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Meryl Streep, Meg Ryan among readers at poetry tribute

Meryl Streep, Meg Ryan among readers at poetry tribute

NEW YORK — At an all-star tribute to poetry on Wednesday, Meryl Streep was thinking about her family.

The Oscar-winning actress sang a lullaby she learned from her mother; read a Gary Snyder poem she had heard about from her sister-in-law, actress Maeve Kinkead; and recited a poem by Maggie Smith (the writer, not the actress, Streep reminded the audience) about a parent protecting her kids from the sorrows of the world:

Life is short, though I keep this from my children.

Life is short, and I've shortened mine

in a thousand delicious, ill-advised ways,

a thousand deliciously ill-advised ways

I'll keep from my children.

Streep, Meg Ryan and Grammy-winning jazz artist Cecile McLorin Salvant were among the readers, and singers, at the 15th annual presentation of Poetry & the Creative Mind. The sold-out event at Avery Fisher Hall was presented by the Academy of American Poets in honour of National Poetry Month. It also featured Amanda Palmer, Maurice Hines and several others reading works by such poets as Frank O'Hara and Nikki Giovanni — and sometimes throwing in a little music.

Palmer brought a ukulele on stage and roared the instrument's praises, while Salvant's voice was all she needed for a shattering performance of the Bessie Smith song "You Ought to be Ashamed." Hines was shaking and twitching and nearly started dancing as he read Maya Angelou's "Ain't That Bad?" He first heard the poem from Angelou herself when they happened to ride on the same train.

Poet Elizabeth Alexander, the evening's host, noted that poetry is both necessary and popular. Some of the readers defended the National Endowment of the Arts, which faces possible elimination by President Donald Trump's administration, while others referred indirectly to Trump and the power of art as resistance.

Author Sebastian Junger read a pair of Whitman poems and likened him to Sen. Bernie Sanders as both comforting and "deeply subversive." Streep, an impassioned backer of Hillary Clinton in 2016, was so impressed with Palmer's voice and musicality she suggested she run for president in 2020.

Some were simply amazed to be invited. Actor Wayne Brady confided that he was a very late convert to poetry — the conversion happened back stage before the event — but he sounded warm and confident as he embarked on Terrance Hayes' "Lighthead's Guide to the Galaxy." Playwright-director James Lapine chose works by two poets who have died in recent years, Thomas Lux and Mark Strand, whose "Eating Poetry" captured the night's pleasure for both readers and listeners.

Ink runs from the corners of my mouth.

There is no happiness like mine.

I have been eating poetry.

___

This story has been corrected to show that Meryl Streep's sister-in-law is actress Maeve Kinkead, not Maeve Kinkaid.

Hillel Italie, The Associated Press