Little Sister Baby-Sitters Club Ann Martin Choose Build PICK YOUR OWN
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Are you a fan of the Baby-Sitters Club series by Ann M. Martin? Do you love the adventures of Kristy, Claudia, Mary-Anne, Stacey, and Dawn as they navigate the world of babysitting and friendship? Well, get ready for a new twist on the classic series with the Little Sister Baby-Sitters Club!
In this fun and interactive post, you get to choose your own adventure with the Little Sister Baby-Sitters Club. Will you join Karen Brewer and her friends as they start their own babysitting business? Will you help them solve mysteries and navigate the ups and downs of growing up? The choice is yours!
So, pick your own adventure and let your imagination run wild with the Little Sister Baby-Sitters Club. Who knows what exciting adventures await you in Stoneybrook? Get ready to build your own story with this beloved series by Ann M. Martin.
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HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) — Civil Rights activist Reverend Dr. Virgil Wood, who worked alongside Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., has died, ABC13 learned Monday.
Wood was one of the last lieutenants of King, working with him in Michigan. He also served as a member of the National Executive Board of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, or SCLC, for the last decade of King’s life and helped to raise money for the cause.
The video above is from a 2019 interview with Houston-area leaders who knew Dr. King.
ABC13’s Melanie Lawson interviewed Wood in 2019 as Houstonians who knew King reflected on the revered leader’s life.
Wood explained how he was a young pastor in Virginia when he first met King.
He knew the brilliant leader and charismatic public speaker, but he also knew the private man.
“He was a fun-loving guy. I mean, he loved his ham hocks and food, smoking, he was a chain smoker,” Wood laughed. “The good joke, he always had a joke to tell.”
Wood, a native of Charlottesville, Virginia, was ordained in his late teens.
He moved to the Houston area after retiring from his pastoral duties in Providence, Rhode Island.
According to a 2007 Houston Chronicle article, Wood spoke to students at Austin High School for years as well as appeared at numerous churches.
It is with a heavy heart that we announce the passing of Dr. Virgil Wood, a Civil Rights icon and Houstonian who dedicated his life to the fight for justice and equality. Dr. Wood, who worked closely with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., passed away at the age of 93.
Dr. Wood was a tireless advocate for civil rights, working alongside Dr. King in the 1960s to bring about social change and racial equality. He played a pivotal role in organizing marches, protests, and voter registration drives, and was instrumental in the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
In addition to his work in the Civil Rights movement, Dr. Wood was also a respected educator and minister. He served as a professor at various universities and seminaries, and was a beloved pastor in the Houston community.
Dr. Wood’s legacy will live on in the countless lives he touched and the progress he helped to achieve. He will be remembered as a true champion of justice and a beacon of hope for future generations.
Our thoughts and prayers are with Dr. Wood’s family and loved ones during this difficult time. May his memory be a blessing and may his work continue to inspire us all to strive for a more just and equitable society.
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Text to speech audio articles made possible by the Quest Grant at Yavapai College. Tuition free industry recognized certificates for your career.
The City of Surprise invites the community to honor the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. at the 9th annual MLK Day of Celebration and Service on Saturday, January 18, 2025, from 8 a.m. – noon, at Willow Canyon High School.
This year’s theme, “Everybody can be great because everybody can serve,” encourages community members of all ages to embrace service as a path to greatness.
The day begins at 8 a.m. with volunteer check-in and a free breakfast for the first 500 volunteers. The celebration program will start at 9 a.m. with an invocation from Pastor Jason L. Flowers of Transformation Community Church, followed by a welcome address from the Mayor of Surprise.
This year’s program will feature returning emcee Susan Casper, from Arizona’s Family News on CBS 5 and 3TV. With a decades-long career in journalism and community advocacy, Susan brings her passion for service and storytelling to this special occasion.
Attendees will enjoy inspiring performances by the Willow Canyon High School Choir, Surprise Sings Community Choir, Voices of Gideon from Gideon Missionary Baptist Church, Pilgrim Rest Baptist Church Choir and a featured performance by The Be Kind People Project.
The celebration will also highlight local nonprofit organizations and community submissions to the #SurpriseCelebratesMLK challenge, where individuals and groups reflect on the question, “How do YOU serve?”
After the program, from 10 a.m. to noon, attendees can participate in hands-on service projects that directly benefit the local community. Projects include packing food for a local food bank, assembling hygiene kits, writing letters of encouragement and more! Preregistration is required, groups and individuals can sign up at surpriseaz.gov/DOSVolunteer.
In partnership with Vitalant, a mobile blood drive will also take place during the event from 8 a.m. – noon. Those interested in donating are encouraged to book a time on the Vitalant website.
This event is presented by the City of Surprise Human Services & Community Vitality Department. For sponsorship opportunities or general event information, please contact Kara Poling at kara.poling@surpriseaz.gov or call 623.222.1647.
Join Surprises for a day of celebration and service in honor of Martin Luther King Jr.!
On January 17th, we will be hosting various events and activities to pay tribute to the life and legacy of this iconic civil rights leader. From community service projects to educational workshops, there will be something for everyone to participate in.
Come together with your friends, family, and neighbors to make a positive impact in our community and continue Dr. King’s vision of equality and justice for all. Let’s honor his memory by spreading love, kindness, and compassion.
Don’t miss out on this meaningful day of reflection and action. Join us for Surprises’s Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Celebration and Service. Together, we can make a difference.
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Rain Reign – Paperback By Martin, Ann M. – VERY GOOD
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Are you a fan of heartwarming stories about friendship, resilience, and the power of empathy? Look no further than “Rain Reign” by Ann M. Martin. This touching novel follows the journey of Rose Howard, a unique and endearing young girl with a passion for homonyms and a special bond with her beloved dog, Rain.
As Rose navigates the challenges of school, family, and bullies, she learns valuable lessons about acceptance and understanding. With a compelling narrative and unforgettable characters, “Rain Reign” is a must-read for readers of all ages.
Grab your copy of this touching tale in paperback format, rated VERY GOOD condition. Don’t miss out on the opportunity to experience the beauty of “Rain Reign” for yourself. Order your copy today and fall in love with Rose and Rain’s story!
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Rain Reign by Ann M. Martin is a heartwarming and touching story that will stay with you long after you’ve finished reading it. The book follows the journey of a young girl named Rose who has Asperger’s syndrome and her beloved dog Rain, who goes missing during a storm.
