Kirk, along
with fellow NEA Jazz Masters Bobby McFerrin, Roscoe Mitchell
and Reggie
Workman, Will Be Honored at a Special Concert
at SF Jazz
Center on April 2, 2020
If you missed yesterday’s exciting announcement that
DORTHAAN KIRK was named a 2020 NEA Jazz Master for her work as a tireless
advocate for Jazz, please click on this link:
https://www.arts.gov/news/2019/national-endowment-arts-announces-2020-nea-jazz-masters
Dubbed
Newark’s First Lady of Jazz, Dorthaan retired from WBGO Jazz 88.3 in 2018 after
four decades as a founding employee of the award-winning public radio station
in Newark. She continues to produce and book events throughout New Jersey;
inspire and support young musicians through the Dorthaan Kirk Scholarship
Opportunity Fund; serve as Consultant to New Jersey Performing Arts Center
(NJPAC); head up Rokir Music Corp. to build upon the legacy of her late
husband, Rahsaan Roland Kirk; book Bethany Baptist Church’s Jazz Vespers
services, now for the 20th year; and offer her time and expertise to help
secure the future of the art form.
Stay tuned
for more information on the Scholarship Opportunity Fund awards in the coming
weeks.
Dorthaan
Kirk, who will receive the 2020 A.B. Spellman NEA Jazz Masters Fellowship for
Jazz Advocacy at a concert at SF Jazz Center on April 2, 2020, will be honored
with fellow NEA Jazz Masters Bobby McFerrin, Roscoe Mitchell and Reggie
Workman.
About
Dorthaan Kirk:
“I was
absolutely stunned and speechless (I’m never speechless) when I learned I was
receiving the award. What an honor to be in such great company of others that
have received it and to be acknowledged in such a big way for the work I love
to do in jazz. I will continue my work to the best of my ability as long as I’m
allowed to.”
Dorthaan
Kirk has been a major force at WBGO Jazz 88.3 FM, Newark Public Radio—the only
full-time jazz format station in New York and New Jersey—working in various
roles for more than four decades. Called “Newark’s First Lady of Jazz,” Kirk
has been active as a curator and producer of jazz events primarily in and
around Newark, New Jersey, and is an avid supporter of musicians and jazz
education for children.
Kirk grew up
in Texas and lived in California before moving to the East Coast in 1970 with
husband Rahsaan Roland Kirk, a jazz great known for playing multiple horns
simultaneously, whose career she managed. Kirk was already a jazz fan before
marriage, but her husband introduced her to more musicians and new venues, and
she became more knowledgeable about jazz history through him.
When her
husband died unexpectedly in 1977 at age 41, Kirk wanted to continue to work in
the jazz business. She was introduced to Bob Ottenhoff, who was working on
getting the Newark Board of Education to transfer their underutilized broadcast
license to create the first public radio station in New Jersey, as a full-time
jazz station. Ottenhoff hired Kirk as one of the original employees that
launched WBGO in 1979. Before retiring in 2018, Kirk was the special events and
community relations coordinator; the curator of the station’s art gallery,
which is open to the public; and managed the annual WBGO Jazz-a-thon as well as
the WBGO Children’s Jazz Series, which offers free jazz concerts by top-name
musicians specifically for young people since 1993.
Kirk has
been active for decades in the Newark community presenting jazz events. In
2000, she coordinated with the Rev. Dr. M. William Howard Jr. of the Bethany
Baptist Church in Newark to present free-of-charge monthly Jazz Vespers, live
jazz events during the months from October to June, that have featured
nationally renowned performers, such as Jimmy Heath, Jon Faddis, and Gregory
Porter. Since 2012, Kirk has been the consultant producer for a monthly jazz
brunch series titled Dorthaan’s Place in her honor at the New Jersey Performing
Arts Center’s Nico Kitchen & Bar in Newark. In addition to recruiting
talent, she has also acted as master of ceremonies for these events.
She
continues to be the keeper of the flame of her late husband’s musical legacy:
managing his music; acting as administrator of his publishing company; and
organizing special events in his honor, such as the tribute at St. Peter’s
Church in New York City in December 2007.
Kirk has
been the recipient of numerous awards from the City of East Orange, City of
Newark, and New Jersey State Assembly for her community-based initiatives in
the arts. In 2013, she received the Humanitarian Award from the American Conference
on Diversity, Essex County Chapter. For her 80th birthday in 2018, the Dorthaan
Kirk Scholarship Opportunity Fund was created to support jazz students in the
Newark area.