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The Kentucky Center (Whitney Hall, Bomhard Theater, Clark-Todd Hall, MeX Theater) 501 West Main Street; Brown Theatre, 315 W. Broadway; and Old Forester’s Paristown Hall, 724 Brent Street. Tickets: Louisville Orchestra Patron Services, 502.587.8681 or LouisvilleOrchestra.org.
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502.212.5177 AH iggs @T H e A udience g roup . com A udience 502. com To read this program in a digital format, scan the QR code with your smartphone, or visit Audience502.com JANUARY-FEBRUARY 2023 PROGRAMS HOLLYWOOD'S GOLDEN AGE January 28,
............................................................... 9
February 25, 2023 .......................................................... 13 Support and Staff ........................................................... 18 Services............................................................................ 22
2023
ARETHA: A TRIBUTE
MESSAGE FROM THE LOUISVILLE ORCHESTRA
Dear Friends,
We begin the new year of Pops at the LO with two great programs, very different from one another, though linked through wonderful music, great entertainment, and dazzling artistry.
The first is our tribute to film music, HOLLYWOOD’S GOLDEN AGE, on January 28th. I know it is no surprise to any of you that my love of movie music runs deep, so much so that I’m pretty sure I could make a couple dozen programs of my favorite film scores and never repeat a tune, and we’d all recognize every melody!
For this concert, we feature the usual and exceptional star of our show, the Louisville Orchestra, in a wide variety of music from when modern film scoring began in the 1930s to the present day. Early masters such as Erich Wolfgang Korngold and Max Steiner loom large, with the brilliance of Bernard Herrmann and Henry Mancini following.
Of course, since it’s my program you know there will be something by my hero, John Williams, and once again, it’s true! Also, John Williams the arranger is represented in a piece near the end of the program called “Tribute to the Film Composer” which he wrote for the 2002 Academy Awards presentation. Let’s just say there are 23 worldfamous movie themes presented in 4 minutes. It’s a glorious romp!
There is more dazzling artistry on this program with pianist Michael Chertock returning to the LO. Mike has chosen several movie-inspired works for piano and orchestra that you will know well. He’s one of my favorite performers, and people, and I’m delighted he’s back!
The February Pops on the 25th is a tribute to the Queen of Soul, and one of music’s great icons, Aretha Franklin, as seen through the brilliant vocalist Capathia Jenkins! Capathia is adored by audiences wherever she goes, due to her enormous repertoire, her ability to sing in so many styles and with such energy and beauty. She’ll sing some of Aretha’s greatest hits, from “Respect” to “Chain of Fools” to “Think!” and many more and will bring her own vocal magic to it all.
Joining Capathia on stage will be award-winning vocalist and arranger Darryl Jovan Williams. With Darryl's help we will also be treated to some of the music of Aretha’s contemporaries, including James Brown and Otis Redding.
We’re going to have an electric and wonderful start to 2023 at the Pops with the Louisville Orchestra. As always, we are supremely grateful for your support and care for the LO, and we look forward to seeing you at the Whitney many times this season!
Bob Bernhart Principal POPS Conductor
A U D I E N C E 4
CLASSICS SERIES
March 4 and 11
Festival of American Music
Journeys of Faith & The Literary Influence
April 1
Rach & Bartok
May 13
From Silence to Splendor
COFFEE SERIES
March 10
Festival of American Music
The Literary Influence
May 12
From Silence to Splendor
POPS SERIES
January 28
Hollywood’s
Golden Age
February 25
Aretha: A Tribute
March 18
Back to the 80’s
April 7
The Texas Tenors
FAMILY SERIES
January 22
Lights, Camera, Action!
March 26
Cultures Crossing
FILM CONCERT SERIES
April 21
Harry Potter in Concert
The Order of the Phoenix
YOU WON’T WANT TO MISS
Get your tickets NOW at louisvilleorchestra.org or call (502) 587-8681.
A SINGLE NOTE OF THE REST OF OUR 2022/2023 SEASON!
TEDDY ABRAMS, MUSIC DIRECTOR
Named Musical America’s 2022 Conductor of the Year, Teddy Abrams is the widely acclaimed Music Director of the Louisville Orchestra. In his ninth season as Music Director, Abrams launches the Orchestra’s groundbreaking Creators Corps – a fully funded residency for three composers – and the Orchestra goes on tour across Kentucky in a first-ofits-kind multiyear funding commitment from the Kentucky State Legislature.
Abrams’s rap-opera, The Greatest: Muhammad Ali, premiered in 2017, celebrating Louisville’s hometown hero with an all-star cast that included Rhiannon Giddens and Jubilant Sykes, as well as Jecorey “1200” Arthur, with whom he started the Louisville Orchestra Rap School. Abrams’s work with the Louisville Orchestra has been profiled on CBS Sunday Morning, NPR, The Wall Street Journal, PBS’ Articulate, and PBS NewsHour.
Highlights of the 2022-2023 season include guest conducting engagements with the Cincinnati, Kansas City, Utah, Colorado, and Pacific Symphonies, a return to conduct the Orchestre Philharmonique du Luxembourg, and his debut with the Tiroler Symphonieorchester Innsbruck.
Abrams has been Music Director and Conductor of the Britt Festival Orchestra since 2013, where, in addition to an annual three-week festival of concerts, he has taken the orchestra across the region in the creation of new work –
including Michael Gordon’s Natural History, which was premiered on the edge of Crater Lake National Park in partnership with the National Parks Service, and was the subject of the PBS documentary Symphony for Nature; and Pulitzer Prize-winning-composer Caroline Shaw’s Brush, an experiential work written to be performed in Summer 2021 on the Jacksonville Woodlands Trail system.
Abrams recently collaborated with Jim James, vocalist and guitarist for My Morning Jacket, on the song cycle The Order of Nature, which they premiered with the Louisville Orchestra in 2018 and recorded on Decca Gold. They performed the work with the National Symphony Orchestra at the Kennedy Center in 2019. In addition to The Order of Nature, Teddy and the Louisville Orchestra recorded All In in 2017 with vocalist Storm Large. Most recently, he released Space Variations, a collection of three new compositions for Universal Music Group’s 2022 World Sleep Day.
