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Y Pool Deemed Too Small, Meet Moved to Commerce

For the first time in 35 years, the popular Palisades-Malibu YMCA fall swim meet won’t be held in Temescal Canyon. ”After last year’s meet, Bette Williams, executive director of the Southern California YMCA Swim League, informed Paly Aquatics Director Picky Stull that Paly could no longer hold the meet at the Temescal pool due to safety issues. For some reason that directive was never relayed to the new Y staff. ”Paly head swim coach Kameron Kennedy said the change of venue was news to him. “Bette came up to me on the last day of the Junior Olympics Meet in August and asked if we had found a pool yet for our meet,” Kennedy said. “At first, I didn’t know what she was talking about.” ”After that Kennedy attempted to rent pools at Santa Monica College, Culver Plunge, Southwest L.A. College and Loyola Marymount University, but by that time they were already booked. Finally he found space at the Natatorium in the City of Commerce. ”Kennedy was optimistic. “I’m happy with the facility at Commerce,” Kennedy said. “It’s indoor with 10 lanes, including three additional lanes for warm-up and cool-down. It’s a fast pool, and I have some swimmers who work so hard’they get up for 5:30 a.m. workouts’they deserve a place with good racing conditions.” ”The downside to hosting the meet at another site is its distance (25 miles south through downtown L.A.) and the $4,200 rental fee that Paly must pay. Also, the Commerce pool will not permit use of its kitchen, so Paly will lose the $2,000 it usually raises from snack-bar sales. ”Williams made her decision after running last year’s meet, which attracted 670 swimmers from various YMCA teams throughout Southern California. The six-lane, 25-yard pool was too small to accommodate the number of swimmers competing. She had to stop warmups because there were too many kids in the pool at one time making it unsafe and she had to delay the start of the meet because of traffic. The narrow, steep road up to the pool made it nearly impossible for parents to drop off their swimmers and gear before parking in Temescal Gateway Park. ”Another problem Williams noted was that the pool was not deep enough. The National YMCA Swimming Board regulations stipulate that swimmers are not allowed to dive into less than five feet of water. The depth at the shallow end of the Paly pool is three feet, meaning that swimmers have to start in the water in certain events rather than from a diving block. ”Williams said it is mandatory for swim teams in the Y national program to participate in local Y meets. Last year, the largest team in the league had only senior and pre-senior groups swim for one day at the Paly meet. “The facility is not one that lends itself to top-notch or elite swimmers having their best swims,” Williams said. “They get nothing out of the meet. The Paly pool is inadequate.” ”Because of its pool, Paly hasn’t been represented at Y Nationals the past two years. “It’s a shame because Paly Y swimmers have always participated and have been national champions in the past,” Williams said. ””I’m very disappointed,” Carol Pfannkuche, executive director of the Palisades-Malibu said. “I know our swim parents would love to have the meet here, but I can understand why Bette made her decision.”

Notre Dame Twins Win at Riviera

Texas Christian University sophomore Nicole Leimbach captured the singles title and Notre Dame twins Catrina and Christian Thompson won the doubles title Sunday at the Women’s All-American Tennis Championships Sunday at the Riviera Tennis Club.’The event was the first of three national championship tournaments for the 2005-06 women’s collegiate season. Leimbach, the No. 3 seed, beat Duke’s eighth-seeded Daniela Bercek’6-3, 6-4’in the singles final. Notre Dame’s Thompson twins beat Fresno State’s Lucia Sainz and Kathrin Winterhalter 9-8 (9-7) in the doubles final. The Thompsons became only the second set of twins to win a national collegiate women’s doubles title, joining Stanford’s Tami and Teri Whitlinger, who won the 1989 ITA National Intercollegiate Indoor title. Last spring Bercek and Leimbach were starring for UCLA and USC, respectively, but both transferred from the Southern California schools over the summer. Leimbach, who did not lose a single set’in five matches this week,’is the first TCU women’s player to win a national singles title.’A native of Colorado Springs, Leimbach actually’lost to Bercek in all three of their’meetings last season while at USC. Notre Dame’s Thompsons were playing in their second straight All-American final and fought off match point twice during the title match.’The juniors from’Las Vegas’have now reached at least the semifinals in three of the last four national tournaments dating back to the beginning of last season. Fresno State’s Winterhalter and Sainz are the first Bulldogs to reach a national doubles final.’They won three matches in the qualifying tournament earlier this week and upset three top 10 teams en route to the final.

