EFTA00631783.pdf
PDF Source (No Download)
Extracted Text (OCR)
From: Lisa New
To: Jeffrey Epstein sleevacation@gmail.eorn>
Subject: Poetry Update and Thank You
Date: Wed, 02 Dec 2015 15:17:58 +0000
Dear Jeffrey,
May I drop by before the New Year (perhaps on the 9th, or on the 17th or 18th?) to get your advice about my renewal of the
Templeton campaign, and also my needs in the coming year for Poetry in America? Below is the letter I'm sending out to my
friends and supporters, and at the bottom a message just for you....
-Lisa
That you are receiving this letter means that you are among a special community of friends whose support— financial, moral,
intellectual, logistical— has allowed my initiative, Poetry in America, to realize what seemed, a year ago, almost certainly too
ambitious a vision. That vision was to produce the highest quality educational video on American poetry, creating a
body of humanities content capable of reaching a broad community of learners: formal and informal, online and
residential, young and old, American and international. And it was to begin— rapidly— to disseminate and
distribute our work.
Whether you donated to Poetry in America through Filmmaker's Collaborative (our 501c3 fiscal sponsor), through Harvard, or
through WGBH; whether you appeared on camera or talked an elusive friend into appearing on camera to discuss a poem;
whether you lent us your film crew, or provided overnight use of your hotel suite or apartment or of your whole skyscraper;
whether you highlighted our work on your stage, or talked your colleagues into becoming corporate sponsors; whether you
flew to Boston to install state-of-the-art editing and video storage equipment, or asked your children's school to let us film
there; whether you encouraged your family foundation to take an interest in the project, or gave us a lesson in IP, in licensing,
in the rudiments of finance, or of distribution; whether you praised, or gave timely, much-needed criticism— you enabled what
we have done.
Here's what we have to report, and to show, a year later, thanks to your help. Links offer sneak peeks of works -in-progress
across the full portfolio of Poetry in America projects.
• The first eight-episode season of the public television series Poetry in America (a co-production between
WGBH, Emmy Award-winning filmmaker David Grubin, and my own new production company, Verse Video), is now
fully funded and in production, with episodes featuring Bill Clinton Herbie Hancock and Sonia Sanchez on Langston
Hughes, Frank Gehry on Carl Sandburg, Katie Couric on Elizabeth Bishop Nas on Whitman and many more
scheduled for nationwide launch in 2017.
• Poetry in America's many initiatives to reach Middle and High School teachers and their students are taking
root. Our first online course for Middle and High School Teachers, Poetry of the City, will launch this Spring with the
Harvard Graduate School of Education. Companion materials to this course will be made available for free on PBS
LearningMedia. This course is designed to meet the needs of English Language Arts and Social Studies teachers in
the US and internationally.
• We are eager to begin production of The Poetry of Earth, Sea, and Sky. Designed, too, for Middle and High School
teachers, The Poetry of Earth, Sea, and Sky will draw English Language Arts instruction into dialogue with science,
and will include extraordinary footage of the natural world conversations with poets scholars and scientists as well
as footage shot in class and in the field with great teachers.
• A recent partnership with Greenwich Country Day School and the Success Academy Network of charter schools will
provide a base for the production of a new collection of classroom-ready educational material on The Poetry of Art,
EFTA00631783
Sport, and Play. This collection will include discussions on poems filmed everywhere from sports fields to Broadway
theaters, and will feature dancers, athletes, fashion designers, and more.
• With a growing archive of footage capturing teachers and students reading American poems, we are eager to
expand our reach and move into America's schools, disseminating, testing, and learning from teachers and
students using our materials. We hope to be able to begin work evaluating the impact of poetry on literacy levels
and character development and, eventually, to produce a full suite of materials that foster character development
along with intellectual growth.
Working closely with such partners as The Nantucket Project, Nautilus Magazine, The Aspen Ideas Festival, and The Big
Think, and, of course, HarvardX, Harvard's provider of free open online courses, we are continuing to create rich
educational media on poetry for adult learners and lifelong learners. These materials include short form videos such as
this one on Robert Pinsky's 'Shirt" (as featured in The New Yorker), and, this spring, the sixth module of the free seven-part
Poetry In America MOOC, which has registrants in over 150 countries.
Growing rapidly, and outpacing our current staff and infrastructure, Poetry in America has a fundraising goal this year of 2.5
million dollars to fund its expanding group of projects. We've taken a big step, hiring the design agency Threespot to help us
develop our web presence. Our website— to launch early 2016— will eventually serve as an online hub for our TV show and
educational projects. We hope you'll join us then for a virtual launch!
Finally, Jeffrey, you have been such a wonderful supporter of my Poetry in America project. The Leon Black gift changed
everything for me last year. It paid salaries for staff I desperately needed to complete projects (detail below), but first and
foremost, it gave me leverage, enabling me to set down a solid Harvard base for my activities by giving the school something
to point to: this public humanities project among the list of projects the Dean supports. The money did it: as soon as they
heard about the gift, they took my project more seriously. Because of that gift, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, which is
space-stingy, found and rewired a studio space for me to house my video production operation and team. That gift woke up
the Deans to the importance of Harvard's role in producing the highest quality humanities content for the WORLD, and not just
for Harvard students. My main employee has half of her salary paid with these funds, and the foundation of our collection for
PBS LearningMedia is being made with this support. This gift represented one of the most consequential shifts of the last
year, allowing me create content and launch projects this year that make future projects that much more likely. If I can keep
this base sturdy at Harvard, refilling these coffers, I will be that much more able to keep working.
I am also so grateful for the help you gave me in defining my project for Templeton, and, what help you have offered to give in
bringing them around. I have, since Templeton turned me down, gotten funding to produce video on two of the poems.'
proposed to Templeton and to create, and test, that video in schools as I proposed. One of my partners in that project is
Success Academy, where I could also expand my work with Templeton. And there are still other poems that may satisfy their
character criteria more fully, including the third of the poems'. originally proposed and that Joe Biden had agreed to discuss
with me (on parenthood and humility). At this point. IN gaining the platform and the name recognition to be an effective
spokesperson for the foundation on building literacy and character in the schools.
It really means a lot to me, all financial help aside, Jeffrey, that you are rooting for me and thinking about me. You push back a
lot (as Larry does), and it's always annoying but I always learn.
With abundant gratitude,
Lisa
Elisa New
Powell M. Cabot Professor of American Literature
Harvard University
148 Barker Center
12 Quincy Street
Cambridge, MA
02138
EFTA00631784
EFTA00631785
Document Preview
PDF source document
This document was extracted from a PDF. No image preview is available. The OCR text is shown on the left.
This document was extracted from a PDF. No image preview is available. The OCR text is shown on the left.
Extracted Information
Email Addresses
Document Details
| Filename | EFTA00631783.pdf |
| File Size | 207.1 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 8,035 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T23:11:21.710616 |