Victor Hugo's 'Ninety-Three' in Shanghai

According to Shanghai Daily News (via EastDay.com), the China National Theater will soon be producing Victor Hugo’s play Ninety-Three. Stop by if you’re in town ? and speak Chinese.
From the announcement:

France, 1793 ? It’s the year of guillotine. The architects of the French Revolution have set up the Convention, designed to stem social chaos, and their troops engage in bloody battle with counter-revolutionaries. Ideals topple in the face of political necessity and intrigue becomes a way of life. This is the setting for “Ninety-Three,” French romantic writer Victor Hugo’s last work of fiction. […]
“The theme ? which is played in brilliantly unexpected variations in all the key incidents of the story, and which motivates all the characters and events, integrating them into an inevitable progression toward a magnificent climax ? is man’s loyalty to values,” said Ayn Rand, the well known 20th century American writer. As a literary work, “Ninety-Three” has long been regarded as the grand finale of Romantic literary school, since during the years when Hugo was writing the novel, from 1872 to 1873, the Naturalist school of fiction had already become France’s dominant literary influence
“I read Hugo’s novel to the letter when I started to write this play,” says [Chinese translator and] playwright Cao Lusheng. “It took me more than a year to complete the play, during which time I revisited Hugo’s memorial hall in France.” Cao says that he has been a fan of Hugo since his student days, and holds a particular fascination for the writer’s expressive language. “His language is full of passion,” says Cao admiringly. “The romantic language surges from this novel vigorously. It warms my heart and inspires my writing.”

See the full announcement for additional details.

Billy Beane on 'The Fountainhead'

Jeffrey Miller points out that A’s GM Billy Beane is a huge fan of Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead:

“Moneyball” made Billy Beane one of the most polarizing figures in baseball, but the book that really gets the A’s GM feeling like a man apart is “The Fountainhead.” Ayn Rand’s classic is about a renegade architect named Howard Roarke [sic–it’s Roark] who refuses to yield to conventional standards, even when it means creating enemies who want to destroy him for it. “He’s my favorite,” Beane said. “He said (the heck with) everything else and did it the way he wanted to. He didn’t care. I read it, like, three times.” Beane is something of a Howard Roarke himself, a renegade baseball architect who refuses to yield to traditional methods, even if it means the old guard wants to destroy him for it. And it does. Beane has de-emphasized the role of field scouts and stripped his manager of most in-game strategy decisions.

India's Richest Woman: Kiran Majumdar-Shaw

Kiran Majumdar-ShawBiotech entrepreneur Kiran Majumdar-Shaw is the CEO of Biocon India Corp.
When her company opened publicly in the stock market yesterday, she also became India’s richest woman:

After a frenetic day of watching her baby make a billion dollar stock market debut on Wednesday, Kiran Majumdar-Shaw popped open the bubbly and thanked all who helped Biocon become India’s first big-ticket biotech listing.
On a balmy evening, the 50-year-old entrepreneur, who started her business with just Rs 10,000 from a garage in Bangalore, threw a party at the Taj Mahal Hotel at Mumbai’s southern tip of Colaba.
There was lots to celebrate — she is now the richest first generation woman promoter ever in the country with a net worth of $450-million […] — thanks to the 50 per cent premium commanded by her company valuing Biocon at $1.1 billion. Majumdar-Shaw owns 40 per cent of the firm.

And to whom does Indian’s richest woman turn to for personal inspiration? Ayn Rand, among others.

Canadian Authorities Confiscate ARI Article

An opinion editorial in the Jerusalem Post [requires free registration] notes evidence for increasing anti-semitism in Canada. Included in their long list of examples is the confiscation, by Canadian authorities, of an article published by the Ayn Rand Institute:

In early October, the Canadian Customs and Revenue Agency confiscated newsletters published by the Ayn Rand Institute entitled In Moral Defense of Israel, claiming they had to determine whether the material constituted “hate propaganda.” The newsletters were released a few days later.

