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Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux, Sinuous Ballet Dancer and Choreographer, Dies at 82

Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux, Sinuous Ballet Dancer and Choreographer, Dies at 82

New York Times28-04-2025

Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux, a star dancer at the Paris Opera Ballet and an elegantly refined principal dancer at New York City Ballet who later nurtured generations of dancers as a teacher and as the director of the Charlotte Ballet, died on April 13 in Charlotte, N.C. He was 82.
His ex-wife, the former City Ballet ballerina Patricia McBride, said the cause of his death, at an assisted-living facility, was heart failure.
Mr. Bonnefoux (pronounced bon-FOO) — or Bonnefous, the name he used professionally during his dancing career — had been an étoile (the word means 'star') at the Paris Opera Ballet for five years when, at 27, he joined City Ballet as a principal dancer in 1970.
He had worked briefly with George Balanchine, the co-founder and principal choreographer of City Ballet, at the Paris Opera in 1963, when the company performed Balanchine's 'The Four Temperaments.' Six years later, Balanchine asked Mr. Bonnefoux to replace an injured dancer in the title role of 'Apollo,' which he was staging at the German Opera Ballet in Berlin.
The four days Mr. Bonnefoux spent with Balanchine, who coached him in the role, were life-changing. 'It gave me the strength to go through 10 more years of dancing,' he told Barbara Newman in an interview for her 1982 book, 'Striking a Balance: Dancers Talk About Dancing.'
Knowing that 'someone like that exists somewhere,' he said, gave him a goal: 'You need to be amazed all the time, to be fresh, to be interested always.'
Mr. Bonnefoux had an additional reason for wanting to join City Ballet. During a guest appearance at a gala with the Eglevsky Ballet on Long Island in 1968, he had fallen for Ms. McBride. It was 'love at first sight,' Ms. McBride said. 'I had never met anyone like him.' They married in 1973.
Over his 10-year career with City Ballet, Mr. Bonnefoux performed in a wide range of works, by Balanchine, Jerome Robbins and other choreographers, which showcased his pure classical technique as well as his aptitude for contemporary movement.
'He was so beautiful physically,' Jean-Pierre Frohlich, a former dancer and a repertory director at City Ballet, said in an interview. 'He had a look that was very different to the dancers here, very sophisticated and elegant.'
Although not considered a virtuoso dancer, Mr. Bonnefoux brought a sinuous grace and power to his roles, as well as a sharp theatrical intelligence.
'Mr. Bonnefous shaped the role with a cursive styling that suggested a Japanese woodcut,' Don McDonagh of The New York Times wrote of his performance in Balanchine's 'Bugaku' in 1975. 'He was powerful, but with the litheness of a large cat rather than a blunt muscularity.' Mr. McDonagh added that his reading of the role 'gave it a tactile grace that one sees in well‐formed sculpture.'
Balanchine created roles for Mr. Bonnefoux in 'Stravinsky Violin Concerto' (1972), 'Cortège Hongrois' (1973), 'Sonatine' (1975), 'Union Jack' (1976), 'Étude for Piano' (1977), 'Vienna Waltzes' (1977) and 'Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme' (1979); Robbins created roles for him in 'A Beethoven Pas de Deux' (1973), later known as 'Four Bagatelles,' and 'An Evening's Waltzes' (1973).
In 1977, after noticing that there were no dedicated classes for young boys at the School of American Ballet, Mr. Bonnefoux approached Balanchine about teaching there. 'I wanted the young ones here to feel right away like male dancers and understand the technical differences,' he told The Times.
That same year, he tore all the ligaments in an ankle while performing. During the enforced rest period that followed, encouraged by Balanchine, he began to choreograph.
In 1978, he created 'Pas Degas' as part of City Ballet's French-themed evening 'Tricolore.' ('I have a few things I will have to tell you for your next ballet,' Balanchine remarked after the premiere.) That year, he also created 'Quadrille' for students at the School of American Ballet and 'Une Nuit a Lisbonne' for the Syracuse Ballet.