Spikers Lose to Venice

The Palisades High girls volleyball team found itself in a familiar position Monday afternoon: facing archrival Venice with first place in the Western League on the line. After not losing a game in their first four league matches, the Dolphins fell behind 2-0 to Venice and were unable to rally back, losing 25-17, 25-18, 18-25, 25-16. The Gondoliers (5-3 overall, 5-0 in league) lost all three of their nonleague matches’to San Pedro, Narbonne and Verdugo Hills’but head coach Alan Hunt felt those losses prepared his team well for Palisades. “You never like to lose, but those are three of the best teams in the City this year,” he said. “Palisades is good too, we just managed to get ahead of them early and we were able to close it out.” Sophomore middle blocker Alex Lunder led the Dolphins (7-1, 4-1) with seven kills and two blocks while Rachel Ehrlich had eight digs. “Our defense wasn’t very good,” Lunder said. “They made us work a lot harder for our points than most of the teams we’ve been playing. We had trouble hitting around their blocks.” Palisades broke an 11-11 tie with five consecutive points to seize control of the third game and it appeared the Dolphins might rally for another two-game deficit on their home floor as they had two weeks earlier against Santa Monica. However, a 10-3 Gondos run in the middle of game four ended any chance of a Pali comeback. “They played well today,” Lunder said. “The good thing is we get to play them one more time.” The teams meet again October 26 at Venice. ‘STEVE GALLUZZO

Dolphins Blank St. Monica, 21-0

Pali Football Wins Third Straight Game; Opens League Against Venice on Friday

Palisades' Marquise Coleman breaks into the secondary on his way to a 32-yard gain against St. Monica last Friday night at Stadium by the Sea.
Palisades’ Marquise Coleman breaks into the secondary on his way to a 32-yard gain against St. Monica last Friday night at Stadium by the Sea.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

It didn’t look pretty, but the Palisades High varsity football team did put 21 points on the scoreboard Friday night at Stadium by the Sea. The more telling number, however, was the “0” on the opposite side, under the word “visitor.” Not to be confused with Santa Monica, which beat Palisades 24-14 in week two, St. Monica, a Southern Section Division XI school with about 650 students, was limited to 85 offensive yards. It was Palisades’ first shutout since a 49-0 victory over Hamilton in 2002 in the first of former coach Jason Blatt’s two seasons. “Three touchdowns is pretty good but we could’ve easily scored 40 on them,” said Dolphins’ senior defensive end Alphanso Gray. “We’ve been practicing a new defense with different blitzes and things and it worked pretty well tonight.” Last Friday’s win marked the 35th time in school history Palisades held its opposition scoreless. What makes the latest shutout so remarkable is that it was achieved despite 14 penalties for 128 yards–only 33 yards less than the Dolphins gained from scrimmage. Pali coaches were understandably beside themselves. “I’m pretending I’m not here tonight,” Pali line coach George Burns said, only half-joking, as he trotted off the field at halftime. By then, the Dolphins had already had three touchdowns negated by silly infractions. “We got away with a lot of stupid mistakes against [St. Monica], but we won’t be able to make them against better teams,” wide receiver Ryan Henry said. “One positive we can take from this game, though, is that we were able to establish the run.” On Pali’s second possession, Henry took a pitch around right end for a 16-yard touchdown but the play was called back on a hold. Early in the second quarter, Henry fielded a punt and weaved his way for a highlight-reel 58-yard touchdown, but the Dolphins were flagged for clipping. Adding insult to injury, running back Marquise Coleman had a 28-yard scoring run nullified by holding just before halftime. “It was a nightmare,” Pali head coach Leo Castro admitted. “The only thing that made it tolerable was that we were winning. Obviously the penalties are an area we have to clean up in a hurry. If we do that against Venice, it’s going to get ugly.” Against a tougher opponent a 21-0 victory would be reason to celebrate, but players and coaches alike know there is still much the Dolphins (3-2 need to work on before Friday night’s Western League opener versus Venice. “We wanted to come out and control the line of scrimmage and we did,” Gray said. “I think we’re ready for league because we’re getting better every week. Venice only beat Santa Monica by three points and we’re much better than we were when we played Santa Monica, so I think we can beat Venice.” Pali’s sloppy play overshadowed a fine effort by Coleman, who rushed 14 times for 63 yards, most it on straight hand-offs in between the tackles. His 1-yard run gave Pali a 14-0 lead with 4:24 left in the first quarter and it appeared the Dolphins were on their way to a rout. Then the flags started flying. “I’m somewhat satisfied with where we are,” said Henry, who scored the Dolphins’ first touchdown on a 14-yard reception. “We’re definitely ahead of where we were last year, but now we start league and it’s like a whole new season.” Quarterback Raymond Elie attempted only nine passes, completing four for 85 yards, and he threw one interception. Rather than scrambling out of the pocket, Elie reverted to drop-back passing and was sacked four times for -19 yards. He scored Pali’s final touchdown on a quarterback sneak early in the third quarter. The Mariners (1-4) used four different quarterbacks, who combined to connect on 7 of 22 passes for 47 yards. Henry and Robert Gillett each had an interception while Christian Clark and Evan Lambkins each had three solo sacks for Palisades. Lambkins also recovered a fumble. Palisades has not beaten Venice since a 55-32 victory in 2000, the last year of the Ron Price era. In the last four meetings, the Dolphins have been outscored 163-21. Like last year, Venice is led by running back Ken Ashley. “He’s a good runner,” Henry said. “We’re pretty good at defending the pass so if we can stop him and force their quarterback to throw, I like our chances.” Last year, Pali held Ashley in check for most of the first half and trailed only 14-0 at halftime. But he returned the second half kick for a touchdown and later scored on a punt return as Venice pulled away to a 35-0 win. “I’d rate Ashley even higher than C.J. Gable [of Sylmar],” Castro said of the Gondos’ leading rusher. “He’s got a lot of speed and he’s really tough to tackle in the open field.” Friday’s varsity game kicks off at 7 p.m. at Stadium by the Sea, preceded by the frosh/soph game at 4 p.m. Pali’s frosh/soph also beat St. Monica, 26-6, for its third win in a row. The home game will be the Dolphins’ fifth in its first six games. “Hopefully, the home field advantage will work in our favor,” Castro said. “I scheduled so many home games because I want our student body and the community to support the football program. Our goal is to win and to be an exciting team that people want to come watch.” Pali’s three-game winning streak has come against teams with a combined record of 3-11-1, but for the first time in his tenure Castro’s team is above .500. “I expected us to be 4-1 at this point,” Castro said candidly. “I knew Sylmar was going to be tough. But I thought we could’ve won the Santa Monica game and we’ve struggled to beat three weak teams since then, so league is where we have to prove ourselves. From here on, there are no pushovers.”

