Glenn Edgerton, Artistic Director
NEW WORKS FESTIVAL
at the Museum of Contemporary Art
MAY 10–14, 2017 FEATURING
Performing at
Cadence by Julia Rhoads Berceuse by Penny Saunders Clan(device) by Alice Klock Cloudline by Robyn Mineko Williams
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HUBBARD STREET’S SEASON 39
SPOTLIGHT BALL Chairman of the Board, Sara Albrecht Honorary Chair, Mayor Rahm Emanuel Corporate Honoree, Exelon
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 2017 Beginning at the Harris Theater for Music and Dance 205 East Randolph Street 6:00 p.m. Special Gala Performance of “Hubbard Street at 40” Continuing at the Fairmont Chicago Millennium Park 200 North Columbus Drive 7:30 p.m. Reception and Dinner For more information, please contact Kristen Meyer by phone at 312-553-2000, via email at kmeyer@pjhchicago.com, or visit pjhchicago.com/hubbardstreetdance. Hubbard Street dancer Jacqueline Burnett in One Thousand Pieces by Resident Choreographer Alejandro Cerrudo. Photo by Todd Rosenberg. hubbardstreetdance.com
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THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS
SEASON SPONSORS
Official Provider of Physical Therapy
Official Health Club
Official Media Sponsor
NEW WORKS FESTIVAL
at the Museum of Contemporary Art
Anne Kaplan Individual Sponsor
Opening Night Sponsors Elizabeth Yntema for the Mark Ferguson Elizabeth Yntema Family Charitable Trust Lead Individual Sponsor Cloudline by Robyn Mineko Williams Bill and Orli Staley Leading Supporters of New Choreography Development Hubbard Street dancer Andrew Murdock, concept by Alejandro Cerrudo. Photo by Quinn B Wharton.
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danc(e)volve: New Works Festival 2017
A letter from Glenn Edgerton, Artistic Director Thank you for joining us for danc(e)volve: New Works Festival at the Museum of Contemporary Art. This weekend we are presenting the newest creations of four innovative and creative Chicago-based choreographers; Julia Rhoads, Robyn Mineko Williams, Penny Saunders, and Alice Klock. Each brings individuality and uniqueness to the stage to create a program that is both challenging for the dancers and interesting for our audiences. I’ve been following Julia Rhoads, Artistic Director of Lucky Plush Productions, since I first came to Chicago eight years ago. She brings out the individuality in each of the dancers and has brought a new approach of working which has included singing and the use of dialogue into the studio. Robyn Mineko Williams is also creating a new work for danc(e)volve, titled Cloudline. I always enjoy seeing the contrast of the choreographic process from choreographer to choreographer, and how the character of each new creation comes through, especially in this danc(e)volve program. Part of Hubbard Street’s mission is to provide opportunities for our dancers to pursue their artistic ambitions. It has been great to see Robyn, Penny, and Alice develop their skills as choreographers and I am happy to have the chance to help facilitate those goals. Berceuse by Penny Saunders, was first premiered during Hubbard Street’s Inside/Out Choreographic Workshop in 2011 and although it is not making its premiere, this will be the first time audiences will see it in a formal setting on stage. Similarly, Alice Klock’s piece Clan(device), while it premiered in Germany earlier this season by Hubbard Street 2 has been reworked and is, in essence, a whole new piece for the company. I am also excited to see the company perform on the stage of the Museum of Contemporary Art. To have the audience in such close proximity to the dancers provides an intimate experience that highlights the works being presented and allows everyone in the space to engage in the work completely. Be sure to come back and join us again in June as we launch our 40th season with a celebration of Hubbard Street’s history, combining classics and audience favorites from the past four decades, including The 40s and Georgia by Hubbard Street’s founding Artistic Director, Lou Conte. We hope you’ll join us for this retrospective look at the company before we move forward into our 40th Anniversary Season! Warmly,
Glenn Edgerton Artistic Director Hubbard Street Dance Chicago
Above: Hubbard Street Artistic Director Glenn Edgerton. Photo by Todd Rosenberg. Cover: Hubbard Street dancer Emilie Leriche, concept by Alejandro Cerrudo. Photo by Quinn B Wharton. hubbardstreetdance.com
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Glenn Edgerton Artistic Director
Karena Fiorenza Ingersoll General Manager
Jason D. Palmquist Executive Director
Lucas Crandall Rehearsal Director
Kathryn Humphreys Director of Youth, Education and Community Programs
Lou Conte Founding Artistic Director
Alejandro Cerrudo Resident Choreographer
Claire Bataille Director of the Lou Conte Dance Studio
Scott Nelson Production Manager
LaMar Brown Company Manager
Jason Natali Audio Engineer
Katherine Selig danc(e)volve Stage Manager
Rebecca M. Shouse Wardrobe Supervisor
Stephan Panek Head Carpenter and Stage Operations
Sam Begich Master Electrician
Julie E. Ballard Stage Manager and Properties Master
Season 39 Sponsors
Official Provider of Physical Therapy
Official Health Club
Official Media Sponsor
danc(e)volve Sponsors Anne Kaplan Individual Sponsor
Opening Night Sponsors Elizabeth Yntema for the Mark Ferguson Elizabeth Yntema Family Charitable Trust Lead Individual Sponsor of Cloudline by Robyn Mineko Williams Bill and Orli Staley Leading Supporters of New Choreography Development
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danc(e)volve: New Works Festival 2017
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Cadence Julia Rhoads, Choreography and Direction Movement developed in collaboration with the dancers Julia Rhoads, Sound score Bethany Clearfield, Vocal arrangement and coaching Michael Caskey, Sound consultant David Schultz, Accordion arrangement and performance
Burke Brown, Lighting Design Rebecca Shouse, Costume Design Recontextualized music samples: Samuel Barber. Knoxville: Summer of 1915 Paul Williams and Kenneth Ascher. Rainbow Connection. Richard Sherman and Robert Sherman. Stay Awake. Cat Stevens. If you Want to Sing Out, Sing Out. Paul McCartney. Hey Jude.
