Sibelius Symphony No. 2


As we ring in 2023, the DSO can help you with some of your new year’s resolutions.
for your dancing feet. Join us for Kings of Soul celebrating the music of legends such as Marvin Gaye, James Brown, Otis Redding and The Temptations (March 10-12), and Decades: Back to the 80s, where hits from Madonna, Debbie Gibson, Queen and more will get your blood pumping. (April 14-16).
While you could hit the airports and put your feet on fresh ground, you could also make a trip to the Meyerson and let the DSO transport you to new places. Composer Gabriela Ortiz’s Antrópolis will take you on a tour of the discotheques of Mexico City, while Sibelius’s Symphony No. 2 will harken the Nordic shores of Finland.
Everyone knows that dancing is terrific cardio, and the DSO has at least two programs perfect
SPEND
Music is a social bonding experience. We perform on stage for our audiences and our community, and we welcome you and music lovers of all ages to join us. Bring your youngest fans to our sensory-friendly family concert, The Unicorn’s Birthday, on June 3. Have some classical music skeptics in your life? Invite them to enjoy Beethoven’s “Pastoral” Symphony (February 2-5) and enjoy the sounds of the countryside that inspired the composer.
While we can’t oversee your practice, we can inspire you with some of the top performers from around the world. Violinist Randall Goosby will make his DSO debut with the pyrotechnics of the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto (January 27-29). Pianist Paul Lewis will perform one of the most famous piano concertos –Grieg’s A minor – with the DSO (January 12-13). Joining a choir? Enjoy the incredible sounds of the Dallas Symphony Chorus in Mendelssohn’s “Lobesang” (March 2-5) and Carmina Burana (May 11-14).
The DSO will welcome jazz artist and composer Terence Blanchard to the Meyerson for two special evenings. Assistant Conductor Maurice Cohn will lead the DSO in selections from Blanchard’s groundbreaking Fire Shut Up In My Bones, a work he called “opera in jazz” and the first opera by a Black composer commissioned by The Metropolitan Opera (February 8). The next night, Blanchard returns to his roots with a jazz performance with his band the E-Collective and Turtle Island String Quartet (February 9).
A night out doesn’t need to be challenging. Come to the Meyerson and dine in our Opus Restaurant pre-show. Walk into the hall for a concert you’ll never forget, and cap off the evening with a drink at one of the bars across the street. Make an evening with the DSO, and stop the worrying!
Did you know that Music Director Fabio Luisi is a celebrated perfumer? His hand-crafted scents are available at the DSO’s store. Come by and see which notes match your mood.
And things that only the DSO can provide:
It’s true! The DSO will screen E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial in concert with the full orchestra performing the score live (May 19-21). Celebrate the joy of the Steven Spielberg classic while John Williams’s iconic music fills the hall.
Pinchas Zukerman is one of the most important violinists of our time. In 2023, he will play/conduct a concert on the Meyerson stage including the Beethoven Violin Concerto and Elgar’s popular Enigma Variations (January 1922). In addition, Zukerman, DSO musicians and SMU faculty will come together for an evening of chamber music at the Meadows School of the Arts (January 26). Want more ideas for the new year? Visit dallassymphony.org and chart your musical course for the year!
Join the DSO for one of two world premiere performances in 2023. American composer Katherine Balch will visit Dallas for the performances of her Cello Concerto written for cellist Zlatomir Fung (April 20-22). DSO Composerin-Residence Angélica Negrón will present Arquitecta, a work for orchestra and written for Colombian singer Lido Pimienta (May 4-7).
The DSO appointed Terry D. Loftis to the new position of Chief Advancement and Revenue Officer, and he began this position in December. In this role, he will lead fundraising, volunteer cultivation, corporate philanthropic support, marketing and social media functions for the organization. He will be a key leader in realizing the strategic objectives of the organization and creating a new, sustainable model among orchestras. We are thrilled to welcome Terry to the DSO!
We were delighted to share two new television programs with you all this holiday season. Locally, WFAA aired our Christmas Pops on Christmas Eve, and globally, Bloomberg Media broadcasted A Holly Jolly Celebration which featured the DSO’s C-Suite Christmas. We were happy to share this holiday spirit with audiences around the world and close to home.
Terence Blanchard with the DSO Award-winning composer and jazz trumpeter Terence Blanchard will join the DSO for two performances this February. The DSO will be the first orchestra to perform selections from Blanchard’s opera, Fire Shut Up in My Bones on February 8, 2023. We will also present an exciting evening of jazz with Blanchard’s band, the E-Collective and GRAMMY® Award-winning Turtle Island String Quartet on February 9, 2023. We are looking forward to welcoming this important musician and composer back to Dallas and to the Meyerson stage.
This November, the Meyerson Symphony Center won the gold award for DFW’s best concert venue from the Dallas Morning News. It is exciting to know that our city recognizes our beautiful and beautiful-sounding home.
In gratitude, these performances are dedicated to: Annual Endowed Concerts in Memory of Irene H. and Ernest G. Wadel
RYAN BANCROFT Conducts
PAUL LEWIS Piano
COLERIDGE-TAYLOR Solemn Prelude
(Approximate duration 10 minutes)
GRIEG Concerto in A minor for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 16 (Approximate duration 30 minutes)
I. Allegro molto moderato
II. Adagio
III. Allegro moderato molto e marcato
PAUL LEWIS PIANOSIBELIUS Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 43 (Approximate duration 44 minutes)
I. Allegretto
II. Andante, ma rubato
III. Vivacissimo
IV. Finale: Allegro moderato
RYAN BANCROFT grew up in Los Angeles and first came to international attention in April 2018 when he won both First Prize and Audience Prize at the prestigious Malko Competition for Young Conductors in Copenhagen. In September 2019 it was announced that Bancroft had been appointed Principal Conductor of the BBC National Orchestra of Wales. This role began in the 20-21 season. Following his first visit to work with the Tapiola Sinfonietta in Finland Bancroft was invited to become their Artist in Association from the 21-22 season.
Since winning the Malko Competition Bancroft has made debuts with a number of international orchestras including the BBC Symphony, Royal Stockholm Philharmonic, Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Danish National Symphony, Rotterdam Philharmonic, Rai Torino and Norwegian National Opera Orchestras. In North America he has been invited by the Toronto Symphony, Atlanta Symphony, Seattle Symphony and Cincinnati Symphony amongst others. Forthcoming debuts include those with the City of Birmingham Symphony, Gothenburg Symphony, Baltimore Symphony and Iceland Symphony. In 2021, Bancroft was announced as Chief Conductor Designate of the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra.
Bancroft has a passion for contemporary music and has performed with Amsterdam’s acclaimed Nieuw Ensemble, assisted Pierre Boulez in a performance of his Sur Incises in Los Angeles, premiered works by Sofia Gubaidulina, John Cage, James Tenney, Anne LeBaron, and has worked closely with improvisers such as Wadada Leo Smith and Charlie Haden. In the 21/22 season he will make his debut with the Ensemble Intercontemporain in Paris.
Bancroft studied trumpet at the California Institute of the Arts, alongside additional studies in harp, flute, cello, and Ghanaian music and dance. He then went on to receive an MMus in orchestral conducting from the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland. While studying in Scotland he played trumpet with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra on many occasions. He continued his conducting studies in the Netherlands and is a graduate of the prestigious Nationale Master Orkestdirectie run jointly by the Conservatorium van Amsterdam and the Royal Conservatoire of The Hague. As a student, his main mentors were Edward Carroll, Kenneth Montgomery, Ed Spanjaard and Jac van Steen.
PAUL LEWIS is one of the foremost interpreters of the Central European piano repertoire, his performances and recordings of Beethoven and Schubert receiving universal critical acclaim. He was awarded CBE for his services to music, and the sincerity and depth of his musical approach have won him fans around the world.
This global popularity is reflected in the world-class orchestras with whom he works, including the Berlin Philharmonic, Chicago Symphony, London Symphony, Philharmonia, Bavarian Radio Symphony, NHK Symphony, New York Philharmonic, LA Philharmonic, Royal Concertgebouw and Leipzig Gewandhaus orchestras. His close relationship with Boston Symphony Orchestra led to his selection as the 2020 Koussevitzky Artist at Tanglewood.
With a natural affinity for Beethoven, he took part in the BBC’s threepart documentary Being Beethoven and performed a concerto cycle at Tanglewood during summer 2022. He has performed the cycle all over the world, including with Orquestra Simfonica Camera Musicae, the Melbourne Symphony, São Paulo State Symphony and Royal Flemish Philharmonic orchestras, and was the first pianist to play the complete cycle in a single season at the BBC Proms in 2010.
Beyond many award-winning Beethoven recordings, his discography with Harmonia Mundi also demonstrates his characteristic depth of approach in Romantic repertoire such as Schumann, Mussorgsky, Brahms and Liszt. In chamber music, he is a regular at Wigmore Hall, having played there more than 100 times. He works closely with tenor Mark Padmore in lied recitals around the world – they have recorded three Schubert song cycles together. Between 2022 and 2024, Paul Lewis embarks on a new Schubert Piano Sonata Series when he will present the completed sonatas from the last 12 years of Schubert’s life at venues around the world.
Lewis is co-Artistic Director of Midsummer Music, an annual chamber music festival held in Buckinghamshire, UK. He is a passionate advocate for music education and the festival offers free tickets to local schoolchildren. He also gives masterclasses around the world alongside his concert performances. He himself studied with Joan Havill at Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London before going on to study privately with Alfred Brendel. In 2021 Paul Lewis became an Irish citizen.
