DC -- 4th of July Concert @ Sylvan Theater (1981):
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- Description of Pictures: The PBS-covered Fourth of July concerts started this year. I didn't see the big concert by the Capitol though. That was for old fogies. I did the one by the Washington Monument (Sylvan Theater) instead. Those pretty well died out over the years.
From http://www.pbs.org/capitolfourth/concert_highlights_sub3.html :
The Creation of a National Institution
AN INTERVIEW WITH EXECUTIVE PRODUCER JERRY COLBERT
Jerry Colbert founded Capital Concerts, which puts on A Capitol Fourth and has overseen every production since day one.
"It's hard to imagine A Capitol Fourth is over a quarter of a century old," reflected Colbert. "It's a great honor to produce this special event that not only celebrates the birthday of our nation but the ideals we are founded on, and also clearly demonstrates how much unites us as Americans."
How did the original concert in 1981 come about?
In 1979, the National Symphony Orchestra began performing Independence Day concerts on the Capitol lawn. I proposed televising them. It took two years to raise the money for the production. The first concert telecast included conductor Mistislav Rostroprovich and singer Pearl Bailey, and neither had a clue who the other was but they made great music together. E.G. Marshall was the host, and the stage was so small that he had to snake his way through the symphony's violin section, pushing through the chairs, to get to the front. E.G.'s script was on a clipboard held down with rubber bands to keep it from blowing in the wind, and he had to flip the pages himself.
I began to wonder what I'd gotten myself into when I visited the old and rusty PBS TV truck. The director of the MacNeil-Lehrer Show was running it. I noticed that none of the monitors was working and worried how we would be able to do a live show without monitors. He hit the bank of monitors with his hand and they all turned on. I thought, this is not the way to a major live television show! In the beginning, it was chaos because we were learning how to produce a huge musical event as we were presenting it.
What drove you to put it on?
My first thought was that putting on an Independence Day celebration in Washington, D.C. was a natural fit for the country. And through the years, I have been inspired by the spirit of the audience and their elation and joy. When the lawn of the U.S. Capitol is full of hundreds of thousands of people, the National Symphony Orchestra plays the national anthem and everyone is on their feet, it is a tremendously uplifting feeling. There is nothing like celebrating a great July 4th party and the nation's freedom at the people's house.
What things have changed with the concert over the last quarter of a century? I imagine it must have grown in scale.
I had no idea when I started out that it would last this long. The show has grown to be the number one performance program on PBS. We are the major national 4th of July celebration, and we have the best network crew in the country here in Washington, D.C. to put in on. I call it Hollywood on the Potomac because the same people who work on the Grammy's, Country Music Awards and Oscars work on A Capitol Fourth. Over the years the shows have become bigger with more stars and more elaborate production numbers. And it now takes a lot more time and effort to produce. A new stage and band shell was built a few years ago to better protect the symphony and guest artists. We have turned the whole city into our palette with numerous cameras spread out around the national mall. We create through the immediacy of live television an environment where the viewers at home are participants and they feel like they are in Washington, D.C. for the show.
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