NEW YORK Clint Eastwood is combining two of
his passions, jazz and film, by taking a lead role in producing
a new documentary about US jazz pianist and composer Dave
Brubeck.
Eastwood also will chair a new honorary board
set up to preserve and continue the legacy of Brubeck, 86,
according to the Brubeck Institute at the University of the
Pacific in Stockton, California.
Other members on the board include trumpeter
and composer Wynton Marsalis, film director George Lucas,
recording artist Al Jarreau, record producer Quincy Jones, and
cellist Yo-Yo Ma.
"Dave Brubeck is an American legend," said
Eastwood, himself a jazz pianist and composer, in a statement
released by the University of the Pacific. "He is an American
original who continues to make significant contributions to
music, introduced a whole new generation to the world of jazz,
and continues to explore the international language of music."
The documentary, to be directed and produced
by Bruce Ricker, is tentatively titled "Dave Brubeck — In His
Own Sweet Way," and will track Brubeck’s career to his latest
work, the jazz opera "Cannery Row Suite," which made its
premiere at the Monterey Jazz Festival in 2006.
Eastwood and Ricker, whose previous film
credits include the "Thelonious Monk, Straight No Chaser" and
"The Last of the Blue Devils," also are making a documentary
about Tony Bennett titled "The Music Never Ends."
In 1988 Eastwood directed a film about the
troubled life and career of jazz musician Charlie Parker called
"Bird," and recently he composed the music for his films "Flags
of Our Fathers" and "Mystic River."
Eastwood has served as the honorary chairman
of the Brubeck Institute since its inception in 2000 and is a
member of the board of directors for the Monterey Jazz Festival.
The Brubeck Institute was established after the donation of
an extensive collection of Brubeck’s materials to the University
of the Pacific’s library for research and archival purposes and
now offers various jazz educational programs. – Reuters