Program
Notes by René Spencer SallerFIRST PERFORMANCE: September 13, 1989 – Worcester; Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, conductor
THIS IS A DSO DEBUT
Coleridge-Taylor was born out of wedlock in London, to Alice Hare Martin, a white English woman, and Daniel Peter Hughes Taylor, a Black medical student from Sierra Leone who returned to his home country before Martin discovered that she was pregnant. Taylor, a Krio, or Creole, was descended from former enslaved Africans from the United States who were freed by the British after the American War of Independence; he eventually became a prominent public health administrator in West Africa. Martin, whose parents were also unmarried when she was born, named her son after the English Romantic poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, calling him by his middle name, Coleridge, for short. The hyphen is believed to have been a printer’s error, although Coleridge-Taylor never bothered to correct it and published his music under that name.
Until she married a railway worker in 1887, Martin and her son lived in Croydon, Surrey, with her father, Benjamin Holmans, a farrier and amateur violinist. Coleridge-Taylor’s talent became apparent in early childhood, and Holmans paid for him to take formal lessons. By the time the prodigy was 15 years old, his extended family had raised enough money for him to attend the Royal College of Music, where he began as a violin student and eventually shifted to composition. Among his important early mentors was the composer Charles Villiers Stanford, who would conduct the premiere of Coleridge-Taylor’s breakthrough cantata, Hiawatha’s Wedding Feast.
Upon graduating from conservatory, Coleridge-Taylor became a professional musician and conductor, as well as a professor at the Crystal Palace School of Music. In 1899, the year that he composed Solemn Prelude, he married Jessie Walmisley, an aspiring singer whom he had met at the Royal College of Music. Although her parents had bitterly opposed the union, owing to Coleridge-Taylor’s mixed race and illegitimacy, they eventually gave their consent and even attended the wedding.
By that point, Coleridge-Taylor was a rising star, lauded by critics and colleagues, including Edward Elgar and the influential publisher August Jaeger, who proclaimed the young man a “genius.” His 1898 cantata Hiawatha’s Wedding Feast, based on the popular 1855 poem The Song of Hiawatha, by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, was a massive hit. Over the next six years, it was programmed approximately 200 times, and Coleridge-Taylor composed two sequel cantatas. “Much impressed by the lad’s genius,” the composer Sir Arthur Sullivan wrote. “He is a composer, not a music-maker. The music is fresh and original, he has melody and harmony in abundance, and his scoring is brilliant and full of color—at times luscious, rich and sensual.”
In 1900 Coleridge-Taylor’s son, Hiawatha, was born. A daughter, Gwendolyn Avril, followed three years later. Both children would go on to enjoy successful careers in music.
Despite his international fame, Coleridge-Taylor struggled to support his family. Like many composers of his era, he sold the copyright to his most lucrative early compositions for a fraction of their true value. Although he hobnobbed with poets, ambassadors, and even President Theodore Roosevelt, his financial status remained precarious, and he worked himself to exhaustion. On September 1, 1912, while waiting for a train in Croydon, Coleridge-Taylor collapsed. He died shortly thereafter from pneumonia, at age 37. King George V granted Jessie Coleridge-Taylor an annual pension of 100 pounds, and memorial concerts were organized to raise funds to support the bereaved family.
In the preface to Twenty-Four Negro Melodies (1905), his influential collection of arrangements, Coleridge-Taylor announced his creative project: “What Brahms has done for the Hungarian folk music, Dvořák for the Bohemian, and Grieg for the Norwegian, I have tried to do for these Negro melodies.”
Although it was written six years earlier, Solemn Prelude demonstrates Coleridge-Taylor’s commitment to the same goal. By invoking the infinitely rich musical traditions of the African diaspora but not directly quoting from them, Coleridge-Taylor pays tribute to his people while simultaneously asserting his unique identity as a composer. The brief but dramatically varied
“ Coleridge-Taylor pays tribute to his people while simultaneously asserting his unique identity as a composer ”
orchestral prelude fulfilled a commission from the Three Choirs Festival, in Worcester, England. Coleridge-Taylor, who had been recommended to the programming committee by Elgar, conducted the first performance in Worcester on September 13, 1899. Although Coleridge-Taylor’s own piano reduction of the work was published around that time, the full score had never been released and eventually went missing.
In July 2022, at Worcester Cathedral, the Three Choirs Festival revived Solemn Prelude, using a new score based on the composer’s manuscript, which had recently been rediscovered in the British Library by a volunteer archivist. The U.S. premiere took place in Chicago two months later. This is its Dallas premiere.
FIRST PERFORMANCE: April 3, 1869 – Copenhagen; Edmund Neupert, piano; Holger Simon Paulli, conductor
LAST DSO PERFORMANCE: November 25, 2018; Andrew Grams, conductor
“Artists like Bach and Beethoven erected churches and temples on ethereal heights,” Grieg said. “I want to build homes for people in which they can be happy and contented.”
In 1867, the year before Grieg completed his only piano concerto, the 24-year-old composer and pianist returned to his native Norway and married his cousin, the singer Nina Hagerup. While studying piano, composition, and theory at the Leipzig Conservatory, he had immersed himself in the piano music of Robert Schumann, who had also lived in Leipzig and had known one of Grieg’s teachers. After the homesick Norwegian finished
his studies in Germany, he moved to Denmark for further training. There, surrounded by Scandinavian nationalists of all stripes, he felt newly inspired by the folk music of his homeland. (Grieg’s paternal great-grandfather, who spelled his surname Greig, had emigrated from Aberdeen, Scotland, to Bergen, Norway, in 1779, around which time the vowels in the family name were transposed.)
Grieg wrote his only completed work in the genre, the Piano Concerto in A minor, in 1868, mostly during a summer vacation with his wife and baby daughter at a cottage in Denmark. Influenced by both Schumann and Norwegian folk music, it’s not only among Grieg’s most famous works; it’s also one of the most famous piano concertos in the repertoire. Although he was a gifted pianist, Grieg wasn’t the soloist at the premiere. The first performance took place on April 3, 1869, in Copenhagen, with the concerto’s dedicatee, Edmund Neupert, on piano.
The A minor Piano Concerto is cast in three movements.
After a dramatic timpani rumble, the soloist lets loose with what is surely one of the most recognizable riffs in the canon. You might recognize the dramatic downward flourish without quite realizing how you know it, because the first movement shows up in so many pop-culture contexts. The coda, for instance, enjoys a prominent place in the 1939 romantic thriller Intermezzo, starring Ingrid Bergman and Leslie Howard; more recently, the opening Allegro pops up on the soundtrack of the 1997 film Lolita.
The central Adagio-Attaca, which begins in D-flat Major, uses sumptuous strings and nimble woodwinds to conjure up an almost Chopinesque sound-world. Throbbing and tuneful,
infinitely hummable, it offers a brief but acutely tender horn solo before the piano dashes in with a series of descending arpeggiated chords. The slow movement concludes with a gorgeous ascension.
The finale, complex yet catchy, incorporates a Norwegian dance, the halling. Equal parts demonic and delightful, the rhythmic last movement gives the soloist and orchestra one last chance to cut loose. The pathos-laden secondary theme is a standout, sung first by flute and then taken up by the brass, piano, and full orchestra. After an exquisite cadenza, the coda erupts in a festive blaze of A Major—a classic minor-to-Major maneuver that signals triumph over adversity.
JEAN SIBELIUS (1865–1957) Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 43
FIRST PERFORMANCE: March 8, 1902 – Helsinki; Jean Sibelius, conductor
LAST DSO PERFORMANCE: September 16, 2007; Eri Klas, conductor
Sibelius is hard to pigeonhole. Was he a staunch conservative whose devotion to tonality put him at odds with the nascent Modernists? The critic Virgil Thomson thought so, describing Symphony No. 2, nearly 40 years after its Helsinki premiere, as “vulgar, self-indulgent, and provincial beyond all description.” Was Sibelius a nationalist composer, whose overtly patriotic works earned him a generous government stipend for most of his adult life? Or was he more daring than both fans and detractors assumed, subtly subverting symphonic conventions to meet his own expressive goals? In 1900 the critic Karl Flodin asserted that “in reality he composes for at least a generation ahead.”
More recently, scholars have emphasized the ways that Sibelius defied the expectations of sonata form, such as his affinity for brief, almost fragmentary motifs that cunningly connect and cohere in the development section, only to shatter unexpectedly. Describing his compositional method, Sibelius wrote, “It is as though the Almighty had thrown the pieces of a mosaic down from the floor of heaven and told me to put them together.”
Partisans of all stripes can find much to debate in Sibelius’s Second Symphony. An immediate success in the composer’s homeland, it was hailed as a “Symphony of Independence,” a defiant rebuke to Tsarist Russia in response to recent sanctions. It was completed in 1902, just two years after the fervently patriotic Finlandia, and the composer’s political convictions were well known. Several of his previous works had been censured by the authorities for inciting rebellion. His favorite conductor, Robert Kajanus, understood the Second as “the most brokenhearted protest against all the injustice that threatens at the present time,” while simultaneously acknowledging “confident prospects for the future.”
But the bulk of the symphony’s themes were written during a vacation in Italy, and some were originally intended for a tone poem based on Dante’s Divine Comedy. Sibelius, for his part, described Symphony No. 2 in more personal terms as “a struggle between death and salvation” and “a confession of the soul.”