'This strange time, when it was supposed to be the end for me,' Mr. Bonnefoux told The Times, 'was finally maybe the richest part of my life.'
Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux and his twin sister, Dominique, were born on April 9, 1943, in Bourg-en-Bresse, in eastern France, to Marie Therèse (Bouhy) Bonnefoux and Laurent Bonnefoux, a tax adviser. A few years later, the family moved to Paris, where the twins began to take dance classes.
Jean-Pierre's teacher suggested that he audition for the Paris Opera Ballet School. While studying there, he also pursued acting, appearing in 'Les Fruits Sauvages' (1954), 'Les Diaboliques' (1955), 'Les Carottes Sont Cuites' (1956) and other films.
'At one point, I really didn't know what to do between dance and acting,' he told Ms. Newman.
His parents consulted 'an Indian man, a Hindu, one who could see the future,' he recalled. 'He said very good things about what I would do in ballet.'
In 1957, at 14, he joined the Paris Opera Ballet, then directed by Serge Lifar, a Kyiv-born former star of the Ballets Russes. He disliked Lifar's ballets but loved his teachers, Gérard Mulys, Raymond Franchetti and Serge Peretti, whose examples would later give him a foundation for teaching.
He moved quickly through the ranks of the company, becoming an étoile at 21 and performing lead roles in 19th-century classics like 'Swan Lake,' 'Giselle' and 'Sleeping Beauty,' as well as in ballets by Roland Petit and Maurice Béjart. (Étoile is the only title at the Paris Opera that is bestowed at the discretion of the management.)
Mr. Bonnefoux danced as a guest artist with the Bolshoi Ballet and the Kirov Ballet. He also befriended Rudolf Nureyev and played a part in the Russian dancer's dramatic defection at Paris's Le Bourget airport in 1961. (He telephoned Nureyev's friend Clara Saint to warn her ahead of time that Nureyev was being sent back to Moscow, rather than going on to London with the rest of the Kirov company.)
But, frustrated by mediocre ballets and infrequent performances at the Paris Opera — and inspired by Balanchine — Mr. Bonnefoux decided to leave for City Ballet.
Gradually, he absorbed City Ballet style. It was not, he told Ms. Newman, 'so much a way of moving; it was more about the contact with the music, how you almost precede the music.'
Mr. Bonnefoux retired from City Ballet in 1980. He took the position of ballet master and choreographer at Pittsburgh Ballet Theater and then moved to Bloomington, Ind., to become head of the dance department at Indiana University.
In 1983, he began to run a summer ballet program at the Chautauqua Institution, a gated arts community in the northwestern corner of New York State and the site of the oldest summer arts festival in North America. He brought in prestigious City Ballet alumni like Ms. McBride and Violette Verdy to stage Balanchine pieces, formed a professional summer company and invited a broad variety of choreographers to work with the dancers.
'He was such a good teacher, and he and Patti were a formidable team in Chautauqua,' said Christine Redpath, a former dancer and a repertory director at City Ballet. 'That beautiful French training really fed into his teaching.'
By the time he stepped down in 2021, Mr. Bonnefoux had transformed the summer program into one of the country's most coveted destinations for aspiring dancers.
'He had a quiet presence, but behind his soft accent there was clarity, detail, precision and, always, encouragement,' said Daniel Ulbricht, a City Ballet principal. 'He was part of the reason why I, and many other dancers, were ready to make that commitment to pursuing a career.'
In 1996, Mr. Bonnefoux became the artistic director of what was then called North Carolina Dance Theater, in Charlotte, with Ms. McBride as associate artistic director. He remained there until 2017, and the couple transformed the company into a strong classical troupe that was also a vibrant home for contemporary choreography, adding works by Dwight Rhoden, Alonzo King, Paul Taylor, Twyla Tharp and William Forsythe to the repertoire, as well staging pieces by Balanchine and Robbins.
