2013 6
spring program
Look inside the centerfold for Program Notes
NCSU Center Stage | The Crafts Center Music @ NC State | University Theatre Gregg Museum of Art & Design | Dance Program
When Reynolds Coliseum was a concert hall
10
The circular life of the Gregg Museum
16
Spring highlights
friends arts nc state of
board of advisors
Officers
2012/1
David S. Thompson, Chair Bing Sizemore, Chair Elect
Members
Ann-Cabell Baum Andersen Richard Bryant Johnny Burleson JoAnne Dickinson Ed Funkhouser Kyle Held Donna Kanich Jane Kanipe Vicky Langley Caroline McCall
arts nc state
Ex-Officio
Jim Clark, President, Friends of the Gregg N. Alexander Miller III, Vice Provost, Division of Academic & Student Affairs Nicole Peterson, Director of Development Banks C. Talley, Jr., Vice Chancellor Emeritus & Director of Special Projects
fa c u lt y a n d s ta f f
ADMINISTRATION
N. Alexander Miller III, Vice Provost, Division of Academic & Student Affairs Christy Rain, Executive Assistant Holly M. Durham, Director of Business and Planning
NCSU CENTER STAGE / ARTS OUTREACH
Sharon H. Moore, Director Mark K.S. Tulbert, Associate Director Lori N. Jones, Community Engagement Coordinator Amy Z. Gustavson, Community Engagement Assistant
THE CRAFTS CENTER
George Thomas, Director Jo Ellen Westmoreland, Assistant Director Dusty Fletcher, Program Assistant Jennifer Siegel, Clay Studio Manager Evan Lightner, Wood Studio Manager Forrest Wilson, Custodian
DANCE PROGRAM
Robin Harris, Director & NCSU Dance Company Artistic Director Tara Z. Mullins, Assistant Director & Panoramic Dance Project Director
GREGG MUSEUM OF ART & DESIGN Roger Manley, Director Zoe Starling, Curator of Education Mary Hauser, Museum Registrar Matthew Gay, Art Preparator Hilary Kinlaw, Museum Operations Manager Clara Ray, Security Guard Rebekah Velazquez, Security Guard
UNIVERSITY THEATRE
Anne Peden Kimberly Przybyl Jonathon Smith, Student Representative Patricia Tector Nicole Tyra Cathy Ward Helen White Martha Zaytoun
John C. McIlwee, Director Allison Bergman, Assistant Director Jayme Mellema, Scenic Designer Joshua Reaves, Lighting and Sound Designer Emily Rossi, Costume Shop Manager/Associate Designer Laura Parker, Costume Assistant David Jensen, Technical Director, Thompson Hall Andrew Korhonen, Operations and Events Coordinator David Jones, Technical Director, Stewart Theatre Kevin Wright, Assistant Technical Director/Sound Specialist Rachel Klem, Acting Coach/Instructor Nancy Breeding, Business/Marketing Manager Ron Foreman, Special Projects/Graphic Designer Phal Ngong, Housekeeper
MUSIC DEPARTMENT
Dr. J. Mark Scearce, Director Dr. Thomas Koch, Associate Director Dr. Jack Fuller, Assistant Director, Outreach and Assessment Kathleen Laudate, Operations Manager Logann Graham, Program Coordinator Randall Rehfuss, Concert Coordinator Dr. Gary Beckman, Director of Entrepreneurial Studies in the Arts Dr. Randolph Foy, Director of Orchestras Dr. Paul Garcia, Director of Bands & Percussion Instructor Dr. Olga Kleiankina, Teaching Assistant Professor Dr. Jonathan Kramer, Teaching Professor Dr. Nathan Leaf, Director of Choral Activities Dr. Wes Parker, Director of Jazz Studies Dr. Rodney Waschka, CHASS Professor Dr. Alison Arnold, Adjunct Faculty Jonathan Gangi, Lecturer David K. Garner, Lecturer Dr. Robert Petters, Adjunct Faculty Dr. Kristen Turner, Adjunct Faculty Andy Beck, Adjunct Instructor Mary Boone, Adjunct Instructor Don Eagle, Adjunct Instructor Wayne Leechford, Adjunct Instructor Dr. David Lewis, Adjunct Instructor Richard Johnston Noel, Jr., Adjunct Instructor Jennifer Seiger, Adjunct Instructor Lin-Ti Wang, Adjunct Instructor
ARTS DEVELOPMENT
Nicole Peterson, Director Ashley McKinstry, Assistant Director Dr. Banks C. Talley, Jr., Director of Special Projects and Vice Chancellor Emeritus Virginia Yopp, Gregg Museum Campaign Manager
ARTS MARKETING
Mark K.S. Tulbert, Marketing Coordinator
TICKET CENTRAL
Katherine Fuller, Director Tyrone Jenkins, Assistant Director
“A work of art is above all an adventure of the mind.” –Ionesco Dear Friends, The great French actress, Sarah Bernhardt, famed for her beautiful voice and unforgettable interpretation of dramatic roles, was beloved and idolized by her admirers, including both audiences and colleagues. One oftrepeated anecdote suggests that her reputation was so deeply appreciated in the Paris theatre that the callboy would notify her of the curtain time of her performances with the words, “Madame, it will be eight o’clock when it suits you.” How wonderful it must be to live in a world where the clock is so accommodating! I recalled this story about “The Divine Sarah” as the programs of ARTS NC STATE begin to adjust to the reality that Stewart Theatre, home to many of our performances, has now closed for the next couple of years as part of the renovation and expansion of Talley Student Center. We will continue to offer a full slate of Center Stage, Dance Program, Music Department and University Theatre events in the coming years, and many – but not all! – of those will be presented in Thompson Hall in the Titmus and Kennedy-McIlwee Theatres. Some performances, primarily those offered by the Music Department, will be held in off-campus venues, and we may experiment by offering others in unexpected locations on NC State’s campus. We may not be able to emulate the Bernhardt rule and begin our performances whenever it suits us, but as valued members of the ARTS NC STATE family, we promise to regularly remind you of the locations and the times of all of our upcoming events. Wherever our moveable feast of the arts takes us, we count on seeing you there.
N. Alexander Miller III, Vice Provost
contents
4 Schedule of Events 6 Out of the Ordinary 10 The Gregg: As Time Goes On 16 Spring Highlights 20 Student Spotlight 21 Important Information 22 ARTS NC STATE Donors 27 Late Night Dining Guide
On the cover: Rose and Violet from University Theatre’s fall 2012 production of Alice in Wonderland. Photo by Ron Foreman.
|3
performances
& Exhibitions
JANUARY
MARCH
Who Let the Wolves Out! Jan 14-Mar 15, The Crafts Center
Kinetic Sculpture Demonstration by Sean Pace Wed, Mar 13, 12pm, NCSU Brickyard
Farfetched: Mad Science, Fringe Architecture and Visionary Engineering Jan 17-Apr 26, Gregg Museum Humanature: Photographs of the Unnatural World by Peter Goin Jan 17-Apr 26, Gregg Museum
Leah Leitson - Responding to Touch: Thrown and Altered Porcelain Fri, Mar 15, 7pm, The Crafts Center Tomáš Kubínek Fri & Sat, Mar 15 & 16, 8pm, Titmus Theatre
Lie-Nielsen Hand Tool Event Fri-Sat, Jan 18-19, The Crafts Center
Dr. Olga Kleiankina, Piano Faculty Recital Sun, Mar 17, 4pm, Titmus Theatre
PMC Lecture Series: Donna Kwon Fri, Jan 25, 7pm Kennedy-McIlwee Studio Theatre
Ellen Ko: Chinese Brush Paintings Mar 20-June 16, The Crafts Center Presentation by Peter Richards of the San Francisco Exploratorium Thur, Mar 21, 6pm, Gregg Museum
Arts NOW Tues, Jan 29, 7pm Kennedy-McIlwee Studio Theatre
PMC Lecture Series: Gavin Douglas Thur, Mar 21, 7pm, Titmus Theatre
Presentation by Duncan Laurie – sculptor, radionics experimenter, and creator of the Purr Generator Thur, Jan 31, 6pm, Gregg Museum
Women’s Choir Festival Sat, Mar 23, 3pm Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Raleigh
FEBRUARY
Raleigh Civic Symphony Sun, Apr 7, 4pm Jones Auditorium, Meredith College Film: Burning Man, introduced by the filmmaker, Peter Goin Wed, Apr 10, 6pm, Gregg Museum Presentation by Humanature photographer Peter Goin Thur, Apr 11, 6pm, Gregg Museum Frank Vignola Fri & Sat, Apr 12 & 13, 8pm, Titmus Theatre Film: Charlie Chaplin’s Modern Times Thur, Apr 18, 12-8pm (continual screenings) Gregg Museum Wind Ensemble Thur, Apr 18, 7pm, Talley Ballroom NCSU Dance Company Concert Thur & Fri, Apr 18 & 19, 8pm, Titmus Theatre Raleigh Civic Chamber Orchestra Sun, Apr 21, 4pm, Titmus Theatre Jazz Combos Tues, Apr 23, 7pm, Titmus Theatre
Ladies in Red Sat, Mar 23, 7pm Jones Auditorium, Meredith College
Closing reception and catalog release party for Farfetched Wed, Apr 24, 6-8pm, Gregg Museum
Panoramic Dance Project Sat, Mar 23, 8pm, Titmus Theatre
Jazz Ensemble Thur, Apr 25, 7pm, Talley Ballroom
APRIL
Pipes & Drums Sat, Apr 27, 2pm, Harris Field
Film: Metropolis Thur, Apr 4, 6pm, Gregg Museum
Celebrate! ARTS NC STATE Sat, Apr 27, 6pm, The McKimmon Center
PMC Lecture Series & Arts NOW: Fire Pink Trio Thur, Feb 14, 7pm Kennedy-McIlwee Studio Theatre
Ninety Miles Thur, Apr 4, 8pm; Fri, Apr 5, 7 & 9pm Titmus Theatre
State of Brass Sun, Apr 28, 4pm Kennedy-McIlwee Studio Theatre
Presentation by visionary architect Paul Laffoley Thur, Feb 21, 6pm, Gregg Museum
NCSU Choirs Concert Fri, Apr 5, 7pm Holy Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church
Grains of Time Tues, Apr 30, 7pm Jones Auditorium, Meredith College
Music of the British Isles Sat, Feb 23, 7pm, Cardinal Gibbons High School
The Heidi Chronicles Fri-Sun, Apr 5-7; Wed-Sun, Apr 10-14; Wed-Sun, Apr 17-21; Evenings 7:30pm, Sun 2pm, Kennedy-McIlwee Studio Theatre
Film: Gizmo! Thur, Feb 7, 6pm, Gregg Museum Gallery Talk: co-curators Roger Manley and Tom Patterson lead a tour of Farfetched Wed, Feb 13, 12pm, Gregg Museum An Inspector Calls Wed-Sun, Feb 13-17, Wed-Sun, Feb 20-24 Evenings 7:30pm, Sun 2pm, Titmus Theatre
Jazz Ensemble Sun, Feb 24, 4pm Jones Auditorium, Meredith College
MAY/JUNE TheatreFest May 30-June 30, Titmus Theatre & Kennedy-McIlwee Studio Theatre
University Theatre | The Crafts Center | Gregg Museum of Art & Design | Center Stage | Dance Program | Music @ NC STATE
4
|
ticket central: 919.515.1100
| ncsu.edu/arts
|5
out of the
ordinary Raleigh’s legacy as a cultural hub by Carrie Knowles
6
|
ticket central: 919.515.1100
| ncsu.edu/arts
197 9.
