THE ATLANTA OPERA
Die Walküre
Richard Wagner composer & librettist April 27, 30, May 3, 5, 2024 Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre
AD NAME DIE WALKÜRE Page 16 Page 10 WELCOME Letter From Tomer Zvulun, Carl W. Knobloch, Jr. General & Artistic Director ..... 5 SPONSORS & CREDITS Sponsors ................ 6 Credits ................. 8 FEATURES Synopsis & Scenes ........... 10 Written by Julia Brown Simmons Production Note ............ 16 Written by Fred Cohn BEHIND THE CURTAIN Cast & Creative ............ 20 The Atlanta Opera Orchestra .... 36 Production Support .......... 39 Glynn Studio Artists.......... 40 COMMUNITY & SUPPORT Donor Profile .............. 41 Director’s Circle ............ 42 Annual Giving ............. 42 Corporate Partners & Foundations & Government ...... 45 Barbara D. Stewart Legacy Society .. 46 Tributes & Memorials .......... 47 LEADERSHIP Executive Committee /Board of Directors /Advisory Council ............ 48 Staff ................... 49
Welcome to Die Walküre, the most romantic of Richard Wagner’s four Das Ring der Nibelungen operas, and my personal favorite. As I write this letter, the reality that we are actually producing this masterwork is sinking in. My tireless technical team is sharing pictures of the scenery (built in Cardiff, Wales), my costume team is sharing the new costumes details (built at Seattle Opera) and my artistic team is booking the travel of the marvelous singers participating in this show. The vision is taking shape and I’m realizing—we are midway through the Ring Wagner has always felt like a forbidden fruit to me. Banned in my home country of Israel, Wagner is associated directly with the Nazis and the Holocaust. While it is inaccurate to call Wagner a “Nazi” (he died half a century before Hitler came to power), there is no question about his detestable bigotry and deep hatred for “the other.” However, his remarkable work culminating with the Ring, arguably the most profound, ambitious work in the history of music, creates a real conundrum. How do we reconcile the genius of the man with his abhorrent personality?
Growing up in Israel I had no access to Wagner’s music. I learned his works only when I arrived in America. During my time at Seattle Opera, my mentor, the visionary Speight Jenkins, General Director of that celebrated company, introduced me to these operas almost 20 years ago.
Working on the Ring changed my life. There is something transformational about this music, the deeply human characters and the relationships in the Ring. Yes, there are exciting mythological quests for power, gold, dragons, and one ring to rule them all, but the Ring is really a story about human relationships and the eternal struggle between good and evil. We confront the contrast between the love of power and the power of love. The first opera of the Ring, Das Rheingold, was all about love of power. The production you will see today is about the power of love. Maybe that’s the reason for its immense popularity.
Since my early days at Seattle Opera, I committed to presenting the work of Richard Wagner as often as possible, sharing his tantalizing world of music and stories. Rather than banning his extraordinary works, we should use the opportunity to discuss the dangers of bigotry and specifically antisemitism in our world. My second goal emerged on arriving in Atlanta. I committed to creating a fresh new version of his monumental work for The Atlanta Opera. The Ring, due to its scale and complexity, is a challenging project for any company, musician, and any audience member. Unlocking this marathon of music, subplots, characters, leitmotifs, special effects, and intense emotion offers a unique prize to anyone who experiences it without reservation. I hope you find this experience as meaningful as I have. It is certainly the honor of a lifetime to bring it to you in a fresh, new production.
5 welcome |
Tomer Zvulun
Carl W. Knobloch, Jr. General & Artistic Director
2023-24 SEASON
Official Beverage of The Atlanta Opera
THE 2023-24 DISCOVERIES SERIES
The Molly Blank Fund of the Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation
WITH ADDITIONAL SUPPORT FROM The Livingston Foundation
VETERANS TICKET PROGRAM
THE ATLANTA OPERA IS GRATEFUL FOR PUBLIC SUPPORT FROM
This program is supported in part by the City of Atlanta Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs and by the National Endowment for the Arts. This program is also supported in part by the Georgia Council for the Arts through the appropriations of the Georgia General Assembly. GCA also receives support from its partner agency—the National Endowment for the Arts. Funding for this program is provided by the Fulton County Board of Commissioners.
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera
6 | sponsors
THIS PRODUCTION OF WAGNERS’S DIE WALKÜRE IS SPONSORED BY
*Mr. & Mrs. Carl W. Knobloch, Jr.
Howard Hunter—Gramma Fisher Foundation
Atlanta Music Festival Fund of The Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta
The Halle Foundation
Karina Miller Trust
OPENING NIGHT SPONSORS
Dr. & Mrs. Alexander Gross
Mr. & Mrs. Paul Blackney
WITH ADDITIONAL SUPPORT FROM
Alfredo & Beau Martin
Mr. & Mrs. Steve Paro
Lynn & Kent Regenstein
Mr. & Mrs. William E. Tucker
WENDY BRYN HARMER’S PERFORMANCE IS SPONSORED In memory of Elizabeth Ann Bair *deceased
The Atlanta Opera Orchestra with Arthur Fagen conducting a rehearsal of Das Rheingold in April of 2023.
encoreatlanta.com | 7
KEN HOWARD
DIE WALKÜRE An Opera in Three Acts
COMPOSER & LIBRETTIST Richard Wagner
FIRST PERFORMANCE June 26, 1870 at the Königliches Hof- und Nationaltheater, Munich, Germany
CONDUCTOR Arthur Fagen
STAGE DIRECTOR Tomer Zvulun
SCENIC & PROJECTION DESIGNER Erhard Rom
LIGHTING DESIGNER Robert Wierzel
COSTUME DESIGNER Mattie Ullrich
LIVE ACTION DESIGNER Ran Arthur Braun
WIG & MAKE-UP DESIGNER Anne Nesmith
FILMED MEDIA Felipe Barral & Amanda Sachtleben
CAST (IN ORDER OF VOCAL APPEARANCE)
SIEGMUND Viktor Antipenko
SIEGLINDE Laura Wilde
HUNDING Raymond Aceto
WOTAN Greer Grimsley
BRÜNNHILDE Wendy Bryn Harmer
FRICKA Gretchen Krupp†
GERHILDE Julie Adams
HELMWIGE Yelena Dyachek
WALTRAUTE Catherine Martin
SCHWERTLEITE Meridian Prall
ORTLINDE Alexandra Razskazoff
SIEGRUNE Aubrey Odle*
GRIMGERDE Maya Lahyani
ROSSWEISSE Deborah Nansteel
MARTIAL ARTISTS Myric Andreasen, Julianna Feracota, Crystal Yau
ASSISTANT CONDUCTOR Eric Weimer
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR Gregory Luis Boyle
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR Nora Winsler*
ASSOCIATE PROJECTION DESIGNER Lauren Carroll
PROJECTION PROGRAMMER Erin Teachman
ASSISTANT LIGHTING DESIGNER Christopher Wong
ASSISTANT WIG & MAKEUP DESIGNER LaShawn Melton
MUSICAL PREPARATION Elena Kholodova
STAGE MANAGER Gina Hays
ASSISTANT STAGE MANAGERS Caitlin Denney-Turner, Aletha Saunders
PROJECTED TITLES OPERATED BY Brendan Callahan-Fitzgerald
Performed in German with English supertitles.
Approximate running time: 4 hours, 25 minutes plus two intermissions: Act I: 65 minutes + Intermission: 30 minutes | Act II: 90 minutes + Intermission: 15 minutes | Act III 65 minutes
Scenery Constructed by Bay Productions Ltd., Dallas Stage Scenery, Inc., and The Atlanta Opera Productions Studios. Properties constructed by The Atlanta Opera Production Studios. Costume Construction by Seattle Opera Costume Shop. English Captions by Jonathan Dean | English Captions for Die Walküre owned by Johanthan Dean, ©2024
The purchase of equipment for The Atlanta Opera is supported by a gift from Eva & Robert Ratonyi.
*Member of The Atlanta Opera Glynn Studio. Sponsored in name this season by a gift from Beth & Gary Glynn, The Glynn Studio Artists also receive significant support from the Donald & Marilyn Keough Foundation, John & Yee-Wan Stevens, and Jerry & Dulcy Rosenberg.
†Alum of The Atlanta Opera Glynn Studio.
Richard Wagner DIE WALKÜRE
Reduced version by Gotthold Ephraim Lessing Used by arrangement with European American Music Distributors Company, sole U.S. and Canadian agent for Schott Music GmbH & Co. KG, Mainz, Germany.
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera
8 | credits
Synopsis & Scene Structure
WRITTEN BY
Julia Brown Simmons
Over his headset, Lieutenant Colonel Bill Kilgore gives an order: “Big Duke Six to Eagle Thrust, put on psy war op. Make it loud. This is a Romeo Foxtrot. Shall we dance?” The camera flashes to a tape player mounted to the floor of the chopper. In this scene from Apocalypse Now, Wagner’s “Ride of the Valkyries” blasts from the helicopter squadron’s loudspeakers, and the air assault unit begins its napalm strike on a Vietnamese village. The attendees at the 1870 premiere of Die Walküre including Franz Liszt, Johannes Brahms, and Camille Saint-Saëns—could not have imagined the world of Francis Ford Coppola’s 1979 epic war film, let alone that part of Wagner’s operatic score would be paired with such a military strike. But, just as that scene is one of the most memorable of Apocalypse Now, it draws on one of the most evocative moments of Die Walküre. Even though
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera 10 | synopsis&scenes
SCENIC RENDERING BY ERHARD ROM
some Wagner fans may tire of the association of Die Walküre with Apocalypse Now, any mention of Coppola’s famous scene will inevitably bring to mind Wagner’s music.
In a way, this iconic scene in Apocalypse Now accomplishes what Wagner himself aspired to in Die Walküre and most all of his operas: a seamless melding of music, written word, drama, set, and stagecraft. This “Gesamtkunstwerk”—to use the term Wagner embraced for “total artwork”—represents an integration of all artistic elements and forms into a cohesive whole. When achieved, the drama depends upon the music just as the music depends upon the drama.
Despite their shared ties to total art, Apocalypse Now and Die Walküre differ in their spatiotemporal setting— or lack thereof. The Atlanta Opera’s Die Walküre, like last year’s Das Rheingold, is not set during, say, the Vietnam War like Apocalypse Now, nor during any specific contemporary moment, as with many modern productions of the Ring. Rather, the opera adopts a modern mythic landscape, reflected in costuming and staging that feature elements divorced from temporality. While the intentional use of technology and other allusions to modernity link the mythos to the audience, The Atlanta Opera’s production insists that a world of timeless mythology speaks the most truth to our world.
In this second opera in Wagner’s world of myth, some time has passed between the end of Das Rheingold, the first of the Ring cycle operas, and the start of Die Walküre. During this interval, there was one pivotal occurrence: Wotan had kids. Between the end of Das Rheingold and the start of Die Walküre, Wotan, ruler of the gods, fathered nine daughters, all likely with the earth goddess Erda, collectively called the Valkyries. He also fathered a set of twins, Siegmund and Sieglinde, with a mortal woman. The twins grew up separated from one another.
Be prepared: The plot of Die Walküre is, to put it mildly, convoluted. The opera opens with Siegmund seeking shelter from a storm. This shelter turns out to be the home of Sieglinde and her husband Hunding. When Siegmund explains to the couple that he is on the run after fighting with the relatives of a girl being forced into marriage, Hunding reveals himself as one of those relatives. Although Hunding allows Siegmund to rest for the night, he insists that they fight the next morning.
encoreatlanta.com | 11
During the night, Sieglinde comes to Siegmund and confesses that she herself was forced into marriage with Hunding. She longs to be saved by the hero who can successfully draw the sword that was plunged into a tree during her wedding feast. When Siegmund draws the sword, the two discover that they are twins and declare their not-so-familial love for each other.
At the opening of Act II, we are introduced to one of Wotan’s Valkyrie daughters, Brünnhilde. Wotan orders Brünnhilde to protect Siegmund—her half-brother—in his upcoming battle with Hunding. But Fricka, Wotan’s wife and the goddess of family values, intervenes, arguing that the twins must be punished for their adultery and incest. Wotan ultimately concedes, instructing Brünnhilde to let Hunding defeat Siegmund.
Brünnhilde appears as Siegmund runs away from Hunding with Sieglinde. She informs Siegmund that he will soon die and must follow her to Valhalla. Siegmund refuses to follow without Sieglinde. This devotion touches Brünnhilde, so when Hunding arrives, she defies Wotan and begins to aid Siegmund to victory. But just as Siegmund is about to secure his victory, Wotan appears, shatters Siegmund’s sword, and allows Hunding to kill him. With Sieglinde and Siegmund’s shattered sword in hand, Brünnhilde flees. Wotan, in a fit of rage, kills Hunding and goes after Brünnhilde.
In the third and final act, Brünnhilde and Sieglinde join the other Valkyries on a mountaintop. Brünnhilde tells Sieglinde that she is pregnant with Siegmund’s son, Siegfried. She gives Siegmund’s broken sword to Sieglinde and tells her to protect the child.