Whatever the composer’s intentions, Sibelius’s Second has enthralled listeners for more than a century. Despite its many pastoral details, it doesn’t evoke a specific landscape— Scandinavian or Mediterranean—so much as the elemental energies of the natural world.
Opening with eight measures of pulsing chords, the first movement presents various thematic shards: a folkish melody from the woodwinds, a plangent oboe tune, and an explosion of brass that expands, contracts, and expands again. The second movement starts with a timpani roll, pizzicato strings, and a tentative bassoon before settling into a leisurely lyricism. Peaceful passages build to passionate climaxes, and a sprightly flute gives way to anxious strings and strident woodwinds. Echoes of the opening chords emerge in the third movement, a sparkling scherzo, revealing aspects of the theme in violin runs and a tender oboe melody. A twice-repeated trio precedes a bridge, which segues ingeniously, without pause, into a finale that begins in an elegiac vein and gradually intensifies to an ecstatic climax. Heaven’s floor reveals its indelible pattern, and the celestial mosaic is complete.
ADAGIO – At a slow tempo
ALLEGRO – A fast and lively tempo
ANDANTE – Moderately slow time
ARPEGGIO – A musical chord played one note at a time in quick succession
ARRANGEMENT – An adaptation of an original piece of music, many times for a unique configuration of players
CADENCE – The end of a phrase
CODA – (Italian: tail) The ending of a piece of music
CONCERTMASTER –The leader of the string section; he or she sits to the conductor’s left, closest to the audience; you will see this person enter the stage to tune the orchestra at the beginning of the performance
CONCERTO – A musical composition for one or more solo instruments and an orchestra
CRESCENDO – A build in the volume or dynamic of the music
CHROMATIC – Using notes not part of the home key or scale; a chromatic scale is made up of all half steps (using all the black and white keys on the piano)
DECRESCENDO – Gradually playing music softer
FORTE – To play strongly and loudly
KEY – The main group of pitches, or notes, that form the harmonic foundation of a piece of
music; for example, A Major or C minor
LARGO – To play in slow time and a dignified style
LEITMOTIF – A recurrent theme throughout a musical or literary composition, associated with a particular person, idea, or situation
MINUET – An elegant dance in triple time; often the third movement of a work
MOVEMENT – Distinct sections of a larger work; these often have contrasting moods and are indicated with different tempo markings
OPUS – A musical composition numbered as one of a composer’s works (usually in order of publication); noted at “Op.” in a composition’s name
ORCHESTRATION – The art of writing for the orchestra and deciding what instruments should play which parts of the music
OSTINATO – A part that repeats the same rhythm or melodic element
OVERTURE – An orchestral composition forming the beginning of an opera or ballet
PHRASE – A small section of a composition comprising a musical thought; comparable to a sentence in language
PIANO – To play softly
PIZZICATO – (Italian: plucked) A direction to performers on string instruments to pluck the strings
POLYPHONIC – Two or more simultaneous lines of independent melody
PRESTO – A very fast tempo
PRINCIPAL – The leader of each instrumental group, such as Principal Oboe, is generally responsible for leading the group and playing orchestral solos
RHYTHM – The arrangement of notes according to their relative length and relative emphasis (beat)
RONDO – A musical form that involves the use of a recurrent theme between a series of varied episodes; the final movement of a Classical concerto or symphony is often in rondo form
SCHERZO – A light-hearted movement found from the early 17th century in various forms but used by Beethoven as an alternative to the minuet in symphonies, sonatas and other instrumental works
SYNCOPATION – In rhythm, the shifting of the expected accent
TEMPO – The speed of the music
THEME – A short musical passage that states an idea
TONE POEM – A piece of descriptive orchestral music, many times in one movement
TUTTI – A section where “all” play together as one
VIVACE – Spirited, bright, rapid, equaling or exceeding allegro
Music Director
Louise W. & Edmund J. Kahn
Music Directorship
Gemma New
Principal Guest Conductor Dolores G. & Lawrence S. Barzune, M.D. Chair
Jeff Tyzik
Principal Pops Conductor Dot & Paul Mason Podium
Maurice Cohn
Assistant Conductor Marena & Roger Gault Chair
Angélica Negrón
Composer-in-Residence
Vacant
Chorus Director Jean D. Wilson Chair
VIOLIN I
Alexander Kerr
Concertmaster
Michael L. Rosenberg Chair Nathan Olson
Co-Concertmaster Fanchon & Howard Hallam Chair
Gary Levinson °
Senior Principal Associate Concertmaster
Enika Schulze Chair Emmanuelle Boisvert
Associate Concertmaster Robert E. & Jean Ann Titus Family Chair
Eunice Keem
Associate Concertmaster Marcella Poppen Chair
Diane Kitzman
Principal Filip Fenrych W. Paul Radman, DDS Chair Maria Schleuning Norma & Don Stone Chair
Lucas Aleman
Jenna Barghouti Mary Reynolds Andrew Schast Motoi Takeda Associate Concertmaster Emeritus Daphne Volle Bruce Wittrig Giyeon Yoon Kaori Yoshida *
VIOLIN II
Angela Fuller Heyde Principal Barbara K. & Seymour R. Thum Chair
Alexandra Adkins Associate Principal Sho-mei Pelletier Associate Principal Bing Wang Bruce Patti * Rita Sue & Alan Gold Chair Mariana Cottier-Bucco Debra & Steve Leven Chair Lilit Danielyan * Hyorim Han Shu Lee Nora Scheller * Aleksandr Snytkin * Lydia Umlauf
VIOLA
Meredith Kufchak Principal Hortense & Lawrence S. Pollock Chair Matthew Sinno Associate Principal Sarah Kienle
Acting Associate Principal Pamela Askew Thomas Demer Valerie Dimond Dr. James E. Skibo Chair
Christine Hwang Keith Verges Chair Xiaohan Sun Maisie Heiken Chair David Sywak
*Performs in both Violin I and Violin II sections
Christopher Adkins
Principal Fannie & Stephen S. Kahn Chair Theodore Harvey Associate Principal Holly & Tom Mayer Chair
Jolyon Pegis
Associate Principal Joe Hubach Chair Jeffrey Hood Greg & Kim Hext Chair Jennifer Yunyoung Choi
Kari Kettering
Donna & Herbert Weitzman Chair, in honor of Juanita & Henry S. Miller, Jr. Minji Kim Zexun (Jason) Shen Nan Zhang
BASS
Nicolas Tsolainos
Principal Anonymously Endowed Chair Thomas Lederer Co-Principal Roger Fratena Associate Principal Paula Holmes Fleming Brian Perry Clifford Spohr Principal Emeritus
FLUTE David Buck Principal Joy & Ronald Mankoff Chair Hayley Grainger Associate Principal Barbara Rabin Chair Kara Kirkendoll Welch Caroline Rose Hunt Chair James Romeo Piccolo
OBOE Erin Hannigan Principal Nancy P. & John G. Penson Chair
° Leave of Absence
Willa Henigman
Associate Principal Brent Ross David Matthews + English Horn Karen & Jim Wiley Chair
Gregory Raden
Principal Mr. & Mrs. C. Thomas May, Jr. Chair Paul Garner ° Associate Principal + E-Flat Robert E. & Ruth Glaze Chair Stephen Ahearn Second Clarinet + Acting Associate Principal + E-flat Courtney & Andrew Nall Chair Stephanie Key Andrew Sandwick ° Bass Clarinet + Utility
BASSOON
Ted Soluri Principal Irene H. Wadel & Robert I. Atha, Jr. Chair Scott Walzel
Associate Principal Barbara & Robert P. Sypult Chair Tom Fleming Peter Grenier + Contrabassoon
David Heyde