We had been told parking would be a problem so we walked from our house on Dixie Trail to the campus. We had recently moved from Chicago, but had already lived through one basketball season and knew parking was a problem not only on campus but all around NCSU when there was a “big” game…in fact, ANY basketball game at Reynolds Coliseum. But, that was basketball, and this was a concert with the opera great, Beverly Sills. I couldn’t imagine she’d have the same kind of draw as a State vs. Carolina game. It was our first experience with Friends of the College and we had no idea what we were about to become a part of. And, being a part of something big, exotic, exciting and just plain, out of this world in Raleigh, North Carolina is exactly what Friends of the College was from 1959 until it closed in 1995. It was the most out of the ordinary, extraordinary thing you could possibly imagine happening at an ag school basketball coliseum. As soon as we turned down Cates Avenue from Dan Allen Drive, we could see the buses lined up to let their passengers off at the front gates. The concert-goers came from as far away as Virginia, Winston Salem, Pinehurst and Greenville, and they wore their Sunday best. You could see the men in suits and the women in high heels and hats making their way to the coliseum. There were thousands of them, twelve thousand, to be exact, that night. Friends of the College began in 1959 as the brainchild of Gerald Erdahl, then the director of the Student Union. Erdahl proposed a jointly sponsored program between the City of Raleigh and NC State, a true Town and Gown venture, to enrich both communities culturally.
|7
out of the
ordinary cont. Beverly Sills
a cultural hub Many folks hold fond memories of the Friends of the College series – and some still ask why it’s not around. The short answer is that times changed. The threelegged stool structure noted by Henry Bowers required “stars of the highest quality [and] a large audience....” As new performing arts venues were built around the country in the last quarter of the 20th century, many top-level artists were attracted to perform in state-of-the-art theatres and concert halls, and were less available to perform in gymnasium spaces like Reynolds Coliseum. Audience members, too, found it much more appealing to attend performances in spaces with excellent sight lines and acoustics, not to mention comfortable seats and air conditioning! Additionally, due to a rapidly changing landscape in the arts, major orchestras reduced their touring schedules, artist fees increased dramatically, and – happily – the Triangle witnessed an explosion of new cultural opportunities. But we can look back with pride that NC State’s Friends of the College performing arts series helped to create the fertile ground that nourished so many new arts programs in our area, and provided rich opportunities and wonderful arts memories for hundreds of thousands of citizens across our state. » 8
|
ticket central: 919.515.1100
| ncsu.edu/arts
Alvin Ailey Dance Company
As Henry Bowers, the long time director who took over the next year after Erdahl’s unexpected passing and who ran FOTC until his retirement in 1987, said: “Jerry Erdahl didn’t care much about music, but he was fascinated with organizing. Like a three-legged stool, our structure had three parts. We knew we had to: 1) have stars of the highest quality, 2) have a large audience, and 3) do it primarily with volunteers in order to keep the cost down.” As designed by Erdahl, Friends of the College was organized through area “captains” who volunteered their time to make telephone calls and sell tickets. The captains were usually prominent members of their communities. They organized area sales teams to contact their own friends and family, 700 volunteers altogether. It was an incentive system where if you sold 20 tickets, you got one ticket free. “We’d have these report dinners twice a year in the university ballroom,” Bowers explained, “We’d have a roll call where the various captains would stand up and report their sales. It was very competitive. We’d offer rewards, records from a local record store, for the top sellers.” In addition to this volunteer word of mouth advertising and selling, the News and Observer and WRAL (both radio and television) were media sponsors and partners. “There was this one ad that WRAL created that I still remember,” Bowers said, “where two farmers on tractors, one going one way, the other going the other way are plowing this big field. When they meet up, they stop in the middle of the row to talk. This one farmer yells across to the other, ‘You going to the ballet tonight?’ It was just great.”
Leonard Bernstein
Van Cliburn
American Ballet Theatre
James Fryde, piper
To give you some perspective on just what Friends of the College was in its prime: during the 1964-65 season these 700 volunteers sold 15,000 memberships. The memberships cost $7 total for the seven concerts presented that season: the London Symphony Orchestra with George Solti, conductor; Japan Philharmonic with Akeo Wantanabe, conductor and violinist Isaac Stern as soloist; the New York City Ballet; Metropolitan Opera stars Roberta Peters, Jan Peerce, Robert Merrill and Richard Tucker; pianist Arthur Rubenstein; the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra with Eugene Jochum, conductor; and, the Brazilian Chorus: Coro Do Brasil conducted by Isaac Karabtchevsky.
There was nothing else like it anywhere along the East Coast. It was just plain phenomenal and a thrilling experience to be sitting in a basketball stadium with 12,000 people listening to and watching intently every note being played and sung, every dance step being taken, every word being spoken.
“Getting big name stars to agree to come to Raleigh wasn’t easy at first,” explained Bowers, “but, it helped us that we were halfway between DC and Atlanta. The talent agency we used in New York was able to book a tour and include us in the middle. Once these groups got here, however, and saw the crowds, they couldn’t believe it. It was quite a thrill for them.”
Carrie Knowles’ book, A Family Story of Alzheimer’s: The Last Childhood, noted as one of the top 100 books written about Alzheimer’s, is now available as an eBook on Kindle. Her novel, Lillian’s Garden, will be published by John Hunt Publishing and will be released in paperback and as an eBook in England and the United States in April 2013. »
At the time Reynolds Coliseum was one of the largest venues in the country, at a potential 15,000 seats. And, it not only had 15,000 seats, but FOTC was able to fill them. Because of its audience size and its ability to draw some of the very top national and international orchestras, soloists, opera productions, dance ensembles, choral ensembles, instrumental ensembles, cultural and ethnic performers, and actors in the world at the lowest ticket prices imaginable, Friends of the College made Raleigh one of the most vibrant cultural hubs in the Southeast.
In truth, the acoustics at Reynolds were not Carnegie Hall, but the experience of hearing Beverly Sills sing to the rafters was truly transporting. I loved it.
To see a full list of artists who performed on the Friends of the College series, scan the QR code to the left, or visit go.ncsu.edu/fotc
|9
Annie Hooper, Angel, from A Blessing From the Source, 1988
the Gregg:
George Bireline, Grete Jalk, George Nelson, Eero Saarinen, Josef Albers and Marimekko, from Southern Roots of Mid-Century Modern, 2010
Thomas Sayre, Earthcasts, from Thomas Sayre, New Work, 2009
as time goes on By Kate Dobbs Ariail
As time goes on, the history of almost everything begins to look circular. Take the Gregg Museum of Art & Design: at the moment of this writing, the Gregg exists as a handsome pair of galleries around a welcoming reception and exhibition area, all of it attached to the front of Talley Student Center.
10
|
ticket central: 919.515.1100
| ncsu.edu/arts
The Gregg Museum of Art & Design will remain open in its current Talley Student Center location through spring semester 2013. But very soon, the galleries will give way to the Talley’s renovations, and the Gregg will re-enter the homeless state of its earliest years – before blooming out again, this time in its own, freestanding building. Today’s students will find it strange to think that NC State University, one of the great engines of design in North Carolina, had no dedicated museum space until 1992. So thoroughly has the Gregg interlaced itself into university life, and the larger cultural life of the Triangle area, that it seems impossible that it hasn’t always been there, filling a unique role in displaying and explicating the arts most firmly rooted in this state and the South. Memory takes me back, way back to 1988, to the first exhibition that I saw that had been produced by what would become the Gregg. As a reporter for The Independent Weekly, I arrived in the upstairs lobby of the Talley Student Center to interview founding director Charlotte Vestal Brown, whose business it was to create a foothold for the visual arts at the science and technology heavy university. Also there was the exhibition’s curator, a tall, careful-spoken man named Roger Manley – who, in time’s circling, became the Gregg’s second director in 2010. Both Brown (now Charlotte Wainwright) and Manley have deep interests in what is called outsider or self-taught art (Manley has made himself expert in this field), and they were surrounded by the multi-material constructions of Annie Hooper, working to craft an eye-catching exhibition in a series of glass display cases between the lobby and the ballroom. The Annie Hooper show was terrific, and so North Carolina: A woman made a world from nothing, and made it so well that it drew in all who passed near. Although the work, inspired by Christian stories and her own deepest longings, is very different from the modernist architecture and sleek product design for which NCSU was better known, the exhibition Annie Hooper: A Blessing from the Source declared that the Visual Art Center (the Gregg’s first name) would explore and honor the creativity bubbling from the people and land of North Carolina, along with work from elsewhere that relates to our traditions and modern practices. As time went on, the Visual Art Center became the Gallery of Art & Design, and then the Gregg Museum of Art & Design. Its space expanded, and expanded again, as the fledgling institution acquired offices, staff, storage and work areas in addition to the spacious main gallery and the snug smaller one. While the curatorial reach has extended, the core mission has remained – to show work that relates to the land-grant university’s pursuits, in the forms that have long been the basis of the state’s economy and craft traditions. Clay, for instance. Piedmont Carolina is made of clay, and along with brick-making, the state has supported an unbroken tradition of functional pottery that reaches back beyond the written record. For nearly one hundred years, an art pottery tradition has existed as well, and some artists have taken that into the realm of sculpture. The Gregg has exhibited the elegant, diaphanous, unglazed clay forms of Clara Couch, so large and thin-walled that they seem to deny the heaviness of their material even while unabashedly revealing it. Thomas Sayre’s earth-castings made much the same point, but did so with the land itself, cast in its very dirt. Textiles continue to be important to the state, and the Gregg owns a large, varied collection, which backs up its many intriguing (and nationally important) textile exhibitions, some contemporary, some historical. One of my all-time favorites was part of the multi-museum Israeli exchange in 1996, and featured stunning Palestinian and Bedouin carpets and clothing along with contemporary Israeli textile work – and photographs taken in Israel by Roger Manley. More recently, we’ve seen intriguing new work by Raleigh textile artists. The Gregg: As Time Goes On (continued on next page)
The total cost of the project to create a new home for the Gregg is $7.5 million. In a true public-private partnership, the university is funding half of the project’s total cost, including $3 million in student fees and $600,000 in other university funds. The Gregg Museum Campaign must raise $3.9 million in private funding from individuals, corporations, and foundations. NC State will not begin renovation of the historic chancellor’s residence or construction on the contemporary addition until the entire project cost of $7.5 million is committed. The Gregg Museum must vacate its current space in Talley Student Center in May 2013 to accommodate Talley’s ongoing renovation and construction. Therefore the sooner the Gregg Museum Campaign reaches its fund-raising goal of $3.9 million, the sooner the new Gregg will be able to fulfill its mission to NC State students and to the community. Once the project attains its funding goal, construction should take approximately 12 to 18 months. With your help, the new Gregg will open in late 2015. To learn more about how you can help, please see page 14 of this program book, or visit newgregg.ncsu.edu.