Mr. Bonnefoux choreographed, too: His ballets included 'Carmina Burana,' 'Peter Pan' and versions of 'Sleeping Beauty,' 'Cinderella' and 'The Nutcracker.'
In 2010, the company opened the Patricia McBride and Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux Center for Dance, housing its rehearsal and administrative spaces as well as a 200-seat theater. Four years later, the company was renamed Charlotte Ballet.
Ms. McBride and Mr. Bonnefoux divorced in 2018, but remained close. He is survived by their children, Christopher Bonnefoux and Melanie (Bonnefoux) DeCoudres, and three grandchildren.
Mr. Bonnefoux's qualities as a director and a teacher were transformative, said Sasha Janes, a former Charlotte Ballet dancer who succeeded Mr. Bonnefoux as director of the School of Dance at Chautauqua.
'He could see things in people they couldn't see in themselves,' Mr. Janes said, adding that Mr. Bonnefoux was ahead of his time: 'He wasn't interested in cookie-cutter perfect dancers; he wanted to see humanity on stage.'

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22 Wild Facts About Old Hollywood Celebrities
22 Wild Facts About Old Hollywood Celebrities

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22 Wild Facts About Old Hollywood Celebrities

Shirley Temple was so popular and talented that there was a conspiracy theory she was not a child at all, but an adult with dwarfism. In fact, she was investigated by the Vatican, who sent a priest to confirm she was in fact a child — which they were, apparently, able to do. Many celebrities from the '40s were actually spies during World War II, including Josephine Baker. She lived in Nazi-occupied France and would flirt with Nazi officials and get them tispy until they divulged military secrets, then write the secrets down on invisible ink and stash them in her underwear. MLB Baseball player Moe Berg worked for the predecessor to the CIA (the Office of Strategic Services), and once traveled to Switzerland with orders to assasinate German scientiest Werner Heisenberg if he discovered the Germans might soon be able to develop an atomic bomb. Famous chef Julia Child worked for the same organization before becoming famous, with her most notable job being to create "cakes" that were used as shark repellant. And Cary Grant reportedly spied on people in Hollywood to find Nazi sympathizers, including the German-born Count Kurt von Haugwitz-Hardenberg-Reventlow, who had married heiress Barbara Woolworth Hutton. Grant actually ended up marrying the heiress after she separated from her husband. Also during WWII, Audrey Hepburn (as a child) used to perform at secret concerts in the Netherlands to raise money for the Dutch resistance, risking discovery and punishment from Germans. Oh, and BTW, guess who was allegedly a Nazi informant? Coco Chanel. During World War II, Coco Chanel was named as a Nazi informant by friend Vera Bate (who herself confessed to being a German agent). The French government arrested Chanel, who had several ties with Nazi intelligence organization Abwehr and its members. Chanel was eventually released due to a lack of evidence and possible help from friend Winston Churchill. Chanel's Nazi ties remained hidden for decades, though her "fear and hatred for Jews" was allegedly "notorious." Lucille Ball once claimed that she picked up Morse code during WWII through her lead teeth fillings. While driving home (and having previously experienced picking up music through her teeth), she began to hear a "de-de-de-de" sound. "As soon as it started fading, I stopped the car and then started backing up until it was coming in full strength. DE-DE-DE-DE-DE-DE DE-DE-DE-DE! I tell you, I got the hell out of there real quick. The next day I told the MGM Security Office about it, and they called the FBI or something, and sure enough, they found an underground Japanese radio station. It was somebody's gardener, but sure enough, they were spies," Ball recounted. The story sounds completely ridiculous, but it's possible it was true. There is no record of Ball talking to the FBI, or Japanese spies being found in that area at that time, but there is evidence shrapnel in someone's body, at least, can pick up AM radio waves, which suggests lead tooth fillings could work the same way. Cary Grant tried LSD over a hundred times in the 1950s as a form of psychotherapy to deal with his childhood trauma. 'After weeks of treatment came a day when I saw the light,' Grant said. 