Associate Principal + Acting Principal Linda VanSickle Chair Alexander Kienle Assistant Principal + Utility Haley Hoops Becky & Brad Todd Chair Yousef Assi Kevin Haseltine
Vacant Principal Howard E. Rachofsky Chair
Stuart Stephenson
Principal Diane & Hal Brierley Chair L. Russell Campbell Associate Principal Yon Y. Jorden Chair Kevin Finamore Assistant Principal Elmer Churampi
Barry Hearn Principal Cece & Ford Lacy Chair Christopher Oliver Associate Principal Brian Hecht Utility Trombone Darren McHenry Bass Trombone
TUBA Matthew Good Principal Dot & Paul Mason Chair
TIMPANI
Brian Jones Principal Dr. Eugene & Charlotte Bonelli Chair Robert O’Brien Assistant Principal
PERCUSSION
George Nickson Principal Margie & William H. Seay Chair Daniel Florio Associate Principal Robert O’Brien
HARP Emily Levin Principal Elsa von Seggern Chair
ORGAN Bradley Hunter Welch Resident Organist Lay Family Chair
Jeanne R. Johnson Chair
Gabriel Sanchez Classical Anastasia Markina Classical
LIBRARY
Karen Schnackenberg Principal Jessie D. & E. B. Godsey Chair
Mark Wilson Associate Principal Robert Greer Assistant Melanie Gilmore Choral
MANAGEMENT
Nishi Badhwar Olga & Yuri Anshelevich Manager of Orchestra Personnel
Scott Walzel Consultant for Community Development & Outreach Nicole Mendyka Assistant Personnel Manager Christopher Oliver Auditions Coordinator
STAGE
Shannon Gonzalez Stage Manager
Alan Bell Assistant Stage Manager Kenneth Winston Lighting Board Operator Kevin Ealy Bill White
Ryan Anthony (1969-2020) Principal Trumpet Emeritus Dwight Shambley (1949-2020) Bass + Young Strings Founder and Artistic Director Emeritus Ronald Snider (1947-2020) Assistant Principal Percussion
EXECUTIVE BOARD
Cece Smith, Chair
Sanjiv Yajnik, Immediate Past Chair
Kim Noltemy, Ross Perot President & CEO
Nancy A. Nasher, Vice Chair
Quincy Roberts, Vice Chair
Yon Y. Jorden, Treasurer
James E. Wiley, Jr., Secretary
Nick Adamson
Dee Baker Amos
Jorge Baldor
Gregg Ballew
Nancy Bierman James Bildner Joanne Bober Keith Braley Vanessa Cain Amy Carenza Andrew Clugston Key Coker Grace Cook
Roberta Corbett Barbara Daseke Greg Davis Kyle Davis John Dayton Steve Do Zenetta Drew Cindy Feld Marion Flores
Bonnie Floyd, M.D. Patti Flowers
Gerardo Garcia
Marena Gault
Marc Gineris
Alan J. Gold Randall G. Goss Kizuwanda Grant Sheila Grant Doug Haloftis Davis Hamlin Maisie Heiken Kim Hext
Laree Hulshoff Adriana Hutson T.D. Jakes Léandré Johns Julie Johnson Robert Kaplan Kristi Kennedy Caroline Kohl Jim LaFontaine Khalil Lalani Mark LaRoe
Lea Anne Laughlin Craig Lentzsch
Michael Lindsey Tim McDonald
Lucy Billingsley
Harold M. Brierley
John R. Cohn
Ronald J. Gafford
Roger C. Gault Joseph F. Hubach
Joleen Julis Holly Mayer
Linda McFarland
William McIntyre
Stanley A. Rabin Brian Ratner
Sarah L. Titus Geoffroy van Raemdonck Donna Arp Weitzman
Andrew Nall
Doug Nelson
Marc Nivet
David Pahl Cherryl Peterman Betty Regard Jeffrey Rich Theodora Ross Ginger Sager Byron Sanders Myrna Schlegel Enika Schulze James C. Scott
Robert E. Segert
Arthur F. Selander Jessica Shepherd Enisha Shropshire
Linda VanSickle Smith
Gloria McCall Snead Paul Stafford Melissa Ruman Stewart Donald J. Stone Venise Stuart
Coley Clark, President
Joseph F. Hubach, Vice President
Yon Y. Jorden, Vice President
Brian Ratner, Vice President
Cherryl Peterman, Treasurer
EMERITUS DIRECTORS
P. Mike McCullough
Jeffrey M. Robinson, Secretary
Harold M. Brierley
John Dayton
Maisie Heiken
Linda McFarland
EX-OFFICIO DIRECTORS
BY VIRTUE OF OFFICE
Yon Y. Jorden
Kim Noltemy
Cece Smith
Barbara Sypult
Charmaine Tang
Francisco de la Torre Galindo T. Peter Townsend Taylor Vaught Wei Ling Wang Martha Wells Kern Wildenthal Susie Wilson Karina Woolley
GOVERNORS
BY VIRTUE OF POSITION
Cynthia Beaird Susan Fleming Erin Hannigan George Nickson
EX-OFFICIO LIAISON
Jo Trizila Jennifer Weaver
LIFE GOVERNORS
Dolores Barzune Harold M. Brierley Howard Hallam Morton H. Meyerson Sam Self W. Bradford Todd
COUNCIL OF PAST CHAIRS
Dolores Barzune Harold M. Brierley Robert W. Decherd Ronald J. Gafford Howard Hallam Linda W. Hart
Joseph F. Hubach
James W. Keyes
A.A. Meitz
Blaine L. Nelson
William L. Schilling Myrna Schlegel Donald J. Stone W. Bradford Todd Sanjiv Yajnik
Andrew Nall
Marc Nivet
Richard Schulze
Robert E. Segert
Melissa Ruman Stewart
EX-OFFICIO DIRECTORS
William L. Green, Assistant Treasurer
David Rosenberg, Assistant Secretary
Cynthia Beaird President
Nancy Labadie President-Elect
Claire Catrino Vice President Fundraising
Carrie Denson Vice President Services Therese Rourk Vice President Arrangements
Christine Drossos Vice President Arrangements
Justine Sweeney Vice President Public Relations
Lucinda Buford Vice President Membership
Julie Jodie Vice President Membership
Kaythrn Voreis Vice President Education and Outreach
Kate McCoy
Recording Secretary
Jennifer Olson
Corresponding Secretary
Laurie Lippincott Treasurer
René Edwards Assistant Treasurer
Lizzy Weeks Bumpas Historian
Venise Stuart Parliamentarian
René Edwards
Finance Committee Chair
Sharon Lee Fashion Notes Co-Chair
Kira Nasrat Fashion Notes Co-Chair
Courtney Plumlee
Junior Symphony Ball Co-Chair
Karen Cox
Presentation Ball Chair
Caroline Downing Savor the Symphony Co-Chair
Laura Downing Savor the Symphony Co-Chair
Susan Fleming President
Eileen Roseblum Chairman
Martin Tobey Treasurer
Gabrielle Rosenstock Secretary
Sally Drayer Gala Vice President Eileen Roseblum Gala Vice President
Patti Craig Luncheon Program Vice President
Judy Tobey Luncheon Program Vice President
Nicole LeBlanc Evening Program Vice President
Lori McCommons Evening Program Vice President
Carolyn Barta
Membership Vice President Blackie Blaquiere Membership Vice President Rebecca Bailey Director
Lucinda Carter Director
Robin Green Director Nicole LaBlanc Director
Sue McAdams Director Lacy Naylor Director
Pam Pendleton Director Dolores Rogers Director Linda Smith Director
Lauren Hein President
Kathleen Sams Vice President
Jesse Bultongez Treasurer
Morgan Williams Secretary Kyle Morrison Parliamentarian Nick Adamson Advisory Chair Garrison Efird Corporate Relations Chair Jordan Jardine Events Co-Chair Herb Ford Events Co-Chair Marley Mitchell Marketing Chair Stef Curtis Membership Chair Ty Bishop Director Matt Copeland Director Buxton Layton Director
DeShan Mayfield Director Chelsea Sanchez Director Alex Sarntee Director Deepak Sobti Director Daphne Hiatt Sylvia Director Justin Webb Director David Wyche Director
Randy and Nancy Best ^ Diane and Hal Brierley *§º^ Fanchon and Howard Hallam *§º^ Linda W. Hart and Milledge A. Hart III §^ Maisie L. Heiken ^ The Marcella Fund ^
The Eugene McDermott Foundation ^ Shirley and Bill McIntyre ^ Nancy A. Nasher and David J. Haemisegger *§^ Margot Perot *§º^
Michael L. Rosenberg Foundation ^ Dr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Smith *^
^ Honoring Founding Members of the Maestro Society in support of Music Director Fabio Luisi
$50,000–99,999
Anonymous (2) Dolores G. and Lawrence S. Barzune, M.D. *§ Henry and Lucy Billingsley Joanne L. Bober Marena and Roger Gault The Cecil and Ida Green Foundation Winnie and Davis Hamlin *§º Joseph F. Hubach and Colleen O’Connor Mrs. Lamar Hunt § Yon Yoon Jorden
The Louise W. and Edmund J. Kahn Dallas Symphony Orchestra Foundation * Cece and Ford Lacy *§ Joy and Ronald Mankoff * C. Thomas May, Jr. and Eleanor S. May * The Meadows Foundation * Sarah and Ross Perot, Jr. The Pollock Foundation * Stanley A. Rabin *
Cindy and Howard Rachofsky *§º Jennifer and Peter Roberts Ruth Robinson *
