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Barry Ulanov – professor of English at Barnard College for 35 years, jazz critic, and author or editor of close to 50 books on Christian humanism, jazz, and other topics – has died at age 82

May 1, 2000, NEW YORK, N.Y. – Barry Ulanov, the McIntosh Professor of English at Barnard College for more than three decades, the author, editor or translator of close to 50 books and more than 1,000 magazine articles on an extraordinarily wide range of topics ranging from jazz, to theater, Christian humanism to French, and a spokesman for the New York City’s arts and cultural scene, died Sunday from complications associated with colo-rectal cancer at the age of 82. He died at 2 a.m., on the date of the Orthodox celebration of Russian Easter, with his four children around him, reading and praying from his favorite Psalms.

Ulanov, at various times an editor, a college professor, and a jazz music producer, was a man of wide interests who was known for telling anecdotes while shifting in and out of the accents and dialects of different characters. He spoke half a dozen languages (including French, Italian, German, Spanish, and Russian) fluently and could make his way in another 10. He lived in New York City and in Woodbury, Conn., on the weekends and in the summer.

Born April 10, 1918 in Manhattan to Nathan Ulanov, concertmaster of Toscanini's NBC Philharmonic, and Jeanette Asquith Ulanov, Ulanov was a student at the Ethical Culture Elementary School and was graduated as valedictorian from Abraham Lincoln High School, in Brooklyn. He chose to attend Columbia University, rather than Harvard, in order to be in Harlem and close to the heart of jazz music and culture, and received his A.B. in 1939. His teachers included Franz Boas, Helen Gardiner, and Lionel Trilling. One of his roommates was Ad Rheinhardt, the modern abstract expressionist artist.

His first marriage, to Joan Bel Geddes, a student at Barnard while he was at Columbia, occurred in 1939, producing three children, Anne, Nicholas, and Katherine, and ended in divorce in 1968. His second marriage, that year, to Ann, produced a son, Alexander. He is survived by his first and second wives, his four children, and two grandchildren.

After his freshman year at Columbia, he deliberately focused his learning on the culture and literature of a different country in each year - Italy, France, Spain and Russia. Literature and music were early interests. He was editor of the Columbia Literary Magazine where he published the first articles of Thomas Merton. He started writing reviews of Jazz music in college and upon graduation was offered the editorship of Metronome, then a flagging magazine of classical music, which became the bible of Be-bop culture under his leadership. He also edited Swing (1939-1941), The Review of Recorded Music (1941-1943) Listen (1940-1942), and the Metronome Yearbook (1950-1955), and was a columnist for Down Beat (1955-1958).

Something of an evangelist for jazz, Ulanov was the first to promote and support Charlie Parker through Metronome, which he edited from 1943-1955 and worked closely with many Jazz musicians, producers, and critics including Billie Holiday, Nat King Cole, Charlie Mingus, Lester Young, David Brubeck, Teo Macero, and Leonard Feather. During World War II, he emceed armed forces radio jazz broadcasts. He wrote more than 1,000 articles in magazines such as Vogue and Esquire on Jazz and American culture, as well as scripts for radio and TV. He sponsored the "Metronome All Stars," a battle of the bands on NBC radio, including Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Lennie Tristano.

Ulanov was the author of four books on jazz music and culture including: "Duke Ellington" (1946), the first biography of the bandleader and composer, "The Incredible Crosby" (1948), "A History of Jazz in America" (1952) which the Saturday Review Syndicate called "the best serious book on jazz as a developing art yet written by an American," and "A Handbook of Jazz" (1957) all translated into multiple languages and reissued for decades.

In his autobiography Miles Davis referred to Ulanov as the only "white Mother[…] critic" who ever understood him or Charlie Parker.

In "A History of Jazz in America," Ulanov wrote that the quest to define "what is American about America" would be possible only if one went beyond "the well-rounded emptiness of the simple summation of a people and its culture … It is [possible], I think, if we are willing to explore not the single culture of Americans but the several cultures, the cultures and the arts of native and naturalized Americans, of Americans from all parts of America, of VIP's and very small people, of businessmen and ballet dancers, of jazz musicians and gas-station attendants, of politicians and painters, of gangsters, and college professors, of drugstore cowboys and bona fide cattlemen, of FBI men and Communists, of movie stars and bobby-soxers, of professional military men and government-issue soldiers, of psychiatrists and farmers and poets."

He taught English Literature at Princeton University from 1951 to 1953 and then, from 1953 to 1988 at Barnard College, Columbia University. At Barnard, he served in his later years as McIntosh Professor of English, and created the Joint Program in the Arts, enabling students to understand the connection of all the arts, and served several times as chairman of the English, Arts, and Religion departments, as well as director of the program in Foreign Areas. He was an adjunct professor of religion at Columbia University. After retiring from Barnard College in 1988, he taught at Union Theological Seminary in New York City in the Department of Psychiatry and Religion. His classes included "Mysticism and Human Presence," and "The Inner Conversation."