'When I broke through, I felt an immeasurably beneficial cleansing of so many needless fears and guilts. I lost all the tension that I'd been crippling myself with. First I thought of all those wasted years. Second, I said, 'Oh my God, the humanity. Please come in.'' Eartha Kitt reportedly once had a threesome with James Dean and Paul Newman. She's been quoted as having said, 'Those two beauties transported me to heaven. I never knew that lovemaking could be so beautiful," though this quote is extremely difficult to confirm. In fact, there are quite a lot of scandalous sexual secrets from Old Hollywood that can't be 100% confirmed but are still fun to hear. For instance, there's speculation that Marlon Brando and James Dean had an S&M-based relationship. Ernest Hemingway once inspected F. Scott Fitzgerald's dick in the bathroom because Fitzgerald was worried it was too small after his wife Zelda complained about it. Hemingway assured him he was "perfectly fine,' telling Fitzgerald, "You look at yourself from above and you look foreshortened. Go over to the Louvre and look at the people in the statues and then go home and look at yourself in the mirror in profile." In another example featuring a famous writer, James Joyce wrote some truly scandalous love letters to his wife Nora Barnacle, many of which extolled her farts. 'You had an arse full of farts that night, darling, and I fucked them out of you, big fat fellows, long windy ones, quick little merry cracks and a lot of tiny little naughty farties ending in a long gush from your hole. It is wonderful to fuck a farting woman when every fuck drives one out of her. I think I would know Nora's fart anywhere. I think I could pick hers out in a roomful of farting women. It is a rather girlish noise not like the wet windy fart which I imagine fat wives have. It is sudden and dry and dirty like what a bold girl would let off in fun in a school dormitory at night. I hope Nora will let off no end of her farts in my face so that I may know their smell also.' Agatha Christie, possibly the most famous writer in the mystery genre, once created her own mystery when she disappeared in 1926 for 11 days — and the reason is still contested. After putting her daughter to bed, Christie (who was aware her husband was having an affair), drove off and her car was later found abandoned, hanging over the edge of a pit. She had left three letters behind, one to her brother-in-law claiming she had gone to a spa, another to her secretary with "scheduling details," and a third to her husband, who never revealed what the letter said. To find her, the police dredged a lake, brought in dogs, enlisted the help of over 10,000 people, and even looked to her novels for clues. She was eventually found at a spa, like she had told her brother-in-law — except according to her husband, she no longer remembered who she was or recognized him. She had checked in under his mistress' name. In the only time Christie ever spoke of it, she admitted to considering driving into the pit her car was found by, and hitting her head — this, accompanied by the trauma of her husband cheating and her mother dying, led to memory loss. Still, people have continued to speculate it was all a publicity stunt. Steve McQueen came very close to being killed by the Manson family along with Sharon Tate, Jay Sebring, Wojciech Frykowski, Abigail Folger, and Steven Parent. He had been invited to Tate's house that night, and the only reason he didn't go, according to his then-wife Neile Adams, was that he 'ran into a chickie and decided to go off with her instead." According to a biography of McQueen, he had been having an affair with a blonde woman at the time, and even invited her to come to Tate's with him. However, she said "she had a better idea for just the two of them." McQueen, unlike Tate,* was on a list of targets for the Manson family. His death was planned to look like a suicide. Tate and her friends weren't specifically targeted, according to prosecutors — she just happened to live in the house once owned by music producer Terry Melcher, who had rejected proposals to make a record with Manson. Speaking of serial killer Charles Manson — he was friendly with a number of big players in Hollywood, including Dennis Wilson and Mike Love, the co-founders of the Beach Boys. In fact, Manson and his friends actually moved into Wilson's house. Wilson later allegedly told Love that he'd seen Manson murder a Black man (though this is contested), causing Wilson to break off the friendship. Marilyn Monroe's last known words were to actor Peter Lawford, who was a brother-in-law to Robert and John F. Kennedy, as he had married their sister, Pat Kennedy. He stated she ended the call with, "Say goodbye to Pat, say goodbye to Jack, and say goodbye to yourself, because you're a nice guy." The Jack in reference was then-President JFK. This is noteworthy because there were longstanding rumors of an affair between JFK and Monroe, as well as Robert F. Kennedy and Monroe. There are also rumors that Robert F. Kennedy visited her that night, though this was denied by the Kennedys. Her housekeeper, Eunice Murray, who was there all day and night