As a guest conductor, Abrams has worked with such distinguished ensembles as the Los Angeles Philharmonic; Chicago, San Francisco, National, Houston, Pacific, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Vancouver, Colorado, Utah, and Phoenix Symphonies; Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra; and the Sarasota and Florida Orchestras. Internationally, he has worked with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Orchestre Philharmonique du Luxembourg, and the Malaysian Philharmonic. He served as Assistant Conductor of the Detroit Symphony from 2012 to 2014. From 2008 to 2011, Abrams was the Conducting Fellow and Assistant Conductor of the New World Symphony.
A U D I E N C E 6
PHOTO BY JON CHERRY
BOB BERNHARDT, PRINCIPAL POPS CONDUCTOR
Bob Bernhardt has been a beloved figure in the artistic fabric of our city for a long time. Starting in 1981 as Assistant Conductor, then as Associate Conductor at the LO, then as Principal Guest Conductor of Kentucky Opera, and now in his 25th season as Principal Pops Conductor, he continues to bring his unique combination of easy style, infectious enthusiasm, and wonderful musicianship to the city and orchestra he loves.
Bernhardt is concurrently in his eighth season as Principal Pops Conductor of the Grand Rapids Symphony in Michigan, and Principal Pops Conductor and Music Director Emeritus of the Chattanooga Symphony and Opera, where he previously spent 19 seasons as Music Director, and is now in his 30th year with the company.
Previously, he was Music Director and conductor of the Amarillo Symphony and the Tucson Symphony, and Principal Conductor and Artistic Director of the Rochester Philharmonic.
In the past decade, Bob has made his conducting debut with the Baltimore Symphony, Dallas Symphony, Houston Symphony, Cincinnati Pops, New Jersey Symphony, Louisiana Philharmonic, Las Vegas Philharmonic, Florida Orchestra, Grand Rapids Symphony, Fort Worth Symphony and Santa Barbara Symphony, all of which were rewarded with return engagements.
He continues a 15-year relationship with the Edmonton Symphony, conducting
there several times each season, and as Festival Conductor for its Labor Day festival, Symphony Under the Sky. He made his debut with the Boston Pops in 1992 at the invitation of John Williams, and has been a frequent guest there ever since.
Recently, he returned to the podiums in St. Louis, Vail, Boston, Nashville, Detroit, Edmonton, Florida, Grand Rapids, Las Vegas, Baltimore, Santa Barbara, Portland (ME), Louisiana, and Rochester, and led performances by the Utah Symphony, Portland Symphony (OR), Calgary Philharmonic, and the National Arts Centre Orchestra in Ottawa.
His professional opera career began with the Birmingham Civic Opera in 1979, two years before he joined the Louisville Orchestra. He worked with Kentucky Opera for 18 consecutive seasons, and with his own company in Chattanooga, also for 18 seasons, where he conducted dozens of fully staged productions in a genre he adores.
Born in Rochester, New York, he holds a master’s degree from the University of Southern California’s School of Music where he studied with Daniel Lewis. He is also a Phi Beta Kappa, summa cum laude graduate of Union College in Schenectady, New York, where he was captain of the soccer team, and an Academic All-American baseball player. (While not all the research is in, Bernhardt believes he is the only conductor in the history of music to be invited to spring training with the Kansas City Royals. After four days, they suggested to him a life in music.)
His children, Alex and Charlotte, live in the Seattle area. He and his wife, Nora, live in Signal Mountain, Tennessee.
A U D I E N C E 7
THE LOUISVILLE ORCHESTRA, 2022-2023
Teddy Abrams, Music Director
Bob Bernhardt, Principal Pops Conductor
Graham Parker, Chief Executive
FIRST VIOLIN
Gabriel Lefkowitz, Concertmaster
Julia Noone, Associate
Concertmaster
Open, Assistant Concertmaster
Mrs. John H. Clay Chair
Katheryn S. Ohkubo
Stephen Taylor
Scott Staidle
Nancy Staidle
Heather Thomas
Patricia Fong-Edwards
SECOND VIOLIN
Natsuko Takashima, Interim Principal
LG&E-KU Foundation Chair
Kimberly Tichenor, Assistant Principal
Christopher Robinson, Interim
Mary Catherine Klan Chair
Andrea Daigle
Cynthia Burton
Charles Brestel
James McFaddenTalbot
Judy Pease Wilson
Blaise Poth
VIOLA
Jack Griffin, Principal
Evan Vicic, Assistant Principal
Jacqueline R. and Theodore S. Rosky Chair
Clara Markham
Mr.† and Mrs. Charles
W. Hebel Jr. Chair
Jennifer Shackleton
Jonathan Mueller
Virginia Kershner
Schneider Viola Chair, Endowed in Honor of Emilie Strong Smith by an Anonymous Donor
Meghan Casper
CELLO
Nicholas Finch, Principal
Jim and Marianne Welch Chair
Lillian Pettitt, Assistant Principal
Carole C. Birkhead
Chair, Endowed by Dr. Ben M. Birkhead
Cecilia Huerta-Lauf, Interim
Christina Hinton*
James B. Smith Chair
Endowed by Susannah S. Onwood
Allison Olsen
Lindy Tsai
Alan Ohkubo, Interim
BASS
Brian Thacker, Interim Principal
Vincent Luciano, Assistant Principal
Robert Docs
Karl Olsen
Jarrett Fankhauser Chair, Endowed by the Paul Ogle Foundation
Michael Chmilewski
FLUTE
Kathleen Karr, Principal Elaine Klein Chair
Jake Chabot Open
PICCOLO Open
Alvis R. Hambrick Chair
OBOE
Alexandr Vvedenskiy, Principal
Betty Arrasmith
Chair, Endowed by the Association of the Louisville Orchestra
Trevor Johnson*, Assistant Principal
Jennifer Potochnic ‡
ENGLISH HORN
Trevor Johnson*
Philip M. Lanier Chair
CLARINET
Andrea Levine, Principal Brown-Forman Corp. Chair
Robert Walker
Kate H. and Julian P. Van Winkle Jr. Chair
Ernest Gross
BASS CLARINET
Ernest Gross
BASSOON
Matthew Karr, Principal
Paul D. McDowell Chair
Francisco Joubert
Bernard
HORN
Jon Gustely, Principal
Edith S. & Barry Bingham Jr. Chair
