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- <text id=93TT0225>
- <title>
- Aug. 16, 1993: An Artist to Plead for Art
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 16, 1993 Overturning The Reagan Era
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CULTURE, Page 65
- An Artist to Plead for Art
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Actress Jane Alexander exits Broadway to revitalize the National
- Endowment
- </p>
- <p>By WILLIAM A. HENRY III--With reporting by Julie Johnson/ Washington and Daniel S. Levy/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> The National Endowment for the Arts commands such a small share
- of total government spending that it does not even appear as
- a separate item on the short form of the federal budget. But
- relative to its size, the agency has over the past few years
- probably consumed more debate time than any other function of
- government. Ronald Reagan entered office suggesting that government
- had no business financing or endorsing cultural activity. A
- dozen years later, the Republicans left the White House having
- turned the NEA from a sacred cow into a matador's bull--and
- having diverted a third of its nominal allocation to potential
- pork barrel by state arts councils. Even that wasn't enough
- for Jesse Helms and Patrick Buchanan, who sought to abolish
- the NEA for purportedly funding obscenity and irreligious bigotry,
- based on a handful of controversial grants among 100,000 the
- NEA has given.
- </p>
- <p> Artists and their allies flocked to Bill Clinton's Inaugural
- expecting him to refurbish the endowment's standing and refill
- its coffers. Last week he took a major step toward at least
- the first half of that agenda, naming one of America's most
- distinguished actresses, Jane Alexander, 53, as the agency's
- new chairman. Said Clinton: "The endowment's mission of fostering
- and preserving our nation's cultural heritage is too important
- to remain mired in the problems of the past. She will be a tireless
- and articulate spokesperson for the value of bringing art into
- the lives of all Americans."
- </p>
- <p> Alexander, who will set aside her career to take the job, has
- been starring on Broadway this season as the eldest of The Sisters
- Rosensweig, a role that brought her a sixth Tony nomination
- (she has won a Tony and an Emmy and been nominated for the Oscar
- four times). Tall and stately, with angular looks that let her
- play glamorous or plain, she specializes in emotionally austere
- drama but offstage is fun loving and approachable. She is living
- proof of the dividends that grants can pay. She vaulted into
- prominence playing the white girlfriend of black boxer Jack
- Johnson in The Great White Hope. It opened in 1967 in a Washington
- production financed by the NEA and went on to Broadway and the
- movies. Alexander has often worked at NEA-funded institutions
- since then, as has her husband, director Edwin Sherin.
- </p>
- <p> Alexander would be the first artist of any kind to hold a post
- customarily given to administrators, and her inexperience at
- infighting could be a drawback. In star-struck Washington, however,
- she will bring glamour and credibility to the case for arts
- funding. Says Jack O'Brien, artistic director for San Diego's
- Old Globe Theater: "She has a realistic view of what we are
- up against, she is an eloquent advocate, she is a classy woman--exactly what Capitol Hill should see." Says Illinois Democrat
- Sidney Yates, a congressional co-creator of the nea who chairs
- the subcommittee overseeing it: "She is well known, generally
- admired for her talents, bright and charming."
- </p>
- <p> Her appointment is no panacea. Clinton is unlikely to expand
- the endowment. While he campaigned against "content restrictions,"
- his Justice Department has continued to defend a Bush-era ban
- on grantees who transgress "general standards of decency and
- respect for the diverse beliefs and values of the American public."
- Alexander has not spoken out since her name was raised, but
- is known to oppose content controls. Aides to Hillary Rodham
- Clinton boosted her. Says a participant: "Mrs. Clinton felt
- the endowment suffered from misinterpretation, innuendo and
- lies, that it needed a more visible face."
- </p>
- <p> Alexander's personal credibility is not enough, warns John Frohnmayer,
- who fought the culture wars until President George Bush ousted
- him as NEA chief during last year's primaries: "Nobody can do
- that job alone. The President has to say, `This is my personal
- choice, someone I have confidence in and designate to carry
- out something critically important to my Administration.' "
- </p>
- <p> Representative Philip Crane of Illinois, who called for abolishing
- the NEA and helped induce the House to cut its allocation, argues
- that private-sector financing for the arts exceeds $9 billion
- a year, making the NEA superfluous. Arts organizations reply
- that every penny is needed and that an NEA grant confers vital
- legitimacy--precisely why conservatives have been so fervent
- about denying money for art that does not meet their mores.
- Says William Patton, executive director of the Oregon Shakespeare
- Festival: "Being recognized by the NEA is the Good Housekeeping
- Seal of Approval."
- </p>
- <p> When Alexander went before Yates' subcommittee in 1990, she
- said, "I find it astonishing that after 25 years we are not
- celebrating the enormous success of the NEA. Rather, we're put
- in a position of defending it. The family of art produces ugly
- babies as well as beautiful ones, but we have to embrace all
- of that family." After a career embracing that whole family
- with unflinching honesty, Alexander is ready to put her artistry
- and income on hold to live up to those words.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-