
John Hearst and
Elizabeth Fondaras |
STELLA ADLER
AWARDS
The Hearsts
Host Soiree
To Celebrate Stella Adler
By Edward T. Callaghan
Photos by Rob Rich
HE
sprawling Bridgehampton aerie, that John
(Bunky) and Barbara
Hearst call home-sweet-home, was the setting for one of the
summer’s most gracious, least pretentious cocktail soirees,
celebrating the life and legacy of a true American treasure, the
late Stella Adler.
The legendary theatrical
family, the Adlers, has influenced American theater over four
generations. The
legacy continues with the internationally famed Stella
Adler Studio of Acting, named for the person many believe was the greatest acting
teacher in the country.

Roy Scheider, Ellen Adler,
Brenda Seimer |
To celebrate the studio’s
2003 awards, the Hearsts and their good pals Roy
and Brenda Scheider
welcomed a Stella
roster of old friends, alumni and supporters to the Hearsts’
wooded enclave for an evening of sparkling conversation, readings
and music, celebrating the spirit of Stella and her vital cultural
center.
Ellen Adler,
kicked off the evening with the announcement of the recipients of
the prestigious awards named in honor of her mother and family:
to Steven Spielberg,
the Jacob Adler Award for courageous contributions to American
culture; to Ruby Dee and Ossie
Davis, the Group Theater Award
for prolific achievement in theater, film and television; and to John
Travolta the highly coveted
Stella Adler Award for consummate interpretation of the
Stanislavski/Adler technique.

Eli Wallach, Frank Langella,
Anne Jackson Wallach |
Roy
Scheider, an alumnus and co-chairman of the famed studio, gave
a short, but powerful, reading from Adler’s late husband, the
esteemed drama critic Harold
Clurman, who with Adler co-founded the ground breaking Group
Theater.
Old family friend Phyllis
Newman read one of Stella’s famous letters of encouragement
to a young student, who clearly took her advice to heart.
The student, Milton
Justice, a successful theatrical producer and now Yale drama
professor, smiled appreciatively at the words written over twenty
years ago by his late mentor. At that moment Stella must have been
there overlooking the potato fields and ocean she so sorely missed
when she went to Hollywood.
Among
the stellar crowd were Elizabeth Fondaras, Frank Langella, Pia Lindstrom, Eli Wallach &
Anne Jackson, John Gruen, Bonnie Pfeifer and Charles Evans, Stan
Herman, the
Marshall Brickmans, Mary Skillern, Kevin Conway, Marcie Bloom,
Cornelia Foss, Gail Furman, Dina Merrill and Ted Hartley, Bob Balaban and
Lynn Grossman, and Mercedes
Ruehl.

Ted Hartley and Dina Merrill |
Joanne
Edelman, director of student affairs, spoke about the schools
planned scholarship programs, expansion of community outreach and
the hoped-for acquisition of a new building for the Harold Cluman
Theater Laboratory.
Fundraising will kick off
on November 17 with a gala dinner/awards ceremony “Stella by
Starlight” at the Rainbow Room in
Manhattan, at which time the 2003 Stella Adler Studio of Acting
Awards will be presented.
Honorary chairman Marlon
Brando and co-chairmen Mike
Medavoy and Roy
Scheider are spearheading the campaign.
A highlight of the
evening is certain to be the star-studded tribute to American
Musical Theater organized by Scheider and esteemed director Gordon
Hunt, father of Oscar winner Helen Hunt. |