Diana Wade Morgen
Gary † and Sue Russell Chair
Scott Leger, Assistant Principal/Third Horn
Stephen Causey
TRUMPET
Alexander Schwarz, Principal
Leon Rapier Chair, Endowed by the Musicians of the Louisville Orchestra
Noah Dugan
James Recktenwald
TROMBONE
James Seymour, Interim Principal
Brett Shuster ‡
BASS TROMBONE
J. Bryan Heath
TUBA
Andrew Doub, Principal
TIMPANI
Open, Principal
Mr. and Mrs.† Warwick
Dudley Musson Principal Timpani Chair
Michael Launius ‡
PERCUSSION
John Pedroja, Principal
HARP
Rachel Miller, Interim Principal
* On leave
‡ Denotes Auxiliary Musician
† Deceased
A U D I E N C E 8
Teddy Abrams, Music Director
Bob Bernhardt, Principal Pops Conductor
Graham Parker, Chief Executive
POPS SERIES SPONSOR
POPS SERIES
HOLLYWOOD'S GOLDEN AGE
Saturday, January 28, 2023 • 7:30PM
The Kentucky Center, Whitney Hall
Bob Bernhardt, conductor | Michael Chertock, piano
Alfred NEWMAN 20th Century Fox Fanfare
Erich KORNGOLD Captain Blood Overture
Max STEINER Theme from King Kong
Bernard HERRMANN (Ed. Palmer) Psycho: A Short Suite for String Orchestra
Miklós RÓZSA “Parade of the Charioteers” from Ben Hur
W.A. MOZART Piano Concerto No. 21 in C major, “Elvira Madigan” II. Andante
Ernest GOLD (arr. Bennett)
Michael Chertock, piano
Exodus, An Orchestral Tone Poem
Michael Chertock, piano
INTERMISSION
Miklós RÓZSA Spellbound Concerto
Michael Chertock, piano
Elmer BERNSTEIN Theme from To Kill a Mockingbird
Michael Chertock, piano
Bruce BROUGHTON Themes from Silverado
John WILLIAMS "A Prayer for Peace" from Munich
Henry MANCINI "Moon River" from Breakfast at Tiffany's
Henry MANCINI Theme from Peter Gunn
John WILLIAMS Tribute to the Film Composer
Concert Sponsor: Joseph and Winona Shiprek
Please silence all electronic devices before the concert begins. The use of cameras and recording devices is prohibited. Please be mindful of your fellow concert attenders if you choose to access the extended program notes during the performance.
A U D I E N C E 9
MICHAEL CHERTOCK, piano
Michael Chertock fashioned a successful career as a piano soloist, collaborating with conductors such as Keith Lockhart, Jack Everly, Robert Bernhardt, John Morris Russell, Thomas Wilkins, Carmon DeLeone, and the late Erich Kunzel. His many orchestral appearances include solo performances with the Philadelphia Orchestra, l’Orchestre Symphonique du Montreal, the Toronto Symphony, the Dallas Symphony, the Altanta Symphony, the Baltimore Symphony, the Naples
Philharmonic, the Detroit Symphony, the Chattanooga Symphony, the Utah Symphony, the Oregon Symphony, the Indianapolis Symphony, the Louisville Orchestra and the Dayton Philharmonic.
Chertock has recorded the John Alden Carpenter's Concertino for Piano and Orchestra with the BBC Concert Orchestra, Abbey Road Studio; the Roger Davis Piano Concerto in F, with the Sofia Philharmonic; and the Rhapsodies of Piano and Orchestra of William Perry with the RTE Orchestra of Dublin, Ireland.
Chertock made his debut at the age of 17, performing the Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 3 with Andrew Litton conducting. Chertock made his Carnegie Hall debut in 1999 with the
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ARTIST BIOGRAPHY
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Cincinnati Pops Orchestra, performing Duke Ellington’s New World A’Comin’.
Chertock has toured Asia with the Boston Pops, and the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra. His 2003 performance on the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra’s recording of Petrouchka with Paavo Järvi turned in rave reviews in Gramophone and American Record Guide. In 2005, Chertock performed Gershwin’s Concerto in F Major with Maestro Lockhart and the National Youth Orchestra of London. Later that year, Chertock performed the world premiere of Jeux Deux for hyperpiano and orchestra by Todd Machover, commissioned by the Boston Pops expressly for Mr. Chertock.
Claude Gingras of La Presse, Montreal, said of pianist Michael Chertock:
The Boston Globe, with guest critic Anthony Tommasini (currently chief music critic of the NY Times), called his playing “unmannered, zestful, and lovely.” The Cincinnati Enquirer has described Chertock's playing as “intelligent and disciplined... noble... finely finished...expressive and wellcontrolled.” The Salt Lake City Deseret News said “Chertock... is a musical performer with an immense technical command of the piano.”
A U D I E N C E 11 ARTIST BIOGRAPHY It’s Never Too Early To Plan For Summer Camp! DramaWorks Classes are On Sale Now for June & July Summer Camps! Early Bird Rates are 15% Off! We welcome our returning learners, and are so excited to invite in anyone new. For classes and registration info go to https:// stageone.org/kids-academy-dramaworks Align your brand with AudienceTM and reach thousands of performing arts enthusiasts throughout the Louisville region. Call us to find out more 502.212.5177. ADVERTISE WITH US!
“Chertock revealed himself as a first-rate pianist and an interpreter of noticeable interest through the freshness that he brought to these familiar scores.... (he) displayed the sensitivity of a Chopin interpreter.”
Chertock began conducting in 2001 when he stepped in for Maestro Carmon DeLeone in performances of Cincinnati Ballet’s The Nutcracker. Chertock is the conductor of the Blue Ash-Montgomery Symphony Orchestra, located in suburban Cincinnati, Ohio, and he frequently composes and arranges music for the orchestra’s concerts. He has conducted the Columbus Symphony (Ohio) and the Cincinnati Symphony in performances of The Nutcracker. In 2015, 2016, and 2017, Chertock conducted the State Symphony Orchestra of Moscow and the Moscow Conservatory Orchestra in programs devoted to the music of George Gershwin.
