jueves, 19 de abril de 2012

Dick Clark: He 'got America dancing' - Kansas City Star

A life as long, influential and bountiful as Dick Clark&#x92;s cannot be given the appropriate amount of detail or put into the proper context in a dozen paragraphs or several hundred words. </p><p>Clark, who died of a heart attack Wednesday morning in California at age 82, was a shrewd businessman, a savvy trendsetter and a keen arbiter and peddler of fashion, entertainment and music in mainstream America. One of his most famous quotes: &#x93;I don&#x92;t make culture, I sell it.&#x94;</p><p>And sell it he did, like some combination of Pat Boone and P.T. Barnum. Clark has been one of our pop culture&#x92;s most recognizable and enduring faces and personalities since the mid-1950s, when he took over &#x93;Bandstand&#x94; from a colleague and fellow Philadelphia DJ named Bob Horn and turned it into a TV juggernaut and his own cash cow. </p><p>In his book &#x93;TV-A Go-Go: Rock on TV from American Bandstand to American Idol,&#x94; Jake Austen wrote of Clark: &#x93;If Clark is guilty of anything, it&#x92;s being a serial capitalist. It just so happened that the tool that best suited his dollar-bills-in-the-eyes ambitions also happened to be the show that got America dancing.&#x94;</p><p>Clark, a native of Mount Vernon, N.Y., was a sleek but warm combination of youthful good looks, impeccable manners and squeaky-clean personality that abided by his nickname: America&#x92;s oldest teenager. He also had a smooth, sonorous voice. His image was the antithesis to personas like the riotous Alan &#x93;Moondog&#x94; Freed. Once Clark hit the national airwaves, parents trusted him. Teenagers submitted to his innocuous charm. </p><p>He was also deep into the play-for-pay game that was standard in the recording industry before &#x93;payola&#x94; became a dirty word and Congress went after guys like Freed, Clark and others. </p><p>Clark emerged unscathed, except at his TV network, ABC, which told him to pick either &#x93;American Bandstand&#x94; or his music industry holdings. He picked the show.</p><p> In the ensuing decades, he built a vast entertainment empire via Dick Clark Productions. His resume includes various roles as producer or host of game shows such as &#x93;$10,000 Pyramid&#x94; and award shows such as the American Music Awards. </p><p>For three decades, he was the face of &#x93;Dick Clark&#x92;s Rockin&#x92; New Year&#x92;s Eve,&#x94; an annual Times Square countdown tradition for millions of Americans. He missed only one year &#x97; 2004, after he&#x92;d suffered a stroke.</p><p>He also started his own chain of restaurants, Dick Clark American Bandstand Grill, for which he was a target of filmmaker Michael Moore in the 2002 documentary &#x93;Bowling for Columbine&#x94; over pay and working conditions in one of the restaurants.</p><p>But it is &#x93;American Bandstand&#x94; for which Clark will be best-known and most revered &#x97; a show that ran from 1957 to &#x92;87 and was memorialized in the 1958 Chuck Berry hit &#x93;Sweet Little Sixteen&#x94;: &#x93;They&#x92;ll be rockin&#x92; on &#x91;Bandstand,&#x92; Philadelphia, P.A.&#x94;</p><p>Clark has been chastised in some corners for initially favoring white, pretty-boy crooners, like Fabian, Gene Vincent and Frankie Avalon. The show was also slow to integrate its field of young dancers. </p><p>It wasn&#x92;t until 1965 that &#x93;Bandstand&#x94; featured its first prominent African-American dancer, Famous Hooks. In 1991, Hooks told the Los Angeles Times, &#x93;It was the most fun of my life. I met so many people and did so many things. Because of my image, I couldn&#x92;t have been bad if I tried.&#x94; </p><p>By 1965, according to Austen, about 35 percent of the music on &#x93;Bandstand&#x94; was by African-American artists. Clark has admitted he tried to keep things wholesome, away from the more rebellious side of rock &#x92;n&#x92; roll and acceptable to parents and adults, but the list of bands and artists who have performed on &#x93;Bandstand&#x94; is vast and impressive.