Bill and Orli Staley are the 2016-2017 Leading Supporters of New Choreography Development.
INTERMISSION
Berceuse Penny Saunders, Choreography Benjamin Godard, Music Julie E. Ballard, Lighting Design Matt Miller, Original Lighting Rebecca Shouse, Costume Design Created for and premiered by Hubbard Street Dance Chicago June 17, 2011 during its Inside/Out Choreographic Workshop. Music by Benjamin Godard: “Berceuse,” as performed by Budapest Strings, from the album The Instruments of Classical Music, Vol.6: The Cello, recorded by Cobra Entertainment LLC. Bill and Orli Staley are the 2016-2017 Leading Supporters of New Choreography Development.
Clan(device) Alice Klock, Choreography Loess, Apparat, Yasume, Music Julie E. Ballard, Lighting Design Jenni Schwaner Ladd, Costume Design Music by Loess: “Brumal” and “Wiebke,” from the album Wind and Water, recorded by n5MD. Music by Apparat: “Limelight,” from the album Walls, recorded by Shitkatapult. Music by Yasume: “The Prevailing Wind,” from the album Where We’re from the Birds Sing a Pretty Song, recorded by City Centre Offices, published by Cacophony Ltd. Bill and Orli Staley are the 2016-2017 Leading Supporters of New Choreography Development.
INTERMISSION
Cloudline Robyn Mineko Williams, Choreography Jherek Bischoff, Emitt Rhodes, Sufjan Stevens, Julie London, Olafur Arnalds, Alice Sara Ott, Music Loosebrains, Sound Design Burke Brown, Lighting Design Branimira Ivanova, Costume Design
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Music by Jherek Bischoff: “Eyes,” from the album Scores: Composed Instrumentals, recorded by Brassland, published by Kobalt Music Group. Music by Emitt Rhodes: “Lullabye,” from the album The Emitt Rhodes Recordings (1969–1973), courtesy of Universal Music Group, published by Manifesto Records. Music by Sufjan Stevens: “Now That I’m Older,” from the album Age of Adz, recorded by Asthmatic Kitty Records, published by New Jerusalem Music. Music by Arthur Kent and Sylvia Dee: “The End of The World,” as performed by Julie London, from the album The Very Best of Julie London, courtesy of Universal Music Group, published by Music Sales Corp. Music by Ólafur Arnalds: “Letters of a Traveller,” as performed by Ólafur Arnalds and Alice Sara Ott, from the album The Chopin Project, courtesy of Universal Music Group, published by Nettwerk One B Music US. Elizabeth Yntema for the Mark Ferguson Elizabeth Yntema Family Charitable Trust is the Lead Individual Sponsor of Cloudline by Robyn Mineko Williams. Bill and Orli Staley are the 2016–2017 Leading Supporters of New Choreography Development. danc(e)volve: New Works Festival 2017
PICTURED: BRIANNA BORGER AND PATRICK ANDREWS. PHOTO BY SAVERIO TRUGLIA.
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CHOREOGRAPHER PROFILES Alice Klock began dancing at age 11. She trained at Interlochen Arts Academy from 2003–07, and in Alonzo King LINES Ballet and Dominican University of California’s joint BFA program from 2007–09. Klock then joined Hubbard Street 2 in September 2009 and was promoted to the main company in September 2011. Klock creates original works in watercolor and mixed media as a visual artist; as a choreographer, she has contributed to the Nexus Project and Visceral Dance Chicago, in addition to premiering multiple pieces through Hubbard Street’s danc(e)volve: New Works Festival and annual Inside/Out Choreographic Workshop. Visit klockonian.tumblr.com to learn more.