He has garnered numerous awards at major competitions, among them the top prize in the 1989 Joanna Hodges
International Piano Competition (Brahms Division,) and the grand prize in the 1993 St. Charles International Piano Competition. He also shared the silver medal in the 1991 World Piano Competition of the American Music Scholarship Association. He received the Rildia B. O’Bryon Cliburn Scholarship in 1986.
In 1994, Chertock released his first CD on the Telarc label, a collection of his original arrangements of music from movies entitled Cinematic Piano. American Record Guide said “(Chertock) plays beautifully, and Telarc’s lush sonics bathe the listener in an intoxicating wash of piano sonorities.” Cincinnati Enquirer critic Janelle Gelfand called it “one of the most gorgeous discs of the summer”, citing his “elegant techniques... just the right poetic tone.” The recording has sold more than 30,000 units worldwide. Since then, he has recorded three more discs with Telarc: Palace of the Winds, Christmas at the Movies and Love at the Movies, which have been praised for their lush, original arrangements and exquisite technical facility.
Michael Chertock is the Artistic Director of Cincinnati’s Peanut Butter and Jam Series performing programs for young children ages 2 to 5. He also performs benefit concerts for Habitat for Humanity and Cincinnati Respite Care.
In 2004 Chertock joined the faculty of the University of Cincinnati, CollegeConservatory of Music, where he is currently chair of the Piano Department. Chertock makes his home in Mason, Ohio with his wife Maaike, son Joshua and daughters Maria and Janneke. Most Sundays you can find him playing piano and organ for services at St. Barnabas Episcopal Church.
A U D I E N C E 12
ARTIST BIOGRAPHY
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4 OP T IONS TO RENEW CARTAGS
YOUDON’THAVETOTAKE ANUMBER EVER AGAIN
Teddy Abrams, Music Director
Bob Bernhardt, Principal Pops Conductor
Graham Parker, Chief Executive
ARETHA: A TRIBUTE
Saturday, February 25, 2023 • 7:30PM
The Kentucky Center, Whitney Hall
Bob Bernhardt, conductor
Capathia Jenkins, vocalist | Darryl Jovan Williams, vocalist
Calli Graver, DeShana Wooden, Nick Trawick, backup vocals
VARIOUS (arr. Tompkins)
Aretha Overture
Don COVAY (arr. Shoup) Chain of Fools Capathia Jenkins, vocals
BACHARACH/DAVID (arr. Waldin) I Say a Little Prayer Capathia Jenkins, vocals
HENDERSON/DeSYLVA/BROWN (arr. Rhodes)
Birth of the Blues Darryl Jovan Williams, vocals
Stevie WONDER (arr. Mossman) Sir Duke
Marvin HAMLISCH (arr. Raine)
SCRIVEN/CONVERSE/TRADITIONAL (arr. Podd)
Jim WEBB (arr. Holcombe)
WARD/BATES (arr. Shoup)
Nobody Does it Better Capathia Jenkins, vocals
What a Friend We Have in Jesus / Climbing Higher Mountains Capathia Jenkins, vocals
MacArthur Park
America the Beautiful Darryl Jovan Williams, vocals
Otis REDDING (arr. Holmes) Respect Capathia Jenkins, vocals
INTERMISSION
Continued on next page...
Please silence all electronic devices before the concert begins. The use of cameras and recording devices is prohibited. Please be mindful of your fellow concert attenders if you choose to access the extended program notes during the performance.
A U D I E N C E 13
POPS SERIES SPONSOR
VARIOUS (arr. Norris)
James BROWN (arr. Waldin)
Irving GORDON (arr. Holcombe)
A Salute to Ray Charles
I Got You (I Feel Good)
Darryl Jovan Williams, vocals
Unforgettable
Capathia Jenkins & Darryl Jovan Williams, vocals
KING/GOFFIN/WEXLER (arr. Bachalis) (You Make Me Feel) Like a Natural Woman
Capathia Jenkins, vocals
Sam COOKE A Change is Gonna Come
Darryl Jovan Williams, vocals
Stevie WONDER (arr. Holman) Isn't She Lovely
WARREN/GORDON (arr. Shoup) At Last Capathia Jenkins, vocals
CAMPBELL/CONNLEY/WOODS (arr. Shoup) Try a Little Tenderness
Darryl Jovan Williams, vocals
TRADITIONAL (arr. Podd) Amazing Grace
Capathia Jenkins & Darryl Jovan Williams, vocals
Concert Sponsor:
A U D I E N C E 14
Continued from previous page...
CAPATHIA JENKINS, vocalist
The Brooklyn-born and raised singer / actor, Capathia Jenkins, most recently released her single “I Am Strong” and her critically acclaimed CD Phenomenal Woman: The Maya Angelou Songs with her collaborator Louis Rosen, sold out the world-famous Birdland Theatre in NYC for 3 nights. She starred as “Medda” in the hit Disney production of Newsies on Broadway. She made her Broadway debut in The Civil War, where she created the role of “Harriet Jackson.”
She then starred in the Off-Broadway 2000 revival of Godspell, where she wowed audiences with her stirring rendition of “Turn Back, O Man” which can still be heard on the original cast recording. She returned to Broadway in The Look of Love and was critically acclaimed for her performances of the Bacharach / David hits. Ms. Jenkins then created the roles of “The Washing Machine” in Caroline, Or Change and “Frieda May” in Martin Short-Fame Becomes Me where she sang “Stop the Show” and brought the house down every night. In 2007 she went back to Off-Broadway and starred in (mis) Understanding Mammy-The Hattie McDaniel Story for which she was nominated for a Drama Desk Award. She was also seen in Nora Ephron’s Love, Loss, and What I Wore.
