VOLUME 61 NUMBER 01 | SPECIAL EDITION 2020
HGO GOES DIGITAL INTRODUCING THE ALL-NEW 2020–21 SEASON pg. 19
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A MESSAGE FROM THE ARTISTIC AND MUSIC DIRECTOR & THE MANAGING DIRECTOR This time of year, the Wortham Theater Center is usually buzzing with energy and anticipation as creative teams and performers bring their vast energy to Houston Grand Opera, to rehearse, to erect grand-scale sets, to make and fit costumes and wigs, and to prepare for every contingency so that our exciting Opening Night is executed perfectly, to an appreciative audience of thousands. Alas, this is no ordinary year. It was with broken hearts that, last March, we had to cancel our highly anticipated spring repertoire performances to protect the safety of our subscribers, supporters, artists, and staff. Shortly thereafter, as the effects of COVID-19 grew and the dangers to performers became more understood, we had no choice but to also cancel the majority of HGO’s 2020-21 season, all the way through next spring. Operas we spent years planning were simply no longer safe to produce. These dismaying events brought with them a grim economic outlook. To protect the future of great opera in Houston, we were forced to make broad reductions to HGO’s budget and lay off almost a third of our staff, a painfully difficult undertaking that had never before been necessary in the company’s entire 65-year history. The losses we are mourning are many. Nevertheless, as we have continued to navigate the uncertainty surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic, we’ve done so with the certain knowledge that no matter what the future holds, we will need opera more than ever—and that our commitment to you remains. We have spent these past months seeking new and creative ways to present soul-stirring opera to you, while heeding the precautions put in place by our local officials. The result is HGO Digital, the Sarah and Ernest Butler Performance Series, a special season of digital programming featuring a wonderful array of brand-new bi-monthly video content to sustain you at home, all of which is previewed in this special edition of Opera Cues. Audiences can look forward to high-quality digital productions of beloved annual company traditions, from the HGO Studio Showcase to the Concert of Arias, while enjoying new stagings of works including David T. Little and Royce Vavrek’s hilarious Vinkensport, a sendup of the world of competitive bird calling; Mozart’s brief and brilliant The Impresario, in an English-language retelling from playwright Jim Luigs; Lee Hoiby’s one-woman opera Bon Appétit!, based on the life of Julia Child and starring renowned mezzo-soprano and HGO Studio alumna Jamie Barton; and Engelbert Humperdinck’s darkly enchanting classic, Hansel & Gretel. We’re also planning a documentary-style video project on The Snowy Day, a world premiere originally slated for our 2020-21 season. The work, by brilliant composer Joel Thompson and librettist and bestselling author Andrea Davis Pinkney, is based on Ezra Jack Keats’s groundbreaking children’s book about a young boy out exploring on a snow day. Two more extraordinary concerts will take place on our digital stage. HGO Artistic Advisor Ana María Martínez, one of the greatest sopranos in the world, will present Suite Española, a celebration of Spanish musical theater, while renowned tenor Lawrence Brownlee will be joined by an all Black group of opera stars to present Giving Voice, a follow-up to HGO’s smash hit evening of opera, gospel, and standards from earlier this year. And so, while the Wortham is quieter than in past years—and while nothing can replace the transporting power of live, in-person performances—we do feel it, if in a slightly different way: that buzz of energy and anticipation as we head into a new season. These last months have been utterly heart-wrenching. We are still hurting. But making these exciting alternative plans has provided us with light to guide us through this dark period. We sincerely hope these artistic jewels do the same for you.
Patrick Summers
Perryn Leech
Artistic and Music Director Margaret Alkek Williams Chair
Managing Director Sarah and Ernest Butler Chair
Opera Cues is published by Houston Grand Opera Association; all rights reserved. Opera Cues is produced under the direction of Dale Edwards, director of Marketing and Communications, and Natalie Barron, associate director of Marketing and Communications, by Houston Grand Opera’s Advancement Department.
Editor-in-Chief Catherine Matusow Designers Chelsea Crouse Tamila Amanzholova Contributors Carleen Graham Jeremy Johnson Perryn Leech Alisa Magallón Brian Speck Patrick Summers Emily N. Wells Advertising Matt Ross/Ventures Marketing 713-417-6857
For information on all Houston Grand Opera productions and events, or for a complimentary season brochure, please email the Customer Care Center at customercare@hgo.org or telephone 713-228-6737. Houston Grand Opera is a member of OPERA America, Inc., and the Theater District Association, Inc.
FIND HGO ONLINE HGO.org /houstongrandopera
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/HouGrandOpera /HouGrandOpera
TO TEXAS YOUTH AND EDUCATION SINCE 1932 In 2020 alone, the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo™ has provided more than $3.7 million to 61 organizations and programs, including: AFA • Barbara Bush Houston Literacy Foundation • Theatre Under The Stars • Glassell School of Art The Hobby Center Foundation • Houston Hispanic Forum • Houston Symphony Alley Theatre • and many others!
Visit rodeohouston.com to learn more.
HOUSTON GRAND OPERA The Show supports Houston Grand Opera’s Community and Learning initiative, HGOco, including the Student Performance Series, Opera To Go!, and Storybook Opera. HGOco serves nearly 80,000 students every season and has been a Show grant recipient for the past twenty years.
SMALL STEPS NURTURING CENTER
SCHREINER UNIVERSITY
Small Steps offers a high-quality education, social and emotional support, transportation, and nutritious meals to children ages two through six living in poverty. Small Steps operates two preschools in the First and Fifth Wards of Houston at no financial cost to the families they serve. This year, Small Steps will serve approximately 180 children and will open a third campus in the Gulfton area in the fall of 2020.
Schreiner University – Western Art Academy Scholarship Program awards scholarships to 48 students who participate in the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo School Art program each year. These scholarships allow high school students to study Western art and learn traditional studio techniques from practicing professional artists.
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IN THIS ISSUE CONTENTS
1
A message from Patrick Summers and Perryn Leech
12
News and Notes
41
HGO Studio
45
HGOco
14
ART FINDS A WAY
51
Impresarios Circle
58
Annual Support
70
Calendar
72
Up Next
19
JUST THE FACTS
FEATURES
14
Art Finds a Way As we mourn what has been lost, we keep creating.
19
Just the Facts A guide to the HGO Digital 2020–21 season
33
The Artist at Home Isolation brings challenges, but also opportunities.
37
Safety and the Stage HGO has a not-so-secret weapon in Houston Methodist.
33
THE ARTIST AT HOME
Board of Directors 2020-21 OFFICERS Allyn Risley, Chairman of the Board Janet Langford Carrig, Senior Chairman of the Board; Houston Grand Opera Endowment, Inc. Senior Chairman James W. Crownover, Chairman Emeritus of the Board Lynn Wyatt, Vice Chairman of the Board MEMBERS AT LARGE Richard E. Agee, Finance Committee Vice Chair Thomas Ajamie Robin Angly John S. Arnoldy * Christopher V. Bacon, Secretary; General Counsel
Michelle Beale, Governance Committee Chair
Dr. Ellen R. Gritz, Studio Committee Chair
Ward Pennebaker
Judith A. Belanger, Finance Committee Vice Chair
Robert C. Hunter *
Gloria M. Portela
Richard Husseini José M. Ivo, Development Committee Vice Chair
Matthew L. Ringel, Marketing and Communications Committee Vice Chair
Anna Catalano, Marketing and Communications CommitteeChair
Marianne Kah
Kelly Brunetti Rose
Perryn Leech
Glen A. Rosenbaum
David LePori
Albert Chao
Claire Liu, Finance Committee Chair
Jack A. Roth, M.D., Studio Committee Vice Chair
Gabriel Loperena, Development Committee Chair
Tom Rushing, Houston Grand Opera Endowment, Inc. Chairman
Richard A. Lydecker Jr.
Manolo Sánchez
Beth Madison *
Harlan C. Stai
Sid Moorhead
Patrick Summers
Sara Morgan
John G. Turner
Terrylin G. Neale, Houston Grand Opera Endowment, Inc. Emeritus Chairman
De la Rey Venter
Astley Blair, Audit Committee Chair Zane Carruth
Donna P. Josey Chapman Louise Chapman Mathilda Cochran, HGOco Committee Chair Albert O. Cornelison Jr. * David B. Duthu * Frederic Dyen Benjamin Fink Michaela Greenan, Audit Committee Vice Chair
Cynthia Petrello
Alfredo Vilas Margaret Alkek Williams * Senior Director
Houston Grand Opera Association Chairs 1955–58 Elva Lobit
1974–75 Charles T. Bauer
1991–93 Constantine S. Nicandros
2009–11 Glen A. Rosenbaum
1958–60 Stanley W. Shipnes
1975–77 Maurice J. Aresty
1993–95 J. Landis Martin
2011–13 Beth Madison
1960–62 William W. Bland
1977–79 Searcy Bracewell
1995–97 Robert C. McNair
2013–16 John Mendelsohn, M.D.
1962–64 Thomas D. Anderson
1979–81 Robert Cizik
2016–18 James W. Crownover
1964–66 Marshall F. Wells
1981–83 Terrylin G. Neale
1997–99 Dennis R. Carlyle, M.D. Susan H. Carlyle, M.D.
1966–68 John H. Heinzerling
1983–84 Barry Munitz
1968–70 Lloyd P. Fadrique
1984–85 Jenard M. Gross
1970–71 Ben F. Love
1985–87 Dr. Thomas D. Barrow
1971–73 Joe H. Foy
1987–89 John M. Seidl
1973–74 Gray C. Wakefield
1989–91 James L. Ketelsen
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1999–2001 Archie W. Dunham 2001–03 Harry C. Pinson 2003–04 James T. Hackett 2004–07 John S. Arnoldy 2007–09 Robert L. Cavnar 2009 Gloria M. Portela
2018–20 Janet Langford Carrig 2020–Present Allyn Risley
Eunice Napanangka Jack, Hairstring, 18” x 65”
Timeless
From the world’s oldest living culture, Australian Aboriginal art reflects ancient traditions in powerful, contemporary patterns.
Booker • Lowe Gallery
For infomation on exhibitions and events: www.bookerlowegallery.com info@bookerlowegallery.com
Aboriginal fine art of Australia
4623 Feagan Street Houston TX 77007 USA
Image © the artist and Booker-Lowe Gallery.
H G O. O R G
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Impresarios Circle The Humphreys Foundation
The Powell Foundation
Donna Kaplan and Richard A. Lydecker
Jill and Allyn Risley
Nancy and Rich Kinder
Schlumberger
Mr. and Mrs. David B. Duthu
Claire Liu and Joseph Greenberg
Mr. and Mrs. Harlan C. Stai
Sarah and Ernest Butler
The Elkins Foundation
Beth Madison
Texas Commission on the Arts
Anne and Albert Chao
Drs. Liz Grimm and Jack Roth
Shell
Louise Chapman
William Randolph Hearst Foundation
The Robert and Janice McNair Foundation
IMPRESARIOS CIRCLE $100,000 OR MORE
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Crownover
Judy and Richard Agee
The Cullen Foundation
Robin Angly and Miles Smith Janice Barrow
The Cullen Trust for the Performing Arts
The Brown Foundation, Inc.
City of Houston through Houston Arts Alliance The Robert and Jane Cizik Foundation
H-E-B Houston Endowment, Inc.
The Sarofim Foundation
M.D. Anderson Foundation
Mr. John G. Turner and Mr. Jerry G. Fischer
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
Vinson & Elkins LLP
Miller Theatre Advisory Board
Mathilda Cochran
Houston Livestock Show and RodeoTM
ConocoPhillips
Houston Methodist
Sara and Bill Morgan
Sid Moorhead
Margaret Alkek Williams The Wortham Foundation, Inc. Lynn Wyatt Anonymous
To learn more about HGO’s Impresarios Circle members, please see page 51.
Doug Rotan
Mark Herrin
Trusts & Estates
Elizabeth Swift 8
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Trusts & Estates
Trusts & Estates
Premier Underwriters GRAND UNDERWRITER— $50,000 OR MORE
Glen A. Rosenbaum Marcia and Alfredo Vilas
Thomas R. Ajamie
Leonard A. Goldstein and Helen B. Wils
Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Nickson
Mrs. Brenda Harvey-Traylor
Cynthia and Anthony Petrello
Michelle Beale and Dick Anderson
UNDERWRITER— $25,000 OR MORE
Dr. and Mrs. Theodore J. Haywood
Matthew L. Ringel
Judith and David Belanger
Dr. Saúl and Ursula Balagura
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Husseini
Mr. and Mrs. David Rowan
Ms. Janet Langford Carrig
Dr. Gudrun H. Becker
Ms. Marianne Kah
John Serpe and Tracy Maddox
Zane and Brady Carruth
Kenneth Bloom and Sheila Swartzman
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Knull III
Hinda Simon
Carolyn J. Levy
Meg Boulware and Hartley Hampton
Nana Booker and David Lowe/ Booker · Lowe Gallery
Mr. and Mrs. Donald G. Sweeney
Ms. Kiana K. Caleb and Mr. Troy L. Sullivan
Mrs. Rosemary Malbin
Mr. De la Rey Venter
Muffy and Mike McLanahan
Mr. Trey Yates
Dr. and Mrs. Miguel Miro Quesada
Rini and Edward Ziegler
Connie Dyer Benjamin and Jennifer Fink Amanda and Morris Gelb Mr. and Mrs. Fred Griffin Dr. Ellen R. Gritz and Mr. Milton D. Rosenau Jr. Will L. McLendon Mr. and Mrs. D. Bradley McWilliams
Anna and Joel Catalano Mr. and Mrs. David Dorenfeld Lynn and Henry Gissel Beth and Gary Glynn
Michelle and Chuck Ritter
Ignacio and Isabel Torras
Kathleen Moore and Steven Homer
“Our Company guides families through generational transitions. Highly experienced in navigating the complexities of estate settlement and trust administration, our professional Trusts and Estates team helps them preserve and protect not only their financial assets, but their family legacy. For each other. For generations to come.”
T RUSTS & E STAT E S • A SSE T M A NAGEMENT • FA M ILY OF F ICE HOUSTONTRUST.COM H G O. O R G
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Founders Council for Artistic Excellence Houston Grand Opera is deeply appreciative of its Founders Council donors. Their extraordinary support over a three-year period helps secure the future while ensuring the highest standard of artistic excellence. For information, please contact Greg Robertson, chief advancement officer, at 713-546-0274 or grobertson@hgo.org. Judy and Richard Agee Albert and Anne Chao / Ting Tsung and Wei Fong Chao Foundation
Connie Dyer
M. David Lowe and Nana Booker / Booker · Lowe Gallery
Frost Bank
Beth Madison
FROSCH
Robin Angly and Miles Smith
Amanda and Morris Gelb
Eleanor Searle Whitney McCollum Foundation
Baker Botts LLP
Drs. Liz Grimm and Jack Roth
Ajamie LLP
Dr. Saúl and Ursula Balagura Michelle Beale and Dick Anderson
The Cullen Trust for the Performing Arts
Dr. Ellen R. Gritz and Mr. Milton D. Rosenau Jr.
John P. McGovern Foundation
Mr. John G. Turner and Mr. Jerry G. Fischer Vinson & Elkins LLP
Lynn Wyatt
Houston Methodist Ms. Marianne Kah
Zane and Brady Carruth
Sid Moorhead
Carolyn J. Levy
Mathilda Cochran
Claire Liu and Joseph Greenberg
Kathleen Moore and Steven Homer
Sara and Gabriel Loperena
Mr. and Mrs. Donald G. Sweeney
Margaret Alkek Williams
Judith and David Belanger
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Crownover
Mr. and Mrs. Harlan C. Stai
The Robert and Janice McNair Foundation The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
ConocoPhillips
Schlumberger
The Wortham Foundation, Inc. Anonymous
Novum Energy Matthew L. Ringel Glen A. Rosenbaum
The Leadership Council The Leadership Council is a program designed to provide fiscal stability to Houston Grand Opera’s Annual Fund through three-year commitments, with a minimum of $10,000 pledged annually. We gratefully acknowledge these members. Mr. and Mrs. Frank N. Barnes Dr. Michael and Susan Bloome Mr. and Mrs. Richard Burleson Anna and Joel Catalano Dr. Peter Chang and Hon. Theresa Chang Mr. William E. Colburn Mr. Efraín Z. Corzo and Mr. Andrew Bowen
Ms. Patricia B. Freeman and Mr. Bruce Patterson
Ms. Elizabeth Phillips
Leonard A. Goldstein and Helen B. Wils
Kelly and David Rose
Mrs. Brenda Harvey-Traylor Dr. and Mrs. Theodore J. Haywood Ann and Stephen Kaufman Marcheta Leighton-Beasley
Mr. and Mrs. Joshua Davidson
Jan and Nathan Meehan
Ms. Anna M. Dean
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Metts
Joanne and David Dorenfeld
Terrylin G. Neale
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Michelle and Chuck Ritter John Serpe and Tracy Maddox Mrs. Helen P. Shaffer Mr. Georgios Varsamis Alan and Frank York
The Production Funders Houston Grand Opera is internationally acclaimed for its onstage excellence. Ensuring the exceptional quality of our productions and the creativity of our artistic forces — singers, conductors, directors, designers — is our highest priority. The art we make onstage is the foundation for everything we do. For information about joining The Production Funders, please contact Greg Robertson at 713-546-0274 or grobertson@hgo.org.
Judy and Richard Agee Ajamie LLP
Claire Liu and Joseph Greenberg
Anchorage Foundation of Texas
Will L. McLendon
Bank of America
The Robert and Janice McNair Foundation
Robin Angly and Miles Smith Janice Barrow
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
BBVA
Sara and Bill Morgan
The Brown Foundation, Inc.
National Endowment for the Arts
Sarah and Ernest Butler
Novum Energy
Anne and Albert Chao
Drs. Liz Grimm and Jack Roth
Louise Chapman
Mr. and Mrs. David Rowan
The Robert and Jane Cizik Foundation
The Sarofim Foundation
Mathilda Cochran ConocoPhillips The Cullen Trust for the Performing Arts Mr. De la Rey Venter Connie Dyer Frost Bank Houston Grand Opera Endowment, Inc.
Schlumberger Shell Dian and Harlan Stai Mr. John G. Turner and Mr. Jerry G. Fischer
BIZARRE. MYSTERIOUS. HORRIBLE. HILARIOUS.
Finalist – Best Travel Book of 2019 Foreword Magazine Indies
Bronze Medalist – Best Travel Essay Independent Publisher Book Awards
Vinson & Elkins LLP
Honorable Mention – Best Travel Book
Margaret Alkek Williams
National Association of Travel Journalists
The Wortham Foundation, Inc. Lynn Wyatt
The Humphreys Foundation
“This book contains some of the most astonishing tales I’ve ever encountered. One after another. They make for obsessive reading.”
Donna Kaplan and Richard A. Lydecker
—Tim Cahill, best-selling author of Jaguars Ripped My Flesh
Houston Methodist
“The entire point of travel is to encounter the unimaginable. Gina and Scott Gaille have collected some of the most remarkable tales to ever see the light of day. A hoot to read.” —J. Maarten Troost, best-selling author of Headhunters on My Doorstep
B O O K
N OW AVAI L AB LE O N A MAZO N
H G O. O R G
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NEWS & NOTES
ARE YOU READY FOR SOME OPERA? Monday has turned into the best night of the week.
In the spring, Houston Grand Opera launched its Monday Night Opera series to continue to connect with our audiences during this period when we cannot gather. These fascinating Zoom-streamed conversations—led by HGO Artistic and Music Director Patrick Summers, Managing Director Perryn Leech, and Dramaturg Jeremy Johnson—have proven to be very popular among the company’s supporters. The interactive discussions have ranged from the practical—How does HGO fit multiple grand-scale sets backstage at the Wortham? How is the company confronting COVID-19? What challenges do costume designers face?—to the cerebral, with sessions on the origins of opera, the history of beloved favorites, and even HGO’s own diva, Ana María Martínez, sharing the ways she applies psychology to understand her characters.
A WARM WELCOME Miah Im joins the HGO Studio as Music Director.
HGO Studio has appointed a new music director, Miah Im. Im will work closely with HGO Studio Director Brian Speck, nurturing the next generation of opera singers while curating the popular Studio Recital Series and serving on the company’s casting committee. Im, a pianist, joins the renowned young artist training program after four years with the Los Angeles Opera, where she served as head of music staff. With a repertoire of 80 operas and counting, and previous appointments at companies across the country and abroad, she has a wealth of knowledge and experience to share with the gifted singers and pianists selected to hone their artistry at the Studio each year. “I am thrilled and incredibly honored to join the HGO family, one of the finest opera companies in America,” said Im. “I will bring my passion and experience in support of this wonderful artform and help to inspire the young artists on their journey to becoming world-class singers.”
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It is a special treat to observe the palpable rapport between Summers and the artists he collaborates with—and to get an intimate view of his love for opera. As one session came to a close this summer, featuring Summers discussing the art of conducting and his priceless memories of his longtime friend and mentor, Australian conductor Sir Charles Mackerras, one attendee begged him to keep talking!
Monday Night Opera is a special benefit for HGO donors of all levels. Every week at 6:30 p.m., join us for webinars, interviews, and lectures from world-class creative team members, artists, and HGO staff members to get exclusive insights into HGO’s upcoming digital programming and much more.
HGO Artistic and Music Director Patrick Summers said Im embodies all the attributes of a sensational coach. “The professional training of singers requires a daunting amount of expertise: musical brilliance, linguistic aplomb, inspiration, a balance of demanding and supportive, an ability to dream out the future of a gifted artist in a way that is unique to each,” he shared. “I’m so excited that Miah Im will carry on the amazing legacy of the Studio and step into shoes at HGO that have been occupied by some of the greatest coaches in the industry. Miah is a unique combination of everything a young singer will seek in the HGO Studio.” Im is also the new director of opera studies at Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music.
