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RECORD
"Since you asked..," with Galway Kinnell
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Series: Poetry Breaks
Program: Poetry Breaks for Schools and Libraries: Galway Kinnell
Date: 1993-01-01
Duration: 00:01:12

Subject: Writing; Kinnell, Galway
People: Kinnell, Galway
Copyright Holder: Leita Luchetti

Clip Description
Pulitzer prize-winning poet, Galway Kinnell, answers questions that students might typically ask a poet. The questions are:
When did I start writing?
When did I know I wanted to be a poet?
Where do I get ideas?
What do I write with?
What is poetry anyway?

Program Description
Galway Kinnell was born in Providence, R.I., on February 1, 1927. After receiving degrees from Princeton (B.A.) and University of Rochester (M.A.), he served in the U.S. Navy. He taught writing at schools throughout the world, including France and Iran, and is presently one of the directors of the Creative Writing Program at SUNY Binghamton and New York University. He has won many awards, including the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry (1983) and the American Book Award. He was a MacArthur Fellow and was named State Poet of Vermont. Among his books of poetry are Three Books: Body Rags/Mortal Acts Mortal Words/the Past, The Book of Nightmares, When One Has Lived a Long Time Alone, and Imperfect Thirst. He currently lives in Vermont and New York.

This is one of three tapes specifically designed for use in high schools. The finished tape consists of four poems, each briefly introduced by Galway Kinnell. The poems are:

"Wait"
"Daybreak"
"Prayer"
"Saint Francis and the Sow"

Following these poems is a segment called "Since you asked..," in which Kinnell answers questions that students might typically ask a poet. The questions are:
When did I start writing?
When did I know I wanted to be a poet?
Where do I get ideas?
What do I write with?
What is poetry anyway?

The source tapes include multiple takes of the poems and questions.

Produced and directed by Leita Hagemann Luchetti.

"Poetry Breaks," conceived by Leita Hagemann Luchetti and co-produced by Luchetti and WGBH New Television Workshop, is an ongoing series of over 100 thirty-second to four-minute spots presenting internationally known poets reading their work on location. These have aired individually on WGBH and public television stations across the country. The Workshop collaborated with Luchetti until its closing in 1993, at which point the works became co-productions of Luchetti and the larger WGBH Foundation.

"Poetry Breaks II," produced from 1991-1994, began airing on WGBH-TV in 1994, and was also broadcast by dozens of other public television stations throughout the country starting in 1994. Between 1995 and 1997, three new poets were taped for Poetry Breaks III.

Series Description
The New Television Workshop originated at WGBH, a public broadcasting station in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1974 to support the creation and development of experimental video art. This experimental programming included dance, drama, music, performance and visual arts on video and film. As early as 1968, WGBH was committed to the development of video art through residency programs, with artists such as Nam June Paik, and the "Rockefeller Artists-in-Television" project. Many of these early works (pre-1974) were broadcast both locally and nationally.

As an umbrella for arts related programming, the Workshop included "Artist's Showcase, " "Frames of Reference, " "Dance for Camera, " "Poetry Breaks," and "New Television," as well as acquired arts programming. Individual works were created for "Visions," a series produced by WNET (New York), and "Alive From Off Center," a series produced by KTCA (St. Paul - Minneapolis). The Contemporary Art Television (CAT) Fund was co-founded by the Workshop and Boston's Institute for Contemporary Art (ICA) in the 1980's, to commission works by video artists. In 1993 the Workshop ceased production at WGBH.

See also: http://main.wgbh.org/wgbh/NTW/FA/TITLES/Poetry400.HTML

 

No transcript is available for this record.