Sieglinde leaves just as Wotan arrives to punish Brünnhilde. Wotan decides to turn Brünnhilde into a mortal woman and put her to sleep on the mountain for any man to find. Brünnhilde convinces Wotan to protect her with a ring of fire so that she can only be found by a hero. Wotan bids her farewell, lays her to sleep, has the demigod of fire protect her, and departs.
This messy plot is secondary to the characters and their relationships, which are different in nature—in their essence, their inner lives, their substance—from those in Das Rheingold. Unlike the flashy, sweeping epic filled with the clashes of gods, giants, dwarves, and dragons that is Das Rheingold, almost every
encoreatlanta.com | 13
scene of Die Walküre portrays an intimate moment between two characters. Fricka and Wotan fight about the son Wotan had by another woman. Siegmund and Sieglinde sing of their passion for each other. Brünnhilde pleads with Wotan to protect her as a daughter.
The Wotan of Die Walküre is especially different from the Wotan of Das Rheingold. In Das Rheingold, Wotan is powerful, ambitious, and thinks he can (and actually can) control almost everything. But here, Wotan confronts the fact that he cannot control his loved ones. Fricka disagrees with him. Brünnhilde defies him. Wotan fathered almost every character on stage in the opera, and while he may already know how to be a god, here he must learn how to be a husband and father, how to balance duty and love.
“These men who fought with their hearts, who have families, who have children, who are filled with love…” says Colonel Kurtz, in his famous Apocalypse Now monologue, of the men he fought against in Vietnam. Although in a wildly different context, that friction between loving one’s family and confronting life’s conflicts is what we see here. The characters of Die Walküre are asking themselves who they are and what they stand for while navigating human relationships with love in their hearts.
The “Ride of the Valkyries,” that scene from the opera that sticks in our memories, leads us astray from what Wagner is up to in Die Walküre. In Apocalypse Now, the “Ride of the Valkyries” scene gets at some of the core concerns of the movie by using the score to glorify war while juxtaposing it against scenes of the suffering caused by the assault. But in Die Walküre, that scene distracts us from the central ideas of the opera: the moment thrills and overwhelms, but it is not representative of the opera as a whole, which is otherwise intimate and human.
The opera overflows with conversations between loved ones—between parents and children, between spouses, between lovers—all of which resonate with our everyday lives. So, perhaps in this production, revel in the adrenaline rush you’ll have during the “Ride of the Valkyries,” but also find a moment of calm to sit with Wagner’s characters, filled with love, and discover that this mythical world is not so very different from our own.
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera 14 | synopsis&scenes
SIEGMUND
COSTUME RENDERING
BY MATTIE ULLRICH
The Ring & Its Mythology
WRITTEN BY Fred Cohn
In the familiar tale of Sleeping Beauty, a princess falls into an enchanted sleep. A forest of trees and brambles, so thick that no mere mortal can penetrate it, surrounds her castle. She lies sleeping for a hundred years; only then does a valiant prince approach the forest. The brambles and briars part in his path, allowing him to move through the palace to the chamber of the sleeping princess, who awakens at his approach, and pledges her love to him.
The story, retold by Charles Perrault in 1697 and the Brothers Grimm over a century later, is itself an echo of a far earlier myth. In Greek mythology, the titan Prometheus has given stolen fire from Olympus to the mortals. In revenge, Zeus orders him chained to a rock. Only a hero of mortal descent can release him. Eventually Heracles, the son of Zeus by the mortal princess Alcmene, discovers and frees him. The myth lacks the romantic element of the Sleeping Beauty story. But Heracles, like the prince in the fairy tale, is a true hero—he is in the midst of one of his Twelve Labors—and it is his bravery that sets Prometheus loose.
These myths reverberate in Die Walküre and Siegfried, the second and third evenings of Richard Wagner’s four-opera masterwork, Der Ring des Nibelungen. The title character of Die Walküre is Brünnhilde, the daughter of Wotan, king of the gods—the Ring’s Zeus figure. He has commanded her to withdraw her protection from the hero Siegmund. But, moved by Siegmund’s devotion to his lover and sister Sieglinde, Brünnhilde contravenes her father’s orders and shields Siegmund in battle. As punishment for her disobedience, Wotan revokes her immortal status and condemns her to a rock, just as Zeus banished Prometheus. There she can fall prey to any mortal man who comes upon her. Brünnhilde, horrified by the notion, pleads to be surrounded by a ring of fire, so that only a hero can break through. Stirred by her supplications, Wotan sends her into a magic sleep, then summons Loge, the god of fire, to surround her with a conflagration.
Siegfried, the protagonist of the opera that is named after him, is the hero that Brünnhilde awaits—her own valiant prince. He is Siegmund’s and Sieglinde’s son; in
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera 16 | productionnote
Act III of Die Walküre, Brünnhilde hails the imminent birth of “the world’s most glorious hero.” His parents are the children of Wotan and a mortal woman, which makes him, like Heracles, a half-mortal, free of the contractual chains that restrict Wotan himself. Only he can break through the sea of flames; only he can awaken the sleeping Brünnhilde to the force of love.
The similarity of these myths is no mere coincidence. Myths are in fact a repository of universal truths. They resonate across time and across cultures. They emanate from what Carl Jung labeled “the collective unconscious”: a realm common to all people, populated by the primal symbols he called “archetypal images.” “The gods are without doubt personifications of psychic forces,” Jung wrote.
The folklore scholar Joseph Campbell, in his seminal 1949 book The Hero of a Thousand Faces, noted: “The symbols of mythology are not manufactured; they cannot be ordered, invented, or permanently suppressed. They are spontaneous productions of the psych, and each bears within it, undamaged, the germ power of its source.”
Wagner’s cycle, chronicling the epic struggle for possession of the Ring of the Nibelungs, draws from a plethora of mythological sources. Its libretto, by the composer himself, is chiefly based on a variety of thirteenth-century sources—the Poetic Edda, the Völsunga Saga and Snorri Sturluson’s Prose Edda; the Middle High German epic poem Das Nibelungenlied ; the Old Norse prose epic Thidreks Saga af Bern. But Wagner also incorporated the tragedies of Aeschylus, including the Oresteia and Prometheus Bound ; Das Lied von hürnen Seyfrid, a sixteenth-century version of the Siegfried myth; and the Grimm Brothers’ collected folk tales.
The myths that Wagner assimilated into his cycle have resounded in the century-and-a-half since he wrote his great work. Jung, writing after the rise of Hitler, found in Nazi Germany an awakening of “the ancient god of storm and frenzy, the long quiescent Wotan.” J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings, written between 1937 and 1949, clearly connects in a veiled way to the worldwide horrors of his epoch, but the work as a whole would be unimaginable without the Ring as a model. The present-day Marvel Universe recycles some of the same myths that Wagner used for the cycle, and its characters include Odin (the Norse Wotan), Thor (the god of thunder in the comic books and movies, as well as in Wagner) and Loki (Loge).
17 encoreatlanta.com |
Ring productions of our time have tended to turn their back on the myths of the Ring, instead treating the work as a kind of contemporary semi-realistic drama. Patrice Chéreau’s hugely influential centenary Ring, first presented at the Bayreuth Wagner Festival in 1976, placed the action in the composer’s own time and redefined it as a quasi-Marxist critique of capitalism.
The Atlanta Opera’s new Ring production, which continues this season with Die Walküre, takes a different tack while still making connections to our own contemporary world. Its director, Tomer Zvulun—the company’s general and artistic director—seeks to restore the power of myth to the cycle within our modern world. Last season, his quasi-cinematic staging of the opening work, Das Rheingold, offered an indication of his overall approach. Erhard Rom’s scenery and projections evoked Wagner’s mythological scenario. The Rhinemaidens—the mermaids whose aquatic play launches the entire cycle— cavorted in a stylized river; an actual rainbow guided the gods to Valhalla, their home. Zvulun’s approach, stripped of directorial editorializing, encouraged the audience to consider Wagner’s myths in their raw form, and to contemplate the universal truths contained within them.
“The common trend is to update the Ring and place it in a specific period,” Zvulun says. “But it is at heart an expression of the human condition.” His Rheingold production did in fact contain a contemporary allusions: Valhalla, just built, loomed as a modern-day skyscraper; a building crane stood in front of it. Directorial decisions like these, as Zvulun sees them, only emphasize the universalism of the Ring’s myths. The production strives to create what the design team has referred to as “a modern mythic landscape.”
“Myth has this ability to compress a huge range of experience,” Zvulun says. “Wotan could be Saddam Hussein—or, in some way, anyone’s father. The struggle for power depicted in the Ring is still with us. Humans are constantly striving to gain power, money, and sex in the hopes they can achieve happiness or even the illusion of immortality. But in the end, it’s all going to pass anyway, just like the gods do in at the end of the Ring.
For Zvulun, the most important concept that the Ring’s myths evoke is that of love, in all its many forms. He cites Wagner’s devotion to Greek tragedy to support his point of view. “In English, there is only one word for love, but the Greeks had eight different words to express the different
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera 18 | productionnote
facets of love,” he says. “Wagner, who was a great student of the Greeks, truly understood this concept, and his operas are infused with his obsession with different kinds of love. Stories about the human condition stir strong emotions in us, because we are all familiar, as human beings, with these different forms of love—from the moment when we are embraced by our mothers for the first time, as we discover erotic love, as we feel love for our children and our friends. “When the curtain rises on this epic story and the dwarf Alberich flirts with the Rhinemaidens, we are introduced to the most shallow form of love: what the Greeks called ‘Ludos,’ or playful love,” Zvulun continues. “As the show progresses, we learn about the ‘Pragma’ that frames the love between Wotan and his wife Fricka. This is long-lasting love, often based on convenience or partnership. Then there’s the distorted ‘Philia’—the love between friends—between Wotan and Loge, along with the ‘Storge’—the familial love—that defines Wotan’s relationship with his children Brünnhilde and Siegmund.
“The most pivotal and destructive kind of love we see in the Ring is ‘Philautia’: the love for self above all,” says Zvulun. “In order to possess the ultimate power, both Alberich and his arch-nemesis Wotan must renounce love—all types of love. It is a danger to the integrity of the family, to nature, to the world. It can only be conquered through the most sublime form of love: ‘Agape,’ the love of nature, humanity and the world. As we see at the end of Götterdämmerung, the last opera in the cycle, only when the obsession with power and self disappear can the world be redeemed. Compassionate love—“Durch Mitleid wissend” as Wagner says quite literally in Parsifal. Brunnhilde’s love for Siegmund and in the end of Götterdämmerung, her compassion for the suffering of the gods lead her to ultimately save the world from unending pain and the meaningless struggle for power. All of this comes from Schopenhauer, whose thoughts and ideas greatly influenced Wagner.
“In the end, it is Agape that perseveres,” Zvulun says. “The ring is thrown back into the Rhine and world order is restored ... or so it seems ... But the story doesn’t end there. The struggle between Agape and Philautia is pervasive everywhere: from politics to show business; from the corporate world to the clergy. How will the story end? I don’t know. We are left with lots of questions and much to contemplate. But that is why we all love the Ring. There may be no answers, but some of the most extraordinary questions we can ask ourselves are all raised throughout the 15-hour epic.
19 encoreatlanta.com | BRÜNHILDE COSTUME RENDERING BY MATTIE ULLRICH
ARTHUR FAGEN
CONDUCTOR
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
LA TRAVIATA, 2005
Arthur Fagen has been the Music Director of the Atlanta Opera since 2010. Fagen is in great demand as a conductor of symphony and opera in Europe, Asia, South America, and the United States. He is a regular guest of the most prestigious opera, concert halls, and music festivals at home and abroad. With an operatic repertoire that spans more than 90 works, he has been the Principal Conductor in Kassel and Brunswick, Chief Conductor of the Flanders Opera of Antwerp and Ghent, Music Director of the Queens Symphony Orchestra, and a member of the conducting staff of the Chicago Lyric Opera. From 2002-2007 Fagen was the Music Director of the Dortmund Philharmonic Orchestra and the Dortmund Opera. Under his leadership and following his successful concerts with the Dortmund Philharmonic in Salzburg, he was invited to tour with the orchestra through Holland at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, Belgium at the Palais de Beaux-Arts in Brussels, and Austria (Salzburg) and China (Beijing and Shanghai). He conducted in that period, among others, new opera productions of Siegfried, Götterdämmerung, and two Ring Cycles. Fagen conducted a new production of Puccini’s Turandot at The Atlanta Opera with enormous success inaugurating the new Cobb Energy Performing Arts Center. Following that success, he has conducted the Israel Symphony Orchestra, Holland Sinfonia, Buenos Aires Philharmonic, Sicily and Rome’s Symphony Orchestras. In recent seasons, Fagen conducted in Atlanta Beethoven’s Fidelio, Akhnaten by Philip Glass, Wagner’s Der Fliegende Holländer, Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte, Le Nozze di Figaro, Don Giovanni, Die Entführung aus dem Serail, and Wagner’s Das Rheingold. Fagen has recorded for BMG, Bayerischer Rundfunk, SFB and WDR Cologne, and has enjoyed a long-term relationship with Naxos label. Among his recordings he has completed the six symphonies of Bohuslav Martinu and Liszt’s Hungarian Rhapsodies with the Staatskapelle Weimar. Fagen is Professor of Orchestral Conducting at the Jacobs School of Music at Indiana University.