As Rose searches for Rain, she learns important lessons about love, loss, and the power of family. Martin’s writing is emotionally resonant and beautifully captures the bond between a girl and her dog.
This paperback edition of Rain Reign is a must-read for anyone who enjoys stories that tug at the heartstrings and celebrate the power of love and friendship. Pick up a copy today and get ready to be swept away by this unforgettable tale.
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T he night sky over New Zealand is wide and wondrous, inky and vast. It’s the type of sky that broadcasts Earth’s infinitesimal place in the infinite cosmos. The type of sky that fills one with awe at the beauty and mystery of existence. The type that brings to mind how, from some vantage point in some far-off pocket of space, human difference simply disappears and we all appear as one, floating in harmony on our beautiful blue and green marble.
And so it is fitting that one night in mid-November, Chris Martin should find himself under such a sky, wandering around the docks of Auckland’s Viaduct Harbour in the hour approaching midnight, pondering creation at large and his place as a creator in it. It was not his first time visiting the water that day. A spiritual teacher once told him, “If you feel a bit down, go for a walk and just look up. And it lifts you” — advice he heeded then and has heeded since. Martin, a musician who is known to be mindful, tends to have a lot on his mind.
“If you zoom out to about 10 miles above, you see, ‘Oh, there’s just tiny points of difference, but the human things that connect to you are pretty powerful,’ ” Martin says slowly, and in a calming tone, the sky arching above him. “And if you zoom back enough generations, everyone is your family ultimately, so you’re never not with your family, in a way. You’re never really alone.”
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For more than a quarter of a century, Martin has fronted Coldplay, which by some measures is this marble’s biggest band right now. Their Music of the Spheres tour, which started in March 2022 in Costa Rica — a location chosen because 99 percent of its electrical grid comes from renewable energy — has sold more than 12 million tickets and earned more than a billion dollars, making it, at present, the most-attended tour of all time and the highest-grossing rock tour of all time, with no definitive end date in sight. It has broken attendance records across the planet, in countries that include Argentina, Brazil, Chile, France, Greece, Indonesia, Italy, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Romania, Singapore, and Sweden. And it has reached these heights with monumental melodies and universal lyrics, sure, but also with something else: an all-encompassing, intergalactic worldview of unity, love, and acceptance.
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Or so I’d been told, anyway. I had arrived as a potential acolyte the week before, flying out from America on the night of the presidential election and landing in Sydney in time to see three shows of the tour’s Australian leg. Wandering Accor Stadium as fans were filing in, I’d chatted with attendees wearing face glitter and euphoric expressions who shared that they were there not only for the music but also the “vibe.”
Yet nothing could have prepared me for the lovefest that is attending a Coldplay show — each millisecond calibrated for maximum explosions of communal joy. There were confetti guns going off and balloons launched into the sky and a literal parade of beautiful, bobbing, inflated planets, the imaginary “spheres” that had supposedly provided their music for Coldplay’s past two albums (2021’s Music of the Spheres Vol. 1: From Earth With Love, and last year’s Music of the Spheres Vol. 2: Moon Music). There were LED bracelets lighting up to grand effect and hologram members of BTS joining Martin for a stirring rendition of “My Universe,” a 2021 collaboration with the South Korean band. There were puppet solos and a sample of Louis Armstrong talking about “what a wonderful world it would be if only we’d give it a chance” and Martin’s imperative to raise our hands in the sky, twinkle our fingers, and “send some of this energy, some of this love, to Ukraine or America or Myanmar or anywhere there are peaceful people who need Australian love.” There were four separate fireworks displays. Four, I tell you.
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On the first night, during a bit when Martin reads audience members’ signs and then blows their minds by inviting someone up onstage to be serenaded, he’d sung “Magic” to a young couple who’d rescheduled their honeymoon to be there. On the second night, he’d performed “Everglow” to a couple whose sign said that their Benji had cancer and that Coldplay’s music was getting them through (“So Benji’s a dog?” Martin clarified when he saw the sign up close. “OK, I didn’t quite understand that. All right, well … we care about all beings, so let’s sing to Benji, your dog”). On the last night, before he brought onstage a mustachioed man in a purple unicorn onesie — and after he’d invited me into the group hug-huddle that he, drummer Will Champion, guitarist Jonny Buckland, and bassist Guy Berryman have below the stage before every show — he’d launched into “Yellow” with the announcement that “I play this for Alex.” I thought for sure that I’d misheard him until the record label rep made clear that I hadn’t: “I think he just dedicated that song to you!”
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By the show’s end, when we were instructed to put on our “moon goggles,” which turned pinpoints of light into glowing rainbow hearts, I knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that my emotions were being manipulated. But honestly? I’m not nearly enough of a cynic to care. America might have just elected an authoritarian, the planet might be burning and drowning all at once, our species might be slowly extincting itself and all others, but in the stadium on those nights, all those concerns seemed possibly (probably?) fixable with the widespread application of Coldplay’s brand of love for all humankind (and beings!) and with Martin singing “Fix You” right there on the upright.
SO, OK. THAT’S how I felt then. In the cold light of day, as I readied myself to meet Martin for our first official interview, doubts had begun to creep in as to a rock band’s role in planetary salvation. From afar, there’s certainly something of the guru or the ascetic about Martin, something highly therapized and slightly otherworldly. It isn’t just the fame, the celebrity marriage, the conscious uncoupling from said celebrity marriage, the clean eating, the teetotaling. It was the general, yes, vibe. Now that my senses were no longer being love bombed, I had to wonder: Was this guy for real?
Anyway, this is where my mind is two days after the band’s last show in Sydney, when Martin lumbers into a hotel suite with sweeping views of Auckland’s waterfront. He wears an open expression, earrings made from colored strings, and the same black sweater with pictures of the Earth, moon, and stars sewn on that he’d worn to the Grammys two years prior. He carries a bowl of round, brown, healthful concoctions and a glass jar full of watermelon juice, both of which he insists on sharing. He seems to hum with a sort of Zen energy, like a person coming off a fast.
Almost immediately, he offers me my own affirmation: He wants me to feel free to write with abandon. “Anything that might be not cool — I don’t really mind. Do what you want,” he says from the crook of a sleek, L-shaped sofa. “I’ve spent a long time not needing anyone else’s approval. And that’s a daily practice.” He pauses and pulls his bare feet up beneath him. “I think if this [article] is to be useful, then perhaps part of it is about the confidence to become yourself and not to try and conform to old tropes of what you think might have made a good Rolling Stone act.”