Julia Rhoads is the founding Artistic Director of Lucky Plush Productions, a Chicagobased dance-theater company recognized for its layered choreography, palpable liveness, surprising humor, and socially relevant storytelling. Rhoads’s work for Lucky Plush has been presented at venues in over 40 international cities, and has commissioned by Harris Theater (IL), Krannert Center for the Performing Arts (IL), Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (IL), Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center (MD), Flynn Center for the Performing Arts (VT), The Yard (MA), and Links Hall (IL). Independent choreography credits include Steppenwolf Theater, Lookingglass Theatre, River North Chicago Dance Company, Walkabout Theater, and Redmoon, among others. Under Rhoads’s leadership, in 2016 Lucky Plush became the first and only dance-based company to receive the prestigious MacArthur Award for Creative and Effective Institutions, recognizing the company’s exceptional creativity and impact. Additional honors include the Alpert Award in Dance, a $75,000 unrestricted award given to one US choreographer annually, and a Fractured Atlas Arts Entrepreneurship Award for spearheading a shared fundraising model between Lucky Plush, Grammy-winning Eighth Blackbird, and puppet theater company Blair Thomas & Co. Rhoads’s work for Lucky Plush has been supported by competitive awards from National Endowment for the Arts, National Dance Project, National Performance Network, Maggie Allesee National Center for Choreography, Chicago Dancemakers Forum, Illinois Arts Council, and she was named as one of Dance Magazine’s “25 to Watch” in 2010, and has three times been named in Newcity’s “Players: The 50 People Who Really Perform for Chicago.” Rhoads is a former member of the San Fransisco Ballet and ensemble member of XSIGHT! Performance Group. She received her BA in History from Northwestern University, her MFA in Performance from the School of the Art Institute Chicago, and she is currently a Lecturer and Dance Advisor in Theater and Performance Studies at the University of Chicago. Penny Saunders, originally from West Palm Beach, Florida, graduated from the Harid Conservatory in 1995, and began her professional career with The American Repertory Ballet under the direction of Septime Webre. She went on to dance with Ballet Arizona, MOMIX Dance Theater, Cedar Lake Ensemble and in 2004 she joined Hubbard Street Dance Chicago. In 2011, Saunders won the International Commissioning Project which launched her choreographic career, creating pieces for Hubbard Streets’ main and second company, Whim W’Him, SFDanceworks, Neos Dance Theater, Owen Cox Dance Group, and The Nexus Project. Saunders is honored to be the choreographer in residence at The Grand Rapids Ballet, receiving support from The New York City Ballet Choreographic Commissions Initiative, and to be the recipient of the 2016 Princess Grace Choreographic Fellowship. In the 2017-2018 season, Saunders is excited to be collaborating with The Cincinnati Ballet, BalletX, Missouri Contemporary Ballet, Tulsa Ballet 2, as well as making her first full length for The Grand Rapids Ballet.
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danc(e)volve: New Works Festival 2017
Hubbard Street dancers Adrienne Lipson and Jacqueline Burnett in rehearsal with Robyn Mineko Williams.
Robyn Mineko Williams began her career at River North Dance Chicago, followed by twelve seasons as a member of Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, during which she performed choreography by renowned artists including Ohad Naharin, Jiří Kylián, William Forsythe and Johan Inger, and originated roles in new works by Jorma Elo, Sharon Eyal, Twyla Tharp and Lar Lubovitch, among others. She began making her own work in 2001 through Hubbard Street’s Inside/Out Choreographic Workshop and has since created multiple premieres for Hubbard Street’s main company and HS2. Williams has made work for Atlanta Ballet, Grand Rapids Ballet, Groundworks Dance Theatre, Thodos Dance Chicago, and Visceral Dance Chicago, presented at venues such as the Kennedy Center, the American Dance Festival, and the Joyce Theater. Named one of Dance Magazine’s “25 to Watch” for 2014, Williams was one of Northwest Dance Project’s 2012 International Choreography Competition, received a 2013 Princess Grace Choreographic Fellowship, and was selected as an emerging choreographer for Springboard Danse Montréal the same year. In 2015 she completed a Princess Grace Foundation–USA Works In Progress Residency at the Baryshnikov Arts Center and received a Choreography Mentorship Co-Commission Award from the Princess Grace Foundation–USA in support of HS2 + Manual Cinema’s Mariko’s Magical Mix: A Dance Adventure. In 2016, Williams launched her independent project, Undercover Episodes, and was named among Newcity’s Players 50 list of local leaders in the performing arts and Best Choreographer by Chicago Mag.
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2016–17 DANCER PROFILES Jesse Bechard (Bolton, MA) began his formal ballet training at age 16, graduated from Walnut Hill School for the Arts, and attended training programs at Boston Ballet, Alonzo King LINES Ballet and Ballet Austin. In 2000, having completed his freshman year at the University of Chicago, he returned to dance, performing for one year with Ballet Austin and for eight with Richmond Ballet. Bechard joined Hubbard Street in August 2010.
Jacqueline Burnett (Pocatello, ID) received classical ballet training in Pocatello, Idaho from Romanian ballet master Marius Zirra, with additional summer training at Ballet Idaho, Brindusa-Moore Ballet Academy, the Universal (Kirov) Ballet Academy, the Juilliard School and the San Francisco Conservatory of Dance. She graduated magna cum laude with departmental honors from the Ailey School and Fordham University’s joint program in New York City in 2009, while an apprentice with Hubbard Street. She was promoted to the main company in August 2009 and is a 2011–12 Princess Grace Honorarium recipient. Alicia Delgadillo (Charlotte, NC) began her classical training at the Susan Hayward School of Dance in San Francisco, California, and continued her studies in North Carolina with Gay Porter and Bridget Porter Young at the Charlotte School of Ballet. In 2004, Delgadillo began studying full time with Daniel and Rebecca Wiley at Piedmont School of Music and Dance. She has attended summer programs at Hubbard Street, the Juilliard School, San Francisco Conservatory of Dance, and Springboard Danse Montréal. Delgadillo graduated with honors from the Ailey School and Fordham University’s joint program in New York City in 2012, while a member of Hubbard Street 2, and was promoted to the main company in April 2014. Kellie Epperheimer (Los Osos, CA) began her dance training in 1988 at the Academy of Dance and Civic Ballet of San Luis Obispo, and attended training programs at the Joffrey Ballet School and the Juilliard School in New York City. A founding member of Cedar Lake Ensemble (later Cedar Lake Contemporary Ballet), she joined Hubbard Street 2 in January 2005, and was promoted to the main company in January 2007.
Michael Gross (Poughquag, NY) earned a BFA in Dance from the University of Arizona and received much of his early training from Colorado Jazz Dance Company in Colorado Springs, followed by further studies at the American Academy of Ballet and Springboard Danse Montréal. Formerly a member of River North Dance Chicago and Visceral Dance Chicago, Gross has also performed with Elements Contemporary Ballet and in the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s holiday production, Welcome Yule! Gross joined Hubbard Street in August 2014 and thanks his friends and family for their love and support.