NEWS & NOTES
SEWING FOR GOOD HGO costume shop’s masks-for-Houston effort, by the numbers
4,700+
Number of masks the costume shop made for Houston area organizations
3
Houston-area institutions assisted: Saint Joseph Medical Center, Star of Hope, and the Houston Area Women’s Center
325
Yards of fabric used to make the masks
In April, as coronavirus infections spread and professionals across the country faced shortages of masks, the talented team at HGO’s costume shop— suddenly with time on their hands after the cancellation of the company’s spring performances—stepped up to fill the gap. Demand for elastic had soared, making it scarce, but the shop had plenty on hand. Instead of using it to sew exquisite costumes for HGO, the highly skilled team employed that elastic to provide Houston’s front-line workers with lifesaving protection.
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HGO team members who contributed to the project
1,580
Hours the team spent sewing masks
$36,000
Cost of the effort, in labor and materials, including donations from HGO, Rodeo Houston, and Dole Packaged Foods
Head of Costumes Norma Cortez and Assistant Stage Manager Meg Edwards, who spearheaded the effort, said they were happy to put their skills to good use helping the city to fight infection from COVID-19. “When we heard from Meg Edwards that one of her friends from St. Joseph’s needed masks for their staff, we didn’t hesitate to offer our skills to help them,” said Norma. “For me, it made me feel proud to be able to help protect the people that were risking their lives to help others.” It was an enormous effort, as demonstrated below, and everyone at HGO is proud of the team.
1,000
Bandanas donated by Rodeo Houston, each of which was used to make five masks
$5,000
Amount donated from Dole to help the cause after Norma’s appearance on Live with Kelly and Ryan
2,365+
Yards of elastic used in the effort
H G O. O R G
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We await the day when we can welcome opera lovers to the Wortham once more.
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ART FINDS A WAY
As we mourn what has been lost, we keep creating. By Patrick Summers Artistic and Music Director
T
here’s always a merry war within the artistic director of any organization between what one aspires to and what can actually be done. The perfect opera season, meaning the one that displays the most balanced and healthy living art, would be comprised largely of operas written in recent years, and only once or twice in each generation dip into the standard repertoire, those top titles that mean “opera” to most people, a frustratingly short list: La traviata, La bohème, Aida, Carmen, Tosca, Rigoletto, Madama Butterfly, The Marriage of Figaro, The Magic Flute, Don Giovanni. Alas, though, the financial realities of a subscription model force us to repeat the aforementioned operas much more frequently than is healthy, but there it is; it is the same in every opera company around the world, and only a vast cultural shift will alter that reality. Is the coronavirus giving us an opportunity we never had before? There are many other considerations, but chief among them are two that stand outside the “standards”: the operas of Richard Wagner are such important cultural lodestars that no opera company that considers itself major can fail to program them. And replenishing the historic repertoire is any company’s greatest responsibility. The normal cycle of planning is three to five years, as the world’s greatest singers, which are not automatically the world’s most famous singers, are in high demand. The creation of a new production takes an enormous
amount of planning and fundraising, none of which is a fast process. The 2020–21 season we announced last January was typical of this process: several of the operas within it were planned five years ago, and all of them finalized three years ago.
be fine to open the season with The Snowy Day; and our winter repertory, Parsifal and Cinderella, would surely be safe, right? Wrong. To the extent that anything felt speedy in this endless spring and summer of COVID-19, it became quickly apparent that we would need alternative programming for much of the coming season, and I began jotting down a list of small-scale operas that I loved, many of them works we would never have the chance to perform under the normal circumstances described above. Within a week, I had a list of about 100 operas. We decided we could produce one smallscale opera per month, and one live recital from the stage of the Cullen, plus a few “special events.”
I began jotting down a list of small-scale operas that I loved. It was during the second week of this past March that it became clear we couldn’t perform our Spring Season that had been planned for years, Salome and The Magic Flute. My hope had been to bookend last season with productions of Handel and Mozart by one of the great directors in the world, Barrie Kosky, whose indelible Saul production will long live in the memory as one of the greatest things we’ve ever put on. His well-traveled Magic Flute production, told in a delightful Edward Gorey style with interactive video, has thrilled audiences everywhere. Thinking back to the whirlwind of that March, we were all naïve and optimistic enough to imagine that all would be fine by the late summer, and the 2020–21 season would proceed as planned. When the slowly unfolding nightmare made it clear that we would not be performing live, we spent weeks planning the filming of our fall productions of Carmen and Werther, sure that we would
A large number of new considerations had to be factored on top of the old ones: by mid-summer, HGO had contracts with artists for seven full-scale operas that had to be canceled: Salome, The Magic Flute, Carmen, Werther, The Snowy Day, Parsifal, and Cinderella. Whatever events chosen for our alternative season had to first turn to those artists whose performances had been canceled, both as a matter of ethical responsibility and budgetary considerations. I removed operas that didn’t involve alternative activity for canceled contracts. I started striking off my list operas that felt to me too heavy for these already-heavy times, and operas that even with their small H G O. O R G
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Most HGO Digital works will be filmed at the Wortham.
scales were too large to consider. I then removed from the list any operas that couldn’t be performed with social distancing as part of their narrative. Factoring in everything, the list shrank from 100 to about 15 titles. From there, I started prioritizing the operas and events, factoring in all that COVID-19 had forced upon us. We knew we wanted to keep our marvelous HGO Studio Showcase in September, so we conceived it to be filmed. The composer David T. Little, one of the great contemporary American composers, wrote a brilliant chamber opera 10 years ago with librettist Royce Vavrek called Vinkensport. This opera is an example of a work we would not have been able to program under “normal” circumstances, for it is under an hour long and its chamber structure would not fill the Brown Theater, but Vinkensport was high on every version of my lists, for its plot about a finch-calling contest in the Netherlands works perfectly under social distancing. It is a wonderful and almost completely unknown opera that will be a great discovery for people. Mourning what we’d lost in this awful summer, not only our regular performances but also the terrible reality of having to terminate the jobs of a third of our colleagues in the company, I felt we would need the comforts that only Mozart can provide. 16
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Mozart is one of the great architects of the soul. His brief opera, The Impresario, was written as lunchtime entertainment for his beloved Joseph II, Emperor of Austria. It tells the story of two rival divas whose temperaments are calmed by music. It is a trifle of sorts, but as always with Mozart, his music makes it transcendent. I wanted to bring The Impresario into our bizarre new world of Zoom and virtual programming, so I turned to playwright Jim Luigs, whose musical Das Barbecü so wonderfully retells the Wagner Ring with country music and a Texan setting. Very quickly, he has written a new script in which the Impresario is actually an Impresaria, a grand Texan woman who owns and runs an opera company in our grand state. Hilarity will ensue. Paired with The Impresario will be another marvelous bon-bon that would have been out of the realm of a regular season. Lee Hoiby’s delightful one-woman opera Bon Appétit!, written for the late Jean Stapleton (famous as the indelible Edith Bunker on All in the Family), gives us a brief time with the mellifluous chef-extraordinaire Julia Child, played in our opera by the mellifluous mezzo-extraordinaire Jamie Barton. There are plans to create an innovative visual documentary surrounding Joel
Thompson and Andrea Davis Pinkney’s new opera, The Snowy Day, as the virus that keeps on giving has forced postponement of its live premiere for another 12 months. You will see The Snowy Day live in December of 2021, but this crisis gives us an opportunity we wouldn’t have had to explore Ezra Jack Keats’s legendary story in ways we’d not thought of a few months ago. In the new year, we’ll have more treasures in store for you which you’ll hear about in more depth later, events like a virtual Hansel & Gretel, Giving Voice, Suite Española, and of course our annual Concert of Arias. And thank YOU, dear HGO patron, for staying with us through hurricanes and pandemics, “from floods to microbes,” as the title character of The Impresario says with her full Texas accent. We all need the arts right now more than ever, and thank you for knowing that all along.
A Huge Thank-You to HGO’s New Partner:
Viewers around the world will be able to transport themselves to a front-row seat for the transcendent new works, concerts, and recitals HGO Digital is offering for the 2020–21 season, thanks to a new partnership between HGO and Marquee TV. Opera fans can subscribe to the arts channel, dubbed the “Netflix of the Arts” by The Financial Times, for free! “Partnering with Marquee TV allows us to deliver the highest-quality audio and video content directly to the televisions of our patrons,” says Dale Edwards, HGO’s director of marketing and communications. “The need for crowding around a laptop or tablet to enjoy HGO content will be eliminated, and everyone in the household can enjoy the performances in comfort.” For information and instructions on how to use the Marquee TV streaming service, visit HGO.org/Digital.
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THE BUTLERS DID IT!
A generous gift helps bring HGO Digital programming to Houston and beyond.
H
ouston Grand Opera—and Austin Opera—audiences have an incredibly exciting season of opera to look forward to, and that is thanks in very large part to longtime supporters of both companies, Sarah and Ernest Butler. The Butlers have made the extraordinarily generous pledge of $1 million to help underwrite the HGO Digital programming featured in the following pages. The pledge will support both HGO and Austin Opera, creating a strategic partnership between the two Texas companies. “The arts have always played a critical role in our lives, and it was important for us to support Houston Grand Opera and Austin Opera with this gift,” say the Butlers. “Collaboration between HGO and Austin Opera is a win for all with extra creativity and cost savings and support for opera, and our hope is that through this new programming and content that HGO is producing, more people will be able to access this wonderful art form that has meant so much to both of us over the years.” The Butlers’ wonderful support of HGO Digital means everything to the company. “Sarah and Ernest’s wonderful commitment is a vote of confidence in HGO and Austin Opera and their support for our exciting future artistic programming,” says HGO Managing Director Perryn Leech. “We are deeply appreciative of their continued investment in the operatic art form that they love so much. This gift allows us to share that love with so many others in both cities, Texas, and around the world.”
Photo credit: Gracie Byrd Jones
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SPECI AL E D I T ION 2 0 2 0
JUST THE FACTS Your guide to HGO Digital, the Sarah and Ernest Butler Performance Series 2020–21 season Stream performances at HGO.org or through
Visit HGO.org/Digital for instructions and information.
SEPT. 25, 2020
Showcas
HGO Studio
A remarkable evening with the talented artists training this year with the HGO Studio This year’s Studio Showcase takes on a new digital format, but the purpose of the production is very much the same. Studio Showcase provides a sneak peek at some of the finest artists in opera today, all of whom are members of the renowned HGO Studio, and some of whom have just moved to Houston to begin their time with our company and community. Repertoire includes both familiar favorites and new discoveries, selected for the single purpose of presenting these artists in scenes that are suited to their spectacular talents. BIZET: CARMEN Act II – “Nous avons en tête une affaire” Frasquita Carmen Mercédès Remendado Dancaïre Piano
Raven McMillon Sun-Ly Pierce Lindsay Kate Brown Ricardo Garcia Blake Denson Bin Yu Sanford
MASSENET: WERTHER Act III – “Bonjour, grande soeur… Va! laisse couler mes larmes” Sophie Charlotte Piano
Elena Villalón Lindsay Kate Brown Alex Munger
MASSENET: DON QUICHOTTE Act II – “C’est vers ton amour…” Sancho Quichotte Piano
Nicholas Newton Cory McGee Kevin Miller
DONIZETTI: L’ELISIR D’AMORE Act I – “Caro elisir!...Esulti pur la barbara” Adina Nemorino Piano
Raven McMillon Ricardo Garcia Kevin Miller
Creative Stage Director Kristine McIntyre
For more on the talented artists training with the HGO Studio this year, see page 41!
DONIZETTI: ANNA BOLENA Act I – “Oh! Qual parlar fu il suo...Tutta in voi la luce mia” Giovanna Enrico Piano
Lindsay Kate Brown William Guanbo Su Alex Munger
MOZART: DON GIOVANNI Act II Finale – “Già la mensa è preparata” Donna Elvira Lindsay Kate Brown Don Giovanni Blake Denson Leporello Nicholas Newton Commendatore William Guanbo Su Piano Bin Yu Sanford MONTEVERDI: L’INCORONAZIONE DI POPPEA Act III – “Pur ti miro” Poppea Nerone Piano
Elena Villalón Sun-Ly Pierce Kevin Miller
RAVEL: L’HEURE ESPAGNOLE Scenes 9–13 – “Évidemment, elle me congédie” Concepción Ramiro Don Iñigo Piano
Sun-Ly Pierce Blake Denson Cory McGee Bin Yu Sanford
BERG: LULU Act I – “Gnädige Frau… Machen Sie auf!... Auf einmal springt er auf…” Lulu Elena Villalón Der Maler Ricardo Garcia Der Medizinalrat Nicholas Newton Piano Alex Munger
An intimate recital series featuring some of opera’s biggest names Don’t miss HGO’s exciting new digital recital series, straight from the Wortham Theater Center’s Cullen Theater to your living room! These are primarily song recitals, so this is your opportunity to hear opera stars in repertoire you might not get to experience at Houston Grand Opera during a regular season. These are truly special events—mark your calendars! TAMARA WILSON, SOPRANO / PATRICK SUMMERS, PIANO September 18 Incredible soprano Tamara Wilson, an HGO Studio alumna, is internationally known for her interpretations of Verdi, Mozart, Strauss, and Wagner. Her appearances with HGO, her home company, include her role debut as Chrysothemis in Elektra in 2018 and the title role of Aida in 2020. In 2016 Wilson won the prestigious Richard Tucker Award, an annual prize given to a rising American opera singer on the “threshold of a major international career.” Her digital recital will feature songs by Henry Purcell, Aaron Copland, Amy Beach, Rossini, and more, with HGO Artistic and Music Director Patrick Summers on piano. REGINALD SMITH JR., BARITONE / RICHARD BADO, PIANO October 9 Reginald Smith Jr. has been hailed by Opera News as having “one of the most exciting baritone sounds to come along in years.” A beloved HGO Studio alumnus and frequent company collaborator, earlier this year he played the role of Amonasro in Aida and performed in HGO’s wildly successful Giving Voice concert. Smith, a Grand Finals winner of the 2015 Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions, hails from Atlanta. His digital recital will feature selections by Johann Sebastian Bach, Robert Owens, Camille Nickerson, H. Leslie Adams, and more, with HGO Director of Artistic Operations and Chorus Master Richard Bado on piano. ARTURO CHACÓN-CRUZ, TENOR November 13 Sought-after tenor and HGO Studio alumnus Arturo Chacón-Cruz has given private recitals for Queen Sofia and King Juan Carlos of Spain, among many other storied performances, including playing the Duke in Verdi’s Rigoletto with HGO last season. Originally from
Sonora, Mexico and currently residing in Miami, Chacón-Cruz was named the Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Emerging Star of 2017 by the San Francisco Opera. His digital recital will feature songs by Leonard Cohen, Consuelo Velázquez, María Grever, Giacomo Puccini, and more. SASHA COOKE, MEZZO-SOPRANO January 8 Two-time Grammy Award–winning artist Sasha Cooke has been called a “luminous standout” by the New York Times. Her appearances with HGO include an acclaimed performance of Verdi’s Requiem in 2017. Cooke is an experienced recitalist who has performed at Carnegie Hall and the Kennedy Center, among many others, and will draw from her extensive repertoire for her digital recital. A graduate of Rice University and The Juilliard School, she lives in Houston. JACK SWANSON, TENOR March 12 Young sensation Jack Swanson is best known for his interpretations of Rossini and Donizetti. Originally from Stillwater, Minnesota, he received his Master of Music in Vocal Performance at Rice University. A finalist in HGO’s 2016 Concert of Arias, Swanson performed in HGO’s 60th anniversary gala in 2015 and had been set to appear in HGO’s now-canceled La Cenerentola in January 2021; instead he will be the star of this digital recital of works that are sure to showcase his incredible range.
Recital Artists
September 18 Tamara Wilson, soprano
Grand Underwriter (Tamara Wilson)
October 9 Reginald Smith Jr., baritone
November 13 Arturo Chacón-Cruz, tenor
January 8 Sasha Cooke, mezzo-soprano
March 12 Jack Swanson, tenor
Guarantor (Reginald Smith, Jr.) Vinson & Elkins H G O. O R G
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OCT. 23, 2020
Vinkenspor or The Finch Opera
DAVID T. LITTLE | ROYCE VAVREK
“
Vinkensport, or The Finch Opera is a bitter-sweet comedy in one act, which explores obsession, desire, and the need to win, through the frame of an obscure Flemish folk sport, ‘finch-sitting.’” —Composer David T. Little
BACKGROUND Vinkensport, or The Finch Opera, a one-act comic opera by David T. Little and Royce Vavrek, premiered in 2010 at the Bard College Conservatory of Music. Vinkensport, or “finch-sitting,” pits contestants—called “chaffinches”—against one another to see who has the most melodious bird. When a bird makes a proper call (a “susk-e-wiet”), its owner receives a tally mark. The competitor with the most points wins. The sport can be traced back to as early as the 1500s.
she is married to a man named Wulf who unabashedly cheats on her. Atticus Finch’s Trainer is thoroughly annoyed by his neighbor, however, and can’t wait to install blinds in his windows to retain his privacy.
THE STORY Six chaffinches introduce the sport of finch-sitting. Hans Sachs’s Trainer, we learn, is high on cocaine. St. Francis’s Trainer and Atticus Finch’s Trainer live next door to one another: she (the former) is enamored with him (the latter), though
Farinelli’s Trainer reveals to the audience that Farinelli actually died years ago: she competes with a CD player in her box so that she always wins. This time, however, the win goes to Hans Sachs’s Trainer. Atticus Finch’s Trainer ends the opera with a beautifully poignant aria, promising to let
We learn that Prince Gabriel III’s Trainer died, so his son has taken over as chaffinch for the bird—even though he seems to hate both the sport and his father. Elton John’s Trainer is an alcoholic and nymphomaniac who habitually cheats on her husband.
his finch fly free—right before Elton John’s Trainer comes back on and drunkenly grabs his crotch. FUN FACT The Flemish people still compete at vinkensport, as they have done for centuries. Allegations of cheating are common and include testosterone use. There was a real-life instance of a competitor installing a CD player in his box—he aroused suspicion after his finch sang 725 susk-e-wiets in three matches in a row.
Cast and Creative
Alicia Gianni Holy St. Francis’s Trainer
Nicole Heaston Sir Elton John’s Trainer
Elena Villalón Farinelli’s Trainer
Ricardo Garcia Hans Sachs’s Trainer
Kelly Markgraf Prince Gabriel III of Belgium’s Trainer’s Son
Ryan McKinny Atticus Finch’s Trainer
Conductor Timothy Myers Co-Directors Ryan McKinny and E. Loren Meeker Houston Grand Opera Orchestra
All HGO Digital events can be viewed for free using the Marquee TV streaming service. Miss the premiere? You still have a month to see each event online. For information and instructions, visit HGO.org/Digital.
Guarantor H G O. O R G
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DOUBLE FEATURE NOV. 27, 2020
Impresari
The calming power of beautiful music helps an opera company avert a Zoom-meeting disaster. BACKGROUND Mozart wrote The Impresario in 1786 (the same year as The Marriage of Figaro) to enter into a musical competition against Antonio Salieri at the Schönbrunn Palace in Vienna. A German Singspiel containing music and spoken dialogue, the work is traditionally sung in the vernacular of the audience. Houston Grand Opera has commissioned a new story, script, and translation from playwright Jim Luigs, who also conceived and wrote the musical Das Barbecü, a hilarious take on Wagner’s Ring. THE STORY Due to a pandemic and working from home, Edna Mendenhall, the impresario of Texas Opera Grande, holds a Zoom audition for Yolanda Cantrell, a singer new to her company. Rona Richards, Texas Opera Grande’s long-time star, sits in on the call, unannounced. Yolanda is late for her audition, so Rona obliges Edna with an aria. Yolanda finally appears on camera and apologizes for her tardiness. She proceeds to sing a superb aria, which shows off her extraordinary range. Edna is delighted, but Rona feels threatened and makes her presence known. Suddenly, Rona’s agent Wiley Stonecrop speaks up. He, too, has been lurking on the Zoom meeting; it soon becomes clear that he is the agent for both women. The two sopranos and their agent sing a trio in English, during which he presses for contracts for both of his singers. Edna consents, and everyone is elated.
The
MOZART JIM LUIGS
FUN FACT Modern audiences may be surprised to learn that Mozart lost the palace battle to Salieri, whose entry in the competition mocked Mozart and his favorite librettist, Lorenzo Da Ponte. Unbothered, Mozart declared himself the superior composer.
Cast and Creative Houston Grand Opera Orchestra
Eun Sun Kim Conductor
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Director E. Loren Meeker
Nova Thomas Edna Mendenhall, Impresario
SPECI AL E D I T ION 2 0 2 0
Raven McMillon Rona Richards, Returning Diva
New Story, Script, and Translation Jim Luigs
Nicole Heaston Yolanda Cantrell, New Diva
Projection Designer S. Katy Tucker
Frederick Ballentine Wiley Stonecrop, Agent
William Guanbo Su Bowie Krebs, Edna’s Assistant
BACKGROUND Lee Hoiby’s one-woman, one-act opera Bon Appétit! premiered in 1989 at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC, with Jean Stapleton performing the role of Julia Child. It was presented as a curtain raiser for Hoiby’s The Italian Lesson, also a musical monodrama.
FUN FACT Houston favorite, HGO Studio alumna, and beloved mezzo-soprano Jamie Barton portrays Child in a role she has made her own, performing in venues including New York’s Carnegie Hall.
Cast and Creative Text Julia Child, adapted by Mark Shulgasser
Jamie Barton Julia Child
Co-Directors Ryan McKinny Tonya McKinny
Piano Jonathan Easter Original Stage Direction Ned Canty
All HGO Digital events can be viewed for free using the Marquee TV streaming service. Miss the premiere? You still have a month to see each event online. For information and instructions, visit HGO.org/Digital.