‘Annie’ Revival is a New Deal

Theater Review

All it takes is the orchestra’s overture to remind us why “Annie” holds a distinguished place in international musical history. The classic, catchy melodies of “It’s the Hard-Knock Life” and “Tomorrow” help transport children and adults to the lonesome but hopeful world of America’s favorite orphan and her determined, foot-stomping, mop-swishing friends. But the musical “Annie” is significantly different from the memorable 1982 movie starring Albert Finney as Daddy Warbucks and Carol Burnett as Miss Hannigan. And the current show revived by the original Broadway director and lyricist, Martin Charnin, takes a decidedly new approach to the familiar characters and moving story. The original Broadway production of “Annie” won seven 1977 Tony Awards, including best musical, book and score. It ran for 2,377 performances and is ranked as one of the 20 longest running shows in Broadway history. Now playing a limited-run at the Pantages Theatre in Hollywood through October 16, “Annie” stars Conrad John Schuck, who originally played Daddy Warbucks on Broadway and reprised the role for a recent Broadway revival. Miss Hannigan is played by Alene Robertson, who made her Broadway debut in “Annie.” Set in 1933 New York, during the Great Depression, the show highlights America’s struggle for stability, and the desperation of politicians and the streetwalkers alike. In this world, Annie’s optimism is not only unusual but also a bit extreme, as is the luxury of billionaire bachelor Oliver Warbucks’ estate in which the plucky red-haired orphan lands herself a’well, a new deal. Annie, played by Marissa O’Donnell, dreams that her biological parents who left her 11 years ago still love and will rescue her from the strict and dreary orphanage run by the wicked drunkard Miss Hannigan. An opportunity to spend a week with Warbucks is the key Annie needs to search for her parents, impress the outside world, and find a loving family. O’Donnell portrays the lovable, endearing Annie with her signature “ah-gee”s and “betcha”s. While maintaining a childlike ring, her singing voice is mature and solid, symbolic of her character’s inner strength. The young actresses who play Annie’s fellow orphan friends are a stellar crew, especially Lindsay Ryan who adds spunk to her role as the youngest child, Molly. Their version of “You’re Never Fully Dressed Without a Smile” best reveals their musical and dance talents, and when Miss Hannigan staggers in with “Did I hear happiness in here?” it feels like she’s referring to the audience’s applause. In the role of Hannigan, Robertson is less of a floozy Cruella de Ville and more like the villainous Ursula in “The Little Mermaid.” She struts and sways across the stage, letting it all out in numbers like “Easy Street,” accompanied by Scott Willis and Julie Cardia as the scheming duo Rooster and Lily St. Regis (played in the movie by the unforgettable Tim Curry and Bernadette Peters). A seemingly older Daddy Warbucks, Schuck is a natural musical talent, his experience revealed in the ease of his solo number, “Why Should I Change a Thing?” the new song by Martin Charnin and Charles Strouse incorporated into the production for the first time. One of the best scenes is undoubtedly Act II’s NBC radio show at Rockefeller Center, with Bert Healy, The Boylan Sisters and the Hour of Smiles Family. Annie and her Daddy Warbucks appear on the show to announce a reward for Annie’s parents, and an awkward Warbucks, unrehearsed and inexperienced, inadvertently performs a commercial. The drama of the live radio broadcast, with Healy’s deep show voice and the accompanying sound effects, as well as the visible goings-on behind the mic’with the playful dummy and flirtatious Boylan Sisters, is a show in itself. Actor Christopher Vettel captures the Bert Healy character, representative of radio personalities of the time. It was interesting to hear the children in the audience laugh not only at the orphans’ aggressive personalities and “Miss Hannigan” jokes but also at the political commentary’for example, when F.D.R. and his Cabinet members tease Warbucks about being a Republican. Perhaps kids are more aware of political jive than one would think, which might be reflective of today’s polarized political society. When Annie delivers her message that a better tomorrow “is always a day away” in the President’s Oval Office, Harold Ickes (played by Harry Turpin) sings the theme song with exaggeratedly funny hand gestures. Her message is inspiring, despite the unbelievable idea that with it she reaches the president and unites the two political parties; most people are more like the other orphans who still have to shout from the bottom. Annie’s canine companion Sandy, played by Lola, makes too few appearances in the production, and I missed the interaction between the two. Miss Hannigan’s underlying protective care for Annie, revealed at the end of the 1982 movie, is also absent in the musical. At times, the show feels more like a rags-to-riches story than the powerful tale of love I remember. The show runs through October 16. Tickets are $25 to $68, and are available online at www.BroadwayLA.org, by calling Ticketmaster at (213) 365-3500, or at the Pantages Theatre Box Office, 6233 Hollywood Blvd.