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danc(e)volve: New Works Festival 2017
HUBBARD STREET DANCE CHICAGO Elliot Hammans (Santa Fe, NM) began his formal dance training in 2008 with Robert Sher-Machherndl and continued his ballet and modern dance education with Moving People Dance in Santa Fe, NM, under the direction of Curtis Uhlemann. Hammans joined Moving People Dance Company as an apprentice in 2010, trained on full scholarship at the Alonzo King LINES Dance Center in San Francisco, and attended Hubbard Street Dance Chicago’s 2011 and 2012 Summer Intensives. Following studies abroad at Austria’s Tanzzentrum SEAD, Hammans earned his BFA in Dance in 2014 from Tisch School of the Arts at NYU. Hammans joined Hubbard Street 2 in August 2014 and was promoted to Hubbard Street’s main company in August 2016. Jason Hortin (Olympia, WA) graduated from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas with a BFA in Dance under the direction of Louis Kavouras. His performance career includes work with Moving People Dance Theatre, Erick Hawkins Dance Company and River North Dance Chicago. Hortin joined Hubbard Street as an apprentice in August 2007 and was promoted to the main company in July 2008.
Alice Klock (See Choreographer Profiles) Emilie Leriche (Santa Fe, NM) began her dance training at the age of eight. In 2007 she began her formal dance training at Walnut Hill School for the Arts, with additional summer study at Joffrey Midwest, Complexions Contemporary Ballet and the San Francisco Conservatory of Dance. Leriche has performed alongside the dancers of zoe | juniper, and at the WestWave Dance Festival as a member of Maurya Kerr’s tinypistol. Leriche joined Hubbard Street 2 in 2011, was promoted to the main company in 2013, was named one of Dance Magazine’s “25 to Watch” for 2015, and is the recipient of a 2015 Dance Fellowship from the Princess Grace Foundation–USA. Adrienne Lipson (London, ON) began dancing under the tutelage of Jennifer Swan and continued her studies at Ryerson University. There, Lipson was a founding member of Rock Bottom Movement, and supplemented her training with summers at Hubbard Street, Jacob’s Pillow, and Springboard Dance Montréal, amongst others. Upon graduation in 2013, Lipson moved to Chicago to join Hubbard Street 2. Lipson worked with choreographer Robyn Mineko Williams on the development of her UNDER(cover) series, and creates her own work as part of Hubbard Street’s Inside/Out Choreographic Workshop. Lipson was promoted to the main company in August 2016. Michel Rodriguez Cintra (Guest Artist courtesy of Lucky Plush Productions) is a Cuban born dancer, teacher and choreographer. He graduated from Escuela Nacional de Arte (National School of Arts) in Havana Cuba. Upon graduation he joined Danza Contemporanea de Cuba where he became Principal Dancer and toured internationally. After moving to Chicago in 2008 Rodriguez started dancing with Hedwig Dances. In 2013 Michel became an ensemble member with Lucky Plush Productions and has been a guest artist and company member in dance companies including Concert Dance Inc, Khecari, and Chicago Moving Company. Rodriguez acts as an Adjunct Faculty member at The Dance Center of Columbia College. He is also a founding member of The Cambrians where he performed The Nexus Project and Clover. Other choreographic credits include Solus for Visceral Dance Company in 2015 and Dancing in the Parks in 2014 and 2016. In 2010 Rodriguez was a finalist of the A.W.A.R.D. Show Chicago with his work Moi Aussi and was named one of The Men of 2010 in dance by Timeout Chicago. In October 2013, he was the recipient of the prestigious 3Arts Award and was featured in Dance Magazine’s 25 to Watch 2014. hubbardstreetdance.com
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2016–17 DANCER PROFILES Florian Lochner (Frankenhardt, Germany) trained at Ballettschule Malsam in Schwäbisch Hall, Germany, and the Staatliche Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst in Mannheim, where he was the recipient of its Birgit Keil Dance Foundation scholarship. Lochner earned his master’s degree in the performing arts and joined Gauthier Dance Company in Stuttgart in 2011, performing works by numerous choreographers including Mauro Bigonzetti, Jiří Bubenířek, Alejandro Cerrudo, Alexander Ekman, Itzik Galili, Eric Gauthier, Marco Goeke, Johan Inger, Jiří Kylián, Christian Spuck, Cayetano Soto, Philip Taylor, Stephan Thoss, Paul Lightfoot and Sol León. He received a “Best of the Season” nomination in Germany’s Dance for You! Magazine in September 2013, and joined Hubbard Street in August 2015. Ana Lopez (A Coruña, Spain) began her formal training at Conservatorio de Danza Diputacion de A Coruña. Upon graduating Isaac Diaz Pardo High School, she continued her training at Centro Internacional de Danza Carmen Roche. Prior to joining Hubbard Street in January 2008, Lopez danced with Joven Ballet Carmen Roche, with Compañía Nacional de Danza 2 in works by Nacho Duato and Tony Fabre, and at Ballet Theater Munich under the directorship of Philip Taylor. She was named one of Dance Magazine’s “25 to Watch” for 2012. Andrew Murdock (St. Albert, AB) is in his fourth season with Hubbard Street. After graduating from the Juilliard School, he joined BJM Les Ballet Jazz de Montréal. As a New York based freelancer he regularly collaborated with Aszure Barton & Artists. Additional collaborators include Gallim Dance, Cherice Barton, Joshua Beamish, Andy Blankenbuehler, Nina Chung, Joe Lanteri, Austin McCormick, Michelle Mola, Abdel Salaam, Edgar Zendejas, Zack Winokur, and Geneviève Dorion-Coupal. As a rehearsal assistant to Aszure Barton, he worked with American Ballet Theatre, Canada’s National Ballet School, Ballet BC, New York University, The Steps Ensemble, Arts Umbrella and Springboard Danse Montréal. David Schultz (Grand Rapids, MI) began training in Michigan with the School of Grand Rapids Ballet, where he then performed for four seasons with its company, Grand Rapids Ballet. Schultz joined Hubbard Street 2 in September 2009 and was promoted to the main company in August 2011, and he is the recipient of a 2012 Princess Grace Award.
