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John P. Gill honored with Parker Westbrook Award for Lifetime Achievement from Preserve Arkansas

Posted on January 17, 2020 by Scott

Tonight (January 17), at the Preserve Arkansas annual awards dinner, attorney John P. Gill will be recognized with the Parker Westbrook Award.

Little Rock attorney and historian John Gill has long had a keen interest in the preservation of Arkansas’s history and architecture. Throughout his career, Gill has demonstrated a passion for preservation through his service on the boards of the Little Rock Visitor Information Center Foundation that restored Curran Hall and Preserve Arkansas, where he was board president in 2010 and spearheaded a large fundraising campaign for the organization’s 30th anniversary.

He has authored books about Arkansas’s historic county courthouses, Depression-era post office art, and the Arkansas Governor’s Mansion. Gill has been a strong preservation advocate, working on behalf of the Friends of the Historic White River Bridge at Clarendon in an effort to save and repurpose the bridge. For his efforts to research, document, and preserve the historic fabric of Arkansas,

The award is named in memory of Parker Westbrook, the father of historic preservation in Arkansas.  Previous recipients include Anthony Taylor, AIA, and Bob Kempkes, AIA; Tommy Jameson, AIA; Ruth Hawkins; Cheryl Griffith Nichols; Ethel Goodstein-Murphree, and Bill Worthen.

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Posted in Architecture, Civic Engagement, Design, History | Tagged Cheri Nichols, Curran Hall, Ethel Goodstein-Murphree, Historic Preservation Alliance of Arkansas, John P. Gill, Parker Westbrook, Preserve Arkansas, Ruth Hawkins, Tommy Jameson

Circumstance and Situation: The Life and Times of both Elizabeth Ashley AND Ann Richards

Posted on January 16, 2020 by Scott

A confident woman strode into Foster’s, the bar tucked inside the second floor of the Arkansas Repertory Theatre on a Wednesday evening.  Extending her hand she grinned and offered, “I’m what’s left of Elizabeth Ashley after rehearsals” as she cracked a smile and delivered one of her laughs that starts in the throat and bursts forth like a well-tuned reed instrument.

After getting settled (well, she is never settled, her energy manifests itself in gesticulations and postures and poses which change with the stories she recounts) she is ready to begin the conversation.

“It happens every time. Ev! ery! time!  There comes a point in rehearsals when you think, ‘What have I gotten myself into?’ And then, once you have gotten past that point, it is like the brain forgets that feeling.  (She pauses.) Until the next time.”

Ashley is in Little Rock preparing to open in Holland Taylor’s Ann at the Arkansas Repertory Theatre.  After preview performances on January 29 and 30, it opens officially on January 31 and runs through February 23.  When it was in New York a few seasons ago she missed seeing the one actor play, which is about Texas Governor Ann Richards (“I was off appearing in something somewhere else”) but had heard about it.  She recalls thinking “What a fabulous idea to do a play about Governor Richards.”

Long a student of politics, which dates back to her childhood in Louisiana, Ashley had known about Ann Richards even before the 1988 Democratic Convention.  “You would see photos, and she would stand out. I loved the way she looked. She would play by the rules – but just barely.  She reminded me of the church women from my childhood, but more genuine, more honest. She dared to be herself.”

“Ann Richards was smart – but not a smartass.  She had wit and was non-apologetic about it.  My mother raised me to respect that.”

The play is directed by frequent Ashley collaborator Michael Wilson. The pair have worked together on Broadway, Off Broadway, and in regional theatres. (Some of those productions have also involved Will Trice, now the Rep’s Executive Artistic Director.)  She has previously commented that Wilson is good at paring down and focusing her performance during the rehearsal process.  “During rehearsals we don’t hold anything back; we have worked together so much and so long.  Rehearsal is like psychoanalysis, only more painful.  As an actor, you have to remove all the layers to find the truth.  Directors have to do the same thing.”

“He [Wilson] has an eye for telling the story. Not just from performers but also the way he guides designers to paint with lights and sound, and the overall physical production.”