and was the one to find her dead, later claimed Robert had visited and they'd fought. When Murray found Marilyn dead around 3:30 a.m., she was reportedly holding her phone, and then-LA chief of detectives Thad Brown reportedly claimed she was found with a crumpled-up piece of paper with the number for the White House on it. Besides her connections to the Kennedys, there were other suspicious details around Monroe's death. Murray initially called Monroe's psychiatrist, Dr. Greenson, who called the doctor who had prescribed the pills, Dr. Engelberg, before calling the police. The police did not arrive for close to an hour after Murray first saw Monroe's body. Lawford later claimed that he'd heard about her death at 1:30 a.m. The wife of Monroe's press relations manager Arthur Jacobs also later claimed that her husband had received the call that Marilyn was dead at 10:30. Natalie Wood, who starred in a number of films including West Side Story, Rebel Without a Cause, and Gypsy, also died under extremely mysterious circumstances. The 43-year-old was with her husband Robert Wagner on his boat on a weekend vacation from filming Brainstorm when she drowned. According to Wagner himself (though he initially denied this), he and Wood argued, and then he went to bed without her. The next morning, her body was found a mile away. Wood had been drinking, and it's possible her death was an accident, but she was found with bruises that could mean she was attacked. Nearby witnesses had heard a woman scream. The captain of the boat, Dennis Davern, allegedly drunkenly confessed to Wood's sister years later that he'd seen Wagner push Wood, who then fell overboard, and that Wagner refused to rescue this is unconfirmed. Wagner has denied he had anything to do with Wood's death. But I mention this one specifically for a wild Hollywood fact that not many people seem to know — Christopher Walken, Wood's Brainstorm costar, had also been on the boat that night. He had reportedly also argued with Wagner, and Wagner was (according to Davern) angry Natalie had invited him. Walken has not said much about the night beyond affirming it was an accident and that he had nothing to do with it. "I don't know what happened. She slipped and fell in the water. I was in bed then. It was a terrible thing." He also said, "The people who are convinced that there was something more to it than what came out in the investigation will never be satisfied with the truth. Because the truth is, there is nothing more to it." One of the wildest Hollywood secrets involves Loretta Young and Clark Gable. For years, there were rumors Young's adopted daughter Judy was actually her biological daughter, conceived with Clake Gable. The rumors wouldn't be proven true until Young admitted to them in her posthumous memoirs. It turned out Young had conducted an elaborate cover-up to make it seem like she had adopted the child. Loretta even reportedly had Judy's ears pinned back in an operation because they so resembled Gable's. Gable never had any role in her daughter Judy's life. Young refused to tell Judy the truth, and according to Judy's memoir, when Judy confronted her about the rumors, Young ran into the house and Young never spoke publicly about the circumstances of Judy's conception, according to her daughter-in-law, Linda Lewis, in the '90s, Young had asked her what date rape meant after hearing the term on Larry King Live. After Lewis explained, Young replied, "That's what happened between me and Clark.' On the train ride back from shooting Call of the Wild on location, Gable had allegedly snuck into Young's compartment. According to Lewis, Young didn't want Judy to know, so Lewis kept quiet until both Young and Judy were dead. Finally, we'll end with a few last examples featuring Errol Flynn, because the man had a wild life and allegedly did some wild things. First of all, he wrote in his autobiography that he once had a job castrating young sheep with his teeth. Second, Flynn once apparently showed up on the doorstep of Hollywood gossip columnist Hedda Hopper, angry about something she had written about him, and began masturbating. "I began laughing, and continued laughing until he finished with a dramatic flourish all over my doorstep," Hopper reportedly told Paul Newman. "I'll say one thing for Errol. He's the only man I know who can ejaculate in front of a fully dressed woman who's laughing derisively during the entire process." And finally, David Niven claims that Flynn once brought him along to view 'the best-looking girls in L.A.'...which, as it turned out, meant parking by Hollywood High to watch the girls get out of school. He then allegedly told a police officer who questioned why they were there that he was "enjoying the scenery." What shocking old Hollywood facts do you know? Let us know in the comments!

