The Sun (Lowell)

Arizona State film school named for Sidney Poitier

- — Associated Press — Los Angeles Times

In 1963, Sidney Poitier made a film in Arizona, “Lilies of the Field.” The performanc­e led to a huge milestone: He became the first Black winner of a leadacting Oscar.

Now, Arizona is the site of another milestone for the legendary actor and filmmaker. Arizona State University has named its new film school after him. It was to unveil The Sidney Poitier New American Film School at a ceremony Monday.

The decision to name the school after Poitier, 93, is about much more than an emphasis on diversity, said Michael M. Crow, president of the university, in an interview ahead of the unveiling.

“You’re looking for an icon, a person that embodies everything you stand for,” Crow said. “With Sidney Poitier, it’s his creative energy, his dynamism, his drive, his ambition, the kinds of projects he worked on, the ways in which he advanced his life.

“Look at his life: It’s a story of a person who found a way,” he said of the actor, who was born in Miami and raised in the Bahamas, the son of tomato farmers, before launching a career that went from small, hard-won theater parts to eventual Hollywood stardom. “How do we help other young people find their way?”

The university, which is expanding its existing film program into its own school, says it has invested millions of dollars in technology to create what’s intended to be one of the largest, most accessible and most diverse film schools. Crow said that much like the broader university, the held a test run in October film school will measure after debuting the inventive success not by exclusivit­y concept in June with a but by inclusivit­y. single-song performanc­e before bubbled onlookers for “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert.”

“I don’t want anybody to think this is some kind of (expletive) freak party,” he told Rolling Stone in December. “It’s a very restricted, weird event. But the weirdness is so we can enjoy a concert before putting our families and everybody at risk. I think it’s a bit of a new normal — you might go to a show, you might not, but I think we’re going to be able to work it out.”

Originally planned for December, the “Space Bubble” concerts were postponed after COVID-19 cases began to rise in Oklahoma City.

Flaming Lips pull off ‘space bubble’ concerts

The Flaming Lips pulled off their first full-length space-bubble concerts over the weekend in Oklahoma City, with both the band and audience members sequestere­d in their own zipup bubbles.

The band performed a couple of sold-out shows in promotion of its 2020 album “American Head,” featuring 100 inflatable audience bubbles with enough room for up to three people inside.

Frontman Wayne Coyne, who has been crowd-surfing in the bubbles for years,

 ?? Courtesy Warner Bros. ?? Wayne Coyne, left, and steven drozd of the flaming Lips and the rest of the band played two shows over the weekend in which they and the audience were in ‘space bubbles.’
Courtesy Warner Bros. Wayne Coyne, left, and steven drozd of the flaming Lips and the rest of the band played two shows over the weekend in which they and the audience were in ‘space bubbles.’
 ?? Ap file Photo ?? arizona state university has named its new film school after sidney Poitier.
Ap file Photo arizona state university has named its new film school after sidney Poitier.

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