1
ARAB TIMES, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2015 23 NEWS/FEATURES Madonna performs in concert on Nov 16, in Herning. (AFP) In this June 4, 1995 file photo, Harold Prince holds his Tony Award for best director in a musical for ‘Show Boat’, at Broadway’s Minskoff Theater in New York. Prince, 87, the most decorated Tony Award-winner in history, directs ‘Prince of Broadway’, which takes audiences through his numerous award-winning productions. The show features a 10-person cast that perform snippets from many of the shows that have earned Prince a record 21 Tonys, including ‘Cabaret’, ‘Evita’, ‘Phantom of the Opera’, ‘Kiss of the Spider Woman’ and ‘Sweeney Todd.’ It has received a sold-out reception in Japan and Prince hopes it will soon grace a Broadway stage. (AP) Honors Posthumous honors for Berra, Chisholm Spielberg, Streisand for Presidential Medal LOS ANGELES, Nov 17, (RTRS): Steven Spielberg, Barbra Streisand, Stephen Sondheim, Gloria Estefan and James Taylor are among the recipients of this year’s Presidential Medal of Freedom, to be presented at the White House by President Obama on Nov. 24. Other recipients include veterans activist Bonnie Carroll, music produc- er Emilio Estefan, former Rep Lee Hamilton, NASA mathematician Katherine G. Johnson, baseball legend Willie Mays, Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.), conductor Itzhak Perlman and former EPA administrator William Ruckelshaus. Posthumous honors will go to Yogi Berra; Shirley Chisholm, the first African American woman elected to Congress; Indian treaty rights activist Billy Frank Jr. and human rights leader Minoru Yasui. The Medal of Freedom is the White House’s highest civilian honor. The list of recipients of each year’s Medal of Freedom usually includes a handful from entertainment. Meryl Streep and Stevie Wonder were among the recipients in 2014. Sondheim was a recipient last year, but could not make the ceremony, and Obama said back then that he would receive the honor at the 2015 event. The White House’s full descriptions of the recipients are below: Yogi Berra (posthumous) Yogi Berra spent over 40 years as a professional baseball catcher, manag- er, and coach. Widely regarded as one of the greatest catchers in baseball his- tory — and an all-time Yankee great — Berra was an 18-time All-Star and 10-time World Series Champion who was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1972. Always quick witted, Berra was famous for his “Yogi-isms,” teaching us all that we can observe a lot just by watching. Berra was also a lifelong ambassador for inclusion in sports. Bonnie Carroll Bonnie Carroll is a life-long public servant who has devoted her life to caring for our military and veterans. After her husband, Brigadier General Tom Carroll, died in an Army C-12 plane crash in 1992, Carroll founded the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors (TAPS), which provides comprehensive support to those impacted by the death of their military hero, bringing healing comfort and compassionate care to the living lega- cies of our nation’s service and sacri- fice. Carroll is also a retired Major in the Air Force Reserve. Shirley Chisholm (posthumous) Shirley Chisholm made history in 1968 by becoming the first African- American woman elected to Congress, beginning the first of seven terms in the House of Representatives. In 1969 she became one of the founding mem- bers of what would become the Congressional Black Caucus. Not sat- isfied, Chisholm went on to make his- tory yet again, becoming the first major-party African-American female candidate to make a bid for the US presidency when she ran for the Democratic nomination in 1972. She was a champion of minority education and employment opportunities throughout her tenure in Congress. Emilio Estefan Emilio Estefan is a passionate and visionary music producer, entrepre- neur, author, and songwriter who has won nineteen Grammy Awards and influenced a generation of artists. As the founding member of the Miami Sound Machine, and later through a decades-long career producing and shaping the work of countless stars, Estefan has helped popularize Latin music around the world. He has received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Songwriters Hall of Fame. Gloria Estefan Gloria Estefan is a singer, song- writer, actor, and entrepreneur who introduced Latin music to a global audience. The Cuban-American lead singer of the Miami Sound Machine has had chart topping hits such as “Conga,” “Rhythm is Gonna Get You,” and “Anything for You.” Estefan has won seven Grammy Awards and is one of the best-selling music artists of all time, having sold more than 100 million records world- wide. She is an inductee to the Latin Songwriters Hall of Fame and a recip- ient of the Ellis Island Medal of Honor. Billy Frank, Jr. (posthumous) Billy Frank, Jr. was a tireless advo- cate for Indian treaty rights and envi- ronmental stewardship, whose activism paved the way for the “Boldt decision,” which reaffirmed tribal co- management of salmon resources in the state of Washington. Frank led effective “fish-ins,” which were mod- eled after sit-ins of the civil rights movement, during the tribal “fish wars” of the 1960s and 1970s. His magnetic personality and tireless advocacy over more than five decades made him a revered figure both domestically and abroad. Frank was the recipient of many awards, includ- ing the Martin Luther King, Jr. Distinguished Service Award for Humanitarian Achievement. Lee Hamilton Lee Hamilton has been one of the most influential voices on internation- al relations and American national security over the course of his more than 40 year career. From 1965 to 1999, he served Indiana in the United States House of Representatives, where his chairmanships included the Committee on Foreign Affairs, the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, and the Select Committee to Investigate Covert Arms Transactions with Iran. Since retiring from Congress, Hamilton has been involved in efforts to address some of our nation’s most high profile home- land security and foreign policy chal- lenges. He served as Vice Chairman of the 9/11 Commission and Co- Chairman of