DOUBLE FEATURE NOV. 27, 2020
THE STORY Bon Appétit is a conflation of two episodes of Julia Child’s cooking show, The French Chef, in which she narrates—with all her wit, antics, and charisma—the baking of the perfect chocolate cake, Le gâteau au chocolat l’éminence brune.
Bon Appétit!
A charming confection of an opera, best enjoyed with a slice of chocolate cake.
HOIBY
DEC. 10, 2020
The SnowyProject Da
“
Peter is a child of color, but he is really a child on an adventure. And that is why the book is so powerful.” —Librettist Andrea Davis Pinkney
JOEL THOMPSON | ANDREA DAVIS PINKNEY Based on the children’s book by Ezra Jack Keats
BACKGROUND Ezra Jack Keats wrote and illustrated The Snowy Day—the story of a little boy named Peter who ventures into the snow—in 1962. The book won the 1963 Caldecott Medal, and it broke a persistent color barrier: Peter was the first Black boy to be the main character of a mainstream children’s book.
Aspen Music Festival, Summers heard a few seconds of a new score and immediately knew this unidentified composer would be the perfect fit for an opera on The Snowy Day. Joel Thompson was that composer, and his unique and colorful musical voice has breathed new life into the story of Peter, beautifully adapted into poetic narrative by Pinkney.
In 2016, acclaimed children’s author Andrea Davis Pinkney wrote A Poem for Peter, an homage to Keats and the legacy of Peter. She would become the librettist of an opera based on The Snowy Day a few years later, when the Ezra Jack Keats Foundation auspiciously put her name forward in the early stages of the opera’s creation.
HGO had planned to debut The Snowy Day in December 2020. While the live production has been delayed to a future season, this documentary-style appetizer to the main event will introduce audiences to the making of this breathtaking new opera.
Star soprano Julia Bullock brought the idea of an opera on The Snowy Day to Patrick Summers, HGO’s Artistic and Music Director. He, too, knew the book from his childhood, and the opera started to take form. In the summer of 2017 at the
a snowball home in his pocket. He discovers it has melted and dreams that his new friends and their snowy day all melt as well, until he awakens to another layer of snow. FUN FACT The Snowy Day has a fan in former first lady Michelle Obama, who told the New York Times it was one of her favorite books growing up. It is also the most checked-out title in the history of the New York Public Library.
THE STORY Both book and opera recount the adventures of Peter after he wakes up to the first snow of winter—the first winter when his parents have promised to let him play in the snow by himself. After breakfast he sets off to explore, getting in a snowball fight and making friends before sneaking
Cast and Creative of the Upcoming HGO World-Premiere Opera, The Snowy Day
Raven McMillon Peter
Karen Slack Mama
Nicholas Newton Daddy/Tim
Elena Villalón Amy
Conductor Patrick Summers Margaret Alkek Williams Chair
Joel Thompson Composer
Andrea Davis Pinkney Librettist
Director Omer Ben Seadia
Andres Acosta Papí/Jasper
Cory McGee Billy
Dramaturg Jeremy Johnson
Lighting Designer Michael James Clark
Scenic Designer Amy Rubin
Houston Grand Opera Orchestra
Costume Designer Jessica Jahn
Supporters of HGO Digital and Mainstage Productions The Robert and Janice McNair Foundation The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation | The Cullen Foundation | Bank of America | H-E-B | The Powell Foundation H G O. O R G
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LIVE! JAN. 22, 2021
Giving Voic
“
I feel it is important that the diversity regularly seen on HGO’s stage be reflected in the audience. I created Giving Voice to welcome Black and African American community members into a company, and an artform, that I love.” —Tenor and Co-Host Lawrence Brownlee
Nicholas Newton, Reginald Smith Jr., J’Nai Bridges, Nicole Heaston, Russell Thomas, and Lawrence Brownlee in the first Giving Voice
BACKGROUND The first Giving Voice concert from internationally renowned tenor Lawrence Brownlee and Houston Grand Opera took place in January 2020, made possible by Bank of America. Brownlee was in Houston to sing the role of Fernand in La favorite, which HGO was staging concurrently with Aida, starring Russell Thomas as Radames. To Brownlee’s knowledge, it was the first time two Black tenors, he and Thomas, were the leading roles at the same time at a major company. Before traveling to Houston for La favorite, Brownlee approached HGO Artistic and Music Director Patrick Summers about
hosting a concert of Black classical singers. Soon the tenors were onstage at the Wortham with fellow artists J’Nai Bridges, Nicole Heaston, HGO Studio member Nicholas Newton, Reginald Smith, Jr., and pianist Kevin Miller, performing Giving Voice: Lawrence Brownlee and Friends Sing Opera, Gospel, and Standards. The artists dazzled the crowd—which was packed with families, students, church groups, fraternities, and sororities—singing everything from Gershwin to gospel to Verdi. The event was so impactful, HGO
invited Brownlee back for another performance of Giving Voice, once again alongside a group of celebrated Black singers. FUN FACT Brownlee is also an avid salsa dancer. Per the Chicago Tribune: “He never travels without his white, size-10 dancing shoes, so that he can unwind with another of his passions, salsa dancing, at nightspots in cities where he happens to be performing.”
Cast and Creative
Donnie Ray Albert
Frederick Ballentine
Lawrence Brownlee Co-host
Nicholas Newton
Zoie Reams
Kevin Miller, piano
Blake Denson
Nicole Heaston Co-host
Cory McGee
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SPRING 2021
Suite Español
“It is important to bring more awareness to zarzuela as an art form given its rich history and sheer volume of masterful and beautiful works.” —HGO Artistic Advisor Ana María Martínez
BACKGROUND A form of Spanish musical theater that combines operatic songs with spoken dialogue and dancing, zarzuela dates to the 17th century but took on new life between 1850 and 1950. Some zarzuelas are long and grand in scope (género grande), while others are lighter and shorter (género chico). Dialogue is often adapted to reflect local current events. Zarzuela remains popular in Spain and Spanish-speaking countries throughout the world but is less often seen elsewhere—something its champions, including internationally beloved soprano and HGO Artistic Advisor Ana María Martínez, seek to change with events such as Suite Española, which will feature both zarzuela and other Spanish-language music. Martínez, the first recipient of the prestigious Pepita Embil Prize of Zarzuela, has given zarzuela concerts all over the world, from Madrid and Barcelona to Rio de Janeiro, Dubai, and Moscow. As a teenager, she sang zarzuela with her mother, Evangelina Colón, both at the Teatro de Bellas Artes in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and at the Thalia Spanish Theater in Queens, New York. “It is an experience,” she says, “I will cherish forever.” THE CONCERT For this special evening, Martínez has put together a collage of excerpts from a variety of zarzuelas that showcase “the flavor of Spain and the distinct rhythms, passion, and beauty of the repertoire,” in addition to a selection of beautiful music from other Spanish-speaking countries. This event will feature songs in Spanish with English narration. Martínez will be joined by a pianist, a guitarist, and two HGO Studio artists, tenor Ricardo Garcia and baritone Blake Denson. FUN FACT In the mid 19th-century, parody zarzuelas, which lampooned Italian operas, had a brief heyday. Victims included Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor.
Grand Underwriter Frost Bank
Hansel & Gretel
HUMPERDINCK “ Hansel and Gretel has a musical score that is, without hyperbole, one of the two or three most ravishingly beautiful in the history of music. One never tires of hearing it or performing it; I could happily conduct it every day.” — HGO Artistic and Music Director Patrick Summers BACKGROUND Hansel and Gretel is an opera in the late German Romantic tradition, premiering in Weimar in December 1893. The composer is Engelbert Humperdinck with a libretto by Adelheid Wette, his sister. She originally asked him to set to music some poems she had written based on the Grimm Brothers’ fairy tale of the same name, but the poems and songs were eventually turned into an opera. THE STORY Hansel and Gretel, the children of a poor broom-maker, are sent into the forest to pick strawberries by their mother, Gertrude. Their father, Peter, comes home with a feast for the family. When he learns the children are in the forest, he worriedly tells Gertrude about the evil Witch who lures children with sweets and bakes them into gingerbread. They leave to find the children. Hansel and Gretel play in the forest as they look for strawberries. They get hungry and eat them, and the sun begins to go down. As it gets darker, the scared children hear a chorus of echoes before the Sandman walks out of the forest. He puts them to sleep as they sing their evening prayers. The Dew Fairy wakes up the children with sprinkles of dew. Hansel and Gretel notice a gingerbread house surrounded by a fence of gingerbread children. As they take bites of frosting and candy, the Witch freezes them with a magic wand. But the children manage to escape and push the Witch into the oven. The gingerbread figures around them turn back into real kids as Peter and Gertrude arrive and embrace their children. They all see that the Witch has been baked into gingerbread in her own oven.
All HGO Digital events can be viewed for free using the Marquee TV streaming service. Miss the premiere? You still have a month to see each event online. For information and instructions, visit HGO.org/Digital.
SPRING 2021
FUN FACT Because Hansel and Gretel premiered in Weimar shortly before Christmas, it most often is performed around the holiday season, which is an interesting bit of history considering that it tells the story, as Maestro Summers notes, of “a cannibalistic witch who is outsmarted and killed by two children she is trying to cook.”
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We See You.
We see you working through your exhaustion to fight a global pandemic. We see you working with other professionals at the Texas Medical Center and throughout the region to coordinate your attack against a disease that has threatened our very way of life. We see you missing time with your own families so that you can help sick Houstonians get home to theirs. We see you, healthcare providers, all of you. And we want to say:
THANK YOU.
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SPECI AL E D I T ION 2 0 2 0
THE ARTIST AT HOME
Isolation brings challenges, but also opportunities. By Catherine Matusow
L
ast spring, as the coronavirus pandemic ground American life to a halt, HGO artists and staff retreated to life in quarantine with the rest of the country. Everywhere, people felt fear, worry, and disappointment, and it was no different for the company, which saw its spring performances canceled after countless hours of planning and preparation by hundreds of professionals. Suddenly, traditional means of artistic collaboration were impossible. But artists are nothing if not creative, and it wasn’t long before they were devising ways to take advantage of their confinement, inventing new methods for staying engaged and reaching out to opera lovers through the digital space. Bass-baritone Ryan McKinny, an HGO Studio alumnus, enlisted a group of creatives for a video collaboration of the song “No One Is Alone” from Into the Woods, a moving tribute to those who have been lost. Soprano Elena Villalón and bass-baritone Nicholas Newton, both current HGO Studio artists, developed a hilariously charming—and informative—web series, The Real Housewives of Classical Music. And renowned soprano and HGO Artistic Advisor Ana María Martínez hosted entertaining Facebook videos in English and Spanish, in which she chatted with fans about life in quarantine and shared the gift of her incredible voice.
McKinny has spent hours editing video at home.
We caught up with these artists to ask about their videos and how they’ve spent their time at home. Follow HGO on social media to enjoy their contributions, as well as those of many other HGO artists connecting with opera lovers by sharing beautiful music online.
Cues: How have you learned to adapt to life in quarantine?
RYAN MCKINNY
How have you used this time to develop your artistry?
Dozens of singers from across the country joined McKinny—an HGO Studio alumnus that opera lovers may recognize as Don Giovanni from last year’s HGO production of the Mozart masterpiece—to create a video of the melancholy yet hope-inspiring “No One Is Alone” from Stephen Sondheim’s Into the Woods, with Doug Peck on piano. Each held a photo of a lost loved one as they explored grief through song. Just try to watch it without crying.
RM: It’s been quite a rollercoaster. Having projects has really saved my sanity. I am definitely not a person who does well just sitting around watching Netflix!
RM: I started keepthemusicgoing.com as a place to share content and encourage people to donate to organizations that help artists in need. I’ve made a ton of videos now, all of which have stretched me as an artist—sometimes as a director and editor, but also as a singer and actor. I think I’ll carry a lot of what I’m learning now forward in my life once this mess is over.
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What do you miss most about in-person collaboration? RM: We can make a lot of amazing things remotely, but there is just a different feeling being in the room with other people that you don’t get via video. Also, that element of just sharing space with others is very much something I miss. How have you used video to reach out from isolation? RM: Gosh, it’s been my whole life for the last several months. I’ve gone from FaceTime and Zoom for business meetings and catching up with friends, to making movies with iPhones—now with a professional camera setup. I’ve spent hours and hours editing video. It’s really become my new job. Melody Moore and I were thinking about what we might collaborate on, and I remembered how supportive she was of me when my father passed away during our run of The Flying Dutchman at the Glimmerglass Festival. I thought about how hard it must be for everyone who is mourning in isolation right now. Then I thought about how universal grief is, and that even though it feels like you are alone, you really aren’t. So, then it felt clear that we should do “No One Is Alone” from Into the Woods. I knew that I wanted to start with just one person and build from there, and that I needed a clear way to show that everyone in the video has lost someone. Holding a photo seemed like a simple way to show that. Doug Peck connected me with Britney Coleman and Sean Alan Krill, and I thought it would be nice to get a big group for the end. I asked around and got a lot of responses from singers and non-singers. I felt really honored that everyone trusted me with such a delicate and intimate theme. I tried hard to honor each of their contributions, and I’m really proud of the result. What’s your secret weapon for getting through this time? RM: Hope. It helps me to imagine the future I want for myself, my family, our art form, 34
SPECI AL E D I T ION 2 0 2 0
Villalón has been working on staple soprano roles.
There is freedom in being unrestricted by a deadline. and our world—and to take steps now to give that hope a chance to materialize.
Clara Schumann, Maria Grever, and more. Each episode features Elena or Nicholas performing one of their songs.
What are you listening to? RM: Outside of my own projects, not much opera at the moment! My most recent playlist features Lizzo, Django Reinhardt, The Heartless Bastards, and The Carolina Chocolate Drops. ELENA VILLALÓN and NICHOLAS NEWTON The two HGO Studio artists created The Real Housewives of Classical Music, an irreverent recounting of the lives of female composers including Fanny Mendelssohn,
Cues: How have you learned to adapt to life in quarantine? EV: The answer for me has been to have a regimented—and also flexible—routine. I’ll create a to-do list for the day or week, and try to complete that list in a period dedicated to work. Since my days are filled with more individual work than meetings and coachings, there is also flexibility if I need to take my dog to the vet, or schedule a video chat with family in a different time zone.
NN: I’ve learned to adapt by just taking it one day at a time, remaining grateful for the resources I have, and making sure I take a daily walk outdoors. How have you used this time? EV: Though I wish I could be involved in the rest of the regular season, and summer season in Santa Fe, this time has allowed me to develop my artistry in a way that was largely prevented by the constant work on current and future projects that I am contracted to do. This time in quarantine has enabled me to learn staple roles for soprano, that aren’t roles I have to learn for contracts in the next few years. There is freedom in being unrestricted by a deadline.
NN: I’ve been working on a bunch of monologues with Philip Lehl and having movement sessions with Adam Noble. I now have a greater understanding of how to communicate on stage and physically embody a character.
texts, often through a misogynistic lens— and forget that they are people who led meaningful and exciting lives. My goal was for the project to be educational, inspiring, and relevant, and make you smile or laugh along the way.
What do you miss most about inperson collaboration?
NN: The project was a great chance for us to collaborate and work on subject matter we are both passionate about. The most fun part has been learning about how these women broke barriers in a male-dominated and -controlled industry that often didn’t want them to succeed.
EV: The beauty of live art is that the collaboration is really a reaction to the actions of your partners, and that the audience is a live participant in those reactions. Dynamics, word stress, breath, even silence are not predetermined. Online, you lose the connection with your audience, looking them in the eyes, even waking them up with a high note if needed. NN: I miss feeling the energy of having other people in the room and performing together live. Singing with prerecorded tracks is less satisfying, and more difficult, than it seems. How have you used video to reach out from isolation?
Newton has been working on monologues and meditating.
EV: The Real Housewives of Classical Music idea was originated by Nicholas last fall, with the intention of doing a recital together. I thought that this topic would transfer to an online element very easily: this was an excellent opportunity to spotlight female composers in an episodic format and discuss their history in a very candid and engaging manner. It is common to read about people in history—especially when their stories are told in dull, unexciting
What’s your secret weapon for getting through this time? EV: Besides work, working out, eating healthy, focusing on hobbies outside of music (sailing, sewing, house projects), reading, limiting screen time, and keeping my dogs alive (I do this one every day). Also, Blue Bell. NN: Meditation and baking to pass the time. What are you listening to? EV: This time can be disorienting and wearisome for artists who are used to great collaboration, and I’ve been listening to artists who stir my soul: recordings of pianists Horowitz and Argerich; early albums of a young Aretha Franklin; Bach; and Connie Converse, whose album with acoustic guitar, recorded before her disappearance in 1974, is fully of haunting, beautiful songs that are especially poignant in this time of isolation and reflection. NN: I’m listening to a lot of songs and operatic ensembles. Looking forward to collaborating with more Studio members this summer! ANA MARÍA MARTÍNEZ In her Facebook videos, alternately presented in English and Spanish, the exalted soprano let fans peek at her private world as she enjoyed a morning coffee and shared her prized possession— a glass butterfly from HGO Artistic and Music Director Patrick Summers—before H G O. O R G
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Since early childhood I learned a beautiful expression in Spanish, which translates as: dress yourself in patience.
Martínez has been using time at home to study upcoming roles.
singing Puerto Rican song “Amanecer” and Cio-Cio-San’s Entrance Aria from Madame Butterfly as only she can.
and to interact virtually with the young artists at HGO and also at Rice University, where I am an Artist-in-Residence.
Cues: How have you learned to adapt to life in quarantine?
What do you miss most about in-person collaboration?
AMM: Since early childhood I learned a beautiful expression in Spanish, which translates as: dress yourself in patience. This is the most challenging adaptation many of us throughout the world have had to learn to endure in unison. I do my best to take things one day at a time, and on difficult days, one hour at a time, hoping with an open heart and mind that we will all get through this. Exercising, and specifically jogging, has also helped me cope with the pandemic.
AMM: Everything!
How have you used this time to develop your artistry? AMM: I am blessed to wear many hats in addition to being a performer. This extra time at home has allowed me to not just practice and study for upcoming roles, but to also delve deep into ways I can contribute to HGO as Artistic Advisor, 36
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How have you used video to reach out from isolation? AMM: I have used video to do some a capella performances to connect with the HGO audience in both English and Spanish, and to connect with the New York Times audience. I have also joined with local colleagues in Houston to offer a mini-concert on social media, and I am using Zoom and FaceTime to connect with young artists, to connect with my colleagues at HGO and Rice University, to speak with my colleagues all over the world to make sure that they are safe and healthy, and, of course, to stay in touch with family and friends.
What’s your secret weapon for getting through this time? AMM: My secret weapon, like many women, is that I am a mother. I know that it is important to set an example of optimism, strength, and resilience during this time because I am not just responsible for my own health and safety, but for that of my son. Having that be my paramount focus provides sustenance to my entire being and helps me get through this time. What are you listening to? AMM: I am listening to Chopin, Antônio Carlos Jobim, Jorge Drexler, and Basia. There is no way you can feel sadness listening to this varied and inspiring music.
SAFETY AND THE STAGE HGO has a not-so-secret weapon in Houston Methodist. By Catherine Matusow
B
eing a major opera company located in Houston, Texas has its challenges. Exhibit A: Hurricane Harvey, which in 2017 arrived and stayed over the city, depositing so much water that it flooded Houston Grand Opera out of its home at the Wortham Theater Center, eventually costing the company $15 million. “Harvey,” HGO Managing Director Perryn Leech says, heaviness in his voice. “We talked then about the worst thing that could possibly ever happen in an opera house—how naive and cute that seems now.” Harvey’s financial damage to HGO will be dwarfed by that of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has caused devastating performance cancellations and layoffs for the first time in company history— “unquestionably the very hardest day of my life as a leader,” says Leech—and is currently estimated to have at least a $20 million impact on the company. Of course, being a major opera company located in Houston, Texas also has its advantages. Chief among them is that just down Main Street from the Wortham lies the Texas Medical Center, home to Houston Methodist. A CRUCIAL RELATIONSHIP “We have a wonderful relationship with Houston Methodist, and we are proud that they are our official healthcare provider,” says Leech. That partnership has proven more important than ever at this moment, as specialists from the hospital are serving on the HGO Health Advisory Committee, providing crucial advice and oversight on how to protect the company’s audiences, staff, and artists while helping it devise a way to continue to bring great art to opera lovers, as safely as possible, when they need it most.
Photo courtesy of Houston Methodist
Dr. Apurva Thekdi—deputy chair of the Ear, Nose & Throat department at Houston Methodist and director of the Texas H G O. O R G
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colleagues at Houston Methodist— including Brett Brosseau, Dr. Ashley Drews, Dr. Warren Ellsworth, J. Todd Frazier, Dr. Robert Jackson, and Dr. Robert Phillips—are the perfect advisors for HGO as the company negotiates a safe return to work in the age of COVID-19. A MOVING TARGET
Dr. Apurva Thekdi’s practice focuses on the larynx and the voice box. (Photo courtesy of Dr. Thekdi and Houston Methodist.)
Voice Center—is heavily involved with the Houston Methodist Center for Performing Arts Medicine, an organization within the hospital that, he explains, “is at the intersection of the arts and medicine,” adding: “we are really the first hospital system in the world to do something that takes this approach and supports the performing arts in this way.” “My practice focuses on the larynx and the voice box,” he explains, “and in doing so I take care of many performers—especially opera singers.” HGO artists visit Dr. Thekdi for both “the 10,000mile oil change and checkup” and emergency care.
We are really the first hospital system in the world to do something that takes this approach and supports the performing arts in this way.”