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera 20 | cast&creative
©2021 The Coca-Cola Company.
TOMER ZVULUN PRODUCTION DIRECTOR
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT THE FLYING DUTCHMAN, 2009
General and Artistic Director of The Atlanta Opera since 2013, Israeli born Tomer Zvulun is also one of opera’s most exciting stage directors, earning consistent praise for his creative vision, often described as cinematic and fresh. His work has been presented by prestigious opera houses around the world, including The Metropolitan Opera, the opera companies of Israel, Buenos Aires, Los Angeles, Montreal, Wexford, Glimmerglass, Houston, Washington National Opera, Seattle, Dallas, Detroit, San Diego, Minnesota, Boston, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, New Orleans and Wolf Trap, as well as leading educational institutes and universities such as The Juilliard School, Indiana University, Boston University, and IVAI in Tel Aviv. Since taking the leadership in Atlanta one decade ago, he personally directed thirty of the company’s productions. He increased the operations of the company from three to six productions per season, while stabilizing the financials and in the course of his first decade tenure, secured Atlanta’s position as one of the top 10 opera companies in the US. Some of his noted achievements includes launching the successful Discoveries series, creating the first young artist program in the company’s history, tripling the company annual fund raising, launching the company’s first Ring cycle, creating The Atlanta Opera Film Studio and building a theatre in a circus tent where performances were conducted safely during the pandemic. His work at The Atlanta Opera attracted international attention by earning numerous awards and prizes including two nominations of The Atlanta Opera for the International Opera Awards in London and the selection of his production of Silent Night as both the Irish Times and Atlanta JournalConstitution production of the year. His focus on innovation led to an invitation to deliver a TED talk as well as a case study that is taught at Harvard Business School. His productions travel the world and bring wide exposure to the company. Next season his production of Rigoletto travels to Los Angeles Opera, his La bohème returns to The Dallas Opera, and his acclaimed production of The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs will make its Kennedy Center debut at the Washington National Opera.
22 | cast&creative
ERHARD ROM
SCENIC & PROJECTION
DESIGNER
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
LUCIA DI LAMMERMOOR, 2011
Erhard Rom (Set & Projection Designer from Seattle, Washington) has designed settings for more than 200 productions around the globe. Most recently, he designed a new production of Don Giovanni for the Royal Swedish Opera in Stockholm. He has appeared frequently with the Atlanta Opera including the revival of La bohème in 2024. In 2015, he was named as a finalist in the designer of the year category for the International Opera Awards in London. His designs have frequently been featured in the Prague Quadrennial International Design exhibition. He has collaborated with many of the world’s leading directors, working for major companies including: San Francisco Opera (The Marriage of Figaro, Susannah, Lucia di Lammermoor, Nixon in China), Seattle Opera (Semele, Eugene Onegin, La bohème), Washington National Opera (Don Giovanni, Samson and Delilah, and Silent Night), Wexford Festival (Silent Night), Houston Grand Opera (Rigoletto), Vancouver Opera (Dead Man Walking, Otello), Glimmerglass Festival (A Blizzard on Marblehead Neck, Later the Same Evening, Silent Night), Opera Theatre of St. Louis (Faust, Jane Eyre, Carmen), Minnesota Opera (The Shining, Dead Man Walking, Rusalka, Romeo and Juliet), and Utah Opera (Moby Dick). Other companies include Boston Lyric Opera, Opéra de Montréal and Wolf Trap, among many others. His 2014 design of the European premiere of Silent Night for the Wexford Festival received two accolades from the 2015 Irish Times Theatre Awards including “audience choice” and “best opera production of 2014.” Future engagements include a new production of Fidelio and Macbeth for the Washington National Opera.
ROBERT WIERZEL
LIGHTING DESIGNER
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
LUCIA DI LAMMERMOOR, 2011
Robert Wierzel has worked in opera, theater, dance, museums, and contemporary music. Opera credits include productions with the opera companies of Paris Garnier, Tokyo, Toronto, Bergen, Norway, Glimmerglass Festival, Seattle, Boston Lyric, Minnesota, San Francisco, Houston, Virginia, Chicago Lyric, Opera Theatre of Chicago, Montreal, Vancouver, Portland, Wolf Trap, NYCO, and San Diego. Wierzel’s work with dance includes the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Company. Broadway credits include Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar & Grill starring Audra McDonald, Fela! (Tony Award nomination), and David Copperfield’s Broadway debut, Dreams and Nightmares Off-Broadway credits include productions with the NYSF/ Public Theatre, The Signature Theatre, Roundabout Theatre Company, and Playwrights Horizons. Wierzel’s extensive regional theater work includes productions with the Alliance Theater (Atlanta), Goodman Theatre (Chicago), A.C.T. San Francisco, Arena Stage (Washington, D.C.), Hartford Stage, Long Wharf Theatre, The Guthrie, Mark Taper Forum, Actors Theatre Louisville, and The Old Globe. He is adjunct faculty at N.Y.U.’s Tisch School and is a Creative Partner at Spark Design.
23 encoreatlanta.com |
MATTIE ULLRICH
COSTUME DESIGNER
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
SALOME, 2020
Mattie Ullrich has designed costumes for opera, theater, film, musicals, dance, and print. Opera productions include the world premiere of David T. Little and Royce Vavrek’s JFK at Fort Worth Opera; Don Giovanni at The Swedish Royal Opera; Das Rheingold at The Atlanta Opera; NY Critics Pick A Silent Woman at Bard SummerScape; La clemenza di Tito at LA Opera; Satyagraha at the Ekaterinburg State Opera and Ballet (Russia); Don Giovanni at the Norwegian Opera and Ballet (Oslo, Norway); I due Foscari for Theater an der Wien (Vienna, Austria), Palau des Artes (Valencia, Spain) and LA Opera; Oresteia for Bard Summerscape Festival; Nabucco productions at the Washington National Opera, Opéra de Montréal, Florida Grand Opera. She has designed many new Off-Broadway plays including The Starry Messenger with Mathew Broderick (The New Group), The Pride directed by Joe Mantello (Wicked), Fault Lines directed by David Schwimmer (Friends), Things We Want directed by Ethan Hawke (The New Group); and the popular one woman show Bad Dates directed by John Benjamin Hickey (Playwrights Horizons). Film projects include Year of the Fish (Sundance), Sovereignty (multi-festival, award winning short) and Shoplifting Chanel
RAN ARTHUR BRAUN
LIVE ACTION DESIGNER
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
DAS RHEINGOLD, 2023
Ran Arthur Braun is one of the world’s most sought-after stunt coordinators and action designers. He has worked on more than 350 live productions with most leading opera houses and festivals. Specializing in large-scale events led him to collaborate world-wide with major production companies, including venues in Asia and the Middle East. He also enjoys a long-standing collaboration with the Bregenz Festival, where he has worked for more than 20 seasons. Ran Arthur Braun has also made a name for himself as a director and set designer: he won the 2014 Music and Theatre Prize for Best Set Design and he was voted 2015 Director of the Year for his production of L’enfant et les sortilèges, both in Poland. He has been a member of Dmitri Tcherniakov’s production team since 2017. He teaches stage fighting at the Royal Opera House Covent Garden in London, the Centre de Perfeccionament Plácido Domingo in Valencia, Bolshoi in Moscow, Opera Studio Warsaw and the Opera Studio in Amsterdam. Braun also manages Action Actors for film, television and stage projects, with recent work provided for Lucas Films, Disney, Amazon Prime, Play Station and Balich Wonder Studio. Winner of Opernwelt 2022 and 2023 award for production of the year, as a member of the artistic team of Christof Loy and Dmitri Tcherniakov. Known as the concierge of Action!, his network provides various services worldwide, including stunt gear, equipment and special effects.
24 | cast&creative
ANNE NESMITH
WIG & MAKEUP DESIGNER
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
Anne Nesmith is a Washington, DC-based wig designer whose work has been seen at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Opera Philadelphia, Arena Stage, Ford’s Theatre, Boston Lyric Opera, Boston Ballet, Opera Boston, Shakespeare Theatre Company, Wolftrap Opera, Signature Theatre, Maryland Lyric Opera and Washington Ballet among others. She has designed internationally for Seiji Ozawa’s Matsumoto Festival and Hyogo Performing Arts Center in Nishinomiya, Japan. Anne was the Resident Wig and Makeup Designer for the Baltimore Opera Company and has constructed wigs for the Scooby Doo Live! tour and the Asian tour of 42nd Street. Her work has also been seen at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, on MD Public Television in Francis Scott Key and the Songs That Built America, in Smithsonian National Portraits Gallery’s Cultures in Motion programs, Great Planes on the Military Channel, Ice Cold Killers for Investigation Discovery and the US Army’s tour Spirit of America. Her work is part of the 2023-24 season at Signature Theatre (Hair), Seiji Ozawa Festival (Così fan tutte) and Wolftrap Opera.
ERIC WEIMER
ASSISTANT CONDUCTOR
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
Eric Weimer, conductor, has established himself as one of the preeminent coaches in the international opera world in the course of the past forty years. Through his work at some of the world’s leading companies—primarily his thirty-five seasons as full-time Assistant Conductor with Lyric Opera of Chicago but also work at the Metropolitan Opera, Bayreuth Festival, San Francisco Opera, Canadian Opera Company, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Cleveland Orchestra, and Edinburgh Festival—he has prepared some 230 productions. He has collaborated with most of the world’s greatest opera maestri as well as coached and worked closely with a great majority of the most celebrated singers active on the international opera stage. Recognized as a German specialist, he has prepared no less than seventeen complete cycles of Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen. A former musicologist, Weimer holds a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago and is the author of Opera seria and the Evolution of Classical Style. He is also in demand as a coach of young singers, serving as one of the principal coaches of the Ryan Opera Center (training wing of Lyric Opera of Chicago) since 1990, where he has prepared young singers in their mainstage roles and conducted many of the Center’s summer opera workshops. He has had numerous residencies with other opera training programs: the Met’s Lindemann Young Artists Development Program, the Washington National Opera’s Cafritz Young Artists, and the San Francisco Opera’s Merola Program. Dr. Weimer has also been engaged as cover conductor for numerous productions at Chicago Lyric as well as for the San Francisco Ring cycles of 2011 and 2018. Productions he has conducted in his own right include The Marriage of Figaro and Hansel and Gretel with the DePaul (University) Opera Theatre, Carmen and La fille du régiment with Fargo Moorhead Opera, and Der fliegende Holländer with Washington National Opera.
25 encoreatlanta.com |
GREGORY LUIS BOYLE
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE, 2016
Gregory Luis Boyle, assistant director, is grateful to have lived and traveled all around the United States to pursue his passion for opera and happily calls Philadelphia his home. Boyle has recently directed La bohème at The Atlanta Opera, Don Pasquale for Inland Northwest Opera in Coeur D’Alene, Idaho, and revival directed Michael Shell’s The Barber of Seville at Austin Opera. Additionally, he has directed a concert version of Tosca for Opera Philadelphia’s outdoor series at The Mann Center in Philadelphia. He has also produced a new production of La Favorite at The Academy of Vocal Arts in Philadelphia and a new production of Mignon, which was postponed indefinitely. Recently, he worked at The Atlanta Opera and The Dallas Opera assisting on Tomer Zvulun’s new production of Das Rheingold. Boyle assisted on Stephan Barlow’s The Barber of Seville production at Santa Fe Opera. He has also worked with the Bonfils-Stanton Foundation Artists at Central City Opera as a director, giving young students the opportunity to explore and develop new roles in opera through a scenes program. Highlights from that summer include Die Fledermaus, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Elixir of Love, Dialogues of the Carmelites, and A Little Night Music
Boyle has also worked with young professionals at programs including at The Academy of Vocal Arts in Philadelphia, The Santa Fe Opera, and the Herndon Foundation of Emerging Artists of Virginia Opera. Previously, Boyle has held associate and assistant director engagements at companies including Opera Philadelphia, the Santa Fe Opera, The Dallas Opera, Central City Opera, and Virginia Opera among others.
NORA WINSLER
GLYNN STUDIO ARTIST
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT THE SHINING, 2023
Nora Winsler is a versatile director who has made significant contributions to numerous productions across the United States. Before her time in the studio program at The Atlanta Opera, Winsler held the position of Resident Assistant Director at Virginia Opera. After touring seven productions with the company over the past two seasons, Winsler returned to Virginia Opera to direct a new production of Il Barbiere di Siviglia this past fall. Tapped as an assistant director by leading directors, Winsler has worked with Francesca Zambello, Brenna Corner, Joachim Schamberger, and Mary Birnbaum. This upcoming summer, Winsler will assist on a new production of Fellow Travelers at Opera Parallèle in San Francisco.
