Roderick MacLeish Passes Away
Jul. 3rd, 2006 06:22 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
For a number of years now, I've been trying to track down Roderick MacLeish.
You know -- Roderick MacLeish. The voice of the Philadelphia Orchestra. An NPR commentator and news analyst for many years, with a rich and wonderful voice and equally rich and wonderful words and sentiments -- truly, he is the reason I got hooked on NPR in the first place. An astonishing storyteller -- he wrote a fantasy novel called Prince Ombra which begins:
Anyway. A number of years ago, the guy just dropped out of sight. And it frustrated me. I wanted to know what happened to him, what he thought of the way things were going. He was, at least to my hearing, a humanist and a populist, someone who cared deeply about the world and its people for all the right reasons.
And I couldn't find him. Google, NPR, nothing.
Turns out he retired. And, this past Saturday, he passed away. He was eighty.
I only wish I'd been able to find him, and thank him for what he brought to my life.
Sigh.
You know -- Roderick MacLeish. The voice of the Philadelphia Orchestra. An NPR commentator and news analyst for many years, with a rich and wonderful voice and equally rich and wonderful words and sentiments -- truly, he is the reason I got hooked on NPR in the first place. An astonishing storyteller -- he wrote a fantasy novel called Prince Ombra which begins:
It is said -- and it is true -- that just before we are born, a cavern angel holds his finger to our mouths and whispers, "Hush! Don't tell what you know."An amazing book.
This is why we have a cleft on our upper lips and remember nothing of where we came from.
Toward the end of the last century -- in 1978, to be precise -- a smooth-lipped boy appeared in the world.
Anyway. A number of years ago, the guy just dropped out of sight. And it frustrated me. I wanted to know what happened to him, what he thought of the way things were going. He was, at least to my hearing, a humanist and a populist, someone who cared deeply about the world and its people for all the right reasons.
And I couldn't find him. Google, NPR, nothing.
Turns out he retired. And, this past Saturday, he passed away. He was eighty.
I only wish I'd been able to find him, and thank him for what he brought to my life.
Sigh.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-07-03 10:56 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-07-03 11:18 pm (UTC)