the Iraq Study Group. Katherine G. Johnson Katherine G. Johnson is a pioneer in American space history. A NASA mathematician, Johnson’s computa- tions have influenced every major space program from Mercury through the Shuttle program. Johnson was hired as a research mathematician at the Langley Research Center with the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), the agency that preceded NASA, after they opened hiring to African-Americans and women. Johnson exhibited exception- al technical leadership and is known especially for her calculations of the 1961 trajectory for Alan Shepard’s flight (first American in space), the 1962 verification of the first flight cal- culation made by an electronic com- puter for John Glenn’s orbit (first American to orbit the earth), and the 1969 Apollo 11 trajectory to the moon. Willie Mays Willie Mays was a professional baseball player, spending most of his 22 seasons as a center fielder for the New York and San Francisco Giants. Mays ended his career with 660 home runs, making him the fifth all-time record-holder. Known as “The Say Hey Kid,” Mays was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1979 and landed on MLB’s All-Time team. In 1951, Mays became one of the first African-American players in Major League Baseball history and won the Rookie of the Year award. Mays also served his country in the United States Army. Barbara Mikulski Barbara Mikulski is a lifelong pub- lic servant, who has held elected office since 1971. She became the longest serving female Senator in 2011, the longest serving woman in Congress in 2012, and the first female Senator to chair the Senate Appropriations Committee in 2012. Applying what she witnessed in her early career as a social worker and community activist in Baltimore, Maryland to her time in office, Senator Mikulski championed the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, and helped establish the NIH Office of Research on Women’s Health to include women in federally-funded health research protocols. Itzhak Perlman Itzhak Perlman is a treasured con- ductor and sought-after teacher. Among his many achievements are four Emmy Awards, 16 Grammy Awards, and the 2008 Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. He was awarded a National Medal of Arts in 2000 and a Kennedy Center Honor in 2003. A native of Israel, he came to the United States at a young age and was introduced to Americans broadly when he appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1958. Mr. Perlman made his Carnegie Hall debut in 1963 when he was 18. In addition to performing internationally and recording the clas- sical music for which he is best known, Perlman has also played jazz, including an album made with jazz pianist Oscar Peterson. William Ruckelshaus William D. Ruckelshaus is a dedi- cated public servant who has worked tirelessly to protect public health and combat global challenges like climate change. As the first and fifth Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, under Presidents Nixon and Reagan, he not only shaped the guiding principles of the agency, but also worked diligently to bring the public into the decision making process. Stephen Sondheim Stephen Sondheim is one of the country’s most influential theater com- posers and lyricists. His work has helped define American theater with shows such as Company, West Side Story, Gypsy, Sweeney Todd, Sunday in the Park with George, and Into the Woods. Sondheim has received eight Grammy Awards, eight Tony Awards, an Academy Award, and the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Steven Spielberg Steven Spielberg is an American film director, producer, philanthropist, and entrepreneur. Spielberg’s films include blockbusters such as Jaws, Jurassic Park, E.T.: The Extra- Terrestrial, and the Indiana Jones series, as well as socially conscious works Schindler’s List,Saving Private Ryan, Lincoln, and his newest film Bridge of Spies. A three-time Academy Award winner, Spielberg is widely considered one of the most influential filmmakers in cinematic history. Barbra Streisand Barbra Streisand is one of our Nation’s most gifted talents. Her body of work includes extraordinary singing, acting, directing, producing, songwriting, and she is one of the few performers to receive an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and a Tony. Her per- formance in 1968’s Funny Girl endeared her to Americans for genera- tions, and she won her first Academy Award for her role in that film. In 1984, she became the first woman to win a Golden Globe for Best Director, which she won for the motion picture Yentl. Streisand is also a recipient of four Peabody Awards, in addition to the National Medal of Arts and Kennedy Center Honors. James Taylor As a recording and touring artist, James Taylor has touched people with his warm baritone voice and distinctive style of guitar-playing for more than 40 years, while setting a precedent to which countless young musicians have aspired. Over the course of his celebrat- ed songwriting and performing career, Taylor has sold more than 100 million albums, earning gold, platinum and multi-platinum awards for classics ranging from Sweet Baby James in 1970 to October Road in 2002. Variety LOS ANGELES: Country singers Chris Stapleton and Eric Church kept pop singer Ellie Goulding from the top spot on the weekly U.S. Billboard 200 album chart on Monday. Stapleton’s “Traveller” spent its second consecutive week at No. 1 with 124,000 album units sold in the week ending Nov. 12, according to figures from Nielsen SoundScan. Church’s “Mr. Misunderstood” climbed one spot to No. 2 with 65,000 units sold. Both Stapleton and Church saw boosts in sales following their appearances and wins at the Country Music Awards earlier this month. (RTRS) COPENHAGEN, Denmark: The European Broadcasting Union says Australia has been invited to submit an entry to next year’s Eurovision Song Contest, taking place in Stockholm. Spokesman Jon Ola Sand says in a statement the glitzy song fest “has the potential to evolve organically into a truly global event,” adding Australian attendance “is an exciting step in that direction.” Australia competed in the 60th edition in Vienna