“WE ARE FOUR WHITE, MIDDLE-CLASS MEN FROM ENGLAND. WE DESERVE TO TAKE SOME SHIT.”
He sounds legit, of course, widening his eyes slightly as if to let in — or give off? — more light. And, truth be told, it is highly possible that Martin has jettisoned any pressure to fit a mold that was not precisely Martin-shaped. His band’s music has managed to sell more than 100 million albums and has won more than 300 awards, including seven Grammys. It has persevered and flourished through reviews (good and bad) and articles (nasty and nice) for longer than many of its fans have been alive. Indeed, it is safe to say that, at present, Coldplay are now more “Coldplay” than ever, and that, after 28 years, Martin has seen the utility in that, in letting Coldplay be precisely the only Coldplay they know how to be. “There’ve been times where we [were like], ‘Well, we should probably try and look a bit like this or talk a bit like that,’ ” Martin says. “And now, it’s just like, ‘No.’ Just follow whatever’s being sent. And that’s a very liberating place to be. If you want a puppet to sing a bit of a song, well, some people might not like this — my mum being one of them, for example. But my point is, that’s part of my journey to be like, ‘Well, I love you, and this is what we’re doing.’ ”
To be fair, this has meant doing some pretty kooky things of late, from Martin popping up to sing karaoke in Las Vegas dressed as an alter ego named Nigel Crisp to the band launching Moon Music — along with branded toasters and tea services — on QVC, creating 32 minutes of television so bizarre I had assumed it was a piece of performance art until Martin told me it wasn’t. “QVC was just fun and odd. It’s a weird thing to go out and sell an album. We just acknowledged that, yeah, we’re trying to sell something, but we really like the thing we’ve made.”
In fact, as the conversation goes on, it’s hard to find something Martin doesn’t like, or an issue he can’t reframe into a more positive, empathetic light. He treats Coldplay haters with profound generosity of spirit: “It would be terrible if we lived in a society where everyone had to [like the same thing]. We’re a very, very easy, safe target. We’re not going to bite back. We are four white, middle-class men from England. We deserve to take some shit for what our people have done. There’s a reason we get to play all around the world, and part of it is not necessarily very healthy.”
Even when I bring up the election, Martin finds an optimistic framing. “Of course, I have my own general leanings, which would probably be described as extremely Democratic,” he tells me. “But the elections and the news cycle make you think: Oh, there’s two different types of humans on Earth, and they hate each other, and it’s a disaster. You could look at it like that, that there’s this chasm between two groups of people. But I’m in a job where I don’t see anything except the opposite of that. Every day I go onstage, I don’t see a chasm at all, I only see collaboration. So my point is, how can we, as a band, be a force for helping people remember ‘Oh, we’re not actually at war with the rest of humanity’?”
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By now, we’ve made our way outside of the hotel and are attempting unsuccessfully to get past locked gates and down to the harbor, trailed almost imperceptibly by Martin’s bodyguard. (“She played the baddie in Chinese kung fu movies and then set up a security company in Hong Kong, and now she comes on call with me sometimes. Isn’t that amazing?”) He says he’s rarely recognized when he’s just out walking around: “There are some idiosyncrasies about being famous, but I look like so many people that I can easily pretend not to be me.” When I point out that people might tend to notice the shoeless guy, even if they don’t know he’s famous, Martin shrugs: “I’m not always barefoot. I love shoes, and I also love not shoes. I’m not trying to disrespect the shoe community.”
Finally, we find an open gate, and ignoring the “no trespassing” sign, Martin makes his way to the edge of a long dock. I remove my own shoes, and we dangle our feet down in the water, which is cool and bracing. Tiny silver fish flutter past our toes. Martin looks out toward the horizon and then closes his eyes and tips his face toward the afternoon sun. “This is very special. Thank you for this moment,” he says.
He seems for real. Very, very, very for real. About all of the Rolling Stone rock & roll tropes not taken. About Coldplay’s acceptance that theirs is a message of acceptance. But also, now, about how maybe that message is the one Martin himself most needs to hear. “When I’m saying these things about world peace, I’m also talking about my own inside,” he tells me. “It’s a daily thing not to hate yourself. Forget about outside critics — it’s the inside ones, too. That’s really our mission right now: We are consciously trying to fly the flag for love being an approach to all things. There aren’t that many [groups] that get to champion that philosophy to that many people. So we do it. And I need to hear that too, so that I don’t give up and just become bitter and twisted and hidden away, and hate everybody. I don’t want to do that, but it’s so tempting.”
What he is saying is this: radical acceptance — of others, of oneself; most especially of oneself — takes work, emotional manipulation even. Sometimes you need it writ large across a stadium of people. Sometimes you need literal fireworks.
“Maybe the theatrics are all part of that,” he ponders. “It’s a bit Disneyland-ish in terms of ‘OK, let’s exist for a couple of hours in this place where no one hates each other.’ ” Martin grins. “The second-happiest place on Earth. Copyright, Coldplay.”
COLDPLAY ARE “TRYING TO FLY THE FLAG FOR LOVE BEING AN APPROACH TO ALL THINGS.”
A WEEK LATER, we meet up at Martin’s studio in Malibu, which, on that day, could be in contention for the third-happiest place on Earth. The hexagonal wood-frame and stucco buildings, which are in the process of being turned into Coldplay’s American base, give off ashram vibes, clustered near the top of a hill that rolls down to the shimmering sea. Rows of crops stretch in one direction, tended by a cheerful young man named Sam. Bees from the property’s apiary buzz giddily through the asters (later, when one lands on Martin’s lunch, he’ll comment on its arrival and then let it rest there indefinitely). Light shines abundantly.
