Al Hirschfeld
An Interview with Ric Burns
New York City, 2003
"The interview was conducted on Wednesday, January
8, 2003, in the late morning, on the top floor of Al’s house on east
95th Street. Present were Arthur and Barbara Gelb, Louise Kerz
Hirschfeld, myself, a producer named Steve Rivo, and a cameraman
named Peter Nelson. At his drafting table, with winter light coming
in a north facing window to his left, Al sat as per usual on an
ancient dentist’s chair, which I understand was his preferred
drafting perch. A cat was also in attendance, intermittently curled
under Al’s arm as he worked. It was a cold day, and Al wore a shawl.
No one ever had bluer eyes, or clearer ones. His 99 year old hand
never shook. He was working from a drawing of O’Neill done decades
earlier – a notably Nina-less caricature, with arms folded. Al
happily added Ninas when prompted by onlookers, making the picture
unique. He died 12 days later on
Monday, January 20th, 2003. What an
extraordinary life."
–
Ric Burns
"I persuaded Al (my very
dear friend) and Louise to agree to Al drawing O'Neill just for our
documentary, and I participated in the interview, partly as he drew,
asking Al questions about his going with O'Neill to the six-day bike
races at the old Madison Square Garden, his love of the jazz joints
on 52nd Street, etc. When the interview and drawing were finished, I
asked Al if he'd be willing to give Ric the drawing, Al's last
completed one." – Arthur Gelb