</p><p>Clark never indulged Elvis Presley, the Rolling Stones, the Who or the Beatles, but his guest list included legends such as Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis, Buddy Holly & the Crickets, Stevie Wonder, the Beach Boys, the Miracles, Ike and Tina Turner, the Four Tops, Jackie Wilson and Simon and Garfunkel. </p><p>He also hosted latter-day stars including Madonna and Prince. There&#x92;s a great YouTube video out of a 1966 episode of &#x93;Bandstand&#x94; featuring an interview with Don Van Vliet and then the show&#x92;s dancers bouncing along politely to Captain Beefheart&#x92;s &#x93;Diddy Wah Diddy.&#x94;</p><p>Rock critic Lester Bangs once called the show &#x93;a leggily acceptable euphemism of the teenage experience&#x94; &#x97; a fair and fitting description. </p><p>But even to those of us who would move on to other more progressive music showcases like &#x93;Don Kirshner&#x92;s Rock Concert,&#x94; &#x93;The Midnight Special,&#x94; &#x93;Soul Train&#x94; and then MTV, &#x93;Bandstand&#x94; was an initial gathering point, a place to hear new music or connect with bands and performers we&#x92;d already heard, a safe place where teenage abandon showed up well-dressed and was expressed orderly and in good manners. </p><p>In his own very businesslike way, Clark made what he was selling &#x97; what he had cast in his own image &#x97; appetizing, hard to resist and memorable.</p><p><h3>A SHOWMAN, A BUSINESSMAN</h3></p><p></span> <span class="bold">1956:</span> Joins &#x93;American Bandstand&#x94; as host, replacing original host Bob Horn. Under Clark&#x92;s guidance, it&#x92;s transformed from a local Philadelphia show to a national phenomenon. </p><p> <span class="bold">1957:</span> Forms a production company, later named Dick Clark Productions, the cornerstone of his entrepreneurial success. </p><p> <span class="bold">1972:</span> Produces and hosts &#x93;Dick Clark&#x92;s New Year&#x92;s Rockin&#x92; Eve.&#x94; </p><p> <span class="bold">1973:</span> Hosts &#x93;The $10,000 Pyramid,&#x94; which in different versions brought him multiple Emmy Awards for best game show host. </p><p> <span class="bold">1974:</span> Creates the American Music Awards at the request of ABC, which lost the broadcast rights to the Grammy Awards. </p><p> <span class="bold">1987:</span> His &#x93;American Bandstand,&#x94; one of network TV&#x92;s longest-lived series as part of ABC&#x92;s daytime lineup starting in 1957, ends its network run, moves to syndication. </p><p> <span class="bold">1989:</span> Produces an &#x93;American Bandstand&#x94; series for USA Network, with new host David Hirsch, which runs for less than a year. </p><p> <span class="bold">1993:</span> Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Clark, who condemned censorship and gave black performers their due, is saluted for defending pop artists and artistic freedom. </p><p> <span class="bold">2001:</span> Co-hosts &#x93;The Other Half,&#x94; a syndicated daytime talk show for male viewers, with Mario Lopez, Danny Bonaduce and Dorian Gregory. </p><p> <span class="bold">2002:</span> Produces &#x93;American Dreams,&#x94; an NBC drama about a Philadelphia teenager who&#x92;s a regular on &#x93;American Bandstand.&#x94; </p><p> <span class="bold">2004: </span>Suffers a December stroke, is forced to miss his annual appearance on &#x93;Dick Clark&#x92;s New Year&#x92;s Rockin&#x92; Eve.&#x94; He returns the next year, despite impaired speech, and is praised by stroke victims and others for his bravery. </p><p> <span class="bold">2006:</span> Honored at the Emmy Awards, he tells the crowd: &#x93;I have accomplished my childhood dream, to be in show business. Everybody should be so lucky to have their dreams come true.&#x94;

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