Obituary of Michael Rothbard
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Michael Rothbard, a former child psychologist who became one of Long
Island's leading music impresarios, died yesterday morning at Huntington Hospital after a sudden illness. He was 63.
Rothbard was co-founder with his partner, Kathie Bodily, of the Inter-Media Art Center, the Huntington
concert hall that closed in June after a quarter-century run in the
heart of the village. A funky place, IMAC, which once doubled as a
video studio and gallery, was also eccentric and lovable. But it was
the music that became synonymous with IMAC - folk, jazz, blues -
performed live by artists ranging from Art Blakey to Philip Glass, Herbie Hancock to Tom Paxton, Suzanne Vega to Ani DiFranco, Richie Havens to Dr. John, Phoebe Snow to Keb' Mo'.
In
a 1995 interview with Newsday, Rothbard explained why IMAC, which moved
around the North Shore for nearly a decade, finally settled in
Huntington. "There was already an arts community here that just
wouldn't quit - storytellers, poets, painters. I'd never seen anything
like it since Woodstock," the loquacious Rothbard said. "It was so energizing."
His career was a long winding road, starting with a stint as a psychologist working with troubled kids in Manhattan, where he met Bodily, then a dental assistant. Their first arts collaboration was a 1970 multimedia festival at Hofstra University.
A grant from the New York
State Council for the Arts gave IMAC its start in 1974 as a video
production studio in Halesite. Rothbard and Bodily soon moved to Bayville,
where IMAC's first live concerts were presented. When the couple
returned to Huntington in 1983, they brought their arts center with
them, occupying the crumbling Art Deco balcony space of a 1920s
vaudeville house on New York Avenue. The new IMAC opened with a sold-out series of avant-garde dance performances, one featuring the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane company.
The
600-seat nonprofit center survived, if never quite thriving
financially, and even managed to improve the physical conditions of its
near-derelict interior. But rising costs, diminishing public financing
and the emergence of other performing arts centers across the Island
made it tougher to keep the doors open.
Bob
Stanford, co-owner of Soundtraks Limited, a CD and DVD shop two doors
from IMAC, said Friday, "Michael was an integral part of Huntington. I
thought it was a sad day when IMAC closed, but this is a much sadder
day."
"Ours was a beautiful and unusual partnership," Bodily said. "This was what we were destined to do."
In
addition to Bodily, whom he called his "perfect mate," Rothbard is
survived by his sister, Lynn Carr, and niece, Melody. Services are
planned for Monday; details will be posted on imactheater.org.