Word: zadikov
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Associate Editor Paul Gray, who wrote the cover story from Hillenbrand's reports and those of Reporter-Researcher Rosemarie Tauris Zadikov, was also impressed by Kirkland's candor and forthright approach when they met for an interview in her teacher's studio. A recent convert to the world of dance, Gray confessed he had indulged in a few Walter Mitty fantasies of joining her onstage. With that, she reached down and pulled off his left shoe. "Good extension," she judged as she tugged at Gray's foot while the nonplused writer tried to stretch...
...favorite books on cooking is a part of this week's cover story on the growing U.S. love affair with the kitchen. The pair in the chefs' hats with Lang in his Manhattan kitchen are TIME'S Michael Demarest, who wrote the story, and Rosemarie Tauris Zadikov, who assisted with the reporting...
...correspondents in bureaus around the world found similar signs of lava, smoke and fire wherever Rostropovich has wandered. In Jerusalem, Isaac Stern talked to TIME'S Robert Slater about "the intensity, the sheer eruptive force behind Rostropovich's enthusiasm." In New York City, Reporter-Researcher Rosemarie Tauris Zadikov interviewed Leonard Bernstein, who recalled how Rostropovich first came to dinner a decade ago, bringing "records, tapes, scores and messages from Shostakovich." Washington Correspondent Bonnie Angelo went to question Rostropovich and to watch his orchestral rehearsals in his newly adopted city. Recalling his emotional concert with the National Symphony...
...York, the story was written by Senior Writer Michael Demarest, who sifted through mounds of material with the help of Reporter-Researcher Rosemarie Tauris Zadikov. An American schooled in England, Demarest remembers glimpsing Elizabeth at the funeral of her grandfather King George V in 1936 and at the coronation of her father George VI. Recalls Demarest: "Those were the last great assemblages of empire. There were to be no more...
Back in New York, Willwerth turned his files over to Contributing Editor Mark Goodman, who wrote the story, and to Reporter-Researcher Rosemarie Tauris Zadikov, who did some interviewing herself. Zadikov, a seven-year veteran of TIME's Music section, was reared on classical music, but finds her tastes broadening. "People are becoming more sophisticated and are looking for quality," she says. "If they find it in popular music, then that is where they will go, even if they are over...