“The classic is, the morning of the show, they wake up, and—my voice just doesn’t sound right. And a lot of it is being able to look and examine them, and show them that everything looks okay, hold their hand, and really just give them the confidence to go on. As you know, so much of singing and performing is confidence.” Leech calls Dr. Thekdi “absolutely brilliant,” adding, “as an opera company that doesn’t engage artist covers we really couldn’t do what we do without him.” That’s even truer now. The doctor and his
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Back in March, HGO started two groups: a board task force to oversee the revised planning needed as the company prepared for the future and, shortly thereafter, the HGO Health Advisory Committee, comprised of HGO leadership, board members, union representatives, and healthcare professionals from Houston Methodist, to negotiate and advise on a safe return to work. There is now also an internal company Return to Work task force that has nine members from across HGO who are putting together protocols—based on recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Harris County officials, plus examples from other organizations across the country—for company staff and artists returning to the Wortham’s offices and rehearsal rooms, as well as HGO’s Leeland Shop and Warehouse facilities. Extensive protocols include recommendations on everything from making a touch-free entrance to the building, to elevator and kitchen use, to practicing social distancing in an office environment. The group is also studying how HGO can safely perform this season’s wonderful slate of alternative digital programming for audiences to enjoy virtually. Most of these works will be filmed at the Wortham’s Cullen Theater, which has been converted into a production studio during this period when performing to a live audience isn’t possible. The situation is in constant flux, of course, with the release of new research, spikes in cases, and ever-changing official directives. Return to Work task force head Kristen Burke, HGO’s production manager, also serves on the Health Advisory Committee and, luckily, has plenty of experience in nimbly adapting to change.
“It’s a moving target,” she says. “Being a stage manager trained me a lot for that.” Crucially, before implementing its recommendations, the task force submits them to the HGO Health Advisory Committee, and that is where the healthcare professionals at Houston Methodist really earn their corn, weighing in with professional advice. “Thankfully,” says Burke, “we have this amazing Health Advisory Committee.” “The feedback from these professionals is critical, and they are very receptive to finding safe ways to work, but clearly if they say something is too much of a risk, we will listen to that advice and adapt,” adds Leech. “There is no point in having specialists’ advice if you’re going to ignore it.” As of this writing, with Houston a hot spot, HGO is taking the simplest, most effective course for the vast majority of its employees, which is having them work from home, while focusing its energies on how to safely produce special socially distanced performances for digital audiences. THE PATH AHEAD One of the ways both advisory groups are forging a path forward for HGO is by looking at what other performers have done—and have not done. A tragic event many have studied closely is Washington’s Skagit County Chorale outbreak, a rehearsal at which some 50 people were infected with COVID-19. Two passed away. “This was a super-spreader event,” explains Dr. Thekdi. Scientists subsequently have been able to quantify the probability of infection for the singers present—a number that is as high as 83 percent—by taking into account variables such as the number of people singing (60), the duration of the event (150 minutes), and mask use (none), while considering other factors such as the size of the room and turnover of air. While it’s not an apples-to-apples comparison, there are a number of lessons HGO and other opera companies can learn from what happened that disastrous day. As an artform, opera faces immense hurdles.
Grand-scale performances feature a large number of singers together on stage, musicians in close quarters blowing on instruments, and audiences of thousands. No solution is 100 percent foolproof, but there are effective ways to mitigate the risk, which HGO is working to do, reiterates Leech, “with very, very serious input and advice from our medical professionals.” Most of HGO’s upcoming season, of course, will be virtual; the hope is to resume live performance at the Wortham in the spring. Upcoming digital works were selected not only for their artistic variety, but also for whether they lend themselves to socially distanced performances. Each will feature a small number of singers, accompanied by perhaps a single pianist, or by pre-recorded music played by a limited number of musicians from the Houston Grand Opera Orchestra. Performances will take place inside the large Cullen Theater, outside, or in artists’ homes. Everyone present will wear masks when not performing, and artists and staff will be scrupulously tested for COVID-19 on a weekly basis—once again thanks to HGO’s partners at Houston Methodist. Plans, of course, could change at any moment. As for longer-term, bigger-picture scenarios, nothing is certain. But it is clear that going forward, it will be essential that all Houstonians do their part to combat the virus, and that our heroic medical professionals—including Dr. Thekdi’s colleagues at Houston Methodist—continue to make advances in testing, treatment, and ultimately, finding a vaccine for COVID-19. “A lot of what’s happening is going to depend on how prevalent the virus is in the community,” says Dr. Thekdi, “and also whether we have a vaccine or not. What’s really going to be the end game for us, is having some kind of vaccine.” Until that wonderful moment—and afterward—it is a huge comfort for HGO to have such an amazing and respected partner in Houston Methodist.
A Special Thank-You to the HGO Health Advisory Committee: Board of Directors Perryn Leech, Chair Christopher V. Bacon Gloria Portela Allyn Risley Jack A. Roth, M.D. Patrick Summers Representatives from Houston Methodist: Brett Brosseau, Director of Employee Health Solutions Ashley Drews, M.D., Infectious Diseases Warren A. Ellsworth IV, M.D., Plastic Surgery J. Todd Frazier, Director, Houston Methodist’s Center for Performing Arts Medicine (CPAM) Robert E. Jackson, M.D., Primary Care, Internal Medicine, C. Richard Stasney, MD Distinguished Chair in Performing Arts Medicine Robert A. Phillips, M.D., Ph.D., FACC, Executive Vice President, Chief Physician Executive & Specialty Physician Group CEO Apurva A. Thekdi, M.D., Laryngology, ENT, and Otolaryngology Company representatives: Michael Bradley, IATSE 51 representative Kristen Burke, Administrative representative Helen Gonzalez, IATSE B-184 representative Larissa Lindsay, IATSE 896 representative Tony Martinez, AGMA representative Linda Sanders, AFM representative Melissa Williford, Director of Human Resources
H O U S T O N
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This six-year multidisciplinary initiative is designed to highlight the universal spiritual themes raised in opera and to enable a wider segment of the Houston community to engage in programming that illuminates opera’s beauty, emotional power, and potential to heal. This season, inspired by mainstage production Breaking the Waves, we will offer programming that explores and celebrates through the lens of the theme faith. For our Music & Healing series, Artistic and Music Director Patrick Summers will speak with leaders who incorporate music into healing practices that impact physical, emotional and mental wellness. We continue our valued partnership with the Institute for Spirituality & Health at Texas Medical Center as part of their Regilare series in early 2021. We also are adapting our ongoing, successful programs with The Women’s Home, Houston Methodist Center for Performing Arts Medicine, and Buffalo Bayou Partnership to hybrid and online formats. Stay tuned for specific program dates! LEAD FUNDERS
Harlan and Dian Stai Lynn Wyatt The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
The Brown Foundation, Inc.
The Wortham Foundation, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Byron Dyer
Albert and Anne Chao/Ting Tsung and Wei Fong Chao Foundation Mr. John G. Turner and Mr. Jerry G. Fischer Louisa Stude Sarofim Foundation
Mathilda Cochran Claire Liu and Joseph Greenberg Elizabeth Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Donald G. Sweeney
For information on providing leadership support for Seeking the Human Spirit, please contact Greg Robertson at 713-546-0274.
HGO STUDIO
THE 2020–21 HGO STUDIO ARTISTS Join us in welcoming—and welcoming back—the talented artists in our prestigious training program.
Raven McMillon Soprano—Baltimore, MD
Elena Villalón Soprano—Austin, TX
Lindsay Kate Brown Mezzo-soprano—Waterloo, NY
HGO appearances: Rona Richards in The Impresario (digital); Peter in The Snowy Day Project (digital); Gretel in Hansel and Gretel (digital); Sister Margaretta in The Sound of Music. Firstyear HGO Studio artist.
HGO appearances: Farinelli’s Trainer in Vinkensport (digital); Amy in The Snowy Day Project (digital); Dew Fairy and Sandman in Hansel and Gretel (digital). Second-year HGO Studio artist.
HGO appearances: Gertrud in Hansel and Gretel (digital); Sister Berthe in The Sound of Music. Third-year HGO Studio artist.
Underwriter: Brenda Harvey-Traylor Raven McMillon received her bachelor of fine arts in vocal performance at Carnegie Mellon University and completed her graduate degree at the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music (CCM). Her opera credits include Adele in Die Fledermaus; the title role in Goldie B. Locks and the Three Singing Bears; Linfea in La Calisto; and Barbarina in Le nozze di Figaro. In addition to her opera credits, McMillon has also workshopped new roles such as Mary in Chiao’s The Secret Codes of Mary Bowser and Lucy in Picker’s Awakenings. Her recent roles included La Princesse in L’enfant et les sortilèges with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra and Papagena in Die Zauberflöte at CCM in the summer of 2020, which were canceled due to COVID-19.
Previously at HGO: Page in Rigoletto; Woman in selected performances of the world premiere of El Milagro del Recuerdo/The Miracle of Remembering; Inez in La favorite. Audience Choice Award winner in HGO’s 2019 Eleanor McCollum Competition Concert of Arias. Alumna of HGO’s Young Artists Vocal Academy (2018). Underwriters: Dian and Harlan Stai Elena Villalón was a Grand Finals winner of the 2019 Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions. She is a recent graduate of the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music (CCM), has been a vocal fellow at the Tanglewood Music Center, and is an alumna of HGO’s 2018 Young Artist Vocal Academy. In summer 2019 she performed Barbarina in The Marriage of Figaro at Opera Theatre of Saint Louis as a Gerdine Young Artist and returned to the Tanglewood Music Center as a soprano fellow. In summer 2020 she was set to make her Santa Fe Opera debut as First Wood Sprite in Rusalka, but this was canceled due to COVID-19.
Previously at HGO: Giovanna in Rigoletto; Second Lady in The Magic Flute (COVID-19 cancellation). Third prize winner in HGO’s 2018 Eleanor McCollum Competition Concert of Arias. Underwriters: Mr. and Mrs. James W. Crownover / Lynn and Henry Gissel This year Lindsay Kate Brown won first place in the Upper Midwest Region of The Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions and competed in the national Grand Finals. She earned an artist diploma at Rice University and made her professional debut with Tri-Cities Opera in 2014. In summer 2018 she was a young artist at Des Moines Metro Opera, where she reprised the role of Ma Moss in Copland’s The Tender Land and covered the role of Ježibaba in Dvořák’s Rusalka. In 2019 she sang the role of the Composer in Ariadne auf Naxos with Wolf Trap Opera. She was set to join The Santa Fe Opera as an Apprentice Artist in summer 2020, but that was canceled due to COVID-19.
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HGO STUDIO Underwriters: Michelle Beale and Dick Anderson/ Dr. Ellen R. Gritz and Mr. Milton D. Rosenau Jr.
Sun-Ly Pierce Mezzo-soprano—Clinton, NY HGO appearances: Hansel in Hansel and Gretel (digital); Sister Sophia in The Sound of Music. First-year HGO Studio artist. Previously at HGO: First prize winner in HGO’s 2020 Eleanor McCollum Competition Concert of Arias. Underwriters: Charlene and Chuck Nickson/Tracy Maddox and John Serpe Originally from Clinton, Chinese American mezzo-soprano Sun-Ly Pierce completed the graduate vocal arts program at the Bard College Conservatory of Music and holds a bachelor’s degree in vocal performance from the Eastman School of Music. As a winner of the Marilyn Horne Song Competition, Pierce will perform on an international recital tour with pianist Chien-Lin Lu featuring the premiere of a new song cycle by two-time Grammy Award winning composer, Jennifer Higdon. Last fall, Pierce joined the Broad Street Orchestra as Dorinda in Handel’s Acis and Galatea. She was set to return to the Music Academy of the West this summer as a 2020 Vocal Fellow, but this was canceled due to COVID-19.
Ricardo Garcia recently completed his master’s degree in voice at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music (SFCM) and holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of the Pacific. He was a studio artist at Wolf Trap Opera, where he covered Roméo in Roméo et Juliette and Giocondo in La pietra del paragone, and a voice fellow with Music Academy of the West, where he sang Jenik in The Bartered Bride. Recent roles include Lamplighter/Drunkard in The Little Prince and Fenton in Falstaff. As a first-year apprentice at Santa Fe Opera, he covered Parpignol in La bohème and sang Fenton/ Normanno in the Apprentice Scenes Night. Recently, Garcia won the San Francisco District of the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions and advanced to the region finals in Los Angeles.
Blake Denson Baritone—Paducah, KY HGO appearances: Giving Voice (digital); Suite Española (digital); Peter in Hansel and Gretel (digital); Church Councilman in Breaking the Waves. First-year HGO Studio artist.
Underwriters: Elizabeth Grimm and Jack Roth/Carolyn Levy/Gloria Portela and Dick Evans
HGO appearances: Hans Sachs’s Trainer in Vinkensport (digital); The Snowy Day Project (digital); Suite Española (digital). First-year HGO Studio artist.
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Nicholas Newton Bass-baritone—San Diego, CA HGO appearances: Daddy/Tim in The Snowy Day Project (digital); Giving Voice (digital); Terry in Breaking the Waves. Second-year HGO Studio artist. Previously at HGO: Monterone in Rigoletto; Second Soldier in Salome (COVID-19 cancellation). Third prize winner in HGO’s 2019 Eleanor McCollum Competition Concert of Arias. Alumnus of Young Artists Vocal Academy (2016).
Previously at HGO: 2018 Alumnus of HGO’s Young Artists Vocal Academy
Ricardo Garcia Tenor—Castro Valley, CA
University’s Shepherd School of Music. Denson was a Studio Artist at Wolf Trap Opera in 2018 and was set to return to Wolf Trap Opera for a second season in the summer of 2020 to perform the Commander and cover the title role in Eugene Onegin, as well as cover the role of Marcello in La bohème, but those productions were canceled due to COVID-19.
Blake Denson was a Grand Finals winner in the 2020 Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions and is a 2018 alumnus of HGO’s Young Artists Vocal Academy (YAVA). He obtained his bachelor of music in voice degree from the University of Kentucky School of Music and recently completed his master’s degree at Rice
Underwriters: Nancy and Ted Haywood/ Kathy Moore and Steve Homer/Jill and Allyn Risley Nicholas Newton’s notable performances include the roles of Count Ceprano in Rigoletto and Capulet (cover) in Roméo et Juliette with Wolf Trap Opera, Achilla in Julius Caesar at Rice University, and L’arbre and Le fauteuil in L’enfant et les sortilèges at the Aspen Music Festival. Newton was a 2019 national semifinalist in the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions and the first-place winner in the 2018 Virginia & Susan Hawk Competition. In summer 2019 he sang Monterone in Rigoletto with Opera Theatre of Saint Louis. In summer 2020 he had been set to return to Wolf Trap Opera as Colline in La bohème, but that production was canceled due to COVID-19.
HGO STUDIO cancellation); Second Armored Man in The Magic Flute (COVID-19 cancellation). Second place winner in HGO’s 2019 Eleanor McCollum Competition Concert of Arias. Underwriters: Anne and Albert Chao Cory McGee Bass—Stafford, VA HGO appearances: Billy in The Snowy Day Project (digital); Giving Voice (digital). First-year HGO Studio artist. Previously at HGO: Second prize winner in HGO’s 2020 Eleanor McCollum Competition Concert of Arias. Underwriter: Beth Madison Cory McGee recently completed his master of music degree at Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music. In summer 2019 he joined Santa Fe Opera as an apprentice artist, portraying the role of the Gardener in Ruder’s The Thirteenth Child. In 2018 he was a studio artist with Wolf Trap Opera, where he played La Voce in Mozart’s Idomeneo and Ranger Nat in David Hanlon’s children’s opera, Listen, Wilhelmina!, and was a soloist in “Bernstein at 100 – A Celebration.” Recent engagements include the title role in Le nozze di Figaro and Pandolfe in Massenet’s Cendrillon (Oberlin Opera Theater) and Leporello in Don Giovanni (Oberlin in Italy).
William Guanbo Su Bass—Beijing, China HGO appearances: Bowie Krebs in The Impresario (digital); Sadistic Sailor in Breaking the Waves. Second-year HGO Studio artist. Previously at HGO: Usher in Rigoletto; Fifth Jew in Salome (COVID-19
William Guanbo Su is a Grand Finals Winner of the 2019 Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions. He has been a Gerdine Young Artist at Opera Theatre of Saint Louis and a voice fellow at the Aspen Music Festival. He has studied German lieder at the Franz Schubert Institute in Vienna, and in 2017 won first prize in the Gerda Lissner Lieder Competition. During summer 2019 he sang Count Ceprano in Verdi’s Rigoletto with Opera Theatre of Saint Louis as a Gerdine Young Artist. He was scheduled to return to Aspen in summer 2020 to perform the role of Sarastro in The Magic Flute until it was canceled due to COVID-19.
Center, where he worked on Il barbiere di Siviglia; he returned to Aspen in the summer of 2019. He received his master of music degree in vocal coaching and accompanying from the University of Illinois. Previous engagements include the Bay View Music Festival (Carmen), where he returned in 2019 as a faculty pianist for its two-week opera and art song program. He appeared with tenor Richard Trey Smagur in a recital of Schumann’s Dichterliebe at Houston’s Jones Hall in a program presented by the Houston Symphony. In summer 2020 he served as a coaching fellow at Wolf Trap Opera.
Bin Yu Sanford Pianist/coach—Seoul, Korea HGO appearances: Coach for The Impresario (digital); The Snowy Day Project (digital); Breaking the Waves. She will also appear with HGO Studio singers in recital and other performances. Firstyear HGO Studio artist. Alex Munger Pianist/coach—New Berlin, Wisconsin HGO appearances: Coach for Vinkensport (digital); Hansel and Gretel (digital); The Sound of Music. He will also appear with HGO Studio singers in recital and other performances. Second-year HGO Studio artist. Previously at HGO: Coach for Rigoletto; La favorite; The Magic Flute (COVID-19 cancellation). He also appeared with HGO Studio singers in recital and other performances. Underwriters: Dr. Saúl and Ursula Balagura and Trey Yates Alex Munger previously served as a staff pianist at the University of Illinois, where he helped prepare La bohème and The Rape of Lucretia. In 2018 Munger was a fellowship pianist with the Aspen Opera
Underwriters: Stephanie Larsen and Lynn Des Prez/Valerie and Miguel Miro-Quesada Bin Yu Sanford has established herself as a solo pianist, vocal coach, and chamber musician. Yu Sanford earned her master of music in solo piano performance and an artist diploma in opera coaching at the University of Cincinnati CollegeConservatory of Music (CCM). Recently, she was selected as one of the vocal piano fellows at Music Academy of the West, where she worked on Jennifer Higdon’s Cold Mountain. Since 2017 Yu Sanford has served as a graduate assistant in the opera department at CCM. She was the first prize winner of the Pennsylvania MTNA Young Artist Piano Competition. In summer 2020 she was scheduled to join the Glimmerglass Festival as an apprentice pianist; however, the festival was canceled due to COVID-19. H G O. O R G
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HGO STUDIO
HGO Studio Supporters The HGO Studio receives generous support from Sylvia Barnes and Jim Trimble, Mr. Patrick Carfizzi, Marcheta Leighton-Beasley, Jerry and Sharyn Metcalf, Marsha Montemayor, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Reynolds, and Janet Sims. The HGO Studio is grateful for the in-kind support of the Texas Voice Center. The Young Artists Vocal Academy (YAVA) is generously underwritten by Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Wakefield and the HGO Guild. Additional support for YAVA is provided by Mr. Patrick Carfizzi, Gwyneth Campbell, and Dr. David and Mrs. Norine Gill.
Additional support for the Houston Grand Opera Studio is provided by the following funds within the Houston Grand Opera Endowment, Inc.: The Gordon and Mary Cain Foundation Endowment Fund
Erin Gregory Neale Endowment Fund Dr. Mary Joan Nish and Patricia Bratsas Endowed Fund John M. O’Quinn Foundation Endowed Fund Fellow
Thomas Capshaw Endowment Fund
Shell Lubricants (formerly Pennzoil– Quaker State Company) Fund
James J. Drach Endowment Fund
Mary C. Gayler Snook Endowment Fund
The Evans Family
Tenneco, Inc., Endowment Fund
Carol Lynn Lay Fletcher Endowment Fund
Weston-Cargill Endowed Fund
William Randolph Hearst Endowed Scholarship Fund Charlotte Howe Memorial Scholarship Fund Elva Lobit Opera Endowment Fund
HGO thanks Magnolia Houston for outstanding support of the HGO Studio and YAVA programs.
Marian and Speros Martel Foundation Endowment Fund
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HGOco
SEEKING TO STRENGTHEN THE SPIRIT Through a challenging period, HGOco continues to inspire Houston’s diverse and vibrant community By Carleen Graham As HGO begins year four of its six-year initiative, Seeking the Human Spirit (STHS), we understand now more than ever the role that music and the arts can play in strengthening the spirit by providing an outlet for expression and interaction with others. We will shift the focus of our STHS programming this season, concentrating on healing through music, and look forward to continued collaborations with the Houston Methodist Center for Performing Arts Medicine, The Women’s Home, SEARCH, and The Beacon, among others. Energized by the success of our virtual summer camp, Discover Opera, the HGOco team is now hard at work exploring innovative and meaningful ways to stay connected with our community throughout this period when we cannot gather in person. We are finding that our Cultivating Empathy through Music & Storytelling workshop has a vibrant new life virtually! Utilizing a combination of
STORIES OF A CITY HGOco champions two new Houston-centric operas. By Emily Wells Turn and Burn Last March, the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo was underway, and HGOco’s Rodeo Songs were about to feature at the Stars Over Texas Stage. These pieces were meant to connect rodeo with opera for the listener, and get folks excited about HGO’s 70th world premiere, Turn and Burn. While that event was canceled, we’re still full of anticipation for this new work’s debut. What does country and western have to do with the operatic works we know and love? The two aren’t as far removed from
interactive features, we are able to bring people together in meaningful ways, helping those feeling isolated or anxious and working to build comradery within organizations. While we may not be able to go into schools this fall, we are excited to film our latest Opera to Go! commission, Katie: The Strongest of the Strong, to share with HISD and other school districts. HGOco is partnering with HISD on professional development workshops for teachers on subjects including maintaining vocal health, as well as in-depth video and virtual-conferencing workshops that offer tips on teaching young voices and developing Social-Emotional Learning (SEL) skills using music and singing. Our commitment to telling stories relevant to or inspired by Houstonians continues with our Song of Houston commissions. We look forward to the premiere of Turn and Burn in February 2021, and to music
each other as they may seem. Stories of heartbreak, lost love, jealousy, and countless other common themes run between the two genres. So why not a rodeo opera? Composer Nell Shaw Cohen and librettist Megan Cohen, a sister team, interviewed athletes, volunteers, committee members, and HLSR fans to breathe life and truth into the characters in the fictional story of Turn and Burn. Their unique, feminist take on a sport and industry historically dominated by male narratives focuses on competitive barrel racer Shayla Taylor. We look forward to sharing this genre-expanding work with our audiences in the spring of 2021. A Space of Sky (working title) HGOco also has been collaborating with its community partners to tell the stories of a completely different and often invisible community. A Space of Sky (working
workshops for A Space of Sky (working title) in November and May. Though we never know quite what to expect with each new day, we are committed—now more than ever—to providing our diverse and vibrant community with programming that strengthens, educates, and inspires, so that we may all be ready to gather again in person to enjoy all the wonders that opera and music have to offer.
title), composed by Jeremy Howard Beck to a libretto by Stephanie Fleischmann, was inspired by two weeks of conversations and interviews with individuals experiencing homelessness, those who have been without homes in the past, and the dedicated staff and volunteers working to end homelessness in the city of Houston. Many people are closer to homelessness than they would like to acknowledge, and the stories shared in this new innovative opera highlight that difficult truth. Development for this project, with its unique blend of the journalistic and the artistic, is ongoing; the new work will make its premiere in March of 2022. HGOco also will continue to support and provide programming for its partner organizations and their clients who exist in this space.