in May as a one-off celebration because of its “long tradition of broadcast- ing the show.” For the 2016 event, Australian broad- caster SBS will not be guaranteed a finals place as it was in Vienna. Instead, Australia’s entry will have to earn a spot via the semifinals. The popular extravaganza is known for its eclectic lineup of techno beats, love songs and pop tunes. (AP) KUALALUMPUR: Australian metalcore band I Killed The Prom Queen has been released from a Malaysian immigration detention centre after being held for per- forming without valid permits, one of its members said. Guitarist Jona Weinhofen said on Twitter the band was freed without charge. “Freedom,” he tweeted Monday. “A lot of press is stating we were deported. For the record we were released with no action against us.” He added that the head of Malaysia’s Immigration Department apologised, but said the band would not likely be back in Malaysia any time soon. “Sorry Malaysia but after this horrible experience I don’t think we will return in a hurry,” he tweeted. (AFP) LONDON: Prince has joined Irish band U2 and American group the Foo Fighters and other entertainers in cancelling con- certs in France, and elsewhere in Europe, following the carnage at a Paris concert venue on Friday. Vienna’s Wiener Konzerthaus, announcing that he would not appear on Nov. 24 as planned, said on its website, “Due to the tragic events in Paris, the tour promoter has decided to postpone the upcoming European tour until further notice.” (RTRS) NEW YORK: Singer Jazzmeia Horn has won the Thelonious Monk Institute Jazz Competition. Horn won the competition finals Sunday night at Los Angeles’ Dolby Theatre after performing the standards “Moanin’” and “Detour Ahead.” She’ll receive a $25,000 scholarship and record- ing contract with the Concord Music Group. Originally from Dallas, the 23-year-old Horn also won the Sarah Vaughan International Jazz Vocal Competition two years ago. The evening also featured a gala con- cert honoring Quincy Jones, who was pre- sented the Monk Institute’s humanitarian award by pianist Herbie Hancock. (AP) Stapleton Church Music Sara seeks change Get ‘Eagles’ to No. 1: UK fans LOS ANGELES, Nov 17, (Agencies): Fans of the California- based rock band Eagles of Death Metal, whose Paris show was turned into a massacre by gunmen who stormed the concert, have mounted a social media campaign to boost downloads of the band’s newly recorded track “Save a Prayer”. A Facebook page titled “Eagles of Death Metal for No. 1” was launched over the weekend, according to the site, by a handful of British- based “regular gig-goers” with no ties to the band’s organization, its manage- ment, market- ing or music label. A compan- ion Twitter page was also established. They urged fans to show solidar- ity by purchasing “Save a Prayer”, a cover version of a 1982 Duran Duran single, from music sites like Amazon.com and iTunes and by playing the track on the Spotify music streaming website. Organizers said they were aim- ing to drive the song to the top of the British pop singles charts this week, and that the track already had hit No. 1 on Amazon and iTunes rock charts within 24 hours. “Save a Prayer” is the 10th track among 11 songs recorded by the band on its fourth album, “Zipper Down,” which was released in October to mostly positive reviews. “Zipper Down” ranked 6 on Amazon’s US roster of best-selling rock albums and at No. 3 on iTunes’ equivalent chart on Monday — an impressive showing for a release that according to Nielsen SoundScan had sold a mea- ger 12,000 album downloads and CDs in the United States before Friday’s tragedy. The band, which also goes by the acronym EODM, was on stage Friday night at the Bataclan concert hall in Paris when gunmen opened fire with automatic rifles, killing scores of people in the largest loss of life in the attacks across Paris. All the musicians escaped unharmed, according to relatives reached by Reuters over the week- end. But at least one member of the band’s entourage, merchandising manager Nick Alexander, 36, was killed, his family said in a statement on Saturday. She’s got a new album out with brand-new music, but Sara Bareilles has pulled it all from her past. The singer-songwriter of such hits as “Brave” and “Love Song” has changed gears entirely to write eclectic music for the Broadway- bound stage musical “Waitress.” “This is the oldest part of me. This is the part that got suppressed as I was a young singer-songwriter in LA and just barely getting a foothold,” she said. Bareilles adored musical theater growing up but had to shelve her more quirky songwriting instincts to become palatable to a main- stream audience. “When you’re trying to make a first impression, sometimes it’s nice to simplify and to just help your audience distill your expression so they can understand it,” she said. “Now, it’s like the gloves are off.” The new album — her fourth stu- dio CD, which debuted at No. 10 on Billboard 200 albums chart this week — is just part of a creative period for Bareilles, who also has her first book out and is preparing to dive back into her new songs to ready them for a spring Broadway debut. After 14 years in Los Angeles, she moved to New York three years ago following a “mini-hiatus” here, finding inspiration in a nonstop, exciting city. “I had a very comfortable life — wonderful friends, cute little house near the beach. And I just felt kind of uninspired. So, it was time for a change,” she said. One of those changes came in the form of Tony Award-director Diane Paulus, who was creating a musical from the 2007 film “Waitress” about a waitress and pie maker trapped in a small-town diner and a loveless marriage. “When I was thinking of creating a musical version of this movie, I just had this gut instinct that we needed a composer who would cap- ture the indie film quality of the original movie. That led me to Sara,” said Paulus. “Lucky for all of us in the theater world, she actu- ally wanted to write a musical.” That’s because Bareilles did community theater and grew up on the cast albums of “The Sound of Music,” “Annie,” “The Secret Garden” and “A Chorus Line.” (“Those are my desert island records,” she said.) Alexander

