After our father, Leonard Bernstein, died in 1990, my brother, sister
and I realized we had a vast archive to contend with. Where would it
reside? We chose the Library of Congress, because in those days, it was
the institution most advanced and enlightened about digitization,
thereby making their resources available to the public online.
It’s beyond gratifying to see that not only musicians and scholars can access these materials but also students of all ages—and, in fact, virtually anyone on the planet with an internet connection. This astonishing availability is in
harmonious alignment with our own hopes for the Bernstein at 100
celebrations; my siblings and I see the centennial as our unique (and
unrepeatable!) opportunity to remind Bernstein enthusiasts worldwide of
his multifarious legacy—and, even more significantly, to introduce him
to younger generations who might not know very much about him.
Over the past two years, I’ve been working on a memoir, “Famous
Father Girl,” which comes out in June from HarperCollins. My research
steered me to the Library of Congress many times. Not only did the
online finding aid help me go on my various treasure hunts, but Mark
Horowitz of the Music Division also was brilliant at helping me navigate
the archive to find the items I was looking for.
Sometimes he even found me goodies I wasn’t looking for: On one
occasion, he unearthed a manuscript of a silly song my father invented
for my brother and me when we were very young. I had no idea that song
existed anywhere but in my own memory. Seeing that manuscript gave me a
profound thrill; it felt like being hurled backward in a time machine.
The word I so often find myself using to describe my father is not a
word he knew in his lifetime: “broadband.” The Bernstein collection has
this same broadband quality. The contents illustrate a career that
traveled across multiple worlds. A partial list of those worlds includes
musical theater, symphony orchestras, educational institutions,
television and radio, audio and video recordings and extensive
participation in humanitarian and civil rights movements. In fact,
exploring the multifaceted universe of Leonard Bernstein is a
fascinating means of exploring the 20th century itself.
Plus, I found all the family holiday cards! The Leonard Bernstein
archive has certainly been an ideal playground for this Famous Father
Girl.
via https://blogs.loc.gov/loc/2018/08/leonard-bernstein-centennial-my-father-leonard-bernstein/
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