The night before, Martin had presumably stayed up into the early morning hours, as he typically does. “There’s music flying around,” he says of that time of night, though, truth be told, “songs pop up everywhere. They wake you up, songs. They’re always a surprise to me. Sometimes the title is way ahead, and it’s waiting for the song to come, the right song. There was about six shitty ‘Viva La Vidas,’ and then the actual one.” He says most great songwriters feel this way, that the craft, the discipline, is in simply paying attention and waiting for what arrives. “Paul Simon, who I love speaking to, will say, ‘I’m not writing anything. But then I wake up and there’s a song knocking on the door. And I have to get out and do it.’ And I’m like, ‘Yeah, I know that feeling.’ ”
We’re talking in the raftered room of the Rainforest where the past two albums had been “organized,” as he put it. Song titles from Moon Music are written in colored marker on the white, shiplap walls. Resting on the mantle of a rocky hearth are a vase of dried flowers, a Polaroid camera, a hand-signed card from BTS, and a framed copy of Max Martin’s “12 Commandments” (“Thou shall kill thy darlings … Thou shall dare to suck …”). Martin had arrived with a gift for me, a bound collection of Sherlock Holmes stories, which he’d mentioned in New Zealand when he was talking about how he loved “being lost in a dream world,” how he was “as obsessed with Mary Poppins as I’m with Radiohead.” He turns to the table of contents, and with a blue marker, he marks the stories he loves most. He says he once had a party trick: Read a sentence from any page, and he’d have been able to tell you what story it was from. He doesn’t think he’d be able to do it anymore. I turn to page 327 and read a few nondescript lines. “That’s not ‘The Adventure of the Copper Beeches,’ is it?” he asks. (It is.)
He’d awoken this morning around 9 a.m., still jet-lagged from being on the other side of the world (“Jet lag is emotionally distorting, isn’t it? It’s also interesting coming back to America — just trying not to watch the news”). He’d meditated for 21 minutes. He’d said “my version of prayers, just sending thoughts out to people.” He’d done free-form writing for 12 minutes and then, as he always does, had burned what he’d written or flushed it down the toilet, a sort of exorcism. “I say things in there that you wouldn’t believe — they’re just the meanest, nastiest, most aggressive, angry parts of you — but no one reads them. I destroy them after I’ve written [them],” he explains. “But they’re out.”
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As we make our way out to the backyard, he stops at an upright piano with its front panel removed, slides onto the bench, and asks if I want to hear an instrumental piece he’s been working on. The song — he can’t remember what he’d decided to name it — is calming and slightly mannered, its trills like the tinkling of a fountain.
“Something like that,” he says after a minute or two, lifting his hands off the keys and kissing the piano quickly. “I’m not playing it very well. It’s going to be good one day, when I know how to play it.”
Outside, lunch (an autumnal kale salad for me; meat croquettes on gluten-free bread for Martin) has been set up on a picnic table under the boughs of a large tree. Behind Martin, the side of a building is painted with a seascape and signed “Apple & Chris.” “I like [my kids] very much. Even though they’re not biologically mine — I’m breaking the story now,” he jokes. “My favorite new thing to embarrass my son is, if we’re walking down the street and someone comes up to us and they say, ‘I’m sorry to disturb you while you’re with your son,’ I say, ‘That’s not my son. That’s my partner.’ ” He laughs deeply. “Yeah. I like them a lot. I think they are mine, to be fair.”
He tells me that next week he’s headed to Paris to attend the renowned Le Bal Des Débutantes with Apple, 20, which is “so not something I ever thought I’d do, but because I’m so in love with her, I’m like, ‘OK.’ ” Plus, now that Moses, 18, is off at college as well, it’s an opportunity for the whole family to be together. “It’s sad,” he says of empty nesting. “That’s the only word. But of course it’d be weirder if they were still like, ‘I can’t leave.’ Then you’d be more worried.”
Martin, Berryman, Champion, and Buckland (from left) in Sydney
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Soon, we’re talking about the yin and yang of attachment, the idea that the more you love someone, the harder it is to lose them — a theme spattered not just across Ghost Stories, the 2014 album written in the turmoil of Martin’s split from Gwyneth Paltrow, but across all of Coldplay’s discography. In March, rumors spread of Martin’s engagement to longtime partner Dakota Johnson; of late, tabloids have been floating the idea that the relationship has cooled. Martin doesn’t want to talk about any of that because, he says, it’s not just his story to tell. “It is important to say that [romantic love] is such a big factor in everything, even though it feels right to keep it precious and private; I’m not denying its power,” he concedes. He does mention Johnson in passing a number of times, including telling me that they listened to Kacey Musgraves’ Golden Hour together in the past couple of days. Later, he says he has only a handful of best friends, and then lists them: “Phil, Dakota, Jonny, Will, and Guy. My kids.”
Perhaps the idea of a lovelorn Martin just fits the collective narrative. Martin was writing breakup songs well before he lost his virginity at 22 or even had a relationship to break up from. “There’s a part of me that’s always been a bit heartbroken from the beginning,” he says. “Maybe about the world, maybe just about the human condition. I hope that doesn’t sound pretentious. I don’t care if it sounds pretentious, it’s true. I’ve always had this deep joy mixed with a deep sadness.”
He was 11 the first time he felt empathy wash over him with such strength that it surprised him. “I remember sitting with this other kid on a minibus, and I could just tell that there was stuff going on, but we didn’t know how to articulate anything. Just like, ‘Why do I feel so strongly what this guy is going through?’ It’s a strange part of me that I feel people’s sadness really heavily. And my own shit I feel pretty heavily. Maybe that’s just being human. Or maybe you need to feel that if you’re the kind of person songs get sent to.”
However it happened — and whatever its result — it is a trademark quality. “He was there for me when I got separated and was heartbroken,” his longtime friend Shakira tells me. “He was checking in every day to see how I was doing, sending me words of support and strength and wisdom. I see him as a person who sees life through a different lens, who’s sensitive to other people’s needs and very empathetic, very empathetic.”
Growing up hyper-religious in Devon, England, the oldest son of an accountant and a music teacher from Zimbabwe, Martin was raised with “the prospect of heaven and hell looming ever large,” as he told Rolling Stone in 2008. The first live event he ever attended was a Billy Graham satellite broadcast. The first music festivals he went to were Christian-music festivals. He went to a cathedral choir school, but “wasn’t good enough to be in the choir.” Then, at age 13, he started boarding at the crusty and uppercrust Sherborne School, meeting Phil Harvey — Coldplay’s manager and unofficial fifth member— in line for the machine that toasted bread.
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“In Central Feeding,” Harvey will later specify. “Central Feeding was the name of the cafeteria. I mean, that really gives you an insight into the school. It was very impersonal, a tough environment. Bands were not a thing at our school. Rugby was a thing.”