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Page 1: Spielberg, Streisand for Presidential Medal · Spielberg, Streisand for Presidential Medal ... Steven Spielberg, Barbra Streisand, Stephen Sondheim, Gloria Estefan and James Taylor

ARAB TIMES, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2015

23NEWS/FEATURES

Madonna performs in concert on Nov 16, in Herning. (AFP)

In this June 4, 1995 file photo, HaroldPrince holds his Tony Award for bestdirector in a musical for ‘Show Boat’, atBroadway’s Minskoff Theater in NewYork. Prince, 87, the most decoratedTony Award-winner in history, directs‘Prince of Broadway’, which takesaudiences through his numerousaward-winning productions. The showfeatures a 10-person cast that performsnippets from many of the shows thathave earned Prince a record 21 Tonys,including ‘Cabaret’, ‘Evita’, ‘Phantomof the Opera’, ‘Kiss of the SpiderWoman’ and ‘Sweeney Todd.’ It hasreceived a sold-out reception in Japanand Prince hopes it will soon grace a

Broadway stage. (AP)

Honors

Posthumous honors for Berra, Chisholm

Spielberg, Streisand for Presidential MedalLOS ANGELES, Nov 17, (RTRS):Steven Spielberg, Barbra Streisand,Stephen Sondheim, Gloria Estefan andJames Taylor are among the recipientsof this year’s Presidential Medal ofFreedom, to be presented at the WhiteHouse by President Obama on Nov. 24.

