SPIELBERG HONORS CLOONEY FOR HUMANITARIAN WORK
The Associated Press State & Local Wire
October 4, 2013 Friday 5:21 AM GMT
By JOCELYN NOVECK, AP National Writer
NEW YORK
Steven Spielberg and George Clooney go way back in show business. In
fact, it was Spielberg who gave Clooney his big break on the TV show
"ER," the actor recalls.
But the two Hollywood heavyweights came together Thursday evening for
a different reason: Spielberg was honoring Clooney for his humanitarian
work around the globe, especially in the Darfur region of Sudan.
At a glittery fundraising gala in the vast "Whale Room" at New York's
Museum of Natural History, the director and his USC Shoah Foundation
presented Clooney with its Ambassador for Humanity Award. Also on
hand to praise Clooney were his co-star in the new movie "Gravity,"
Sandra Bullock, and Jon Stewart of "The Daily Show."
"George is the best kind of humanitarian," Spielberg said. "The humble
humanitarian." The director called Clooney "an unparalleled example
of action over apathy."
Clooney told the crowd of donors that "Our job is to make it hard
for the bad guys to do what they're doing, and for the good guys to
ignore it."
The actor also praised Spielberg for his foundation's work in creating
and preserving video testimonies of Holocaust victims for future
generations to learn from.
"We have to be able to keep a record of what the powerful can do to
the powerless," Clooney said.
The gala marked the 20th anniversary of Spielberg's Holocaust movie
"Schindler's List," a film that won the director an Oscar and,
Spielberg says, gave him the idea to start a foundation that would
record interviews with Holocaust survivors. To date, the foundation,
founded in 1994 and based since 2006 at the University of Southern
California, has collected nearly 52,000 eyewitness testimonies on
video, in what it calls the largest digital collection of its kind
in the world.
In an interview before the gala, Spielberg explained that a new,
broader phase of the foundation's work, begun recently, involves
collecting video testimonies from survivors of genocide in places
like Rwanda, Cambodia, and Armenia. "The origins of hatred haven't
gone away," the director said. The foundation has already begun its
work with testimony from Rwanda. The other countries will follow.
Spielberg said the only obstacle to further broadening the foundation's
work is funding, and the group announced during the evening that the
gala had raised close to $3.7 million.
A further goal, Spielberg said in the interview, was to get the
country's public school systems to teach tolerance education. The
director said his foundation is working on getting materials to
schools to be used in social science classes.
He noted that Holocaust survivors are fast dying out, an even more
important reason to preserve their life stories on video video that
can be catalogued and indexed for easy access, which now makes up
for much of the foundation's work.
"The survivor community is vanishing," he said. "Soon, it will only
exist in cyberspace. But it's a powerful community. We hope that
through these testimonies, the survivors can live forever."
Spielberg himself did not have relatives who died in the Holocaust.
But his grandmother helped Hungarian Jews who had fled the Holocaust
learn English in the United States. As a three-year old, he says,
he learned his numbers from the "Auschwitz tattoo" of one of the
survivors who gathered regularly in his home.
While making "Schindler's List," he said, he met survivors who would
come to him and want to tell him their stories, starting from when
they were children. "They just wanted me to listen," he said. "They
didn't want to talk to their children about it. The fact that they
wanted to tell a complete stranger what they couldn't tell a daughter
or son really moved me."
The Associated Press State & Local Wire
October 4, 2013 Friday 5:21 AM GMT
By JOCELYN NOVECK, AP National Writer
NEW YORK
Steven Spielberg and George Clooney go way back in show business. In
fact, it was Spielberg who gave Clooney his big break on the TV show
"ER," the actor recalls.
But the two Hollywood heavyweights came together Thursday evening for
a different reason: Spielberg was honoring Clooney for his humanitarian
work around the globe, especially in the Darfur region of Sudan.
At a glittery fundraising gala in the vast "Whale Room" at New York's
Museum of Natural History, the director and his USC Shoah Foundation
presented Clooney with its Ambassador for Humanity Award. Also on
hand to praise Clooney were his co-star in the new movie "Gravity,"
Sandra Bullock, and Jon Stewart of "The Daily Show."
"George is the best kind of humanitarian," Spielberg said. "The humble
humanitarian." The director called Clooney "an unparalleled example
of action over apathy."
Clooney told the crowd of donors that "Our job is to make it hard
for the bad guys to do what they're doing, and for the good guys to
ignore it."
The actor also praised Spielberg for his foundation's work in creating
and preserving video testimonies of Holocaust victims for future
generations to learn from.
"We have to be able to keep a record of what the powerful can do to
the powerless," Clooney said.
The gala marked the 20th anniversary of Spielberg's Holocaust movie
"Schindler's List," a film that won the director an Oscar and,
Spielberg says, gave him the idea to start a foundation that would
record interviews with Holocaust survivors. To date, the foundation,
founded in 1994 and based since 2006 at the University of Southern
California, has collected nearly 52,000 eyewitness testimonies on
video, in what it calls the largest digital collection of its kind
in the world.
In an interview before the gala, Spielberg explained that a new,
broader phase of the foundation's work, begun recently, involves
collecting video testimonies from survivors of genocide in places
like Rwanda, Cambodia, and Armenia. "The origins of hatred haven't
gone away," the director said. The foundation has already begun its
work with testimony from Rwanda. The other countries will follow.
Spielberg said the only obstacle to further broadening the foundation's
work is funding, and the group announced during the evening that the
gala had raised close to $3.7 million.
A further goal, Spielberg said in the interview, was to get the
country's public school systems to teach tolerance education. The
director said his foundation is working on getting materials to
schools to be used in social science classes.
He noted that Holocaust survivors are fast dying out, an even more
important reason to preserve their life stories on video video that
can be catalogued and indexed for easy access, which now makes up
for much of the foundation's work.
"The survivor community is vanishing," he said. "Soon, it will only
exist in cyberspace. But it's a powerful community. We hope that
through these testimonies, the survivors can live forever."
Spielberg himself did not have relatives who died in the Holocaust.
But his grandmother helped Hungarian Jews who had fled the Holocaust
learn English in the United States. As a three-year old, he says,
he learned his numbers from the "Auschwitz tattoo" of one of the
survivors who gathered regularly in his home.
While making "Schindler's List," he said, he met survivors who would
come to him and want to tell him their stories, starting from when
they were children. "They just wanted me to listen," he said. "They
didn't want to talk to their children about it. The fact that they
wanted to tell a complete stranger what they couldn't tell a daughter
or son really moved me."