At Sherborne, Martin was president of the Sting fan club, played with Harvey in an (all-white) blues band called the Rockin’ Honkies, and was mercilessly bullied. “You see Chris now, and he’s like this six-foot-two, ripped, statuesque, very imposing figure,” Harvey says. “But back then he was gangly, awkward, fey. Hugely feminine elements to him — I think he’d be the first to say that — but at boys’ boarding school, there’s no nuance. They sensed weakness and soft spots, and they just went for it. It was pretty brutal.”
It didn’t help that he was still a self-professed “zealot,” still loomed over by the prospect of heaven and hell, terrified of even thinking about boobs and also terrified of not thinking about them because the most terrifying prospect was that he might be gay. “All of that dogma and telling kids that they’re sinners when they’re six is a pretty strange thing to do,” Martin says now when I bring it up. “And that takes a lifetime to unravel. It takes years and albums to shed.”
Harvey says that humor became Martin’s defense mechanism (“He’s always been able to switch on that; if he decides he wants to make you laugh, he’ll make you laugh”). Slowly, too, his naivety and theological rigidity began to fall away. “I don’t think that being gay is wrong, and I don’t think anyone deserves to burn in hell for eternity,” Martin shares. “That’s a bit over the top.”
In 1996, the four members of Coldplay met in Ramsey Hall their first week at University College London. Not long after, Martin heard Buckland playing guitar from behind the door of his dorm room. “He was like a whirlwind,” Buckland tells me. “Just, ‘Oh, you play the guitar? Brilliant. Let’s do something.’ ” They started rehearsing in the dorm bathroom, where the acoustics were good. Berryman joined a few months later, Champion a few months after that, when the drummer they’d been working with checked out in the middle of a recording session (he ended up playing in Keane). The band members signed a record deal in April 1999 and then took their final exams a month later. For someone from Martin’s background, the idea of being a rock star was so implausible that during this time a woman came up to his father at a luncheon and said, “I’m so sorry to hear about your son.” “She was deadly serious,” Martin says. “ ‘I’m so sorry to hear about your son wasting all that education.’ And to be fair to my dad, I think he said, ‘Oh, don’t worry, it’ll be all right.’ ”
“I NEED OUR MUSIC MORE THAN ANYONE. THOSE SONGS ARE THERAPY AND CATHARSIS AND EXPLAINING.”
In some ways, it was; in some ways, it wasn’t. As Coldplay’s sound grew to fill arenas, the inevitable backlash started, the allegations that they made “music for bed wetters,” that they were too middle-class, too earnest, too nice. (“I think we’re kind people. We’re not always nice,” Martin specifies.) The New York Times dubbed Coldplay “the most insufferable band of the decade,” in response to which Martin did not smash guitars and hotel suites but rather turned diffidence into an art form, sitting down with Rolling Stone’s Joe Levy to say he just wanted to make the band “a bit more sufferable.”
The making and release of Ghost Stories was another tenuous point. The band barely toured the album, and Martin was so down and spending so much time alone that his bandmates were worried for his safety. “Look, I’m trying to — I have to choose my words carefully,” says Harvey. “I think Chris carries a lot of pain and damage or trauma around in him. And it was embedded in there largely in those mid-teenage years. I think that he has developed a lot of mechanisms, for not controlling them, but just sort of being at peace with them and alchemizing them. He’ll be very down, and I’ll be worried about him, and it’ll seem like he’s descending into the depths of the darkest mood; and then he’ll use that desperation, that darkness as inspiration.”
As other acts from their era have broken up or petered out, Coldplay’s success has rested on Martin’s ability to alchemize, both emotionally and creatively. “I’ve been thinking about this recently,” Champion says of Coldplay’s staying power. “Chris is obviously relentless, just never stops. We always say after a leg of a tour, ‘Please just rest a little bit.’ And then within a day or two, there’s an email saying, ‘Hey, got this new idea.’ It’s wonderful. I wouldn’t ever want to take any breaks on his creativity because he really needs it to make sense of [his life].”
And even as the band has alchemized and evolved to incorporate new trends and genres — from EDM to Afrobeats — it has managed to maintain a certain essential Coldplayness. “Our great joy is when you look out [at the audience] and there are five-year-old kids and pensioners,” Champion says. Some of that continuity is thanks to the ever-present yearning in Martin’s voice, some to the big chords and cathedral choruses, some to the lyrics that have ambiguity without a shred of subtlety. “I sometimes feel that we are most powerful in countries where they don’t really speak English,” says Martin. “I’m not the best lyricist in the world by any stretch of the imagination, but I think if you don’t speak English, there’s a feeling that you feel.”
Coldplay walking into Sydney’s Accor Stadium in November
Anna Lee
The wind has started to pick up now, and the afternoon is cooling. We clear our plates, bringing them to the studio’s small kitchen, and then make our way to a sitting room with a view of the meadow.
I bring up happiness set points, the idea that we all have an individual baseline of happiness that, barring calamity, tends to go along with us throughout life. On a scale of one to 10, I ask, where would Martin put his happiness? “I’d say, I’m one and 10,” he replies. “They’re both equal. Meaning that more and more, I realize I’m always on both — nothing in the middle. But most of the day is spent trying to occupy the middle, what Rabin-dranath Tagore would call ‘tensegrity’ — a violin string being pulled in two directions violently, and then the music is in the middle — that’s tensegrity, tension and integrity.”
He’s trying to explain what he means, what this tension is like, or at least where it comes from: “It’s like you start off as a band with three fans and one guy at the bar who thinks you’re shit. And then you get to a band with 3,000 fans and 10 guys on the internet who think you’re shit. And then as you become the biggest band in the world, you also become the least popular band in the world. You can never escape. You can never win, if you’re looking for just winning. The stronger the light, the darker the shadow.”
He says that certain events and writings and people have helped him deal with all of this along the way: the voice teacher who told him that, no matter what venue he was playing, he should think about the person at the very back; Bruce Springsteen’s admonition that every show might be someone’s first or someone’s last; Viktor Frankl’s Man’s Search for Meaning; the poems of Rumi; producer Brian Eno, who produced Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends, swooping in when Coldplay were at their lowest and reminding them that making music should feel like joy; his children: “Even if you have the most dreamy setup for your child, they’ll still come home from school sad sometimes. You can’t avoid it. It’s painful to watch, but when it’s your own child, you can’t self-annihilate and you can’t blame. And it reminds you: It’s just being human.” Even the 2016 Super Bowl — which he’d performed with bestie Beyoncé and Bruno Mars and had felt pretty darn good about until he’d made the mistake of reading the reviews — even that had been a point of transition and growth.
