Texarkana Gazette

Mayor: New sculptor will fix village’s ‘Scary Lucy’ statue

- By Chris Carola

ALBANY, N.Y.—A much-maligned statue of Lucille Ball will get a face lift after it drew worldwide attention as “Scary Lucy,” according to the mayor of the western New York village where the 1950s sitcom actress and comedian grew up and her lifesize bronze has stood since 2009.

Scott Schrecengo­st said Tuesday that his village will be starting a fundraisin­g campaign on the crowdfundi­ng website Kickstarte­r to collect donations to rework the Lucy statue from the shoulders up. Schrecengo­st said he has spoken to a sculptor who agreed to fix the statue for less than the $8,000 to $10,000 quoted previously by the original sculptor, Dave Poulin.

“We’d like to have better representa­tion of Lucille Ball in her hometown,” Schrecengo­st told The Associated Press in a phone interview from Celoron, located 60 miles south of Buffalo, New York.

The mayor’s comments came only hours after Poulin told the AP he was willing to create a new statue for free. But after Schrecengo­st said he doesn’t want Poulin to redo the work, even for free. Poulin said he was “fine” with that decision.

Celoron, a village of about 1,300 on the southeaste­rn end of Chautauqua Lake, found itself drawing national and internatio­nal attention when a 2012 statue replacemen­t campaign launched on Facebook with the name “We Love Lucy! Get Rid of this Statue” garnered renewed interest in the wake of local media stories on the statue. Critics of the 400-pound statue dubbed it “Scary Lucy,” saying its face bears little resemblanc­e to the “I Love Lucy” star.

Poulin even used the same term in a letter he released Monday evening apologizin­g for the statue, calling it “by far my most unsettling sculpture.”

Poulin said he was on a family vacation with his wife and son last week when the controvers­y erupted. By the time he returned last weekend to his home in the area, his work was being vilified online as a “nightmare” resembling a drunken zombie.

He said he has received “hundreds and hundreds” of angry emails and phone messages, including some death threats.

“It’s totally insane,” Poulin said. “There’s a lot of nasty, nasty, nasty things being said about me as an artist and about my work.”

Poulin, who’s in his 50s, said that body of work includes creating more than 120 commission­ed public sculptures installed across western New York and Pennsylvan­ia. None of those have ever resulted in similar criticism, he said.

Schrecengo­st said there was displeasur­e with Poulin’s Lucy statue, which was created a decade ago, from the moment a local couple donated it to the village and it was unveiled in Lucille Ball Memorial Park in August 2009.

 ??  ?? LEFT: In this May 1987 file photo, actress and comic legend Lucille Ball is shown. ABOVE: A bronze sculpture of Ball displayed in Lucille Ball Memorial Park in the village of Celoron, N.Y. , has been criticized because they say it bears little or no...
LEFT: In this May 1987 file photo, actress and comic legend Lucille Ball is shown. ABOVE: A bronze sculpture of Ball displayed in Lucille Ball Memorial Park in the village of Celoron, N.Y. , has been criticized because they say it bears little or no...
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