Kevin J. Shannon (Baltimore, MD) began dancing under the guidance of Lester Holmes. He graduated from the Baltimore School for the Arts with additional training at the School of American Ballet, Miami City Ballet School, Paul Taylor Dance Company and Parsons Dance. He earned his BFA in 2007 at the Juilliard School, toured nationally with the Juilliard Dance Ensemble and appeared in the “Live from Lincoln Center” broadcast television special The Juilliard School: Celebrating 100 Years. Shannon joined Hubbard Street in November 2007. Jessica Tong (Binghamton, NY) received her formal training at the Ballet School in Salt Lake City under Jan Clark Fugit, as well as at the University of Utah, where she was a member of Utah Ballet. Tong danced with BalletMet in Ohio, Eliot Feld’s Ballet Tech in New York City and with Hubbard Street 2 before joining the main company in January 2007. She was named one of Dance Magazine’s “25 to Watch” for 2009, and currently serves on Chicago Dancers United’s Ambassador Committee for Dance for Life Chicago.
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danc(e)volve: New Works Festival 2017
About Hubbard Street Hubbard Street Dance Chicago’s core purpose is to bring artists, art and audiences together to enrich, engage, educate, transform and change lives through the experience of dance. Celebrating its 39th season in 2016–17, Hubbard Street continues to be an innovative force, supporting its creative talent while presenting repertoire by major international artists. Hubbard Street Dance Chicago grew out of the Lou Conte Dance Studio at LaSalle and Hubbard Streets in 1977, when Lou Conte gathered an ensemble of four dancers to perform in senior centers across Chicago. Barbara G. Cohen soon joined the company as its first Executive Director. Conte continued to direct the company for 23 years, during which he initiated and grew relationships with both emerging and established artists including Nacho Duato, Daniel Ezralow, Jiří Kylián, Ohad Naharin, Lynne Taylor-Corbett and Twyla Tharp. Conte’s successor Jim Vincent widened Hubbard Street’s international focus, began Hubbard Street’s collaboration with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and cultivated growth from within, launching the Inside/Out Choreographic Workshop and inviting Resident Choreographer Alejandro Cerrudo to make his first work. Gail Kalver’s 23 years of executive leadership provided continuity from 1984 through the 2006–07 season, when Executive Director Jason Palmquist joined the organization. Glenn Edgerton became Artistic Director in 2009 and, together with Palmquist, moved this legacy forward on multiple fronts. Inside/Out is now part of a broader strategy for building new repertoire, the Choreographic Development Initiative, which aims to be a national model for artistic development while proactively diversifying contemporary dance. Partnerships with the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, The Second City and other institutions keep Hubbard Street deeply connected to its hometown. To the company’s repertoire, Edgerton has extended relationships with its signature choreographers while adding significant new voices such as Kyle Abraham, Mats Ek, Sharon Eyal, Alonzo King, Crystal Pite, and Victor Quijada.
Claire Bataille, left, and Ginger Farley in Case Closed by Lynne Taylor-Corbett, 1986. Photo by Jennifer Girard.
Isaac Spencer, left, and Erin Derstine in Float by Julian Barnett, 2006. Photo by Todd Rosenberg.
Choreographer Mats Ek, left, rehearses Quinn B Wharton in Casi-Casa, 2012. Photo by Todd Rosenberg.
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Shannon Alvis, left, and Terence Marling in Extremely Close by Alejandro Cerrudo, 2008. Photo by Todd Rosenberg.
danc(e)volve: New Works Festival 2017
The main company’s members comprise one of the only ensembles in the U.S. to perform all year long, domestically and around the world, while four nationally renowned Summer Intensive Programs bring young artists into its ranks. Hubbard Street’s Youth, Education and Community Programs are national benchmarks for partnership, dance education and urban school research. In 2008, the Parkinson’s Project became the first dance class in the Midwest for those affected by Parkinson’s disease and, with The Autism Project pilot in 2014, it’s now part of Hubbard Street’s growing Adaptive Dance Programs. Youth Dance Programs for students ages 18 months to 18 years emphasize creative expression and are offered year-round at the Hubbard Street Dance Center. At the Lou Conte Dance Studio — where Hubbard Street began in 1974 — workshops and master classes allow access to expertise, while a broad variety of weekly classes offer training at all levels in jazz, ballet, modern, tap, African, hip-hop, yoga, Pilates® and dance fitness. Visit hubbardstreetdance.com to learn more.
Above left: Frank Chaves and Leslie Stevens in Mae by Richard Levi, 1987. Archival photo. Above right: Hubbard Street 2 in The 40s by Lou Conte, 2003. Archival photo. Center: Tobin Del Cuore, left, and Cheryl Mann in Gimme by Lucas Crandall, 2004. Photo by Todd Rosenberg. Ron De Jesús, left, Krista Ledden and Ensemble in I Remember Clifford by Twyla Tharp, 1996. Photo by Ruedi Hofmann.
