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Saturday 23 of November 2024

Uma Thurman, Patty Griffin among readers at poetry tribute


FILE - In this May 18, 2017 file photo, actress Uma Thurman poses for photographers during the photo call for the Un Certain Regard jury at the 70th international film festival, Cannes, southern France. Actresses Uma Thurman and Christine Lahti were among the readers and Grammy winner Patty Griffin performed a new song during a poetry tribute in New York City. Presented by the Academy of American Poets, the 16th annual
FILE - In this May 18, 2017 file photo, actress Uma Thurman poses for photographers during the photo call for the Un Certain Regard jury at the 70th international film festival, Cannes, southern France. Actresses Uma Thurman and Christine Lahti were among the readers and Grammy winner Patty Griffin performed a new song during a poetry tribute in New York City. Presented by the Academy of American Poets, the 16th annual "Poetry & the Creative Mind" was held Wednesday, April 25, 2018 at Lincoln Center. The subjects ranged from classic themes of love and family to such contemporary issues as the #MeToo movement. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, File),FILE - In this May 18, 2017 file photo, actress Uma Thurman poses for photographers during the photo call for the Un Certain Regard jury at the 70th international film festival, Cannes, southern France. Actresses Uma Thurman and Christine Lahti were among the readers and Grammy winner Patty Griffin performed a new song during a poetry tribute in New York City. Presented by the Academy of American Poets, the 16th annual "Poetry & the Creative Mind" was held Wednesday, April 25, 2018 at Lincoln Center. The subjects ranged from classic themes of love and family to such contemporary issues as the #MeToo movement. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, File)
Actresses Uma Thurman and Christine Lahti were among the readers and Grammy winner Patty Griffin performed a new song during a poetry tribute in New York City. Presented by the Academy of American Poets, the 16th annual "Poetry & the Creative Mind" was held Wednesday night at Lincoln Center. The subjects ranged from classic themes of love and family to such contemporary issues as the #MeToo movement.

NEW YORK (AP) — As Uma Thurman rose from her chair during a poetry tribute at Lincoln Center, she turned and bowed to the reader who preceded her, visual artist Lorna Simpson.

“That’s called when the evening peaks,” Thurman said Wednesday night after Simpson had completed June Jordan’s “Poem About My Rights,” an impassioned statement of resilience in the face of male violence and oppression. With such lines “I am the history of battery assault and limitless armies/armies against whatever I want to do with my mind,” the 40-year-old poem inspired by women in the apartheid system of South Africa seemed as modern as the #MeToo movement and Thurman’s recent allegations of abuse by Harvey Weinstein. Thurman was the final reader at “Poetry & the Creative Mind,” a tribute to National Poetry Month and to the power of art to speak across time.

Award-winning poet Terrance Hayes was the host, and Thurman, Simpson, Christine Lahti and Patty Griffin among the featured performers who read, and sang, before a capacity crowd in Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall. It was the 16th annual staging of Poetry & the Creative Mind, presented by the Academy of American Poets and a demonstration that you don’t have to be a poet to appreciate poetry. The backgrounds of those reading included acting (Thurman, Lahti and Tim Daly), music (Griffin), radio (“On Being” host Krista Tippett), science/literature (Janna Levin) and cooking (former White House pastry chef Bill Yosses). Some readers offered detailed explanations of which poems they had selected, while others, such as Daly and Griffin, acknowledged they weren’t sure what their poems actually meant but that they liked them anyway.

“It does things to my brain and heart,” Griffin said before reading the Rumi poem “Wax.” Poetry has long been wedded to music and the academy has a tradition of including musical performers, from Sting to Kris Kristofferson. A guitar awaited Griffin to the left of the stage and after the Rumi poem, the Grammy winning singer-songwriter sang a new, melancholy ballad that was inspired by a dream about Billie Holiday. Yosses also managed to work in his profession by reading Adrienne Su’s “Four Sonnets About Food,” clearly favoring the lines about “baked red fish, clear soup and bread.”

The words “Donald Trump” were never said, but his presidency was the assumed target as Daly and others referred to the current times and the poems from the past that seemed to address them. Daly recited W.H. Auden’s classic inspired by the outbreak of World War II, “September 1, 1939,” and prescient in its fears for democracy and “what dictators do.” Lahti dedicated her reading to women’s voices and stories, including Anne Sexton’s “Her Kind” and Louise Gluck’s pained “The Red Poppy,” and its closing words “I am speaking now/the way you do. I speak/because I am shattered.” Thurman ended with “If,” Rudyard Kipling’s well memorized ode to manly grace and courage, recited by countless students but for the night wholly belonging to her:

If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster

And treat those two impostors just the same;

If you can bear to hear the truth you’ve spoken

Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,

Or watch the things you gave your life to, broken,

And stoop and build ’em up with worn-out tools.