The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Oscar winner helps music program

Donations pour in after film named best documentar­y short.

- By Cathy Free Washington Post

Steve Bagmanyan found his calling in a shop of broken instrument­s, tucked away in an industrial section of downtown Los Angeles. But each year, the shop breaks his heart.

Cutbacks have left just 11 people repairing instrument­s for more than a half-million students in Los Angeles public schools. There used to be 60 technician­s supporting the students.

“The work that we do is important and needs to be passed down, but people who do what we do are a dying breed,” said Bagmanyan, who has been on the job for 21 years. “Children are our future, and yet we’re cutting arts and music programs around the country.”

In the past two weeks, though, fortunes seem to be reversing for the repair shop, as Bagmanyan’s silent toiling suddenly got a huge spotlight.

Since “The Last Repair Shop,” a film featuring Bagmanyan and three other instrument technician­s, won an Oscar for best documentar­y short film at the Academy Awards on March 10, people across the country have been donating to a fund to boost instrument repairs and school music programs in Los Angeles.

“The attention has been overwhelmi­ng, and we’re honored,” Bagmanyan said.

Most people didn’t realize the L.A. instrument repair shop existed until the documentar­y came out, he said.

The school district’s repair shop is believed to be the last large in-house program of its kind in the country. Since 1959, it has been offering free instrument­s and repairs across the district, which today has 540,000 students in more than 1,000 schools. The Los Angeles school system is the second-largest in the country.

“For children who live in poverty, public schools are the entities that actually provide (musical) resources and enrichment activities that wealthier families can already afford to provide,” school district superinten­dent Alberto Carvalho said.

In most schools, including those in the country’s largest district, New York City Public Schools, students rely on teachers, volunteers or private repair shops to fix broken musical instrument­s.

“Where does a child get a saxophone, a violin, a clarinet?” Carvalho said. “We’re able to offer that. And we never allow those instrument­s to go silent because they are broken.”

Donations from the fundraiser will be used to hire more instrument repair technician­s, start a student apprentice program, purchase new equipment for the shop and expand music classes, he said.

People already have donated more than $83,000 to The Last Repair Shop Fund, a campaign launched last month by the filmmakers and the Los Angeles Unified School District. That’s just one part of the fundraisin­g effort, which has a campaign goal of $15 million.

“The Last Repair Shop” documentar­y focuses on Bagmanyan and three other dedicated instrument repair specialist­s, weaving their personal stories with comments from students who have found comfort and joy in music.

The public response to the film and the fundraiser has been touching, said Ben Proudfoot, who co-directed the short documentar­y with composer Kris Bowers and is the founder and CEO of Breakwater Studios.

Bowers attended L.A. public schools. “After talking to him, we found out he actually tuned the pianos at my elementary and middle school,” Bowers told an L.A. TV station. “So I definitely directly benefited from their effort to keep music programs in the schools.”

He and Proudfoot accepted their Oscars with 12-year-old Porché Brinker, an L.A. public schools student who is learning to play the violin and is featured in their documentar­y.

In Bowers’ acceptance speech, he talked about the heroes in public schools who often go “unsung, unthanked and unseen.”

“Tonight, you are sung, you are thanked, you are seen,” he said, pointing to the upper balcony where Bagmanyan and the other instrument repair technician­s were seated.

Proudfoot said there was a spike in donations after the Oscars, including from people who benefited from the L.A. music program as children.

“We started with $3,000, and it immediatel­y went up,” he said. “We’re seeing lots of $10 to $100 donations from people who are inspired by what they’re doing in the shop and want to contribute to a dying art form.

Bagmanyan said his cup is full knowing that children might carry a love of music with them for a lifetime.

Getting dropped off at the Academy Awards this year in a school bus with the rest of the crew was another high point.

“When they announced the winner and it all became real, I had this nice, warm feeling of relaxation,” he said.

“I was planning to retire this year. But now I’m going to build the shop back to the level it once was and keep on going for a while.”

 ?? BREAKWATER STUDIOS ?? String instrument repair technician Dana Atkinson is one of four specialist­s employed by the Los Angeles Unified School District featured in the Oscar-winning documentar­y “The Last Repair Shop.” The documentar­y’s win has led to a slew of donations to the shop.
BREAKWATER STUDIOS String instrument repair technician Dana Atkinson is one of four specialist­s employed by the Los Angeles Unified School District featured in the Oscar-winning documentar­y “The Last Repair Shop.” The documentar­y’s win has led to a slew of donations to the shop.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States