Her head is in the stars and spirits
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Newport Beach resident Anne McKnight has taught yoga since well
before the discipline became as much a part of the southern
California landscape as the seaside and hamburger stands. She studied
yoga under the world-famous Indra Devi and now teaches at the Lido
Island Clubhouse.
McKnight, 78, hails from the Chicago area and has always
considered creativity a core part of her life. She has worked in the
modeling, radio and television industries and enjoys painting and
taking classes at the Oasis Senior Center in Corona del Mar. The yoga
teacher is also a devotee of astrology -- she met well-known
astrologer Jeanne Dixon -- and has led discussions on the practice
aboard cruise ships.
McKnight may be one of the few seniors to wear clothing fashioned
by Roxy, a company popular with teenage girls, but her fashion sense
is inspired by her son, Robert McKnight Jr., who founded Quicksilver,
Roxy’s parent company. Her daughter, Kathy Armstrong is an attorney
and her late husband, Robert, worked in international business after
serving as a pilot to Navy Secretary James Forrestal in World War II.
McKnight took time out of her afternoon to hang out with Andrew
Edwards of the Daily Pilot to talk about yoga, creativity and
California living.
How did your modeling career work out?
I modeled all through high school and then during my college
years, I represented my school at Marshall Fields in Chicago.
And then I did modeling at Marshall Fields and then after college,
I was with an agency, the Patricia Stevens Agency, and then I started
teaching there. And I was also connected, I did modeling and I was
teaching.
I’m curious about the radio and TV shows that you were on, what
were they like?
It was so long ago, it was just kind of like a two- or three-year
period that I was doing this, and I was just having fun. I was young,
and I would meet all these producers and directors, Otto Preminger,
all these old-timers.
These shows wouldn’t last long. It was maybe a three-year period
when I went from show to show. Script girl was my title, and it was
just a fun, fun job.
What did you do on the show?
I interviewed them, the contestants, and sort of got the good ones
for presentation. And then I also was with an agency called
Atkins-Gilbert, and we also did a show at the Pantages Theater where
we would interview, but, you know, shows kind of come and go.
That was my first TV show, when TV was just starting and the cable
was here, and we would have all these people come on stage. It was
kind of old-time beginning TV.
How did you become interested in art?
I was an art major in college, and then I also studied at the Art
Institute in Chicago. And I paint now, I try to, one day a week. I
have a little studio room. I have like a studio, and I’ve got my
easel up. And I’ve done paintings for all my grandchildren.
Any favorite subject matter?
Impressionistic. My style has definitely changed. I’ve kind of
been doing everything, sort of like a Matisse, I like that look.
Decorative art.
How did you get started in yoga?
I had been back to Michigan, this is when my children were very
young, and I just heard of this wonderful teacher who was teaching in
San Marino from some other friends of mine, and I just was intrigued
by it. And then I just fell in love with it because it’s kind of
body, mind, spirit, all integrated.
I do a half hour every morning, I’m very faithful with my yoga,
and it’s the hatha yoga, there’s seven different kinds of yoga and
what I’m trained in is the hatha yoga.
How is hatha yoga different from other styles?
It’s physical exercise, you have to learn all the physical
postures before you go on to any of the other yogas.
How were you introduced to astrology?
In Tecate, Mexico, where Indra Devi had an ashram, they have these
all over now. And that’s how I met Jeanne Dixon ... she was there
giving a lecture and that got me excited, you know how you get
something that you’re interested in, that got me interested in
astrology. And then I really went into it. I went to a school, Temple
of Astrology. I took family courses at USC, they had recreational
[classes] at USC, and then I had all these charts done.
What have your teaching experiences been like?
Very rewarding, I would say, fulfilling. In high school, my
daughter was in the National Charity League, which is a
mother-daughter thing, my granddaughter is in now. But anyway, I was
in charge of the whole yoga program for the mothers and the
daughters. Several times a year, we would get together and I would do
a mother-daughter yoga session for girls. They would have one session
on makeup and all that stuff, hair, modeling and clothes. And I would
always do the yoga, so that was wonderful for young girls.
It seems like for you, creativity has been important your entire
life.
I’m definitely a creative person. I function creatively.
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