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HGOCO
ALL ABOARD! Announcing the Bauer Family High School Voice Studio class of 2021 Houston Grand Opera is pleased to welcome nine students into the prestigious Bauer Family High School Voice Studio for the 2020–21 season. These young singers will receive 24 tuition-free voice lessons with esteemed voice faculty Hector Vasquez, Alicia Gianni, and Christopher Michel. Along with significant financial assistance for college auditions, students will have the opportunity to work with HGO mainstage artists in monthly masterclasses and build college-readiness skills with HGO staff throughout the 2020–21 season.
Victoria Cerda, soprano, junior at Eisenhower High School, Aldine ISD
Sam Dill, countertenor, senior at Kinder High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, HISD
Nate Edwards, baritone, senior at Tomball Memorial High School, Tomball ISD
Brianna Escamilla, mezzo, senior at Angleton High School, Angleton ISD
Nicholas Mathew, tenor, junior at Shadow Creek High School, Alvin ISD
Jackie Hickman, mezzo, junior at Kinder High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, HISD
Benjamin Mera, tenor, senior at Cypress Falls HS, CFISD
Samantha Pape, mezzo, junior at Kinder High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, HISD
Jude Watt, tenor, senior at Kingwood High School, Humble ISD
Find more information at hgo.org/hsvs.
The Bauer Family High School Voice Studio is generously sponsored by: Ruth and Ted Bauer Family Foundation C. T. Bauer Foundation Houston Grand Opera Guild Endowment Fund in memory of Ann Craft
DISCOVER OPERA CAMP HGOco’s popular summer camp series, scheduled to be held at the Wortham this past June, had to be canceled due to COVID-19. The team at HGOco quickly reimagined a virtual opera camp for teenagers ages 13 to 18, Discover Opera.
The online camp, which ran three days per week from June 16 through July 2, was designed for serious singers, opera geeks, and students who wish to pursue music in college. Forty-three campers from all four mainland time zones participated.
“We had a choice in front of us: cancel camp completely or create something new with the limited resources available and see what happens,” recalls Alisa Magallón, HGOco’s senior education manager. “In the end, what we created was an insight into our profession most students don’t see until their final years of college. We created a camp that gave scope to the world of a professional singer that goes beyond the voice, and the students responded in the best way possible: they want more.”
Campers fell into two categories. Explorers enjoyed pop-in visits from luminaries including Jamie Barton, Daniel Belcher, Arturo Chacón-Cruz, Anthony Roth Costanzo, Eun Sun Kim, Ana María Martínez, Marietta Simpson, Reginald Smith, Jr., and Patrick Summers, along with classes taught by HGOco staff and other professionals on singing, acting, stage combat, opera history and literature, and diction. Navigators partook in those activities while enjoying additional
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sessions on subjects including auditioning, resume building, selecting the right college, and both traditional and nontraditional career pathways. For the first time, eight other opera companies partnered with HGOco for Discover Opera by sending campers, promoting the opportunity, or observing activities: Arizona Opera, Atlanta Opera, Austin Opera, Central City Opera, Cincinnati Opera, Minnesota Opera, Opera Philadelphia, and Palm Beach Opera. I am so proud of how the HGOco team rallied to create Discover Opera in such a short period of time. We really had a lot of fun. A special thank-you to Shell for making our camp possible! —Carleen Graham
HGOCO Three years ago, at the outset of a new project to turn the historic life and times of iconic strongwoman and suffragette Katie Sandwina into a new children’s opera, Katie: The Strongest of the Strong, no one knew how timely this piece would be in 2020. What began as a lovely homage to the 100-year anniversary of the ratification of 19th Amendment has turned into a poignant reflection of social unrest in our country in the wake of the Me Too and Black Lives Matter movements. The opera’s themes of creating meaningful change, reframing the public’s view of marginalized peoples, and seeking a reckoning for injustice are more relevant than ever today.
A STORY OF STRENGTH Opera to Go! takes social justice on the road with a new children’s opera. By Alisa Magallón
The brilliant creative team, composer Faye Chiao and librettist Anton Dudley, connect past to present in Katie, and in doing so remind us of what truly matters: the ability to define yourself by your strengths, persevere over the judgment of others, overcome inequality, believe in yourself, and stand up for others.
their movement—follow Katie across the U.S. as she learns that strength is about lifting not only heavy objects, but also voices that need to be heard. Written for an all-female cast, the 45-minute performance subtly reminds audiences how uncommon it is for women to dominate the operatic stage. For children watching Katie, we are creating a new definition of opera that erases the misogyny ingrained in the artform for hundreds of years. Don’t miss the opportunity to see this production—and learn Katie’s story—during this time when we most need its transformative power. The world premiere of Katie: The Strongest of the Strong by Faye Chiao and Anton Dudley is set to launch a digital “tour” in October, with live performances planned starting in the spring of 2021. hgo.org/operatogo
Full of joyful moments depicting Katie Sandwina’s life on the road performing wild feats of physical strength with P.T. Barnum and his circus, the opera has a vaudevillian feel but also a modern voice. Suffragettes—and the protestors against
Lead Supporters The Elkins Foundation The William Randolph Hearst Foundation The Powell Foundation ConocoPhillips H-E-B The Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo™
HGOco Funders Grand Guarantor
Grand Underwriter
The Elkins Foundation
The Powell Foundation
Guarantors
Underwriters
The Brown Foundation, Inc.
Judy and Richard Agee
City of Houston through the Miller Advisory Board
Ruth and Ted Bauer Family Foundation
ConocoPhillips
Rosemary Malbin
William Randolph Hearst Foundation
Wells Fargo
H-E-B Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo™ Kinder Foundation The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Bill and Sara Morgan OPERA America
Supporters Adrienne Bond Nana Booker and David Lowe/ Booker · Lowe Gallery Lawrence E. Carlton, M.D., Endowment Fund
George and Mary Josephine Hamman Foundation Houston Grand Opera Guild Kinder Morgan Foundation William E. and Natoma Pyle Harvey Charitable Trust Glen Rosenbaum The activities of Houston Grand Opera are supported in part by funds provided by the City of Houston and by a grant from the Texas Commission on the Arts.
The Nexus Initiative HGOco programs, including Student Performances and HGO’s performances at Miller Outdoor Theatre, are supported through the NEXUS Initiative, which is made possible by: Anchorage Foundation of Texas BBVA The Brown Foundation, Inc. The Wortham Foundation, Inc. Shell
The Cockrell Family Fund James J. Drach Endowment Fund
Shell H G O. O R G
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Houston Grand Opera Guild welcomes the artists joining the HGO Studio for the 2020–21 season. We look forward to streaming the annual Studio Showcase on September 25, and to enjoying all the HGO Digital works on offer this fall and winter. Houston Grand Opera Guild welcomes the 2020-21 season’s Studio Artists. HGO Guild membership provides volunteer opportunities that increase your enjoyment of opera. Meet new friends in the Buddies program, join artist hospitality events, learn about opera, and more. Join the HGO Guild — call 713-546-0269, or visit www.hgoguild.org/membership for more information.
Photos provided by Houston Grand Opera
2020-21 HGO Studio Artists
BLACK LIVES MATTER. Houston Grand Opera is committed to showcasing and welcoming the incredible talents of BIPOC voices in opera, concerts, on our staff, on our board, and in our audience.
IMPRESARIOS CIRCLE
The Impresarios Circle is Houston Grand Opera’s premier donor recognition society. These vanguard supporters who provide annual support of at least $100,000 are instrumental to HGO’s success. For information, please contact Greg Robertson, chief advancement officer, at 713-546-0274 or grobertson@hgo.org. Robin Angly, Chairman
JUDY AND RICHARD AGEE HGO subscribers since 2000–01, Judy and Dick are ardent believers in the power of storytelling through words and music. They partnered with the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston Inner-City Catholic Schools to bring HGOco programs to economically disadvantaged students. Judy and Dick, the founder and chairman of Wapiti Energy LLC and Bayou Well Holdings Company LLC, are members of HGO’s Founders Council. Additionally, Judy is the chair of the HGOco Committee and Dick serves as vice chair of the HGO Finance Committee. Beyond their generous support of general operations and HGOco, they also support Concert of Arias and HGO’s mainstage productions.
JANICE BARROW Jan’s relationship with HGO extends back to the early 1980s, when she and her late husband, Dr. Thomas Barrow, first became subscribers. Jan is a member of HGO’s Laureate Society and the Founders Council, contributing to HGO’s main stage and special events. She also supports the HGO Studio, having underwritten several rising opera stars over the past 20 years. Jan’s late husband, Tom, former chairman of the HGO Board of Directors, was instrumental in the concept and construction of the Wortham Center. A lifelong lover of music, Jan is past president of the Houston Symphony and has a special affinity for Puccini and Wagner.
ANCHORAGE FOUNDATION OF TEXAS Many Houstonians of all ages and backgrounds experience opera for the first time during HGO’s free public performances at Miller Outdoor Theatre, an annual tradition made possible by the longstanding generosity of Anchorage Foundation of Texas. The Foundation has been improving the quality of life in Houston for four decades, and made a generous contribution to HGO’s Hurricane Harvey recovery fund. Marc Melcher is president of Anchorage Foundation of Texas, and his family has been involved with HGO for over 25 years.
THE BROWN FOUNDATION, INC. The Brown Foundation, Inc., established in 1951 by Herman and Margarett Root Brown and George R. and Alice Pratt Brown, has been a treasured partner of HGO since 1984. Based in Houston, the Foundation distributes funds principally for education, community service, and the arts, especially the visual and performing arts. HGO is tremendously grateful for The Brown Foundation’s leadership support, which has been critical to the company’s unprecedented growth and success in recent years. The Brown Foundation was among the lead contributors to HGO’s Hurricane Harvey recovery efforts.
ROBIN ANGLY AND MILES SMITH HGO subscribers Robin and Miles joined the Founders Council in 2010. The company is honored to have Robin on the HGO Board of Directors and as a member of HGO’s Laureate Society. The couple is very familiar with the view from the HGO stage as well—both are former singers in the HGO Chorus. Robin and Miles have been donors to HGO special events, the Young Artists Vocal Academy, and HGO’s Ring cycle. They are charter members of the Impresarios Circle and generously underwrite a mainstage production each season.
SARAH AND ERNEST BUTLER HGO subscribers for over 20 years, Ernest and Sarah are the lead underwriters for the company’s digital artistic programming for the 2020-21 season. They also have generously endowed three chairs at HGO: those of Managing Director Perryn Leech, Chorus Master Richard Bado, and HGO Chorus Concertmaster Denise Tarrant. Because supporting young artists is a particular passion for both, HGO’s Concert of Arias is one of their favorite annual events. Ernest and Sarah reside in Austin and are longtime supporters of Ballet Austin, Austin Opera, Austin Symphony Orchestra, the Texas Cultural Trust, and the University of Texas Butler School of Music, which has carried their name since 2008. Ernest and Sarah are world travelers, and they never miss an opportunity to see opera in the cities they visit.
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IMPRESARIOS CIRCLE ZANE AND BRADY CARRUTH Brady is the chief executive officer and president of Saratoga Financial Group and is a trustee of The Wortham Foundation, Inc. Zane is the President of Carson Marketing, LLC, with over 25 years of marketing experience. HGO subscribers since the 2012–13 season, Zane and Brady are members of the Founders Council for Artistic Excellence and served as the chairmen of the 2017 Opera Ball. HGO is proud to have Zane on the HGO Board of Directors. She also serves on the Marketing and Communications Committee. In 2016, HGOco presented a world premiere Storybook Opera program based on Zane’s children’s book, The World’s First Tooth Fairy...Ever. ANNE AND ALBERT CHAO Anne and Albert have been subscribers and supporters of HGO for the past two decades. While serving as president and CEO of Westlake Chemical Corporation, Albert finds time for numerous cultural causes. He is a member of the HGO Board of Directors and was the co-chair of Inspiring Performance—The Campaign for Houston Grand Opera. Over the years, the Chaos have sponsored HGO special events, the HGO Studio, HGOco’s Song of Houston, and mainstage productions. The couple has also supported the HGO Endowment through their family foundation, the Ting Tsung and Wei Fong Chao Foundation. LOUISE CHAPMAN Louise Chapman of Corpus Christi, Texas, a longtime supporter of HGO, recently joined the HGO Board of Directors. Louise’s late husband, John O. Chapman, was a south Texas agricultural businessman and philanthropist. In addition to HGO, the Chapmans have supported numerous organizations in health, education, and the arts, including Texas A & M University, the Corpus Christi Symphony, and the Art Museum of South Texas. Louise and HGO Trustee Connie Dyer have known each other since they were college roommates at The University of Texas. MATHILDA COCHRAN Mathilda is a native of New Orleans and a long-time resident of Houston. She is a retired museum educator, having served for many years as Manager of the Docent and Tour Program at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, as well as a volunteer with Taping for the Blind, Inc. She and her late husband, Mike, created the Cochran Family Professorship in Earth and Environmental Sciences to support Tulane University’s School of Science and Engineering. Mathilda currently serves as a member of the HGO Board of Directors and is chair of the HGOco Committee. She has been an HGO subscriber since the 1986-87 season.
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CONOCOPHILLIPS For over 40 years, ConocoPhillips has supported various programs at HGO, from special events to mainstage productions, including a long-standing tradition of supporting HGO’s season-opening operas. In 2009, the company gave a major multi-year grant to establish ConocoPhillips New Initiatives, a far-reaching program that allows HGOco to develop new and innovative education and community collaboration programs. Kelly Rose, general counsel and SVP, serves on the HGO Board of Directors. JIM AND MOLLY CROWNOVER Jim Crownover was the chairman of the HGO Board of Directors 2016–18. He has been a member of the board since 1987 and has served on the Executive, Governance, Development, and Finance Committees. He and his wife, Molly, have been HGO subscribers for 30 years and are members of HGO’s Laureate Society and Impresarios Circle. In 1998, Jim retired from a 30-year career with McKinsey & Company, Inc., and currently serves on the boards of Chemtura Corporation, Weingarten Realty, Republic Services, Inc., and FTI Consulting. Jim also serves and supports the Houston Ballet, Rice University, the Houston Zoo, United Way Houston, Project Grad Houston, and a number of other organizations. THE CULLEN FOUNDATION For more than three decades, The Cullen Foundation has been a vital member of the HGO family. Established in 1947, the Foundation has more than a half-century history of giving generously to education, health care, and the arts in Texas, primarily in the Greater Houston area. The Opera is very grateful for the Foundation’s longstanding leadership support of HGO’s Family and Holiday Opera Series. THE CULLEN TRUST FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS The Cullen Trust for the Performing Arts has been a lead underwriter of HGO’s mainstage season for nearly 30 years. The Trust was established from assets of The Cullen Foundation to specifically benefit Texas performing arts institutions, particularly those within the Greater Houston area. In recent years, The Cullen Trust has provided lead support for memorable productions including HGO’s Family and Holiday Opera Series, and made a leadership contribution to HGO’s Hurricane Harvey recovery fund, as well as a generous gift to HGO’s COVID-19 recovery efforts.
THE ELKINS FOUNDATION Established by Margaret Weiss Elkins and James A. Elkins Jr. in 1956, The Elkins Foundation enriches our community by supporting a wide variety of educational, healthcare, cultural, community, and religious organizations. We are honored that Jenny Elkins and her family have been part of the HGO family for more than 15 years. The Elkins Foundation allows tens of thousands of students to experience opera each season through Opera to Go! and HGOco’s other learning programs. DRS. LIZ GRIMM AND JACK ROTH HGO subscribers since the 2013–14 season, Liz and Jack have both committed themselves to cancer research and patient care through their work at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. Jack is a member of the HGO Board of Directors and serves on the HGO Studio Committee. Liz and Jack were generous underwriters of HGO’s historic, first-ever Ring cycle and lead supporters of HGO’s German repertoire, including Elektra. Additionally, Liz and Jack chaired the 2018 Opera Ball on April 14, 2018. HOUSTON GRAND OPERA ENDOWMENT, INC. Established and incorporated in 1982, the Houston Grand Opera Endowment (HGOE) is a vital financial management tool that ensures HGO has a reliable, regular source of income. Today, the Endowment contains over 50 named funds, both unrestricted and restricted, and annually distributes 5 percent of the Endowment’s average market value to HGO, making it the largest single annual funder of the Opera. HGOE leadership includes Chairman Thomas Rushing, Senior Chairman Janet Langford Carrig, and several members of the HGO Board of Directors. HOUSTON LIVESTOCK SHOW AND RODEOTM For more than 15 years, the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo™ has supported HGOco’s arts education programs, helping more than one million Houston area students experience the magic of live opera through Opera to Go!, the Student Performance Series, and Storybook Opera. A 501(c)(3) charity, the Show has committed more than $475 million to the youth of Texas since 1932. The Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo is the world’s largest livestock show and rodeo, with more than 2.4 million attendees in 2019.
HOUSTON METHODIST For over ten years, Houston Grand Opera has partnered with Houston Methodist, the official health care provider for HGO. Houston Methodist’s Center for Performing Arts Medicine (CPAM) is the only center of its kind in the country, comprising a specialized group of more than 100 physicians working collaboratively to address the specific demands placed upon performing artists. In addition to the first-rate medical care CPAM provides HGO artists, Houston Methodist also generously supports HGO’s special events and mainstage productions, is a major community partner on Seeking the Human Spirit, and is the presenter of HGO’s young professional programs. HGO is fortunate to have Dr. Warren Ellsworth and Dr. Apurva Thekdi serve as Houston Methodist’s corporate trustees. THE HUMPHREYS FOUNDATION Based in Liberty, Texas, the Humphreys Foundation has been a major underwriter of HGO’s mainstage season since 1980. Geraldine Davis Humphreys (d. 1961), a member of the pioneer Hardin family of Liberty, Texas, bequeathed her estate to the Humphreys Foundation, which was formally established in 1959. The Foundation provides support for performing arts in Texas and college scholarship funding for students in the arts. Linda Bertman, Louis Paine, and Robert Wall serve as trustees of the Humphreys Foundation. In recent years, the Foundation’s generous support has helped make possible unforgettable productions, like 2019’s holiday mariachi opera, El Milagro del Recuerdo. DONNA KAPLAN AND RICHARD LYDECKER Richard Lydecker has been an HGO subscriber and supporter for more than three decades. He is a member of the HGO Board of Directors and Impresarios Circle. Richard has great passion for opera, especially Wagner, and he and Donna were underwriters for HGO’s Ring cycle. They are also special events sponsors, supporting Opera Ball and Concert of Arias. NANCY AND RICHARD KINDER Nancy and Rich became HGO subscribers during the 2000–01 season. Rich is cofounder, chairman, and CEO of Kinder Morgan, and Nancy is a focused philanthropist whose work has positively impacted communities throughout Houston and beyond. Rich and Nancy established the Kinder Foundation in 1997 to provide impactful gifts to projects dedicated to urban green space, education, and quality-of-life issues in the Greater Houston area. HGO is indebted to the Kinders for their visionary support in areas including general operations, mainstage productions, special events, and especially HGOco, the Opera’s innovative education and community collaboration initiative.
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CLAIRE LIU AND JOSEPH GREENBERG Claire and Joe have subscribed to HGO for many seasons and are members of HGO’s Founders Council for Artistic Excellence. Claire serves on the HGO Board of Directors and is chair of the Finance Committee. She is newly retired from LyondellBassell Industries where she led the corporate finance team and was formerly a managing director with Bank of America. Joe is founder, president, and CEO of Alta Resources, L.L.C., a private company involved in the development of shale oil and gas resources in North America. Claire and Joe support many organizations, with particular emphasis on educational organizations including YES Prep and Teach for America. An avid runner, Claire has completed a marathon in all 50 states. BETH MADISON This season marks Beth’s 23rd as an HGO subscriber. HGO has had the honor of her support since 2004. Past chair of the HGO Board of Directors, she currently serves on the HGO Studio Committee, and is an active member of HGO’s Founders Council. She was the honoree at the 2017 Concert of Arias. Beth generously supports the HGO Studio, special events, and mainstage operas. Beth has been inducted into the Greater Houston Women’s Hall of Fame and serves on the University of Houston System Board of Regents. THE ROBERT AND JANICE MCNAIR FOUNDATION Janice and the late Bob McNair, longtime HGO subscribers, are well known for their incredible philanthropy and for bringing the NFL back to Houston. Bob was senior chairman of McNair Interests, a financial and real estate firm, and owner of the Houston Texans. The Robert and Janice McNair Foundation provides leadership support to Houston-area organizations supporting educational opportunities for youth. The McNair Foundation is the lead supporter of HGO’s Family and Holiday Opera Series. Bob was a former chair of the HGO Board of Directors (1995–97). M.D. ANDERSON FOUNDATION The M.D. Anderson Foundation has provided general operating support to HGO for more than 30 years. The Foundation was established in 1936 by Monroe Dunaway Anderson, whose company, Anderson, Clayton and Co., was the world’s largest cotton merchant. While the Foundation started the Texas Medical Center and was instrumental in bringing to it one of the premier cancer centers in the world, the Foundation’s trustees also looked to improve the wellness of communities through the arts. HGO is privileged to have such a longstanding and committed partner in enhancing the quality of life for all Houstonians.
