walt Disney and Shirley Temple; Edgar Bergen with his ventriloquist dummy, Charlie McCarthy. Disney won an Oscar in the Short Subjects, Cartoon category for “The Country Cousin” and Bergen was honored for his outstanding comedy creation, Charlie.
The 9th Academy Awards, hosted by George Jessel and held on March 4, 1937, was the first time in which the categories of Best Supporting Actor and Best Supporting Actress were awarded.

 

 

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Olivia de Havilland and Joan Fontaine sitting together, 1942. The caption reads, “One of the real dramas at the dinner was this scene showing Miss Fontaine and her sister, Olivia de Havilland, also contender for the honor. This was the first [illegible] that two sisters had ever vied for an Oscar.” Engaged in a rivalry that lasted most of their lives, De Havilland and Fontaine are the only siblings to have won lead acting Academy Awards.

 

 

http://jpg1.lapl.org/00106/00106378.jpgWalt Disney receiving the Irving Thalberg Award at the 14th Academy Awards, held at the Biltmore Bowl. Photograph dated February 29, 1942.

 

Browse more historic images through the Los Angeles Public Library’s Photo Collection.

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A Life in Photography: Sebastião Salgado at ALOUD

“I am not a social photographer. I am not an economic photographer. I’m not a photojournalist. Photography is much more than that. Photography is my life. It’s my way of life, and my language,” explained Sebastião Salgado when he spoke to The New York Times last spring. For over 40 years, Salgado has been communicating across all corners of the globe through his camera lens. From the Amazonian mines to the genocides in Rwanda and Bosnia, his breathtaking black-and-white photographs bring a chilling humanity to global stories of suffering and destruction.

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Nenet Nomads, Wind Storm, Siberia, Russia, 2011 (c) Sebastião Salgado/ Amazonas Images, Courtesy Peter Fetterman Gallery

 

Born in Brazil, Salgado was an economics student when he fled a military movement in his home country for France. It was not until his 30s that he developed a great curiosity for photography, and after experiencing life as an immigrant began to feel a compulsion to showthat dignity is not an exclusive property of the rich countries of the north but exists all over the planet.” These obsessions led him to work on years-long photographic projects, including: Workers, documenting the vanishing life of manual laborers across the world; Migrations, illuminating the epic displacement of the world’s people at the close of the twentieth century; and most recently, Genesis, the result of Salgado’s quest to rediscover the world’s forgotten people and places.

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Eastern Part of the Brooks Range, Alaska, USA, 2009 (c) Sebastião Salgado/ Amazonas Images, Courtesy Peter Fetterman Gallery

 

This month, ALOUD will offer audiences an up-close look at the iconic work of the renowned photographer and UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador through two special events. First, ALOUD will screen the Oscar-nominated documentary, The Salt of the Earth, directed by Wim Wenders and Salgado’s son Juliano Ribeiro Salgado. The film follows Salgado’s tumultuous journey into capturing some of the world’s worst devastation and how this sparked his newest project, Genesis, a tribute to the planet’s beauty. The following week, in a rare in-person appearance, ALOUD will welcome Salgado to the Broad Stage. Joined in conversation with Pico Iyer, one of today’s most consciousness-raising travel writers, Salgado will discuss his prolific international career and how his current focus has become increasingly invested in issues of eco-conservation and environmental education. Learn more about these upcoming programs at lfla.dev/aloud.

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Sebastião Salgado. Credit: Nicole Toutounji/ UNICEF

Thursday, February 25, 7:15 PM
The Salt of the Earth: Sebastião Salgado
Free film screening at Central Library
Reservations:
lfla.dev/aloud

Monday, February 29, 7:30 PM
The Broad Stage
An Evening with Sebastião Salgado
In conversation with writer Pico Iyer
Tickets: lfla.dev/aloud

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Stay Home and Read a Book with Judy Blume

“Ask any writer and you’ll undoubtedly hear about the libraries in their lives,” writes Judy Blume, the award-winning and best-selling author and this year’s Stay Home and Read a Book Ball chair.

