The Washington Post - 01.08.2019

(Axel Boer) #1
BY AVI SELK

There were two distinct audiences for the
Democratic primary debate on Tuesday: people
who tuned in to see a long row of aspiring
presidents snipe at one another over policy
differences and those who wanted to watch the
orb queen Marianne Williamson resonate fre-
quencies of love into the universe.
If you were in the former group, maybe you
invited some friends over and broke out the
Doritos. If you were one of the latter, you might
have checked out the “occult task force” being
organized on an orb-festooned Reddit page “to
influence the events at the debate so that
Marianne gets as much airtime as possible.”
In the few minutes she got to speak, William-
son did not disappoint the online fan club of

professed occultists, liberal peaceniks and iron-
ic memeophiles who have gathered around the
67-year-old New Age guru’s metaphysical cam-
paign for the White House.
“If you think any of this wonkiness is going to
deal with this dark psychic force of the
collectivized hatred that this president is bring-
ing up in this country, then I’m afraid that the
Democrats are going to see some very dark
days,” she warned her rivals midway through.
This echoed Williamson’s famous closing argu-
ment from the previous round of debates in
Florida, when she dismissed the preceding
hour-and-a-half of policy talk and declared in
her best Hepburnian accent: “Mr. President, if
you are listening, I want you to hear me, please.
You have harnessed fear for political purposes,
SEE WILLIAMSON ON C3

The mystical allure of


Marianne Williamson


Her debate presence has won over occultists, meme-makers and others


MARY INHEA KANG FOR THE WASHINGTON POST

KLMNO


Style


THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 2019. SECTION C

EZ RE

BY ANNE MIDGETTE

Two weeks ago, the Maryland-
based National Philharmonic an-
nounced that it was planning to
close because it had run out of
money. Now, the group has an
embarrassment of riches. On
Tuesday, the orchestra adminis-
tration said that it had raised the
funds needed to stay open, while
on Monday night, a local musician
and businessman presented to
the board a concrete proposal to
save the year-round regional or-
chestra, which performs at Strath-
more in Montgomery County.
“We certainly are thrilled be-
yond belief that the community
has come together to support this
organization with its hard-earned
dollars for the organization to
move forward,” said Leanne Fer-
folia, the orchestra’s president,
who has been working overtime
on an emergency fundraising
campaign to raise the $150,000
that was needed by Wednesday.
Meanwhile, James Kelly, a vio-
list who is co-owner of Potter
Violins in Silver Spring, said he
had pledges from 12 donors, in-
cluding himself, amounting to
$275,000. The only contingency:
that the orchestra boot its leader-
ship and allow him to take over as
interim president.
Now the orchestra’s board has
SEE PHILHARMONIC ON C2

About 40 minutes
after the start of
Tuesday night’s
Democratic
debate, I got an
email from a
Washington Post
reader with this
subject line: “I
don’t care for this.”
He was complaining, of
course, about the Detroit debate
on CNN, which he described as
a reality TV show with
journalists playing celebrity
hosts.
With frustratingly tiny and
rigidly enforced response time,
outsize attention to fringe
candidates and divisive
questions — some of which
could have been framed by the
Republican National Committee
— the first Detroit debate was a
lost opportunity to inform the
voting public.
“Honestly, you could catalog
all journalism’s faults just from
watching debate moderators,”
tweeted Joshua Benton, who
runs Harvard’s Nieman
Journalism Lab.
To wit: “An obsession with
conflict over explanation,
forcing complex policies into
soundbites, above-it-all
savviness that only makes sense
if you spend all your time on
Politics Twitter or in DC.”
The worst of Night 1 may
have been the format itself,
which started with a painfully
high-octane video that managed
to simultaneously evoke “The
NFL Today,” World Wrestling
Entertainment and “Jeopardy!”
Then there was the spaceship-
like set that (according to CNN’s
Oliver Darcy) took 100 people
eight days to build and involved
SEE SULLIVAN ON C3


CNN needs


to put away


its debate


stopwatch


Margaret
Sullivan


Struggling


orchestra


receives


2 lifelines


Philharmonic board now
faces competing plans

BY PETER MARKS

Every popular art form strives
to be a big tent. In the world of
musical theater, Harold Prince,
who died Wednesday at 91, was a
big tent all by himself.
The list of Broadway musicals
for which Prince was lead pro-
ducer, or director, or both is noth-
ing short of breathtaking. The
history of the American musical,
from the 1950s on, was all but
packed into the frame and con-
sciousness of one balding, beard-
ed, tirelessly imaginative, peer-
lessly inspirational figure. Con-
sider his achievements: “West
Side Story,” “Fiddler on the Roof,”
“Wonderful Town,” “The Pajama
Game,” “Damn Yankees,” “A Fun-
ny Thing Happened on the Way to
the Forum,” “She Loves Me.” And
these were all before he really got
going.
An appreciation of Hal, as he
was universally known, practical-
ly writes itself. The shows above
are among his pre-1965 triumphs.
After that, he would produce and
direct “Cabaret” in 1966, “Compa-
ny” in 1970 and “Follies” in 1971
(at the height of his partnership
with Stephen Sondheim), “A Lit-
tle Night Music” in 1973 and
“Pacific Overtures” in 1976.
SEE APPRECIATION ON C8


APPRECIATION


Hal Prince,


king of the


Broadway


musical


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A long career measured
in transcendent evenings

BY SONIA RAO

Woodstock 50 organizers an-
nounced Wednesday that the
beleaguered music festival,
which was supposed to take
place Aug. 16 through Aug. 18, is
officially canceled.
“We are saddened that a series
of unforeseen setbacks has made
it impossible to put on the Festi-
val we imagined with the great
lineup we had booked and the
social engagement we were an-
ticipating,” organizer Michael
Lang, co-founder of the 1969
festival, said in a statement.
Organizers had been forced to
relocate Woodstock 50 last week
to Merriweather Post Pavilion in
Columbia, Md., a move that set
off the most recent series of hits
to the commemorative festival.
When announced in January, the
festival was supposed to take
place in Watkins Glen, N.Y., a few
hours northwest of the 1969
festival’s Bethel Woods site. But
organizers failed to obtain the
proper permits. They were later
denied another permit for a
venue in Vernon, N.Y., a town a
few hours north of Bethel Woods
that then voted unanimously to
reject the festival’s appeal alto-
gether.
Artists announced in March as
part of the festival lineup —
including Jay-Z and Miley Cyrus,
as well as 1969 performers Dead
and Company, Santana and John
Fogerty — were released from
SEE WOODSTOCK ON C3

Woodstock


50 canceled


after more


setbacks


JACOB BIBA FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
Best-selling author Marianne Williamson, 67, seen at top in New York and above in South
Carolina, has garnered an online fan club with her metaphysical presidential campaign.

Fest commemorating the
original in 1969 has faced
lineup, financial issues
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