Jeff Lantos Finds ‘Indiana Jones’ in Jamestown’s Capt. John Smith

By EVELYN BARGE Palisadian-Post Intern The walls of Jeff Lantos’ fifth-grade classroom at Marquez Elementary are plastered with memorabilia from nearly 20 years of teaching’collages, drawings, poems and thank-you notes. Most prominent are the hundreds of photos and playbills from student theater productions, which Lantos directs three times a year as a way for his students to learn more about history by becoming immersed in it as actors and singers. Lantos not only writes and produces all the fifth-grade musicals, but has also recently expanded his literary repertoire to include a historical children’s novel about the life and adventures of John Smith that was published by AuthorHouse last spring. Village Books will host a signing of “My Adventures with John Smith,” next Thursday at 7:30 p.m. during which two of Lantos’ former students will act out excerpts of the novel. Another former student, Kristen Sorensen, drew the cover illustration. “This book grew out of the fact that I teach John Smith as part of my history lessons,” Lantos said. “I thought this would make a great story.” During his research, Lantos said he discovered that most people know very little about Smith’s life outside his relationship with the Native American princess Pocahontas. “Pocahontas was really the last chapter of his life. Before that, he led an adventurous life similar to Indiana Jones.” The book chronicles many of Smith’s lesser-known adventures, from his stint as a hero in the Turkish-Hungarian war to his sale into slavery in Constantinople. Smith escaped from slavery and went on to become a cartographer, a pirate and, eventually, the president of the Jamestown Colony in the New World. Lantos said the children’s book was four years in the making. He devoted his summers to working on the novel but had to stop the writing process each fall to return his focus to teaching at Marquez. “You get into a kind of trance,” he said of the writing process. “You may be talking to someone, but you can’t hear them, because your mind is always on the book.” Lantos said he struggled to find a balance between the historical facts and the fictional elements that make a strong narrative. “I wanted to be true to the facts, but with a narrative thrust and dramatic build.” To aid the narrative flow of his story, Lantos introduced a fictional narrator, Mel the parrot who gives a first-hand account of Smith’s adventures. Mel acts as the adventurer’s wisecracking sidekick and therapist. Lantos often turned to the experts, his own fifth-grade students, for feedback on drafts of “My Adventures with John Smith.” He said he recognized their boredom or unresponsiveness to sections of the book as a sign that those passages needed more work. Now, Lantos is incorporating the published version of the novel into his history lessons. Many of his students have responded with praise for the new book. “It makes history fun,” said fifth-grader Emma Jackson. “It’s really funny, too. The parrot tells you all about his adventures with John Smith.” Other students said reading from the novel is helpful because it parallels the content of their history textbook and class. “It’s the same thing we’re learning in history class,” said Jake Weston. “It helps you understand it better.” Lantos hopes they keep turning the pages. “I want them to understand that when you’re studying history the key is to get past the timelines and dates and boldface type. If you can do that, it’s going to be as exciting as any movie or TV show.” “My Adventures with John Smith” is just the most recent of Lantos’ endeavors to get students fired up about history. The teacher has devoted much of his professional career to finding creative ways of transforming basic classroom subjects like history, math and literature through the arts. “Ask any fifth grader who’s not in my class what they think of history,” he said. “They’ll tell you it’s boring. But there is a palpable change in the mood of the class when you don’t just tell them you’re going to learn history, but you tell them we’re going to sing a song or we’re going to put on a play. Then they get excited about learning.” Using this teaching philosophy, Lantos leads his fifth graders in three musical productions each year. Lantos wrote all of the musicals with scores by composer Bill Augustine. In December, the students perform “Miracle in Philadelphia,” about the Constitutional Convention of 1787. In March, the students put on “Hello Louisiana” about the Louisiana Purchase and the Lewis and Clark expedition. In June, they perform “Water and Power,” which focuses on the Industrial Revolution and the struggle for workers’ rights. Lantos also compiled a guide for teachers incorporating drawing and art into American history lessons. The guide, “Read, Draw, Remember: American History Activities,” was published by Scholastic in 2003 and features many of his students’ drawings as examples. “Anytime you combine the arts with other subjects, the kids will buy into it and enjoy it and retain it longer, which is the key,” Lantos said. The extra effort to help students uncover a love of history is all in a day’s work for the fifth-grade teacher who has been at Marquez Elementary since 1987. “Bringing joy into a student’s life on the stage or by putting up their piece of art makes a lifelong learner,” he said.