Jeffrey Robinson and Stefanie Schneidler Anita and Merlyn D. Sampels *§ Myrna and Bob Schlegel *§ Enika and Richard Schulze * Elsa von Seggern Foundation * Norma and Don Stone *§º Barbara C. and Robert P. Sypult *§ Mrs. Robert E. Titus * Ms. Sarah Titus
Martha McCarty Wells Karen and Jim Wiley *§ Jerry and Susie Wilson Mrs. Charles J. Wyly, Jr. *
The Dallas Symphony is honored to recognize the individuals and foundations whose extraordinary annual support contributes significantly to its artistic programs and community engagement initiatives.ANNUAL FUND $25,000-49,999
Sara and Justin Bailey Adenilda and Kevin Bryant James F. Carey
John and Barbara Cohn § Don and Barbara Daseke John W. Dayton * Peggy Dear *
The Decherd Foundation Durham Family Foundation * Cindy and Charlie Feld * Ben Fischer and Laree Hulshoff Ron and Rebecca Gafford Susan and Mark Geyer
Kathryn H. Gilman in memory of Alfred G. Gilman *§
Jean M. and Marc A. Gineris Doug Haloftis and Fernando Gonzalez
Tim Headington §
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph V. Hughes, Jr. Robert S. Kaplan
Mr. and Mrs. Atlee Kohl/ Kohl Foundation *§ Holly and Tom Mayer Courtney and Andrew Nall Kim Noltemy
ANNUAL FUND $12,500-24,999
Anonymous
Nicholas Adamson Steve and Cindy Aughinbaugh Pamela Barrett Sherry S. Bartholow * Dolores G. and Lawrence S. Barzune, M.D. *§ Frances Blatt * Patricia and Paul Bonavia Brett and Allison Brodnax Carole Ann and Dick Brown Mrs. Thomas R. Corbett * Mr. and Mrs. William A. Custard § Denise and Steve Do Laura and Walter Elcock Bonnie Floyd, M.D. Angela Fontana and Andre Szuwalski Susan and Woodrow Gandy Rita Sue and Alan Gold * Kathleen A. Messina and Gary W. Goodwin Elisabeth W. Grant Dr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Grant
Lucy and Richard Gussoni * Michael and Marsha Halloran Mr. and Mrs. Scott Hancock Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hewes Mr. and Mrs. Gregory W. Hext Mr. and Mrs. Laurence E. Hirsch Nancy Ann and Ray L. Hunt § Jane and Pat Jenevein *§ Beverly and Ken Jinkerson Joan and Jack Kickham * Debra and Steve Leven Sue L. Maclay * Linda and John McFarland Joyce and Harvey Mitchell *§ Nesha and George Morey William and Linda Nelson David and Michele Pahl Paulos Foundation * Mary Catherine and Trevor K. Person
Charles H. Phipps Mrs. Lev Prichard Vin and Caren Prothro Foundation *§
Stephen B. L. Penrose
Betty S. Regard
Jeff Rich and Jan Miller
Adrienne and Tom Rosen
Arthur F. Selander
Joanna and Peter Townsend * Fred Tuomi and Erin Hannigan
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert D. Weitzman Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Woolley §
Marilyn Roark
Quincy Roberts
Bridget Silverthorne Russell § Stephen and Marcy Sands
Diana and Sam Self Peggy and Carl Sewell § Nancy Shutt *
Katherine and Steven Smethie Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Stephens Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence D. Stuart Barbara C. and Robert P. Sypult *§
Becky and Brad Todd *
Ms. Merle K. Turner and Mr. Bill Condon Mark and Ellen Ulrich
Timothy R. Wallace
David and Harianne Wallenstein Dr. and Mrs. Howard J. Weiner * Adele Wildenthal
Marnie and Kern Wildenthal * James C. Williams Mr. and Mrs. Dan Wright Sanjiv and Mohua Yajnik
ANNUAL FUND $7,500-12,499
Anonymous (2)
Susie and John Adams * Anne and David Allred
Dr. and Mrs. James M. Atkins * Mrs. Richard D. Bass * Mr. and Mrs. Spence Beal James Bildner
Mr. Mark R. Blaquiere and Ms. CatheyAnn Fears Kalita and Ed Blessing § Linda Brookshire Susan Brown and William McCoy Mary Christian Mr. and Mrs. Andrew D. Clugston Mary McDermott Cook *
Mr. and Mrs. William Cornog Mrs. Patricia M. Craig Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Doffing Marion T. Flores §
Dr. and Mrs. James Forman Katherine Freiberger and Lawrence Althouse Mr. and Mrs. James A. Gibbs * Mr. David Gibson and Mrs. Chikako Terada
Rosann and Richard Gutman * Susan and T. Hardie Mrs. Deborah Heaton Elissa Sabel and Stan Hirschman Sue and Phil John Hon. Julie Johnson and Dr. Susan Moster Mr. and Mrs. Rod Cain Jones * Kristi and Michael Kennedy Drs. Susan and Gregory Kozielec Drs. John and Deirdre LaNoue Kathleen and Frank Lauinger * Dr. and Mrs. Michael Lindsey Mr. and Mrs. Jay W. Lorch Morgan and Chad MacDonald Nancy Cain Marcus and Sanford R. Robertson § Tom and Charlene Marsh Family Foundation * Richard and Bobbi Massman Navias Family Foundation * Kathy and Greg Nelson Dr. Aharon and Shula Netzer Krunali Patel and Umesh Iyer
ANNUAL FUND $5,000-7,499
Anonymous (2)
Suzanne Azoulay
Julie and Craig Beale § Jill C. Bee and Loren Glasser Joyce and Selly Belofsky § Mr. and Mrs. John K. Blake Mr. and Mrs. Larry E. Boerder Mr. Bill Bond
Denise and Greg Boydston Mel and Candi Brekhus
Mr. and Mrs. Barry Buford Mrs. Alicia Burkman Jo Ann B. Caruth Kay and Elliot Cattarulla
Mr. and Mrs. Harris W. Clark Bonnie E. Cobb Gary and Alice Coder Donna and Dan Coletti Sandra Cook Mr. Matthew Copeland Carol Crowe
Hannah Cutshall Clifton and Sherry Daniel *§ Sandra L. Carlson DeBusk * Robert Miller Dickson and Carolyn Bacon Dickson * Mary and Bob Dilworth § Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Dix
In Memory of Bob and Ginnie Payne §
Nancy and Wilfred Roberts Deedie Rose
Theodora Ross
Marion Rothstein * Ginger Sager
William L. Schilling *§º Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Segert
Sandy and Mark Singer * Gloria and Juan Ernesto Snead Nancy and John Solana * Anthony and Itske Stern Charlotte Test Sandra Tucker Jutta and Arie Van Selm Marcia Joy Varel * Joe and Ellen Walker Sharon and Bob Walker Don E. Welsh
Mr. and Mrs. Ward W. Wueste Aaron Bertram Zeman and Dane Ruccio
Dede Duson
Jason and Lucy Edling Marion P. Exall Billie Williamson and Mack Forrester * Stephen Geoffray and Cindy Walker
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Gibbs Jessie D. and E. B. Godsey Family Wade and Margaret Goodrich
Dr. and Mrs. William L. Green * (Col. Rt.) Bill and. Mrs Barbara Gross Tim Hanley
ANNUAL FUND $5,000-7,499
Rob and Robin Haseltine
John A. Henry III
Kathy and Richard Holt Gerald L. and Frankie L. Horn * Ms. Nina C. Hutton
Christopher and Allison Ireland Kathleen Irvin and Dennis Walo Jo Jagoda *§
Amy Jones
Kim Jordan * Mr. and Mrs. Steven Keirstead Dr. Karen K. King
John and Gina Knight Nancy and Mark Knudsen Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph C. Koch III *
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Koniecki Dr. and Mrs. John R. Krause
Charles and Diana Lace Paula S. Lambert
Liza and Will Lee * Craig and Joy Lentzsch Frank and Dianne Maio March Family Foundation
Mrs. Clovis A. Mathews
Patricia and David May Erika and Mike McFadden Victoria and Hunter McGrath Anne McNamara
Libby Meyers § Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Morgan * Ron and Jane Morrill Dhruv Narayanan
Jeannie and David Nethery Mr. and Mrs. David Nurenberg * Danna L. Orr
Lucilo Peña and Lee Cobb Dr. and Mrs. Melvin R. Platt * Michelle and Al Rabalais W. Paul Radman, DDS and Jane Vandecar * Dr. Karen L. Rainville
Patrick and Joy Ramsier Katherine and Eric Reeves Mrs. Janet K. Richter Hon. and Mrs. Wm. F. Sanderson, Jr. Jane Sandlin
ANNUAL FUND $3,000-4,999
Anonymous (17) Kelsey and Matt Acosta Mr. Dustin Anthamatten Matamba and Regina Austin
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Baldwin Jr.
