Monday, October 6, 1997
Vol. 33, No. 40, ISSN: 0511-4187
Remarks on presenting the arts and humanities medals. (Pres Bill Clinton's
speech during the awards presentation of the 1997 National Medal of Arts and
National Medal of Humanities)(Transcript)
� September 29, 1997
� Thank you very much. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the White
House. I thank the Members of Congress for coming, the members of the
councils who stood up and were recognized. I also want to thank the
First Lady for that very nice speech and unusual introduction.
[Laughter]
� The spin that was put on my going to the opera at home was slightly
different than the one you heard. [Laughter] It went more like, "I've
been trying to get you to do this for 5 years, now. I know you will
like this if you go." [Laughter] "And besides, it's Carmen, it's your
kind of thing." [Laughter] And then, afterward, I said, "Gosh, I just
loved that, and I thought Denyce Graves was great, and it was
fabulous." And she said, "I told you. I told you. I told you." So I was
glad to have the sort of sanitized version presented to you. [Laughter]
But I thought, in the interest of openness, I should tell you the whole
story. [Laughter]
� Let me again say to all of you, you are very welcome here in the
White House. And let me say a special word of thanks to two people:
first, to Jane Alexander for her outstanding leadership of the National
Endowment of the Arts, thank you; and second, to Sheldon Hackney, who
recently left his job as Chairman of the National Endowment for the
Humanities, but who did a wonderful job for the United States in the
position, thank you.
� This morning, we honor 20 men and women and one organization for
extraordinary achievement in arts and humanities. And in giving these
awards, we also applaud the achievements of our country. We celebrate
our capacity for individual expression and common understanding, and we
rejoice in our Nation's thriving and growing diversity. We take pride
in the power of imagination that animates our democracy.
� And above all, by giving these awards we declare to ourselves and to
the world, we are, we always have been, and we always will be a nation
of creators and innovators. We are, we always have been, and we always
will be a nation supporting our artists and scholars. It is our
heritage. It must be a great gift we give to the future.
� As Hillary said, as we work up to the millennium, we will be
observing it in many ways over the next 4 years that both honor our
past and encourage our people to imagine the future. Today, I invite
each of you to be partners in that endeavor in the White House
Millennium Program, to help us to make sure the millennium is marked by
a renewed commitment to the arts and humanities in every community in
our Nation.
� One of the most important goals for the millennium is to give every
child in America access to the universe of knowledge and ideas by
connecting every school and library in our country to the Internet by
the year 2000. Working together with business leaders, we've made solid
progress. And as we work to connect our schools and libraries we must
make sure that once our children can log on to the Internet they don't
get lost there.
� So today I'm pleased to announce that on the 27th of October the
National Endowment for the Humanities, in partnership with MCI and the
Council of Great City Schools, will throw the switch on a new
educational website called Ed-SITE-ment - Ed-SITE-merit, not bad -
[laughter]. This exciting new tool will help teachers, students, and
their parents to navigate among the thousands of educational websites,
and there are literally tens of thousands of them now. Most important,
it will expand our children's horizons and instill in them an early
appreciation for the culture and values that will be with them
throughout their lives.
� President Kennedy once said he looked forward to an America that
raised the standards of artistic achievement and enlarged cultural
opportunities for all citizens. The men and women we honor today have
brought us much closer to realizing that vision. More than 30 years
later, at the edge of the new millennium, we must pledge ourselves anew
to meet this challenge.
� Now, it gives me great pleasure to present the 1997 National Medal of
Arts and National Medal of Humanities awards. First, the National Medal
of Arts.
� Like Martha Graham and Georgia O'Keeffe, Louise Bourgeois' name is
synonymous with innovation, and her life is proof that creative impulse
never fails. In 1981, her retrospective at the Museum of Modem Art, the
first to be devoted to a woman artist, encompassed 40 years of
extraordinary work. Since then, she has created another lifetime of
enduring art, and I have no doubt she has more to teach us.
� Ladies and gentlemen, Jean-Louis Bourgeois, the artist's son, will
accept the award on her behalf. Louise Bourgeois.