Other recipients include veteransactivist Bonnie Carroll, music produc-er Emilio Estefan, former Rep LeeHamilton, NASA mathematicianKatherine G. Johnson, baseball legendWillie Mays, Sen. Barbara Mikulski(D-Md.), conductor Itzhak Perlmanand former EPA administrator WilliamRuckelshaus. Posthumous honors willgo to Yogi Berra; Shirley Chisholm,the first African American womanelected to Congress; Indian treatyrights activist Billy Frank Jr. andhuman rights leader Minoru Yasui.

The Medal of Freedom is the WhiteHouse’s highest civilian honor.

The list of recipients of each year’sMedal of Freedom usually includes ahandful from entertainment. MerylStreep and Stevie Wonder were amongthe recipients in 2014. Sondheim wasa recipient last year, but could notmake the ceremony, and Obama saidback then that he would receive thehonor at the 2015 event.

The White House’s full descriptionsof the recipients are below:

Yogi Berra (posthumous)Yogi Berra spent over 40 years as a

professional baseball catcher, manag-er, and coach. Widely regarded as oneof the greatest catchers in baseball his-tory — and an all-time Yankee great— Berra was an 18-time All-Star and10-time World Series Champion whowas elected to the Baseball Hall ofFame in 1972. Always quick witted,Berra was famous for his “Yogi-isms,”teaching us all that we can observe alot just by watching. Berra was also alifelong ambassador for inclusion insports.

Bonnie CarrollBonnie Carroll is a life-long public

servant who has devoted her life tocaring for our military and veterans.After her husband, Brigadier GeneralTom Carroll, died in an Army C-12plane crash in 1992, Carroll foundedthe Tragedy Assistance Program forSurvivors (TAPS), which providescomprehensive support to thoseimpacted by the death of their militaryhero, bringing healing comfort andcompassionate care to the living lega-cies of our nation’s service and sacri-fice. Carroll is also a retired Major inthe Air Force Reserve.

Shirley Chisholm (posthumous)Shirley Chisholm made history in

1968 by becoming the first African-American woman elected to Congress,beginning the first of seven terms inthe House of Representatives. In 1969she became one of the founding mem-bers of what would become theCongressional Black Caucus. Not sat-isfied, Chisholm went on to make his-tory yet again, becoming the firstmajor-party African-American female

candidate to make a bid for the USpresidency when she ran for theDemocratic nomination in 1972. Shewas a champion of minority educationand employment opportunitiesthroughout her tenure in Congress.

Emilio EstefanEmilio Estefan is a passionate and

visionary music producer, entrepre-neur, author, and songwriter who haswon nineteen Grammy Awards andinfluenced a generation of artists. Asthe founding member of the MiamiSound Machine, and later through adecades-long career producing andshaping the work of countless stars,Estefan has helped popularize Latinmusic around the world. He hasreceived a Lifetime AchievementAward from the Songwriters Hall ofFame.

Gloria EstefanGloria Estefan is a singer, song-

writer, actor, and entrepreneur whointroduced Latin music to a globalaudience. The Cuban-American leadsinger of the Miami Sound Machinehas had chart topping hits such as“Conga,” “Rhythm is Gonna GetYou,” and “Anything for You.”Estefan has won seven GrammyAwards and is one of the best-sellingmusic artists of all time, having soldmore than 100 million records world-wide. She is an inductee to the LatinSongwriters Hall of Fame and a recip-ient of the Ellis Island Medal ofHonor.