To see a full list of Gregg Museum exhibitions over the years, scan the QR code to the left, or visit go.ncsu.edu/ gregghistory
| 11
the Gregg:
as time goes on
CONT
Innovative, high-craft metalwork – from iron to gold – is regularly featured at the Gregg, along with other types of jewelry (one particularly remembers the exhibition of mother-daughter metalworkers Mary Ann Scherr and Sydney Jo Scherr, and the fabulous retrospective of Robert Ebendorf ’s endlessly inventive output), furniture and architectural drawings and models. The Gregg neatly put NCSU designers in a national context with its 2010 Southern Roots of Mid-Century Modern. As North Carolina critic, journalist and outsider art scholar Tom Patterson said at a symposium some years ago, “Southern culture is various and multiple, dependent on place, land, religion, family and heritage.” This has always been well recognized at the Gregg and its predecessors. As the museum prepares to move to its new home, Patterson’s subsequent comment seems apropos: “Artists used to know their place, but now they don’t have to. But not all of them have forgotten where they came from.” Kate Dobbs Ariail has written widely on the arts since 1988. The Five Points Star, her cultural criticism blog, can be found at www.thefivepointsstar.com. »
12
|
ticket central: 919.515.1100
| ncsu.edu/arts
| 13
The Gregg Museum of Art & Design Finds a New Home… The Gregg Museum of Art & Design, NC State University’s collecting and exhibiting art museum, has found a new home for its diverse collection of 25,000 objects, its thought-provoking rotating exhibitions, and its various education and public programs. The historic chancellor’s residence at 1903 Hillsborough Street in Raleigh will be the site of the new Gregg, forming the apex of a campus and community arts complex that will include Pullen Arts Center and Theatre in the Park.
What is the Gregg Museum Campaign?
How can I help?
The Gregg Museum Campaign must raise funds in order to renovate the historic residence and build the museum’s addition. NC State University demonstrated its commitment to the new museum by funding half of the project’s total cost of $7.5 million and now the remaining funds must be privately raised.
You are welcome to visit the site of the future Gregg Museum to learn more about this exciting project! In the meantime, visit newgregg.ncsu.edu to learn more about the Gregg Museum Campaign. There you will find information on the following giving levels:
When will the new Gregg open? The Gregg Museum Campaign is underway now! Once we reach our goal, we can break ground and begin renovations of the historic chancellor’s residence and construction of the contemporary addition.
» Naming opportunity levels (with individual donor plaque recognition): $25,000+ » Founding Friends level (with comprehensive donor plaque recognition): $5,000 - $25,000 » Gifts of all levels are welcome!
newgregg.ncsu.edu Contact Nicole Peterson at 919-513-1337 or nicole_peterson@ncsu.edu to schedule a visit or with any questions.
| 15
Music @ NC State
University Theatre
Dance Program
SPRING 2013 HIGHLIGHTS Please see the calendar on page 5 for a full list of ARTS NC STATE performances and exhibitions.
University Theatre | The Crafts Center Center Stage | Gregg Museum of Art & Design Dance Program | Music @ NC STATE
Farfetched: Mad Science, Fringe Architecture and Visionary Engineering
The Crafts Center begins 2013 with a fun exhibition titled Who Let the Wolves Out! This visual display of Wolfpack pride challenged both student and community participants to create and exhibit art reflective of our treasured institution, and is presented as part of NC State University’s 125th anniversary year celebration. Free
GALLERY TALK: FARFETCHED Wednesday, February 13 at 12pm | Gregg Museum of Art & Design
Farfetched takes as its basic point of departure British mathematician Alfred North Whitehead’s famous quip that, “Every really new idea looks crazy at first.” The exhibition features objects that question (and push) the boundaries of what is considered “normal” in art and technology. Some of the greatest scientists, architects, and engineers who ever lived – Galileo, Newton, Tesla, Marconi, the Wright brothers – were accused of insanity at one time or another during their careers. Free
Join co-curators Roger Manley and Tom Patterson for a tour of Farfetched, the exhibition that takes a closer look at the strange zone where art, technology and insanity apparently converge. Free
Humanature: Photographs of the unnatural world by Peter Goin
In an English industrial city in 1912, the eminently respectable Birling family is celebrating their daughter’s engagement when a doorbell interrupts the family festivities. It is an inspector who says he is investigating the suicide of a young woman. What starts as an evening of celebration in a close-knit family increasingly deteriorates as the inspector interrogates and implicates each member of the group. But after the inspector departs, the mystery deepens. What secrets are tearing this family apart? An engaging psychological thriller.
Nevada photographer Peter Goin makes images of human-made flies, artificial lakes and forests, man-made waterfalls, fake tornados, trees, rocks and artificial beaches, as well as controlled burns, designer forests, and managed wildlife reserves, in order to question the relationship of culture to the natural and unnatural worlds. Free
|
Exhibition: through March 15 | The Crafts Center
Exhibition: through April 26 | Gregg Museum of Art & Design
Exhibition: through April 26 | Gregg Museum of Art & Design
16
Who Let the Wolves Out!
ticket central: 919.515.1100
| ncsu.edu/arts
An Inspector Calls Wednesday-Sunday, February 13-17 and 20-24 Evening shows at 7:30pm, Sunday matinees at 2pm | Titmus Theatre
The Crafts Center: Ellen Ko
PRESENTATION BY VISIONARY ARCHITECT PAUL LAFFOLEY
Tomáš Kubínek: CERTIFIED LUNATIC AND MASTER OF THE IMPOSSIBLE
Thursday, February 21 at 6pm | Gregg Museum of Art & Design
Friday & Saturday, March 15 & 16 at 8pm | Titmus Theatre
Following a two-day workshop (Grow This House) with students in architecture, design, horticulture (and the public) to envision innovative architectural concepts, visionary architect Paul Laffoley founder of the Boston Visionary Cell, will discuss the new ideas generated during the workshop. His own ideas include structures based on Klein Bottles and modifying tree genetics to grow houses rather than build them. Free
Tomás Kubínek has to be the wildest thing to fly out of Canada since geese! A collision of theatre and music hall, his exuberant one-man show is equal parts comic brilliance, virtuosic vaudeville and irresistible charm. Balancing the absurd and the profound, his outrageous antics may defy description, but he’ll make you laugh ‘til you cry as he takes you under his hypnotic spell.
Music of the British Isles
Dr. Olga Kleiankina, Piano Faculty Recital
Saturday, February 23 at 7pm Cardinal Gibbons High School, 1401 Edwards Mill Road
Sunday, March 17 at 4pm | Titmus Theatre
This annual concert brings together two distinctive Celtic groups associated with NC State – the Pipes and Drums and the Irish Session Musicians. The program will include a variety of music from marches to dance tunes. Featured this year will be Irish dancers from Cardinal Gibbons High School. Free
Olga Kleiankina, along with the piano minor students at NC State, will present the delightful music of Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition and Tchaikovsky’s The Seasons.
Student Art Purchase submission day Tuesday, March 19, 9am-3pm | Gregg Museum of Art & Design
KINETIC SCULPTURE DEMONSTRATION Wednesday, March 13 at 12pm | NCSU Brickyard Asheville sculptor Sean Pace presents Fight-or-Flight, a two-part kinetic sculpture that interprets literally the instinctive response widely accepted as the first stage of the general adaptation syndrome. If this sounds serious, fear not – the demo will be more than memorable and, we promise, extremely farfetched.
Sell your art! The 13th annual Student Art Purchase takes place on March 19. Any currently enrolled full-time NC State student is eligible to submit artwork for judging. A committee comprised of faculty, staff, students and local artists review the submitted work and choose the art to be purchased. Go to page 20 to learn more.
Ellen Ko: Chinese Brush Paintings Exhibition: March 20-June 16 | The Crafts Center
Leah Leitson Responding to Touch: Thrown and Altered Porcelain Friday, March 15 at 7pm | The Crafts Center
Ellen Ma-Lin Ko started taking lessons in traditional Chinese brush painting as a child in Taiwan, with instruction from two well-known professional artists, Lin Shen-Jean and Shao Yu-Huan. She has continued her practice of Chinese brush painting ever since her graduation from the World College of Journalism in Taiwan. Free
In conjunction with a weekend workshop presented by the Triangle Potters Guild, students and the public are invited for a presentation by noted North Carolina potter Leah Leitson, chair of the Art Department at Warren Wilson College. Leitson works exclusively in porcelain, and her work has been featured in many exhibitions nationally and internationally. Free
| 17
Center Stage: Frank Vignola
SPRING 2013 HIGHLIGHTS
Music @ NC State: Grains of Time
Continued…
PRESENTATION BY PETER RICHARDS OF THE SAN FRANCISCO EXPLORATORIUM
Creative Arts Award submission deadline
Thursday, March 21 at 6pm | Gregg Museum of Art & Design
The Creative Artist Award recognizes original work in music, dance and theatre created by currently enrolled full-time NC State students. Each winning creative artist receives a $500 award and acknowledgement in the following year’s ARTS NC STATE playbill, and the selected works are produced in the next academic year. Go to page 20 to learn more.
In March, environmental artist Peter Richards will work with engineering, ecology, architecture, and natural resources students to “imagineer” an outdoor sculpture for the future Gregg Museum. Join us for a presentation about the results of this Site Response Seed workshop, as well as his own work. Free
PMC Lecture Series: Gavin Douglas Thursday, March 21 at 7pm | Titmus Theatre
Thursday, April 4 at 8pm; Friday, April 5 at 7 & 9pm | Titmus Theatre
Dr. Gavin Douglas’ research interests include nationalism, politics, globalization and cross-cultural aesthetics. His ongoing fieldwork in Burma (Myanmar) focuses on the state patronage of traditional music and the role it plays in the political processes of the ruling dictatorship.
