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There is an international club so exclusive it consisted
of only three members. That’s the number of women archi-
tects who had won the Pritzker Architecture Prize since its
inception in 1979.
That club admitted two more Tuesday: Yvonne Farrell
and Shelley McNamara, founders of the Irish studio
Grafton Architects. The pair are known for producing
formidable buildings of brick and concrete that harbor
surprising pockets of light and air within.
“Without grand or frivolous gestures, they have man-
aged to create buildings that are monumental institu-
tional presences when appropriate,” reads the citation
issued by the Pritzker jury, “but even so they are zoned and
detailed in such a way as to produce more intimate spaces
that create community within.”
“To be an architect is an enormous privilege,” said
Farrell in a statement. “To win this prize is a wonderful
endorsement of our belief in architecture.”
With their win, they join the rarefied ranks of the design
world, becoming the 47th and 48th Pritzker Prize lau-
reates, issued by the Hyatt Foundation in Chicago.
They also join the even more rarefied ranks of women
who have received the Pritzker, including the late Iraqi
British architect Zaha Hadid, who won in 2004, and
remains the only solo woman winner, as well as Kazuyo
Sejima (of the Japanese firm SANAA) and Carme Pigem
(of RCR Arquitectes, a studio from Spain), who won as
part of ensembles in 2010 and 2017, respectively.
Farrell and McNamara are, as noted the jury’s citation,
“pioneers in a field that has traditionally been and still is a
male-dominated profession” (something the Pritzker
Prize, with its heroic, dude-heavy laureate list, has had a
hand in perpetuating).
For the architects, the Pritzker marks a historic, trans-
Atlantic sweep. Last month the pair were awarded the
Royal Gold Medal in architecture by the Royal Institute of
British Architects. As with the Pritzker, they were the
fourth and fifth female architects to win that prestigious
award — and the first all-female team to do so. (And as
with the Pritzker, Hadid remains the
‘Pioneers’ in design
Irish pair among rare women to win the top architectural honor
YVONNE FARRELL,
Shelley McNamara.
Alice Clancy
THIS UTECbuilding in Lima, Peru, exemplifies the style of the 2020 Pritzker Prize winners: formidable with pockets of light and air.
Iwan Baan
BYCAROLINAA. MIRANDA
[SeePritzker,E4]
Alice Clancy
The original “Party of
Five” revolved around a
group of white siblings
forced to raise themselves
after their parents died in a
car crash. Nearly two dec-
ades later, Freeform’s re-
boot, set in Echo Park, fol-
lows the Acosta siblings as
they cope with the ongoing
effects of their parents being
deported.
Now, in the final stretch
of its first season, “Party of
Five” has taken its story to
Mexico.
The season’s penulti-
mate episode, “Mexico,” ex-
plored the unraveling mar-
riage between Javier and
The kids check in on parents
‘Party of Five’ reboot
co-creator details the
visit to deported dad
and mom in Mexico.
By Yvonne Villarreal
[See‘Party of Five,’E8]
EMILY TOSTA,from left, Bruno Bichir, Niko Guardado and Fernanda Urrejola
during an unexpected family reunion in “Party of Five’s” “Mexico” episode.
Erin SimkinFreeform
A timely play by
any ‘Measure’
Society’s shifting
views on sex inform
Antaeus’ staging of a
Shakespeare work. E3
Comics...................E6-7
What’s on TV..........E8
Dressed in a blue-gray
checked suit jacket, Robert
Kirkman sat hunched in the
front row of a downtown Los
Angeles courtroom as law-
yers and witnesses took
turns dissecting his AMC
Networks contract, illumi-
nated on screens around the
white tile and walnut wood-
paneled room.
Kirkman, who wrote the
comics upon which AMC
based its hit show “The
Walking Dead,” alternated
between resting his head on
his right hand and throwing
exasperated looks to his
business partner David
Alpert, who sat beside him
on the slick wooden pews.
The men were in court re-
cently to press their case
against AMC Networks, al-
leging its namesake cable
network cheated them out of
potentially hundreds of mil-
lions of profits from “The
Walking Dead” and its spin-
offs. The producers allege
they only received profits
from two of the 10 years the
highest-rated show in cable
TV history has been on the
air.
“They kept indicating
that they would provide and
treat us fairly, and then
when they didn’t, we then
ended up in litigation,”
Alpert said of AMC in court.
A decade after “The
Walking Dead” premiered,
the cable network that made
its name with “Mad Men”
This legal battle
just will not die
AMC, ‘Walking Dead’
creators tussle over
profits, a growing issue
in the streaming age.
By Anousha Sakoui
[See‘Walking Dead,’E2]
Ronan Farrow has
threatened to cut ties with
Hachette over an upcoming
memoir by his father, Woody
Allen.
“I was disappointed to
learn through press reports
that Hachette, my publisher,
acquired Woody Allen’s
memoir after other major
publishers refused to do so
and concealed the decision
from me and its own employ-
ees while we were working on
‘Catch and Kill,’ ” the jour-
nalist said in a statement
posted to Twitter on Tues-
day. “I’ve also told Hachette
that a publisher that would
conduct itself in this way is
one I can’t work with in good
conscience.”
Farrow’s 2019 book re-
counted the challenges he
faced while reporting on the
allegations of sexual miscon-
duct against movie mogul
Harvey Weinstein. As Far-
row explains in his state-
ment, it is “a book about how
powerful men, including
Woody Allen, avoid account-
ability for sexual abuse.” The
book was published by Ha-
chette imprint Little, Brown.
In his statement, Farrow
also blasted the publisher
for not fact-checking Allen’s
upcoming book. His sister
Dylan made similar accusa-
tions against the publisher
Monday.
Dylan’s statement called
the upcoming autobiogra-
phy “deeply unsettling and
an utter betrayal of my
brother whose brave report-
ing, capitalized on by Ha-
chette, gave voice to numer-
ous survivors of sexual as-
sault by powerful men.” She
said she was never con-
tacted by fact-checkers to
verify any information.
“This provides yet anoth-
er example of the profound
privilege that power, money
Farrow
siblings
slam
Allen’s
book
Ronan and Dylan say
publisher Hachette
has not fact-checked
filmmaker’s memoir.
By Dorany Pineda
and Tracy Brown
[SeeFarrow,E5]