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HUBBARD STREET’S CORPORATE CIRCLE These generous companies support our work onstage, in schools, and in communities through membership in our Corporate Circle. CORPORATE LEADERS $5,000 and above
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When your company joins Hubbard Street’s Corporate Circle, it receives exclusive benefits including performance tickets and an invitation to observe company rehearsal in our West Loop studios. For more information contact Joey Gaona, Corporate and Foundation Relations Coordinator, at jgaona@hubbardstreetdance.com or call 312-850-9744, ext. 170
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HUBBARD STREET STAFF PROFILES Glenn Edgerton (Artistic Director) joined Hubbard Street Dance Chicago after an international career as a dancer and director. At the Joffrey Ballet, he performed leading roles, contemporary and classical, for 11 years under the mentorship of Robert Joffrey. In 1989, Edgerton joined the acclaimed Nederlands Dans Theater (NDT), where he danced for five years. He retired from performing to become its artistic director, leading NDT 1 for a decade and presenting the works of Jiří Kylián, Hans van Manen, William Forsythe, Ohad Naharin, Mats Ek, Nacho Duato, Jorma Elo, Johan Inger, Paul Lightfoot and Sol León, among others. From 2006 to 2008, he directed the Colburn Dance Institute at the Colburn School of Performing Arts in Los Angeles. Edgerton joined Hubbard Street as associate artistic director in 2008; since 2009 as artistic director, he has built upon more than three decades of leadership in dance performance, education and appreciation established by founder Lou Conte and continued by Conte’s successor, Jim Vincent. Jason D. Palmquist (Executive Director) joined Hubbard Street Dance Chicago in May 2007, after serving the arts community in Washington, D.C. for nearly 15 years. Palmquist began his career at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, completing his tenure there as vice president of dance administration. At the Kennedy Center, he oversaw multiple world-premiere engagements of commissioned works in dance, the formation and growth of the Suzanne Farrell Ballet and the inception in 1997 of the Millennium Stage, an award-winning, free daily performance series that to date has served more than 3 million patrons. Deeply enriching the Kennedy Center’s artistic programming, Palmquist successfully presented engagements of global dance companies including the Royal Ballet, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, the Kirov Ballet, Paul Taylor Dance Company, American Ballet Theatre and New York City Ballet. Palmquist also managed the Kennedy Center’s television initiatives, including the creation of the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor and a prime-time special on NBC memorializing the first anniversary of the September 11 attacks. In 2004, he accepted the position of executive director at the Washington Ballet. Under his leadership, the company presented full performance seasons annually at the Kennedy Center and the Warner Theater, and nurtured its world-renowned school and extensive education and outreach programs. A graduate of the University of Northern Iowa, Palmquist currently serves on the boards of the Arts Alliance of Illinois and the Harris Theater for Music and Dance. Karena Fiorenza Ingersoll (General Manager) brings more than a decade of experience to Hubbard Street as a leader, fundraiser and producer in the performing arts. Most recently, she served as the associate managing director of Berkeley Repertory Theatre in California, where she line-produced and managed all new play development efforts, shepherding 30% growth in capacity. Previous tenures include executive director of contemporary dance company Robert Moses’ Kin (San Francisco, CA), associate managing director of Yale Repertory Theatre (New Haven, CT), management fellow during ArtsEmerson’s inaugural presenting year (Boston, MA), annual fund manager at Aurora Theatre (Berkeley, CA), and international experience in Mexico City working for a nonprofit humanitarian group. While in the Bay Area, Fiorenza Ingersoll was secretary and then president of the Berkeley Cultural Trust and a proud member of the Bay Area Latino Theatre Artists Network. She is also a freelance arts management strategist and artist representative, partnering with individual artists and ensembles whose work gives voice to underrepresented stories and perspectives. Recognized nationally, Fiorenza Ingersoll was invited in 2014 by Theatre Communications Group to be part of its SPARK Leadership Program’s inaugural class. She holds two bachelor’s degrees from the University of California at Berkeley and an MFA in Theater Management from Yale University. Alejandro Cerrudo (Resident Choreographer) was born in Madrid, Spain and trained at the Real Conservatorio Profesional de Danza de Madrid. His professional career began in 1998 and includes work with Victor Ullate Ballet, Stuttgart Ballet, and Nederlands Dans Theater 2. Cerrudo joined Hubbard Street Dance Chicago in 2005, was named Choreographic Fellow in 2008, and became the company’s first Resident Choreographer in 2009. Fifteen works choreographed to date for Hubbard Street include collaborations with The Second City, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, and Nederlands Dans Theater. These pieces and additional commissions are in repertory at companies around the U.S. as well as in Australia, Denmark, Germany, and the Netherlands; touring engagements have brought his work still further abroad, to audiences in Algeria, Canada, Morocco, and Spain. In March 2012, Pacific Northwest Ballet invited Cerrudo to choreograph his first work for the company, Memory Glow, upon receiving the Joyce Theater Foundation’s second Rudolf Nureyev Prize for New Dance. Additional honors include an award from the Boomerang Fund for Artists (2011), and a Prince Prize for Commissioning Original Work from the Prince Charitable Trusts (2012) for his acclaimed, first evening-length work, One Thousand Pieces. In March 2016, Switzerland’s Ballett Basel premiered his second evening-length work, Sleeping Beauty, at Theater Basel. Cerrudo was one of four choreographers invited by New York City Ballet principal Wendy Whelan to create and perform original duets for Restless Creature, and he is United States Artists’ 2014 USA Donnelley Fellow.
