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The Third Coast Festival Lifetime Achievement Award (now the Audio Luminary Award) is presented annually to an individual who is greatly admired for his or her significant and ongoing contributions to the field of radio. Hats off to the 2003 recipient, Joe Frank.
A master of the dark, humorous, and sometimes absurd in radio, Joe Frank's work spans more than 30 years. He began in 1977 at WBAI, Pacifica's New York station, and later served as co-anchor of National Public Radio's All Things Considered in 1978. Over the course of the next two decades he produced and developed several radio series for KCRW and National Public Radio. Throughout Frank's career, he has been honored with many major industry awards, including the George Foster Peabody Award and two Major Armstrong Awards for radio drama.
Joe Frank has historically combined techniques of monologue, radio drama, and talk radio to tell stories about the human experience. Tackling philosophical or spiritual questions, the programs are timeless explorations of life, death, alienation, faith, and love. Over the years Frank's distinctive approach to making radio has inspired producers around the world to experiment with and stretch the medium beyond traditional boundaries.
In nominating him for this award, veteran producer Larry Josephson wrote, "Joe Frank has taken his craft to the outer limits of radio. He is a master of the medium, and a model for those who have followed." In supporting this nomination, radio innovator Jay Allison offered these thoughts: "Radio loves the darkness. There is no voice in America that fits inside the darkness better than Joe Frank's." Film director Francis Ford Coppolla put forth this observation: "As a radio artist, Joe stands with no equal."
We're pleased to present Joe Frank's acceptance speech, delivered to a spellbound audience, at the 2003 TCF awards ceremony. You can listen to it in the player above -- and hear more examples of his work in the Extras section below.
Joe Frank's radio work spans more than 30 years. He began in 1977 at WBAI, Pacifica's New York station, and later served as co-anchor of NPR's All Things Considered. He produced and developed four radio program series for KCRW and NPR: Work in Progress, In the Dark, Somewhere Out There, and The Other Side. Frank has published two plays, and is also the author of The Queen of Puerto Rico and Other Stories, based on his radio work. In 2003, he was the recipient of Third Coast's Lifetime Achievement Award.
Listen to more stories by Joe Frank.
In Larry and Zack, a phone call between father and son reveals volumes about their relationship and ultimately the father's alcoholism.
In O.J., a conversation between a tabloid reporter and an intimate friend of O.J. Simpson produces new "theories" about the notorious athlete's trial.
In Sweepstakes Winner -- a self-reflective farce about public radio fund-raisers -- a family receives a phone call from their local public radio station at a most inopportune moment.
Posted at 03/15/2010