Lisa and Gregg Ballew Pete and Julie Bell
Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Best * Nancy Bierman
Georgia Sue Black * Elaine Bohlin
Dr. Arthur P. Bollon and Dr. Rhonda R. Porterfield * Mr. Robert E. Boyer Tab Boyles
Linda and Gilbert Brown
Lori H. Burk §
Nan-Elizabeth Byorum * Vanessa and David Cain Amy Carenza and Nathan Offerdahl
Mr. Arturo Carrillo Lucinda and Lyne Carter Ted Casey and Angela Wommack
Dr. Angie Cayton
Richard A. Chesney Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Chiu Laura and Lawrence Ciavola Mr. Frank Cinatl III Robert and Donna Clancy Bev Coben *§ Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Cohan
Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Scimo
Linda and Richard Shaffer Mr. and Mrs. William T. Solomon
Jo and Andre Staffelbach Jim and Elaine Stedman Dr. Marvin and Kathy Stone Mrs. Rosalie E. Stone Dr. Laurie Sutor Seymour R. Thum * Inge and Sam Vastola * Charles and Barbara Vaughan Ann Penson Vreeland, Ph.D. § Larry and Marilyn Waisanen Ralph O. Weber Barbara and John Zrno
Mr. Joseph Colangelo
Richard H. Collins * Mr. Jeremy Comstock Dr. Martin and Michelle Conroy Lynn and Bruce Cope Hannah Cope Jess Corrigan and Lisa Hartman
Thomas and Catherine Crandell Stan and Kelly Crow
Christopher Crume Cullen and Judy Cullers
Dr. Diana P. Cunningham Dallas Symphony Players Association Gretchen and Doug Davies Lourdes and Tom Delimitros
ANNUAL FUND $3,000-4,999
Dr. James Dixson
Mr. and Mrs. Loften B. Dunlap Dr. and Mrs. Arlet R. Dunsworth Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Eiseman, Jr. Andrew F. Ellis and Marie Corley
Julie and Robert England Dr. Phyllis Engles * Mr. Steven Engwall Pat and Al Enlow Paddy and Barry Epstein * Dr. Chip and Evey Fagadau
Mr. and Mrs. Tad Fallows Anne and Alan Feld * Dr. Singyi Feng Kevin and Michelle Finamore Paul Firey in memory of Mary Lou Firey John L. Fish
Dr. and Mrs. Louis Fisher Mr. and Mrs. Hollye C. Fisk Curt and Susie FitzGerald Roy and Laura Fleischmann * Susan G. Fleming, Ph.D. Mary Shelton Florence Estate Antony Francis Dr. Rhoda Frenkel
Catherine Fritz
Mr. and Mrs. Graham A. Gardner Kathleen and Robert Gibson Lee Gibson in memory of Annie-Laurie Cooper Jason and Charlene Gladden W. John Glancy Mrs. Caitlin T. Glass and Mr. Anthony Patterson Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Gleiser Lilli Gober/GFT Ms. Haia Goldenberg Stephen and Bette Goldmann
Mr. Jacob Goodstein and Mrs. Reanna Wilborn
Dr. and Mrs. J. Kirkland Grant * Craig A. and Pamela H. Green Robin Green and Sandy Esserman
Mr. and Mrs. Charles V. Greene Dr. C. Fish Greenfield and Thom Maciula
Ralph E. and Beverly Gretzinger Barbara Gunnin * Brian Hackfeld and Joey Miertschin
Paul Hale and Oscar Gomez Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Hallam § Keith Hallock
Hon. Deborah Hankinson Mr. Luke Hardin Allison and Steve Harding Steve and Alicia Harris
Olivia and Charles Hasty Mr. Philip Henderson William L. Herrera James W. Hickey Lista and Rick Hightower Hines Heritage Foundation Revoc. Trust Ed Howard
Carroll W. and Linda K. Hughes Sharon and Robert Hulsey Sandra and Rick Illes Mark E. Jacobs Jean Jaffre Mary M. Jalonick Jordan and John Jardine Emily Jefferson * Jann Scarlett Jerner Dr. and Mrs. Rohan Jeyarajah Dr. and Mrs. Juan M. Jimenez Mrs. N. Page Johnson * Dr. and Mrs. R. Ellwood Jones
Dr. Ronald C. Jones M.D. *
Toby and Will Jordan Cynthia Karm Miss Nancy Kelley Kay and John Kelly Mr. Kyle F. Kerr * Ms. Jerrie J. Kertz Ellen Lindsey Key Mr. Matti Kiik Scott and Elizabeth Kimple Michael and Barbara Kimps Janie and Holman King
Dr. and Mrs. Jerold Lancourt Michael and Kathleen LaValle Bucky Layton
George and Natalie Lee Dr. and Mrs. Moonhee Lee Ronna and Larry LeMaster Jane Saginaw Lerer and Stephen Lerer Marsha Lev Ann and Nate Levine
Dr. S. David and Mrs. Jennifer Lloyd Philip and Janeva Longacre Julie and Michael Lowenberg * Mrs. Jole Luehrs
Lloyd Lumpkins Ms. MaryAnn Lyons Nancy Wiener Marcus Ms. Tory Marpe David and Sara Martineau Gwyn and Wilson Mason * C. Thomas May, Jr. and Eleanor S. May * Sue Thompson McAdams
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde S. McCall, Jr. Sherry McCray
Dr. James and Becky McCulley * Kari and Tim McDonald
* 25 or more consecutive years of Stradivarius Patron support § Stradivarius Patrons who are also Loge Box Seat Option holders
Charter Member
ANNUAL FUND $3,000-4,999
Barbara and Rai Mehta
Mr. and Mrs. Al Meitz * Carole and Michael Mendelson Judy and Tom Mercer Drs. Janet and Sonya Merrill Linda Wightman Meyer Don and Debbie Michel
Harriet Miers
Mr. and Mrs. Brian K. Miller Dr. Linus Miller
Toni Miller and Jan Nealey
In memory of Marie A. Moore
Carroll S. Moriarty
Kyle and Taylor Morrison Sally and James Nation § David and Jean Neisius
Charlene and Tom Norris
Mr. and Mrs. James Timothy Norwood Mr. and Mrs. Van Oliver Ms. Hester Parker Jeff and Annette Patterson Hank and Becky Pearson § Mrs. Mary Dean Perry * Dr. Sidney Perutz Stanley M. Peskind
Anthony Peterson
The Rev. Patricia Phillips Mr. Mark D. Pitts
Lucy Polter *§ Patsy and Bud Porter * Arlene and Bill Press Dr. James T. Pyron § Carolyn Raiser and Andy Streitfeld
Dr. and Mrs. Claudio Ramaciotti Kara and Todd Ranta
Mr. Dick Rawlings
Ken and Mary Kay Reimer Helen and Frank Risch * Nicole Roberts
John H. Rodgers *
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rogoff Taras and Diana Lynn Romanchuk Mr. and Mrs. Allan D. Rosen Helen and Duke Rosenberg *§ Dr. Randall and Barbara Rosenblatt Eileen and Harvey Rosenblum Eric and Joyous Rothell Deirdre and Bob Ruckman Mr. Wayne Ruhter Raymond and Nina Russo Debbie and Gavin Ryan Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Sanchez Drs. Jean and Herb Schaake * Sophia G. Schmidt John and Page Schreck
Mr. and Mrs. Martin A. Schuepbach
Dr. and Mrs. James C. Scott John L. Shaw
Dana and James Shay Nancy Shelton and Caryl M. Keys
Joslyn and Greg Shirey Carole and Norm Silverman LKS Fund/Lisa K. Simmons Mrs. George Slover * Carol Leone and Regan Smith Martha M. Smither * Kim Snipes and Wayne Meyer Danny Snyder Karen and Martin Sosland Cindy and Stuart Spechler * William and Jacqueline Stavi-Raines
Mr. David Stecker Phillip W. and Ann Bridges Steely Miss Janie Stephens
Richard and Alice Stevenson
Hilda H. Stinchcomb
Mr. Samuel Stinchcomb Gayle Stoffel *
Catherine Stone Dee Swope
Dr. Paul B. Taylor Mr. Jack Terrillion
H.F. and Cindy Tibbals
Dr. Martin and Judy Tobey Jim and Deborah Turner Mr. and Mrs. Jack Tutterrow Dr. and Mrs. Albert Vaiser § Michael van Enter Karen Warner
Dr. Richard and Tina Wasserman
Dennis Waters and Lyn Tharp Carol and Jon Weinstein
Carl Weisbrod
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Weston Jane Wetzel *§ Jeanette and George Wharton *§
Mr. Paul Wharton and Ms. Silvia Tapia
Dr. and Mrs. Martin G. White *§
In Memory of David Whiting Sarah and Bryce Whitling
Katherine and Randall Wiele Jill and Malcolm Winspear Mrs. Barbara Wiggins * Douglas and Donna Wolfe Terry and Judy Wolfe Linda and Michael Wolfson James Woodall
Susan Yarad Z. and Shirley Zsohar
For more information about becoming a Stradivarius Patron, please contact Tanner Garrett, Manager of Individual Giving, at 214.871.4080 or t.garrett@dalsym.com.
The Dallas Symphony Orchestra gratefully recognizes the corporations and foundations whose annual investment in the DSO’s artistic, educational and community engagement initiatives enriches the North Texas community.
$100,000
Hillcrest Foundation
The Jeanne R. Johnson Foundation
The Eugene McDermott Foundation O’Donnell Foundation
Michael L. Rosenberg Foundation
$50,000-99,999
Anonymous BDO USA, LLP
David M. Crowley Foundation The Dallas Morning News
Fichtenbaum Charitable Trust, Bank of America, N.A., Trustee Gittings Portraiture Holland & Knight Foundation PNC Bank
Posey Family Foundation
The Brian J. Ratner Foundation
The Rea Charitable Trust Sammons Enterprises Harold Simmons Foundation
$25,000-49,999
Anonymous
AT&T*
Bank of America*
Harry W. Bass, Jr. Foundation
Bloomberg Philanthropies
Chadwick-Loher Foundation
CIBC
The Kaleta A. Doolin Foundation
Dallas Tourism Public Improvement District
First Horizon
The Men and Women of Hunt Consolidated, Inc.
Kohl Foundation
Ray H. Marr Foundation
The Heart of Neiman Marcus Foundation / Neiman Marcus Stemmons Foundation*
Summerlee Foundation TACA*
Texas Capital Bank
The VanSickle Family Foundation Wiley Property, Ltd.
$15,000-24,999
Theodore and Beulah Beasley Foundation
Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. Frost Bank Haynes and Boone, LLP
Central Market / H-E-B Tournament of Champions JPMorgan Chase* Locke Lord LLP
Pulse Supply Chain Solutions, Inc. Quilling, Selander, Lownds, Winslett & Moser, P.C.
The Rosewood Foundation / The Rosewood Corporation*
Simmons Bank Sturgis Charitable Trust
Texas Women’s Foundation West Monroe Partners Winstead PC Zerbina, Imports, LLC
$10,000-14,999
b1BANK Ben E. Keith Company* Capital Title Cariloop
The DSO is supported, in part, by funds from the Office of Arts and Culture, City of Dallas.
Communities Foundation of Texas
Crow Holdings
Feldman Family Foundation
Jones Day
Fannie and Stephen Kahn
Charitable Foundation
Kirkland & Ellis LLP
La Stella Cucina Verace
Methodist Dallas Medical Center
Northern Trust*
Josephine Hughes Sterling Foundation Susser Bank
UT Southwestern Medical Center / Southwestern Medical Foundation Veritex Community Bank
$5,000-9,999
ActivePure Alto
Azimont Group Bell Nunnally Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas Diodes Inc.