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HUBBARD STREET DANCE CHICAGO Lucas Crandall (Rehearsal Director) began his dance career with the Milwaukee Ballet in 1979. In 1980, he joined the Ballet du Grand Théâtre de Genève, then directed by Oscar Aráiz. Under the direction of Jiří Kylián, he danced with Nederlands Dans Theater for two years before returning to Geneva, as Soloist and later Rehearsal Assistant, under the direction of Gradimir Pankov. Crandall has performed and originated roles in works by notable choreographers including Aráiz, Kylián, Christopher Bruce, Nacho Duato, Mats Ek, Rui Horta, Amanda Miller, and Ohad Naharin. In 2000, Crandall returned to the U.S. to join Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, as Associate Artistic Director and staff at the Lou Conte Dance Studio. His teaching and coaching career includes residencies at various U.S. universities; master classes and repertory workshops, both domestically and abroad; and guest positions at companies including Les Ballets Jazz de Montréal, Northwest Professional Dance Project, and the Ballet du Grand Théâtre de Genève. Crandall’s choreographic work includes multiple premieres for Hubbard Street (Atelier, Gimme, The Set) and new works for Northwest Dance Project and Thodos Dance Chicago. Crandall was recently Rehearsal Director for Nederlands Dans Theater’s main company for three years, under the directorships of Paul Lightfoot and former Hubbard Street Artistic Director Jim Vincent. Crandall returned to Hubbard Street as Rehearsal Director in April 2013. Lou Conte (Founding Artistic Director), after a performing career that included roles in Broadway musicals such as Cabaret, Mame and How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, established the Lou Conte Dance Studio in 1974. Three years later, he founded what is now Hubbard Street Dance Chicago. Originally the company’s sole choreographer, he developed relationships with emerging and world-renowned dancemakers Lynne Taylor-Corbett, Margo Sappington and Daniel Ezralow as the company grew. Conte continued to build Hubbard Street’s repertoire by forging a key relationship with Twyla Tharp in the 1990s, acquiring seven of her works as well as original choreography. It then became an international enterprise with the inclusion of works by Jiří Kylián, Nacho Duato and Ohad Naharin. Throughout his 23 years as the company’s artistic director, Conte received numerous awards including the first Ruth Page Artistic Achievements Award in 1986, the Sidney R. Yates Arts Advocacy Award in 1995, and a Chicagoan of the Year award from Chicago magazine in 1999. In 2003, Conte was inducted as a laureate into the Lincoln Academy of Illinois, the state’s highest honor, and in 2014, was named one of five inaugural recipients of the City of Chicago’s Fifth Star Award. He has been credited by many for helping raise Chicago’s international cultural profile and for creating a welcoming climate for dance in the city, where the art form now thrives. Hubbard Street dancer Florian Lochner, concept by Alejandro Cerrudo. Photo by Quinn B Wharton.
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Hubbard Street Staff and Board Glenn Edgerton Artistic Director
Dexter Carlson and Alyssa Sawinski Development Interns
Camille E. Rudge Secretary
Jason D. Palmquist Executive Director
Youth, Education and Community Programs Kathryn Humphreys Director of Youth, Education and Community Programs
John E. Vazquez Assistant Treasurer
Lou Conte Founding Artistic Director Karena Fiorenza Ingersoll General Manager Claire Bataille Director of the Lou Conte Dance Studio Lucas Crandall Rehearsal Director Alejandro Cerrudo Resident Choreographer Belina Mizrahi Controller LaMar Brown Company Manager Krista Ellensohn Manager of Pre-Professional Programs Meredith Dincolo Director of the Professional Training Program Kimberly Norwood-Ingram Bookkeeper Deirdre Connelly Facilities and Operations Coordinator Emma Speiser Management Associate Foster Wattles Archive Intern Brit Clairborne Erin Harner Alaya Turnbough LCDS Interns
Keesha Beckford Youth Programs Manager Michelle Modrzejewski Community Programs Manager Jennifer Gunter Administrative Manager Savannah Turner Education Coordinator Michael Artrip Tanniqua-Kay Buchanan Erisilia Melchiorre Ruthie Picha Mecca Robinson Amanda Smith Work Study Staff Production Staff Scott Nelson Production Manager Julie E. Ballard Stage Manager and Properties Master Jason Natali Audio Engineer Stephan Panek Head Carpenter and Stage Operations Sam Begich Master Electrician
External Affairs Andy Sheagren Associate Director of Marketing
Wardrobe Staff Rebecca M. Shouse Head of Wardrobe
Danielle Sparklin Manager of Patron and Data Services
Elizabeth Hunstad First Hand
Rebecca Monen Manager of Institutional Giving
Constance Thome Rachel Winborn Drapers
Jose E. Gaona Corporate and Foundation Relations Coordinator Sofia Pilar Marketing Coordinator Rachael Pshock Development Data and Patron Services Coordinator Hayley Ross Communication Coordinator Sidney Cristol Advertising, Sales and Ticketing Chelsea Dvorchak Marketing Intern
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Sarah McCarty Senior Manager of Research and Curriculum
danc(e)volve: New Works Festival 2017
Greta Humphrey Bethany Sassen Angela Enos Stitchers Jenni Schwaner Ladd Touring Wardrobe Board of Directors Mayor Rahm Emanuel Honorary Chair Sara Albrecht++ Chair Richard L. Rodes President and Treasurer
Ellis Regenbogen+ Immediate Past Chair Denise Stefan Ginascol++ VP Development Katherine V. Schostok Assistant VP Development Meg Siegler Callahan+ VP Board Development Marc Miller+ VP Artist Training Continuum Richard F. Tomlinson II VP Facilities Bija Bennett Colleen Batcheler Berle Blitstein Ross B. Bricker Catherine Chavez Steven Collens Kristin Conley Joel Cory Dirk Denison Kelly Royer Dolyniuk Miguel Edwards Larry Gilbert Linda Hutson Karen H. Lennon+ Betsy Stelle Morgan Sarah J. Nolan Cynthia S. Van Osdol Sheila Owens Byron Pollock++ Alyssa Rapp Lauren Robishaw Tatjana Schuster Mary Kay Shaw Deborah Stonebraker Randy White+ Life Directors John W. Ballantine+ Corinne Brophy Edythe R. Cloonan++ Sondra Berman Epstein+ Stanley M. Freehling Charles R. Gardner Paul Gignilliat Sandra P. Guthman+ James Mabie++ Marie E. O’Connor++ Timothy Schwertfeger++ Jack D. Tovin Sallyan Windt William N. Wood Prince+ + Past Board Chair ++ Past Board President Program Book Hayley Ross, Editor Peggy Fink, Designer Sidney Cristol, Advertising Sales
Hubbard Street Dance Chicago gratefully acknowledges the support of the following corporations, foundations, government agencies and individuals who made gifts to our Annual Fund between September 1, 2015 and April 28, 2017.