“This very famous person emailed me, and she said, ‘Don’t worry about what everyone’s saying.’ I was like, ‘What?’ I hadn’t looked at anything. Then I collapsed into the internet and became really down for a while.” But eventually, something else happened: He realized that, were he to do it all over again, he probably wouldn’t change a thing. “And that was some kind of weird epiphany for me.”
“HALF THE TIME I FEEL LIKE I’VE DONE NOTHING BUT FAILED MY ENTIRE LIFE. MAYBE THAT KEEPS ME GOING.”
It was also a kind of relief, because when it comes to the music, he sort of can’t change a thing, at least not when it comes to the messaging and his psychological connection to it. “I need our music more than anyone,” he explains. “Those songs, they are therapy and they are catharsis and they are explaining. And they’re full of love and acceptance and kindness. And they’re often ahead of me, in terms of what they’re singing about. They’re aspirational for me as a person.
“ ‘A Sky Full of Stars,’ for example, is about complete unconditional love for someone no matter what they do to you or if they like you or not. That’s an almost impossible place to get to in real life, but the song’s already there, like so many songs — ‘Oh, What a Wonderful World.’ They’re saying, ‘Hey, if you aim in this direction, things might get better.’ ”
He pauses and laughs. “I know this is very rock & roll,” he says, poking fun at his own goodliness. “Mainlining speedballs.”
But here’s the thing, the possible key to Coldplay’s longevity and their whole biggest-band-in-the-worldness: What Martin is talking about sort of is rock & roll these days. Consider, please, the extent to which all the bile and bellowing of so much of the late Nineties seems hopelessly dated in 2025, a year when you can — wonder of wonders — open your phone at any minute and see, for instance, a child in Chad joyfully singing along to a song from South Korea, or men with shaved heads and face tattoos dancing to “Pink Pony Club.” How, Martin wants to know, can you do that and not burst wide open with the empathy and thrill that it provides? How can you “other” what is right there in front of your eyes? Maybe radical acceptance is actually the most … radical thing of all.
Or maybe not. Maybe it’s all too much for you, the dancing unicorns, the rainbow hearts, the serenaded puppies. But if Coldplay are a force for good, please also consider that such a statement is not just theoretical. In November 2019, the band paused touring until its members could figure out how to continue to tour with less environmental impact, which they now have by 59 percent, according to a team of scientists at MIT they’re paying to calculate their carbon footprint and keep them honest. They printed Moon Music vinyl with plastic recovered from the floors of rivers in Malaysia and Indonesia by boats they bought to recover it. They run their show on used cooking grease, for crying out loud! They have rejected dynamic ticket pricing and pledged to donate 10 percent of their proceeds from their 2025 U.K. tour dates to the Music Venue Trust, a charity that supports grassroots music venues. Just watch their happy employees — their co-manager, their physical therapist, their social media guy, and the woman who helps them partner with accessibility and inclusion initiatives — just watch them gather to the right of the stage, grinning widely and dancing giddily to “feelslikeimfallinginlove,” before running through tunnels to catch vans out of the stadium as the last set of fireworks goes off.
Shirt by Jungmaven. Pants by Rag & Bone
And few bands are as conscientious about pairing up with and promoting younger artists from all over the world. (The shows in Australia included not just Nigeria’s Ayra Starr and Zimbabwe’s Shone but also local talent like Becca Hatch, Jazzy K, Emmanuel Kelly, and Elly-May Barnes.) “Sometimes he seems like a kid in a candy store when it comes to music,” Shakira had told me.
Starr, who in addition to touring with Coldplay also features on the track “Good Feelings,” explains that she and Martin had been in touch for a while — texting music back and forth — before he invited her to join him in the studio. “I’m really grateful that I get the amount of support I get from him,” she adds. “When I first played him my album The Year I Turned 21, he had the nicest things to say about the project and gave me some notes and advice as the musical genius he is, though I was stubborn with some of the advice.” Even that, he took in stride. “He has a way of making you feel comfortable around him — and the most British sense of humor I’ve ever come across. I think he is not even intentionally funny. He is just direct and honest, which is very charming, especially his dad jokes.”
The evening of the day I interviewed Martin in New Zealand, he also hosted an “artist party” at the aptly named Parachute Studios, gathering a small group of local musicians to share music they were working on. “How is the scene in New Zealand in terms of making a living from playing?” he’d (not rhetorically) asked the 12 young artists lounging on cushions around him, kicking off a discussion of coffee-shop jobs and how, in smaller countries, an artist can tour every corner and still not gain a ton of fans.
“You can’t possibly help everybody, which is such a bummer,” Martin tells me later. “But I also think the power of those meetings is to get people together themselves, in their local scene. And then you leave, and then they all hang out together, and it empowers [them].”
As we’re leaving the artist party, Martin asks if I want to meet back up at the hotel later that night. By the time we do, it’s past 10 p.m. Eventually, we make our way down to the harbor again, the air smelling fresh and briny, the water’s dark ripples lapping gently against the docks, the sky — as noted — wide and wondrous, inky and vast. “Let’s go right,” he says. “Walk around and see the big view.”
“Look at the stars,” I find myself saying to him before even really realizing the words have left my mouth. It’s too late to take them back, but actually, I wouldn’t want to because, seriously, look at the stars! Here, on the other side of the world, they make up constellations I’ve never seen before in my life, so many constellations that possibly do shine for you and all the things that you do. Martin leans his head back and looks at them.
“I SOMETIMES FEEL THAT WE ARE MOST POWERFUL IN COUNTRIES WHERE THEY DON’T REALLY SPEAK ENGLISH. I’M NOT THE BEST LYRICIST IN THE WORLD BY ANY STRETCH OF THE IMAGINATION, BUT IF YOU DON’T SPEAK ENGLISH, THERE’S A FEELING THAT YOU FEEL.”