Ann Richards is the latest in a string of larger-than-life characters which Ashley has portrayed, (“I’ve never underacted,” she jokes).  A conversation with her is sprinkled with casual references to playwrights Tennessee Williams and Edward Albee, both of whom wrote roles in which she has performed and received glowing notices.  While she has starred in motion pictures and television (and can currently be seen in the Netflix show “Russian Doll”) much of her career has been on the stage.

After acting in several Off Broadway plays in the late 1950s and early 1960s, Ashley’s big break came in the play Take Her, She’s Mine.  It was originally written by Henry and Phoebe Ephron as a screenplay. But Art Carney was looking for a stage project after finishing his run in the TV show “The Honeymooners.”  He and director George Abbott, who was the pre-eminent director of Broadway comedies and musicals throughout much of the 20th Century decided to make it into a play.  Carney would play the father of a late teen daughter and Phyllis Thaxter played the mother.  To portray one of their daughters Abbott auditioned most of the leading Broadway ingénues of the era.

“Mr. Abbott was displeased with what he saw,” remembers Ashley. “He commented that he wanted ‘the most peculiar girl in New York.’ My agent got word of that and called me and told me to get up to Mr. Abbott’s office immediately.”  Ashley walked into the audition clad in the jeans and leather jacket she had been wearing when she got the call.  She had recently cut her own hair which was further matted down and windblown by the helmet she had worn as she rode forty-plus blocks on the back of a friend’s motorcycle from Greenwich Village to the Times Square office.

Nonetheless, she read for Mr. Abbott, he offered a few suggestions, and she read again.  After the audition, before she could get to the elevator, the show’s producer Hal Prince chased her down in the hallway and brought her back into the room where she was offered the role.

“That may be the only time I have been cast in a role I’ve auditioned for.  Usually I don’t get those parts.” She smiles and chuckles after that last statement.  “Mr. Abbott liked the sound of my voice.  By circumstance and situation, I was cast.”

During the out-of-town tryouts and on Broadway, Ashley’s dressing room was near Carney’s.  “All his friends–old comedians and new comedians would come visit him.  They liked me.  I learned how to do physical comedy from them.”

Image result for take her she's mine broadway poster

The rehearsal process saw the play get reshaped.  “What had started out as a comedy about a family gradually became focused on the relationship between the father and the daughter.  That was all due to Mr. Abbott and Art Carney.”

While she may be modest about how her talent impacted the development and success of the play, others took notice.  In addition to receiving the Theatre World Award as an outstanding newcomer, Ashley received the American Theatre Wing’s 1962 Tony Award for Supporting or Featured Actress for her role (which was a fictionalized version of a teenage Nora Ephron).

Take Her, She’s Mine would be the only time she was officially directed by Abbott, but she stayed in touch with him.  “He lived to be 107 (he died in 1995); I would often call him and invite him to see me in plays during rehearsals or out of town.  He would give me notes and advice on what was working and what was not. He would also tell me what I had the power to fix and what was beyond my performance.”

After originating the role of Corie in Neil Simon’s breakout hit Barefoot in the Park, Ashley appeared in a few movies and then retired from acting, for what would be the first of several times that life events have intervened in her career.  “I had a husband who was an actor who did not want me to work.” She says wistfully, “So I didn’t.  I would do a guest appearance on TV here or there. But that was it.”

After a divorce and amidst few acting opportunities (“back then an actor’s wife was furniture, his ex-wife was a pariah”), Michael Kahn at the American Shakespeare Theatre approached her about starring as Maggie in a production of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.  Kahn wanted to direct an American classic play and contacted Tennessee Williams about restoring some of the cuts which had been forced by censors in the original production in the 1950s.

“We thought he was going to bring in a bound manuscript,” Ashley recalls. “But instead – and I’ll never forget it – Tennessee walks in to rehearsals with two or three grocery bags full of loose pages. Some of it was written on paper, some on napkins, some on cardboard. He emptied it on a table, and we would go through it.  And he said to me (and at this point she affects Williams’ accent) ‘Just read this. We’ll figure out what we want, and what we don’t.’”

Working on that project with Williams was exciting and fulfilling, if a bit surreal. “I had grown up going to plays with my mother at Louisiana State University. When I was around nine, I had seen Summer and Smoke (an early Williams’ play).” It was that production which had lit a fire in her about the power of the theatre.