An active concert artist, Ms. Jenkins has appeared with numerous orchestras around the world including the Cleveland Orchestra, Houston Symphony, Pittsburgh
Symphony (with Marvin Hamlisch), National Symphony, Cincinnati Pops (with John Morris Russell), Philly Pops, San Francisco Symphony, Seattle Symphony, Utah Symphony, Minnesota Orchestra, Toronto Symphony, San Diego Symphony, the Hong Kong Philharmonic, and many others. She was also a soloist with the Festival Cesky Krumlov in the Czech Republic multiple times. Capathia had the great honor of performing in the ‘Broadway Ambassadors to Cuba’ concert as part of the Festival de Teatro de La Habana. She will be returning to Carnegie Hall with the New York Pops for Get Happy: That Nelson Riddle Sound and also sang in a Tribute to Marvin Hamlisch at the Library of Congress. Her television credits include 30 Rock, The Practice, Law & Order SVU, The Sopranos, and Law & Order. She can be seen in the film Musical Chairs directed by Susan Seidelman. Ms. Jenkins was also seen in The Wiz in a live performance on NBC. She can be heard on the following film soundtracks: Nine, Chicago, Legally Blonde 2.
DARRYL JOVAN WILLIAMS, vocalist
is the Gold Medalist of the Americans Traditions
Savannah Onstage International Soloist Competition. It was this competition that earned Williams a Gold Medal, a Ten Thousand Dollar Grand Prize, and an offer to sing for the Yachting Event for the 1996 Summer Olympics.
Darryl is a celebrated artist around the world. Darryl was invited to tour Eastern Europe as the Choir Director and guest
A U D I E N C E 15 ARTIST BIOGRAPHY
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soloist by the late Mr. Michael Brenner, one of Germany’s elite promoters, in the European Tour of Queen Esther Marrow and The Harlem Gospel Singers. His vocal prowess gained him rave reviews and won him the opportunity to perform for Pope (now Saint) John Paul II in Bologna, Italy.
Mr. Williams has toured extensively in the Broadway hit Smokey Joe’s Cafe with the legendary Gladys Knight and was a fixture at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. Darryl has also created background vocals and sung background for artists such as Gladys Knight, Leslie Gore, Ann Nesby, Louis St. Louis, and Emmy Award winner Dave Pierce and most recently Michael Bublé. His performance and background vocals with Leslie Gore at Fienstein’s was lauded as one of the Top Ten Cabaret Shows in 2009.
A frequent soloist with symphony orchestras, Darryl’s recent and upcoming engagements include performances with Houston Symphony, Seattle Symphony, Baltimore Symphony, Utah Symphony, Chicago Philharmonic, Louisville Orchestra, Allentown Symphony, Chautauqua Symphony, among others. Darryl has recently been the co-music arranger and vocal arranger for Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber. He was also the vocal arranger for the much-anticipated hit Jesus Christ Superstar Gospel, which won him rave reviews for his portrayal as Judas. Williams was recently a semifinalist at the world-famous Apollo Theatre. He was most recently seen as the lead in Passing Strange and in a one man show written for him by Broadway legend Mr. Timothy Graphenreed. He is presently touring the world in his own show, The Mind of a Tenor, which has toured on Cruise ships and most recently South Africa.
A U D I E N C E 16 ARTIST BIOGRAPHY
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LOUISVILLE ORCHESTRA 2022-2023 BOARD of DIRECTORS
Mr. Andrew Fleischman Chair
Mr. Lee Kirkwood
Immediate Past Chair
Mrs. Carole Birkhead*
Mrs. Christina Brown
Mrs. Maggie Faurest
Mrs. Ritu Furlan
Mrs. Mariah Gratz
Mrs. Paula Harshaw
Mrs. Carol Hebel*
EXECUTIVE
Graham Parker
Chief Executive
Nathaniel Koch
Chief of Staff
Ms. Wendy Hyland
Mr. Brian Kane
Mr. Don Kohler, Jr.
Mrs. Karen Lawrence
Carol Barr Matton
Mr. Joseph Miller
Mr. Guy Montgomery
Mr. Khoa Nguyen
Dr. OJ Oleka
Dr. Teresa Reed
Mr. Jeff Roberts
Mr. Bruce Roth
Mrs. Denise Schiller
Mrs. Winona Shiprek*
Mr. Gary Sloboda
Mr. Dennis Stilger Jr.
Lindsay Vallandingham
Mrs. Susan Von Hoven
Mr. James S. Welch Jr.
Mrs. Mary Ellen Wiederwohl
Mr. Robert H. Wimsatt
*denotes Life Member
LOUISVILLE ORCHESTRA ADMINISTRATION
CREATORS CORPS
Lisa Bielawa
Composer
TJ Cole
Composer
EDUCATION & COMMUNITY
Sarah Lempke O’Hare
Director of Education & Community Engagement
Jenny Baughman
Megan Giangarra Office Administrator & Patron Services Associate
Arricka Dunsford
Kentucky Tour Project Manager
ARTISTIC OPERATIONS
Adam Thomas
Interim Director of Artistic Operations
Jake Cunningham
Operations Manager
Adrienne Hinkebein
Director of Orchestra Personnel
Murphy Lamb
Production Assistant
Bill Polk
Stage Manager
Chris Skyles
Librarian
Tyler Taylor Composer
Jacob Gotlib
Creators Corps Program Manager
DEVELOPMENT
Holly Griffitt Neeld
Director of Development
Edward W. Schadt
Director of Leadership Giving
Zaq Andel
Special Events Manager
Jessica Burleson
Institutional Giving Manager
Jonathan Wysong
Development Manager
MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS
Mallory Kramer
Director of Marketing
Nancy Brunson
Communications & Content Manager
Education & School
Programs Manager
Elizabeth Etienne
State Community Partnerships & Engagement Manager
Allison Cross
Local Community Partnerships & Engagement Manager
FINANCE
Tonya McSorley
Chief Financial Officer
Stacey Brown
Controller
Cheri Reinbold
Staff Accountant
PATRON SERVICES
Carla Givan Motes
Director of Patron Services
Shane Wood
Patron Systems Manager
ASSOCIATION OF THE LOUISVILLE ORCHESTRA, INC.
EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
Lindsay Vallandingham
President
Mona Sturgeon Newell
Immediate Past President
Helen Davis
VP Communications
Pam Brashear & Liz Rorke VP Education Co-Chairs
Jeanne James & Suzanne Spencer
VP Hospitality Co-Chairs
Marguerite Rowland
VP Membership
Michele Oberst
VP Ways & Means
Susan Smith
Recording Secretary
Sue Bench
Corresponding Secretary
Ann Decker Treasurer
Rita Bell
Parliamentarian
Carol Hebel, Winona Shiprek, & Anne Tipton
President's Appointments
ALO BOARD of DIRECTORS
Margie Harbst
Paula Harshaw
Sara Huggins
Jeanne James
John Malloy
Marcia Murphy
Nancy Naxera
Roycelea Scott
Mollie Smith
Carol Whayne
A U D I E N C E 18
FOUNDER | $250,000
The Maxine and Stuart Frankel Foundation for Art
William M. Wood Foundation
SUSTAINER | $100,000+
VIRTUOSO | $50,000+
BENEFACTOR | $25,000+
Brooke Brown Barzun Philanthropic Foundation
Humana Foundation
League of American Orchestras
SUPPORTER| $10,000+
Anonymous Foundation
Atria Senior Living Group
Augusta Brown Holland
Philanthropic Foundation
Caesars Foundation of Floyd County
City of Windy Hills
Gheens Foundation
The Glenview Trust Company
Carol Barr Matton Charitable Foundation
Roth Family Foundation, Inc.
PATRON | $5,000+
Anonymous Foundation
Arthur K. Smith
Family Foundation
Bass Family Foundation
The Eye Care Institute and Butchertown Clinical Trials
MEMBER | $3,000+
University of Louisville
School of Music
Wimsatt Family Fund
General Dillman Rash Fund
The Malcolm B. Bird
Charitable Foundation
Woodrow M. and Florence G. Strickler Fund
Arthur H. Keeney Ophthalmic Fund
Habdank Foundation
A U D I E N C E 19 THE CONDUCTORS SOCIETY
CORPORATE & FOUNDATION MEMBERS
LOUISVILLE ORCHESTRA CONTRIBUTORS
Annual gifts provide funding that is critical to the success of our mission to bring diverse programming and educational opportunities to our community. The Louisville Orchestra gratefully acknowledges the following donors of record for the period of October 1, 2021 to October 31, 2022.
CONDUCTORS SOCIETY (FOUNDER)
$250,000+
Christina L. Brown
Jim and Irene Karp
CONDUCTORS SOCIETY (SUSTAINER)
$100,000 - $249,999
Anonymous (2)
Laura Lee Brown & Steve Wilson
Owsley Brown III
Brook and Pam Smith
William and Susan Yarmuth
CONDUCTORS SOCIETY (VIRTUOSO)
$50,000 - $74,999
Anonymous
Betty Moss Gibbs
Frank and Paula Harshaw
Mrs. Edie Nixon
David Jones & Mary Gwen Wheeler
James and Marianne Welch
CONDUCTORS SOCIETY (BENEFACTOR)
$25,000 - $49,999
Carol Hebel
Brian Kane
Warwick Dudley Musson
Elizabeth and Justus Schlichting
Winona and Joseph Shiprek
CONDUCTORS SOCIETY (SUPPORTER)
$10,000 - $24,999
Anonymous (2)
Edith S. Bingham
Walter Clare
Linda Dabney
David † and Patricia Daulton
Andrew and Trish Fleischman
Elisabeth U. Foshee
Ritu Furlan
Louise and Jay Harris
Lee and Rosemary Kirkwood
Donald and Ann Kohler
Mary Kohler
Kenneth and Kathleen Loomis
Sheila G. Lynch
Carol Barr Matton
Guy and Elizabeth Montgomery
John and Patricia Moore
Thomas Noland † and Vivian Ruth Sawyer
Dr. Teresa Reed
Jeff and Paula Roberts
Bruce and Marcia Roth
Denise Schiller
Dennis Stilger Jr.
Lindy B. Street
Elizabeth Helm Voyles and James R. Voyles
Jane Feltus Welch
Mr. Tom Wimsett
CONDUCTORS SOCIETY (PATRON)
$5,000 - $9,999
Steve and Gloria Bailey
Dr. and Mrs. David P Bell
Ms. Cary Brown and Dr. Steven E. Epstein
Elizabeth W. Davis
Susan Diamond
Nan Dobbs
Ms. Donna Emerson
Thelma Gault
Joseph Glerum
Matthew and Lena Hamel
Owen and Eleanor Hardy
Elizabeth and Mike Keyes
Patricia Buckner McHugh
Herbert and Barbra Melton
Dianne M. O'Regan
Tim and Shannon Peace
Marla Pinaire
Clifford Rompf
Ellen and Max Shapira
Gary and Amy Sloboda
Richard Stephan
Ann and Glenn Thomas
Ruth and Bryan Trautwein
Susan and Michael Von Hoven
Jeanne D. Vuturo
Dr. Joan and Robert Wimsatt
CONDUCTORS SOCIETY
(MEMBER)
$3,000 - $4,999
John and Theresa Bondurant
Dr. and Mrs. Bruce Burton
Thomas A. Conley III
Shirley Dumesnil
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Ellison Jr.
