PRESS CONTACT:  Richard W. Hatter, (212) 687-4470

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 1, 2005

JOHN SIMON GUGGENHEIM MEMORIAL FOUNDATION

CELEBRATES 80th ANNIVERSARY

The John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation will celebrate its 80th anniversary with a literary reading featuring twenty-two of America’s most important writers, all of whom are Guggenheim Fellows. The event, which is free and open to the public, will be held at the Great Hall of the Cooper Union on Thursday, March 31st, beginning at 7:00 p.m. This will be the first time in the history of the Foundation that a reading by Fellows is being offered to the general public.

The roster of illustrious readers will include playwrights and performance artists, such as Eric Bogosian (Drinking in America), Karen Finley (Return of the Chocolate-Smeared Woman), and Wendy Wasserstein (The Heidi Chronicles). It will highlight some of our most important prose writers, such as Shirley Hazzard (The Great Fire), Oscar Hijuelos (The Mambo Kings), Jamaica Kincaid (Autobiography of My Mother), Jhumpa Lahiri (The Namesake), Chang-Rae Lee (A Gesture Life), Joyce Carol Oates (We Were the Mulvaneys), and Grace Paley (The Collected Stories). It will feature some of our most valuable poets, such as Billy Collins (Sailing Alone Around the Room), Galway Kinnell (A New Selected Poems), and Sharon Olds (Strike Sparks). The poet Edward Hirsch (Lay Back the Darkness), who is president of the Foundation, will act as master of ceremonies.

Since 1925, the Foundation has earned an enviable reputation for identifying exceptionally gifted men and women whose contribution to our nation's educational and cultural well_being has been profound. The distinguished critic Alfred Kazin echoed these sentiments: "The Guggenheim Foundation has by its support of the individual and by its concern with talent done more for American thought, learning, and art than any other foundation in the United States." There is unusually persuasive evidence to support these comments on the Foundation's record of identifying and supporting talented individuals. Over 85 Fellows have gone on to win the Nobel Prize, while nearly 200 have been awarded Pulitzer Prizes.

Over the years, the Foundation has supported, at various stages in their careers, nearly 15,500 scientists, scholars, and creative artists with grants totaling over $230 million. Please help us spread the word about this ground-breaking event.

Additional Readers: Jonathan Ames (The Extra Man); Nicholas Christopher (Crossing the Equator: New and Selected Poems); Mary Gordon (Pearl); Jessica Hagedorn (Dogeaters);
Mary Karr (The Liar’s Club); Pat Oleszko (Don’t Touch Me Here); Gerald Stern (American Sonnets); and Edmund White (The Married Man).


Website: http://www.gf.org