� [At this point, the President and the First Lady presented the medal
to Mr. Bourgeois.]
� Don't worry, I'll report this on my gift form. Thank you. [Laughter]
� When Betty Carter sings "Baby, It's Cold Outside," it makes you want
to curl up in front of a fire, even in the summertime. Performing with
the likes of Ray Charles, Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, and Lionel
Hampton, she is truly a goddess in the pantheon of jazz. Her greatness
comes not only from her unforgettable voice but from her passionate
commitment to helping young artists develop their own careers.
� Ladies and gentlemen, the incomparable Betty Carter.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Ms. Carter.]
� We can't celebrate art today without celebrating the people who help
us to experience it. Aggie Gund has spent a lifetime bringing art into
the lives of the American people. With the "Studio in a School," she
forged a new partnership between professional artists and public
schools to introduce children to the joys of creative expression.
� And I might say, that's even more important today. One of the things
that a lot of us who care about our schools are concerned about are the
dwindling opportunities too many of our children have in the arts of
all kinds, because we know it gives these children, so many of them, a
chance to learn, to grow, to find positive means of self-expression. If
they never become any kind of artist, the increase in
self-understanding, self-control, self-direction, and pure,
old-fashioned enjoyment in life is more than worth the effort. And so
we are especially grateful to Aggie Gund. As president of the Museum of
Modern Art, she is helping to usher in the 21st century of art.
� Ladies and gentlemen, it's an honor to present her today.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Ms. Gund.]
� From the National Mall to the National Gallery, Dan Kiley has helped
to redefine the American landscape. He's one of those rare artists who
join the beauty and variety of nature with the joy and form of design.
In his thought-provoking, memorable designs, building and site come
together as one, proving that great landscapes and great buildings are
part of the same vision.
� Ladies and gentlemen, Dan Kiley.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Mr. Kiley.]
� It is no mystery - [laughter] - why Angela Lansbury deserves this
award. From the Royal Shakespeare Theatre to Broadway to television,
she has created vivid characters we can't forget. For that work, she
has earned three Academy Award nominations, four Tony Awards, and 16
Emmy Awards. To that wall of honors we add this one, for she is her own
unforgettable character.
� Ladies and gentlemen, Angela Lansbury.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Ms. Lansbury.]
� A hush falls in the Metropolitan Opera as the great chandelier rises
and James Levine raises his baton. For 25 years and 1,600 performances
of 70 different operas, countless opera goers, television watchers, and
radio listeners have shared that experience and shared in the great
gift of his talent. His work has renewed the grand tradition of opera
and infused it with new life for the next generation of opera lovers.
� Ladies and gentlemen, James Levine
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Mr. Levine.]
� I really admire him. He was up here looking for his mother. He says,
"I know she's out here somewhere." [Laughter] Where is she? Good for
you. Thank you.
� Just hearing Tito Puente's name makes you want to get up and dance.
With his finger on the pulse of the Latin American musical tradition
and his hands on the timbales, he has probably gotten more people out
of their seats and onto the dance floor than any other living artist.
For 50 years now, the irrepressible joy of his irreplaceable music has
won him four Grammy Awards, countless honors, and a wide world of fans.
� Ladies and gentlemen, Tito Puente.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Mr. Puente.]
� If anyone has actually given a voice to American dramatic arts, it is
Jason Robards. In the great works of our greatest playwrights, Eugene
O'Neill, Lillian Hellman, Clifford Odets, Arthur Miller, and in Academy
Award performances in great movies like "All The President's Men," he
has brought the American experience to life with characters that
animate history and illuminate the human condition. And every one of us
who has ever had to give a significant number of public speeches has
wished at some moment in his life that he had a voice like Jason
Robards. [Laughter]
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Mr. Robards.]
� Edward Villella, quite literally, leapt onto the world stage of
ballet and changed it forever with the stunning grace and muscular
athleticism that are his signature style. As principal dancer with the
New York City Ballet, he collaborated with the men who defined 20th
century ballet, George Balanchine and Jerome Robbins. And as artistic
director of the Miami City Ballet, he is attracting the ballet audience
of the 21st century.
