|
 |
 |

NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
April
Roger Ebert to donate
papers to library at Illinois
Andrea Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
4/29/04
 |
| Photo
by Thompson/McClellan |
| Ebert
collection
Roger Ebert (center), a UI alumnus and Pulitzer Prize-winning
film critic for the Chicago Sun-Times, talks with
guests at a reception held in his honor hosted by
UI president James J. Stukel and his wife, Joan. Ebert
announced at the event his plans to donate a collection
of his papers to the University Library. The event
also kicked off the sixth annual Roger Ebert Overlooked
Film Festival. Jack Valenti (right), president and
CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America,
and Darren Ng, creator of the short film, “The
Scapegoat,” were festival guests. |
|
|
CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — Roger Ebert, the Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic for
the Chicago Sun-Times, will give his papers to his alma mater, the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Ebert, widely regarded as the most visible and the most influential
U.S. film critic, announced his intention to leave his papers to Illinois’
Library at the kickoff of
his sixth annual “Overlooked
Film Festival” in Champaign on April 21.
An Urbana native, Ebert earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism
and communications at Illinois
in 1964. He also did graduate work in English
at Illinois.
Ebert’s papers will be housed in the University
Archives, which also is home to the papers of many U. of I. alumni
who went on to great achievement, including Olympics administrator Avery
Brundage, playwright-screenwriter Samson Raphaelson, journalist James
“Scotty” Reston and sculptor Loredo Taft.
Ebert began his career in journalism in earnest at age 15, as a sportswriter
for the Champaign-Urbana News-Gazette. He continued writing for that
paper during his junior and senior years in high school and his freshman
year at Illinois, moving from sports to the city desk and later to the
state desk.
In the summer of 1961, Ebert joined Illinois’ student paper, the
Daily Illini, writing a weekly
column and working one night a week as night editor. In his junior year
at Illinois, he served as news editor, and in his senior year, as editor-in-chief.
In 1967 – the same year he became film critic for the Sun-Times
– Ebert published a book titled “Illini Century: One Hundred
Years of Campus Life,” (U. of I. Press). The book is a social
history of the university’s first century, based on the files
of the Daily Illini, which also are in the University Archives.
Ebert began his movie review television show with co-host Gene Siskel
in 1976, and Ebert has been nominated for an Emmy many times during
his career. He won the Pulitzer Prize for criticism in 1975 for his
film reviews the previous year.
Ebert is the author of several books, many about the cinema, including
“A Kiss is Still a Kiss,” an anthology of his reviews. He
also has written screenplays, including the screenplay for the cult
classic, “Beyond the Valley of the Dolls” (1970). Ebert
has contributed to many of the country’s top magazines and newspapers.
He also is a lecturer and an artist.
Details about the contents of the new Ebert collection, as well as plans
for acknowledging his gift, will be announced at a later date.
According to university archivist William Maher, who will process and
oversee the new collection, the University Archives already owns some
Ebert material. In 2001, the film critic gave the Archives some 22 cubic
feet of one-inch videotapes of ”Siskel and Ebert,” the syndicated
series he and Siskel co-hosted for more than 20 years and under various
program names, and of “Ebert & Roper,” the series he
and Richard Roper currently co-host. Siskel died in 1999.
Ebert documents – in the form of personal and business-related
correspondence – can be found in the Archives’ Daniel Curley
Papers. Curley was an English professor at Illinois, an acclaimed writer
and the editor of the university’s literary magazine Ascent from
1975 to his death in 1988. He also edited the magazine’s precursor,
Accent, for several years.
Curley was Ebert’s professor at Illinois and mentor, and later,
friend. In 1986, they co-wrote the book, “The Perfect London Walk,”
which was based on strolls they took around London in the mid-’60s
when Ebert visited the Curleys, then on leave in London. The book is
still in print.
Maher believes that Ebert’s correspondence yet to come will be
“a great boon” to researchers and writers, and Maher said
he hopes that Ebert’s papers will include material from the period
“when he was shifting from a news reporter to a critic.”
“His correspondence with Dan Curley in the early 1960s as he first
experienced London and South Africa and then struggled to find a niche
in Chicago is quite fascinating,” Maher said. Ebert spent a year
at the University of Cape Town, on a reading program through a Rotary
fellowship.
Curley, who in his correspondence variously addressed Ebert as “Roger,”
“The Jolly Roger” and “Rajah,” once described
his protégé in the ’60s as “the finest young
man I have met in the past 10 years. He has personal and intellectual
qualities which would make for success in any field he chose to enter.
“He was in my classes at all levels of undergraduate study, literature
and writing,” Curley wrote. “I could well wish that more
of my colleagues were men of his alert mind.”
|
 |
 |
|