Mariah Gratz
Drs. Eugene & Lynn Grant March
Dr. Carmel Person
Norman and Sue Pfau
Steve Robinson
Russell and Theresa Saunders
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sireci
Susan and Raymond Smith
Robert and Silvana Steen
Dr. Gordon Strauss and Dr. Catherine N. Newton
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Wardell
Maud C. Welch
Mary Ellen Wiederwohl and Joel Morris
Dale R. Woods
PRELUDE
$1,500 - $2,999
Teddy Abrams
Hon. and Mrs. Jerry E. Abramson
David B. Baughman
Dr. Stephen and Jeannie Bodney
Bethany Breetz and Rev. Ronald Loughry
John B. Corso
Marguerite Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel L. Dues
Rev. John G. Eifler
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene C. Fletcher
Randall L. and Virginia † I. Fox
David and Regina Fry
John R. Gregory
June Hampe
Kenneth and Judy Handmaker
Allison Jacobs
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lamb
Margaret Lanier
John and Sharon Malloy
Joseph B. Miller
Lynn and Roy Meckler
Glynn Morgen
Mona and John Newell
Sharon Pfister
Fred and Claudia Pirman
Dr. and Mrs. Timothy B. Popham
Eugenia and John Potter
Gordon and Patty Rademaker
Sharon Reel
Ms. Ann Reyolds
Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Rounsavall III
Marianne Rowe
GSR Foundation
Rev. Edward W. Schadt
Alleine Schroyens
Dr. Anna Staudt
Mary C. Stites
Lindsay Vallandingham
Elizabeth B. Vaughan
Carolyn Marlowe Waddell
Stephen and Patricia Wheeler
Dr. & Mrs. Nathan Zimmerman
SONATA
$500 - $1,499
Anonymous (5)
Carlyn and Bill Altman
Cheryl Ambach
Dr. Fredrick W. Arensman
David and Madeleine Arnold
Boe and Judith Ayotte
Joseph and Linda Baker
Miriam Ballert
John and Mary Beth Banbury
Lynne A. Baur
Stephen and Sharon Berger
Janice Blythe
Cornelia Bonnie
Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence H. Boram
Charles C. Boyer
Samuel and Sue Bridge
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Broussard
Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Brown
Drs. Frank and Carolyn Burns
Michael and Nancy Chiara
Larry Sloan and Helen K. Cohen
George and Frances Coleman
Cynthia and David Collier
Jeff and Marjorie Conner
Mr. and Mrs. David Contarino
Robert Cox
Betsey Daniel
Robert and Ann Decker
Carol W. Dennes
Pat DeReamer & Cynthia DeReamer Rollins
Dr. John and Mrs. Dee Ann Derr
Judy Dickson
James and Etna Doyle
Deborah A. Dunn
Susan Ellison
Dan and Ellen Baker Finn
Carl † and Roberta Fischer
George and Mary Lee Fischer
Dr. Marjorie Fitzgerald
Nancy Fleischman
Leslie and Greg Fowler
Mr. Ed R. Garber
Mary Louise Gorman
John and Mary Greenebaum
Mary C. Hancock
Mrs. Martha Hardesty
Barbara B. Hardy
John D. Harryman
Dr. Mary Harty
Carl Helmich Jr.
Chris and Marcia Hermann
Mrs. Susan M. Hyland
Barbara Jarvis
Anne Joseph
Dean Karns
Warren Keller
Tamina and Edward Kim
Karl and Judy Kuiper
Dwight Kyle
Amy and Matthew Landon
Kate and Allan Latts
Portia Leatherman
Samuel and Stephanie Levine
Cantor David Lipp and Rabbi Laura Metzger
Gretchen Mahaffey
Mrs. Sallie Manassah
Anne Maple
Mrs. Nancy Martin
Joan McCombs
Susan S. Means
Bob and Barbara Michael
Ms. Kellie L. Money
Biljana N. Monsky
Ronald and Debra Murphy
Dr. Naomi J. Oliphant
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Olliges Jr.
Miriam Ostroff
Sharon Pfister
Mr. Timothy Pifer
Ms. Margaret Plattner
Arthur Pratt
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Pusateri
Carol Clow Pye
David Ray and Jean Peters
Douglas Rich
Embry Rucker and Joan MacLean
Marilyn Schorin
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Seale
Dr. and Mrs. Saleem Seyal
Ruth Simons
Mark Slafkes
Mr. Joseph Small
Mr. Sheryl G. Snyder and Mrs. Jessica Loving
Dr. Joern Soltau
Richard O. Spalding
Katherine Steiner
Dr. and Mrs. Temple B. Stites
Mary and John Tierney
Dr. and Mrs. Paul E. Tipton
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Underwood
Linda and Chris Valentine
Dr. Manning G. Warren III
Matt and Kathy Watkins
Kendrick Wells III
Roger and Janie Whaley
John T. Whittenberg
Raleigh and Roberta Wilson
Michelle Winters
Jonathan and Stephi Wolff
Frank and Keitt Wood
Jeanne and Paul Zurkuhlen
DUET
$250 - $499
Anonymous (4)
Ms. Mary Beth Adams
Mrs. Mary Alexander-Conte
Bryce and Danielle Armstrong
Dr. and Mrs. Joe F. Arterberry
George Bailey
Dr. Crump W. Baker & Dr. Alta M. Burnett
John T. Ballantine
Donna Benjamin
Sara Blake and Kingsley Durant
Bill Bolte
Mr. Daryl Booth
George Borrmann
Mr. Jonathan Braden
Dennis and Joan Brennan
Doris Bridgeman
Mr. Barlow Brooks
Betty and Randolph Brown
Janet Campisano
Julia Carey
Will and Kathy Cary
Dr. Atif Chowghury
Judith K. Conn
A U D I E N C E 20
LOUISVILLE ORCHESTRA CONTRIBUTORS
Chenault M. Conway
Virginia B. Cromer
Mr. Dale Curth
Mrs. Sandra Curtis
Ms. Doris Davis
Mr. Lee Davis
Mr. Brent Densford
Mr. John Dersch
Uwe and Kathy Eickmann
Traci and John Eikenberry
Dr. James Eisenmenger
Dr. Walter Feibes
Ms. Judy Fieldhouse
Mr. Bart Fisher
Mr. Geoffrey Fong
William and Ilona Franck
Leslie K. Friesen
Ms. Pamela Gadinsky
Ron Gallo
Ed Garber
Edmund R. Goerlitz
Ellen and Richard Goldwin
Mrs. Connie Goodman
Timothy and Natalie Healy
Lawrence A. Herzog
David Sickbert & Thomas Hurd
Ms. Vivien Jacoby
Dr. Surinder Kad
Dr. and Mrs. David Karp
Michasl Kemper & Annette Grisanti
Ms. Susan U. Kimbrough
James Krauss-Jackson
Stanley Krol
Dr. and Mrs. Forrest S. Kuhn
Lawrence Lambert
Mr. Fred Levein
Dr. and Mrs. Ronald Levine
Karen M. Long
Michael Maloff
William Martinez
Ms. Eddie-Sue McDowell
Dr. and Mrs. Ronald Morton
Carla and Barry Motes
William and Marilou Nash
Ms. Susan Neal
Ms. Martha C. Nichols
Susan Norris
Mr. David Nuermberger
Robert Paris
Kathleen Pellegrino
Dianna and Peter Pepe
Curtis Peters
Judith N. Petty
Doug Elstone and Russ Powell
Mitchell and Cindee Rapp
John and Katherine Robinson
Lynne Rodeheffer
David Rodger
Vicki Romanko
Isaac B. Rosenzweig
Bill and Judy Rudd
Barbara Sandford
Courtney and Brandon Schadt
Margaret Scharre
Susan G. Zepeda and Dr. Fred Seifer
Dr. Lyne Seldon
John and Barbara Sinai
Richard and Terri Smith
Donna M. Stewart
Lynda Stuart
Dr. and Mrs. Gerald F. Sturgeon
William F. and Barbara J. Thomas
Dr. and Mrs. Robert S. Tillett Jr.
