jueves, 10 de mayo de 2018
Paul McCartney Says Won't Come to Israel to Receive Wolf Music Prize
Paul McCartney in Israel
www.haaretz.com
Paul McCartney Says Won't Come to Israel to Receive Wolf Music Prize
McCartney says being chosen was a 'great honor,' but his schedule won't allow him to travel to Israel
Maya Asheri
May 10, 2018
Singer/songwriter Paul McCartney performs on stage at the Prudential Center on September 11, 2017 in Newark, NJ. CREDIT .Brent N. Clarke / Invision / AP
The musician Paul McCartney announced Thursday that he would not come to Israel later this month to receive the Wolf Prize for Music he was awarded in February.
"It's very flattering and I'm grateful to be chosen for the Wolf Prize for Music this year," wrote McCartney. "It’s certainly a great honor for me to be included among the greatest artists, creators, scientists and writers of today’s history. But after reviewing my schedule I have to announce that I will not be able to arrive at the date set."
The music prize will be awarded to McCartney and Adam Fischer, a conductor and human rights activist; the Agriculture Prize to Prof. Gene Robinson of the University of Illinois for leading the genome revolution in the biology of honey bee populations; the Chemistry Prize to Prof. Makuto Fujita of the University of Tokyo and Prof. Omar Yaghi of the University of California, Berkeley for their contributions to supramolecular chemistry.
The prestigious Wolf Prize was founded in 1975. It has been awarded in five areas - four in the sciences and one in the arts - in a fixed rotation.
Last month, actress Natalie Portman announced that she would not arrive in Israel to receive the Genesis Prize. The dual American-Israeli citizen said in a statement that she cancelled her arrival upon knowledge that Netanyahu was scheduled to speak at the ceremony.
www.jpost.com
PAUL MCCARTNEY TO SKIP WOLF PRIZE CEREMONY
Singer could still collect award if he attends in the next two years.
BY AMY SPIRO
THE JERUSALEM POST
MAY 10, 2018
British musician Paul McCartney performs during the "One on One" tour concert in Porto Alegre, Brazil. (photo credit: REUTERS)
Sir Paul McCartney will not be attending the upcoming Wolf Prize ceremony in the Knesset after being selected earlier this year for the prestigious recognition.
A spokeswoman for the prize confirmed on Thursday that after discussions with representatives for the singer and his wife, he informed them that he would not be able to appear in person.
“It’s very flattering and I am grateful to be this year’s Wolf Prize winner in music,” McCartney said, according to the Wolf Foundation. “It’s certainly a great honor for me to be included among the greatest artists, creators, scientists and writers of today’s history. But after reviewing my schedule I have to announce that I will not be able to arrive at the date set.”
The Wolf Foundation noted that recipients of the prize must appear in person to collect their honor, but they may do so at the ceremonies of either of the following two years instead.
“We thank Sir Paul McCartney, his staff and his wife, Nancy Shevell, for their cooperation,” said Reut Inon Berman, CEO of the Wolf Foundation, “and we’re looking forward to seeing them together in May 2019.”
McCartney was last in Israel in 2008, when he performed for a near-capacity crowd of 50,000 at Yarkon Park in Tel Aviv.
The ceremony for this year’s prize winners will be held on May 31 at the Knesset in Jerusalem. The foundation confirmed on Thursday that the remaining eight laureates would attend the event.
In February, the Wolf Prize announced its nine laureates in the fields of music and science. McCartney was to share the $100,000 prize with conductor Adam Fischer. The agriculture prize will be awarded to Prof. Gene Robinson of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champagne, and the chemistry honor will be given to Omar Yaghi, a Jordanian American who works at the University of California, Berkeley, and to the University of Tokyo’s Makoto Fujita.
The award in physics will go to Charles H. Bennett and Gilles Brassard of the IBM Research Center in New York at the University of Montreal, respectively. The mathematics prize will be shared by two professors from the University of Chicago, Alexander Beilinson and Vladimir Drinfeld.
The Wolf Prize has been awarded since 1978 by the Wolf Foundation, which was established in 1975 with a $10 million endowment from the Wolf family. While it is a private, nonprofit NGO, its activities are overseen by the state comptroller, and the culture minister acts as chairman of its council.
Former Beatles star Paul McCartney (C) walks towards photographers in Tel Aviv September 24, 2008
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