Louise W. Kahn Endowment Fund of The Dallas Foundation W. P. & Bulah Luse Foundation
Marsh & McLennan Agency LLC
Metroplex Civic and Business Association
Musume
Platt Cheema Richmond PLLC
Roberts Group
Steinway Hall - Dallas
Ussery Printing Company
World Affairs Council of Dallas / Fort Worth
* Giving for 20 or more consecutive years
For more information about partnership opportunities and benefits, please contact Sarah Whitling, Director of Institutional and Board Engagement, at 214.871.4062 or s.whitling@dalsym.com.
Gina Bachauer Fund for Young Artists
Lucile and Clarence Dragert Guest Artist Fund
Rita Sue and Alan Gold Fund for the Lynn Harrell Young Artist Competition
Cecil and Ida Green Guest Artist Fund
The Linda and Mitch Hart Domestic Touring Fund
The Linda and Mitch Hart International Touring Fund
The Linda and Mitch Hart Musicians Retirement Fund
Horchow Family Endowed Fund
Jeanne R. Johnson Fund for Artistic Excellence
Fannie and Stephen S. Kahn Orchestra Travel Fund
The Herman W. and Amelia H. Lay Family Concert Organ Soloists Fund
Eugene McDermott Orchestra Fund
Eugene McDermott Touring Fund
Meyerson Family Artistic Excellence Fund
Nancy P. and John G. Penson Dallas Symphony Orchestra Recording Fund
Pollock Family Fund for Music Library Contents
Robinson Family Fund
Anita and Merlyn D. Sampels Guest Artist Fund
The Charlie and Sadie Seay Endowment Fund for Artistic Excellence
Norma and Don Stone New Music Fund
Martha Wells Women in Music Fund
Constantin Foundation Fund
Gail B. and Dan W. Cook III Fund
Corbett Fund for Artistic Excellence
Leo F. and Clara R. Corrigan Foundation Fund for General Support
Alta Ewalt Evans Fund
Robert E. and Ruth Glaze Fund
Fanchon and Howard Hallam Fund
Winborne and Davis Hamlin Family Fund
Linda and Mitch Hart
Young Adult Education Fund
William Randolph Hearst Endowed Fund for Young Strings
Carol and Jeff Heller Guest Artist Fund
The Philip R. Jonsson Endowed Fund for Young Strings
Ben E. Keith Foundation Fund
Cece Smith Lacy and John Ford Lacy Fund
Linda and Stanley Marcus Fund
Juanita and Henry S. Miller, Jr. Fund for General Support
The Pollock Foundation Endowment for Audience Development
Frank K. Ribelin Young Strings Endowment
George A. and Nancy P. Shutt Endowment Fund
Barbara and Robert P. Sypult Family Artistic Fund
Barbara and Robert P. Sypult International Guest Artist and Guest Conductor’s Fund
Desmond A. Wilcox and Brents Davis Orchestra Fund Hazel Young Fund
African-American Festival Concert Fund
Frances and J.D. Blatt Family Fund for Violinists
Sherwood E. Blount, Jr. Family Fund
Lawrence R. and Joy Lipshy Burk Memorial Fund
Chautauqua Music Student Scholarship Fund
Dallas Symphony Chorus Fund
Jeanne and Sanford Fagadau Family Fund for Education
Emme Sue and Jerome J. Frank Fund for HeartStrings
Gertrude Munger Garrett and Melvin Miller Garrett Memorial Fund for Artistic Excellence
Jessie D. and E. B. Godsey Family Fund
Gould Family Fund in memory of Jim Gould and Katherine Warren Gould Elissa Sabel and Stan Hirschman Guest Artist Fund
Hispanic Festival Concert Fund
Holland & Knight Foundation Fund
Mrs. Lee Hudson Fund for General Support
Luther King Capital Management Fund
Adah Yale Marr Memorial Fund for the Classics
Music and Merit Program Fund
The Hitoshi Nikaidoh Memorial Fund for Education
The S.C. Ratliff, Nannie V. Ratliff, W.C. Ratliff and Lucille N. Ratliff Endowment Fund
Michael L. Rosenberg Foundation
Gertrude Simon HeartStrings Fund
Dr. James E. Skibo Fund
Itske and Anthony Stern Fund
Richard and Alice Stevenson Education Fund
Annette G. Strauss Fund for Artistic Excellence
Brenda J. Stubel Chorus Endowment
Becky and Brad Todd Fund
Worsham, Forsythe & Wooldridge, L.L.P. Fund
Texas Instruments Classical Series
Max, Celia and Jerry Abramson Family Concert
American Airlines
AT&T
Bank of America
Dallas Symphony Orchestra League
ExxonMobil
D. Gordon Rupe Foundation Opening Concert
Sydney J. Steiner and David L. Florence
Arkady Fomin
Annual Endowed Concerts in memory of Irene H. and Ernest G. Wadel
Pops Series Presented by Capital One Mary Martin
The Meadows Foundation
Liener Temerlin
Cecil and Ida Green Youth Concerts Series
Cecil and Ida Green Foundation
The Meadows Foundation
The Morton H. Meyerson Family Foundation
Anne J. Stewart
Bank of America
Renaissance Foyer
The Richard D. Bass Foundation Percussion Warm-up Room and Choral Music Library
Diane and Hal Brierley Artists’ Dressing Rooms
Diane and Hal Brierley B-flat Rotary Trumpets
Diane and Hal Brierley
The Brierley Suite
Capital One East Loge
Mary C. Crowley Dress Circle Balcony East
Dallas Bankers Association
Isaac Stern Loge Foyer
Dallas Symphony Orchestra Guild
Furnishings of Music Director’s Suite and Musician’s Lounge
Dallas Symphony Orchestra Guild in Memory of Stephen F. Black Harpsichord
Dallas Symphony Orchestra League, Junior Group and Innovators
Musician’s Lounge
Anne and Robert Dickson
Wagner Tubas (Wagnertuben)
Hila and Nat Ekelman Telephone Alcove
ENSERCH Corporation
Grand Tier Balcony East
Ginny and John Eulich
Driveway and Entrance Canopy Greer Garson Fogelson and E.E. “Buddy” Fogelson E.E. “Buddy” Fogelson Pavilion
Margaret and Robert Folsom Administrative
Emme Sue and Jerome J. Frank Celesta
Emme Sue and Jerome J. Frank
Restaurant Tree
Ida and Cecil Green Grand Stairway
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Greenberg Hamburg Steinway and Bosendorfer
Paul Guerrero
Dress Circle Stairway West
The Richard Gussoni Family Symphony Suites
The Haggar Foundation Concertmaster’s Dressing Room
Howard Hallam Choral Rehearsal Room
Hallam Family/Ben E. Keith Foundation Lobby Bars
Ebby Halliday and Maurice Acers Development Office
JoAnne and John Hamann Bosendorfer Grand Piano
Nancy Hamon Light Sculptures
Linda and Mitch Hart Hart Symphony Suites and Reception Atrium
Linda and Mitch Hart Linda and Mitch Hart Lobby
The Thomas O. Hicks Family Dress Circle Balcony West
Hoblitzelle Foundation Symphony Suites
The Horchow Family Horchow Hall
ICH Companies
Executive Director’s Office
Jeanne R. Johnson Choral Rehearsal Room
Margaret and Erik Jonsson
Grand Choral Terrace
JPMorgan Chase West Loge
Louise W. and Edmund J. Kahn Music Library / Archives Room
Clarice and Richard Kearley Heralding Trumpets
Dorothy and David Kennington Symphony Suites
Eunha Kim
Steinway & Sons Model D Grand Piano
Jerry and Connie Klemow Symphony Suites
KPMG LLP
Finance Office
Louis W. Kreditor Patron Service Center Extension
The Kresge Foundation Symphony Suites
Cece and Ford Lacy Guest Services Center
Amelia Lay Hodges
The Herman W. and Amelia H. Lay Family Concert Organ
Maxus Energy Corporation Box Office
The Eugene McDermott Family Eugene McDermott Concert Hall
The Meadows Foundation Concert Hall, Administrative Offices and Elevators
Juanita and Henry S. Miller, Jr. Board Room
The Harvey and Joyce Mitchell Family Foundation Broadcast Control Facility
Margot W. and Ben H. Mitchell Fund of the Communities Foundation of Texas C Rotary Trumpets and Electric Piano
Alexander H. Moore
Dress Circle Stairway East
On loan from Miss Laurel Ornish
George Gershwin by Andy Warhol
Oryx Energy Corporation Dress Circle
The Elizabeth H. Penn Family East Pavilion
Nancy and John G. Penson Green Room
The Ross Perot Family Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center
Carol and George Poston Grand Tier Balcony West
Carol and George Poston Grand Tier Stairway West
Wendy Reves
Emery Reves Arch of Peace
The Rosewood Corporation Observation Rooms
Anita and Merlyn D. Sampels Anita Sampels Suite
Myrna and Bob Schlegel Schlegel Administrative Suites
Mary Liz and George R. Schrader Water Fountains
Margie and William H. Seay Boutique
Ruth C. and Charles S. Sharp Marquee
Barbara and Bob Sypult Volunteer Offices
Verizon Grand Tier Stairway East
On loan from Gwen Weiner Les Ondines by Henri Lauren Philip H. Weinkrantz Music Stands
In Honor of Mr. and Mrs. Peter N. Wiggins, Jr. Dress Circle Box
Many opportunities are available to establish new funds and name building components. For more information, please contact Toni Miller, CAP®, Director of Individual Giving, at 214.871.4078 or t.miller@dalsym.com.
