Miami Herald (Sunday)

Maggie Pelleyá went on the radio and changed Miami

- BY HOWARD COHEN hcohen@miamiheral­d.com

‘‘ THE ARTS ARE IN MOURNING. WE SHALL NOT SEE THE LIKES OF MAGGIE ANYTIME SOON. I WILL MISS HER FOREVER.

Maggie Pelleyá’s more than 40 years guiding Miami community radio station WDNA couldn’t have had a more inauspicio­us start.

When Pelleyá, the station’s general manager since 1994, started with WDNA as a volunteer in the early 1980s, its studios were housed inside a weather-worn semi-truck trailer that squatted in a lime grove in South MiamiDade farmland.

“Bargain-basement radio,” WDNA’s then-president told the Miami Herald in 1983 while on the air as he shooed off ants that were on the mixing board and had been foraging for crumbs in the shag carpet He, too, foraged but for a vinyl jazz LP to slap on the turntable. Most of the “really good records” had been pilfered by WDNA’s DJs, he said, and none of them had showed up to work that day.

“Good afternoon. You’re listening to WDNA, community radio. I’m Tom, sitting in for whoever’s supposed to be here, and isn’t,” he announced to whoever was listening 40 years ago.

But Pelleyá found a devoted audience, stamping WDNA 88.9 FM with the slogan “Serious Jazz Miami.” It is a testament to her leadership.

“Lots of folks have contribute­d and been instrument­al at WDNA throughout the years, but truly Maggie Pelleyá is the reason we all have a place to be called WDNA,” the station, which is now in a studio building in the 2900 block of banyan tree-lined Coral Way, posted on its website in tribute.

Pelleyá died suddenly on Tuesday at 72, the station and her family said. A cause has not been given.

PELLEYÁ AS EDUCATOR

“She taught us to be insatiably curious, deeply patient, and encouraged us to explore this wondrous world,” her son, Wifredo Fernández, told the Miami Herald on Friday.

“She taught us the importance of participat­ing in democracy because she witnessed its antithesis, of defending the voice of the individual, of the complexity of creative expression, of the beauty and joy of experienci­ng art in all its forms, of preserving nature, the power of positive thinking, and the simple pleasures that life offers. She was a modern renaissanc­e woman, cross-generation­al, and just so damn cool,” Fernández said.

When Nat Chediak, founder of the Miami Film Festival, gravitated to producing Latin jazz records, he turned to his dear old friend and her audience of jazz devotees at WDNA.

Chediak — who scored three Grammy awards and three Latin Grammys starting in 2002 for his work on albums by Bebo Valdés and Chucho Valdés — met Pelleyá when he ran the independen­t Cinematheq­ue theater in Coral Gables in the 1970s. Pelleyá was working reservatio­ns for Delta Airlines, predating both WDNA and the Miami Film Festival.

“Maggie’s easygoing demeanor belied a steely resolve to find a home in South Florida airwaves for ‘America’s classical music,’ which is what jazz meant to her and means to her listeners,” Chediak said.

“For decades, she struggled out of a second-story walk-up near Westcheste­r to find a proper location and increased frequency for WDNA, which she accomplish­ed when the station moved to its present headquarte­rs on Coral Way,” Chediak said.

CULTURAL EXPOSURE

Her 23-year Delta career — which ended after the birth of her second son, Diego, and after WDNA managers promoted her from volunteer to her management position in 1994 — provided a training ground for the Havana-born Pelleyá.

Born May 14, 1950, Pelleyá came to Miami at age 10 in December 1960. She lived with family friends until her mother, Margarita Madrazo, could join her in 1961. Her father, Jose Luis Pelleyá, a lawyer who owned Union Radio Cadena Nacional in Cuba, had exposed his eager 6-yearold daughter to the possibilit­ies of a DJ booth and broadcasti­ng. He was politicall­y imprisoned on the island until he arrived in Miami in 1970.

By then Pelleyá was 20 and soon to embark on a career with Delta in October 1972.

“That helped me to travel a lot. Traveling opens your horizons in an incredible way, and that has helped me to learn to appreciate the richness of all the cultures that surround me,” Pelleyá told el Nuevo

Herald in a 1995 interview.

As Pelleyá and her husband, Luis Wifredo Fernández, who had studied broadcasti­ng at Miami Dade College, volunteere­d and produced a music program, “Para Ustedes,” at WDNA, for a couple of years, she eventually rose to station general manager.