In the 1950s, Ulanov became increasingly interested in the connection between modern art and contemporary American culture. He completed a Ph.D. at Columbia University in 1955 in English Literature with a sub-specialization in Early Christian Art and a dissertation on Alberti and perspective. He worked as architect I.M. Pei’s sound consultant on projects such as the mile-high shopping center in Denver, and the Roosevelt Fields mall. He also wrote text and read at performance of Anna Sokolow Dancers at Frank Lloyd Wright’s Falling Waters, and published several volumes on modern art and contemporary American culture including "Makers of the Modern Theater" (1961), "The Two Worlds of American Art: The Private and the Popular" (1965), on the private and public spaces for aesthetic expression in the United States, and, with James Hall, "Modern Culture and the Arts" (1972), the first U.S. textbook ofmodern art.

From the mid-1950s on, he was involved along with first wife Joan with the Catholic Church worldwide through his presidency of the Catholic Renascence [sic] Society, whose members included Flannery O’Connor. With Joan, he translated "The Last Essays of George Bernanos," and created the St. Thomas More Society, an intellectual Catholic discussion and meeting group. With Frank Tauritz, he translated Joy Out of Sorrow, by Mere Marie des Douleurs. He was an active member of Vatican II Council, where he was involved in the translation of the liturgy into vernacular from Latin, and he spoke at the International Eucharistic Congress with Pope John XXIII in Bombay in 1964.

He published several books on Religion and culture including "Sources & Resources: the Literary Traditions of Christian Humanism" (1960), "Seeds of Hope in the Modern World" (1962), and the "Prayers of St. Augustine," and associate editor for five volumes of "The Bridge, a Yearbook of Judaeo-Christian Studies," published by The Institute of Judaeo-Christian Studies, Seton Hall, from 1958 to 1963. He was author of "The Making of a Modern Saint: A Biographical Study of Thérèse of Lisieux" (1966).

He was named a Guggenheim Fellow 1962-1963 and received an Honorary Litt.D. from Villanova University in 1965.

In the last twenty years, he concentrated on explorations of religion and psychology, publishing over ten books with his second wife Ann Belford Ulanov, Professor of Psychiatry and Religion at Union Theological Seminary and psychoanalyst in private practice. Their works together included "Religion and the Unconscious" (1975), "Primary Speech: A Psychology of Prayer" (1982), "Transforming Sexuality: The Archetypal World of Anima Animus" (1994) and "Cinderella and her Sisters: The Envied and the Envying"(1998). Until his death, they co-edited the Journal of Religion and Health, published by the Institutes of Religion and Health. On his own, he wrote and "Jung and the Outside World" (1992), detailing the influence of Jungian psychoanalysis on the arts, literature and philosophy.

Ulanov lectured extensively worldwide in Europe, Asia, Latin America and a majority of the United States on topics ranging from Duke Ellington’s sacred music to the depth psychology and religion. In recent years, he updated and in 1996 reissued his edited volume "On Death, Wisdom and Consolation from the World’s Great Writers." He was an advisor to Reminiscing in Tempo, an award-winning documentary on public television about Duke Ellington.

"The astonishing fact is that each of us is himself or herself and nobody else. What our imagination has brought us to, in this meeting of knowing and unknowing, is the eternal moment where our small being confronts Being itself. We have something new to experience, something new to understand," he wrote with Ann Ulanov in "The Healing Imagination: The Meeting of Psyche and Soul" (1982).

He is survived by his wife Ann Belford Ulanov, and his children: Anne Ulanov, of Poughkeepsie, a computer support specialist at Davis Polk & Wardwell, of New York City and Woodbury, Conn., and freelance writer; Nicholas Ulanov, of Princeton, N.J., and Oxford, England, President of the Ulanov Partnership, international consultant to non-profit and art organizations around the world; Katherine Ulanov, of New York City, owner and designer of Nonlinear NYC; Alex Ulanov, of New York City and Woodbury, Conn., a consultant at the Boston Consulting Group and previously visiting assistant professor of classics at Yale University; and two grandchildren, through Anne Ulanov, Amy and Mark Pietrasanta.

A memorial service will be held at 4 p.m. on Wednesday, May 17, at James Chapel, Union Theological Seminary, 3041 Broadway at 121st Street, New York City. The family requests that in lieu of flowers, donations may be sent to the Ulanov Scholarship Fund, c/o Union Theological Seminary, 3041 Broadway, Knox Hall 7E, New York, N.Y. 10027.

Contact: Lucas Held, Barnard College, 212-854-7583

Alex Ulanov, 917-743-4387

 

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