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera 26 | cast&creative
RAYMOND ACETO HUNDING
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
Raymond Aceto, bass, has established an important presence among the world’s leading opera companies and symphony orchestras. His performances continue to gather both popular and critical acclaim. Of his performance as Baron Scarpia, The Houston Chronicle hailed, “Raymond Aceto oozes suave villainy as the evil Baron Scarpia, his voice a dark rumble of menace and lust as he plots to destroy Cavaradossi and conquer Tosca ... intelligent characterization distinguishes Aceto’s Scarpia as more than a cartoon villain. Commanding in voice and presence, implacable in his lust for Tosca, he is nonetheless subtle in his calculations. It’s his smiling ease that confirms how dangerous he is.” Recent highlights include performances in Madama Butterfly (the Bonze) and in Les Pêcheur de Perles (Nourabad) at the Metropolitan Opera and as Méphistophélès in Gounod’s Faust at Washington National Opera. Aceto returned to the Santa Fe Opera for the 2023 festival season in Debussy’s Pelléas and Mélisande (Arkel), and continued the 2023-24 season opening the Metropolitan Opera’s season as Warden George Benton in Dead Man Walking Most recently, he appeared with the Dallas Opera for Roméo et Juliette in the role of Frère Laurent, and will perform with the Fort Worth Symphony in Die Walküre
VIKTOR ANTIPENKO
SIEGMUND
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
Viktor Antipenko, tenor, praised for his effortless, expansive sound, and excellent technique, continues to sing leading roles to great acclaim and has become a singer to watch in the dramatic repertoire. In the 202324 season, he made his debuts at the New National Theatre Tokyo of Japan in Eugene Onegin (Lensky), at Pacific Opera Victoria and Scottish Opera performing his signature role of Siegmund in Die Walküre and repeats the role here in Atlanta. Last season, Antipenko made house debuts at Seattle Opera in Tristan und Isolde and returned for Das Rheingold, for performances in Glasgow and Edinburgh in Il Tabarro (Luigi) in a production by Sir David McVicar, and Lyric Opera of Kansas City debut as a Don José in Carmen with Roberto Kalb on the podium. He returned to Staatstheater Kassel for Hermann in Pique Dame conducted by Francesco Angelico and directed by Ariane Kareev and Israeli Opera for his role debut as Manrico in Il trovatore working with a creative team that includes director Daniele Abbado. Previously, Antipenko made his Metropolitan Opera debut in the famous Anthony Minghella production of Madama Butterfly (Pinkerton). He also made his role and house debut performing Radamès in Aida at the Israeli Opera conducted by Giuliano Carella and directed by Stathis Livathinos and debuted at Arizona Opera in Carmen (Don José) under the baton of Christopher Allen.
27 encoreatlanta.com |
GREER GRIMSLEY WOTAN
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT DAS RHEINGOLD, 2023
Greer Grimsley is internationally recognized as an outstanding singing actor and one of the most prominent Wagnerian singers of our day. Grimsley’s reign as a leading interpreter of the god Wotan has brought him to myriad esteemed international opera houses; some highlights include his portrayal of the role for a complete cycle of Der Ring des Nibelungen with The Metropolitan Opera, Deutsche Oper Berlin, Teatro Comunale di Bologna under Daniele Gatti’s baton, Gran Teatre del Liceu in Barcelona, New National Theatre Tokyo, the Nikikai Opera Foundation in Tokyo, San Francisco Opera, the Royal Opera Stockholm, and for Seattle Opera in three complete cycles over the past decade. Last season’s engagements included returns to Seattle Opera as the High Priest in Samson et Dalila and Wotan in Das Rheingold, the latter of which he also performed with both The Atlanta Opera and the Orchestra of the Music Makers in Singapore. In addition, Grimsley sang Scarpia in Tosca with San Diego Opera. This season, he returns to The Metropolitan Opera as The Captain in Mary Zimmerman’s new production of Florencia en el Amazonas, Palm Beach Opera as Scarpia in Tosca, and Santa Fe Opera as Paul in the world premiere of The Righteous. Other roles performed throughout the world include the title role in Der fliegende Holländer, Telramund in Lohengrin, Kurwenal in Tristan und Isolde, Amfortas in Parsifal, Jochanaan in Salome, Scarpia in Tosca, Don Pizarro in Fidelio, and the title role in Macbeth
WENDY BRYN HARMER
BRÜNNHILDE
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
Wendy Bryn Harmer, soprano, is heralded by the Seattle Times as “a standout…with a big, radiant voice.” This season, she returns to the Metropolitan Opera (Kitty Hart in Dead Man Walking) and debuts with Santa Fe Opera (Marilyn in The Righteous) and Utah Symphony (Ravel’s Shéhérazade). Future seasons include engagements with Staatsoper Hamburg, Lyric Opera of Kansas City, and Santa Fe Opera. She has excelled as Chrysothemis in Elektra (Metropolitan Opera), Senta in Der fliegende Holländer (Seattle Opera, Utah Opera); Sieglinde in Die Walküre (Michigan Opera Theater); Leonore in Fidelio (Opera Omaha, Boston Baroque), Ariadne auf Naxos (Palm Beach Opera), and Eglantine in Euryanthe (Bard Music Festival). She previously joined Seattle Opera, the Metropolitan Opera, San Francisco Opera, Montreal Symphony Orchestra, and Boston Symphony Orchestra for operas that comprise Wagner’s Ring cycle—her countless previous performances within the epic work encompass the roles of Sieglinde, Gerhilde, and Orltinde in Die Walküre; Freia in Das Rheingold; and Gutrune and Third Norn in Götterdämmerung. She has also sung Adalgisa in Norma (Palm Beach Opera), Rosalinde in Die Fledermaus (Houston Grand Opera), Fata Morgana in The Love for Three Oranges (Opera Philadelphia), Desdemona in Otello (Kalamazoo Symphony), and Susan B. Anthony in The Mother of Us All (Chautauqua Opera). Concert performances include Vaughan Williams’ A Sea Symphony (Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra), Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 (San Francisco Symphony, Tulsa Symphony Orchestra), and Beethoven’s Ah! Perfido and Barber’s Knoxville: Summer of 1915 (Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra). She is a graduate of the Metropolitan Opera’s Lindemann Young Artist Development Program.
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera 28 | cast&creative
GRETCHEN KRUPP
FRICKA
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE, 2022
Gretchen Krupp, mezzo-soprano, delivers with a voice described as “show-stopping,” “ripe, round” and “searing” and is quickly building a reputation for extraordinary vocalism and theatricality. Her repertoire is wide-ranging and eclectic, encompassing old and new, dramatic and comic. During the summer of 2023, Gretchen made her Santa Fe Opera debut in Der fliegender Holländer (Mary). Her 2024 engagements include a concert with the Hart Institute for Women Conductors, The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, and Elektra with Dallas Opera. The mezzo returns to Santa Fe Opera in 2025 as Waltraute, covering Fricka in Die Walküre, and joins the York Symphony Orchestra as the mezzo soloist in Verdi’s Requiem. In 2022-23 Krupp was a Glynn Studio Artist with The Atlanta Opera singing Kate Pinkerton in Madama Butterfly, Paquette in Candide, and Flosshilde, while covering Fricka, in Das Rheingold. She also sang Mother Earth in the premiere of Amy Leventhal’s new opera Our Sacred World and an opera gala with the Chattanooga Symphony. She has made concert debuts with The Dallas Opera, the National Symphony, Baltimore Concert Opera, and was a Filene Artist at Wolf Trap Opera for two seasons. She is a proud alumna of prestigious programs at Santa Fe Opera, Wolf Trap Opera, The Glimmerglass Festival, Des Moines Metro Opera, and Dolora Zajick’s Institute for Young Dramatic Voices.
Laura Wilde, soprano, a 2019 Richard Tucker Foundation career grant recipient, has been praised by Opera News for having “a ravishingly beautiful sound, [and] a fine sense of style and character.” In the 2023-24 season, Wilde made her debut with Utah Opera in La bohème and with The Dallas Opera in Elektra. In concert, she sang with the South Dakota Symphony as soloist in the Requiem by Johannes Brahms. Previously, she returned to the Metropolitan Opera to sing Ellen Orford in Peter Grimes, debuted the role of Floria Tosca at Arizona Opera, and performed the title role in Salome at Houston Grand Opera. Career highlights for Wilde include singing the title role in Kat’a Kabanova at Teatro dell’Opera di Roma, and Fiordiligi in Così fan tutte with Washington National Opera. Highlights of recent seasons include Mamah Cheney in the world premiere of Daron Hagen’s Shining Brow at Arizona Opera; the title role in Janáček’s Jenůfa at both Santa Fe Opera and English National Opera; Fiordiligi in Così fan tutte and Agathe at Staatstheater Stuttgart; the title role of Káťa Kabanová at Scottish Opera; Freia in Das Rheingold as well as Ortlinde and the cover of Sieglinde in Die Walküre, in David Pountney’s new Ring Cycle conducted by Sir Andrew Davis at Lyric Opera of Chicago; Gretel with Sir Andrew Davis at the Edinburgh Festival. Cancellations due to the Covid-19 pandemic included her Metropolitan Opera debut as Der Hüter der Schwelle des Tempels in Die Frau ohne Schatten, the full Ring Cycle at Lyric Opera of Chicago, and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 with the Memphis Symphony.
29 encoreatlanta.com |
LAURA WILDE SIEGLINDE ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
JULIE ADAMS
GERHILDE
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
Julie Adams, soprano, was winner of the 2014 Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions, 2015 George London Award, 2015 Elizabeth Connell prize for aspiring dramatic sopranos, and recipient of a 2015 Sara Tucker Study Grant. Adams has been praised by The New York Times for possessing a voice that is “rich, full and slightly earthy in an expressive way.” In the 2023-24 season, Adams made her role debut as Elsa (Lohengrin) and appeared on the concert stage in Mahler’s Symphony No. 2 (Sinfonieorchester Wuppertal) and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 (Pomona College and Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestras). Adams began her 2022-23 season at Opernhaus Zürich, singing the role of Gerhilde in Die Walküre, before singing the role of Sieglinde in the same title at Stadttheater Bern. In the 2021-22 season, Adams returned to Braunschweig for performances of Rusalka, joined the Ann Arbor Symphony for Schumann’s Adventlied, and made her company and role debut as Elisabeth in Tannhäuser in Wuppertal, Germany. The 2020-21 season saw Adams joining Staatstheater Braunschweig, where she was featured in the title roles of Rusalka and Madama Butterfly. In the 2019-20 season, Adams returned to Arizona Opera as Mimì in La bohème after her 2018-19 house debut with Arizona Opera as Anna Sorensen in Silent Night by Kevin Puts. Also in 2018-19, Adams made her house debut with Des Moines Metro Opera as Mimì in La bohème, and was featured in recital under the auspices of the George London Foundation. Orchestral engagements included Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 with the Phoenix Symphony conducted by Tito Muñoz, and a concert version of West Side Story with the Oakland Symphony.
YELENA DYACHEK
HELMWIGE
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
Yelena Dyachek, mezzo-soprano, was a winner of the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions in 2016, receiving praise from The New York Times saying “... memorable as the soprano Yelena Dyachek from California, who demonstrated impressive range, depth, and power in ‘Come scoglio,’ before delivering an emotionally captivating Letter Scene ...” A graduate from Houston Grand Opera’s prestigious studio program and during her time in the HGO Studio, Dyachek appeared in several productions including Musetta (La bohème), Flora (La traviata), and Berta (Il barbiere di Siviglia). Further productions included Norma, Some Light Emerges, and Nixon in China. In the summer of 2019, she made her debut as Marie Antoinette in Ghosts of Versailles at the Glimmerglass Festival. In the 2019-20 season she joined the Lyric Opera of Chicago for productions of Il barbiere di Siviglia and Dead Man Walking, and was scheduled to make her role debut as Tatyana in Eugene Onegin with Palm Beach Opera. Other scheduled performances that season were her Houston Symphony debut and a return to the Aspen Music Festival. Dyachek’s recent performances include her singing both the roles of Zemfira in Aleko and the title role of Francesca da Rimini with Odyssey Opera.
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera 30 | cast&creative
MAYA LAHYANI
Maya Lahyani, soprano, has been hailed as “a voice to die for [combined] with acting ability, beauty, and stage presence,” and is quickly becoming one of today’s most sought-after international singers. This season, Lahyani performed Grimgerde (Die Walküre) at Detroit Opera, the title role in Carmen at Portland Opera and Handel’s Messiah under the baton of Xian Zhang. Last season, she sang the role of Dorothée in Laurent Pelly’s production of Cinderella at the Metropolitan Opera. She also made her return in the title role in Carmen at both Arizona Opera and Minnesota Opera. Lahyani was a 2010 grand finalist of the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions and a 2008 finalist in the Joy in Singing Competition. She has been awarded scholarships by the San Francisco Foundation, the America-Israel Cultural Foundation, the Ronen Foundation, and the Israeli Vocal Arts Institute. She received her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in music from the Mannes School of Music in New York. She is married to tenor Viktor Antipenko.