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THE MELLON FOUNDATION Established in 1969, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation supports a wide range of FOUNDATION initiatives to strengthen the humanities, arts, higher education, and cultural heritage. The driving force behind so many of HGO’s new commissions, The Mellon Foundation’s longstanding support of HGO helps us tell relevant new stories and add to the operatic repertoire by developing new works, like Joel Thompson and Andrea Davis Pinkney’s The Snowy Day. THE ANDREW W.
MELLON
MILLER THEATRE ADVISORY BOARD The Miller Theatre Advisory Board (MTAB), appointed by Houston’s mayor and confirmed by the City Council, acts as a steward of public and private funds to provide professional-caliber performances free to the public at the Miller Outdoor Theatre for the cultural enrichment of Houston’s diverse communities and visitors to the city. HGO’s partnership with MTAB extends over six decades, making great opera accessible to thousands of Houstonians each year through live mainstage and Opera to Go! performances at Miller Theatre. June Deadrick is an HGO trustee representing the Miller Theatre Advisory Board. SID MOORHEAD Sid Moorhead is the owner of Moorhead’s Blueberry Farm in Conroe, Texas, a family business that started as his father’s hobby over 40 years ago. After working for several years as a computer analyst, Sid left the corporate world to run the farm. He’s been an opera lover since he was in college, and he joined the Opera as an HGO Trustee in 2014. Now a member of the HGO Board of Directors, Sid enjoys traveling to experience opera around the world on our HGO Patron trips. We’re thrilled to have Sid as a valued member of our HGO family. SARA AND BILL MORGAN Sara and Bill have been supporting HGO since 2002. Sara is a co-founder of the Houston Center for Contemporary Craft, where she currently serves on the board. Bill is a co-founder of the Kinder Morgan companies and the retired vice chairman and president of Kinder Morgan, Inc., and Kinder Morgan Energy Partners, LP. The Morgans support HGOco, HGO’s special events, and mainstage productions, including the Holiday Opera Series. HGO is thrilled to have Sara serve on the HGO Board of Directors and as a member and past chair of the HGOco Committee.
NOVUM ENERGY Founded in 2011 in Panama, Novum Energy is an international physical oil supply and trading company committed to industry excellence in delivery standards and customer service. Founder and President Alfredo Vilas serves on the HGO Board of Directors and has over 20 years of experience and a passion for service to the community through cultural, recreational, and philanthropic work. Novum Energy is supporting HGO’s new production of The Sound of Music next spring.
The Powell Foundation
DIAN AND HARLAN STAI Harlan, a member of the HGO Board of Directors, and Dian are charter members of HGO’s Founders Council for Artistic Excellence, and their leadership support includes mainstage productions, the HGO Studio, the HGO Endowment, and special events. The Stais have also sponsored HGO Studio artists and they host annual recitals featuring HGO Studio artists at Mansefeldt, their renowned Fredericksburg ranch. HGO was privileged to recognize Dian and Harlan as the honorees of Opening Night 2008 and the 2014 Concert of Arias.
THE POWELL FOUNDATION Founded in 1967 by Houston-based attorney Ben H. Powell and his wife, Kitty King Powell, The Powell Foundation improves the lives of residents of Harris, Travis, and Walker counties through charitable work in the fields of education, conservation, human services, and the arts. In addition to its longstanding support of HGOco’s impactful student programs, The Powell Foundation was among the lead contributors to HGO’s Hurricane Harvey recovery efforts and has made a generous contribution toward HGO’s COVID-19 recovery.
TENENBAUM JEWELERS HGO is thrilled to count Tenenbaum Jewelers as the preferred jeweler of Houston Grand Opera. For 40 years, Tenenbaum has been Houston’s premier destination for unique, rare, and collectible estate jewelry with styles ranging from antique to vintage to contemporary. Owners Tony Bradfield and Kevin Black are familiar faces at HGO performances, recitals, and events. From donating fabulous one-of-a-kind auction items to generously supporting our mainstage opera season and special events, the Tenenbaum team helps HGO sparkle and shine.
SCHLUMBERGER Schlumberger is a leading corporate contributor to HGO, supporting the main stage and a wide range of special projects over nearly 20 years. Schlumberger’s leadership gift was integral to launching HGO’s ongoing affordability program, the NEXUS Initiative, in 2007—since then, NEXUS has made great opera accessible to more than 275,000 people. HGO is honored to count Schlumberger among its most dedicated corporate supporters. Fred Dyen, Cameron Group HR director, serves on the HGO Board of Directors.
JOHN G. TURNER & JERRY G. FISCHER John and Jerry, based in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, travel around the world to experience the best that opera has to offer. HGO subscribers and donors for over a decade, the couple’s leadership support of Wagner’s Ring cycle (2014–17) was the largest gift ever made to HGO for a single production. John, a shareholder at Turner Industries Group, is a member of the HGO Board of Directors and past chair of the HGO Studio Committee. Jerry is a board member of Baton Rouge Symphony Orchestra. In recent years, John and Jerry have supported HGO mainstage productions, the HGO Studio, and special events. They are members of the Founders Council for Artistic Excellence, and John is a member of HGO’s Laureate Society.
SHELL Shell is a leader in the Houston arts community, supporting HGO for over 40 years. Shell’s leadership support makes opera more accessible to everyone through the NEXUS Initiative for Affordability and inspires young minds with STEM-aligned arts education opportunities like our annual Opera Camps. Shell was also a major supporter of HGO’s Hurricane Harvey recovery. HGO is honored to have De la Rey Venter, executive vice president of integrated gas ventures, represent Shell on our board of directors, as well as HGO Trustee Christos Angelides, external relations general manager of integrated gas ventures.
VINSON & ELKINS LLP HGO has been privileged to have the support of international law firm Vinson & Elkins LLP for nearly three decades. For more than 100 years, Vinson & Elkins LLP has been deeply committed to empowering the communities in which it serves. It has enriched the cultural vibrancy of Houston by supporting HGO through in-kind legal services and contributions to special events and mainstage productions, including this season’s Live from The Cullen recital featuring Reginald Smith Jr. The Opera is honored to have two Vinson & Elkins LLP partners serve on its board of directors: from left, Chris Bacon and Glen A. Rosenbaum. H G O. O R G
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IMPRESARIOS CIRCLE
MARGARET ALKEK WILLIAMS Margaret, a longtime singer, possesses a deep affinity for all music, and especially opera, supporting HGO for over 30 years. Currently, Margaret continues her parents’ legacy as chairman of their foundation, where her son Charles A. Williams serves as president. HGO is humbled by Margaret’s incredible generosity and dedication to the company, both as an individual donor and through her family’s foundation. She has endowed the Margaret Alkek Williams Chair, held by HGO Artistic and Music Director Patrick Summers, and is a member of HGO’s Laureate Society. A valued member of the HGO Board of Directors, Margaret was the honoree of the 2009 Opera Ball and chairman of the 2014 Ball, and she generously chaired the 2018 Hurricane Harvey benefit Concert HGO and Plácido: Coming Home! THE WORTHAM FOUNDATION, INC. In the 1980s, the Wortham Foundation contributed $20 million to lead the capital campaign for the Wortham Theater Center, guided by businessman Gus S. Wortham’s early recognition of the vital role of the arts in making Houston an appealing place to live and work. During their lifetimes, Gus and his wife, Lyndall, were dedicated to improving the lives of Houstonians. The Foundation continues to support the Opera through the Wortham Foundation Permanent Endowment and generous annual operating support. This leadership support has been vital to HGO’s growth and commitment to excellence. The Wortham Foundation’s support of HGO’s Hurricane Harvey recovery helped to bring the company back home, and we are deeply grateful. LYNN WYATT Lynn’s generosity touches every aspect of HGO. She is a Lifetime Trustee of HGO and serves as the vice chairman of the HGO Board of Directors. She serves as vice-chair of HGO’s Governance Committee and chaired HGO’s Golden Jubilee Gala in 2005. Oscar Wyatt endowed The Lynn Wyatt Great Artist Fund in 2010, honoring Lynn’s service to the company and dedication to bringing the world’s best operatic artists to HGO, and she was the honoree at the 2010 Opera Ball. Lynn and Oscar have been lead supporters of a number of HGO productions and programs, including the multiyear company-wide initiative Seeking the Human Spirit.
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SPECI AL E D I T ION 2 0 2 0
Your one-stop destination for great opera, recitals, and concerts at home. Stream the entire HGO Digital season through the HGO website, or watch it on your TV through Marquee TV! Find instructions for downloading Marquee TV and detailed information about each program in the 2020–21 HGO Digital season. From the Wortham, straight to your living room!
Don’t Miss
Concert of Arias 2021
Concert d of Arias The live finals of the 33rd annual Eleanor McCollum Competition for Young Singers Stream It Live!
7 p.m. February 5, 2021 Sid Moorhead, event chairman HGO.org/COA
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CALL TODAY TO SCHEDULE YOUR PERSONAL TOUR Introuctory Pricing Ends June 30th!
5020 Kelvin Dr. | Houston, TX 77005 www.villagesouthampton.com H G O. O R G
57
ANNUAL SUPPORT
Members of Houston Grand Opera’s Patrons Circle support the opera at a level of $5,000 or more, thereby making possible the incredible work of HGO. Members of the Society are entitled to many benefits at the Opera, including complimentary valet parking, Masterson Green Room privileges during performance intermissions, personalized ticket service, two tickets to all open dress rehearsals, Opera Guild membership, a discount on Opera Guild Boutique purchases, and more. HGO gratefully recognizes Patrons. For information on joining the Patrons Circle, please contact Kelly Nicholls at 713-980-8698 or knicholls@hgo.org. David Gill, Chairman
TRUSTEE—$10,000 OR MORE
Mrs. Geraldine C. Gill
Mary Roediger and Ralph Herbert
Mr. and Mrs. Philip A. Bahr
Mr. Wesley Goble
Mrs. Henry K. Roos
Mr. and Mrs. Frank N. Barnes
Sandy and Lee Godfrey
Kelly and David Rose
Blanche S. and Robert C. Bast Jr., MD
Adelma S. Graham
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Rushing
Mr. and Mrs. Martin D. Beirne
Mr. and Mrs. Melvyn Hetzel
Mr. and Ms. Manolo Sanchez
Philip and Larissa Bither
Mr. and Ms. Nicholas Greenan
Judy Sauer
Dr. Michael and Susan Bloome
Lee M. Huber
Ms. Sue Schwartz
Dr. Janet Bruner
Mr. Mark F. Jacobs and Ms. Shae Keefe
Mrs. Helen P. Shaffer
Mollie and Wayne Brunetti
Mr. A. V. Jones Jr.
Ms. Janet Sims
Bill and Melinda Brunger
Mr. Jon Rex Jones
Mr. Jeffrey Stocks
Mr. Tom Burley and Mr. Michael Arellano
Ann and Stephen Kaufman
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Burleson
Ann and Sam Koster
Dr. Laura E. Sulak and Dr. Richard W. Brown
Ms. Gwyneth Campbell and Mr. Joseph L. Campbell
Elizabeth and Bill Kroger
Mr. Minas and Dr. Jennifer Tektiridis
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Langenstein
Dr. Barbara Tilley
Jess and Patricia Carnes
Stephanie Larsen
Dr. Peter Chang and Hon. Theresa Chang
Marcheta Leighton-Beasley
Mr. Scott B. Ulrich and Mr. Ernest A. Trevino
Ms. Patsy Chappelear
Dr. and Mrs. Ernst Leiss
Mr. William E. Colburn
Rochelle and Max Levit
Dr. Jessica Suarez-Colen and Dr. John Colen
Mrs. Marilyn Lummis
Julie and Bert Cornelison Mr. Robert L. Cook and Mrs. Giovanna Imperia
Ms. Laura Marsh Mr. and Mrs. D. Patrick McCelvey Jan and Nathan Meehan
Mr. Efraín Z. Corzo and Mr. Andrew Bowen
Amy and Mark Melton
Mr. and Mrs. Claude J. Davenport III
Ginger and Hugh Menown
Mr. and Mrs. Joshua Davidson
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Metts
Ms. Anna M. Dean
Dr. and Mrs. William E. Mitch
Dr. Elaine Decanio
Marsha L. Montemayor
Anna and Brad Eastman
Erik B. Nelson and Terry R. Brandhorst
C.C. and Duke Ensell
Beverly and Staman Ogilvie
Mr. Perry Ewing
Ms. Jeanne M. Perdue
Carol Lay Fletcher
Gloria M. Portela and Richard E. Evans
Ms. Patricia B. Freeman and Mr. Bruce Patterson
Ms. Lynn Des Prez
S. Scott and Gina Gaille
Ms. Katherine Reynolds
Dr. and Mrs. Ronald Galfione
Mr. Serge G. Ribot
Gerard and Christine Gaynor
Mr. and Ms. Walter Ritchie
Dr. and Mrs. David P. Gill
Ed and Janet Rinehart
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SPECI AL E D I T ION 2 0 2 0
Dr. Angela Rechichi-Apollo
James M. Trimble and Sylvia Barnes Mr. and Mrs. Jess B. Tutor John C. Tweed Mr. Georgios Varsamis Mr. and Mrs. James M. Vaughn Jr. Marietta Voglis Mr. and Mrs. K.C. Weiner Ms. Debra Witges Mr. and Mrs. C. Clifford Wright, Jr. Alan and Frank York Mr. and Mrs. David P. Young Mr. Hugh Zhang and Ms. Lulu Tan Nina and Michael Zilkha YOUNG TRUSTEE—$5,000 OR MORE Mr. and Mrs. Bryan W. Bagley Emily Bivona and Ryan Manser Mr. Wirt Blaffer and Ms. Nina Delano Mr. Ryan Boehner Carrie and Sverre Brandsberg-Dahl Ms. Kiana K. Caleb and Mr. Troy L. Sullivan Mr. Anthony Chapman
ANNUAL SUPPORT Drs. Rachel and Warren A. Ellsworth IV
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Ardell
Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Davis
Michelle Klinger and Ru Flanagan
Bill Arning and Mark McCray
Dr. and Mrs. Roupen Dekmezian
Mr. Claudio Gutierrez
Paul and Maida Asofsky
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Hanno
Mr. Neely Atkinson
Dr. Thomas S. DeNapoli and Mr. Mark Walker
Sara and Gabriel Loperena
Christopher Bacon and Craig Miller
Ms. Elisabeth DeWitts
Dr. Nico Roussel and Ms. Teresa Procter
Kate Baker
Mr. and Mrs. Tracy L. Dieterich
Drs. Vivek and Ishwaria Subbiah
Nancy and Paul Balmert
Mr. and Mrs. John DiFilippo Jr.
Ms. Katherine Thomasson and Mr. Michael Talbot
Mr. William Bartlett
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Dooley
Mr. and Mrs. James Becker
Dr. and Mrs. Giulio Draetta
Dr. James A. Belli and Dr. Patricia Eifel
Mr. John Ellis Drewer
Drs. Robert S. and Nancy Benjamin
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Dubrowski
Dr. and Mrs. Joel M. Berman
Dr. David Edelstein and Mrs. Julie Riggins
Drs. Henry and Louise Bethea
Kellie Elder and David Halbert
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley C. Beyer
Mrs. James A. Elkins III
Dr. Dennis Berthold and Dr. Pamela Matthews, College Station, TX
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen D. Bickel
Parrish N. Erwin Jr.
Dr. Joan Hacken Bitar
Mr. and Mrs. J. Thomas Eubank
Mr. Richard E. Boner and Ms. Susan Pryor, Austin, TX
Dr. Jerry L. Bohannon
Ms. Thea M. Fabio and Mr. Richard Merrill
Dr. and Mrs. Jules H. Bohnn
Mary Ann and Larry Faulkner
Ms. Adrienne Bond
Ms. Ursula Felmet
Mr. Jeffery Bosworth and Mr. Timothy Bammel
Nanette Finger
Walt and Nancy Bratic
Kevin and Debbie Fogarty
Mr. Al Brende and Mrs. Ann Bayless
Wanda and Roger Fowler
Mr. Chester Brooke and Dr. Nancy Poindexter
Mr. John E. Frantz
Mr. Stephen Brossart and Mr. Gerrod George
Drs. Daniel and Jean Freeman
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander van Veldhoven NATIONAL TRUSTEE—$5,000 OR MORE Ms. Jacqueline S. Akins, San Antonio, TX Jorge Bernal and Andrea Maher, Bogota, Colombia
Sarah and Ernest Butler, Austin, TX Dr. Thomas S. DeNapoli and Mr. Mark Walker, San Antonio, TX Brian Hencey and Charles Ross Jr., Austin, TX Mr. Charles Hendrix, Rancho Mirage, CA Edward and Patricia Hymson, San Francisco, CA Mrs. Judy Kay, DeRidder, LA Mr. and Mrs. Blair Labatt, San Antonio, TX Mrs. Sharon G. Ley and Mr. Robert F. Lietzow, Austin, TX Ms. Wanda A. Reynolds, Austin, TX
Mr. Matthew Brown Ms. Sonja Bruzauskas and Mr. Houston Haymon
Dennis and Linda Fish
Ms. Caroline Freeman Mr. and Mrs. William B. Freeman Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Scott J. Garber Dr. Alice Gates and Dr. Wayne Wilner
Mr. and Mrs. Lester P. Burgess
Dr. Layne O. Gentry
Chuck and Michelle Ritter, Kansas City, MO
Mrs. Carol Butler
Dr. Eugenia C. George
Dr. Sid Roberts and Mrs.Catherine Roberts, Lufkin, TX
Drs. Ian and Patricia Butler Mr. Patrick Carfizzi
Nancy Glass, M.D., and John Belmont, M.D.
James and Nathanael Rosenheim, College Station, TX
Drs. Susan and Dennis Carlyle
Mr. Thomas K. Golden and Mrs. Susan Baker Golden
Mr. and Mrs. Juan M. Carreon
Dr. and Mrs. Clark D. Terrell, Boerne, TX
Mary Frances Gonzalez
Mrs. John R. Castano
Dr. and Mrs. David Y. Graham
Ms. Nada Chandler
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Greaves
Mr. Robert N. Chanon
Joyce Z. Greenberg
Damon Chargois
Dr. and Mrs. Stephen B. Greenberg
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Christiansen
Mr. W. A. Grieves
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Clarke
Ms. Dianne L. Gross
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Collier
Ms. Gabriella M. Guerra
Ms. Donna Collins
William F. Guest
Dr. Nancy I. Cook
Mr. Sten L. Gustafson and Ms. Sofia Adrogué
PATRONS CIRCLE—$5,000 OR MORE Ms. Jacquelyn M. Abbott Mr. and Mrs. W. Kendall Adam Ms. Jacqueline S. Akins Mrs. Nancy C. Allen Mr. William J. Altenloh and Dr. Susan Saurage-Altenloh Chris and Michelle Angelides
Shelly Cyprus
H G O. O R G
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ANNUAL SUPPORT Ms. Zahava Haenosh
Dr. Mike Lemanski
Mrs. Gerald Rauch
Ms. Barbara D. Hagood
David and Lori LePori
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Halsey
Dr. and Mrs. Olivier Lhemann
Dr. David Reininger and Ms. Laura Lee Jones
Mrs. Mary Hankey
Mrs. Sylvia Lohkamp and Mr. Tucker Coughlen
Carol F. Relihan
Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Lynn
Mr. Robert Richter Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. A. John Harper III
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mach
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory S. Robertson
Dr. Linda L. Hart
Ms. Michele Malloy
Drs. Alejandro and Lynn Rosas
Brian Hencey and Charles Ross Jr.
Ms. Diane M. Marcinek
Dr. and Mrs. Franklin Rose
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Hewell
Renee Margolin
Mrs. Shirley Rose
Pam Higgins and Tom Jones
Mary Marquardsen
Ms. Jill Schaar and Mr. George Caflisch
Mrs. Ann G. Hightower
Ms. Anastasia Marshall
Ms. Jo Ann W. Schaffer
Deborah and Michael Hirsch
Mrs. Richard P. Schissler Jr.
Ms. Janis Hodgson
Mr. R. Davis Maxey and Ms. AnnMarie Johnson
Gary Hollingsworth and Ken Hyde
Dr. and Mrs. Malcolm Mazow
Dr. Holly Holmes
Mrs. Dorothy McCaine
Dr. Patricia Holmes
Wynn and Shawna McCloskey
Alan and Ellen Holzberg
Ms. Marion Andrus McCollam
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Homier
Mrs. Sarah McCollum
Dr. and Mrs. Gabriel N. Hortobagyi
Gillian and Michael McCord
Robert and Kitty Hunter
Mimi Reed McGehee
Dr. Alan J. Hurwitz
Dr. Alice R. McPherson
Edward and Patricia Hymson
Keith and Elizabeth McPherson
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jacob
Mrs. Anne C. Mendelsohn
Mr. and Mrs. Malick Jamal
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Menzie
Ms. Joan Jeffrey
Jerry and Sharyn Metcalf
Mr. and Mrs. James K. Jennings Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Misamore
Mr. and Mrs. Basil Joffe
Ms. Celia Morgan
Mr. Raymond Jones and Mr. Paras Trivedi
Mrs. Bobbie Newman
Sultana Kaldis
Drs. John and Karen Oldham
Ms. Linda Katz
Ms. Claire O’Malley
Mr. Frank Harmon III and The Honorable Melinda Harmon
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Kauffman
Mr. Roberto Orlandi
The Honorable and Mrs. Stuart S. Kay, Jr.