The Dallas Symphony thanks the following donors who committed generous gifts in support of a $7.5 million fundraising Initiative to build the future of the DSO. Funds raised support the DSO’s ongoing pursuit of innovation and artistic excellence in music; and serves to name the Young Musicians program in honor of the DSO’s Ross Perot President & CEO, Kim Noltemy, who founded the program.
Diane and Hal Brierley
Fanchon and Howard Hallam
The Jeanne R. Johnson Foundation Holly and Tom Mayer
The Eugene McDermott Foundation
Nancy A. Nasher and David J. Haemisegger O’Donnell Foundation
Margot Perot
Stan Rabin in Loving Memory of Barbara Rabin Martha McCarty Wells
Henry and Lucy Billingsley Capital One Cece and Ford Lacy Robinson Family Norma and Don Stone
Susan Garner Fleming
Ron and Rebecca Gafford
Marena and Roger Gault
Linda and Mitch Hart
Yon Yoon Jorden
Fabio Luisi and Yulia Levin
The Brian J. Ratner Foundation
Jeff Rich and Jan Miller
Diana and Sam Self
Barbara and Bob Sypult
Becky and Brad Todd Karen and Jim Wiley
The Dallas Symphony thanks the following patrons who have recently committed generous gifts to the DSO. Made in addition to ongoing annual support, these investments are part of a transformational effort to ensure a sustainable future for the Dallas Symphony.
$10,000,000 AND ABOVE
Mrs. Eugene McDermott and The Eugene McDermott Foundation Margot and Ross* Perot
$2,500,000-$9,999,999
Anonymous
Diane and Hal Brierley Linda and Mitch Hart Maisie Heiken
Cece and Ford Lacy
The Marcella Fund Nancy A. Nasher and David J. Haemisegger Family
$1,000,000-$2,499,999
Anonymous (3)
Capital One Fanchon and Howard Hallam
Estate of Jeanne R. Johnson
The Jeanne R. Johnson Foundation O’Donnell Foundation
Pollock Family Foundation Barbara* and Stan Rabin Robinson Family Elsa von Seggern Foundation Linda VanSickle Smith Norma and Don Stone
In Memory of Irene H. and Ernest G. Wadel, Louis J. and Rose G. Hamel, and Beulah G. and Burnet Wadel
$250,000-$999,999
Estate of Arlene and James Booth Marena and Roger Gault Rita Sue and Alan Gold Gould Family Fund in memory of Jim Gould and Katherine Warren Gould
The Caroline Rose Hunt Family Katherine Glaze Lyle Joy and Ronald Mankoff Shirley and William S. McIntyre Foundation
Estate of Dr. William M. and Bettie Osborne Cindy and Howard Rachofsky Audrey and Albert Ratner, Michael and Deborah Ratner Salzberg and Brian J. Ratner Enika Schulze
John R. Sewell
Dr. James E. Skibo Fund Jean Ann Titus Sarah Titus Martha McCarty Wells Kern and Marnie Wildenthal Adele and Hobson* Wildenthal Karen and Jim Wiley
$100,000-$249,999
Anonymous
Estate of Rosalie C. and James R. Alexander Joanne L. Bober
Mrs. Thomas R. Corbett Ron and Rebecca Gafford Jessie D. and E.B. Godsey Family Kim and Greg Hext Yon Y. Jorden Debra and Steve Leven Holly and Tom Mayer Kim Noltemy
Michael L. Rosenberg Foundation Myrna and Bob Schlegel Mrs. George A. Shutt Mr. and Mrs. William T. Solomon Estate of Brenda J. Stubel
Symphony of Toys in Memory of Arkady Fomin Barbara and Bob Sypult Texas Instruments Foundation Becky and Brad Todd Donna and Herb Weitzman
Anonymous
Nicholas Adamson
Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Altabef
Lisa and Gregg Ballew
Jennifer and Coley Clark
John and Barbara Cohn
Barbara and Steve Durham
Ebby Halliday, REALTORS
David and Melinda Emmons
Ben Fischer and Laree Hulshoff
W. Gary and Donna Fowler
Estate of Robert and Ruth Glaze
Samuel S. Holland
Kathy and Richard Holt
Estate of Louise K. Kane
KPMG LLP
Selena Loh LaCroix
Mr. and Mrs. Mark H. LaRoe
Craig and Joy Lentzsch
Catherine Z. and George T. Manning
Estate of Dorothy O. Matetich
Scott and Jennifer McDaniel
Linda B. and John S. McFarland
Estate of Kathryn Amsler Priddy in Memory of Nancy and Jack Penson
Nancy and John Solana
Estate of William A. Solemene
Barbara and Sheldon Stein
Estate of Freda Gail Stern
Melissa Ruman Stewart and Paul Stewart
Estate of Anne-Marie Genevieve Thames
*deceased
For more information, please contact Toni Miller, CAP®, Director of Individual Giving, at 214.871.4078 or t.miller@dalsym.com.
Kim Noltemy
Ross Perot President & CEO
Nishi Badhwar
Olga & Yuri Anshelevich Manager of Orchestra Personnel
Nicole Mendyka
Assistant Personnel Manager
Quin Phillips
Executive Assistant to President & CEO
Glyne A. Griffith II, DBA, CDP, CSR
Vice President of Equity, Diversity, Inclusion + Social Impact
Katie McGuinness
Wildenthal Families Vice
President of Artistic Operations
Ashley Alarcon
Young Musicians Manager
Tom Brekhus
Senior Production + Pops Concerts Manager
Jen Guzmán
Thomas & Roberta Corbett
Director of Education
Sarah Hatler
Education Manager
Stephanie Izaguirre
Young Musicians Coordinator
Carolyn Jabr
Young Strings Manager
Emma Jensen
Dallas Symphony Children’s Chorus Site Coordinator
Todd Joiner Senior Manager of Artistic Administration
Nathan Lutz
Director of Operations + Education Programs
Michael Lysinger Chorus Administrator
Paula Olsen
Dallas Symphony Children’s Chorus Artistic Manager
Micah Ringham
Dallas Symphony Children’s Chorus Operations Manager
Ben Spagnuolo
Artistic Operations Coordinator
Roberto Zambrano
Artistic Director to the Young Musicians Program
COMMUNICATIONS + MEDIA
Denise McGovern
Vice President of Communications + Media
Sidney Hopkins Communications + Media Manager
Analiese White Communications + Media Coordinator
Terry D. Loftis
Chief Advancement + Revenue Officer
Tab Boyles
Director of Event Planning
Jon Ediger
Corporate Relations Coordinator
Tanner Garrett
Manager of Individual Giving
Lilian E. Godsey
Manager of Donor Stewardship
Kim Koenig
Events Coordinator
Whitney MacDonald
Major Gifts Officer
Toni Miller, CAP®
Director of Individual Giving Alex Small
Manager of Events + Board Engagement
Alisa Stone
Development Operations Coordinator
Alma Delia Vega, CAPM®
Director of Development Operations + Analytics
Sarah Whitling
Director of Institutional + Board Engagement
VOLUNTEER SERVICES
Maliska Haba
Manager of Volunteer Services
FINANCE
Drew Cameron
Chief Financial Officer
Cecilia Rauschuber
Accounts Payable Coordinator
Julie Ribeca
Accounting Administrator
Deanie Sewell
Controller
Danesha Voss Senior Staff Accountant
Heather Yeager
Senior Manager Budgeting + Financial Analysis
COMMUNITY RELATIONS, FACILITIES + HUMAN RESOURCES
Debi Peña
Chief Administrative Officer
Carl Baines
Desktop + Systems Administrator
Celia Barshop
Director of Meyerson Sales + Operations
Velyncia Caldwell
Senior Lighting Technician
Jaz Clayborne
Security Supervisor
Cameron Conyer
Audio Video Specialist
Amanda Cook
Payroll + Human Resources Manager
Suré Eloff
Human Resources + Community Liaison
Avery Gauthier
Audio Technician
Kimberly Koniecki
Senior Manager of Meyerson Sales + Operations
Visit dallassymphony.org for employment opportunities.
David Lane
Director of IT
Lamar Livingston
Director of Technical Operations
Shawn Mahan Lead House Manager
Emily McCall Supply + Facilities Coordinator
Kyra McGuirk Recruiting + HR Specialist
Marissa Mediati Event Operations Manager
Grant Ostergard
Lighting/Audio Technician
Andrew Polansky
Lighting Technician
Judith Washington Data Quality Associate
Roger Willis Assistant House Manager
Adrian Zeigler
Security Manager
MARKETING + GUEST SERVICES
Terry D. Loftis
Chief Advancement + Revenue Officer
Kim Burgan
Vice President of Sales + Marketing
Liz Akop
Group Sales Representative
Kathryn Barrett Shop Manager + Buyer
Jenna Buckley Marketing Associate
Eric Burleson Concert Associate
Elisa Campos
Ticketing Operations Manager
Mallory Coulter Director of Digital Marketing
Carla Ewing Guest Services Manager
Corri Greene Graphic Designer
Leigh Hopkins Senior Manager of Digital Marketing
Eric Landrum
Senior Manager of Partner + Experiential Marketing
Alex Moffitt
Guest Services Coordinator
Vanessa Nates Marketing Associate
Danielle Reeves
Lead Graphic Designer
Sabrina Siggers
Group Sales Representative
Paul Torres
Guest Services Manager
Jena Tunnell
Director of Ticketing + Guest Services
Adam Wallman
Manager of Marketing Research + Analytics
Stephanie Watson Guest Services Coordinator