Picture of Judy Blume
Judy Blume visits ALOUD last June.

 

Blume firmly believes in the power of libraries and books to change lives, “Ask any reader and you will hear that books not only change lives, but sometimes save them. That’s exactly what the right book at the right time can do,” writes Blume. “So on March 6, 2016 I hope you’ll join me at the Stay Home and Read a Book Ball. It’s a book lover’s dream. No dressing up, no one in your face, no mystery food.  Just you and that book you’ve been longing to read.”

Read Blume’s full letter about the magic of Los Angeles and its public library here, and learn more about taking part in the 28th edition of the Stay Home and Read a Book Ball, the Library Foundation of Los Angeles’ oldest and most popular fundraising campaign.

Stay Home TileSupport and promote the Los Angeles Public Library from the comfort of your own home! Participate and celebrate one of the City’s most vital institutions and what it means: free and open access to information, lifelong learning, and democracy. Make “reservations” to this “non-event,” and donate gifts (amounts of your own choosing) to support the Library’s educational and cultural programs, including the award-winning series ALOUD at Central Library.

Learn more about staying home on March 6 to support the Los Angeles Public Library!

Or contact Erin Sapinoso, Associate Director of Foundation and Corporate Relations, at 213.292.6248 or [email protected].

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Young Literati Gathers L.A.’s Best and Brightest

On Saturday, Feb. 20, actors, musicians, and celebrated Angelenos will join together to benefit the Los Angeles Public Library at the Eighth Annual Toast, hosted by the Young Literati of the Library Foundation of Los Angeles. Held at the historic AVALON Hollywood, the Young Literati’s biggest event of the year will be curated by philanthropist, entrepreneur, and Young Literati Chair Amanda Fairey; her husband, artist and activist Shepard Fairey; producer Samantha Hanks and actor/director Colin Hanks; actress Busy Philipps and her husband, screenwriter Marc Silverstein; and comedian Demetri Martin. Busy Philipps and Samantha Hanks will serve as Honorary Chairs of the event, with Philipps serving as the evening’s emcee.

toast

Over the course of the evening, special guests including musician and technology creative Kenna; actor and comedian Randall Park (Fresh Off the Boat); comedian Tig Notaro; director Jason Reitman (Men, Women & Children); comedian and late night host Andy Richter; actress and comedian Kristen Schaal (Last Man on Earth); actress Jenny Slate (Obvious Child); actress and writer Sarah Thyre; actress and comedian Charlyne Yi (House) and others will read selections of literature from the Library’s vast collections – all focused on the theme of water as a vital resource. Attendees will also enjoy a live DJ set by Shepard Fairey and DJ Francesca Harding as well as a blaring performance by Buyepongo. We hope you’ll join us for this special night! Before you raise your glass for public libraries–here are a few fun highlights featuring the evening’s special guests.

Randall Park talks about the quirks of growing up in L.A. and becoming an actor:

 

Kristen Schaal talks to Andy Richter and Conan about how far she’ll go for a laugh on her hit show, Last Man on Earth:

 

One of Jenny Slate’s most memorable characters, Marcel the Shell:

 

Jason Reitman’s first foray into television with Hulu’s comedy series, Casual:

 

Charlyne Yi’s Many Impressions:

 

Learn about Kenna’s climb to the top of Mt. Kilimanjaro to raise awareness about the global water crisis in 2010.
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Listen to Sarah Thyre’s podcast Crybabies, which she produces alongside writer Susan Orlean.


 


Hear a sample of Buyepongo’s hip-hop, classic reggae, jazz-infused funk:

And here is a recap of last year’s Toast.

 

 

Learn more about attending the Toast here.

Proceeds from the Eighth Annual Toast will support the Los Angeles Public Library’s Adult Literacy Services, which helps adults with English literacy skills below a sixth grade level improve their reading and writing proficiency through one-on-one tutoring, self-directed and online practice, and group classes literacy centers in 21 neighborhood libraries – all for free. The second largest library-based adult literacy program in the nation, the essential Library service aids the more than two million adults that lack basic English skills in Los Angeles County.

 

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