Advertisement. Advertise with us

WATCH ‘LEGACY LIST WITH PAXTON’ TRAILER

PBS Show To Help Elevate

Famous Sculptor’s Legacy

TV Program Will Help Son’s Mission:

Make Father’s Works Known To World

“Legacy List,” a PBS reality show about home decluttering that has its season premiere on Jan. 14, will visit the Coventry home of late sculptor David Hayes in the season’s fifth episode. (David Hayes Art Foundation)

By JIM KEVLIN • Special to www.AllOTSEGO.com

ONEONTA – Since his famous sculptor father’s passing in 2013, David Hayes Jr. of Oneonta has been striving to continue elevating the artist’s legacy, organizing exhibits of David Sr.’s massive metal artworks at prestigious museums around the country.

The younger Hayes’ mission – his father was also named David – will receive a significant boost in the next couple months, when the PBS reality show, “Legacy List With Matt Paxton,” airs on public television stations nationwide, including on WCNY Syracuse on Saturday, March 6, following “Antiques Roadshow.”

Filmed last September at the sculptor’s historic home and barn on 57 acres in Coventry, Conn., the episode is generating interests even before it is aired, with articles about the Hayes segment appearing in recent days in the Hartford Courant and Washington Post.

The Courant’s headline from its Jan. 12 was “PBS decluttering show visits home of late Connecticut sculptor and find the stories behind the stuff.” Among “the stuff” Paxton discovers are original works by Salvador Dali and Picasso.

However, to son David Jr., who’s well known around Oneonta as board president of First Night, which also organizes Hometown Fourth of July activities and over Christmas, the Festival of Lights in Neahwa Park. the most endearing artifact was a mechanic’s shirt from Moriarty Brothers, a gas station in nearby Manchester.

“I was delighted to see that shirt,” he said.  “I didn’t know it was there. My dad worked at Moriarty Brothers. My mom was Moriarty’s daughter. I believe that’s how they met. If they hadn’t met there’d be no me.”

According to the Courant story, Paxton used to host an A&E show called “Hoarders,” but “he created ‘Legacy List’ hoping for a happier vibe,” the Courant reported.

In the new show, “I wanted to show the aging population of American and all of their cool stories,” Paxton said.  “It’s the stories that hold us back from downsizing, seeing the dining room, all the memories in it.”

But for David Hayes Jr., the artist’s son, the most moving artifact found in the house was a simple work shirt his father wore for his first job, at Moriarty Brothers, an auto service station in Manchester.

“I was delighted to see that shirt. I didn’t know it was there. My dad worked at Moriarty Brothers. My mom was Moriarty’s daughter. I believe that’s how they met. If they hadn’t met there’d be no me,” he said.

David Jr., who was on site last September in Coventry when Paxton’s crew filmed the episode, said the focus was the old house, which is on the Connecticut Register of Historic Places, and its contents, “and trying to clear it out.”

However, dozens of David Sr.’ sculpture are set up around the house, so his father’s creations will be introduced to the nation’s PBS-viewing public, many for first time.

Posted

1 Comment

  1. I just watched your The Legacy list showing all the beautiful and wonderful sculptures of David Hayes sr. I was impressed with all David Sr did in his awesome life, but my favorite was David Jrs moms cook book and recipes!! I can only imagine the wonderful cook she was. I myself do the same thing, write down recipes in books or on paper or envelopes. I would love to have a Julia Hayne recipe book . Can I purchase one? If so May I hv the order address? Love the show. Thank you so much. God bless. Ms Ruthie

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Related Articles

SCOLINOS: It’s All We Need To Know: Home Plate 17 Inches Wide

COLUMN VIEW FROM THE GAME It’s All We Need To Know: Home Plate 17 Inches Wide Editor’s Note:  Tim Mead, incoming Baseball Hall of Fame president, cited John Scolinos, baseball coach at his alma mater, Cal Poly Pomona, as a lifelong inspiration, particularly Scolinos’ famous speech “17 Inches.” Chris Sperry, who published sperrybaseballlife.com, heard Scolinos deliver a version in 1996 at the American Baseball Coaches Association in Nashville, and wrote this reminiscence in 1916 in his “Baseball Thoughts” column. By CHRIS SPERRY • from www.sperrybaseballlife.com In 1996, Coach Scolinos was 78 years old and five years retired from a college coaching…

Sports Can Resume, Superintendents Told

CLICK HERE FOR MEMO TO SCHOOLS Sports Can Resume, Superintendents Told COOPERSTOWN – In a memo released Friday evening, county Public Health Director Heidi Bond advised local school superintendents that sports can resume as early as Monday. “Effective Feb. 1, participants in higher-risk sports may participate in individual or distanced group training and organized no/low-contact group training,” Bond wrote, “…including competitions and tournaments, if permitted by local health authorities.”…

Killer Ricky Knapp Dies In Prison

Killer Knapp Dies In Prison; Guilty In SUNY Coed’s Death ONEONTA – Ricky Knapp, the man convicted of the 1977 death of SUNY Oneonta student, has died in Mohawk Correctional Facility, according to prison records. Knapp, 66, died March 8, having served 40 years of a 25-to-life sentence for a 1978 manslaughter conviction in the death of 18-year-old Linda Velzy, a SUNY student from Long Island. According to reports, Velzy was last seen Dec. 9 1977, hitchhiking in downtown Oneonta.…