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Murray
Horwitz: from the Big Top to the Silver Theatre
BY
MITCHELL TROPIN
Inside
Murray Horwitz's office in downtown Silver Spring are gold
Peabody awards for excellence in broadcasting, a Thomas "Fats"
Waller screen saver, and a framed oversized poster for the
operatic version of The Great Gatsby.
The items
represent key moments in Horwitz's renaissance career: Broadway,
opera, television, radio, and, most currently, film. Since
January 2001, he has been director of the American Film Institute's
new AFI Silver Theatre and Cultural Center, a major element
in Silver Spring's renaissance.
These
are heady times for Horwitz, who saw the AFI Silver's three-screen
complex open officially in April, while across town, Arena
Stage is staging "Ain't Misbehavin," the show that
he co-created based on Fats Waller's music.
Horwitz
is of medium build, with small wire-rim glasses, mustache,
tousled hair, and genial smile. Many years ago he covered
his pleasant appearance with the greasepaint and accoutrements
of a clown.

Horwitz
in the lobby of the AFI Silver Theatre & Cultural Center,
where he has been director since 2001.
Horwitz's
love for the arts goes back to his hometown of Dayton, Ohio,
where his parents urged him and his two brothers to explore
many cultural influences from stage musicals to rock and roll,
and "not to make any artificial distinctions between
high and low culture. We were not discouraged from reading
comic books, but we were encouraged to go to theaters, go
to the movies, and see a wide range of films. Not everything
was good, but everything was worthy."
Horwitz's
father, a doctor, performed light opera in St. Louis. His
mother was a pianist and a radio actress. They emphasized
the value the arts provided others, Horwitz remembers, and
they believed that entertainment should be a form of public
service.
"My
father considered three professionsÑmedicine, teaching, and
entertainmentÑto be the most worthy, because they sought very
directly to improve people's lives," he said.
While
enthusiastic about the arts, the Horwitzes wanted their son
to go to college to have something to fall back on. Murray
entered Kenyon College, a small liberal arts school, declaring
a double major in drama and history. He figured he could teach
history, go into government, or enter politics. But he discovered
that his talents lay in the arts.
While
studying French dramatists and British satirists, Horwitz
developed a passion for humor. "I could appreciate irony
and satire. I could read Jonathan Swift's A Modest Proposal
and say, ÔI know what this guy is doing,'" he said.
For a
drama class, Horwitz prepared a one-man production showing
clowns through the ages. Then fate stepped in.
"While
preparing the show I discovered there was a clown college
in Florida run by the Barnum and Bailey and Ringling Brothers
Circus. I went to my professors, saying this is where I could
learn how to do physical comedy," he said.
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After
completing the college's six-week ourse, the circus
offered him a contract. His parents took the development
in stride: "My mother went around telling her friends,
ÔI have three sons: a doctor, a lawyer, and a clown
in the circus.'"
Circus
life was a grinding way to make a living, Horwitz said.
The travel by rail was constant, the pay poor, and working
conditions dismal. For his first year with the circus,
Horwitz didn't even have a room, sleeping in a bunk
and sharing the same rail car with 15 others. The rewards
compensated.
"What
better way to start a career then going around the country,
making people laugh two times a day and three times
on Saturday, and getting paid for it?" he said.
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Horwitz
in his years as a professional clown with Ringling Brothers
and Barnum & Bailey Circus.
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The young
performer discovered that the circus is a tough arbiter. "The
life tends to quickly sort out those who lack talent or skill,"
he said. "Nobody can teach you how to be funny. But if
you are funny you are going to need to know some techniques,
some skills. Where you really learn those skills is on the
job."
After
three years as a successful clown, he left in 1972 to pursue
an acting career in New York. He took on several jobs, working
at an all-news radio station. He got the idea of creating
a one-man show based on the stories of Yiddish writer Shalom
Aleichim.
With no
track record in the theater, Horwitz found it tough getting
a backer. Then he ran into a Philadelphia theater owner who
remembered his one-man show back at Kenyon College. The owner
agreed to put the show on in Philadelphia, which Horwitz remembers
as "the city of brotherly love, rather than perceptive
critics."
The show
went well and was brought to New York, where Horwitz met another
struggling actor and director, Richard Maltby, Jr. Horwitz
described listening to Fats Waller recordings with Maltby
in his New York apartment.
"What
caught our attention was the wit in the piano music, not the
comic asides," Horwitz said. "This convinced us
that Waller's music and personality could live on stage."
After
sorting through the enormous amount of music that Waller had
written, the two men started preparing a show. The result
was the award winning Ain't Misbehavin'.
Horwitz
had discovered Waller as a teenager, when a friend told him
that any-one interested in comedy and in jazz had to listen
to Fats. Horwitz was mesmerized when he first heard Fats'
stride piano, thinking it must be two men playing piano.
"I
ran downstairs to my mother, who played piano, dragged her
upstairs and exclaimed, ÔPlease tell me this is not impossible!'"
Ain't
Misbehavin' was an unusual production for Broadway because
it did not fit into the traditional categories: It was not
a musical comedy or a revue, and it did not have a plot, but
there was humor and drama. Maltby and Horwitz had the task
of creating jokes and lines that sounded as if they actually
came from the big man's imagination.