WOMEN’S CHOIR FESTIVAL
The Heidi Chronicles
A spectacular collaboration: over 250 women’s voices, combining singers from NC State, UNC, ECU, Meredith College, Roanoke College, and Virginia Tech. This concert will be performed under the baton of guest conductor Al Sturgis and in the sparkling acoustic of the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Raleigh.
Panoramic Dance Project Concert Saturday, March 23 at 8pm | Titmus Theatre The Panoramic Dance Project presents choreographic work with Afrocentric and World Dance perspectives, created by its director, invited guest artists, and student company members. This program will include Stages by guest choreographer Rhea Patterson. Her new work is informed by her mother’s struggle with Parkinson’s Disease, as seen through the eyes of a dancer. Patterson is currently a member of the Broadway cast of Wicked.
|
Ninety Miles The distance between Miami and Havana is only ninety miles. This project, featuring New Orleans-born trumpeter Nicholas Payton, Puerto Rican saxophonist David Sánchez, and New York vibraphonist Stefon Harris, adopts the distance as its title, and seeks to bridge that divide and emphasize the musical, cultural and historical kinships between the United States and Cuba.
Saturday, March 23 at 3pm | Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Raleigh
18
Wednesday, March 27 at noon
ticket central: 919.515.1100
| ncsu.edu/arts
Friday-Sunday, April 5-7, Wednesday-Sunday, April 10-14 and 17-21 Evening shows at 7:30pm, Sunday matinees at 2pm Kennedy-McIlwee Studio Theatre Set in the 1960s, the story of Heidi Holland takes us from Chicago to New York and places in between as the successful art historian tries to find her bearings in a world that is rapidly changing, especially for women. She watches her friends move from the idealism and political radicalism of college years through militant feminism, then back to the materialism that they rejected in the first place. Heidi’s path takes her through an affair with an arrogant lawyer/publisher to a troubling relationship with a charming young pediatrician with baggage of his own. This funny and touching play by Wendy Wasserstein explores how liberation is achieved only if one is true to oneself. Winner of the Pulitzer Prize, the Tony Award and New York Drama Critics Circle award.
University Theatre
University Theatre
RALEIGH CIVIC SYMPHONY
RALEIGH CIVIC CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Sunday, April 7 at 4pm | Jones Auditorium, Meredith College
Sunday, April 21 at 4pm | Titmus Theatre
Based at NC State University, the Raleigh Civic Symphony combines student and community musicians with professional leaders and innovative programming. The spring concert will include the Overture to Shakespeare’s As You Like It by John Knowles Paine; The Wood Dove, a symphonic poem by Antonin Dvořák; and Symphony in D by César Franck.
This spring concert will include Anton Webern’s Concerto for 9 Instruments, a twelve-tone concerto for flute, oboe, clarinet, horn, trumpet, trombone, violin, viola, and piano; Chain 1 by Witold Lutoslawski; and Mozart’s Symphony No. 35 in D, also called the Haffner Symphony.
PRESENTATION BY PHOTOGRAPHER PETER GOIN Thursday, April 11 at 6pm | Gregg Museum of Art & Design Artist Peter Goin will discuss the pieces in Humanature along with his other landscape photography. Free
Frank Vignola Friday & Saturday, April 12 & 13 at 8pm | Titmus Theatre How amazing is guitarist Frank Vignola? A single performance careens across the musical spectrum from standards to opera, classic rock to contemporary pop, Latin to R&B, classical to swing, all performed with stunning virtuosity. He has performed with the likes of Ringo Starr, Madonna, Donald Fagen, Wynton Marsalis and Mark O’Connor. The late guitar legend Les Paul named Vignola to his “five most admired guitarists” list for the Wall Street Journal. He’ll be joined on stage by the wonderful young guitarist Vinny Raniolo.
NCSU Dance Company Concert Thursday & Friday, April 18 & 19 at 8pm | Titmus Theatre Nationally acclaimed by the American College Dance Festival Association, the NCSU Dance Company performs a distinguished collection of modern dance for their annual concert. The program will feature premiere and repertory work created by the dance program directors and invited guest artists, including MODERN on MODERN on MODERN by Claire Porter.
CLOSING RECEPTION AND CATALOG RELEASE PARTY FOR FARFETCHED Wednesday, April 24, 6-8pm | Gregg Museum of Art & Design This is it: the last big event before the Gregg moves out of Talley! FREE
Pipes & Drums Saturday, April 27 at 2pm | Harris Field Join the NCSU Pipes and Drums as they celebrate Beltane, an ancient Gaelic festival observed in Ireland, Scotland and the Isle of Man to mark the beginning of summer. Free
CELEBRATE! ARTS NC STATE Saturday, April 27 at 6pm | The McKimmon Center It’s the best party of spring! Join us for our 16th annual gala in support of the visual and performing arts at North Carolina State University. This festive event includes a reception, silent auction, dinner and entertainment. At the gala, in grateful recognition of their generous and longstanding support of the arts, the Friends of ARTS NC STATE Board of Advisors will award the 2013 Bowers Medal of Arts to the Student Body of NC State University.
TheatreFest 2013 May 30-June 30 One month, three plays in rolling rep! Shows run May 30 through June 30 in the Titmus Theatre and Kennedy-McIlwee Studio Theatre in Thompson Hall. Tickets go on sale Friday, April 5. »
| 19
Student spotlight Performing Arts Awards The Performing Artist Award honors student performers in music, dance and theatre. This award is open to any current full-time NC State student enrolled in an ARTS NC STATE music, dance or theatre course and/or involved in an ARTS NC STATE Music Department, Dance Program, or University Theatre production or performance. The Performing Artist Award is chosen by adjudicating faculty. The winning performing artists each receive a $500 award and acknowledgement in the following year’s ARTS NC STATE playbill. Grant funding for the Performing and Creative Artist Awards is provided by the NC State Foundation, Inc.
2011-12 Performing Artist Award Recipients
Dance: Hayley Dirscherl, Biomedical Engineering (graduate student) Music: Daniel Kim, Industrial Engineering & Biological Engineering Theatre: Robert Steinberg, Marketing with a Theatre minor
Creative Artist Awards The Creative Artist Award recognizes original work in music, dance and theatre created by currently enrolled full-time NC State students. This award is not tied to enrollment or participation in the arts programs or courses at NC State. A committee of music, dance and theatre faculty reviews submissions made annually of original work and selects the Creative Artist(s). Each winning creative artist receives a $500 award and acknowledgement in the following year’s ARTS NC STATE playbill. A corresponding grant is given to the appropriate ARTS NC STATE department to assist in producing the selected work(s) in the next academic year.
2011-12 Creative Artist Award Recipient
Theatre: Michael Seebold, English (World Literature) & Philosophy Submission deadline for the 2012-2013 Creative Artist Award is noon on Wednesday, March 27, 2013. For more information, go to ncsu.edu/arts/ students, or contact ARTS NC STATE at 919-513-1800 or artsncstate@ncsu.edu.
Curricular Connections Guide The Curricular Connections Guide exists to integrate ARTS NC STATE programming into the university’s curriculum in appropriate and meaningful ways. The Arts Outreach staff produces this comprehensive guide each semester to identify specific course connections with all six ARTS NC STATE visual and performing arts programs. Started in 2004, the Curricular Connections Guide has served as a way for the arts programs to provide specific opportunities to faculty that allow for enhanced learning for their students. Examples of collaboration include artists leading a discussion or workshop in the classroom, students being welcomed into the Gregg Museum’s permanent collection for a behind the
20
|
ticket central: 919.515.1100
| ncsu.edu/arts
scenes tour, and faculty encouraging students to attend performances or exhibitions for extra credit or writing assignments. To see a copy of this semester’s Guide go to the ARTS NC STATE website at ncsu.edu/arts.
The Arts Village The Arts Village is a Living and Learning Community on campus sponsored by ARTS NC STATE and University Housing. Located in Turlington Residence Hall, the Arts Village is home to 160 students who consider the arts an important part of their lives. The Arts Village has students from every undergraduate college on campus. Living and learning villages provide environments in which students can pursue their academic goals in close partnership with mentors, professors and others who share their same interests. In the Arts Village, students who share a passion for the arts have created a close-knit community of friends who encourage and support each other both academically and artistically. Just about any time of day (or night!), you can walk down the halls of Turlington and hear students running lines together for a play, rehearsing for a music ensemble, or eagerly planning to attend a performance or exhibition together. Contributing to the core arts experience for Arts Village students, ARTS NC STATE faculty and staff design unique educational programs for the students throughout the year. For more information about the Arts Village, contact Sharon Moore at sharon_moore@ncsu.edu.
Student Art Purchase Since 2001, ARTS NC STATE has purchased original artwork of NC State students for permanent display on campus. A committee comprised of faculty, staff, students and local artists review the submitted work and choose the art to be purchased. In the twelve years that the Student Art Purchase has taken place, 106 pieces of student artwork have been purchased and are on display in the Talley Student Center, as well as Peele Hall, Witherspoon Student Center, and the College of Veterinary Medicine. The Student Art Purchase is open to any currently enrolled, full-time NC State student. The 2013 Student Art Purchase will be held on Tuesday, March 19, 2013. Find out more about entering a piece by visiting ncsu.edu/arts/students. »
Pictured above are details from four works purchased during the 2012 Student Art Purchase (L-R): Tilt! by Troy Calkins (chalk pastel, acrylic paints); Pins by Davis Choun (mixed media); Executive Space by Stephen Lindberg (mixed media); and Growth of Piranha Plants by Tony Hankerson, Jr. (watercolor).
IMPORTANT INFORMATION Ticket Central 919.515.1100 Talley Student Center, 2nd floor 12-6pm, Mon-Fri Ticket Central is your source for tickets to all ARTS NC STATE performances. Located in the 2nd floor lobby of the Talley Student Center, Ticket Central is open weekdays from 12-6pm during fall and spring academic semesters. On the evening of shows, Ticket Central remains open until the performance begins. Ticket Central opens 1½ hours before weekend performances. The box office in Thompson Hall opens 1 hour before the show. Hours vary during university holidays and over the summer. For your convenience, tickets may also be purchased online anytime at ncsu.edu/arts. Discounts are available for current NC State students, faculty, staff, Centennial Campus affiliates and Encore members (current university ID required), FRIENDS of ARTS NC STATE ($100+ donation), members of the Parents & Families Association (Very Important Parent card required), and members of the NC State Alumni Association (membership card required). Discounts are also available
for senior citizens, non-NC State students, and groups. All discounts must be taken at time of purchase and may not be combined. Exchanges are available as a special benefit to Center Stage Create Your Own Series subscribers and University Theatre season subscribers only. Exchanges must be handled in person at the Ticket Central office during normal business hours, no later than 48 hours in advance of the performance date printed on your ticket. Tickets must be exchanged fora performance within the same series. Refunds are not offered, except in the case of a cancelled performance. All events are subject to change.
