Vol. XXV No. 1
September 2009

Commencement 2009

With Honorary Doctorate in Hand, Linney Addresses the Graduating Class

The graduating class of 2009 was treated not only to a bright, balmy afternoon on Friday, May 22, the day of Juilliard’s first commencement ceremony in the newly-renovated Alice Tully Hall, but to a commencement address by one of the School’s most illustrious alumni, actor Laura Linney, who, along with choreographer and dancer Donald McKayle, jazz legend and entrepreneur Quincy Jones, composer Steve Reich, soprano and opera director Renata Scotto, and performing artist and philanthropist Haruhisa Handa, received an honorary doctorate that day. Here is a transcript of Ms. Linney’s speech, which can be heard on the Juilliard multimedia gallery.

President Polisi, distinguished guests, faculty, family, friends, and—most importantly—the Juilliard graduating class of 2009: Thank you. I am so extraordinarily proud and honored to have been invited to help you mark this milestone, this commencement of your lives as performing artists outside of this very special place called Juilliard. Can you believe it? Did you ever think this day would come? What an exciting day. What a very big day this is. After intense years of arduous study and exploration, you are today suspended between an ending of one part of your lives and the beginning of another.

I welcome this opportunity to congratulate all of you on a truly remarkable accomplishment—because graduating from Juilliard is a tremendous accomplishment. It is also a unique privilege not to be brushed over lightly ... it is something you can and should be proud of the rest of your lives.

My invitation here today not only includes me in your celebration but also, in the process, selfishly allows me the opportunity to express a little gratitude. This moment gives me a chance to say thank you all over again to the faculty and fellow students who pushed, prodded, intimidated, and inspired me through the sometimes painful, often joyful Juilliard experience that I carry with me every day of my life. Nearly two decades later, I am more deeply indebted than I ever knew possible to those who have made The Juilliard School what it is. Juilliard changed me, and I know that it has changed all of you as well.

For those of you now saying goodbye to this place and to this chapter in your life, I hope you’ll take a moment to remember the many, many people who offered you something useful and good on your way through this school. Plenty of faces will come to you quickly and easily—the faces of people who knew how good you were, how far you could go, how much you could give, and how much you could take long before you did. As time passes, more faces will appear, more lessons will be remembered, more voices will make themselves heard.

As I look across row after row of these talented musicians and singers, I remember the strings, the brass, the percussion, and the heavenly voices that I once heard flowing down through the stairwells and up through the hallways of the third floor—the music that gave me heart on days when I really, really needed it. When I look at the dancers, I distinctly remember passing through some open space in the building and stumbling onto an impromptu rehearsal. I remember stopping, utterly transfixed, spying, to watch such strength and poise, and that fierce artists’ concentration. They would stop and pace the floor, jumping in and out of the music, unsatisfied ... I remember wishing I could watch them forever, suspended in an epiphany that I had just witnessed, and felt the power of dance, the transformative power of art in motion. It was one of the most beautiful things I have ever seen. It was also then that I sighed, and really understood why all the actors wanted to date the ballerinas!

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Laura Linney
(Photo by Peter Schaaf)