Billy Frank, Jr. (posthumous)Billy Frank, Jr. was a tireless advo-

cate for Indian treaty rights and envi-ronmental stewardship, whoseactivism paved the way for the “Boldtdecision,” which reaffirmed tribal co-management of salmon resources inthe state of Washington. Frank ledeffective “fish-ins,” which were mod-eled after sit-ins of the civil rightsmovement, during the tribal “fishwars” of the 1960s and 1970s. Hismagnetic personality and tirelessadvocacy over more than five decadesmade him a revered figure bothdomestically and abroad. Frank wasthe recipient of many awards, includ-ing the Martin Luther King, Jr.Distinguished Service Award forHumanitarian Achievement.

Lee HamiltonLee Hamilton has been one of the

most influential voices on internation-al relations and American nationalsecurity over the course of his morethan 40 year career. From 1965 to1999, he served Indiana in the UnitedStates House of Representatives,where his chairmanships included theCommittee on Foreign Affairs, thePermanent Select Committee onIntelligence, and the Select Committeeto Investigate Covert ArmsTransactions with Iran. Since retiringfrom Congress, Hamilton has beeninvolved in efforts to address some ofour nation’s most high profile home-land security and foreign policy chal-lenges. He served as Vice Chairman of

the 9/11 Commission and Co-Chairman of the Iraq Study Group.

Katherine G. JohnsonKatherine G. Johnson is a pioneer in

American space history. A NASAmathematician, Johnson’s computa-tions have influenced every majorspace program from Mercury throughthe Shuttle program. Johnson washired as a research mathematician atthe Langley Research Center with theNational Advisory Committee forAeronautics (NACA), the agency thatpreceded NASA, after they openedhiring to African-Americans andwomen. Johnson exhibited exception-al technical leadership and is knownespecially for her calculations of the1961 trajectory for Alan Shepard’sflight (first American in space), the1962 verification of the first flight cal-culation made by an electronic com-puter for John Glenn’s orbit (firstAmerican to orbit the earth), and the1969 Apollo 11 trajectory to the moon.

Willie MaysWillie Mays was a professional

baseball player, spending most of his22 seasons as a center fielder for theNew York and San Francisco Giants.Mays ended his career with 660 homeruns, making him the fifth all-timerecord-holder. Known as “The SayHey Kid,” Mays was inducted into theBaseball Hall of Fame in 1979 andlanded on MLB’s All-Time team. In1951, Mays became one of the firstAfrican-American players in MajorLeague Baseball history and won theRookie of the Year award. Mays alsoserved his country in the United StatesArmy.

Barbara MikulskiBarbara Mikulski is a lifelong pub-

lic servant, who has held elected officesince 1971. She became the longestserving female Senator in 2011, thelongest serving woman in Congress in2012, and the first female Senator tochair the Senate AppropriationsCommittee in 2012. Applying whatshe witnessed in her early career as asocial worker and community activistin Baltimore, Maryland to her time inoffice, Senator Mikulski championedthe Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, andhelped establish the NIH Office ofResearch on Women’s Health toinclude women in federally-fundedhealth research protocols.

Itzhak PerlmanItzhak Perlman is a treasured con-

ductor and sought-after teacher.Among his many achievements arefour Emmy Awards, 16 GrammyAwards, and the 2008 GrammyLifetime Achievement Award. He wasawarded a National Medal of Arts in2000 and a Kennedy Center Honor in2003. A native of Israel, he came to theUnited States at a young age and wasintroduced to Americans broadly whenhe appeared on the Ed Sullivan Showin 1958. Mr. Perlman made hisCarnegie Hall debut in 1963 when hewas 18. In addition to performinginternationally and recording the clas-

sical music for which he is bestknown, Perlman has also played jazz,including an album made with jazzpianist Oscar Peterson.

William RuckelshausWilliam D. Ruckelshaus is a dedi-

cated public servant who has workedtirelessly to protect public health andcombat global challenges like climatechange. As the first and fifthAdministrator of the EnvironmentalProtection Agency, under PresidentsNixon and Reagan, he not only shapedthe guiding principles of the agency,but also worked diligently to bring thepublic into the decision makingprocess.

Stephen SondheimStephen Sondheim is one of the

country’s most influential theater com-posers and lyricists. His work hashelped define American theater withshows such as Company, West SideStory, Gypsy, Sweeney Todd, Sundayin the Park with George, and Into theWoods. Sondheim has received eightGrammy Awards, eight Tony Awards,an Academy Award, and the PulitzerPrize for Drama.