The show
opened on Broadway in 1978, where it won Tony Awards for Best
Musical and Best Actress (Nell Carter). The original production
ran for 1,604 performances. In celebration of the show's 25th
anniversary this year, Arena Stage and theaters in other cities
are staging productions.
Horwitz
followed the show with other musical projects, such as Harlem
NocturneÑa history of African-American music, and a show
celebrating the music of jazz pianist Moses Allison. While
they enjoyed some success, Horwitz found himself scrambling
for workÑgoing so far afield as directing daytime soap operas
and making occasional TV appearances on such shows as Kojak.
By this
point in his life, Horwitz and his wife Lisa, married since
1974, were raising three children: Charles, Ann, and Alexander
Thomas. Lisa is a hometown girl from Dayton, but Horwitz met
her in New York City. She was a mezzo soprano opera singer
and he was a clown.
"It's
Pagliacci" Horwitz joked.
With a
family but without steady work, Horwitz moved to Washington
to look for new opportunities. One came along when Horwitz
ran into Richard Maltby's fianc?e. She was working for the
National Endowment of the Arts (NEA) as deputy director for
opera and musical theater. When she moved to New York to marry
Maltby and quit her NEA job, Horwitz asked friends whether
he could be an arts administrator, despite a lack of experience.
They assured him he could.
Horwitz
got the position she vacated, learning a valuable lesson in
the process.
"In
general I have never known a lot about business or the world
of institutional art. What has served me well is that I did
know the art form," he said. "You also need to know
taste and what is good and bad; being able to look at, let's
say, a list of songs and say, Ôwow, what great songs!'"
After
several years with the NEA, Horwitz joined National Public
Radio as vice president for cultural programming. Horwitz
would receive two Peabody awards for Excellence in Broadcasting
for two major NPR projects he co-created.
The first
project, Making the Music, was the joint effort of
Horwitz and the renowned jazz trumpeter Wynton Marsalis. The
26-part "swing through Jazz" was designed to present
the joyful and expressive energy of Jazz.
A second
Peabody was for The NPR 100, a millennium project that
highlighted the 100 most significant American musical works
of the 20th century. Compiling the list launched a thousand
arguments over what is American music, Horwitz said. The most
often asked questionÑespecially by talk show hostsÑwas "What's
number one?"
Horwitz
said the answer is that there is no number one. "Some
television host would say to me, ÔWe've got 45 seconds left.
What is number one?' only to be told there was no such thing.
We were not going to make the same mistake made by so many
millennium lists. We were not going to say one song is more
important than another."
While
with NPR, Horwitz completed a fairly unique projectÑproviding
lyrics to songs that were part of a modern opera based on
The Great Gatsby. Pulitzer Prize winner John Harbison
wrote the music and libretto, but asked Horwitz to write lyrics
for songs that the F. Scott Fitzgerald characters would hear
on the radio. The Great Gatsby premiered in 1999 at
the Metropolitan Opera.
"This
was clearly different for a post-Oscar Hammerstein, post-Stephen
Sondheim musical theater writer, where you want the songs
to be sung by the characters and to advance the plot,"
Horwitz said.
When growing
up, Horwitz would go to nearby Yellow Springs, home of Antioch
College and the Little Art Theater, a movie theater that showed
the many worlds of cinema: Alec Guinness comedies, French
New Wave, Akira Kurosawa films from Japan, and classic Buster
Keaton silent films. Horwitz sees AFI Silver fulfilling a
similar role. "Essentially we are an art house,"
he said.
Horwitz
also sees AFI Silver offering him a chance to use the media's
entertainment value for public service and to use his talents
to make life better for people. "I believe film and video
offer have much to contribute to the proffering and cementing
the view that all men and women are brothers and sisters."
What bothers
Horwitz is the fact that there was a broader range of cultural
options available in the 1950s and 1960s.
"Nowadays
marketing and demographic segmentation has separated us. There
is no longer an Ed Sullivan show where you would see violinist
Sasha Heifitz, followed by Ethel Merman, followed by Fats
Domino. Strangely, with the proliferation of media and technologies
to enjoy them, people tend to navigate in a narrower cultural
channel," he said.
With marketing
dividing people, Horwitz wants to exploit "movies' traditional
ability to bring people together." Looking at the attendance
at AFI Silver, Horwitz said, "the diversity of the audiences
so far has shown that we can be right."
Horwitz
sees AFI Silver making a large contribution to downtown Silver
Spring's rebirth. During AFI's April 12 open house, a young
professional approached Horwitz, telling him that AFI Silver
cemented her decision to buy a home in Silver Spring. Retelling
the story later, Horwitz smiles broadly and makes a celebratory
gesture. From his expression, one could tell hearing the woman's
news felt as good as the roar of a Big Top crowd.
AFI will
present this summer several special offerings, including a
documentary festival, Silver Docs, scheduled for June
18-23. Takoma Park's documentary filmmaker, Nina Gilden Seavey,
is festival director. For more on AFL Silver Theatre, visit
its web site, www.afi.com.
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