Chapman Previews Chamber Music Season

When Alan Chapman greets the Chamber Music Palisades audience to deliver his pre-concert notes, it’s more fireside chat than dense analysis. Known by many classical music lovers for his mellifluous voice as host of KUSC’s afternoon show, Chapman also provides pithy insight on the content of the local chamber series, co-founded by pianist Delores Stevens and flutist Susan Greenberg, Now embarking on its 9th season, Chamber Music Palisades has managed to explore an expansive set of musical resources built around a given group of instruments, piano and flute. “Part of what dictates the program is personnel, which is the wonder of Chamber Music Palisades,” Chapman says. “If you have an established quartet, it becomes the core of what they do, but here the only constants are Dee and Susan. If it suits their purposes for a singer or string quartet, they’ll do it.” Chapman has provided commentary on the programs from the outset. “I knew Susan through the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra,” says Chapman, who produced the L.A. Chamber’s concerts and hosted that group’s pre-concert comments for 13 years. Different from the format of the Pacific Symphony and the Los Angeles Master Chorale, for which Chapman previews the entire program at the outset, with CMP, he comments on each composition before it is played. He stands casually in front of the audience with a hand-held microphone and provides a context for the piece, a way of approaching the music that will make listening to it a better experience. “I’m tipping you off, opening the door on this piece for you. I’m the connector between you and the piece. “From time to time, I am approached by people who are offering no money or not enough, and think I talk off the top of my head,” Chapman says. “I could do that, but I don’t want to do that.” Indeed, his comments, anecdotes and insights belie a thorough and scholarly preparation. Although Chapman has been involved in music since his childhood in Poughkeepsie, New York’he played piano, bass and guitar and joined the union at 16’he was more interested in math and science in high school. He went off to MIT, but rapidly changed his intentions, ultimately majoring in music with a minor in German literature and behavioral science. The next stop was Yale, where he earned his doctorate in music theory and moved to California with a lead on two job positions listed for a Ph.D. in music theory. He took the Occidental job, although years later he would be teaching at the other school, UCLA, where he currently teaches the art of listening. In preparing his commentary for the Chamber Music Palisades season, Chapman factors in an audience with a lot of experience as concert-goers and listeners. “The wonderful thing about this series is that it’s almost guaranteed that you will hear really good music that you’ve never heard before, apart from the commissioned works. When I’m out in the patio during intermission, people are talking about the music and there is a lot of enthusiasm, a great connection between the music and the audience. The audience is really there with it.” Chapman credits Stevens and Greenberg with putting together an incredible spectrum of chamber music. “They look at the cast of characters and figure out how they are going to be grouped. How are the colors going to be put together?” In preparing his comments, Chapman says that he tries to penetrate the soul of the music by asking “Why do a bunch of notes do something for you?” He offers two examples from the first concert on October 18, which features Haydn’s Divertissement III in C Major for flute, violin and cello; C.P.E. Bach’s Quartet in G Major for flute, viola, cello and piano; Gernot Wolfgang’s world premiers of “Thin Air” for violin, viola and cello and Dvorak’s Quartet in Eb Major, Op 87 for piano and strings. “C.P.E. was the second of the elder Bach’s 20 children, four of whom became noted composers. Had you been in Germany in the latter 18th century, people would have assumed you were talking about C.P.E. not J.S. He sits in an interesting position, spanning the baroque to classical period. He lives through it and is really part of a new school with new values on how music should function, and in terms of mood swings he’s all over the place. “Dvorak is one of my favorites,” Chapman continues. “His chamber music is supreme. This piece was written when he was no longer a young man, yet there is so much variety and energy, at times it gets orchestral.” Chapman sings high praise for great chamber music. “When you listen to great chamber music well performed, I marvel at how much is possible with so few people. Chamber Music Palisades maximizes the resources available. How could you get more content?” Chamber Music Palisades opens its 9th season on Tuesday, October 18, 8 p.m. at St. Matthew’s parish, 1031 Bienveneda. Subscriptions are $80; single admission is $25, and students with current ID are admitted free. For information, contact: 454-4024 or 459-2070.

