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Katrina recovery puts Pitt in spotlight
Stacey Plaisance
NEW ORLEANS—Forget about the movies, Brad Pitt is all about resurrecting
New Orleans. The actor says he’s put his Hollywood career on hold, with
no film projects underway, while doing all he can to help the city
recover from Hurricane Katrina. “This is my project,” he said earlier
this month, sitting at a table on a tiled slab where Katrina’s flood
pushed a house off its foundation in the Lower 9th Ward more than two
years ago. He said he and Angelina Jolie and their children planned to
spend the holidays in New Orleans.
The slow recovery from Katrina’s destruction in August 2005 has
attracted many celebrities, among them Sean Penn, Denis Leary, Kirstie
Alley, Ellen Degeneres and New Orleans native musicians Harry Connick
Jr. and Branford Marsalis. Few stand out as much as Pitt, who has made a
personal and financial commitment to rebuilding shattered neighborhoods.
He and Jolie bought a home in the French Quarter. He has pledged more
than $5 million to rebuild one of the city’s most devastated
neighborhoods and has spent countless hours listening to residents’
needs. “I believe in what’s going on down here,” he said after the
launch earlier this month of Make It Right, the Pitt-backed project to
rebuild 150 homes in the Lower 9th Ward.
Katrina was especially devastating in the Lower 9th, one of New Orleans’
most impoverished areas. Less than 10 percent of its population has
returned, one reason Pitt has launched two projects to build affordable,
environmentally friendly homes. Make It Right calls for construction of
its first house to start by summer. Pitt has pledged to match up to $5
million in contributions. So far, more than $3.5 million has been
raised.
Pitt, 43, was born in Oklahoma and raised in Missouri, but is no
stranger to New Orleans. He filmed two movies here — “Interview With a
Vampire” in the 1990s and “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button” in 2006
and early 2007. “Button” is due out next year. Pitt says his passion to
help the people of New Orleans is simple: it’s the right thing to do. He
said the storm “illuminated the fact that there’s a portion of our
society that we’re not looking after.”
“It’s going to take a long time to address the issues here, but this is
a viable, viable start,” he said. Pitt said Make It Right and another
project he launched last year with Global Green USA will help fill the
need for affordable housing while also rebuilding “smarter” with energy
saving, environmentally friendly materials.
Both projects have attracted national supporters, including Democratic
presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Barak Obama. Pitt said he
hopes the city’s recovery will be a focal issue of the 2008 campaign.
“I don’t want it to be used so much as a whipping boy for past mistakes,
but as a real proving ground for policies set forth, meaning education,
health reform,” he said. “If it’s going to work, it’ll work here, and
this place certainly needs it.” Many New Orleans residents — even those
who aren’t getting a house through Pitt’s projects — say they are
grateful for his generosity. |