Suzanne Page-Pryde and Arthur Pryde
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Rice Kelly
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Pancherz
Mr. Anthony K.
Mrs. Maria Papadopoulos
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Kelly
Mr. and Ms. Carl Pascoe
Ms. Nancy J. Kerby
Susan and Ward Pennebaker
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kidd
Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. Pinson
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Kolb
Mr. and Mrs. Elvin B. Pippert Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Lary R. Kupor
Mr. Robert Pitre
Mr. and Mrs. Blair Labatt
Susie and Jim Pokorski
Mr. and Mrs. Randall B. Lake
Ms. Penny Prater
Dr. Helen W. Lane
Lou and Joan Pucher
Caroline and Perryn Leech
Dr. Paul B. Radelat and Ms. Irina Grant
Mr. Richard Leibman
Ms. Judith Raines
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SPECI AL E D I T ION 2 0 2 0
Ms. Wanda A. Reynolds
Mr. Vance Senter and Mrs. Jane Senter Mr. Raul Sepulveda Dr. Paul E. Setzler Mr. Paul Shaw and Mr. Roger Woest Diana Strassmann and Jeffrey Smisek Dr. and Mrs. C. Richard Stasney Mr. Per A. Staunstrup and Ms. Joan Bruun Richard P. Steele and Mary McKerall Mrs. Sue Stocks Kathy and Richard Stout Dr. and Mrs. Demetrio Tagaropulos Mr. Leon Thomsen and Mrs. Pat Thomsen Ms. Susan L. Thompson Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tobias Dr. and Mrs. Karl Tornyos Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Trainer Jr. Mrs. Ann Gordon Trammell Dr. Elizabeth Travis and Mr. Jerry Hyde Mr. James Trippett Mr. and Mrs. John Untereker Birgitt van Wijk Ms. Barbara Van Postman Mr. Veer Vasishta Mr. and Mrs. Larry Veselka Mr. Greg Vetter and Ms. Irene Kosturakis Ms. Marie-Louise S. Viada Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Wakefield Geoffrey Walker and Ann Kennedy Darlene Walker and Reagan Redman Dean Walker Mr. and Mrs. M. C. “Bill” Walker III Mary Lee and Jim Wallace
ANNUAL SUPPORT Mr. and Mrs. John Wallace
Ms. Joan Sanborn
Diane and Raymond Wallace
Adel and Jason Sander
Robert and Nancy Shivers, San Antonio, TX
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Watkins
Ms. Emily Schreiber
Ms. Alice Simkins, San Antonio, TX
Ms. Pippa Wiley
Kenneth and Deborah Scianna
Ms. Jane L. Williams
Mr. Nicholas Shea
Dr. David N. Tobey and Dr. Michelle Berger, Austin, TX
Loretta and Lawrence Williams
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron J. Stai
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Williams
Dr. Pavlina Suchanova
Dr. Courtney Williams
Mr. and Mrs. Hector Torres
Nancy and Sid Williams
Andrea Ward and David Trahan
Margaret and Alan Weinblatt, San Antonio, TX
Dr. Randall Wolf
Anonymous
Mr. Donald Wertz, Austin, TX
Mr. and Mrs. David S. Wolff Mr. Peter Wood and Ms. Silvia Salle Mr. and Mrs. John W. Wright Ken and Carolyn Yeats Drs. Edward Yeh and Hui-Ming Chang
NATIONAL PATRONS— $2,500 OR MORE
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Tucker, Bryan, TX Mr. Jerre van den Bent, Dallas, TX Mrs. Rons Voogt, Huntsville, TX
Valerie and David Woodcock, College Station, TX
Ms. Cynthia Akagi and Mr. Tom Akagi, Madison, WI
John L. Zipprich II
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Allison, Lake Charles, LA
5 Anonymous
Tom and Kay Brahaney, Midland, TX Dr. Bernd U. Budelmann, Galveston, TX
YOUNG PATRONS—$2,500 OR MORE Chris Armstrong and Laura Schaffer Ms. Megan Brown Ms. Elise Bungo
Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Cloudman III, Boulder, CO Mr. James M. Duerr and Dr. Pamela Hall, San Antonio, TX
Mr. Sholto Davidson
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Evans, Coldspring, TX
Ms. Rebecca Ferrell
Mr. Jack Firestone, Miami, FL
Mr. Ryan Firth and Dr. Alinda Gary
Mrs. Ronald P. Fischer, Chagrin Falls, OH
Meredith and Joseph Gomez
Dr. and Mrs. Marvin A. Fishman, Angel Fire, NM
Ms. Kathleen Henry Ms. Tami Hiraoka Lady Kimbrell and Mr. Joshua Allison Miss Ellen Liu and Miss Ilana Walder-Biesanz Kirby and David Lodholz Rachel and Daniel MacLeod Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Mehrens Chadd Mikulin and Amanda Lenertz Ms. Constanza Montanez Adam and Tina Outland Lauren Randle Mr. Arturo Muñoz Holguin and Ms. Jessica Roper
Michael Freeburger and Matilda Perkins, Fair Oaks Ranch, TX Dr. Wm. David George, Austin, TX Mr. Raymond Goldstein and Ms. Jane T. Welch, San Antonio, TX Mr. Kyle Kerr, Irving, TX Jeff and Gail Kodosky, Austin, TX Dr. and Mrs. Morton Leonard Jr., Galveston, TX Mr. George Loudder and Dr. Martha Loudder, College Station, TX Cathleen C. and Jerome M. Loving, Bryan, TX Mr. John P. Muth, Wimberley, TX
Dr. John Papadopoulos
Dr. James F. Nelson, San Antonio, TX
Adrienn L. Parsons
John and Elizabeth Nielsen-Gammon, College Station, TX
Ms. Darlene Perales Drs. Mauricio Perillo and Lujan Stasevicius Jennifer Salcich
Mrs. Carolyn A. Seale and Mrs. Carol Lee Klose, San Antonio, TX Mr. and Mrs. Victor E. Serrato, Pharr, TX H G O. O R G
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ANNUAL SUPPORT
HGO Donors Houston Grand Opera appreciates all individuals who contribute to the company’s success. Support in any amount is received most gratefully. Our donors share a dedication to supporting the arts in our community, and the generosity of these individuals makes it possible for HGO to sustain world-class opera in the Houston area. For information on becoming a Houston Grand Opera donor, please contact Kelly Nicholls at 713-980-8688 or knicholls@hgo.org. ASSOCIATE PATRONS— $2,000 OR MORE
CONTRIBUTING FELLOWS— $1,000 OR MORE
Dr. John P. Anderson
Ms. Cecilia Aguilar
Dr. James E. Griffin III and Dr. Margo Denke
Ms. Dorothy B. Autin
Mr. and Mrs. Neil Ken Alexander
John Hearn
Dr. Carlos Bacino
Joan and Stanford Alexander
Mr. and Mrs. David T. Hedges, Jr.
Grace and Mark Baker
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Barbe
Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Henderek
Mr. Bob F. Boydston
Mr. and Mrs. Arturo Barragan
Dr. Ralph J. Herring
Kenneth T. Chin
Mrs. Deborah S. Bautch
Dr. Janice L. Hewitt
Vicki Clepper
Mr. and Mrs. V. G. Beghini
Mr. Bob Heyl
Mr. Jerry Conry
Alan and Sallymoon Benz
Dr. Sallie T. Hightower
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur G. Dauber
Mrs. John E. Bixby
Kay and Michael W. Hilliard
Andrew Davis and Corey Tu
Dr. Zach Blailock Jr.
Mr. Tim Hilt
June Deadrick
Drs. David H. and Joanne Boldt
Mr. and Mrs. Clay Hoster
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Dean
Mr. James L. Boockholdt
Mr. Francisco J. Izaguirre
Mr. and Mrs. Blake Eskew
Jim and Susan Boone
Lynda and Frank Kelly
Marion and Gary Glober
Ms. Zu Dell Broadwater
Mrs. Judy Koehl
Mrs. Gwynn F. Gorsuch
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brodhead
Ms. Rachel Le and Mr. Lam Nguy
Ms. Janet Graves
Mr. and Mrs. James Brugman
Ms. Nadine Littles
Mr. and Mrs. Dewuse Guyton
Mr. Paul D. Camp
Mr. Robert Lorio
Dr. and Mrs. Carlos R. Hamilton, Jr.
Dorothy E. F. Caram, Ed.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Y. Lui
Ms. Rebecca Hansen
Mr. and Mrs. Thierry Caruso
Ms. Lynn Luster
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Kaplan
Dr. Claude Cech
Ms. Nancy Manderson
Mr. Peter Manis and Ms. Susan Richman
Dr. Beth Chambers
Neal Manne and Nancy McGregor
Mr. James L. McNett
Ms. Mary Clark
Dr. and Mrs. Moshe H. Maor
Kay and Larry Medford
Mark and Juliet Markovich
Hal and Terry Meyer
Dr. Lorraine Cornwell and Mr. Matthew Antonelli
Mrs. Eileen Moore
Mike and Gayle DeGeurin
Nancy Martin
John Newton and Peggy Cramer
Peggy DeMarsh
Danita Maseles
Mr. Wilton Pate
Mr. Frederick S. Dueser
Ms. Molly Mayfield
Mrs. Ulrike Peto
Mr. Harold J. Eisenman and Ms. Jolene Friedman
Mrs. Mollie E. McBride
Ms. Elizabeth Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Irving Pozmantier Ramon and Chula Sanchez Christopher B. Schulze, M.D. Ms. Karen MacAdam Somer Nancy Thompson Mr. and Mrs. Alton L. Warren 2 Anonymous 62
SPECI AL E D I T ION 2 0 2 0
Ms. Ann L. Faget Dr. Jack M. Fletcher Monica Fulton Lucy Gebhart Mrs. Wendy Germani Susan Giannatonio and Bruce Winquist Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Girouard Rhoda Goldberg
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gott
Mr. and Mrs. H. Woods Martin
Dr. Mary Fae McKay Ms. Maryellen McSweeney Christianne Melanson and Durwin Sharp Mrs. Theresa L. Meyer Mr. Douglas D. Miller Dr. and Mrs. Stanley Milstein Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Moynier Mr. and Mrs. Marvin H. Mueller
ANNUAL SUPPORT Mr. and Mrs. Chad Muir
Ms. Joan M. Shack
Mrs. Paloma Urbano
Mr. Dean Niemeyer and Dr. Marlowe D. Niemeyer
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shearouse
Dr. and Mrs. Lieven J. Van Riet
Mr. Nick Shumway and Mr. Robert Mayott
Andrea Ward and David Trahan
Mr. Eugene Nosal
Mr. Herbert Simons
Mr. Jesse Weir
Geoffry H. Oshman
Jan Simpson
J. M. Weltzien
Ms. Jo L. Papadakis
Mr. and Mrs. Louis. S. Sklar
Dr. Michael White and Dr. Claire Hoppenot
Dr. and Mrs. Richard B. Pesikoff
Len Slussler
Ms. Susan Trammell Whitfield
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Phillips
Mrs. Roberta Smiley
LaVerne and Philip Wiles
Dr. and Mrs. Florante A. Quiocho
Mr. and Mrs. George Sneed
Mrs. Dolores Wilkenfeld
Ms. Judy Ramsey
Virginia Snider and Michael Osborne
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Wise
Mr. and Mrs. William Rawl
Ms. Linda F. Sonier
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Woodell II
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Reynolds
Mr. Brian Speck
Ms. Pinar Oya Yilmaz
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Steve Rhea
Mr. and Mrs. George Stark
6 Anonymous
Mr. William K. Rice
Ms. Lori Summa
Mrs. Carol Ritter
Mr. and Mrs. Willie Swisher
Mr. Jorge Rodriguez and Mrs. Beatriz Nino-Rodriguez
Mr. and Mrs. Winston Talbert
Dr. Roger D. Rossen Mansel and Brenda Rubenstein Mr. and Mrs. Eliseo Salazar Mr. Alan Schmitz
Mr. Kiyoshi Tamagawa Stefanie and Ralph Telford Ms. Jennifer Townsend Mr. and Mrs. Tim Unger
Corporate, Foundation, and Government Supporters Houston Grand Opera’s corporate, foundation, and government partners make it possible for HGO to create and share great art with our community. We are incredibly proud to work with these organizations and grateful for all they do. For information on joining HGO’s valued team of corporate and foundation supporters, please contact Kelly Finn, director of development, institutional giving, at 713-546-0265 or kfinn@hgo.org.
Michaela Greenan, Corporate Council Chair
CORPORATE, FOUNDATION, GOVERNMENT
Janet Langford Carrig, ConocoPhillips (Retired)
Michael Heckman, Houston First Corporation
HOUSTON GRAND OPERA CORPORATE COUNCIL
Thierry Caruso, EY
Michael Hilliard, Winstead PC
Anna Catalano, Kraton Corporation
Gwen Hulsey, Baker McKenzie
Thomas R. Ajamie, Ajamie LLP
Albert Chao, Westlake Chemical Corporation
Richard Husseini, Baker Botts L.L.P.
Angelo Ciardella Jr., Bank of America Merrill Lynch
William Kopp, Scott & Stringfellow LLC
Chris Angelides, Shell J. Scott Arnoldy, Triten Corporation Chris Bacon, Vinson & Elkins LLP C. Mark Baker, Norton Rose Fulbright LLP Astley Blair, Marine Well Containment Company (Retired)
Beth A. Colle, EY Adam Cook, Tokio Marine HCC Joshua Davidson, Baker Botts L.L.P.
Rick Jaramillo, Bank of America Michele M. LaNoue, Headworks Inc. Richard Leibman, FROSCH David LePori, Frost Bank Claire Liu, LyondellBasell (Retired)
Meg Boulware, Boulware & Valoir
Frederic Dyen, Schlumberger
Tony Bradfield, Tenenbaum Jewelers
Warren Ellsworth, MD, Houston Methodist
J. Douglas McMurrey Jr., Kinder Morgan (Retired)
Neal Carlson, Wells Fargo
Brannon Fitch, Truist
Mark Metts, Sidley Austin LLP
H G O. O R G
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ANNUAL SUPPORT Charlene Nickson, ACC Realty LLC
Norton Rose Fulbright LLP †
Jim Benton of Houston
Ward Pennebaker, Pennebaker
PwC
The Lancaster Hotel
Gloria M. Portela, Seyfarth Shaw LLP
Sidley Austin LLP
Masterson Design/Mariquita Masterson
Allyn Risley, GTT North America
Tokio Marine HCC
Shaftel Diamond Co.
Susan Rivera, Tokio Marine HCC
Truist
Rosewood Hotel Group
Kelly Rose, ConocoPhillips
Wells Fargo †
Glen Rosenbaum, Vinson & Elkins LLP
Westlake Chemical Corporation †
MEMBERS—$1,000 OR MORE
Manolo Sánchez, Spring Labs
Winstead PC
Brasserie du Parc
Denmon Sigler, Baker McKenzie
Chu Okoli Art
Apurva Thekdi, MD, Houston Methodist
SPONSORS—$10,000 OR MORE
Connie Kwan-Wong/CWK Collection Inc.
Ignacio Torras, Tricon Energy
Locke Lord LLP †
Dar Schafer Art
Tom Van Arsdel, Winstead PC
Deborah Bay & Foto Relevance Art
De la Rey Venter, Shell
MEMBERS—$1,000 OR MORE
Elliott Marketing Group
Alfredo Vilas, Novum Energy
Alliance Bernstein
Ellsworth Plastic Surgery
David Young, Union Pacific
CenterPoint Energy
The Four Seasons Hotel Houston
CHANEL
Freedom Super Cars
Patterson & Sheridan LLP
Gittings Portraiture
CORPORATE SUPPORTERS GUARANTORS—$100,000 OR MORE ConocoPhillips † H-E-B † Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo™ † Houston Methodist †* Novum Energy Schlumberger † Shell †
IN-KIND CONTRIBUTORS UNDERWRITERS— $25,000 OR MORE Abrahams Oriental Rugs and Home Furnishings
Vinson & Elkins LLP †* GRAND UNDERWRITERS—$50,000 OR MORE
The Glimmerglass Festival Guard and Grace Hayden Lasher The Hotel ZaZa
City Kitchen Catering
Joan Laughlin Art
The Events Company
Kim Ritter Art
A Fare Extraordinaire/The Revaire
Las Terrazas Resort & Residences
Fort Bend Music Company
Lavandula Design
Tenenbaum Jewelers * United Airlines †*
Glade Cultural Center
Matt Ringel/Red Light Management SPONSORS—$15,000 OR MORE
Mayfield Piano Service
Sara and Gabriel Loperena
Megan Murray Photography
Magnolia Houston
Monica Fulton
Neiman Marcus Precious Jewels
Page Piland Art Rhonda Lanclos Art
Ajamie LLP Baker Botts L.L.P. †
CO-SPONSORS—$7,500 OR MORE
Ristorante Cavour
Bank of America
BCN Taste and Tradition
Robin Jackson Photography
BBVA †*
Elegant Events and Catering by Michael
Sandi Seltzer Bryant Art
Nana Booker and David Lowe/Booker · Lowe Gallery *
Kirksey Gregg Productions
Shoocha Photography
Mandarin Design Lab
Marcia and Alfredo Vilas
FROSCH *
Medallion Global Wine Group
Frost Bank
Sakowitz Furs Schwartz, Page & Harding LLP
UNDERWRITERS—$25,000 OR MORE
Steak48
Baker McKenzie Boulware & Valoir
BENEFACTORS—$5,000 OR MORE
EY
The Corinthian at Franklin Lofts
Houston First Corporation
David Peck
64
SPECI AL E D I T ION 2 0 2 0
FOUNDATIONS AND GOVERNMENT AGENCIES PREMIER GUARANTORS— $1,000,000 OR MORE The Brown Foundation, Inc. † Houston Grand Opera Endowment Inc. † The Wortham Foundation, Inc. †
ANNUAL SUPPORT PRINCIPAL GUARANTORS— $500,000 OR MORE City of Houston through Houston Arts Alliance † The Cullen Foundation † Houston Endowment, Inc. † GRAND GUARANTORS— $250,000 OR MORE Albert and Anne Chao/Ting Tsung and Wei Fong Chao Foundation †
Cockrell Family Fund Houston Grand Opera Guild † San Diego Opera The Vaughn Foundation Vivian L. Smith Foundation William E. and Natoma Pyle Harvey Charitable Trust † MEMBERS—$1,000 OR MORE
The Alkek and Williams Foundation †
George and Mary Josephine Hamman Foundation †
Anonymous
Kinder Morgan Foundation
The Cullen Trust for the Performing Arts †
Houston Saengerbund
The Elkins Foundation
The Nathan J. Klein Fund
The Humphreys Foundation † The Powell Foundation †
* Contribution includes in- kind support
The Robert and Janice McNair Foundation †
† Ten or more years of consecutive support
Texas Commission on the Arts † GUARANTORS—$100,000 OR MORE
CORPORATE MATCHING
Anchorage Foundation of Texas
Baker Hughes Foundation
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation †
Bank of America Charitable Foundation Matching Gifts
City of Houston through the Miller Theatre Advisory Board †
BP Foundation, Inc.
Houston Endowment Inc.
Chevron Humankind
Kinder Foundation
ConocoPhillips Company Employee Giving
John P. McGovern Foundation †
Encana Matching Gifts
M.D. Anderson Foundation †
EOG Resources, Inc.
National Endowment for the Arts †
EQT Foundation
OPERA America
ExxonMobil Foundation
The Sarofim Foundation
Fannie Mae Matching Gift Donations
William Randolph Hearst Foundation
Hewlett-Packard Company IBM Corporation
GRAND UNDERWRITER— $50,000 OR MORE
LyondellBasell Chemical Company
Carol Franc Buck Foundation
Quantlab Financial, LLC
UNDERWRITERS— $25,000 OR MORE Eleanor Searle Whitney McCollum Foundation
Macquarie Group Limited Shell Oil Company Foundation The Boeing Company Gift Match/BPAC Program Williams Companies
Ruth and Ted Bauer Family Foundation † Stedman West Foundation † SPONSORS—$10,000 OR MORE Albert and Ethel Herzstein Charitable Foundation † H G O. O R G
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ANNUAL SUPPORT
Laureate Society The Laureate Society comprises individuals who have helped ensure the future of Houston Grand Opera by remembering the Opera in their wills, retirement plans, trusts, or other types of estate plans. The Laureate Society does not require a minimum amount to become a member. Planned estate gifts to the Houston Grand Opera Endowment can be used to support general or specific Opera programs. Houston Grand Opera is deeply grateful to these individuals. Their generosity and foresight enable the Opera to maintain its growth and stability, thus enriching the lives of future generations. For information regarding charitable estate gift planning and how it might positively impact you, your loved ones, and Houston Grand Opera, please contact Richard Buffett, director of major gifts and legacy giving, at 713-546-0216 or rbuffett@hgo.org.
Helen Wils, Chairman
LAUREATE SOCIETY MEMBERS
Nada Chandler
Dr. Layne O. Gentry
Ms. Gerry Aitken
Mr. Robert N. Chanon
Mr. Michael B. George
Mrs. Margaret Alkek Williams
Ms. Virginia Ann Clark
Dr. Wm. David George
Mrs. Judy Amonett
Mathilda Cochran
Norine Jaloway Gill and David P. Gill, M.D.