Liberating Liebermann’s Legacy

“Beer Garden in Brannenburg” (1893), one of the works on view at the Skirball, is a key example of Liebermann’s ability to merge human forms with the natural environment. Collection of Mus

There’s no mention of him in Gardner’s “Art Through the Ages,” the art history student’s bible. Nor does his name appear in Janson’s “History of Art,” another major tome for the art lover. Yet painter Max Liebermann (1847-1935) was Germany’s most famous artist from the mid-1880s until the Nazi takeover in 1933. The Skirball Center hopes to reverse Liebermann’s little-known status among Americans with its major retrospective “Max Liebermann: From Realism to Impressionism,” now on view through January 29, 2006. The exhibition, the first international loan show organized by the Skirball, examines Liebermann’s legacy not only through his art, but almost by equal measure, through his role as a robust cultural leader whose life paralleled a time of profound artistic and political change. The descendant of a prosperous German Jewish family, Liebermann was a celebrity in his own day. He scaled the heights of artistic life, serving as president of the Berlin Secession from 1898 until 1910 and later, from 1920 through 1932, he was president of the Prussian Academy of Art during the Weimar Republic. Attaining such a position of civic authority was possible for a Jew only during this brief democratic period of German history. His stature came crashing down with the rise of Adolf Hitler. In 1933, he was forced to resign his distinguished post amid the rising tide of laws restricting the rights of Jews. When he died two years later at 87, the Nazi regime had succeeded in making him a non-person, with no notice taken of his death in the German press. In subsequent years, his widow, Martha, endured the seizure of the couple’s home and art collection’along with the vilification of her husband’s art as “degenerate”‘until she committed suicide in 1942. “Hitler’s coming to power in 1933 meant that the world of Liebermann’s 19th-century liberal political views was slated for extinction,” writes Marion F. Deshmukh in her exhibition catalog essay. “As a Jew, as a political moderate, and as a modern painter, Liebermann represented to the Nazis all that was ‘alien and un-German.'” Ironically, Liebermann defined himself as a German who happened to be a Jew, says Lori Starr, director of the Skirball Museum. “He was determined to help Germany not live in isolation but be tuned in to the larger international community. He collected modern art and introduced it to Germany.” “He was not only an important artist, but an important human being,” says Barbara C. Gilbert, Skirball senior curator of fine arts and curator of the exhibition. “He was very outspoken and people listened to what he had to say. He played a huge role in Berlin’s cultural community.” He and his fellow secessionists advocated artistic freedom, unhindered by politics or ideology. Their goal was to organize shows outside the official, government-controlled annual exhibitions. At the height of its influence, the Secession had 97 members, including many women, and 119 corresponding members including Claude Monet, Edgar Degas, Wassily Kandinsky and Henri Matisse. Liebermann, himself a hardworking and prolific artist, created hundreds of paintings over his long career. Sixty paintings and a dozen works on paper are on view at the Skirball, ranging in style from his early Realist interpretations of Dutch peasant life, to stirring portraiture, to his individual take on Impressionism. He drew inspiration from wide sources: 17th-century Dutch masters Frans Hals and Rembrandt van Rijn; Jean-Fran’ois Millet and the Barbizon School, as well as contemporaries Edouard Manet, Edgar Degas, Lovis Corinth and Edvard Munch. The artist he revered most was Manet who, in Liebermann’s opinion “had the ability of painting what was old in a new way.” Liebermann first began studying art in the atelier of the Berlin painter Karl Steffeck in 1866. He later enrolled at the Weimar Art Academy and continued training in Paris. In the 1870s and 1880s, he used a Realist style to exalt the dignity of labor and the working classes. Liebermann suffered harsh criticism for these portrayals of rural life since they were considered at odds with the tradition of grand history painting favored by the conservative art establishment of Berlin. The artist gradually moved to a more modernist approach to painting, experimenting with new themes such as the leisure activities of middle-class urbanites. This shift is especially reflected in “Parrotman,” a 1901 painting rendered with new spontaneity. He also created strong, affecting portraits of family members and distinguished citizens. In his last 20 years of life, Liebermann turned to an in-depth study of the gardens at his lakeside villa in Wannsee, a suburb of Berlin. During these years, he developed his own brand of Impressionism, lightening his palette and starting to paint in a looser, more abstract way. He lived long enough to see Expressionism emerge as the dominant art movement. Emil Nolde, one of the leading German Expressionists, was critical of Liebermann, regarding his work, once thought to be progressive, as old-fashioned and traditionalist. “Although he and the emerging generation of German Expressionist painters often were at odds regarding art theory’-with Liebermann insisting on a basis of Realism and the Expressionists leaning towards greater emotionalism’Liebermann’s bold handling of subject matter, color and paint application would at times come to inspire these younger artists,” Gilbert says. Gilbert’s own inspiration for embarking on an eight-year exploration of Liebermann and his work came in 1997 when she made her first trip to Berlin as a courier for the painting “The Artist’s Wife and Granddaughter”(1926), the only painting of Liebermann’s in the Skirball’s collection. The painting was to be featured in one of three exhibitions held in Berlin to commemorate the 150th anniversary of Liebermann’s birth. “Like many American art historians, I had not seen many of his paintings,” Gilbert says. “It was a real eye-opener. People are used to seeing the French Impressionists, but here’s something new for them to see.” The exhibition will travel to The Jewish Museum in New York City, its only other venue, where it will be on view from March 10 through July 9, 2006. The Skirball has organized a wide range of exhibition-related programs. “The German Silent Film Series,” beginning October 20, will present six relatively unknown masterpieces of German films from the 1920s and 1930s, most screened with live piano accompaniment. Contact: 440-4500 or www.skirball.org.