We walk for a while, for a long time, sometimes in silence. More than once, Martin says we should turn around at a certain spot in the distance, but then when we get there, he just keeps going. We pass boats strung with Christmas lights, bobbing in the blackness. “I think one of the flip sides of the band at this point is that the adrenaline is so crazy high, and the shows are so big and everything, that then there’s a real depression crash on the other side of it,” he tells me. “It’s like you give so much openness, but it’s so hyperreal to process like that all the time. It’s ridiculous. And why it kills a lot of people. It’s a quite hazardous job. And I understand why, because it is a form of drug. So I spend a lot of time on my own really trying to stay afloat, and walking really helps me with that. And going in the ocean really helps me with that.”
He says his life back in Malibu — at a house up the road from the studio — is mostly a quiet one. He tries to swim in the ocean every day, even sometimes after dark. He watches TV, reruns of favorites like Curb Your Enthusiasm and 30 Rock. He reads. He walks. He doesn’t currently own a car. Mostly, his life is spent in service to the music, waiting for it to arrive from the cosmos or from others. “Every year there’s someone that comes, an artist or a song, an album that just puts you in your place and makes you humbled and then inspired,” he says. “What’s it been this year? Chappell Roan? I hope she’s OK. It’s hard for the younger ones, especially when they’re on their own.” He says there’s no way he’d have survived without Jonny, Will, and Guy.
For a long time now, Martin has known that Coldplay will release only two more albums — an animated musical based on a story Harvey and Martin are writing together, and a final album, simply called Coldplay, which will be a sort of homecoming to the band’s original sound. “The cover of the album, I’ve known it since 1999,” Martin says. “It’s a photograph by the same photographer that took the photo that’s the cover of our first EP.” After that, the band will continue to tour, a legacy act in the process of living out its legacy.
“Chris is never going to stop writing, so I kind of take it with a little bit of a pinch of salt,” Berryman had told me in Australia. “We’re still years away from any kind of retirement. But I think you have to have a plan. If you’re running a marathon, you know you have to run 26 miles. But if somebody said to you, ‘OK, start running and just don’t stop,’ it’s quite hard to motivate yourself.”
Whatever the next stage looks like, Martin wants to pay homage to all those songs that have arrived over the decades but didn’t fit within the “picture frame” of any given album. “One day we’ll do a thing called Alphabetica, which will be lots of outtakes and songs that didn’t fit anywhere, but we’ll release them in a compendium. We’ll do a song that begins with A, and one that begins with B, because there’s enough to do that —we don’t have any spare songs with Q. That’s the one I’m stuck with.”
Eventually, we do turn back toward the hotel, but not before Martin asks, “How’s your swimming?”
“My nightswimming?” I reply, referencing the R.E.M. song. “Deserves a quiet night.”
He likes this response. “One of the best songs ever. R.E.M., for so many of us, are such a big deal.”
He’s quiet for a moment. It’s a funny thing, really, to ponder legacy. “Half the time I feel like I’ve done nothing but failed my entire life,” he says. “But maybe that’s one of the things that keeps me going — a strong feeling every day about how ‘You’ve fucked it all up. You could have been great.’ And that’s OK, because it gives you something to work through, and work with. I’m a human. And that’s OK,” he says, to himself as much as anyone. “That’s OK.”
“I am the disease and the cure,” I offer, my own little affirmation.
“Yeah,” Martin says.
“Yeah,” I reply.
He looks out to where the stars reflect off the water. “We have a line like that, in a song called ‘Clocks.’ ”
“I was quoting you to you,” I affirm.
He nods slowly. “You know, what’s interesting is that the cure for most things is in the toxin. The antidote for most poisons is the poison itself. The toxin is often the remedy. Often the thing that’s causing your pain also contains its own solution. Isn’t that amazing?”
“There’s a metaphor in there somewhere,” I tell him.
And Martin, earnest Martin, frontman of the biggest and kindest and most earnest band in the world, widens his eyes and smiles.
Production Credits
Styling by BETH FENTON. Grooming and wardrobe by TIFFANY HENRY. Tailoring by NIKKI EDMONDS. Produced by PATRICIA BILOTTI for PBNY PRODUCTIONS. Photographic assistance: GILLES O’KANE and BRANDON EPPERSON. Styling assistance: MANUEL PARRA and STEPHANIE MASTRO. Safety Diver: HAL WELLS. Water Camera Assistant: EVAN CONNELL. Lifeguard: BEN RIGBY
Chris Martin and Co. on ‘Music of the Spheres’ Tour, Future
Coldplay frontman Chris Martin and his bandmates have been wowing audiences around the world with their ‘Music of the Spheres’ tour. The tour, which kicked off in 2021, has been a massive success, with fans raving about the band’s incredible live performances and stunning visuals.
But what does the future hold for Coldplay? Will they continue to tour and release new music, or will they take a break and focus on other projects? Only time will tell, but one thing is for sure – Coldplay’s music will continue to captivate audiences for years to come.
As the band continues to push the boundaries of their sound and experiment with new genres and styles, fans can expect even more exciting music from Coldplay in the future. So keep an eye out for tour dates and new releases, because Chris Martin and Co. are showing no signs of slowing down anytime soon.
Beyoncé and Chris Martin have been friends for years. The pair have collaborated on music and performed at the Super Bowl together. Martin once even wrote a song he hoped to hear Beyoncé record. She flatly refused to accept it from him, though. Martin shared why Beyoncé had no interest in the song.
Beyoncé rejected a song from Chris Martin
In 2016, Coldplay performed at the Super Bowl with Beyoncé and Bruno Mars. He said he felt great about the performance, but soon realized that people online were not as happy with it.
“This very famous person emailed me, and she said, ‘Don’t worry about what everyone’s saying,’” he told Rolling Stone in 2024. “I was like, ‘What?’ I hadn’t looked at anything. Then I collapsed into the internet and became really down for a while.”
Beyoncé recently revealed that she rejected an ‘awful’ song from Coldplay’s frontman Chris Martin. In a recent interview, Beyoncé shared that she was sent a song by Martin for her upcoming album but ultimately decided not to include it.
The song, which Beyoncé described as ‘awful’, did not meet her high standards for music and she felt it didn’t align with her vision for the album. While it may have been a disappointment for Martin, Beyoncé’s decision to reject the song shows her commitment to creating music that resonates with her and her audience.
Despite the rejection, Beyoncé and Chris Martin remain on good terms and have collaborated on music in the past. It just goes to show that even the biggest names in music have their own standards and preferences when it comes to creating art.