CATHERINE MARTIN WALTRAUTE
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
Catherine Martin, mezzo-soprano, continues to make an impact in repertoire ranging from Verdi and Wagner to Strauss and Bellini. Last season, Martin made her role debut as Fricka (Dayton Opera’s Das Rheingold), bowed as Santuzza (Opera Colorado’s Cavalleria rusticana), as Mistress Quickly (Maryland Lyric Opera’s Falstaff), and joined Des Moines Metro Opera as Clarice (The Love for Three Oranges). This season, she returned to the Metropolitan Opera to cover Helen Prejean in Dead Man Walking and Preziosilla in La forza del destino and makes her Atlanta Opera début as Waltraute in Die Walküre Highlights from recent seasons include covering Marguerite in Berlioz’s Le damnation de Faust with the Metropolitan Opera; Eboli (Maryland Lyric Opera’s Don Carlos); Orfeo in Orfeo ed Eurydice with Kentucky Opera; Witch (Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra’s Hansel and Gretel); Waltraute (Twilight: Gods with Michigan Opera Theatre and Lyric Opera of Chicago); performances in various roles from Wagner’s Ring Cycle with Lyric Opera of Chicago, Houston Grand Opera, Washington National Opera, Boston Symphony Orchestra at Tanglewood, the Dallas Symphony, and National Taichung Theatre in Taiwan; Amneris in Aïda with Houston Grand Opera, Opera Carolina, Opera Colorado, and Opera Santa Barbara; Adalgisa (Florida Grand Opera’s Norma); Der Komponist (The Glimmerglass Festival’s Ariadne auf Naxos); Hécube and covering Didon in Les Troyens with Lyric Opera of Chicago; Maddalena (Rigoletto with New Orleans Opera and Opera Santa Barbara); Herodias (Dayton Opera’s Salome); Meg (Intermountain Opera’s Falstaff); Leonora (New Amsterdam Opera’s La favorita); Wowkle (Maryland Lyric Opera’s La fanciulla del West); Songs of a Wayfarer with the American Youth Philharmonic Orchestra; and Messiah with the Handel Oratorio Society.
encoreatlanta.com | 31
GRIMGERDE ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
DEBORAH NANSTEEL
ROSSWEISSE
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
Deborah Nansteel, mezzo-soprano, is poised for international stardom having already performed in almost all of the leading opera companies in the US. She made her début with The Metropolitan Opera as Alisa (Lucia di Lammermoor), her début with the Lyric Opera of Chicago as Gertrude (Roméo et Juliette), her Carnegie Hall début in Mozart’s Coronation Mass, and her New York Philharmonic début alongside Eric Owens in In Their Footsteps: Great African American Singers and Their Legacy. She performed the role of Mother in the World Première of Blind Injustice with Cincinnati Opera, as well as participated in Glimmerglass Opera Festival’s digital production of Jungle Book as Raksha. This season, Nansteel has house débuts with LA Opera as Aunt Lou in Highway 1, USA and The Atlanta Opera as Rossweise in Die Walküre, in addition to performing the roles of Azuecena in Il trovatore (Opera Santa Barbara) and Mother in Hansel and Gretel (Opera San Antonio). As a concert soloist, Nansteel will be seen with the Utah Symphony in performances of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 and Act III of Wozzeck, and joins the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola for their 150th Anniversary celebration of Verdi’s Requiem. Last season, Nansteel returned to the Metropolitan Opera as Annina (La traviata) and for their concert tour of Otello and had her house début with the San Francisco Opera in their productions of Eugene Onegin and Dialogues of the Carmelites. Nansteel also debuted the role of Amneris (Aida) for both Opera Grand Rapids and Finger Lakes Opera, performed Gertrude (Hansel and Gretel) for New Orleans Opera, soloist in Verdi’s Requiem for Orchestra Iowa, and performed the role of Mother Abbess (Suor Angelica) for Opera Omaha.
AUBREY ODLE
GLYNN STUDIO ARTIST
SIEGRUNE
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
RIGOLETTO, 2023
Aubrey Odle, known for her “warm, plummy” and “luscious” sound, is a competitive up-and-coming mezzo-soprano. She is currently a Glynn Studio Artist with The Atlanta Opera, this season performing roles in Rigoletto (Giovanna) and Die Walküre (Siegrune). For the Summer 2024 season, she will cover the role of Marilyn in the World Premiere of The Righteous at The Santa Fe Opera as an Apprentice Artist. Previously, as a Resident Artist with the Lyric Opera of Kansas City, she performed roles on the mainstage such as Flora (La traviata), Mercédès (Carmen), Mother (Amahl and the Night Visitors), and A Teacher (The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs). Other roles performed include Judith in Bluebeard’s Castle, the title role in Carmen, and many others. In competition, she most recently won second place in both the Opera Birmingham Vocal Competition and the Carolyn Bailey Argento Competition with the National Opera Association.
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera 32 | cast&creative
MERIDIAN PRALL SCHWERTLEITE
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
Meridian Prall, mezzo-soprano, is best-known for her vocal ease and golden timbre, recently made her Santa Fe Opera debut as the Third Wood Sprite (Rusalka). During the 2023 season, she was a Sullivan Award recipient and made two additional house debuts as Meg Page (Palm Beach Opera’s Falstaff) and Second Lady (Opera Theatre of Saint Louis’ The Magic Flute). Prall was featured in the Hart Institute for Women Conductors Showcase Concert as a soloist with Dallas Opera in January 2024. In summer 2024, Prall will return to Opera Theatre of Saint Louis as Cornelia in Julius Caesar. She will return to The Atlanta Opera as Third Lady in The Magic Flute. Prall studied violin from a young age and began taking voice lessons her sophomore year of high school. She followed her voice teacher, Denise Bernardini, to the University of Toledo and graduated in 2018. During her time in Toledo, she sang regularly with the Toledo Symphony and continues to sing masterworks alongside conductor Alain Trudel. She continued her studies at the University of Michigan and graduated in 2020. As a result of winning the University of Michigan Concerto Competition, Prall performed the United States premiere of Verklärtes Jahr, a song cycle for mezzo-soprano and orchestra by Joseph Marx, with University of Michigan’s University Philharmonia Orchestra, Adrian Slywotzk conducting. Meridian was a semifinalist in the Houston Grand Opera Eleanor McCollum Competition.
ALEXANDRA RAZSKAZOFF
ORTLINDE
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
DAS RHEINGOLD, 2023
Alexandra Razskazoff, soprano, was named a Grand Finals Winner in the 2022 Metropolitan Opera Laffont Competition. She is acclaimed by The New York Times as a “richly faceted, slinky soprano,” whose voice is “rich, distinctive of timbre, and penetrating, and possess[es] a lovely bloom on top” (Opera News). Razskazoff made her house debut last season with The Atlanta Opera as Wellgunde (Das Rheingold) and made her role debut at Teatro Municipal de Santiago as Micaëla (Carmen). She recently appeared in a series of concerts with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, Opera at Florham, Maryland Opera, Washington Opera Society, and Vero Beach Opera. She returned to Palm Beach Opera for their 2023 season to cover Fiordiligi (Così fan tutte) and Alice Ford (Falstaff). Alexandra made some notable house debuts in spring and summer of 2022 including Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 with the Bozeman Symphony and Mimì (La bohème) at Teatro Municipal de Santiago, Chile. She reprised Violetta (La traviata) with Out of the Box Opera, as well as Donna Elvira (Don Giovanni) with Teatro Grattacielo at the Phoenicia International Festival of The Voice.
33 encoreatlanta.com |
MYRIC ANDREASEN
MARTIAL ARTIST
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
JULIANNA FERACOTA
MARTIAL ARTIST
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
Myric Andreasen was born and raised in Manila, Philippines. She finished her bachelor’s degree in Communication Arts at the University of the East. In 2009, she married and migrated to the U.S. to start a family. She has spent the past five years as a background actress in several movies and television shows. In 2021, she began training as a stunt performer at L.A. Stunts and continued at ATL Stunts, focusing on stage combat performance, wire work, and martial arts. Working recently as an actress, she has appeared on The Secret Life of Amy Bensen and TV commercials for Popeyes and He Gets Us She is currently a student at North Georgia Aerials and the primary educator of her three children.
Julianna Feracota is a professional dancer based in Atlanta. She is a company member with Full Radius Dance and Monica Hogan Danceworks. She also pursues freelance projects and has been lucky enough to work with local choreographers like Julio Medina, Patsy Collins, Meaghan Novoa, and Nadya Zeitlin, among others. Feracota began her training at the Academy of Movement and Music in Oak Park, IL and graduated from the University of Iowa in 2018 with a BFA in Dance and a BBA in Accounting. She has trained extensively in ballet, contemporary, modern, and Graham. She furthered her studies at dance programs with AXIS Dance Company, Orsolina28, and Hubbard Street Dance Company. She has been honored to perform works by renowned choreographers like Alice Sheppard, Monica Bill Barnes, Rennie Harris, Jose Limòn, and Martha Graham. Feracota furthers her involvement with the Atlanta dance community as the Board Treasurer of DanceATL, a non-profit organization that provides resources and programming for local dance artists. In addition to her dance career, Julianna practices Muay Thai, a Thai martial art. She began training seriously in the form in 2021.
CRYSTAL YAU
MARTIAL ARTIST
ATLANTA OPERA DEBUT
Crystal Yau is originally from Hong Kong, and moved to the United States during her high school years. Her father was a Tai Chi master, and she developed a love for Tai Chi and Kung Fu. She studied with her father, and at the Shaolin Institute in Norcross, GA. She worked her way up the ranks, taking on leadership roles and performing Kung Fu all around Atlanta. She has performed Lion Dances, Dragon Dances, Dragon Ribbon, Tai Chi, and Kung Fu at locations like the Georgia Aquarium, Atlantic Station, Delta, and much more. She also has performed for several organizations like the Georgia Asian Pacific American Bar Association, Chinatown, ADP, and others. In 2024, Yau opened her own school to spread her love of martial arts, combining it with her background in holistic health, forming Phoenix Wellness Arts. Her repertoire consists of studies in traditional Shaolin Kung Fu, WuShu, Tai Chi, Wudang, Yoga, as well as experience with several weapons like staff, fan, broadsword, and straight sword. Based now in Duluth, GA, she continues to train, leading children’s Kung Fu, and teaching Tai Chi classes.
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera 34 | cast&creative
TOGETHER, LET’S MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN THE LIVES OF OUR NATION’S HEROES
The Home Depot Founda tion is proud to partner with The Atlanta Opera to honor our U.S. militar y, veterans and their families.
HomeDepotFoundation.org © 2020 Homer TLC, Inc All rights reserved.
VIOLINS
Peter Ciaschini
The Loraine P. Williams Orchestra Concertmaster Chair
Helen Kim
Asst. Concertmaster*
Lisa Morrison
Acting Asst. Concertmaster
Fia Durrett. Principal
Second Violin
Jessica Stinson
Acting Asst. Principal
Second Violin
Edward Eanes*
Felix Farrar
Sally Gardner-Wilson
Robert Givens
Patti Gouvas
Shawn Pagliarini
Virginia Respess-Fairchild
Patrick Ryan
Angèle Sherwood-Lawless*
Rafael Veytsblum*
Mary Matthews Burndrett†
Barbara Careaga†
Kevin Chaney†
Chelsea Cline†
Nina Fronjian†
Kim Hain†
Eva Hsu†
Alison James†
Kathryn Koch†
Kim Padgett†
Mayu Sommovigo†
Grace Kawamura Stubbart†
Elonia Varfi†
VIOLA
William Johnston
Principal
Catherine Allain
Asst. Principal
Ryan Gregory
Julie Rosseter*
Karl Schab*
Joli Wu*
Josiah Coe†
Tania Maxwell-Clements†
Shadwa Mussad†
Cody Russell†
Patrick Shelc†
Maggie Synder†
Meghan Yost†
CELLO
Charae Krueger
Principal
David Hancock
Acting Asst. Principal
Mary Kenney
Cynthia Sulko
Barney Culver†
Alexis Lee†
Sarah Kapps†
Grace Sommer†
BASS
Daniel Tancredi
Principal
Emory Clements
Samuel Dugo
Maurice Belle†
Robert Henson†
Jonathan McWilliams†
FLUTE/PICCOLO
James Zellers
Principal
Kelly Bryant double Piccolo
Erica Pirtle† double Piccolo
OBOES/ENGLISH HORN
Christina Gavin
Principal
Ann Lillya†
Kari Kistler† double English Horn
CLARINET/BASS CLARINET
David Odom
Principal
John Warren double Bass Clarinet
Justin Stanley†
BASSOON
Carlos Clark
Principal
Debra Grove
John Grove†
FRENCH HORNS/
WAGNER TUBA
David Bradley
Principal
Andrew Sehman
Associate Principal†
Jason Eklund
James Baker†
Michael Daly†
Eric Hawkins†
Mackenzie Newell†
TRUMPET
Yvonne Toll-Schneider
Principal
Alexander Freund
Brandon Craswell†
TROMBONE
William P. Mann
Principal
Richard Brady
Josh Bynum†
CONTRA BASS TUBA
Donald Strand
Principal
TIMPANI
John Lawless
Principal
PERCUSSION
Michael Cebulski
Principal
Courtney MacDonald-Bottoms†
Scott Pollard†
HARP
Susan Brady
Principal
Ellen Foster†
PERSONNEL MANAGER
James Zellers
ORCHESTRA LIBRARIAN
Phil Parsons
Musicians employed in this production are represented by the American Federation of Musicians of the United States and Canada.