Steven SpielbergSteven Spielberg is an American

film director, producer, philanthropist,and entrepreneur. Spielberg’s filmsinclude blockbusters such as Jaws,Jurassic Park, E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial, and the Indiana Jonesseries, as well as socially consciousworks Schindler’s List,Saving PrivateRyan, Lincoln, and his newest filmBridge of Spies. A three-timeAcademy Award winner, Spielberg iswidely considered one of the mostinfluential filmmakers in cinematichistory.

Barbra StreisandBarbra Streisand is one of our

Nation’s most gifted talents. Her bodyof work includes extraordinarysinging, acting, directing, producing,songwriting, and she is one of the fewperformers to receive an Emmy,Grammy, Oscar, and a Tony. Her per-formance in 1968’s Funny Girlendeared her to Americans for genera-tions, and she won her first AcademyAward for her role in that film. In1984, she became the first woman towin a Golden Globe for Best Director,which she won for the motion pictureYentl. Streisand is also a recipient offour Peabody Awards, in addition tothe National Medal of Arts andKennedy Center Honors.

James TaylorAs a recording and touring artist,

James Taylor has touched people withhis warm baritone voice and distinctivestyle of guitar-playing for more than 40years, while setting a precedent towhich countless young musicians haveaspired. Over the course of his celebrat-ed songwriting and performing career,Taylor has sold more than 100 millionalbums, earning gold, platinum andmulti-platinum awards for classicsranging from Sweet Baby James in1970 to October Road in 2002.

Variety

LOS ANGELES: Country singers ChrisStapleton and Eric Church kept popsinger Ellie Goulding from the top spoton the weekly U.S. Billboard 200 albumchart on Monday.

Stapleton’s “Traveller” spent its secondconsecutive week at No. 1 with 124,000album units sold in the week ending Nov.12, according to figures from NielsenSoundScan.

Church’s “Mr. Misunderstood” climbedone spot to No. 2 with 65,000 units sold.Both Stapleton and Church saw boosts insales following their appearances andwins at the Country Music Awards earlierthis month. (RTRS)

❑ ❑ ❑

COPENHAGEN, Denmark: TheEuropean Broadcasting Union saysAustralia has been invited to submit anentry to next year’s Eurovision SongContest, taking place in Stockholm.

Spokesman Jon Ola Sand says in astatement the glitzy song fest “has thepotential to evolve organically into a trulyglobal event,” adding Australian attendance“is an exciting step in that direction.”

Australia competed in the 60th editionin Vienna in May as a one-off celebrationbecause of its “long tradition of broadcast-ing the show.”

For the 2016 event, Australian broad-caster SBS will not be guaranteed a finalsplace as it was in Vienna. Instead,Australia’s entry will have to earn a spotvia the semifinals.

The popular extravaganza is known forits eclectic lineup of techno beats, lovesongs and pop tunes. (AP)

❑ ❑ ❑

KUALALUMPUR: Australian metalcoreband I Killed The Prom Queen has beenreleased from a Malaysian immigrationdetention centre after being held for per-forming without valid permits, one of itsmembers said.

Guitarist Jona Weinhofen said onTwitter the band was freed withoutcharge.

“Freedom,” he tweeted Monday. “A lotof press is stating we were deported. Forthe record we were released with noaction against us.”

He added that the head of Malaysia’sImmigration Department apologised, butsaid the band would not likely be back inMalaysia any time soon.

“Sorry Malaysia but after this horribleexperience I don’t think we will return in

a hurry,” he tweeted. (AFP)❑ ❑ ❑

LONDON: Prince has joined Irish bandU2 and American group the Foo Fightersand other entertainers in cancelling con-certs in France, and elsewhere in Europe,following the carnage at a Paris concertvenue on Friday.

Vienna’s Wiener Konzerthaus,announcing that he would not appear onNov. 24 as planned, said on its website,

“Due to the tragic events in Paris, the tourpromoter has decided to postpone theupcoming European tour until furthernotice.” (RTRS)

❑ ❑ ❑

NEW YORK: Singer Jazzmeia Horn haswon the Thelonious Monk Institute JazzCompetition.

