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Streep sums up her own category: "I'm in a particular subset of members that's not even allowed to vote." The inductees demonstrate again how far the academy has changed from its frankly snobbish roots, when modernists, women, non-whites and Jews were not welcome and the presence of a "lowly" actress, even one as talented as Streep, might have set off mass resignations. Saul, for instance, is a founder of Pop Art whose lush and sometimes lurid works include "Donald Duck Crucifixion" and "Sex Deviant Being Executed." "I was quiet surprised and even shocked when I got the news because I always thought of myself as a `bad' artist and that the academy was a place devoted to `good' artists," he said. "I felt a bit uncomfortable for a moment, but then I thought, `What the heck, why be childish?' So I went with it." McGuane, whose novels include "Keep the Change" and "Ninety-Two in the Shade," has been previously cited by the academy. He received an award in 1972 for his novel "Bushwhacked Piano" and remembered speaking at the ceremony with Bernard Malamud, Walker Percy and Eudora Welty. "All those people are gone but remembering them and that event has made this a gratifying personal landmark," he said. New members will be inducted at an afternoon ceremony next month at the academy's beaux arts complex in upper Manhattan, just off the Hudson River. Author Calvin Trillin, elected to the academy two years ago, will be a featured speaker. Streep plans to attend.
"I just hope to have lots of cocktails and talk about high-fallutin' things," Streep said. Like they do in Hollywood. "Uh, yeah, of course."
[Associated
Press;
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