� Ladies and gentlemen, the remarkable Edward Villella.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Mr. Villella.]
� There may not be a serious, committed baby boomer alive who didn't at
some point in his or her youth try to spend a few minutes at least
trying to learn to pick a guitar like Doc Watson. A guitar virtuoso
whose unique style merges many musical traditions, he started his
remarkable career at age 13, armed with a $12 guitar and a deep love of
mountain music. Five Grammy Awards and a lifetime of achievement later,
he still lives in the land his great-great grandaddy homesteaded, and
he's still making that old-time mountain music.
� Ladies and gentlemen, Doc Watson.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Mr. Watson.]
� For our artists to create the kind of works we're here to celebrate,
they have to have three things: time, space, and inspiration. For
nearly half a century, that is what more than 4,500 artists have found
at the MacDowell Colony. On this 450-acre farm in rural New Hampshire,
Thornton Wilder wrote "Our Town;" Leonard Bernstein finished his great
"Mass." Today, a new generation of artists thrives in the atmosphere
created by composer Edward MacDowell and his wife, Marian.
� Ladies and gentlemen, the award to the MacDowell Colony will be
accepted by the chairman of the MacDowell Colony, a man we all know in
other guises, Robert MacNeil.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Mr. MacNeil.]
� Now, I have the honor of introducing the recipients of the National
Humanities Medal, men and women who keep the American memory alive and
infuse the future with new ideas.
� First, Nina Archabal. To those who know and work with her, she is a
fireball who lets no one stand in the way of her mission to preserve
Minnesota's history. To the State of Minnesota, she's a bridge-builder
between native peoples and other Minnesotans, helping them share their
stories. To America, she exemplifies how tradition informs everyday
life and shapes history. And just this rooming she told the President
that it was high time he high-tailed it out to Minnesota to see exactly
what she was doing. [Laughter]
� Ladies and gentlemen, Miss Nina Archabal.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Ms. Archabal.]
� David Berry and I share a goal: to strengthen our Nation's 2-year
community colleges so that more Americans can get the education they
need to succeed in life, no matter how old they are or where they come
from. As professor of history at Essex County College in Newark, New
Jersey, he's broadened the horizons and expanded the dreams of his
students. As director of the Community College Humanities Association,
he's helping 2-year colleges all over the country to do the same.
� Ladies and gentlemen, I don't know how many of you have ever spent
any time in these 2-year institutions, but they are exhilarating in the
opportunities they offer to people who not so long ago would never have
been able to dream of them. And the fact that we are bringing the
humanities into them and putting them front and center is a very
important part of inspiring the Americans of the 21st century, because
more and more of them will find their way to these remarkable
institutions.
� Ladies and gentlemen, David Berry.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Mr. Berry.]
� After a very, very successful career as chairman and CEO of an
investment banking firm, Richard Franke could well have rested on his
achievements. Instead, he made it his mission to advance the cause of
the humanities in everyday life. Through the Chicago Humanities
Festival he founded in 1989, he's bringing the pleasures of art and
ideas to the people of the great city of Chicago. And his commitment to
the humanities extends to the entire Nation.
� Ladies and gentlemen, Sir Richard
� Franke.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Mr. Franke.]
� I doubt that there is a more revered force in American education
today than Bill Friday. As president of the University of North
Carolina, he devoted himself to improving education for all Americans.
There is hardly an important educational task force he has not been a
member of. He helped to found the National Humanities Center. He sat on
the Carnegie Commission on Higher Education and the President's Task
Force on Education. As executive director of the Kenan Charitable
Trust, he continues his life of achievement.
� I can tell you that in all the years that I served as Governor and
Hillary and I worked to improve education for our children from
kindergarten through higher education and to change the horizons of the
South in ways that would bring people together and elevate their
conditions, no one was more respected or had more influence on how we
all thought and what we tried to do than the remarkable Bill Friday.
� Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Friday.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Mr. Friday.]
� I think I should say that our next awardee, Don Henley, is not in the
wrong category. [Laughter] He has already won so many awards for his
wonderful, wonderful music, he may think that he doesn't need another.