Horn won the competition finalsSunday night at Los Angeles’ DolbyTheatre after performing the standards

“Moanin’” and “Detour Ahead.” She’llreceive a $25,000 scholarship and record-ing contract with the Concord MusicGroup.

Originally from Dallas, the 23-year-oldHorn also won the Sarah VaughanInternational Jazz Vocal Competition twoyears ago.

The evening also featured a gala con-cert honoring Quincy Jones, who was pre-sented the Monk Institute’s humanitarianaward by pianist Herbie Hancock. (AP)Stapleton Church

MusicSara seeks change

Get ‘Eagles’ to No. 1: UK fansLOS ANGELES, Nov 17,(Agencies): Fans of the California-based rock band Eagles of DeathMetal, whose Paris show wasturned into a massacre by gunmenwho stormed the concert, havemounted a social media campaignto boost downloads of the band’snewly recorded track “Save aPrayer”.

A Facebook page titled “Eaglesof Death Metal for No. 1” waslaunched over the weekend,according to the site, by a handful

of British-based “regulargig-goers”with no ties tothe band’sorganization,its manage-ment, market-ing or musiclabel.

A compan-ion Twitterpage was alsoestablished.

They urged fans to show solidar-ity by purchasing “Save a Prayer”,a cover version of a 1982 DuranDuran single, from music sites likeAmazon.com and iTunes and byplaying the track on the Spotifymusic streaming website.

Organizers said they were aim-ing to drive the song to the top ofthe British pop singles charts thisweek, and that the track already hadhit No. 1 on Amazon and iTunesrock charts within 24 hours.

“Save a Prayer” is the 10th trackamong 11 songs recorded by theband on its fourth album, “ZipperDown,” which was released inOctober to mostly positive reviews.

“Zipper Down” ranked 6 onAmazon’s US roster of best-sellingrock albums and at No. 3 oniTunes’ equivalent chart onMonday — an impressive showingfor a release that according toNielsen SoundScan had sold a mea-ger 12,000 album downloads andCDs in the United States beforeFriday’s tragedy.

The band, which also goes by theacronym EODM, was on stageFriday night at the Bataclan concerthall in Paris when gunmen openedfire with automatic rifles, killingscores of people in the largest lossof life in the attacks across Paris.

All the musicians escapedunharmed, according to relativesreached by Reuters over the week-end. But at least one member of theband’s entourage, merchandisingmanager Nick Alexander, 36, waskilled, his family said in a statementon Saturday.

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She’s got a new album out withbrand-new music, but SaraBareilles has pulled it all from herpast.

The singer-songwriter of suchhits as “Brave” and “Love Song”has changed gears entirely to writeeclectic music for the Broadway-bound stage musical “Waitress.”

“This is the oldest part of me.This is the part that got suppressedas I was a young singer-songwriterin LA and just barely getting afoothold,” she said.

Bareilles adored musical theatergrowing up but had to shelve hermore quirky songwriting instinctsto become palatable to a main-stream audience.

“When you’re trying to make afirst impression, sometimes it’s niceto simplify and to just help youraudience distill your expression sothey can understand it,” she said.“Now, it’s like the gloves are off.”

The new album — her fourth stu-dio CD, which debuted at No. 10 onBillboard 200 albums chart this week— is just part of a creative period forBareilles, who also has her first bookout and is preparing to dive back intoher new songs to ready them for aspring Broadway debut.

After 14 years in Los Angeles,she moved to New York three yearsago following a “mini-hiatus” here,finding inspiration in a nonstop,exciting city.

“I had a very comfortable life —wonderful friends, cute little housenear the beach. And I just felt kindof uninspired. So, it was time for achange,” she said.

One of those changes came in theform of Tony Award-director DianePaulus, who was creating a musicalfrom the 2007 film “Waitress”about a waitress and pie makertrapped in a small-town diner and aloveless marriage.

“When I was thinking of creatinga musical version of this movie, Ijust had this gut instinct that weneeded a composer who would cap-ture the indie film quality of theoriginal movie. That led me toSara,” said Paulus. “Lucky for allof us in the theater world, she actu-ally wanted to write a musical.”

That’s because Bareilles didcommunity theater and grew up onthe cast albums of “The Sound ofMusic,” “Annie,” “The SecretGarden” and “A Chorus Line.”(“Those are my desert islandrecords,” she said.)

Alexander