Mr. Warren Townsend
Anna Laura and Thomas Trimbur
Susan and David Vislisel
Patricia Walker
Sharon Welch
Crawford and Alice Wells
Ms. Carolyn Williams
Ms. Francis Wirth
Mr. Larry Wood
Grace Wooding
Mark Wourms
ROBERT S. WHITNEY SOCIETY
Members of The Robert S. Whitney Society are Individuals who have generously made estate plans for the Louisville Orchestra. For more information on ways to join the Whitney Society, please contact Edward W. Schadt, Director of Leadership Giving at 502.587.8681 or ESchadt@LouisvilleOrchestra.org.
Anonymous
Doris L. Anderson
Ms. Bethany A. Breetz and Rev. Ronald L. Loughry
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Buhrow
Douglas Butler & Jamey Jarboe
Walter Clare
Mr. † and Mrs. Stanley L. Crump
Janet R. Dakan
Betty Moss Gibbs
Anita Ades Goldin
Louise and Jay Harris
Mr. † and Mrs. Charles W. Hebel, Jr.
Mr. Henry Heuser, Jr.
Dr. Carl E. Langenhop †
Mrs. Philip Lanier
Sheila G. Lynch
Mr. and Mrs. † Warwick
Dudley Musson
Dr. Naomi Oliphant
Susannah S. Onwood
Paul R. Paletti, Jr.
Sharon Pfister
Mr. † and Mrs. Gary M. Russell
Rev. Edward W. Schadt
Rev. Gordon A. and Carolyn Seiffertt
Dr. Peter Tanguay & Margaret Fife Tanguay
Bob Taylor and Linda Shapiro
Rose Mary Rommell Toebbe †
Elizabeth Unruh †
Kevin and Linda Wardell
Dr. and Mrs. Richard S. Wolf
† Denotes deceased
A U D I E N C E 21
COURTESY
• As a courtesy to the performers and other audience members, please silence all mobile devices.
• The emergency phone number to leave with babysitters or message centers is 502.562.0128. Be sure to leave your theater and seat number for easy location
• Binoculars are now for rent in the lobby for select performances. Rental is $5 per binocular. An ID must be left as a deposit.
• Cameras and recording devices are not allowed in the theaters.
• Latecomers will be seated at appropriate breaks in the program, as established by each performing group. Please be considerate of your fellow audience members during performances. Please remain seated after the performance until the lights are brought up.
• Children should be able to sit in a seat quietly throughout the performance.
• To properly enforce fire codes, everyone attending an event, regardless of age, must have a ticket.
ACCESSIBILITY
Wheelchair accessible seating at The Kentucky Center is available on every seating and parking level, as well as ticket counters and personal conveniences at appropriate heights. Infrared hearing devices are available to provide hearing amplification for patrons with hearing disabilities in all spaces of The Kentucky Center and Brown Theatre, including meeting spaces.
Audio Description is available for selected performances for patrons who are blind or have low vision.
Caption Theater is available for selected performances as a service for patrons who are deaf or hard of hearing.
Please make reservations for services at the time you purchase your ticket through the Box Office to ensure the best seating location for the service requested. Call 502.566.5111 (V), 502.566.5140 (TTY) or email access@kentuckycenter.org for more information about the range of accessibility options we offer, or to receive this information in an alternate format.
A U D I E N C E 22 THEATRE SERVICES
The Brown Theatre 502.584.4500 www.KYOpera.org
BECOMEAMEMBER
Speed Members enjoy free admission, Members-only programming, discounts in the Museum store, and much more!
Photography: Josh Svoboda
today!
speedmuseum.org/belong for details.
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THE HERITAGE CENTER
STOP BY A PLACE TO HAVE A HERITAGE EXPERIENCE
Since 2011, the Kentucky Center for African American Heritage has been a member of the Kentucky Tourism, Arts, and Heritage Cabinet. As a quasi-state agency, the Heritage Center is dedicated to a statewide mission to preserve, promote, and advance the culture and heritage of African Americans in Kentucky and the legacy shared throughout the African Diaspora.
For over a decade, the He r itage Center’ s operation has been l o cated in the heart o f Louisville’s historic Russel l neighborh o od o n the f o rmer Louisville Street Railwa y Comple x known as the “ Trolley Barn,” b u ilt in 1876 . The impo s ing 68,000 sq. ft. camp u s p r ovide s multiple venues where ed u c a tion, en r ichment , and ente r t a inment happens.
Permanent exhibitions in the Brown-Forman Great Hall and other galleries across the Heritage Center campus include “A Salute to Muhammad Ali: A Life of Inspiration,” “Black Freedom Struggle in Kentucky,” “Brigadier General Charles Young: Soldier, Educator, Diplomat & Civil Rights Advocate,” “The Legends of Great African American Jockeys,” “Two Centuries of Black Louisville and “A Self-Guided Tour of Louisville’s Civil Rights History ” In addition to rotating and permanent exhibitions throughout the year, the Heritage Center produces, curates, and hosts educational, enrichment, and entertainment programs with performances of all types for children and adults alike.
EDUCATION
EXHIBITS, WORKSHOPS, TALKS AND SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS
ENRICHMENT
FAMILY FUN EVENTS, HOLIDAY FESTIVALS AND CULTURAL CELEBRATIONS
ENTERTAINMENT
MOVIES, PLAYS, CONCERTS AND SOCIAL EVENTS
1701 West Muhammad Ali Boulevard | 502-583-4100 | KCAAH.ORG
KENTUCKY CENTER FOR AFRICAN AMERICAN HERITAGE SIGN UP FOR UPDATES!
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