Prime cuts, prime savings: Up to 20% off Father's Day gifts from Snake River Farms 🥩
Prime cuts, prime savings: Up to 20% off Father's Day gifts from Snake River Farms 🥩

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Prime cuts, prime savings: Up to 20% off Father's Day gifts from Snake River Farms 🥩

Prime cuts, prime savings: Up to 20% off Father's Day gifts from Snake River Farms 🥩 He's probably tired of ties! Give him a gift he'll actually devour! Is your dad the kind of guy who has everything? If you're still struggling to find him the perfect Father's Day gift (Sunday, June 15), why not send him the gift of premium meats delivered right to his doorstep? Snake River Farms offers a one-stop shop for top-quality meats, from perfectly marbled steaks to flavorful pork. Their selection is ideal for any barbecue enthusiast looking to truly elevate their grilling experience. To help make this a more budget-conscious purchase, now through Sunday, June 8, Snake River Farms is offering up to 20% off select Father's Day gifts and bundles. With deals like this, you might even want to grab a bundle for your next summer barbecue. Below, you will find all our favorite deal ideas you won't want to miss. Father's Day gift and bundle deals at Snake River Farms More: Under $100: Get this Omaha Steaks Father's Day deal with steaks, franks and free burgers More: Father's Day pizza party: 20% off an indoor/outdoor pizza oven that cooks in 2 minutes 🍕 What is Snake River Farms? Snake River Farms developed its proprietary brand of 100% American wagyu. These high-quality cuts bear this grade and are intensely marbled with intramuscular fat that melts as the beef cooks and provides what Snake River Farms calls a "self-marinating effect." This means that pound for pound, American wagyu will be the butteriest, meatiest and most unbelievably tender and delicious beef you will ever sink your teeth into. Aside from its inspired approach to wagyu, Snake River Farms packs an amazing selection of cuts, from the humble flat iron steak to Kurobuta pork. "It has the richness of Japanese beef with lots of marbling, but the flavor is more akin to what we're used to in America. You can give me a pound of the best Wagyu from Japan, or a pound of this, and I'll choose Snake River Farms every time." — Chef Wolfgang Puck How are Snake River Farms orders packed? To maintain the highest quality, Snake River Farms products are individually sealed in air-tight packaging and flash-frozen prior to shipment. Each order is shipped using a reusable thermal bag in a recyclable shipper box lined with a biodegradable insulated foam. Large items like briskets and hams will not fit in the thermal bag, but one is added to the shipment. Shelf-stable goods like jerky and salami don't require a coolant. What is the Snake River Farms Guarantee? Snake River Farms guarantees that your complete order will be delivered frozen or partially frozen. If you have any concerns or issues, please don't hesitate to contact their team. The founder, Robert Rebholtz, Sr., said, "We want our customers to want to do business with us." Their promise of your satisfaction is not complete until their products arrive and are served at the table. Shop Snake River Farms

Frank Gehry, Theaster Gates and Wendy Schmidt Earn 'Legend' Status at Star-Studded MOCA Gala
Frank Gehry, Theaster Gates and Wendy Schmidt Earn 'Legend' Status at Star-Studded MOCA Gala

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Frank Gehry, Theaster Gates and Wendy Schmidt Earn 'Legend' Status at Star-Studded MOCA Gala