Palisadian Sets Tough Goals as Writer’s Guild President

A recent L.A. Times editorial offered several suggestions to Patric Verrone, the newly-elected president of the Writers Guild of America, West, on keeping professional screenwriters in line: “Get a big dog; have lots of Friskies treats on hand; keep a powerful squirt gun close by to spray stragglers with. Oops, our mistake. Those are suggestions for herding cats.” On the surface, The Times’ implication that the job Verrone won in an election on September 20 is a nearly impossible task might seem accurate. However, the tone of the editorial might have been different if the writer had actually talked to Verrone. This savvy resident of Pacific Palisades is clear on the issues facing the WGA and the action that needs to be taken to ensure that writers get a fair shake. During his two-year term, Verrone will seek four major goals. The first is to rebuild the union and expand into the areas that don’t recognize guild members, animation and reality TV shows. The second step is to reconnect guild members with one another. Third, organize the union so that all of its members are on the same page before the next agreement is negotiated with the studios in 2007. And fourth, band together with other show business unions such as SAG, DGA and AFTRA because they share many of the same problems the Writers Guild is facing. For writers as well as other creative people in the television/ motion picture industry, a union is important because their jobs and employers constantly change. A union provides its members with health insurance and pension plans. Inherent in show business are two other issues that unions help protect: assigning credit and receiving residuals. “Residuals are important to writers because they are the bridge between jobs,” Verrone noted. In 1998, Verrone was hired to work on “Futurama,” the first television show that Matt Groening did after creating “The Simpsons.” Verrone was dismayed to discover that the Writers Guild didn’t cover animated series. He also learned that “The Simpsons,” “King of the Hill,” and “Family Guy” were not guild signatories. After some negotiation, Twentieth Century Fox Television agreed to a union agreement, recognizing the writers for those shows under the Guild. Historically, animated series were created by a cartoonist on a story board, after which a gag man would write the words. Generally, there was no script. People working on the show were covered by the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE). For the most part writers have since replaced gag men, but the IATSE still claims those writers under its union. Writers for animated shows on cable networks such as Nickelodeon and The Cartoon Network are not paid residuals, nor do they receive health benefits. For instance, Disney and Pixar writers for the animated features “Shrek” and “Shrek II” didn’t receive royalties. On television, 70 percent of the network shows are guild signatories, but only 12 percent of the cable shows are, according to Verrone. Generally, the areas in which writers don’t receive benefits, residuals or royalties are: animation, cable non-fiction, cable comedy and variety, and also a large percentage of independent films, including documentaries. Verrone cited “March of the Penguins” as a recent example in which a writer was successfully covered under the WGA. How did television writers get into their current predicament? Verrone explained that in the early 1980s, when cable channels were just starting, they had a tiny portion of the viewing audience, so unions gave them low-entry collective bargain deals. Over time, most of the cable channels were acquired by one of six media conglomerates: Time Warner, Viacom, Disney, Sony, NBC-Universal and Fox. The exception is the Discovery channel which remains independent. So far, the six conglomerates have made a conscious effort to make cable a non-union entity. When Verrone began writing for “The Late Show with Joan Rivers” in 1986, the entry-level position in television was talk shows. Now the entry level shows are on cable. Part of Verrone’s headache is the lack of bargaining power caused by the number of writers who don’t belong to the union. The other part is getting the six conglomerates