NEW YORK – All of her neighbors are gone, ****** out. Now Elizabeth Sargent, the last holdout tenant of Carnegie Hall's towers, is preparing to leave the affordable studios that for more than a century housed some of America's most brilliant creative artists.
Red scaffolding surrounds Carnegie Hall as the city-owned towers are being gutted this summer in a $200 million renovation that includes adding a youth music program. *********** like Robert De Niro and Susan Sarandon had fought to save the homes, petitioning the city not to "displace these treasured artists and master teachers."
Musicians, painters, dancers and actors thrived in the two towers built by 19th-century industrialist Andrew Carnegie just after the hall went up in 1891. The towers — one 12 stories high, the other 16 — housed more than 100 studios, some with special skylights installed to give painters the northern light they prize.
Over the years, Marilyn Monroe, Grace Kelly and Robert Redford took acting lessons here and Lucille Ball had voice coaching. James Dean studied scripts and Leonard Bernstein, music.
Women once lined up on the street to visit an alluring resident — the young Marlon Brando. His studio space on the eighth floor was demolished in early July.
Sargent, a one-time dancer noted for her boldly sexual poetry, is now in her 80s and in remission from cancer. For 40 years, she's lived on the ninth floor of the red brick southern tower above the famed stage of the 119-year-old landmark.
She has until Aug. 31 to clear out.
This isn't right. I'm all for fostering music education, but it shouldn't come at the expense of accomplished masters in the arts. Basically, Weill is using this as an opportunity to put his name in the media, but he's sending a big "Fuck You" to some of the masters of the crafts that he claims to be promoting. This is the same thing as saying you're gonna demolish the Taj Mahal to build a homeless shelter where it currently stands. Sure, teaching music to underprivileged **** from the ghetto should be important, but it shouldn't be done with ulterior motives, as is Weill's case, nor should it be done at the expense of those that are considered masters of the arts.
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