*Core Musician On Leave | †Non-Core Musician
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera 36
| theatlantaoperaorchestra
2024-25 SEASON Discoveries: Bohème Project—Rent Jonathan Larson | Sept-Oct 2024 Pullman Yards Discoveries: Bohème Project—La bohème Puccini | Sept-Oct 2024 Pullman Yards The Magic Flute Mozart | Nov 2024 Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre Semele Handel | Jun 2025 Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre Macbeth Verdi | Mar 2025 Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre Siegfried Wagner | Apr/May 2025 Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre ATLANTAOPERA.ORG | 404-881-8885 AN OPERA
PRODUCTION
Head Carpenter
Head Fly
Tyler Malovoz
Kendrick Roberts
Head Electrician ................................ Jaime Mancuso
Head Properties
Head Video
Head Audio
COSTUME
Elizabeth Guiberteau
Andrew Van Eyechaner
Teddy Murray
Wardrobe Supervisor ............................ Kelly Chipman
Wig & Makeup
DIE WALKÜRE LIVESTREAM
Stagehands employed in this production are represented by the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees—Local 927
The Wardrobe Department employed in this production is represented by the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees—Local 859
The Make-up Artists & Hair Stylists employed in this production are represented by the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees—Local 798
Jessica Paige
Additional Camera Operators ............ Gioconda Barral-Secchi, Kendra Johnson, Valeriia Luhovska, Carlee Soeder, Adam Khan, Amber Kirchner
Sound Capture & Live Mixing
Sound Monitor
Switcher
Score Cuer
Livestream Technical Operator
Tim Whitehead
Preston Goodson
Felipe Barral-Secchi
Jessica Wax
Gerald Griffith
productionsupport |
STORYBOARD RENDERING BY ERHARD ROM 39
About the Glynn Studio Artists
Joining The Atlanta Opera are singers
Aubrey Odle, Amanda Sheriff, and Jason Zacher Kameron Lopreore was selected for a second season as a Studio Artist continuing from the 2022-23 season. Joining the vocalists will be stage director Nora Winsler
Each of the Studio Artists is an early career professional with significant training and stage experience, some with lead performances and major concert appearances on their resumé. The program builds on The Atlanta Opera’s commitment to provide opportunities for performers at all stages in their careers. Throughout the season, these artists will have the opportunity to work with established performers and coaches
to improve their skills in all aspects of their field. Master Vocal Teacher
Laura Brooks Rice has been part of the Studio Artist program since 2021 and is an acclaimed performer and voice teacher and acting coach. An experienced group of coaches and clinicians are engaged in the training and support of the Glynn Studio Artists.
The Atlanta Opera is grateful for the support of the young artist program from Beth and Gary Glynn. Significant support is also provided by the Donald and Marilyn Keough Foundation, John and Yee-Wan Stevens, and Jerry and Dulcy Rosenberg.
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera 40 | glynnstudioartists
AUBREY ODLE mezzo-soprano
KAMERON LOPREORE tenor
AMANDA SHERIFF soprano
NORA WINSLER stage director
JASON ZACHER bass-baritone
Meaningful Music, Medicine, & More
Music, passion, and service have defined Dr. Jill Mabley’s life since childhood. Her grandmother was a pianist in the Circuit Chautauqua movement through the 1920s and two of her uncles were classical singers. Mabley was drawn to folk music during her early years, but while in college, she experienced the “revelation” of hearing opera superstars Jussi Björling and Robert Merrill on the radio in George Bizet’s famous Pearlfishers duet. The power and beauty of their voices stirred Jill’s heart and inspired her lifelong love of opera.
Following her medical training, Mabley dove into her professional career as an ER doctor in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Dedicated to service, instead of vacationing during the slower months, Jill joined medical mission trips to serve communities in South America, Southeast Asia, and Central America.
When Dr. Mabley relocated to Atlanta in 1997 for a position at Northside Hospital, she wasted no time in supporting The Atlanta Opera with her attendance and donations. In 2001, her life took another unanticipated turn: “When the tragic events of 9/11 happened, I just felt like my calling was not in the private sector.” She quit her job and joined the Cherokee County Fire and Emergency Services as their medical director, a position she held for twenty-two years. The County Board of Commissioners recently honored her extraordinary service by naming the EMS Wing Dedicated in her honor.
Jill Mabley’s relentless commitment to serving others extends across multiple charities she holds dear. Following her young nephew’s untimely death, Mabley rewrote her will to ensure all her assets were left to nonprofits, including her local animal shelter and The Atlanta Opera. When asked what she loved most about opera, Jill cited “the power of the music–not just the singers, but also the orchestra. Then you add the costumes, lights, dancing, and staging. It offers everything and nourishes my spirit.” She calls the Opera’s digital broadcasts “a dream come true” for her to enjoy repeatedly. By remembering The Atlanta Opera in her will, Mabley finds satisfaction in knowing her planned gift sustains her dream to bring the timeless beauty of opera to future generations.
To learn how to join
Dr. Jill Mabley in the Opera’s Legacy Society, contact Jonathan Blalock at 336-512-6832 or jblalock@atlantaopera.org
41 donorprofile |
COURTESY DR. JILL MABLEY
ANNUAL GIVING
We are grateful for the following donors’ generous support. This list reflects gifts and annual pledges to unrestricted operating expenses, special projects, and/or endowment made between Jul 1, 2022 and Feb 21, 2024.
Director’s Circle
$200,000+
Harold Brody & Donald Smith†
John & Rosemary Brown†
Dr. Frank A. Critz & Dr. Ann Critz†
Beth & Gary Glynn
Mr. Howard W. Hunter - Gramma Fisher Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. Michael L. Keough
*Mr. & Mrs. Carl W. Knobloch, Jr.†
Jerry & Dulcy Rosenberg†
Katherine Scott
*Mrs. Lessie B. Smithgall
$100,000+
*Sylvia Halleck, MD
Mr. James B. Miller, Jr.†
John & Yee-Wan Stevens†
Rhys & Carolyn Wilson†
$50,000+
Cathy & Mark Adams†
The Antinori Foundation†
Mr. & Mrs. Paul Blackney†
Laura & Cosmo Boyd
Connolly Family Foundation
The Gable Foundation, Inc†
Mr. John L. Hammaker
Alfredo & Beau Martin†
Mary Ruth McDonald
Mr. William F. Snyder†
Ms. Bunny Winter & Mr. Michael Doyle†
$25,000+
Bryan & Johanna Barnes†
Mr. Robert P. Dean & Mr. Robert Epstein†
Dr. & Mrs. Alexander Gross†
Mr. John Haupert & Mr. Bryan Brooks†
Talia & John Murphy
Victoria & Howard Palefsky†
*Mr. William E. Pennington
Ms. Janine Brown & Mr. Alex J. Simmons, Jr.
Judith & Mark Taylor
Carol B. & Ramon Tomé†
Patron’s Circle
$15,000+
Mr. & Mrs. James Anderson
*Mrs. Elizabeth Bair
Julie & *Jim Balloun†
Mr. David Boatwright†
Dr. Donald J. & Janet Filip†
*Ms. Anne Marie Gary
Mr. & Mrs. Edward J. Hardin
The Hilbert Law Firm
Slumgullion Charitable Fund†
Stephanie & Gregor Morela†
Sandra & Peter Morelli†
Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Nicholas III
Christine & Mark St.Clare†
Larry & Beverly Willson†
The Mary & Charlie Yates Family Fund
Gold $10,000+
Elizabeth & Jeremy Adler†
Mrs. *Phillip E. Alvelda†
John & Wendy Anzalone†
Dr. & Mrs. Asad Bashey
Mr. & Mrs. C. Duncan Beard
Mr. & Mrs. Dante Bellizzi
Natalie & Matthew Bernstein
Anonymous
Mr. Frank H. Butterfield†
Mr. & Mrs. Kate Cook
Mr. Richard H. Delay & Dr. Francine D. Dykes†
Mr. Tomer Zvulun & Mrs. Susanna Eiland
Dr. & Mrs. Todd D. Ellis
Dieter Elsner†
Ms. Ariana B. Fass
Deborah & Paul Harkins
Roya & Bahman Irvani
*Mary & *Wayne James
Dr. & Mrs. David Kavtaradze
Mr. & Mrs. Steve Paro†
Mr. & Mrs. Michael E. Paulhus†
Norm & Shannon Prestage
Lynn & Kent Regenstein†
Ms. Ana M. Rountree & Mr. Mason Rountree
Mr. Milton J. Sams†
Thomas R. Saylor
Charles T. & Donna Sharbaugh†
Mr. & Mrs. Timothy E. Sheehan
Triska Drake & G. Kimbrough Taylor†
Wadleigh C. Winship Charitable Fund
Silver $5,000+
Mr. & *Mrs. Shepard B. Ansley
Dr. R. Dwain Blackston
Drs. Eda Hochgelerent & Bruce Cassidy†
John W. Cooledge†
Mr. & Mrs. Ron L. Cundy
Dr. Jeannette Guarner & Dr. Carlos del Rio
Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Edge
Mr. & Mrs. Reade Fahs
Sally & Hank Fielding†
Ms. Rebecca Y. Frazer & Mr. Jon Buttrey
Mr. & Mrs. Ethan Garonzik
Ellis & Cathy Green
Kevin Greiner & Robyn Roberts
Judge Adele P. Grubbs
Gena & Joey Gyengo
Ms. Lynn Hanna
Dr. Thomas High
Donna & *Richard Hiller
Mr. L. D. Holland†
Billy Huger
Mr. Pitak Intrawityanunt
Gail G. Johnson
Mr. & Mrs. Gert Kampfer
Ms. Anne Morgan & Mr. James Kelley
Ms. Elizabeth Klump
Mrs. Dale Levert & Mr. George W. Levert
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Long
Mr. Nicholas Marrone
Dan D. Maslia & Mimi Shetzen Maslia
Belinda & Gino Massafra
Robert & Creel McCormack
Erica McVicker
Clara M. & John S. O’Shea†
Lib & Neal Quirk
Mr. James L. Rhoden
Morton & Angela Sherzer
Baker & Debby Smith†
Lynne & Steven Steindel
George & Amy Taylor†
Mr. & Mrs. William E. Tucker
Dr. & Mrs. Nicholas Valerio III†
Benny & Roxanne Varzi
Thurman Williams
Bob & Cappa Woodward Charitable Fund
Bronze $2,500+
Scott & Betsy Akers
Mr. James L. Anderson
Ms. Casey Armanino
Atlanta Neurology
Catherine A. Binns
Mr. & Mrs. Earl Blair
Mr. Jonathan Blalock
Mr. Sean Bowen
Ms. Donna Burchfield
Ms. Mary Calhoun
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Cohn
T. Dennis Connally
Jean & Jerry Cooper
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera
42 | giving&support
Jim & Carol Dew
Danica & Milton Dilligard
Mr. Mark du Mas
Drs. Morgan & Susan Horton Eiland
Mr. Thomas Emch
Mark & Mary Eppert
Mr. & Mrs. Lance Fortnow
Mr. Michael D. Golden & Dr. Juliet Asher
Dr. Thomas N. Guffin, Jr.
Ms. Laura Heery
Mr. Brian Henry
Douglas Hooker & Patrise Perkins Hooker
Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey R. Hoopes
Mr. & Mrs. David C. Huffman
Mr. Christopher Kell
Mr. Alfred D. Kennedy & Dr. Bill Kenny
Red Eft Mapping
Mr. & Mrs. Larry Kurlander
Ms. Brenda O. Lambert
Ms. Constance B. Lewis
Linda L. Lively & James E. Hugh III
Dr. & Mrs. Ellis L. Malone
Samantha & William Markle
John S. Metz
Philip & Caroline Moïse
Mrs. Agnes Nelson
Denis Ng & Mary Jane Panzeri Ng
Lucy S. Perry
Mr. Joshua Peyton
Mrs. Betsy Pittman
Margaret & Bob Reiser
Monet Jeanne Roberson
Mr. & Mrs. J. Barry Schrenk
Beverly & Milton Shlapak
Mr. & Mrs. E. Kendrick Smith
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Sproul
Gail & Barry Spurlock
Dr. Jane T. St. Clair & Mr. James E. Sustman
Dr. Tarek Takieddini
Mr. Johnny Thigpen & Mr. Clay Martin
Cynthia Widner Wall
Mr. Mark Westfall
Thomas R. Williams Family
*Dr. & Mrs. R. Craig Woodward
Friend’s Circle
Investor $1,000+
Mr. Paul Anderson, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert O. Banker
Ms. Hope M. Barrett
Christine M. Beard
Mr. Walter Carter Bland
Mrs. Jane Blount
Dr. & Mrs. Jerry Blumenthal
Raphael Bostic
Ms. Martha S. Brewer
Mr. Nelson C. Chu
Ms. Alice Sue Claeys
Mrs. Carol J. Clark
Mr. N. Jerold Cohen & Ms. Andrea Strickland
Ms. Lillianette Cook & Ms. Carol Uhl
John & Linda Cooke
Jeremy & Audrey Critz
John & Melissa Critz
Mr. & Mrs. Edward S. Croft III
Ann & Jim Curry
Dr. & Mrs. F. Thomas Daly Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Harold T. Daniel Jr.