Seating Policy Doors open approximately one-half hour before curtain time. As a courtesy to performers and audience members, latecomers will not be seated until a suitable pause in the performance. Please note that due to the configuration of the theatres in Thompson Hall, late seating for theatrical performances will not be available.
Electronic Devices Cameras and recorders of any kind are not allowed. Cell phones must be silenced or turned off. No text messaging please, as it is distracting to your fellow audience members.
A Note to Parents Parents should exercise discretion in deciding which events are appropriate for their children. Regardless of age, everyone must have a ticket. Please, no babes-in-arms.
Accessibility ARTS NC STATE performances, exhibitions and classes are accessible to people of all abilities. Ample wheelchair seating is available in all theatres. Large print programs, recorded playbill notes and sign-language interpreters are available on request (please provide Ticket Central with two weeks notice to allow time for an ASL interpreter to prepare). The Thompson Hall theatres are equipped with an infrared assistive listening system. An on-site wheelchair, courtesy of Arts Access, is also available. With advance notice, we are eager to provide any other assistance needed.
Acknowledgements The price of your ticket covers only a portion of the cost of presenting ARTS NC STATE programs. Our primary financial support comes from the students of NC State University. Additional support is provided by grants and our generous donors. Please refer to the list of our donors beginning on page 18.
Advertising This book would not be possible without the advertisers who support it. The ARTS NC State programs are published and designed by Opus 1, inc., in cooperation with ARTS NC State. If you are interested in reaching our audience with your message in the ARTS NC State program book, please call or email Amy Scott or Devon Semler at (919) 834-9441 or amys@opus1inc.com or devons@opus1inc.com. This program book was not printed with state-appropriated funds. PHOTO CREDITS: (when available) COVER: Ron Foreman PG 3: Roger Winstead (both images) PGS 6-9: Friends of the College archival photos (NCSU Libraries Special Collections) PG 10: Matt Gay PGS 16-17 (L-R): (Music) Dan Jahn, (University Theatre) Ron Foreman, (Dance) Ben Scott Photography, (Crafts) courtesy of the artist PGS 18-19: (Center Stage) Alison Hasbach, (Music) Dan Jahn, (University Theatre) Ron Foreman, (University Theatre) Dan Jahn
| 21
DONORS ARTS NC STATE is grateful to our FRIENDS of ARTS NC STATE for their generous support. This list represents charitable contributions made between July 1, 2011 and June 30, 2012. While we make every effort to be accurate and thorough, it is possible to accidentally omit or misspell a name. Please contact us at 919-515-6160 with any additions or corrections.
Visionary ($10,000 and above) R.A. Bryan Foundation, Inc. Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund ■ Dr. Roy Cromartie & Paul Fomberg Fox Family Foundation, Inc. Charles & Kathryn Green ■ ■ Drs. Norman & Gilda Greenberg Bernard & Patricia Hyman ■ Jerry & Nina Jackson ■ ■ Loomis Foundation Elizabeth Matheson Michael Busko & Joan Mills Busko/Mills Family Foundation, Inc. ■ ■ Mac & Lindsay Newsom ■ ■ ■ George Smedes Poyner Foundation Lew & Billie Rentel ■ Bing & Carol Sizemore ■ ■ Rebecca Thompson ■ Thomas & Kimberly Przybyl ■ The Titmus Foundation, Inc. ■ Caroline Hickman Vaughan ■ Randall & Susan Ward ■ Lane & Linda Wharton ■
Benefactor ($5,000-$9,999) Dr. Charles & JoAnne Dickinson The family of Nancy Gregg ■ Dr. Awatif E. Hassan ■ IBM Corporation Sara Lynn & K.D. Kennedy, Jr. ■ Christopher Leazer & Heath Ramsey ■ Gregor McElvogue Dr. Thomas & Judy Stafford ■ ■ ■ Dr. Michael Stoskopf & Dr. Suzanne Kennedy-Stoskopf ■ David S. Thompson York Properties, Inc. ■ ■ ■ G. Smedes & Rosemary York ■ ■ ■
Connoisseur ($2,500-$4,999) Bruce T. Brown Richard & Suzy Bryant ■ Thomas E. Cabaniss Capital Investment Group, Inc. ■ Clancy & Theys Construction Company Tim & Carroll Clancy Joan DeBruin ■ Lynn & Faye Eury Eugene & Vicky Langley ■ ■ Robert & Michelyn Masini, In memory of Toni Christine Masini ■ State Employees Combined Campaign Wells Fargo Foundation ■
Patron ($1,000-$2,499) Dorothy R. Adams Dr. Richard & Cynthia Bernhard James & Lee Black ■ Diane E. Boone Henry & Sory Bowers ■ ■ ■ Dr. Bruce & Kelly Branson Community Foundation of Greater Greensboro, Inc. Robert Cooper & Sharon Perry ■ Cynthia M. Gregg, MD: Facial Plastic Surgery Charles N. & E. Marian Dowsett Dr. Dearborn Edwards ■ ■ Ronald G. Ellis, Jr. ■ Emerge Fine Art Larry W. Ennis ■ ■ Zach Galifianakis Douglas & Rachel Galyon ■ ■ GE Foundation The Glenwood Agency/Ann-Cabell Baum Andersen & Bryan Andersen ■ Dr. James & Ann Goodnight ■ Dr. Roger & Susan Gregg ■
22
|
ticket central: 919.515.1100
Dr. Marc I. & Fay P. Hoit ■ Dr. Harold B. & Patsy G. Hopfenberg ■ Jason Horne & Eva Maria Feucht ■ Dr. R. Merill & Marilyn Hunter Dr. Robert & Donna Kanich John & Jane Kanipe ■ ■ ■ ■ Thomas Laundon ■ Annabelle Fetterman ■ Lundy Fetterman Family Foundation, Inc. ■ John H. & Alice B. Margeson Caroline V. McCall Tom & Kathy McPherson ■ N. Alexander Miller III ■ Dr. Hayne & Barbara Palmour ■ ■ ■ ■ Dr. Emily Mann Peck James M. & Anne Peden ■ PJM Interconnection LLC Dr. Stephen Reynolds & Dr. Susan Osborne Dr. Surry Roberts ■ Willard & Susan Ross ■ Joseph & Diane Sanders ■ William M. & Catherine S. Singer St. Andrews Society of NC, Inc. Hope Stanton ■ ■ Sampson & Mary Starling ■ ■ David H. & Virginia A. Stevens ■ ■ Nan & Leighton Strader ■ Dr. Banks & Louise Talley ■ ■ ■ Dr. John & Patricia Tector ■ ■ ■ ■ Marilyn J. VanderLugt Richard L. Watts Helen H. White ■ Chancellor W. Randolph Woodson & Susan Woodson ■ Ken D. Worsham & Pauline M. Leveille George & Reba Worsley ■
Sponsor ($500-$999) Dr. Ernie & Beverly Alexander Chip & Lynn Andrews ■ Walter & Melissa Bartlett Allen & Corinne Barwick BB&T Insurance Services Linda Beck Robert & Mary-Charles Boyette ■ D. Mac & Sylvia Campbell Marvin & Mary Chaney Herb & Kathryn Council ■ Dr. Lucy C. Daniels ■ ■ Michael & Terry Davis William Ellenson & Dr. Kathleen R. Brown ■ ■ Greg & Julie Florin Eileen S. Goldgeier ■ Elizabeth Gregg Robert M. & Dorothy K. Gunn Kenneth E. & Kathy K. Hersey Sheila C. Holman Robert & Janet Howard ■ Dr. Louis & Dawn Hunt Lou Johanson ■ Haig Khachatoorian ■ ■ Ron & Herta Kirk G. Thomas Lee & Dr. Hiller A. Spires Rob Maddrey & Mark Tulbert Frank & Jo Ann Madren Peter & Missy Matrangola ■ ■ ■ Michael G. & Lisa Maza ■ ■ Arica N. McCord The Hon. Nancy McFarlane & Robert McFarlane ■ Mimi M. McKinney ■ ■ ■ Robert Hazelgrove & Daniel McLawhorn ■ Mu Beta Psi Craig McDuffie & Linda Noble David Nolte North Carolina Pottery Collector’s Guild Anne R. Packer Dr. Carol H. Rahmani
| ncsu.edu/arts
R. Stanhope pullen society The R. Stanhope Pullen Society was created in 1993 and recognizes alumni and friends who invest in the future of the university through any type of deferred gifts. ARTS NC STATE would like to recognize Pullen Society members who have designated support for our arts programs: Nancy C. Gregg Norman & Gilda Greenberg Glenn S. Harman Michael J. Holland Jack M. Hunter Bernard & Patricia Hyman Martha Keravuori James & Eileen Lecce
Charles & Virginia Ritchie ■ ■ Dr. Frank & Dudley Sargent SAS Institute Incorporated South Arts Dr. John L. & Emily Sprague David L. & Kay K. Stout David Hopp & Susan O. Straw H. Brad & Anna C. Sullivan Samuel T. & Joyce E. Terry George & Christina Thomas Dr. Joab L. & Marly D. Thomas ■ Eunice L. Toussaint ■ ■ Dr. Lawrence & Frances Twisdale Dr. Pascal & Patricia Udekwu Ronald Weathers & Mouzetta Zumwalt-Weathers ■ Tom & Lisa N. Weber Shannon E. White John C. & Helen S. Whitley Cody N. Williams George G. & Margo H. Williams Andy & Jennifer Willis ■ Butch & Brenda Wilson ■ George & Reba Worsley
Friend ($250-$499) Richard & Elizabeth Axtell Donald & Linda Barker John & Susan Barringer Jon & Kathryn Bartley Kim & Roselyn Batcheller ■ ■ Jennie Bireline Robert & Carol Black Mark Boettiger Carson Boone C. Wade & Brenda Brickhouse Johnny Burleson & Walter Clark ■ Sean M. Cassidy Nancy Champion Dr. James W. Clark, Jr. ■ ■ ■ Thomas E. Coggin Victor L. Cononi Dr. Joseph Cornett & Dr. Cynthia Gregg ■ Philip & Sara Dail Dr. Paul L. Davis, Jr. Gail S. Duncan Sriram Easwaran & Lavanya Ganesh Ms. Lynn Ligon Fisher Virginia M. Friend Arthur & Anya Gordon Dr. Gerald & Barbara Hawkins Emory A. & Jospehine G. Howard ■ ■ Fred & Lynnette Indermaur ■ The Hon. Lucy Inman & Billy Warden
Sheila Lund N. Alexander Miller III Mac & Lindsay Newsom Lew & Billie Rentel Banks & Louise Talley Caroline Hickman Vaughan David & Judiann Wilkinson
