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The Bowery Boys: New York City History

Rewind: West Side Story and the Making of Lincoln Center

The Bowery Boys: New York City History

Tom Meyers

Society & Culture, History, Documentary, Places & Travel

4.83.6K Ratings

🗓️ 17 December 2021

⏱️ 54 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Steven Spielberg's new version of West Side Story is here -- and it's fantastic -- so we're re-visiting our 2016 show on the story of Lincoln Center, with a new podcast introduction discussing the film and the passing of musical icon Stephen Sondheim. The fine arts campus assembles some of the city's finest music and theatrical institutions to create the classiest 16.3 acres in New York City. It was created out of an urgent necessity, bringing together the New York Philharmonic,the New York City Ballet, the Metropolitan Opera, the Julliard School and other august fine-arts companies as a way of providing a permanent home for American culture. However this tale of Robert Moses urban renewal philosophies and the survival of storied institutions has a tragic twist. The campus sits on the site of a former neighborhood named San Juan Hill, home to thousands of African American and Puerto Rican families in the mid 20th century. No trace of this neighborhood exists today. Or, should we say, ALMOST no trace. San Juan Hill exists, at least briefly, within a part of classic American cinema. The Oscar-winning film West Side Story, based on the celebrated musical, was partially filmed here. The movie reflects many realities of the neighborhood and involves talents who would be, ahem, instrumental in Lincoln Center's continued successes. boweryboyshistory.com Originally released as Episode #218, December 9, 2016 Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/boweryboys

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey, it's the Bowry Boys.

0:01.5

Hey.

0:16.1

Hi there, welcome to the Bowry Boys.

0:17.8

This is Greg Young.

0:18.9

And this is Tom Myers.

0:20.8

Tom, I need to say right up front here, I am sorry that we never got to do a podcast

0:28.1

on Stephen Sondheim's New York while he was alive.

0:32.0

I know.

0:33.0

We talked about this for years.

0:35.0

It was my dream to interview him.

0:38.4

And of course, sadly, he died on November 26, 2021.

0:43.1

The day after Thanksgiving, we will all miss his genius, of course.

0:49.1

And we actually got a little hint of how he'll be missed by the crowds who spontaneously

0:54.1

flocked to Marie's crisis and the duplex that night and most night since.

0:59.6

This is a true loss in American cultural history.

1:03.0

And also sad because it comes on the heels of a brand new film version of the musical

1:07.9

West Side Story, which was just released, directed by Steven Spielberg with a new screenplay

1:14.0

by Tony Kushner.

1:15.6

Of course, Sondheim wrote the original lyrics to West Side Story.

1:20.0

And Greg, you just saw the movie.

1:21.6

Mm-hmm.

1:22.6

It's fantastic.

...

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