See the full article for additional background.

Ayn Rand & Capitalism Grant at Univ of South Carolina

The Associated Press reports (via The Mercury News) that the University of South Carolina has received a $1 million grant from Branch Banking & Trust Company (BB&T) to promote the study of capitalism:

USC will get the funds over the next couple years, said business school dean Joel Smith III, and will use the money to create a capitalism ethics class, a capitalism-focused professorship, a lecture series and a room in the business library dedicated to the works of authors that support free enterprise such as Ayn Rand.
John Allison, chairman and CEO of BB&T, said USC and the bank jointly developed the focus of the endowment.
“If you look at a lot of business education programs, they do a good job of teaching people the technical part of business,” Allison said. “But they don’t often explain the philosophical foundations for capitalism, and anybody can make better decisions if they understand the context.”
Smith said the study of ethics has become more common in recent years but the way USC will study “the moral defense of capitalism as a mechanism is fairly unique.” […]
Smith said recent business ethics scandals have brought to light the need for a program of the ethics of capitalism.
“What’s more important is that the leaders of the future and the practitioners of the future understand the difference and practice properly,” Smith said.

See the full article in The Mercury News for additional information.
UPDATE: “USC also will dedicate an Ayn Rand reading room as part of the renovated Springs Library at the business school and launch a BB&T speaker series.”
UPDATE (3/25): This story just doesn’t quit. Now they’re adding a graduate course to study Atlas Shrugged, too.

Fountain Head Primary School in India

India appears to have more admirers of Ayn Rand’s novels than any country but the U.S. And India’s first female astronaut is on public record as a fan of Rand’s novels.
So when college graduate Vardan Kabra turned down a prestigious offer from Procter & Gamble so he could start a primary school to train new fountainheads of human progress, it’s not altogether surprising that he decided to name his school after Ayn Rand’s novel:

A school with a difference, that’s his dream. He’s so sure of his dream that even the lure of lucre has failed to tempt this IIMA passout.
Vardan Kabra declined to accept the Rs 7-lakh pre-placement offer made by Procter and Gamble to realise his dream of building a primary school that will churn out leaders for a better tomorrow.
Kabra, whose talents have been chiselled by teachers at Delhi Public School (DPS) R K Puram, Delhi and IIT Mumbai, has no dearth for inspiration. He dreams of a school of thinkers. “Ideas: That’s what we want children to come up with. For that, it’s best to catch them young. That’s why we are planning a primary school,” says Kabra.
Objectivism got him thinking about this concept. So what else could he have named the school but Fountain Head, inspired by Ayn Rand’s book on objectivism. “The name is ideal for a school as it means source of knowledge,” says Kabra.

Read the full story at Express India.

Joan Baez and The Fountainhead

While apparently not influenced much, or enough, by Ayn Rand’s political principles, 1960s leftist activist Joan Baez credits The Founainhead with influencing her own trenchant approach to politics:

A little music, a little politics. It’s always been that way for Baez, but only now is it a comfortable balancing act. The woman whose silver soprano held audiences spellbound at the 1959 Newport Folk Festival has occasionally seen her career buffeted by her commitment to social causes. While Baez helped turn “We Shall Overcome” into a civil rights anthem, she also devoted an entire side of an album to a listener-proof account of a U.S. bombing raid on Hanoi.
“Dark Chords” is the singer’s coming-out party of a sort, and she’s celebrating her newfound confidence after a 15-year break from activism, during which she focused on her inner folk star.
“For the first 20, 25 years, I was steadier in my politics than I ever was in my image of myself musically,” she said. “Nobody could trip me up politically, and that came before the music. That started when I was 10 years old and reading Ayn Rand’s ‘Fountainhead’ while living in Baghdad.

See the full profile in TCPalm.com for more info about Baez’s development as a woman, singer, and songwriter.