While the 1974 revival did not completely replicate what Williams had originally written, it did capture the original spirit.  (It is also the version most frequently performed now.)  It also cemented a decade long friendship between Williams and Ashley that lasted until his death in 1983.  They would frequently see each other, and Williams had a particular fondness for Ashley’s mother.  But there were limits to their friendship.  “When I needed to get away from everyone and would go to a remote island, somehow he would find me.  I loved the man, but you did not want him as a house guest.” She raises her eyebrows and winks after that last comment.

After a sold out run in Stratford, Connecticut, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof was brought to Broadway.  She received her third Tony nomination for that performance (having received a second one for Barefoot in the Park).  In her typical fashion, Ashley gives the credit for her portrayal to the work of Kahn the director and to Williams himself.  Since that experience she has appeared in numerous Williams plays on Broadway, Off Broadway, and in regional theatre. She was the first person to play both Maggie and Big Mama (Maggie’s mother-in-law) in major professional productions of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.

A conversation with Ashley brings up the names of many of her costars and friends from her over six decades of work as an actor.  In addition to starring in Oscar-nominated movies and her substantial stage credits, that career has included everything from appearances on TV game shows to soap operas and her Emmy-nominated four years on “Evening Shade” created by Arkansan Linda Bloodworth-Thomason.

Ever the Southern lady, she does not speak ill of others—by name.  Stories of less-than-stellar individuals are told with generic nomenclature.  But the names that were peppered in the conversation included Angela Lansbury, Charles Durning, James Earl Jones, John Larroquette, Geraldine Page, Anjelica Page, Barbara Bel Geddes, John Cullum, Estelle Parsons, Terrence McNally, Amanda Plummer, Leonard Bernstein, Isaac Stern, Gregory Peck, and Ben Bradlee.

While appearing in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at the Kennedy Center, Ashley renewed ties with the Washington, DC political world.  These connections had first been fostered nearly a decade earlier during her service as an original member of the National Council on the Arts, which oversees the National Endowment for the Arts.  Broadway producer Roger L. Stevens, who had been arts advisor to President Kennedy and President Johnson, was the founding chairman of the body. Ashley had met him in the early 1960s when she understudied Betsy Von Furstenberg in the Jean Kerr play Mary, Mary, which he produced, and the pair had stayed in touch.

“With a lot of older men on the committee, he was looking for someone he knew who was female, moderately well-known, and under 30–so he asked me.  I knew nothing about grants and funding, but I learned so much.” The experience included having to testify before Congress. Photos from that era show her seated alongside Stevens and Gregory Peck before a congressional committee.

A few years later she was back in DC appearing at the Kennedy Center (also a Roger L. Stevens project), this time during the era of the Watergate hearings.  She was friends with members of the press as well as members of Congress. “As I would see them in social settings, one side would often try to use me to find out what the other side knew.” But if Ashley knew, she did not disclose back then, or today. She just smiles her gracious welcoming smile and shifts in her chair, letting her fingers do a staccato tap on the tabletop.

As Ashley speaks, you can almost hear the wheels turning in her head as it races a thousand miles a minute with stories, facts, and memories.  “I’m sorry. I know I take a one sentence answer and turn it into a forty sentence one” she remarked at one point in the conversation.  With so much swirling in her head, she admits that offstage, “I sometimes struggle with names; I call my son, my dog’s name” (and lets out a hearty laugh). That is part of her charm. The sly smile, the twinkling eyes, the candor, the self-awareness, the ability to be peripatetic while sitting in a chair—these all add to the essence which is Elizabeth Ashley

Image result for postcards from the roadAs documented in her book Actress: Postcards from the Road, Ashley has overcome quite a few obstacles. There have been even more since the book was published in 1978.  But like Richards, who was also up front about facing her own challenges, Ashley is an indomitable survivor who keeps bouncing back.

This resiliency is only one reason Ashley is well-suited to play Richards. She is a Southern lady, who loves politics and is an excellent storyteller. A challenge of a one-person show can be making sure that the delivery stays engaging.  There can be a sameness as the lone actor recounts anecdote after anecdote for the audience.  A true storyteller makes each story seem fresh.  With Ashley, as with Richards in the play, there is sense of excitement because there is always one more story to tell. Or to be honest, probably about fifteen different additional stories to tell at any given moment.