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Beyoncé rejected song, Chris Martin, music collaboration, celebrity news, music industry, pop culture, entertainment industry, Beyoncé music, Chris Martin song, rejected songs, music collaboration, celebrity collaborations, music news.
On the Dec. 15 episode of the “Sunday Sitdown with Willie Geist” podcast, Crystal talked about his time being taught by Scorsese at New York University.
“He was a graduate student at the time, just doing his first movie, called ‘Who’s That Knocking at My Door.’ And it was 1968, 1969, 1970,” Crystal remarked on the podcast.
Crystal went on to describe Scorsese’s looks: “[He] had a big beard and granny glasses and hair down to his shoulders. He looked like everybody. He’d stand behind you while you were editing your film and he would be very scary, because he would look and he was so intense and he would speak very quickly — even then — he spoke quicker then because he was, you know, 50 years younger.”
Scorsese would reference Howard Hawks always using wide shots in his films as…
In a recent interview, comedian and actor Billy Crystal revealed some behind-the-scenes insights into his time as a student at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts, where he was taught by legendary director Martin Scorsese.
Crystal described Scorsese as “intense” and “scary” during his time as a student, stating that the acclaimed filmmaker had a no-nonsense approach to teaching. “He was so intense. He would be very scary,” Crystal said. “He would come into class and just start yelling at us about our work. But you could tell he was just so passionate about what he was teaching.”
Despite Scorsese’s intimidating demeanor, Crystal admitted that he learned a great deal from the director. “It was a tough experience, but I wouldn’t trade it for anything. He really pushed us to be the best we could be,” Crystal said.
It’s clear that Scorsese’s influence had a lasting impact on Crystal’s career, as the actor has gone on to achieve great success in Hollywood. And while Scorsese may have been intimidating in the classroom, it’s clear that his passion for filmmaking left a lasting impression on his students.
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Billy Crystal, Martin Scorsese, NYU, intense teaching, scary, director, actor, film school, mentorship, Hollywood legends
On the Dec. 15 episode of the “Sunday Sitdown with Willie Geist” podcast, Crystal talked about his time being taught by Scorsese at New York University.
“He was a graduate student at the time, just doing his first movie, called ‘Who’s That Knocking at My Door.’ And it was 1968, 1969, 1970,” Crystal remarked on the podcast.
Crystal went on to describe Scorsese’s looks: “[He] had a big beard and granny glasses and hair down to his shoulders. He looked like everybody. He’d stand behind you while you were editing your film and he would be very scary, because he would look and he was so intense and he would speak very quickly — even then — he spoke quicker then because he was, you know, 50 years younger.”
Scorsese would reference Howard Hawks always using wide shots in his films as…
In a recent interview, actor and comedian Billy Crystal opened up about his experience being taught by legendary director Martin Scorsese at New York University. Crystal described Scorsese as “intense” and “scary” during his time as a student.
“He was so intense,” Crystal said. “He would be very scary. He would stand on your desk and scream at you if you didn’t get it right. But he was also incredibly passionate and knowledgeable about film. It was a transformative experience for me.”
Crystal went on to praise Scorsese for his dedication to teaching and his ability to push his students to be their best. “He demanded excellence, and he wouldn’t settle for anything less,” Crystal said. “But that’s what made him such a great teacher. He inspired us to work harder and dig deeper.”
Despite the intimidating nature of Scorsese’s teaching style, Crystal looks back on his time at NYU with fondness. “I learned so much from him, and I’m grateful for the opportunity to have been taught by such a master,” Crystal said. “He may have been scary, but he was also a true genius.”
It’s clear that Martin Scorsese’s impact on his students, including Billy Crystal, goes far beyond the classroom. His passion for film and dedication to excellence have inspired generations of filmmakers and actors to strive for greatness.
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Billy Crystal, Martin Scorsese, NYU, teaching, intense, scary, film school, mentorship, Hollywood, legendary director, actor, filmmaker, New York University
The actor and comedian, who’s now 76, discussed his experience of being taught by the iconic director on the December 15 episode of the podcast Today’s Sunday Sitdown With Willie Geist.
Crystal said: “I was in film school [at NYU], and Martin Scorsese was my film production professor. He was a graduate student at the time, just doing his first movie, called Who’s That Knocking At My Door. And it was 1968, 1969, 1970.”
He continued: “[He] had a big beard and granny glasses and hair down to his shoulders. He looked like everybody. He’d stand behind you while you were editing your film and he would be very scary, because he would look and he was so intense and he would speak very quickly – even then – he spoke quicker then because he was, you know, 50 years younger.
“And he’d go, ‘Why’d you shoot it that way? Use a wide shot! Howard Hawks always used a wide shot.’ I said, ‘I’m 19 — I don’t know who Howard Hawks is!’”
Crystal went on to say that, despite his time at college being almost six decades ago, Scorsese still feels the same, with “the same energy” when he sees the 82-year-old.
Crystal (third from left) and Scorsese (fifth from right) at the 41st Annual Chaplin Award Gala in 2014. CREDIT: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images
Elsewhere in the interview, Crystal spoke about living in New York City’s West Village at the height of the counterculture. He said: “This neighbourhood was wild. It was a terrible time for America, but a great time at the same time. Cause all of that adversity and all of the protesting against the Vietnam War. It brought us together … What came out of it was a renaissance in music, in poetry, in art — that we’re still feeling today.
“Suddenly there were voices. There was Joan Baez, there was [Bob] Dylan, there was the Grateful Dead. All of that world was like right here.”
In a recent interview, former student Billy Crystal shared his experience with legendary filmmaker Martin Scorsese during his time as a film professor at NYU. Crystal described Scorsese as “very scary” and revealed that he was often intimidated by the acclaimed director.
Despite his initial fears, Crystal also praised Scorsese for his passion and dedication to teaching. He recalled how Scorsese pushed his students to think critically and creatively, shaping them into better filmmakers in the process.
Overall, Crystal’s account sheds light on the intense yet rewarding experience of learning under the guidance of Martin Scorsese. The iconic director’s influence continues to resonate with his former students, inspiring them to pursue their own creative endeavors in the world of cinema.
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Martin Scorsese, NYU film professor, Billy Crystal, film industry, director, actor, Hollywood, Scorsese films, Martin Scorsese teaching, NYU film school, famous directors, film education, Martin Scorsese interview