But today we honor him not for another hit record but instead for 7
years of relentless effort to protect a vital part of America's
history, the woods that inspired Henry David Thoreau to write his
greatest work, "Walden." Through his support of the Thoreau Institute,
Don is also keeping Thoreau's great legacy alive for the 21st century.
� I've known Don for many years, and I told him today right before we
came out here that if I had a nickel for every time he has hit on me to
preserve the woods around Walden Pond, I would indeed be a wealthy man.
[Laughter] He has done his job to preserve a profoundly significant
part of our legacy as a larger part of his passionate commitment to
preserving our environment and our natural heritage.
� Ladies and gentlemen, Don Henley.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Mr. Henley.]
� Great writers reveal a world we've never seen but instantly recognize
a authentic. Maxine Hong Kingston is such a writer. In her
groundbreaking book, "The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of Girlhood Among
Ghosts," she brought the Asian-American experience to life for millions
of readers and inspired a new generation of writers to make their own
unique voices and experiences heard.
� Ladies and gentlemen, Maxine Hong Kingston.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Ms. Hong Kingston.]
� The great chorus of American voices has also been immeasurably
enlarged by the work of Luis Leal. For 50 years he has told the story
of the Chicano people, here in America and all over the Latin world. In
16 books he has revealed the unique voice of Latin literature. In 1995,
in recognition of his great contributions, the University of California
created the Luis Leal Endowed Chair in Chicano Studies, the only one of
its kind in our Nation.
� Ladies and gentlemen, Luis Leal.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Mr. Leal.]
� As we approach the millennium, many Americans are examining their own
and our Nation's spirituality, faith, and the role of religion in our
Nation's life. No one has thought more deeply about these questions
than Martin Marty, a renowned scholar of religious history, the author
of 50 books, the director of the Public Religion Project at the
University of Chicago which finds common ground in our diverse
communities of faith.
� Among many things to which he is faithful, he is faithful to his
teaching, and he told me he is missing class today, one of the very few
times in a very long career of teaching. We have all been enriched by
his work, and we thank him for it.
� Ladies and gentlemen, Martin Marty.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Mr. Marty.]
� Paul Mellon has elevated the great tradition of American philanthropy
to an art form. His gifts have immeasurably strengthened the cultural
institutions that are at the very heart of our civil society,
including, of course, the National Gallery here in Washington. With his
sister, he established the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Nation's
largest private funder of the humanities. And through his exceptional
generosity, he has enriched the libraries of our Nation with precious'
collections of the world's greatest works.
� Ladies and gentlemen, Robert Smith of the National Gallery of Art
will accept the award on behalf of Paul Mellon.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal to Mr. Smith.]
� No one has done more to expand the American library of voices than
Studs Terkel. He has quite literally defined the art of the oral
history, bringing the stories of ordinary people to life in his unique
style, and letting the everyday experiences that deepen our history
speak for themselves. That is why I am very pleased he has agreed to
advise the White House Millennium Program on the best way to collect
family and community histories, a project we will launch with the NEH
this spring.
� Ladies and gentlemen, a true American original, Mr. Studs Terkel.
� [The President and the First Lady presented the medal and
congratulated Mr. Terkel.]
� He just thanked me for coordinating the medal with his trademark
shirt, tie, and socks. [Laughter] The rest of our honorees will just
have to abide it. We were trying to get the wardrobe right.
� Let me again thank all of you for coming and say a special word of
thanks to Senator Pell and to Congressman and Mrs. Capps, to
Congressman Horn, Congresswoman Maloney, Congresswoman Pelosi,
Congressman Serrano, and Congressman Burr. And I thank them. We have
talked a lot about all the fights that exist between the President and
Congress over the NEH and the NEA. It's important to recognize we've
got some good supporters there, too.
� Let me invite you to enjoy the Marine Orchestra, to enjoy each other,
to enjoy this beautiful day and the rich gifts our honorees have given
us.
� Thank you very much for coming.
� NOTE: The President spoke at 9:45 a.m. in the Rose Garden at the
White House. In his remarks, he referred to Lois Capps, wife of
Representative Walter Capps.
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