Ashley feels that Richards has one more story to tell, even now.  Though the play is set after Richards left the governor’s office in 1995, Ashley finds the message as relevant today as in the late 1990s.  “While we are staying faithful to the script (which involves Richards making an address in Texas twenty years ago), I think the audiences will feel like Ann Richards is speaking to people in Arkansas, today.”

 

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government, Theatre, Tony Awards | Tagged Amanda Plummer, American Shakespeare Theatre, Angela Lansbury, Anjelica Page, Ann, Ann Richards, Arkansas Repertory Theatre, Art Carney, Barbara Bel Geddes, Barefoot in the Park, Ben Bradlee, Betsy Von Furstenberg, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Charles Durning, Congress, Edward Albee, Elizabeth Ashley, Estelle Parsons, Evening Shade (TV), George Abbott, Geraldine Page, Gregory Peck, Hal Prince, Henry Ephron, Holland Taylor, Isaac Stern, James Earl Jones, Jean Kerr, John Cullum, John F. Kennedy, John Larroquette, Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Leonard Bernstein, Linda Bloodworth-Thomason, Lucille Cole, Lyndon Baines Johnson, Mary Mary, Michael Kahn, Michael Wilson, National Council on the Arts, National Endowment for the Arts, Neil Simon, Nora Ephron, Phoebe Ephron, Phyllis Thaxter, Roger L. Stevens, Russian Doll, Summer and Smoke, Take Her She’s Mine, Tennessee Williams, Terrence McNally, Theatre World Awards, Tony Awards, Watergate, Will Trice

Little Rock’s 57th Mayor, Martin Borchert, born on January 16, 1916

Posted on January 16, 2020 by Scott

On January 16, 1916, future Little Rock Mayor Martin Borchert was born in Stuttgart.  After graduating high school he moved to Little Rock.  During World War II, he served as a bomber.  He started work at ACME Brick and spent 21 years there before engaging in other business interests.  Among these businesses were Martin Borchert Co., ASCO Hardware, Detection Systems Inc. and Component Systems Inc.  In 2005 he was inducted into the Arkansas Construction Hall of Fame.

Mayor Borchert was elected to the Little Rock City Board of Directors in 1964 and served from January 1965 through December 1968. He chose not to seek a second term.  In 1967 and 1968 he served as Mayor of Little Rock. During this time, he laid out the vision for what has become Riverfront Park along the Arkansas River.

Other civic achievements included being a member of the Board of the Little Rock Chamber of Commerce, being on the Governor’s Citizens Advisory Committee, a member of the Pulaski County Quorum Court, vice chairman of the Arkansas Planning Commission, and being on the Little Rock Air Force Base Community Council. In 1967 he served on the President’s National Advisory Council to the Small Business Administration.

Mayor Borchert served on the Little Rock Water Commission, including a tenure as chairman. In 1985, he was chairman of the Metropolitan Transit Policy Board and as chairman oversaw the transfer of the Central Arkansas Transit system to the Central Arkansas Transit Authority. One of the achievements of which he was very proud of was that he was one of the very first in Arkansas to receive an Adopt the Highway road.

Mayor Borchert was married for 57 years to Rosemary “Biddy” Branch Borchert.  They had two children, a son, John “Topper” Borchert and a daughter, Leslie Borchert Wilson.  He died on May 11, 2007.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government, History, LR Look Back | Tagged Central Arkansas Water, City of Little Rock, Little Rock, Little Rock Air Force Base, Little Rock Parks and Recreation, Little Rock Regional Chamber, Martin Borchert, Riverfront Park, Rock Region Metro

Music Matters – tonight local artists come together to support LRSD Fine Arts programming

Posted on January 13, 2020 by Scott

We all know that music matters.  Well tonight (January 13) at the CALS Ron Robinson Theater, the “Music Matters” concert will feature a variety of local and regional musicians who are coming together for a musical event in support of the Little Rock School District’s Fine Arts programming.

