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What Art Fraudster Inigo Philbrick Has To Say For Himself Now That He’s Out Of Prison

“I’m obviously in no position to do anything other than say how sorry I am. But there is a small part of me that thinks: what about all the good deals? … The ambition is to get back to doing what I was doing. I was a great art dealer.” - The Guardian

Will At The Center Of A Shakespeare Controversy Has Been Located After 150 Years

A will that has been lost for more than 150 years and was at the centre of a bitter legal battle by William Shakespeare’s family over who owned the playwright’s final home has been unearthed in an unlabelled box at the National Archives. - The Guardian

This Man Has Built A Career Out Of Talking To Leprechauns

“Now a hale 81, Kevin Woods calls himself Ireland’s last leprechaun whisperer, a title that reflects the weekly conversations he says he still carries on with them. But he’s more precisely a leprechaun promoter, building a tidy business from books, merchandise and guided tours of (a) cozy leprechaun cavern.” - The New York Times

Data: Are Art Historians Now More Employable Than Computer Scientists?

According to data released this year by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, recent art history graduates nationwide were more employed than computer science graduates, at a rate of 3% and 6.1%, respectively. - Hyperallergic

Who Are The Generals In The Trump White House’s Culture War?

Since he returned to the White House, Trump has appointed himself chairman of the Kennedy Center, revived the Garden of Heroes statuary project, and pushed for more control over the Smithsonian, among other things. The allies he’s appointed to oversee these efforts don’t always have arts backgrounds or experience. - The New York Times

Audra McDonald Followed Home From Theater By Autograph-Seeker

She says that on Saturday, following her next-to-last performance in Gypsy on Broadway, an audience member “snuck around and found me the way I had exited from the theater, followed me all the way home to where I was staying, came into the building,” and insisted that “they deserved an autograph.” - Entertainment Weekly

Actor Terence Stamp, 87

“His six decades in the business were peppered with highlights, including his touching portrayal of the transsexual Bernadette in 1994’s The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert. … But it will be his portrayal of Zod in 1978’s Superman and its sequel Superman II that most people associate with Stamp.” - AP

Doris Lockhart Saatchi, Critic And Prominent Art Collector, Has Died At 88

Lockhart Saatchi was an “American-born collector of contemporary art and art writer who played a leading role in giving movements like Minimalism and Pop Art wide exposure in both Britain and the United States.” - The New York Times

He Was Once A Bus Conductor. Now He’s One Of India’s Biggest Movie Stars, With A 50-Year Career.

Rajinikanth even worked briefly as a porter in his youth before checking bus passengers’ tickets. Now he’s Tamil-language cinema’s number-one superstar and one of the best-paid actors in Asia, with 170 film credits, 50,000 fan clubs and even a temple or two dedicated to him. - BBC (MSN)

Leonard Tow, Philanthropist And Cable TV Magnate, Dead At 97

“Besides (the 131-seat Tow Theater at Lincoln Center, he) funded a performing arts center at Brooklyn College; journalism programs at Columbia University and City University of New York; the Tow Center for Developmental Oncology at Memorial Sloan Kettering; and the Tow Youth Justice Institute in West Haven, Conn.” - The New York Times

Trump Announces This Year’s Kennedy Center Honorees, Says He Will Host Show

By making the announcement of honorees himself, Trump is taking on the role of producer/showman, elevating the attention to the show, which has aired on CBS since its origin yet is hardly a ratings blockbuster. - Deadline

Richard Longo On Being An American Artist

He became so ubiquitous that, as he put it in Interview magazine last year, “I was one of the artists that was blamed for the ’80s.” - The New York Times

George C. White, Founder Of Eugene O’Neill Theater Center, Is Dead At 89

“Mr. White had an immeasurable impact on the theatre industry through the Center, kickstarting the careers of countless playwrights, performers, directors, composers, and more.” - Playbill

Arts Patron Christophe de Menil, 92

For two decades, Ms. de Menil was a costume designer for the avant-garde theater director Robert Wilson, who died on July 31. An art collector herself, she was a patron of Willem de Kooning as well as the choreographer Twyla Tharp. She introduced the Los Angeles architect Frank Gehry to New York. - The New York Times

Sheila Jordan, 96, “An Impishly Imposing Jazz-Vocal Titan”

“Jordan was that rarest bird, a singer — a white singer, a ‘chick singer’ — who earned the trust and admiration of geniuses like Mingus and Parker. ‘Charlie Parker referred to her ‘million-dollar ears’ and other jazzmen would always include her in their exceedingly small list of real jazz singers,’ wrote Nat Hentoff.” - The Gig

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