Jonathan C. & Lisa M. Johnson Robert & Claudia Kadis George & Debora Kaiser ■ Drs. Hans D. Kellner & Ruth V. Gross Martha N. Keravuori ■ ■ ■ Nevin Kessler & Mary Linda McBride ■ Chris & Maggie LaPlante ■ Dr. Hugh K. Leatherman, Jr. Charles & Wanda Leffler ■ George W. & Betty Anne Lennon Ben & Emily Link Kathryn Lundeen Richard & Carole Marcotte Charles A. & Marie P. Martin Joe & Mary Matza Katherine F. Mauney John & Nancy McIlwee Dr. Julie McVay ■ Moore & Van Allen PLLC ■ ■ N.C. Humanities Council ■ ■ Drs. Devin & Marsha Orgeron Daniel R. & Elizabeth G. Page Jon & Lingyun Parati John H. & Lynette S. Parker ■ ■ ■ Jerome P. & Rory M. Parnell Dr. Barbara M. Parramore ■ Matt & Nicole Peterson Stephen B. Popson Qualcomm Inc Dan C. & Lillie B. Ragan John & Sue Ramsay Robert G. Rankin IV Wade & Kathy Reece ■ Russell & Ruth H. Roberson Ronald B. & Gail Runyan Perry & Susan Safran Bill Savage & Mary Losik Dr. Roby B. & Amber S. Sawyers Dr. J. Mark & Leda Scearce Steven D. Schuster & Mary Anne Howard ■ ■ Barbara Lee Smith ■ Scotty Steele ■ ■ ■ Patrick Steele & Dr. Mary Paula Zaytoun Steele ■ Glenn L. Stewart ■ ■ Sandy & Carolyn Stidham ■ ■ Mark D. & Judith M. Strickland Mark B. & Kathlyn F. Sullivan ■ ■ Rodney Swink & Juanita Shearer-Swink Kyle & Kip Talhelm Tarheel Gem & Mineral Club Dr. Stephen D. Terry Dr. Paul & Holly Tesar Triangle Potters Guild
■ Stafford Endowment for ARTS NC STATE Student Travel ■ Lynn Jones Ennis Memorial Fund ■ Nancy Carpenter Gregg Memorial Fund ■ Gregg Museum Campaign Dr. William P. & Jane W. Tucker Harry C. & Delores C. Tune Kristopher & Nicole Tyra David & Josie Walker Drs. John N. & Terry C. Wall George & Patricia Wallace ■ Tom & Mary Ward David A. White & Janine B. LeBlanc ■ ■ Bud Whitmeyer & Rebecca Merrill Richard Wiersma Kenneth W. & June B. Winston Dr. Henry S. & Martha Zaytoun ■ Dr. James & Carol Zuiches ■
Contributor ($100-$249) Ms. Ellen B. Adelman Mark J. Spinello ■ ■ Lynn & Mary Aiken David & Diane Ailor Barry & Lynn Alexander ■ ■ Durwood Jones & Pamela Allen ■ ■ Alliance One International Jay Althouse & Sally Albrecht American Airlines, Inc. Andrew & Jeannette Ammons Donald Anderson & Melanie Shaffer Dr. Dudley B. & Lisa Anderson Dr. Warwick A. Arden & Dr. Barbara Loeffler ■ Claude Arnold Charlie & Sissy Ashby ■ ■ Rebecca Askew ■ ■ Thomas & Deborah Atkinson Drs. Mack & Shirley Bailey ■ William & Ruth Barnett ■ ■ Dr. Robert & Shirley Barnhardt ■ Graydon J. Bashioum Andrew & Sheila Beal Richard Bean & Annette Overton Clarence & Carol Beaver Elwood & Diane Becton ■ Charles & Mary Lou Bell Roger & Rhonda Berkowitz ■ ■ John & Julie Bezold Bart & Sue Bielawski
John & Catherine Bishir ■ ■ Michael & Dr. Noni Bohonak Dale & Denia Bone Albert & Elizabeth Borden Jean Bowen Dr. S.R. & Jo Anna Boyette V.R. & Mary Brantley David & Shawn Brewster Dorothy Brown ■ Dr. Robert D. Brown Raymond A. & Kymbra Bryan Richard & Julia Bryant Scott & MaryBeth Carpenter ■ James & Susan Carter ■ ■ W. Robert Chapman & Mary Lovelock Janice Christensen Marion L. J. Church Carol D. Clark Scott Clay & Philippa Drewer Adam Compton Jonathan Conrad Council for Children’s Rights ■ ■ Gail Crozier CS Forester Benefits Group Thomas & Mary Cunningham Judy L. Curry Anne Dahle ■ ■ Phyllis C. Danby Ralph W. Daniel Bill & Betty Daniel Jo Lindy K. Daniels John R. Davis & Jean Laughlin-Davis James & Kathryn Deal Robert & Elizabeth Dean Virgil R. Dodson Duke Energy Foundation Jeff & Linsey Dyson Louis Early & Eleanor Johnson Dr. Risa S. Ellovich Marvin M. & Gail M. Everett Curtis & Barbara Freeze Dr. William C. & Ida H. Friday Drs. James & Mary Susan Fulghum Dr. Jack & Jen Fuller
Dr. Jimmy D. & Doris Garlich Kevin P. Gates Dr. Forrest & Evangeline Getzen Kenneth R. Gilland Thomas & Lorri Givens Glaxo Smith Kline Betty & Matthew Goodman Raymond H. & Susan G. Goodmon Dr. Chris & Odile Gould William & Erica Grantmyre Dr. Scott T. & Susan G. Gray Paul & Evelyn G. Green Dr. David B. Greene E. Shelton & Courtenay G. Griffin Joseph Hackley & Cynthia Clark Charles T. & Cheryl B. Hall ■ ■ Sarah B. Hanner ■ ■ Loren & Susan Harrell ■ Robert L. & Peggy L. Harris ■ ■ Wayne & Susan Harris Robert H. & Beverly N. Hartgrove Dr. Kerry S. Havner Edgar E. & Brenda H. Hedgecock Dr. John A. Heitmann, Jr. Kyle Held ■ Anderson C. Hensley Gregg Hilker ■ Robert Hill & Linda Balfour William M. & Billie L. Hodan Charles E. & Judith B. Holland David E. Horne James & Ann Horner ■ Dr. F.T. & Ginger Horton Robert J. & Caralyn M. House Gary Jacobson & Elizabeth Michaels John & Cathy Keane ■ ■ Thomas R. Kendig Ken & Meg Kennedy ■ John J. & Laura Kent James & Deborah Kessler Benjamin & Jean Kilgore Gary King & Joyce Watkins King Sonya Ko ■ ■ Dr. Thomas Koch
Frank B. Konhaus Barbara Kretzer Joe Layton & Sarah Roholt William B. & Deanna D. Lineback Ashleigh M. & Margaret P. Lucas Dr. Dan Lunney ■ Sam & Anne Mace John A. & Lucinda MacKethan Charlotte M. Martin Jack Martin Masco Corporation Dr. Blase E. Masini William F. & Sharon S. Massey Todd & Patty Mathes Donald Mathews & Betsy Buford ■ ■ Bob & Carol J. Mattocks Nancy R. McBride ■ ■ W. Elliott & Jennifer L. McCabe ■ ■ Douglas & Victoria McCrea Hal & Gilda McKinney Spencer & Ashley McKinstry Michael J. McLendon Brian L. & Konni A. McMurray Mike Merritt & Dr. Jayne Fleener David & Renee Metsch Microsoft Corporation Judge Burley & Lou Mitchell Henry & Helen Mitchell Betty Mittag Robert & Patricia Mohnal Dr. David & Karen Montgomery ■ Keith R. & Elizabeth N. Moore Matthew C. Moore James Wilson & Barbara H. Mulkey ■ Peter W. & Angelyn C. Murgas Wendell & Linda Murphy National Academy of Needlearts ■ ■ Lisa Navas Katherine L. Newsom ■ ■ Robert P. & Dr. Lauren B. Noble Norfolk Southern Corporation Thomas & Jennifer O’Brien Robert J. & Laurie J. O’Connor ■ ■ Ol’ North State Knitting Guild
NAMED SCHOLARSHIPS & ENDOWMENTS Endowments may be established with a minimum commitment of $15,000 and may honor or memorialize an individual or family member while supporting arts initiatives such as student scholarships, programmatic support, and collections. ABB Inc. Arts Outreach Endowment Judy C. Abee Marching Band Endowment Patricia H. Adams Scholarship Donald and Maryann Bitzer Theatre Achievement Awards Endowment Carey & Neita Bostian Music Endowment Henry & Sory Bowers Arts Endowment Bruce T. Brown Marching Band Endowment Charlotte V. Brown Museum Endowment Raymond A. Bryan, Jr. Jazz Endowment Curtis R. Craver Clarinet Scholarship Dr. Eloise A. Cofer Arts Endowment Mildred J. Davis Museum Endowment Annabelle Lundy Fetterman Symphony Concertmaster Endowment Fox Family Foundation Crafts Center Endowment John N. & Nancy C. Gregg Museum Endowment Dewey M. Griffith Marching Band Endowment
Dr. Frank M. Hammond Endowment for Musicianship & Outstanding Leadership Glenn S. Harman & Miriam Bailey Gardner Choral Accompanist Scholarship Endowment Glenn S. Harman & Kay Crawford Johnson Double-Reed Scholarship Endowment Amelia E. Hunter Choral Leadership Endowment ITG Norma Ausley Memorial Endowment Suzanne Kennedy-Stoskopf Endowment for Creativity in the Performing Arts The Lattice Endowment for the Performing Arts James and Eileen Lecce Ethnic Art Collection Endowment Sheila Margaret Lund Endowment Jim Marchman Marching Band Endowment Toni Christine Masini Memorial Scholarship John C. McIlwee Theatre Endowment John Menapace Photography Endowment N. Alexander Miller III Arts Endowment Sharon Herr Moore Center Stage Endowment
NCSU Pipes and Drums Scholarship Barbara G. & Hayne Palmour III Museum Endowment James M. Poyner Visiting Artist Endowment Kimberly Titmus Przybyl Music Endowment Lew & Billie Rentel ARTS NC STATE Scholarship Lew & Billie Rentel Museum Enhancement Endowment Lew & Billie Rentel Thompson Building Endowment Reynolds Music Performance Scholarship Alby Rose Marching Band Scholarship Stafford Endowment for ARTS NC STATE Student Travel Banks & Louise Talley Arts Endowment Banks C. Talley Jr. Arts Endowment for the Frank Thompson Building Brita M. Tate Memorial Endowment Martha Emerson Upchurch Performing Arts Endowment Wachovia Endowment for the Visual & Performing Arts Randall & Susan Ward Museum Endowment Dr. Elmer R. White Trumpet Scholarship Mary Lib Wood Endowment for the Visual & Performing Arts
| 23