At WDNA, she continued to absorb advice about radio from her father who had reestablis­hed his law career in the States.

Pelleyá ensured those cultural voices that she had heard on her travels — a mélange of English, Spanish, French, Creole, Urdu and other languages — would be heard and celebrated through jazz and world music for the station’s South Florida listeners.

“Being at the head of a radio station is a huge responsibi­lity because you are the one who holds the reins and the successes and failures will fall on your shoulders,” Pelleyá told el Nuevo Herald.

“Public radio differs from commercial radio in that it is an educationa­l medium,” Pelleyá once said. “Our purpose is to keep alive the cultures that coexist in Miami that are not represente­d in other stations, to highlight their richness, so that they are not lost.”

WDNA’S SUPPORT FOR THE ARTS

Chediak and listeners who are mourning her understand the challenge.

“There are a small number of individual­s — like Michael Tilson Thomas and Edward Villella — who raised the bar for the arts in our community. Unlike them, Maggie was not an artist. But working with an army of volunteers and educationa­l institutio­ns like the Frost School of Music [at the University of Miami] she made it possible for musicians to prosper and grow, both in the WDNA studio and in the city at large. The arts are in mourning. We shall not see the likes of Maggie anytime soon. I will miss her forever,” Chediak said.

“I got to know Maggie well in in 2003 when I started my band PALO!,” said Miami Dade College music professor Steve Roitstein, who leads the Miami Afro-Cuban funk band.

“She facilitate­d us with her graceful generosity in that initial period and ensured that WDNA supported my project throughout the years. With open arms, Maggie welcomed my Miami Dade College music business students as interns at the station, offering excellent learning opportunit­ies to a diverse group of young people,” he said.

“She never sought the spotlight, instead nurturing and highlighti­ng those who were lucky enough to be around her. But her kindness, intelligen­ce, and perpetual efforts for the causes she believed in delivered tangible and lasting results to the arts world internatio­nally. Our community benefited immeasurab­ly from her guidance of WDNA, a legacy that will outlast all of us,” Roitstein said.

Around 2008, WDNA started presenting jazz concerts in its gallery and performanc­e space at the Coral Way property. The station’s monthly Jazz Encounters events gave middle- and high-school students the opportunit­y to jam with profession­als.

“We used to think jazz was strictly for gray-haired folks,” an enthusiast­ic Pelleyá told the Herald in 2014. “But there are 20somethin­gs and even teenagers. It’s definitely grown, overall.”

The Jazz Encounters event last Friday at WDNA’s studio at 2921 Coral Way was designed as a tribute to Pelleyá.

SURVIVORS AND SERVICES

Pelleyá’s survivors include her husband of 45 years, her two sons and sister Maria “Mimi” Pelleyá. She was predecease­d by her parents and her brother, Jose Luis Pelleyá.

A Mass will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday, May 24, at St. Augustine Catholic Church, 1400 Miller Rd., Coral Gables.

The family requests that donations in Pelleyá’s honor be made via WDNA.org.

Nat Chediak

Howard Cohen: 305-376-3619, @HowardCohe­n

IN 1998, HE BECAME PRESIDENT OF THE KNIGHT FOUNDATION, WHICH IS BASED IN MIAMI.

brother, Thomas Hennen Carter, died at 19.

Hodding Carter III attended Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire before graduating from Greenville High School in 1953. He graduated from Princeton University in 1953 and married Margaret Ainsworth Wolfe. They had four children before divorcing in 1978.

Carter later married Patricia M. Derian, a Civil Rights Movement veteran who sought to transform U.S. foreign policy as President Carter’s assistant secretary of state for human rights and humanitari­an affairs.

After she died in 2016, Carter married again in November 2019 to journalist and author Patricia Ann O’Brien after the two connected during a reunion at the Nieman Foundation for Journalism.

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com | May 6, 2021 ?? WDNA 88.9 FM General Manager Maggie Pelleyá sits in the station’s Coral Way building. ‘Lots of folks have contribute­d and been instrument­al at WDNA throughout the years, but truly Maggie Pelleyá is the reason we all have a place to be called WDNA,’ the station said.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com | May 6, 2021 WDNA 88.9 FM General Manager Maggie Pelleyá sits in the station’s Coral Way building. ‘Lots of folks have contribute­d and been instrument­al at WDNA throughout the years, but truly Maggie Pelleyá is the reason we all have a place to be called WDNA,’ the station said.

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