Mr. James M. Datka & Ms. Nora P. DePalma
Mr. Trey Duskin & Ms. Noelle Albano
Anonymous
Micah Fortson & Georgia Jarman
Dr. Spencer H. Gelernter
Dr. Richard Goodjoin
James C. Goodwyne & Christopher S. Connelly
Helen C. Griffith
Ms. Louise S. Gunn
Felicia & Isaiah Hale
George L. Hickman III
Richard & Linda Hubert
Cliff Jolliff & Elaine Gerke
Mrs. Cecile M. Jones
Mrs. Peter G. Kessenich
Wadih & Ali Khayat
Ms. Carla Knobloch
Anonymous
Tim & Angela Leveridge
Mr. & Ms. Larry Anderson
Dr. Jill Mabley
Jennifer & Chad Mann
Dr. & Mrs. Steven Marlowe
Mrs. Erin Martin
Mr. Stedman C. Mays Jr. & Mr. Charles Bjorklund
Linda & Don Morris
Barbara & Mark Murovitz
Carol S. Niemi
Kathie & Charles Palmer
Mr. Darryl-Christopher Payne†
Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence S. Phillips
Dr. & Mrs. Donald Reitzes
R.J. & D.G. Riffey, Jr.
Sidney & Phyllis Rodbell
Ms. Hazel Sanger
Stewart & Mary Searle
Adhishesh Sood
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Stansfield
Kay Summers
Ms. Virginia S. Taylor
Mr. Michael Tushman & Mrs. Marjorie Williams
Eldred Veira
Ms. Betsy K. Wash
Alan & Marcia Watt
Rae & George Weimer
Dr. & Mrs. James O. Wells, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Mark Westfall
Ms. Kathy J. White
Dr. & Mrs. Hamilton Williams
Supporter $500+
Judith M. Alembik
Dr. Catherine Allard
Martha Allday
Dr. Raymond Allen
Paula Stephan Amis
Mr. John Baker
Mr. Albert E. Bender, Jr.
Mrs. Marilee F. Betor
Mr. Matt Blackburn
Jill Blair & Fay Twersky
Ms. Mary D. Bray
Stanford M. Brown
Craig & Brenda Caldwell
Mr. Pete Ciaschini
Dr. Lawrence M. Cohen
Mrs. Jan W. Collins
Julianna M. Critz
Maureen & Michael Dailey
Mr. Joseph V. Dawsey & Mr. Frank D. Kubanek
Mrs. Anne J. Ederington
Ms. Ellen J. Evans
Dr. & Mrs. Richard D. Franco
Dr. & Mrs. David J. Frolich
Mr. Glen Galbaugh
*Col. & Mrs. Donald M. Gilner
John Greer
Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Grodzicki
Mr. & Mrs. Sam Hagan
Debra M. Hulsey
Ms. Lynne Elliott Jones
Mr. J. Carter Joseph
Keith Kellum
Joan & Arnold Kurth
Mr. Scott Lampert
Mr. Sidney E. Linton
Livvy Kazer Lipson
Allan & Vaneesa Little
Dr. Jo Marie Lyons
Jeanie & Albert Marx
Mr. Michael Mayes
Mr. M. Reynolds McClatchey Jr.
Sally & Allen McDaniel
Mr. Bernard McGuinness
Mr. M Sean Molley & Ms. Heidi C. Pritchett
Ciaran Morris
Jane Morrison
Mr. Marvin Moss
Terri & Stephen Nagler
Mr. Allan & Mrs. Twinkle Nelson
Rita Omark
Mr. Lawrence F. Pinson
*Sharon & Jim Radford
Mr. Stephen L. Rann & Ms. Dytre Fentress
Mr. & Mrs. James W. Robbins
Sandra & Ronald Rousseau
Dr. & Mrs. William M. Scaljon
Dr. & Mrs. William E. Silver
Andrew J. Singletary, Jr.
Mr. Fred B. Smith
Mr. Paul Snyder
Sharon Daniels Sullivan
encoreatlanta.com | 43
Carolyn & Robert Swain
Stephen Swicegood
Dr. & Mrs. Michael Szikman
Mr. Stephen H. Thompson & Mr. Drew Mote
Mr. Joseph Usher
Ms. Juliana T. Vincenzino
Ms. Brenda D. Jennings
Kelly Weekes
Ed Willard & J. R. Attaway
Kiki Wilson
Contributor $250+
Christine Allen
Mr. Carl H. Anderson, Jr.
Stephan & Laura Anderson
Atlanta Opera Orchestra Players Association
Mr. & Mrs. David S. Baker
Claire & Bryan Benedict
Mr. Edward S. Berkoff
Mr. & Mrs. Sid Besmertnik
Dr. Stephen R. Brandt
James & Nancy Bross
Beau F. Brummett
Dr. & Mrs. Harold L. Chapman, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Don S. Coatworth
Carol Cookerly & Robert Beal
Mr. David D’Ambrosio
Carol Comstock & Jim Davis
Mr. & Mrs. John Drucker
Mr. & Mrs. David R. Dye
Allison Fichter & Phillip O’Brien
Judy & Stan Fineman
Mary Anne & Bruce Gaunt
Ms. Pat Godbee
Vasily Goncharu
Ms. Susan Goodman
Drs. Nancy & Robert Griner
Mr. Jamael & Mrs. Rashidah Hester
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas M. Holly, Jr.
Ms. Jan W. Hughen
Mr. Rolf Ingenleuf
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Johnston
Mr. William Johnston
Matthew Katzmark
Mr. & Mrs. David Keller
John & JoAnn Keller
Dorothy Yates Kirkley
Mr. Roy Locklear III
Richard Lodise & Valerie Jagiella
Mr. Simon Miller
Mrs. George E. Missbach Jr.
Berthe & Shapour Mobasser
Mr. & Mrs. George T. Munsterman
The Honorable & Mrs. George A. Novak
Mr. John Owens
Mrs. Polly N. Pater
Mr. & Mrs. John Payan
The Reverend Neal P. Ponder, Jr.
Catherine Popper & Noah Eckhouse in honor of Ms. Faye P. Popper
Misty Reid
Mr. Stephen & Mrs. Elizabeth Rhoden
Virginia Rolfes
Mr. Barry F. Ross & Mrs. Jane M. Rooks Ross
Ms. Anne Schneider
Ms. Regina Schuber
Mr. Karin Schwerd
Clayton & Holly Sparrow
Elizabeth Morgan Spiegel
Steve & Christine Strong
Dr. David E. Sutherland II & Mrs. Sarah F. Yates Sutherland
Barbara & Jon Swann
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick C. Taylor
Ms. Nancy A. Thomas
Ms. Mary Thorpe-Mease
Mr. & Ms. Wolfgang Tiedtke
Ms. Susan Wall
Ms. Jone Williams & Ms. Barbara Robb
44 | giving&support
†extraordinary donors who have committed to continue their annual giving for three years or more *deceased Our audience is your audience. Advertise with Encore and reach a targeted group of performing arts lovers. CONTACT: Hila Johnson (305) 978-2922 hila@encorecharlotte.com
CORPORATE PARTNERS
$100,000+
The Coca-Cola Company
The Home Depot Foundation
$50,000+
Gas South Truist UPS
$25,000+
The Capital Group Companies Charitable Foundation
Price Waterhouse Coopers
Warner Bros. Discovery
$10,000+
Accenture LLP
Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta
The Hilbert Law Firm
Homrich-Berg, Inc. - Buckhead
KaneTreadwell Law LLC
KPMG LLP
National Distributing Co., Inc.
Troutman Pepper WestRock Company
$5,000+
CIBC EY
Anonymous
Wallace Graphics
$2,500+
BNY Mellon
FOUNDATIONS & GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
Foundations
$500,000+
The Molly Blank Fund of The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation
Lettie Pate Evans Foundation
$225,000+
Mr. Howard W. Hunter - Gramma Fisher Foundation
Donald & Marilyn Keough Foundation
$100,000+
Anonymous
The Coca-Cola Foundation
The Halle Foundation
Knobloch Family Foundation
$50,000+
Atlanta Music Festival Association Fund of Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta
The Roy and Janet Dorsey Foundation
The Gable Foundation
Livingston Foundation†
Mary & EP Rogers Foundation, Inc.
The Sara Giles Moore Foundation
The Rich Foundation, Inc.
Truist Trusteed Foundations:
Florence C. and Harry L. English Memorial Fund
The Zeist Foundation, Inc.
$20,000+
Connolly Family Foundation
The Jim Cox, Jr. Foundation
The Hertz Family Foundation, Inc.
J. Marshall & Lucile G. Powell Charitable Trust
The Ray M. & Mary Elizabeth Lee Foundation
$10,000+
David, Helen, & Marian Woodward Fund
The George M. Brown Trust Fund
JBS Foundation
$5,000+
Camp-Younts Foundation
$1,000+
Atlanta Woman’s Club
The Hills Family Foundation, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas D. Hills, Trustees
Kiwanis Foundation of Atlanta
The Mary Brown Fund of Atlanta, Georgia
The Opera Guild for Atlanta
Frances Wood Wilson
Foundation, Inc.
Government
City of Atlanta Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs
Fulton County Arts & Culture
Georgia Council for the Arts
National Endowment for the Arts
encoreatlanta.com | 45
Official Beverage of The Atlanta Opera
BARBARA D. STEWART LEGACY SOCIETY
The Atlanta Opera established the Barbara D. Stewart Legacy Society to recognize donors who have designated The Opera as a beneficiary in their estate plan. In honor of Barbara D. Stewart’s many contributions to The Atlanta Opera, our planned giving division, the Encore Society, has been renamed the Barbara D. Stewart Legacy Society.
Cathy Callaway Adams & Mark Adams
Anonymous (5)
Mr. & *Mrs. Shepard B. Ansley
*Mrs. Elizabeth Ann Bair
Mrs. Wallace F. Beard
The Bickers Charitable Trust
Mr. Jonathan Blalock
*Jim & *Nancy Bland
Mr. Montague L. Boyd, IV
Mr. Robert Colgin
*Martha Thompson Dinos
The Roy & Janet Dorsey Foundation
Mr. Richard H. Delay & Dr. Francine D. Dykes
Arnold & Sylvia Eaves
* Ms. Dorothy E. Edwards
*Heike & Dieter Elsner
Ms. Melodi Ford
Carl & Sally Gable
*Ms. Anne Marie Gary
Mr. & Mrs. Sidney W. Guberman
Ms. Judy Hanenkrat
*Sylvia Halleck, MD
Caroline Hardin
Richard & Fern Hartnig
The Hilbert Family Trust
Eda L. Hochgelerent, M.D. & Bruce A. Cassidy, M.D.
Mr. L. Don Holland
Mr. Hilson Hudson
*Mrs. Joseph B. Hutchison
Gail G. Johnson
Mr. J. Carter Joseph
*Mrs. Alfred D. Kennedy, Sr.
*Mrs. Isabelle W. Kennedy
*Donald & *Marilyn Keough
Mr. & Mrs. Michael L. Keough
Ms. Corina M. LaFrossia
Mr. & Mrs. John G. Malcolm
Mr. Robert L. Mays
Mr. & Mrs. Allen P. McDaniel
*Peggy Weber McDowell & *Jack McDowell
Mr. & Mrs. Craig N. Miller
*Miss Helen D. Moffitt
Mr. J. Robert Morring
Clara M. & John S. O’Shea
Mrs. Polly N. Pater
Mr. James Paulk
*Mr. William Pennington
*Mr. Bruce Roth
Ms. Hazel Sanger
Mr. D. Jack Sawyer, Jr.
Anita & J. Barry Schrenk
Katherine Scott
Elizabeth N. Shapiro
*Mrs. Lessie B. Smithgall
Elizabeth Morgan Spiegel
Christine & Mark St.Clare
*Ms. Barbara D. Stewart
*Mrs. Eleanor H. Strain
Mr. Tarek Takieddini
Sandra & *Tom Teepen
Dr. & Mrs. Harold Whitney
*Mrs. Jane S. Willson
Rhys & Carolyn Wilson
Ms. Bunny Winter & Mr. Michael Doyle
Mr. Charles R. Yates, Jr. & Mrs. Mary Mitchell Yates
*Mr. & *Mrs. Charels R. Yates, Sr.