DONORS ■ Stafford Endowment for ARTS NC STATE Student Travel ■ Lynn Jones Ennis Memorial Fund ■ Nancy Carpenter Gregg Memorial Fund ■ Gregg Museum Campaign Dr. Michael R. & Mary Y. Overcash Greg Pahel & Janice Mrkonjic Dr. Sejal B. Parikh ■ Dr. Richard R. & Nell H. Patty Gregory Paul & Mary Hart-Paul Irvin & Ann Pearce Kenneth E. Peters & Michael C. Dawson Vicki & Charles Phaneuf Robert L. & Joanne L. Pilot Michael Poterala David & Luisa Price ■ Charles W. & Judith W. Proctor Billy & Cathy Rackley ■ Ralph Recchie Sylvia N. Redwine Mary Regan Dr. David A. & Mary M. Rendleman Jerry & Carole Rhodes Walter & Jean Richardson Mary J. Rivers RJ Reynolds Foundation Les & Robert Robinson Kimberly A. Rogers Suzanne M. Rose Stephen E. Rothrock & Karen Nickless Dr. Burton & Janice Russell John & Kelly Russell Dr. Richard & Jackie Saleeby Elizabeth A. Sall John & Ginger Sall Diego Sanchez & Allison Kaufman ■ ■ David & Beatrice Sanford ■ Bruce & Miriam Sauls Dr. Stephen & Nancy Schecter Gene R. & Maryann Schroeder Sarah Schroth David & Diana Sendall ■ ■ Joseph Shaffner & Anna Brita Tate Philip Shelton J. Frank & Rebecca H. Shipp Ann B. & Richard W. Shirk Scott H. Shore & Dr. Rebecca S. Boston Ken & Allison Sigmon William & Jennette Skinner Anthony K. & Marie W. Slater Dana L. Smith Gabriel D. Smith John K. Smith & Jean Troy-Smith ■ ■ Keller & Bennie Smith E. Randolph & Helen Snyder Dr. Daniel & Carolyn Solomon ■ Dr. Edward S. & Linda W. Stanton ■ ■ Jane S. Steele ■ ■ Anita L. Stejskal Warren & Debbie Stephenson Dr. Philip J. & Elise R. Stiles James L. & Catherine R. Stuart Jim & Mary A. Sullivan Suresh K. & Phoola O. Sus Edward C. & Dr. Janice C. Swab Suzanne Taylor ■ ■ Edward & C.J.B. Terrell Derek & Barbara Thompson ■ Joseph R. & Rebekah S. Thompson John C. & Gayla Todd Dr. Nadine F. Tope Peggy B. Tousignant ■ ■ Monte C. & P.D. Towe Triangle Basket Weavers W. Scott & Roslyn S. Troutman Truist Kimberly Tully John & Connie Turlington Twisted Threads Fiber Arts Guild United Way Tar River Region Robert W. Upchurch Dexter C. Vaughan Dr. Lona F. Voellinger ■ ■ The Hon. Anna M. Wagoner & E. William Wagoner
24
|
ticket central: 919.515.1100
Drs. Stephen A. & Charlotte V. Wainwright Eleania B. Ward Charles & Joann Warner ■ Bob & Marilyn Warner Jeffrey M. & Elizabeth S. Weingarten Jo Ellen Westmoreland ■ G. Oliver White & Linda M. Satterfield Deborah C. White David & Judi Wilkinson Fred H. & Gail L. Williams ■ ■ Jacob A. & Joyce E. Williamson Mark P. Wilson Dr. William Winner & Dr. Terri Lomax Winston Salem State University Foundation ■ ■ Claus H. Wolf Dr. James H. & Martha H. Woodward ■ Richard & Amy Woynicz Xerox Corporation
Supporter ($50-$99) 1789 Questers ■ ■
Dr. Frank & Judy Abrams Robert & Marilyn Aldridge Alison Allen ■ ■ Lauren E. Allison Paul Allred Jeffery & Kristine Alpi Jack Arnold & Robin Harris Andrew & Elizabeth Arrowood Garland & Charlene Askew ■ ■ ASPPA Benefits Council - Philadelphia ■ ■ Graham Auman Justin J. Autry Pat Bailey Charlotte Baker ■ ■ Mae Bell Jerry Bennett Richard & Julie Benson Dr. Anna Bigelow William & Brenda Boatwright Wanda Borrelli William & Millicent Britt Dawson Bruckman Jeffrey & Nancy Burgess Gregory Calabria Brian E. Campbell ■ Larry E. Campbell Hubert & Mary Carr Dr. Harvey Johnson Charlton Curtis & Maria Chi Church & Dwight Company Inc. Thomas & April Clark Chris Cline Kenneth & Sandra Close Christian Cobb John Connors & Mary Beth Tobin Larry G. & Karen C. Conrad ■ ■ ■ Jon & Ellie Cooke Trudy I. Cooper Terry & Nancy Cox Gregory & Martha Crampton ■ ■ Lee Crosby Rodney & Courtney Crosby Charles W. & Barbara S. Darden Fred B. Davenport, Jr. ■ ■ Charles W. Davies ■ ■ Tony Delmedico & Hope G. Panara Sam Dennis ■ Stephen W. & Martha Derbyshire ■ ■ H.E. & Karen Dickerson Meredith Dockery Timothy & Susan Doran Keith W. & Carol A. Douglas ■ ■ William H. & Jeanette S. Dove Dr. William M. Dunlap Tim J. Earley & Linda Loy Marjorie Eckels Daniel & Janet G. Edgerton Dr. James R. & Delores O. Edwards Dr. Eugene J. Eisen ■
| ncsu.edu/arts
Timur Ender Charles R. & Anna S. Farinholt Dr. Richard Felder & Dr. Claudia Brent William Eugene Felker Teresa Ferlotti John Ferrante Dr. John A. & Jo Ann Fisher ■ ■ Robert E. Fite Dr. William L. & Heidi B. Fornes Dr. Tom F. & Janet Foster Bradley & Cheryl P. Francis Duff & Billie Freeman Sandy & Patricia Friedman David W. & Heather D. Frink Shayne C. Gad Robert N. & Brenda S. Garner Joseph S. & Susan H. Gentry ■ ■ Genworth Financial Maurice J. & Karen R. Gifford Joel Goodhart ■ ■ Sally M. Gorsline ■ ■ John & Gisela Grace Patsy Grainger Noel T. Griffin Matt Grzebien Donald & Joyce A. Gunter Dr. Patrick V. Gurgel & Dr. Gisele C. Passador-Gurgel Mary Guyett Dealis W. & Carol B. Gwyn Zachary Christian Hall Richard B. & Alice C. Hardy Eva Hardy Vicki Hare David L. & Kathy R. Harris Sherri Harris ■ ■ George Scott Heath ■ Betty H. Henderson ■ ■ Jim Herrington Bill Hickman & Pat Hall Dennis T. & Susan B. Hight Joe L. & Anna Ball Hodge William E. Holman & Stephanie Bass David Henry Hook ■ Dr. Larry C. & Kimberly L. Hovis James W. & Bianca Howard Dr. Ann Howe Leslie R. Hoying ■ ■ James E. Hudgins, Jr. Leta F. Huntsinger John E. & Amy R. Huss Martin G. & Sarah G. Hyatt W. Scott & Jennifer M. Irvin ■ ■ Dr. Everette James & Nancy J. Farmer John L. & Virginia M. Jernigan Anton & Maria E. Jetten Adrian A. & Avis C. Jones Terry H. & Joyce C. Jones ■ ■ Thomas B. & Kay S. Jones ■ ■ Lynne K. Kane Sarah Keener ■ Kevin Kennedy Cyrus & Carolyn King ■ William L. Kiser Charles F. Kleeberg Dr. Olga A. Kleiankina Gary & Suzanne Krill John G. Lafratta Edward & Elinor Le Claire Dr. John K. Lee Cynthia L. Lee ■ ■ Dr. William D. & Colleen H. Lee B. Frank Lewis R. Cory Livengood ■ Dorothy B. Love Drs. Paul & Kathy Lunn Kent Lyle Lori I. Lynn Alan Maloney James A. & Debbie Maness
Roger Manley & Theadora Brack ■ Robert E. & Roselle E. Margolis Granger & Carolynn Marley ■ ■ Agnes F. Marshall ■ ■ Nicholas & Carrie Martinelli ■ Amy McDonald Dr. Peter E. McElligott A. Sherri McGee ■ ■ Mark B. McNeill Joseph H. Meadows, Jr. Katherine Meares Lorraine Mercer Claire Meyerhoff ■ Lindsey & Sharon Moore T. Edwin Moore Dr. James L. & Elizabeth J. Mostrom Jane B. Murphy Drs. Paul & Rebeca Nagy Dr. Willard W. & Joan M. Neel Dr. Juliana Makuchi Nfah-Abbenyi David R. & Jayne C. Nimocks Sally Noble NC Museum Art Foundation, Inc. ■ ■ North Carolina Senior Games, Inc ■ ■ Thomas W. O’Brien Dr. Janice E. Odom ■ Dr. Barry and Lois Ostrow Jim & Shirley Overcash Lindsay C. & Alison S. Overton ■ ■ William & Martha Pahl ■ ■ Knowles R. Parker Michael Parker & Ann Cowperthwaite Maurice W. Partin, Jr. Will & Amanda Patnaud R. Andrew Payne Alan H. Peterson & Priscilla S. Kistler ■ ■ Martha B. Petty Robert & Julie Pfund Thomas A. Phillips David Pittman Lane C. & Merry W. Price Will Pridgen ■ Dr. Lee T. & Sallie G. Quick Raleigh Fine Arts Society Inc ■ ■ ■ J. Er & Catherine B. Ralston M. Scott & Charlotte Rankin Katharine L. Reid Philip E. & Clara K. Richardson Colonel Charles A. Riedell Mary P. Roberts Dr. Michael L. & Elizabeth F. Ross George & Jane Rudisill ■ ■ William & Layla T. Santa Rosa Maurice C. & Jacqueline A. Sardi ■ ■ Dr. Charles & Mary Scarantino Mary Ann Scherr Nancy H. Scheunemann Robert & Molly Schneider Ron Schrock Susan Scott ■ Dr. Leon & Lois Semke Brian Shawcroft Robert D. & Connie C. Shertz ■ ■ Michael J. Shiver Drs. Gerald B. & Mary H. Sibrack Dr. E. Max & Dorothy Sink Eric Smith & Cynthia Holding-Smith Ryan & Kathryn K. Snead Ruth L. Speece Greta Speer Thomas Spleth & Jean McLaughlin Stanley R. Stager, III George M. & Karin H. Stephens Dr. Irwin Stern Kristine Stiles Priscilla Swindel P.J. Teal ■ Anne Wall Thomas Anne Tomins Julie Tomlin ■
Friends of ARTS NC STATE Become a friend! Carol A. Toomajian Douglas & Cynthia Tudor Henry A. & Elizabeth H. Turlington The Rev. Roy L. & Cynthia S. Vestal Jennifer L. Viets Justin & Ann Marie Waller Tony H. & Angie C. Whitley Amanda A. Willis Adria Wilson ■ Deborah M. Wilson Barbara Wishy Troy & Leigh Wojcik Barry C. & Carmen T. Wood Frederick P. & Elaine Wooten Wood ■ ■ John M. Woodell & Michelle D. Prysby Louise J. Wurst Charles G. Zug, III
YOUR gift will… INTRODUCE the arts to thousands of NC State students ENRICH the cultural landscape of your community SUPPORT all six visual and performing arts programs OR the program(s) of your choice
GIFTS IN-KIND Visionary ($10,000 and above) Kim & Roselyn Batcheller Esther Wang
Benefactor ($5,000-$9,999)
GIVE TODAY! Call 919.515.6160 or visit ncsu.edu/arts
Christian Cobb Granger & Carolynn Marley Dr. Banks & Louise Talley
Connoisseur ($2,500-$4,999) Richard & Suzy Bryant Joan DeBruin William & Jeanette Dove Sandra Green Dr. Everette James & Nancy Farmer N. Alexander Miller III Drs. Stephen & Charlotte Wainwright
Patron ($1,000-$2,499) Carson Boone Luzette C. Brown Bob and Beth Dixson Ronald & Mary Falciani Harvey & Jane Goldman Charles & Kathryn Green Drs. Norman & Gilda Greenberg Bernard & Patricia Hyman Bea Spielman Caroline Hickman Vaughan Watered Garden Florist
Sponsor ($500-$999) Roger & Rhoda Berkowitz Cronin Byrd Dr. James W. Clark, Jr. Kevin Coleman Kevin Cummings John P. Ferguson Robert & Pickett Guthrie Richard V. Hanson Robert Hoffert Lie-Nielsen Toolworks, Inc. Harriett Page Sandy Porter Jennifer Rienfenberg Dr. Robert & Mary Rollins Lynne Taylor-Corbett Theo Davis Printing Marilyn Woo Carolyn Wyland
Friend ($250-$499) Carly Andrus Joan Mills Busko CE Rental Brenda Goodrick Sarah A. Long Stonehaven Jewelry Gallery Ltd. Sweet Bay Tree, Inc.