The event runs from 7pm to 10pm.  Featured artists include Patrice Butterfly from New Orleans, Genine Latrice Perez, Crissy P, Diedra Jones, Imstephenjames, Rodney Block and the Afterthought Band.

Contributing artists include Curtis JJ Adams, Tonya Leeks, Tim Woods, Yvette Preyer, Gavin Hawkins, Tarick Horton, Cat Marlon Davis, Steve Bailey, Cliff Aaron, and Ivan Yarborough.

Tickets are $15 in advance and $20 at the door. You’d pay $20 or more to hear any single one of these performers. So this is quite a bargain to hear all of them over a three hour time period!  And it is for a great cause!

Support music! Support the arts! Support the LRSD! Because “Music Matters!”

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Music | Tagged Afterthought Band., Artistry in the Rock, CALS, Cat Marlon Davis, Central Arkansas Library System, Cliff Aaron, Crissy P, Curtis JJ Adams, Diedra Jones, Gavin Hawkins, Genine LaTrice Perez, Imstephenjames, Ivan Yarborough, Little Rock School District, Patrice Butterfly, Rodney Block, Ron Robinson Theater, Steve Bailey, Tarick Horton, Tim Woods, Tonya Leeks, Yvette Preyer

In tribute to Phyllis Brandon

Posted on January 12, 2020 by Scott

It seems fitting that I learn of Phyllis Brandon’s death on a Sunday, since she shaped Sundays for so many people for decades.

Phyllis D. Brandon played a unique role in shaping and supporting Little Rock’s cultural life.  As the first and longtime editor of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette‘s High Profile section, she promoted cultural institutions, supporters and practitioners.

Since it started in 1986, being featured in High Profile has been akin to the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval.  It exposes cultural institutions and events to new and wider audiences.  There is no way to put a monetary measure on the support Brandon gave to Little Rock’s cultural life during her time leading High Profile from 1986 to 2009.  From 2009 to 2011, she served as editor of Arkansas Life magazine, again supporting and promoting cultural life.

With her unassuming manner, she coaxed stories out of interview subjects and captured photos which highlighted events.  A journalist since her junior high school days in Little Rock, Brandon was also a witness to history.  As a recent graduate of the University of Arkansas, Brandon returned to her alma mater, Little Rock Central High, to cover the events in early September 1957 for the Arkansas Democrat.  Eleven years later, she was in Chicago for the contentious and violent 1968 Democratic National Convention as a delegate.

From 1957 until 1986, she alternated between careers in journalism and the business world, as well as being a stay-at-home mother.  Upon becoming founding editor of High Profile, she came into her own combining her nose for news and her life-long connections within the Little Rock community.  As a writer and photographer, she created art in her own right. A look through High Profile provides a rich historical snapshot of the changes in Little Rock and Arkansas in the latter part of the 20th Century and start of the 21st Century.

It is impossible to overestimate the positive impact that Phyllis Brandon had on Little Rock’s cultural and philanthropic scene. But she would never take credit for anything.  She always gave it to the leadership at the newspaper or to the people and organizations she covered.

Her modesty was genuine. One year I was seated as her dinner companion at the Arkansas Arts Center’s Tabriz. During dinner I asked her if she had ever considered writing a book. I mean, she had been a first-hand witness to Central High integration AND the 1968 Democratic Convention. Her response to me was a sheepish smile and then in a soft voice, “No.  Who would want to read about my experiences?”  I tried to assure her that many people would. But she was uncomfortable talking about herself, so I allowed her to change the subject.

Once I DID have the chance to honor her for her commitment to Little Rock’s arts scene.  But to do so, I knew it had to be a surprise. It was at an event she was planning on covering.  So I approached Walter Hussman about recognizing her.  He assured me that he’d make sure she was there, and then proceeded to fill a table at the event with Democrat-Gazette leadership as an added tribute to her.

Then-Mayor Jim Dailey (who shared a July 31 birthdate with Phyllis) presented the award to her.  She was shocked and probably would have preferred not to be in the spotlight. But she was gracious in accepting the honor.  Thankfully, she did not have to make a speech.  It is one of my favorite memories of Phyllis Brandon.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, History, Literature, Visual Art | Tagged Arkansas Arts Center, Arkansas Democrat, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Arkansas Life, Chicago, Crisis at Central High, High Profile, Jim Dailey, Little Rock Central High School, Phyllis Brandon, Tabriz, Walter E. Hussman Jr.