Ms. Michelle Beale and Mr. Richard H. Anderson
Mr. William E. Colburn
Lynn Gissel
Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Comstock
Dr. Rollin O. Glaser
Ms. Robin Angly and Mr. Miles Smith
Mr. Jim O. Connell
Wesley H. Goble
Christopher Bacon and Craig Miller
C.M. and A.A. Cooper Jr.
Mr. David Gockley
Gilbert Baker
Mr. Efrain Z. Corzo
Rhoda Goldberg
Dr. Saúl and Ursula Balagura
Mr. Alan M. Craft
Mary Francis Gonzales
Mrs. Thomas D. Barrow
James W. Crownover
Mr. Jon K. Gossett
Bill A. Bartlett
Ms. Judy Cummings
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gott
James M. Barton
Rochelle Cyprus
Adelma Graham
Mrs. Barry Beller
Karl A. Dahm
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Graubart
Dr. Patricia Eifel and Dr. James A. Belli
Lida S. Dahm, M.D.
Dr. Nichols Grimes
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley C. Beyer
Ms. Sasha Davis
Dr. Ellen R. Gritz
Dr. Joan Hacken Bitar
Ms. Anna M. Dean
Mario Gudmunsson and Darrin Davis
Emily Bivona and Ryan Manser
Ms. Peggy DeMarsh
Mr. Jas A. Gundry
Susan Ross Black
Elisabeth Dewitts
Mr. Claudio Gutierrez
Dr. Michael and Susan Bloome
Dr. and Mrs. Russell L. Deter II
Robert W. Guynn, M.D.
Dr. and Mrs. Jules H. Bohnn
Mr. and Mrs. David B. Duthu
Bill Haase
Mr. Andrew Bowen
Connie Dyer
Linda Lloyd Hart
Lynda Bowman
Ms. Gloria M. Portela and Mr. Richard E. Evans
Ms. Brenda Harvey-Traylor
Judith and Harry Bristol Ms. Zu Dell Broadwater
Joyce and Trey Evans
Miguel and Teresita Hernandez
Catherine Brock
Ms. Thea M. Fabio and Mr. Richard Merrill
Dr. Ralph Herring
Mrs. Ira B. Brown
Ann L. Faget
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Hewell
Logan D. Browning
Ms. Vicki Schmid Faulkner
Mr. Edward L. Hoffman
Richard Buffett
Mrs. Jean L. Fauntleroy
Gary Hollingsworth and Ken Hyde
Ralph C. Byle
Ms. Carol Sue Finkelstein
Alan and Ellen Holzberg
Gwyneth Campbell
Ms. Carol L. Fletcher
Mrs. Marjorie H. Capshaw
Mr. Carlisle Floyd
Ms. Kathleen Moore and Mr. Steven Homer
Jess and Patricia Carnes
Bruce Ford
Frank Hood
Janet Langford Carrig
Dr. Donna Fox
Ms. Ami J. Hooper
Mrs. Sylvia J. Carroll
Dr. Alice Gates
Dr. Marjorie Horning
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SPECI AL E D I T ION 2 0 2 0
Nancy Ferguson-Haywood
ANNUAL SUPPORT Ms. Sue A. Shirley-Howard and Mr. Richard H. Howard
Mr. Juan R. Morales
Mr. Robert J. Smouse
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney S. Moran
Ms. Linda F. Sonier
Eileen and George Hricik
Mrs. Lucian L. Morrison
Mr. and Mrs. Harlan C. Stai
Ms. Lee M. Huber
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin H. Mueller
Catherine Stevenson
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Hunter
Ms. Linda C. Murray
Bruce Suter
Dr. Lamar and Mrs. Jane Jackson Charitable Trust
Ms. Terrylin G. Neale
Rhonda J. Sweeney
Bobbie Newman
Mr. Leonard B. Tatar
Mrs. Tassie Nicandros
Mrs. John Ben Taub
Ms. B. Lynn Mathre and Mr. Stewart O’Dell
Quentin Thigpen and Amy Psaris
Mr. and Mrs. Staman Ogilvie
Mrs. Robert Toth
Mrs. James W. O’Keefe
Mr. John G. Turner Mr. Jerry G. Fischer
Geoffry H. Oshman
Mr. Paul and Dr. Rhonda Turner
Macky Osorio
Mr. and Mrs. Jess B. Tutor
Mrs. Susan Osterberg
Birgitt van Wijk
Mrs. Joan D. Osterweil
Alfredo Vilas
Thelma and Richard Percoco
Marietta Voglis
Mrs. Sara M. Peterson
Ms. Rons Voogt
Nancy Pryzant Picus
Dean B. Walker
Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. Pinson
Mr. Gordon D. Watson
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Pokorski
Rebecca Weaver
Willy and Inge Lotte Liesner
Mr. Arthur B. Pryde and Mrs. Suzanne Page-Pryde
Dr. and Mrs. H. E. Warshaw
Heide and Karl Loos
Dr. Angela Rechichi-Apollo
Mrs. Marilyn G. Lummis
Mr. Geoffrey Westergaard
Carol F. Relihan
Dr. Jo Wilkinson Lyday
Ms. Roxanne Cargill and Peter Weston
Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Reynolds
Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Lynn
Ms. Jane L. Williams
Wanda H. Reynolds
Ms. Sandra L. Magers
Helen Wils
Mrs. Rosemary Malbin
Mr. Bill Richmond and Mr. Dennis Courtney
David and Mary Wolff
Ms. Michele Malloy
Ed and Janet Rinehart
Mr. and Mrs. J. Landis Martin
Mr. and Mrs. Edward N. Robinson
Nancy Wynne Mattison
Mrs. Shirley Rose
Jackie and Malcolm Mazow, M.D.
Glen A. Rosenbaum
Mrs. Dorothy McCaine
Mr. John C. Rudder Jr.
Mrs. Cynthia Tally McDonald
H. Clifford Rudisill and Ray E. Wilson
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander K. McLanahan
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas V. Rushing
Dr. Will L. McLendon
Mr. and Mrs. Terrell F. Sanders
Mr. Allen D. McReynolds
Ms. Wanda Schaffner
Maryellen McSweeney
Deborah and Kenneth Scianna
WE HONOR THE MEMORY OF THOSE WHO INCLUDED HGO IN THEIR ESTATE PLANS:
Mr. and Mrs. D. Bradley McWilliams
Charles and Gudrun Senuta
Dr. Thomas D. Barrow
Christianne Melanson
Helen and James Shaffer
Ms. Evelyn M. Bedard
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Menzie
Hinda Simon
Ronald Borschow
Miss Catherine Jane Merchant
Mr. Herbert D. Simons
Mr. Ira B. Brown
Ms. Georgette M. Michko
Ms. Susan Simpson
Mr. Thomas Capshaw
Ms. Suzanne Mimnaugh
Janet Sims
Dr. Lawrence E. Carlton
Sid Moorhead
Bruce Smith, DDS
Mr. Tony Carroll, LCSW
Mr. Brian James Mr. Spencer A. Jeffries Ms. Charlotte Jones Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kauffman Mr. and Mrs. Stephen M. Kaufman Steve Kelley and Charles Dennis A. Mark Kelly Kyle F. Kerr Ms. Virginia Kiser Ann and Sam Koster Ms. Michele LaNoue Lynn and Jon Lamkin Marcheta Leighton-Beasley Carolyn J. Levy
Mr. Jesse Weir
Dr. L. Fabian Worthing III Lynn Wyatt R. Alan York Katherine and Mark Yzaguirre Dr. and Mrs. Efrain Zavala Mr. John L. Zipprich II 24 Anonymous
H G O. O R G
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ANNUAL SUPPORT Michael Cochran
Mrs. Margaret Love
John and Fanny Stone
Ms. Marilyn R. Davis
Ms. Marsha Malev
Dr. Carlos Vallbona
Frank R. Eyler
Mr. Constantine Nicandros
Daisy Wong
Linda Finger
M. Joan Nish
Miss Bonnie Sue Wooldridge
Christine E. George
Mr. James W. O’Keefe
Jack W. Harris
Barbara M. Osborne
Roberta Harris
Mrs. Mary Ann Phillips
Jackson C. Hicks
Mr. Howard Pieper
Ann Holmes
Mr. and Mrs. Craig M. Rowley
Mark Lensky
Mrs. Joseph P. Ruddell
Mary R. Lewis
Mr. Eric W. Stein Sr.
Houston Grand Opera Endowment
Tom Rushing, Chairman
The Houston Grand Opera Endowment, Inc., is a separate nonprofit organization that invests contributions to earn income for the benefit of Houston Grand Opera Association. The Endowment Board works with Paul Comstock Partners, independent investment counsel, to engage professional investment managers. An endowed fund can be permanently established within the Houston Grand Opera Endowment through a direct contribution or via a planned gift such as a bequest. The fund can be designated for general purposes or specific interests. For a discussion on endowing a fund, please contact Richard Buffett, director of major gifts and legacy giving, at 713-546-0216 or rbuffett@hgo.org. HGO acknowledges with deep gratitude the following endowed funds.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
The Brown Foundation Endowment Fund
Mary Ann Phillips Endowed Fund
Tom Rushing, Chairman
C. Howard Pieper Endowment Fund
Janet Langford Carrig, Senior Chairman
The Ting Tsung and Wei Fong Chao Foundation Endowment Fund
Terrylin G. Neale, Chairman Emeritus
Jane and Robert Cizik Endowment
Rowley Family Endowment Fund
Yolanda Knull, Vice Chairman
Michael and Mathilda Cochran Endowment Fund
The Ruddell Endowment Fund
Richard Husseini, Secretary/Treasurer Thomas Ajamie Robert Hunter Marianne Kah Stephen M. Kaufman Perryn Leech Allyn Risley
Kitty King Powell Endowment Fund
Douglas E. Colin Endowment Fund
Shell Lubricants (formerly Pennzoil — Quaker State Company) Fund
Mary Jane Fedder Endowed Fund
Dian and Harlan Stai Fund
Linda K. Finger Endowed Fund Robert W. George Endowment Fund
The John and Fanny Stone Endowment Fund
Frank Greenberg, M.D. Endowment Fund
Dorothy Barton Thomas Endowment Fund
Jackson D. Hicks Endowment Fund
John G. Turner and Jerry G. Fischer Endowed Fund
Scott Wise
General and Mrs. Maurice Hirsch Memorial Opera Fund Elizabeth Rieke and Wayne V. Jones Endowment Fund
Marietta Voglis Endowed Fund
GENERAL ENDOWMENT FUNDS Altenloh Endowed Fund
Lensky Family Endowed Fund
Bauer Family Fund
Mary R. Lewis Endowed Fund
The Wortham Foundation Permanent Endowment Fund
Charles T. (Ted) Bauer Memorial Fund
Beth Madison Endowed Fund
Sandra Bernhard Endowed Fund
Franci Neely Endowed Fund
PRODUCTION FUNDS
The Stanley and Shirley Beyer Endowed Fund
Constantine S. Nicandros Endowment Fund
Edward and Frances Bing Fund
Mary Frances Newton Bowers Endowment Fund
Barbara M. Osborne Charitable Trust
The Wagner Fund
Pat and Daniel A. Breen Endowment Fund 68
SPECI AL E D I T ION 2 0 2 0
Cynthia and Anthony Petrello Endowed Fund
John and Sheila Tweed Endowed Fund Bonnie Sue Wooldridge Endowment Fund
Tracey D. Conwell Endowment Fund
ANNUAL SUPPORT PRINCIPAL ARTISTS FUNDS Jesse Weir and Roberto Ayala Artist Fund The Lynn Wyatt Great Artist Fund ENDOWED CHAIRS Margaret Alkek Williams Chair: Patrick Summers, Artistic and Music Director
The Gordon and Mary Cain Foundation Endowment Fund Thomas Capshaw Endowment Fund Houston Grand Opera Guild Endowment Fund James J. Drach Endowment Fund Evans Family Endowed Chair
EDUCATION FUNDS Bauer Family Fund Lawrence E. Carlton, M.D., Endowment Fund Beth Crispin Endowment Fund James J. Drach Endowment Fund
Carol Lynn Lay Fletcher Endowment Fund
Fondren Foundation Fund for Educational Programs
Sarah and Ernest Butler Chair: Perryn Leech, Managing Director
William Randolph Hearst Endowed Scholarship Fund
David Clark Grant Endowment Fund
Sarah and Ernest Butler Chorus Master Chair: Richard Bado
Charlotte Howe Memorial Scholarship Fund
Sarah and Ernest Butler Concertmaster Chair: Denise Tarrant
Elva Lobit Opera Endowment Fund
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Elkins Jr. Endowed Chair: Peter Pasztor
Marian and Speros Martel Foundation Endowment Fund Erin Gregory Neale Endowment Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Albert B. Alkek Chair
Dr. Mary Joan Nish and Patricia Bratsas Endowed Fund
ELECTRONIC MEDIA FUNDS
John M. O’Quinn Foundation Endowed Fellowship Fund
The Ford Foundation Endowment Fund HOUSTON GRAND OPERA STUDIO FUNDS Audrey Jones Beck Endowed Fellowship Fund/Houston Endowment, Inc.
Shell Lubricants (formerly Pennzoil — Quaker State Company) Fund
The Schissler Family Foundation Endowed Fund for Educational Programs OUTREACH FUNDS Guyla Pircher Harris Project Spring Opera Festival Fund (Shell Lubricants, formerly Pennzoil— Quaker State Company) CONCERT OF ARIAS Eleanor Searle McCollum Endowment Fund
Mary C. Gayler Snook Endowment Fund Tenneco, Inc. Endowment Fund Weston-Cargill Endowed Fund 11666 Katy Freeway westpointlincoln.com 866.869.3390
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H G O. O R G
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SECTIONCALENDAR 2020-21 NAME
SAVE THE DATES SEPTEMBER
OCTOBER 12
NOVEMBER 13
SEPTEMBER 18
Monday Night Opera, Opera Unwrapped: David T. Little’s Vinkensport, or The Finch Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
Live from The Cullen: Arturo ChacónCruz. 7:30 p.m. HGO Digital event.
OCTOBER 19
NOVEMBER 23
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
Live from The Cullen: Tamara Wilson with Patrick Summers on piano. 7:30 p.m. HGO Digital event. With Zoom event: New Patrons Reception. SEPTEMBER 21
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
NOVEMBER 27
Double Bill: Mozart’s The Impresario/Lee Hoiby’s Bon Appétit! 7:30 p.m. HGO Digital event. With Zoom event: Wine and Cheese Social watch party for HGO Young Patrons and Opening Night for Young Professionals members.
SEPTEMBER 25
HGO Studio Showcase. 7:30 p.m. HGO Digital event. With Zoom event: “They’re Just Like Us!” for HGO Underwriters and Impresarios Circle members. SEPTEMBER 29
“Monday” Night Opera, on a special Tuesday time slot due to Yom Kippur. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
OCTOBER 23
David T. Little’s Vinkensport, or The Finch Opera. 7:30 p.m. HGO Digital event.
SEPTEMBER 30
School release of filmed production: Faye Chiao and Anton Dudley’s Katie: The Strongest of the Strong.
OCTOBER 26
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
NOVEMBER 30
Monday Night Opera, Opera Unwrapped: Joel Thompson and Andrea Davis Pinkney’s The Snowy Day. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
JANUARY JANUARY 8
Live from The Cullen: Sasha Cooke. 7:30 p.m. HGO Digital event. JANUARY 11
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
DECEMBER
JANUARY 18
OCTOBER
NOVEMBER
DECEMBER 7
NOVEMBER 2
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
OCTOBER 5
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
DECEMBER 10 NOVEMBER 9
OCTOBER 9
Live from The Cullen: Reginald Smith Jr. with Richard Bado on piano. 7:30 p.m. HGO Digital event.
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Monday Night Opera, Opera Unwrapped: Mozart’s The Impresario/Lee Hoiby’s Bon Appétit! 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
SPECI AL E D I T ION 2 0 2 0
The Snowy Day documentary. 7:30 p.m. HGO Digital event. DECEMBER 18
Live from the Cullen: Holiday Celebration with the HGO Studio. 7:30 p.m. HGO Digital Event.
Note: Events featured in this calendar are subject to change as COVID-19 continues to evolve in Houston. For additional events and the latest information, please visit HGO.org.
2020-21 CALENDAR
All HGO Digital events can be viewed for free using the Marquee TV streaming service. Miss the premiere? You still have a month to see each event online. For information and instructions, visit HGO.org/Digital.
JANUARY 22
MARCH 12
Giving Voice. 7:30 p.m. HGO Digital event.
Live from The Cullen: Jack Swanson. 7:30 p.m. HGO Digital event.
JANUARY 25
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
FEBRUARY
MARCH 15
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
FEBRUARY 1
MARCH 29
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
FEBRUARY 5
APRIL
Concert of Arias, the 33rd Annual Eleanor McCollum Competition for Young Singers. Live. 7 p.m. HGO Digital event.
APRIL 10
Opera Ball 2021: Une Nuit à Marrakech. For information, contact Brooke Rogers at 713546-0271 or brogers@hgo.org.
FEBRUARY 8
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event. FEBRUARY 15
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event. FEBRUARY 22
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event. FEBRUARY 26, 27, 28
Nell Shaw Cohen and Megan Cohen’s Turn and Burn. Socially distanced performances at downtown venue Warehouse Live.
MARCH MARCH 1
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event. MARCH 8
Monday Night Opera. 6:30 p.m. Zoom event.
See Breaking the Waves at the Wortham next spring.
APRIL 16, 18M, 24, 29
Live performances of Missy Mazzoli and Royce Vavrek’s Breaking the Waves. Wortham Theater Center’s Brown Theater. APRIL 30, MAY 2M, 4, 7, 8, 9M, 14, 15
Live performances of Rodgers & Hammerstein’s The Sound of Music. Wortham Theater Center’s Brown Theater.
MAY MAY 1
HGOco presents the Bauer Family High School Voice Studio Graduation Recital. Duncan Recital Hall, Rice University. 6–9 p.m. Free.
MAY 6, 9
HGO Studio Recital Series: Artists of the HGO Studio perform at Rienzi, the decorative arts wing of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, at 1406 Kirby Drive. 7:30 p.m. May 6; 5 p.m. May 9. MAY 11, 12
Student Matinees: Rodgers & Hammerstein’s The Sound of Music. 10 a.m. Wortham Theater Center’s Cullen Theater.
experiences, including Create an Opera (grades 3–8), Sing! Move! Play! (pre-K–grade 2), and Art of Opera (grades 9–12), which will feature the premiere of The Impresario of Oz (Buller/Silvestri). Registration information will be available in January 2021 at houstongrandopera.org/ community-and-learning.
JUNE JUNE 7–25
Opera Camp: One of Houston’s most in-demand summer camp series will return in June 2021! HGOco will offer three unique H G O. O R G
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UP NEXT
HGO plans to return to the Wortham stage for our Spring Repertory performances—make plans to see them now!
BREAKING THE WAVES
THE SOUND OF MUSIC
MUSIC BY MISSY MAZZOLI LYRICS BY ROYCE VAVREK
MUSIC BY RICHARD RODGERS LYRICS BY OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN II BOOK BY HOWARD LINDSAY AND RUSSEL CROUSE
April 16–29
Suggested by “The Trapp Family Singers” by Maria Augusta Trapp
Missy Mazzoli and Royce Vavrek’s Breaking the Waves, based on the 1996 Lars von Trier award-winning film of the same name, is a co-production with Opera Ventures, Scottish Opera, Adelaide Festival, and Théâtre national de l’Opéra Comique. Premiering at the Edinburgh Festival in 2019, the production tells the story of a religious young woman whose husband is seriously injured soon after their wedding.
April 30–May 15 HGO’s staging of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II’s The Sound of Music represents the perfect opportunity for the whole family to experience the musical like they’ve never heard it before, in an authentic production elevated by gorgeous, unamplified operatic singing.
Leading the HGO cast is HGO Studio alumna Lauren Snouffer in the role of tragic heroine, Bess. She is joined by Alexander Birch Elliott as her husband Jan, Michelle Bradley as her mother, and Zoie Reams as her sister-in-law Dodo. The production is led by director Tom Morris, whose acclaimed production of War Horse had long runs at the National Theatre in London and on Broadway. Nicole Paiement conducts the HGO premiere in her company debut.
In her HGO debut, acclaimed Trinidadian soprano Jeanine De Bique performs the iconic role of Maria, joined by Michael Mayes as Captain von Trapp and Katie Van Kooten as the Mother Abbess. Frequent HGO collaborator Francesca Zambello directs; HGO Chorus Master Richard Bado conducts the cast, HGO Orchestra, and Chorus; and Eric Sean Fogel choreographs and serves as associate director for this classic piece of musical theater.
By arrangement with G. Schirmer, Inc., publisher and copyright owner.
By arrangement with Concord Theatricals on behalf of The Rodgers & Hammerstein Organization. www.concordtheatricals.com
Production Sponsors Robin Angly and Miles Smith Drs. Liz Grimm and Jack Roth Sara and Gabriel Loperena
Grand Guarantor Texas Commission on the Arts Guarantors The Robert & Jane Cizik Foundation Houston Methodist Grand Underwriters Margaret Alkek Williams Novum Energy Underwriters Tokio Marine HCC Norton Rose Fulbright LLP
TO PURCHASE TICKETS, CALL THE CUSTOMER CARE CENTER AT 713-228-6737 OR VISIT HGO.ORG.
72
SUMMER 2020
Our mission is to enrich the lives of our clients, colleagues, and communities through sound financial advice, integrity, and a commitment to service beyond expectation.
A year ago, South Texas Money Management became part of CAPTRUST. CAPTRUST was recently named the largest wealth management firm in the Houston area by the Houston Business Journal.* Founded in 1997, we are an independent registered investment advisor with clients and offices around the country. Based in Raleigh, North Carolina, we provide investment advisory, asset management, and planning services to affluent private clients and institutional investors, such as retirement plan fiduciaries, endowments, foundations, and religious entities. *with investment minimums of less than $1 million
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Photo by Lynn Lane.