Contributor ($100-$249) Gerry Aquadro Susan Brandeis Virginia Brogden Bob Brown Judith A. Brown Catherine J. Burton Michael A. Giaquinto Verne & Barbara Ingersoll Pat A. Light John & Barbara McGeachy Marina M. Robinson William & Kathleen Stewart
Supporter ($50-$99) Lynne Guglielmi Barbour Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer Dr. Patricia Troyer
AUCTION DONORS ARTS NC STATE thanks the many individuals, businesses and organizations that donated items for the live and silent auctions at the 2012 Celebrate! ARTS NC STATE Gala. American Dance Festival Anonymous The ArtsCenter Claire Ashby Anne Atkinson Atlantic Mulch & Erosion Control, Inc. Adam Attarian Laura Azzi Watercolors Gaines Bailey Bailey’s Fine Jewelry Donna Barnack Susan Dahlin Bashford BB&T Insurance Services Beleza, A Fair Trade Boutique Donna Belt The Borough Suzy & Richard Bryant Johnny Burleson & Walter Clark Carolina Ballet Carolina Brewers Guild Carolina Hurricanes
Sarah Cawn NCSU Center Stage Chapel Hill Restaurant Group Jean Cheely Kathryn Council The Crafts Center Jason Craighead Davenport @ Five Points Deep Dish Theatre DowntownRaleigh.com The Durham Bulls/Jim Goodmon Dan Dye Sue Edmondson JP Edwards/JP Edwards Art Hayley Sizemore/Emerge Fine Art Empire Eats Betty Fetvedt John Fetvedt Patrick J. FitzGerald Amy Flynn Designs Dr. Edward T. Funkhouser Grains of Time Danene Groenke Charlotte Guice Abie Harris Al Headen Mark Hewitt/W. M. Hewitt Pottery Anna Ball Hodge Humble Pie Nina Jackson Lillian Jones Justice Theatre Project George & Debora Kaiser Donna Kanich Cathy Keith Kenzania/Margie Springer Joyce Watkins King Meredith Kittrell Ladies in Red Vicky Langley The Little German Band and Dancers Lonnie Poole Golf Course Linda Marcuson Randall Marcuson Massage Envy The Hon. Nancy L. McFarlane MulchMan The Museum Spa Music Department
Nasher Museum of Art NC State Alumni Association NC State Athletics NC State University Office of the Chancellor NC State University Office of Finance and Business NC State University Office of Gift Planning NC State University Pipes and Dums Carol Fountain Nix North Carolina Symphony North Carolina Theatre O2 Fitness Ben Owen III/Ben Owen Pottery John Pagliuca R. Andrew Payne Jane Walker Payne Sherri Pekks Charlene Poisel Raleigh Little Theatre Heath Ramsey Kathy Myers Reece Sara Reichle Jess Rotenberg Photography The Roundabout Art Collective Rowdy & Lacy Daniel Salo David Sanford Mary Ann Scherr Carol & Bing Sizemore Barbara Lee Smith Special Projects, LLC Dr. Hiller Spires Emily & John Sprague Judy & Tom Stafford The State Club Stitch/Holly Aiken Tarheel Foodie/Susan Sink Yuko Nogami Taylor S. Tector Metals/Sarah Tector The Umstead Hotel and Spa University Theatre Bill Wallace Katy Walls Linda Watson/Cook for Good Cheryl Weisz Jo Ellen Westmoreland Bud Whitmeyer & Rebecca Merrill Jack Williams Susan Woodson Zely & Ritz
| 25
26
|
ticket central: 919.515.1100
| ncsu.edu/arts
Late night dining
■ ■
Near Campus Downtown
■ ■
Cameron Village Glenwood South
As a service to our patrons, we offer these suggestions of local restaurants with late night hours. NOTE: the only nights listed are those for when the establishment is open until at least 11pm. These are published hours as of January 2013; we encourage you to call ahead to confirm.
■ Cameron Bar & Grill
■ Irregardless Café
■ Porter’s City Tavern
■ Cantina 18
■ Krispy Kreme
■ The Raleigh Times Bar
■ 42nd Street Oyster Bar
■ Capital Club 16
16 W Martin St | 747-9345 Thu-Sat 11pm
■ Mellow Mushroom Pizza
■ The Remedy Diner
■ Chuck’s
■ Mitch’s Tavern
■ Sitti
■ MoJoe’s Burger Joint
■ Sugarland 2031 Cameron St | 835-2100 Fri-Sat 11pm
508 West Jones St | 831-2811 Mon-Thu 11pm, Fri-Sat 1am
■ Babylon
309 N Dawson St | 838-8595 Fri-Sat 2am
■ Beasley’s Chicken+Honey
200 S Wilmington St | 322-0127 Thu-Sat 12am
■ Boylan Bridge Brewpub
201 S Boylan Ave | 803-8927 Daily until 12am
■ The Borough
317 West Morgan St | 832-8433 Daily until 2am
■ Busy Bee Café
225 South Wilmington St | 424-7817 Daily until 2am
■ Café Caturra
432 Woodburn Rd | 835-9463 Fri-Sat 11pm
2018 Clark Ave | 755-2231 Thu-Sat 12am 433 Daniels St | 835-9911 Fri-Sat 11pm
237 S Wilmington St | 322-0216 Thu-Sat 12am
■ David’s Dumpling & Noodle Bar 1900 Hillsborough St | 239-4536 Fri-Sat 11pm
■ Five Star Restaurant
511 West Hargett St | 833-3311 Daily until 12am
■ Flying Saucer
328 West Morgan St | 821-7468 Daily until 2am
■ Gravy
135 South Wilmington St | 896-8513 Fri-Sat 11pm
■ Humble Pie
317 S. Harrington St | 829-9222 Fri-Sat 12am
901 West Morgan St | 833-8898 Sat, 11pm 549 N. Person St | 833-3682 Daily until 12am, drive-thru 24/7 601 West Peace St | 832-3499 Fri-Sat 11:30pm 2426 Hillsborough St | 821-7771 Mon-Wed 12am, Thu-Sat 2am, Sun 11pm 620 Glenwood Ave | 832-6799 Mon-Sat 1:30am, Sun 12am
■ Natty Greene’s
505 W Jones St | 232-2477 Sun-Wed 12am, Thu-Sat 2am
■ The Oxford
319 Fayetteville St | 832-6622 Mon-Wed 12am,Thu-Sun 2am
■ Players Retreat
105 Oberlin Rd | 755-9589 Daily until 2am
■ Poole’s Downtown Diner
426 S McDowell St | 832-4477 Tue-Sat 2am
2412 Hillsborough St | 821-2133 Fri-Sat 11pm 14 East Hargett St | 833-0999 Daily until 2am 137 East Hargett St | 835-3553 Fri-Sat 12am 137 South Wilmington St | 239-4070 Fri-Sat 12am
■ Tobacco Road Sports Café
222 Glenwood Ave | 832-3688 Sun-Wed 12am, Thu-Sat 2am
■ Tyler’s Taproom
18 Seaboard Ave | 322-0906 Daily until 2am
■ Village Draft House
428 Daniels St | 833-1373 Sun-Tue 12am, Wed-Sat 2am
■ Zely & Ritz
301 Glenwood Ave | 828-0018 Fri-Sat 11pm
ADVERTISERS INDEX Cape Fear Formal Wear.........................................................13 www.capefearformalwear.com Carolina Meadows.................................................................15 www.carolinameadows.org Dr. Cynthia Gregg......................................................................5 www.cynthiagreggmd.com Duke Performances...............................................................13 www.dukeperformances.org Edible Art.................................................................................21 www.edibleartnc.com Emerge Fine Art......................................................................26 www.emergefineart.com Glenwood Agency..................................................................26 www.glenwoodagency.com Irregardless Cafe....................................................................26 www.irregardless.com Michael Zirkle Photography................................................15 NC State University...............................................Back Cover www.ncsu.edu NC State Bookstores..............................................................13 www.ncsu.edu/bookstore Opus 1, inc...............................................................................12 www.opus1inc.com Our State Magazine...............................................................12 www.ourstate.com Ronald McDonald House......................................................15 www.ronaldhousedurham.org Ruggero Piano...........................................................................5 www.ruggeropiano.com Springmoor................................................................................5 www.springmoor.org The Village at Brookwood....................................................27 www.villageatbrookwood.org
| 27