On Saturday night, over 600 power players from the worlds of entertainment, art and philanthropy thronged The Geffen Contemporary for the 2025 MOCA Gala, raising $3.1 million for LA's Museum of Contemporary Art. The swirl of notable guests and presenters included House Speaker Emeritus Nancy Pelosi, Mayor Karen Bass, Ava DuVernay, Jane Fonda, Sarah Paulson, Candy Spelling, Lisa Edelstein, David Alan Grier, Barbara Kruger, Catherine Opie, Tim Disney, Julie Wainwright, Edythe Broad, Jeffery Dietch, Michael Govan and Nadya Tolokonnikova of Pussy Riot. More from The Hollywood Reporter Keanu Reeves Applauds Ana de Armas' "Joy for the Action" as She Joins 'John Wick' Universe Tom Hiddleston Breaks Down His Dance Moves in 'The Life of Chuck' and If He'd Ever Do a Musical 'Andor' Team Breaks Down Their Favorite Series Moments, Including That Mon Mothma Speech The gala, co-sponsored by Bvlgari (which showcased covetable jewels during cocktail hour), honored inaugural MOCA Legends Theaster Gates, Frank Gehry and Wendy Schmidt. Johanna Burton, director of MOCA, said the new awards are a way to recognize people 'who have helped write the stories of MOCA past, present, and future.' 'It's a frame that will allow people to celebrate the institution,' Burton said in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter before the event. 'But also to really celebrate these people who make our work possible every day.' Embracing the importance of community and collaboration between multiple fields in the face of oppression was clearly on top of everyone's minds throughout the evening. 'Something that's special about MOCA, its always actually pushed the limits of what art making is and who defines it and what it looks like,' Burton said. 'It began as a very multidisciplinary experimental, risk-taking space. And I think we're really encouraging and thinking about that now.' Glittering guests mingled during cocktail hour and took selfies in ballgowns in front of monumental mirrored sculptures while exploring the MOCA Geffen's current exhibition Olafur Eliasson: OPEN. They were then led into the gala by the TAIKOPROJECT Japanese drum ensemble. Inside the Frank Gehry designed event space, decked out with multicolored globes of light and black tablescapes, guests enjoyed dinner as the program began. MOCA board chair Maria Seferian kicked off the event, sounding a battle cry for the arts. 'Museums are collections of stuff with people and places, but at their heart, museums are really just an idea, creativity, possibility, imagination. In other words, freedom,' Seferian said. 'Freedom. We need that now, freedom to imagine and to act outside the different confines of circumstance. Art has the ability to change how we see and understand something past or present or future. It's a language that connects feeling to knowledge, to activate action, to spark a paradigm shift, to interrogate and create identity.' Johanna Burton echoed this sentiment in her remarks. 'I've always believed deeply that culture is crucial to a civic society,' she said, 'There is no greater time to embrace that idea.' Ava DuVernay presented the first MOCA Legends Award to multidisciplinary artist Theaster Gates, whose first major solo show on the West Coast was at MOCA in 2001. Gates was celebrated as a modern-day Renaissance man whose practice incorporates sculpture, conceptual formalism, music, performance, land art and space theory to create community. 'Theaster Gates is the whole band,' an effusive DuVernay said. 'He's the lead singer calling out to something eternal. He's the bassist, holding down the bottom, grounding it all. He's the drummer, beating out time, creating momentum. He's the guitarist bending strings into something never heard before. He's the saxophone, swirling through the soul of the thing, mournful and ecstatic all at once.' DuVernay also celebrated Gates' work preserving and uplifting Black history and culture. 'He's a builder, but not just of buildings, of legacies, of spaces for joy and resistance, for worship and imagination and reimagination,' she said. He's a bridge between what was and what can be, between the Black archive and the Black future. What's in between? Theaster.' Gates graciously accepted his honor, noting the importance of supporting creatives. 'It's about living a life where you take your talent and you multiply it, and you do the very, very, very best you can to create inspiration by taking those talents and watching them multiply,' he said. 'I feel like I'm constantly looking at black and brown talent in my neighborhood and no one's invested in them,' he said. 