The Arkansas Cinema Society kicks off 2020 programming with LOVE THEM FIRST documentary

Posted on January 11, 2020 by Scott

Image may contain: 3 people, people smiling, people sitting and textMake plans to join the Arkansas Cinema Society for their first event of 2020, a screening of “Love Them First” with co-director Ben Garvin.  It is presented in conjunction with the Clinton School of Public Service.

“Love Them First: Lessons from Lucy Laney Elementary” follows the determination of a charismatic north Minneapolis elementary school principal, Mauri Friestleben, as she sets out to undo history.

But when the school encounters a heartbreaking setback, Friestleben confronts the true measure of student success. It’s a story of inspiration, heartbreak, perseverance and the power of love.

Date: January 11, 2020
Location: CALS Ron Robinson Theatre
Time: Screening at 5:30pm with panel discussion after the movie moderated by State Senator Joyce Elliott
Filmmaker Guest: Co-director Ben Garvin

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Film | Tagged Arkansas Cinema Society, Ben Garvin, CALS, Central Arkansas Library System, Clinton School of Public Service, Clinton School Speaker Series, Joyce Elliott, Love Them First (film), Ron Robinson Theater

Carter named to Americans for the Arts’ Private Sector Council

Posted on January 7, 2020 by Scott

Members of Americans for the Arts have elected Scott Whiteley Carter as a member of their advisory council for the Private Sector. Carter will advise Americans for the Arts’ staff on developing programs and services that will build a deeper connection to the field and the network membership.

In the Private Sector Council, Carter will work with fellow arts leaders to develop and implement private-sector advocacy programs and serve as leaders to other local arts agencies seeking to connect with the private sector.

Carter, a Little Rock native, currently serves as the Public Affairs and Creative Economy Advisor for the City of Little Rock. In this position, he works to capitalize on momentum taking place within Little Rock’s corporate and creative communities. In addition, he is the staff liaison to the City’s Arts+Culture Commission, various cultural organizations, and serves as the City of Little Rock historian.

“This is an exciting time in Little Rock. The arts and creative sectors are important as we work to increase emphasis on economic development and also quality of life, which are two key initiatives of our mayor. I look forward to not only exploring how other cities are leveraging the collaborations between corporate and creative entities, but also to sharing the innovative things we are doing here,” Carter said.

Little Rock Mayor Frank Scott, Jr. said he asked Carter to focus on the intersection between the arts and economic development by naming him the City’s Public Affairs and Creative Economy Advisor in 2019.

“His service on the Private Sector Council will not only give him the opportunity to play a role in national arts policy, but also to share what we are doing in Little Rock as well as to see best practices in other cities,” Mayor Scott said. “As we work to Unite Little Rock, the arts must play an important role in creating jobs and improving the quality of life. Locally and nationally, Scott is dedicated to this initiative.”

Robert L. Lynch, president and CEO of Americans for the Arts welcomed Carter and other new members to the advisory council.

“Americans for the Arts strives to cultivate the next generation of arts leaders in America, and these leaders are willing to dedicate their time and expertise to work with peers across the country to shape national programs and messages and help craft services for states, communities, and local organizations,” Lynch said. “I applaud them for their valued contribution and commitment that will undoubtedly improve the state of arts in America.”

Potential council members were nominated in September and were voted on by members of Americans for the Arts through November 15, 2019. Carter will serve a two-year term, from January 1, 2020 to December 31, 2021.

Americans for the Arts is the leading nonprofit organization for advancing the arts and arts education in America. With offices in Washington, D.C. and New York City, it has a record of more than 55 years of service. Americans for the Arts is dedicated to representing and serving local communities and creating opportunities for every American to participate in and appreciate all forms of the arts. Additional information is available at www.AmericansForTheArts.org.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government | Tagged Americans for the Arts, City of Little Rock, Frank Scott Jr., Scott Whiteley Carter

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Little Rock Culture Vulture
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