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HISTORY OF THE JACOB BURNS FILM CENTER

The Jacob Burns Film Center (JBFC) began in 1998 when a group of individuals interested in creating a cultural arts center in Westchester County purchased the old Rome Theater in Pleasantville, New York. The Rome Theater, a beautiful Spanish mission-style, historic landmark building, was built in 1925 as one of the first movie theaters in Westchester County. Opened during the golden age of cinema, the New York Times called it "The Show Place of Westchester County." It was an active cinema, showing films until 1987, when it closed its doors due to competition with neighboring multiplexes. The group, led by founder Stephen Apkon, secured the building and an adjacent lot, formed a nonprofit organization (originally known as The Friends of the Rome Theater), and began working to make the dream of a film center a reality.

    
Facade installation in the late 1940s
 
JBFC Ribbon Cutting, with (from left) Executive Director Steve Apkon, Glenn Close, Ang Lee, Paul Schrader, Westchester County Executive Andy Spano, Janet Maslin and director Francis Veber.

In 2000, a capital campaign was launched to raise $5 million to fund much of the project costs. Early on, the project received a donation of $1.5 million from the Jacob Burns Foundation, a Pleasantville-based nonprofit family foundation. It was in honor of that leadership gift that the proposed center received its new name. The name was announced and construction began in April, 2000.

Since the JBFC opened its doors to the public in June, 2001, the Westchester community and those from surrounding areas have enjoyed thousands of films from around the world. The Film Center is committed not only to presenting this wide array of films but also to hosting a range of related experiences, including art exhibitions, book signings, live performances, and a wealth of after-screening interviews and discussions with filmmakers, scholars, critics, and authors. In addition to our extensive film programming offerings, JBFC designed and has provided outstanding film and visual literacy education programs for teachers and students of all ages through curriculum-based programs, after-school enrichment, curriculum-enhancing film programming, and film production experiences.


 
Stephen Apkon  

STEPHEN APKON
Founder & Executive Director
As Founder and Executive Director of the Jacob Burns Film Center, Inc., Stephen Apkon has combined a lifelong passion for film with his desire to revitalize Pleasantville, NY, his hometown. Together with a group of like-minded individuals, he formed a nonprofit organization, purchased the old Rome Theater and began the journey to create the Burns Film Center. Mr. Apkon has brought vision, direction, and leadership to this burgeoning arts organization whose mission is to bring a diversity of film and educational programs to Westchester County and its surrounding communities.

From 1992 to 1999, Mr. Apkon was a General Partner in Crossroads Partners, EEC, a private merchant banking partnership based in Westchester. Before then, from 1988 to 1992, he was a Principal at Odyssey Partners, LP, a private Manhattan-based investment partnership primarily involved in management buyouts in industries as diverse as technology and retailing. From 1986 to 1988, he was an Associate in the Merger and Acquisitions Department of Goldman Sachs & Co. in Manhattan. In 1998, Mr. Apkon formed the Friends of the Rome Theater, now known as the Jacob Burns Film Center, Inc.

A native of Framingham, MA, Mr. Apkon graduated from Georgetown University in 1983. In 1986, he received an M.B.A. from Harvard Business School, where he graduated with distinction. He is a member of the Board of Directors of World Hunger Year, a Manhattan-based hunger advocacy organization; and the Board of Directors of Teatown Lake Reservation. Mr. Apkon, 46, his wife, Lisa Hertz Apkon, and their three children, Talia, Ori and Maayan, live in Pleasantville, NY.


THE JACOB BURNS FOUNDATION

The Jacob Burns Film Center was named in honor of a leadership gift to the Film Center’s capital campaign from the Jacob Burns Foundation. The Foundation’s president and the grandson of Jacob Burns, Barry Shenkman, is a member of the Film Center's Board of Directors. From the beginning, Barry and his family have lent their counsel, support and leadership to the vision for this new cultural institution.

The Jacob Burns Foundation, based in Pleasantville, NY, is a nonprofit family foundation that focuses primarily on the arts, legal education, legal ethics and Jewish philanthropic causes. Major arts grant recipients include Channel Thirteen, the Metropolitan Opera and Lincoln Center Theater in New York City, and the Westchester Arts Council and Purchase College, here in Westchester County.


Founded by the late Jacob Burns (b. 1902, Russia; d. 1993, New York) of Manhattan, a lawyer, artist and philanthropist, the Jacob Burns Foundation, since its inception in 1959, has given away millions of dollars to not-for-profit organizations in the U.S.

    
Jamie Shenkman, Lynda Shenkman Curtis, Rosalie Burns and Barry Shenkman of the Jacob Burns Foundation

The Foundation became involved with the film center project because of the need for a regular venue for challenging films in the northern suburbs outside of New York City; because it recognized the need for providing educational programming focusing on visual literacy and the appreciation of film; and because it saw an opportunity to make the area more vibrant.

Coincident to this and on an historic note, when Jacob Burns’ father, George Burns (nee Zorak Bialack from Kiev, Russia) immigrated to the U.S., he settled in Washington, D.C., circa 1915, where he opened, what may have been that city’s first silent movie house, on 14th St. NW. As a teen, it was Jacob Burns’ job to deliver the film to the theater, on his bicycle, and to work the pedals of the player piano throughout the show.

 

 




JACOB BURNS FILM CENTER • 364 MANVILLE ROAD, PLEASANTVILLE, NY, 10570 • 914.747.5555
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