'And in fact, they are burying black talent all the fucking time. And is it possible that we would just take a moment to imagine that the talent around us has the capacity to do greater than it does? So when the queen comes home, the talent is producing beautiful things. My job is to make talent, to be talented, to multiply talents. And really all I want is for the world to say, 'Well done thy good and faithful servant. Well done.'' Jane Fonda, passionate and witty as always, introduced another MOCA Legends Award recipient, the philanthropist and investor Wendy Schmidt. Schmidt has spent decades creating innovative non-profit organizations working with communities to build healthy oceans, renewable energy, sustainable food systems and human rights. Along with her husband, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, she funded MOCA's Wendy and Eric Schmidt Environment and Art Prize which honors and funds artists whose practices address critical intersections in art, design, conservation, suitability and environmental justice. 'She is an avid puzzler,' Fonda said of Schmidt. 'It's no accident that she acquired Jigsaw Productions earlier this year. She sees how pieces fit together, she sees the big picture, she sees how the world can be while the rest of us just see a mess.' Fonda also managed to get in a good-natured dig at her ex-husband: 'She is a competitive sailor. She was the first woman and the first American to win the world's largest sailing race. She's a petite woman, and she has captained enormous ships with all-male crews, with focus and determination and tenacity, and she leads them to victory. And so, I say, take that Ted Turner.' Taking the stage, Schmidt joked, 'It's obviously an honor and a challenge to take the mic after Jane Fonda was just here.' Schmidt went on to make an inspired and impassioned speech encouraging multi-disciplinary collaboration to benefit humanity. 'Art and science working together allows all of us to see the world and approach challenges in a far richer, nuanced and more promising way. This is why our philanthropy crosses disciplines, deliberately seeing what happens at the edges of things, where they intersect. That's where changes happen.' 'I see science and art as two sides of the same coin; each of them rests on a single necessary foundation. Freedom of thought, freedom to imagine and to create is part of human nature and is the underpinning of a free society. And that's why any talk of improper ideology in our country sits sideways with me. If you try to undermine scientific inquiry you'll also suppress artistic expression. The good news is in practice it's hard to do, because humans are curious and we like to communicate. We're also gifted with imagination and we will find a way to use it. Like water, human curiosity and human expression will always find a way.' Perhaps the most moving part of the evening was the presentation of the third and final MOCA Legends Award to renowned architect Frank Gehry, who renovated the old warehouse which houses the MOCA Geffen. 'Frank Gehry is a magician because with his architecture he enables people to see the art differently, to hear the music differently, to understand the education differently,' Nancy Pelosi said. 'He is a magician who turns whatever is happening into something that is very well understood.' Pelosi also hit on the theme of community. 'Architecture is architecture, but it's art. It's art for the community. He has listened to the community about what this structure will be. He designs it around the community. It's about culture, it's about community, it's about communication.' The 96-year-old Gehry spoke from his table in a soft voice, but his words reverberated throughout the hall. 'MOCA means a lot to me,' said Gehry, speaking on the impact of artists on his personal life and architectural practice early on in his career. 'Artists brought me into their club — it's where I wanted to be, and they opened my eyes to another world.' The night ended with a rousing performance by Grammy-nominated Tierra Whack. Donors, artists, and curators left their tables to dance and mingle, a community determined to thrive in our uncertain future. 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