Mr. Tomer Zvulun & Mrs. Susanna Eiland
*deceased
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera
46 | giving&support
TRIBUTES & MEMORIALS
In Memory of Eleonora M. Barson
Colonel John V. Barson, D.O. & Mrs. Gay L. Barson
In Honor of Mr. Jonathan Blalock
Mr. John Thompson, II
Mr. William F. Snyder
Connor Howard
Rae & George Weimer
In Honor of Dr. Hal Brody & Mr. Don Smith
Jonathan Blalock
Connor Howard
In Honor of John & Rosemary Brown
Mr. Barry F. Ross & Mrs. Jane M. Rooks Ross
In Memory of Maria Callas
Jesus Olivas Sierra
In Memory of Suzanne Claeys
Ms. Alice Sue Claeys
In Honor of Rebekah Clark Cooledge
Dr. John W. Cooledge
In Honor of Brother George Councill
Barbara Bonner
In Honor of Ann & Frank Critz
Brenda O’Neal Lambert
Rae & George Weimer
In Honor of Robert Dean & Robert Epstein
Jonathan Blalock
Linda & Don Morris
In Memory of Col. & Mrs. Edgar W. Duskin
Noelle Albano & Trey Duskin
In Honor of Mr. Robert G. Edge
Mrs. Eleanor Crosby
In Honor of Sally & Hank Fielding
Ms. Anne Schneider
In Memory of Sam Hagan
Jonathan Blalock
William Frampton, III
Mr. Alfred Msezane
William Ogden Shropshire
Wayne R. Vason & Lee Harper
Elizabeth Wilson
In Memory of Harriet Harris
Carlquist Harris
Freya Harris
Karen Rajczi
In Memory of Dr. James T. Lowman
The Family of Frank A. Thorpe
Ms. Mary Thorpe-Mease
Mr. Stephen Koger
John & Yee-Wan Stevens
In Honor of Alfredo Martin
Jonathan Blalock
In Honor of Mary Ruth McDonald
Jonathan Blalock
Rae & George Weimer
In Memory of Peggy McDowell
Mr. J. Carter Joseph
In Honor of Julie Meyer
Helen & Steven Kraus
In Honor of Talia & John Murphy
Lib & Neal Quirk
In Memory of Ann Chamlee Payne
Darryl-Christopher Payne
In Memory of William Pennington
Jonathan Blalock
In Memory of Marietta Pompilio
Dan Pompilio & Lark Ingram
In Memory of the Honorable George A. Novak
Jana M. Novak
In Honor of Howard & Victoria Palefsky
Mr. & Mrs. Kate Cook
Donna Burchfield & Penn Nicholson
In Honor of Jerome & Dulcy Rosenberg
Mr. & Mrs. Jay Davis
Dr. & Mrs. William E. Silver
In Honor of Rolando Salazar & The Atlanta Opera Chorus
Ms. Pat Godbee
In Honor of Katherine Scott
Jonathan Blalock
In Honor of William F. Snyder
Jonathan Blalock
In Honor of Paul Warshauer
Helen & Steven Kraus
In Memory of Margaret Williams
Thurman Williams
In Memory of Marya Gabrielle Williams
Jone Williams & Barbara Robb
In Honor of Charlie & Mary Yates
Anonymous (24)
Carol Cookerly & Robert Beal
Mr. Jonathan Blalock
Mr. Pitak Intrawityanunt
Mr. Joshua Peyton
Mr. Stephen & Mrs. Elizabeth Rhoden
Mr. & Mrs. J. Barry Schrenk
Dr. David E. Sutherland II & Mrs. Sarah F. Yates Sutherland
Dorothy Yates Kirkley
Mr. Joseph Usher
In Honor of Mr. Tomer Zvulun & Ms. Susanna Eiland
Sally & Hank Fielding
Mr. Michael D. Golden & Dr. Juliet Asher
Connor Howard
Ms. Elizabeth Klump
Emily Knobloch
Mr. & Mrs. Larry Kurlander
Mary Ruth McDonald
Katherine Scott
John & Yee-Wan Stevens
Mr. & Mrs. William E. Tucker
Rae & George Weimer
In Memory of Henry Zvulun
Mary Jane Burkhalter
Sally & Hank Fielding
Mr. Michael D. Golden & Dr. Juliet Asher
Katherine Scott
Ms. Elizabeth Klump
In Honor of The Atlanta Opera Staff
Rae & George Weimer
encoreatlanta.com | 47
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Board Chair
Mr. Rhys T. Wilson
Vice-Chair
Mr. John L. Hammaker
Vice-Chair | Development Committee Co-Chair
Mr. Charles R. Yates, Jr.
Secretary
Mr. John Haupert
Treasurer | Finance Committee Chair
Ms. Bunny Winter
Audit Chair
Mr. Bryan H. Barnes
Community Engagement Committee Chair
Mr. Alex Simmons, Jr.
Development Committee Co-Chair
Mrs. Talia Murphy
Equity, Diversity & Inclusion Committee Chair
Mrs. Stephanie Morela
MEMBERS
Mrs. Elizabeth Adler
Mrs. Susan M. Anderson
Mr. Dante Bellizzi
Mr. Montague L. Boyd, IV
Dr. Harold J. Brody
Mrs. Rosemary Kopel Brown
Dr. Frank A. Critz
Mr. Robert Dean
Dr. Carlos del Rio
Dr. Todd Ellis
Mr. Dieter Elsner
Dr. Donald J. Filip
Mrs. Joanne Chesler Gross
Mrs. Caroline Hardin
Mr. Jamael Hester
Mrs. Laura Lane
Mr. Andrew R. Long
Mr. Alfredo Martin
ADVISORY COUNCIL BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Mr. Andrew J.M. Binns
Mr. Kenny L. Blank
Mrs. Inge Bledel
Ms. Mary Calhoun
Ms. Sally Bland Fielding
Facilities Task Force Chair
Mr. Howard Palefsky
Investment Committee Co-Chair
Mr. Frank Butterfield
Investment Committee Co-Chair
Mrs. Sandra S. Morelli
Nominating & Board Engagement Committee Chair
Mr. Kevin Greiner
Strategic Planning Committee Chair
Mrs. Christine St.Clare
At-Large Member, Immediate Past Chair
Mrs. Cathy Callaway Adams
At-Large Member
Mr. Howard W. Hunter
Carl W. Knobloch, Jr. General & Artistic Director, ex-officio member
Mr. Tomer Zvulun
Ms. Kelly Mayall
Mr. James B. Miller, Jr.
Mr. Michael E. Paulhus
Mr. Herbert J. Rosenberg
Mr. Thomas Saylor
Mr. William E. Tucker
Ms. Julia Filson
Mr. Roger Fleming
Mr. Lance Fortnow
Mrs. Beth W. Glynn
Dr. Thomas N. Guffin, Jr.
HONORARY MEMBERS
Mr. Ronald Antinori
The Very Reverend Samuel G. Candler
Mr. Robert G. Edge
Mr. Carl I. Gable, Jr.
Mrs. Nancy Hall Green
Mr. Gregory F. Johnson
Mr. Carter Joseph
Mr. Alfred Kennedy, Jr.
Mr. Michael Keough
Mrs. Emily C. Knobloch
Mr. George Levert
Mr. J. Barry Schrenk
Mr. Timothy E. Sheehan
Mr. G. Kimbrough Taylor, Jr.
Mr. Mark K. Taylor
Mr. Thomas R. Williams
Mr. Robert G. Woodward
Mr. Douglas Hooker
Mrs. Erin Quinn Martin
Mr. Robert G. Pennington
Mr. Paul Snyder
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera 48 | leadership
EXECUTIVE
Carl W. Knobloch, Jr. General & Artistic Director Tomer Zvulun
Managing Director
Executive Assistant & Board Liason
Special Projects Manager
ARTISTIC / MUSIC
Carl & Sally Gable Music Director
Director of Artistic Administration
Artistic & Operations Manager
Chorus & Orchestra Manager
Micah Fortson
Misty Reid
Nancy Kritikos
Arthur Fagen
Meredith Wallace
Megan Bennett
Orchestra Librarian ................................
Artistic Services Coordinator
PRODUCTION
Director of Production
Assoc. Director of Production
Production Manager
Technical Director
Lighting Supervisor
Props Supervisor & Artisan
COSTUME
Costume Director
Show Manager
Communications Coordinator
Master Draper / Tailor
First Hand
Chris Bragg
Phil Parsons
Elizabeth Graiser
Robert Reynolds
Meggie Roseborough
Amy Smith
Rick Combs
Matthew Peddie
Paige Steffens
Sarah Burch Gordon
Paula Peasley-Ninestein
Allison Hines
Mary Cruz Torres
Gibron Shepperd
Stitchers Hauzia Conyers, Michelle Lee, Jenn Rogers
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT & EDUCATION
Director of Community Engagement & Education
Education Manager
Community Engagement & Education Coordinator
DEVELOPMENT
Development Managing Director
Director of Development—Individual Giving
Associate Director of Development Operations
Development Operations Manager
Individual Giving Manager
Institutional Giving Manager
FINANCE
Jessica Kiger
Amy Williams
Jonesia Williams
Jessica Langlois
Jonathan Blalock
Katy Gardner
Aaron Walker
Luke MacMillan
Marisol Deus
Controller
Inga V. Murro
Staff Accountant Camelia Johnson
Staff Accountant
David Tubbs, Jr.
Bookkeeper Ruth Strickland
ADMINISTRATION
Chief Administrative Officer Kathy J. White
Director of Human Resources Kenneth R. Timmons
MARKETING, COMMUNICATIONS, & AUDIENCE DEVELOPMENT
Director of Sales & Marketing
Creative Services Manager
Marketing Project Manager
Sales & Marketing Manager
Senior Manager, Ticketing Services
Ticketing Services Coordinator
COMMUNICATIONS & PUBLIC RELATIONS
Director of Communications & Public Relations
THE ATLANTA OPERA FILM STUDIO
Rebecca Brown
Matt Burkhalter
Emily Crisp
Ashley May King
Renee Smiley
Chauncey Sims
Michelle Winters
Director of The Atlanta Opera Film Studio Felipe Barral
Film Associate
Short-Form Video Editor
GLYNN STUDIO
Master Teacher
Studio Artists ...........
Amanda Sachtleben
Brittany Fontis
Laura Brooks Rice
Kameron Lopreore, Aubrey Odle, Amanda Sheriff, Nora Winsler, Jason Zacher
49 staff |
CONCESSIONS
Concession stands are located in the center of the lobbies on all three levels. Food and beverage items are prohibited inside the theater. Thank you for your cooperation.
RESTROOMS
Restrooms are located on house right and house left of all three lobbies. Family restrooms are also located on house right of all three lobbies. Mobility-impaired patrons may use any of our restrooms.
PREPAID PARKING
On the performance page on the Cobb Energy Centre website there is a link to purchase parking in advance. Day of parking is available for $15 (credit or debit card only). There are 1,000 on-site parking spaces; 700 in a four-level deck and 300 more in a surface lot.
EMERGENCY INFO
In the event of an emergency, please locate the nearest usher who will direct you to the appropriate exit.
ELEVATORS
Elevators are located on each side of the lobbies on all levels.
LOST & FOUND
Items are turned into the Synovus Box Office on the day of a performance. To
inquire about a lost item, please call Public Safety at 770-916-2911.
SMOKING
Smoking is prohibited inside the building.
SPECIAL ASSISTANCE
Persons requiring access assistance are asked to contact the Ticketmaster at 800-982-2787 for advance arrangements.
Audio clarification devices are available to our hearing impaired guests at no charge. This is on a firstcome, first-served basis and are available at the main desk in the lobby.
Wheelchairs are available upon request. All items require a form of identification to be held until the item is returned.
COBB ENERGY CENTRE RULES & REQUESTS
• All patrons, regardless of age, must have a ticket in order to be admitted to the performance. Please be aware that not all performances are suitable for children.
• Infants will not be admitted to adult programs. Parents will be asked to remove children who create a disturbance.
• There is no late seating allowed. Closed-circuit monitors are provided in the lobby as a courtesy to
latecomers.
• Please turn off all cellphones prior to the beginning of each performance.
• Please limit conversation during the performance.
• Cameras (including use of cellphone camera) and audio and video recording devices are strictly prohibited at all times.
• Leaving while the show is in progress is discourteous and we ask that you refrain from doing so.
• Please unwrap all candies and cough drops before the performance.
atlantaopera.org | @theatlantaopera 50
| housepolicies
IDENTITY CONFLICT
AN EVENING OF MUSIC & REFLECTION
Featuring Another Sunrise and post-concert panel discussion
WED 1 MAY @ 6:30PM THE TEMPLE | 1589 PEACHTREE ST, NE
ATLANTAOPERA.ORG/ANOTHER-SUNRISE &
The Douglas J. Hertz Family Foundation
Clinton Smith conductor Esther Tonea soloist