to give basic work benefits to their employees. The rise in reality shows on television has further undermined the status of writers. “Of course there are writers on these shows,” Verrone said. “But they are called segment producers, story assistants or some other euphemism for writers.” Those so called “non-writers” are working long, hard weeks at relatively low wages, and receive neither health insurance nor pension plans. Arguing they should be paid for their overtime work, these writers’backed by the WGA’have brought a class-action lawsuit against their independent producers and the media conglomerates. Verrone is also irritated that Jon Stewart’s “The Daily Show” on Comedy Central is a non-union show. “This is a show that is supposed to tell the truth about the power structure’the conglomerates,” Verrone said. “Yet Comedy Central is non-union, and Stewart’s writing staff is also non-union.” Born in Queens, New York, Verrone moved with his family to Fort Meyers, Florida, where he attended high school. While earning his undergraduate degree at Harvard, he was editor of the National Lampoon Magazine. He graduated from Boston College law school in 1984 and moved back to Florida. While practicing law, Verrone got a call from Maiya Williams, a woman he had dated in college, who told him that many of his former Lampoon colleagues had moved to California and were working in television. He decided to take a three-month sabbatical and move to Los Angeles. The sabbatical turned into 19 years, and Verrone’s list of writing credits is extensive. He wrote for “The Tonight Show” from 1987 to 1990 until Johnny Carson retired, and then worked on the “Larry Saunders Show,” “The Critic” and the “Muppets Tonight,” for which he won his first Emmy in 1998. In 2001 he received his second Emmy for “Futurama.” Meanwhile, Verrone married Williams and they have three children, Patric,10, Marianne, 8, and Teddy, 5, all of whom attend Corpus Christi School. In addition to taking over leadership of the 7,500-member WGA (west), Verrone is the co-producer and head writer for an untitled animated project on Cartoon Network scheduled to air in 2006, featuring Andr’ Benjamin from the musical group Outkast, which by the way in a non-union shop. As a hobby, Verrone creates and sells individually hand-casted and painted historical figurines on eBay.

PRIDE Plants New Trees in Marquez Beautification

As part of Palisades PRIDE’s ongoing makeover of the commercial block of Marquez Avenue, five mature golden medallion trees were planted in front of the shops last Thursday morning. Landscape contractor William Ranselaar and his crew sunk the 36-inch boxes into 4-foot-square holes cut into the cement. “The basins will soon be covered over by wrought-iron tree grates like those on Swarthmore,” said PRIDE’s project leader Bob Jeffers. “So far we’ve removed three rooftop signs, installed the stop sign at Bollinger, and landscaped the hillside across the street,” Jeffers said. “These trees are part of the final push to complete the job.” In the next few months, PRIDE will be installing five benches, four trash cans, and four antique lampposts, along with landscaping the median triangle where Marquez meets Sunset. A “Marquez Knolls Shops” sign at the corner is also planned. “Our goal is to do for Marquez what PRIDE did for the 1000 block of Swarthmore in 1996 when they repaired the sidewalks and planted new trees,” Jeffers said. He noted that “throughout the project, the merchants have been very patient and supportive, and Ronny Naidoo (owner of Ronny’s Market) has given away a lot of free snacks to me and the crews.” PRIDE anticipates that everything should be completed by mid-January. The total cost of the project is $100,000, with $89,000 coming from City of L.A. discretionary funds through former City Councilwoman Cindy Miscikowski, and $9,000 donated thus far by Marquez homeowners. “We always need money for our projects and maintenance,” Jeffers said. Donations can be sent to PRIDE c/o the Chamber of Commerce, 15330 Antioch St. Founded in 1992 by a small group of concerned Palisadians, PRIDE stands for Protect and Renew our Identity & Environment, and has been actively planning and completing various beautification projects ever since.