CORPORATE SUPPORT $50,000 and above Athletico Physical Therapy Chicago Athletic Clubs Harris Theater for Music and Dance $25,000–$49,999 Allstate Insurance Company The Chicago Community Trust/ The Sun-Times Foundation Exelon Grosvenor Capital Management, LP $10,000–$24,999 Abbvie Baker McKenzie LLP ConAgra Brands ITW Jenner & Block, LLP MAC Cosmetics Northern Trust The PrivateBank The Second City Wessex 504 Corporation $5,000–$9,999 AJR Ventures Arnstein & Lehr, LLP Blue Plate Events Brown Brothers Harriman Deloitte Goodsmith Gregg & Unruh LLP HFF
Jackson National Life Insurance Company Katten Muchin Rosenman, LLP Levin Schreder & Carey Ltd. PWC LLP USG Corporation West Monroe Partners $2,500–$4,999 Advertising Resources, Inc. Allegro Dance Boutique Attorneys’ Title Guaranty Fund, Inc. Citizens for John Cullerton HBK Engineering, LLC McDonald’s Corporation PhRMA Power Rogers & Smith, P.C. Sahara Enterprises, Inc. Sepia Valentine Austriaco & Bueschel, P.C. Wells Fargo $1,000–$2,499 Amsted Industries Ariel Investments Barrington Strategic Wealth Management Group Belgravia Group, Ltd Berger Schatz, Matrimonial and Family Law Attorneys Chef Fredy Grant Thornton LLP KPMG PJH & Associates, Inc. Tito’s Handmade Vodka
CONNECT WITH SOPHISTICATED CONSUMERS Advertise in Hubbard Street’s magazine-quality program.
Glenn Edgerton, Artistic
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35 YEARS Glenn Edgert on, Artistic
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Season-long packages keep your distinct brand front of mind with our forward-thinking audience. For more information or to request a media kit, contact Sidney Cristol at 312-850-9744 ext. 164, or at scristol@hubbardstreetdance.com.
Edgerton,
Artistic Director
Winter Series 15 December 12–
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FOUNDATION & GOVERNMENT SUPPORT $100,000 and above The Davee Foundation Doris Duke Charitable Foundation Polk Bros. Foundation $50,000–$99,999 Lloyd A. Fry Foundation The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation National Endowment for the Arts Princess Grace Foundation-USA The Shubert Foundation $25,000–$49,999 Anonymous Chicago Dancing Company Colonel Stanley R. McNeil Foundation, Bank of America, N.A., Trustee The Crown Family The Joyce Foundation Julius N. Frankel Foundation National Parkinson Foundation Prince Charitable Trusts The Rhoades Foundation The Sage Foundation
The Nathan Cummings Foundation Illinois Arts Council Agency The Irving Harris Foundation Jack and Goldie Wolfe Miller Fund Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation The Siragusa Foundation Tawani Foundation $5,000–$9,999 Butler Family Foundation Golder Family Foundation Charles and Joan Gross Family Foundation John R. Halligan Charitable Fund Edmond and Alice Opler Foundation Jerome Robbins Foundation Charles & M. R. Shapiro Foundation A. Montgomery Ward Foundation, John A. Hutchings, Richard W. Oloffson and Bank of America, N.A. Trustee The Farny R. Wurlitzer Foundation $1,000–$4,999 Anonymous Aaron Copland Fund for Music Modestus Bauer Foundation Walter and Karla Goldschmidt Foundation Levitetz Family Foundation The Service Club of Chicago
$10,000–$24,999 Anonymous Robert & Isabelle Bass Foundation, Inc. Helen Brach Foundation The Elizabeth F. Cheney Foundation
INDIVIDUAL SUPPORT Artistic Director’s Society $50,000 and above Sara Albrecht Joyce Chelberg Charlie Gardner and Patti Eylar Kenneth C. Griffin Charitable Fund Denise Stefan Ginascol and John Ginascol Jay Franke and David Herro James and Margaret Johnson Latsko Family Foundation The Lauter McDougal Charitable Fund John W. and Jeanne M. Rowe $25,000–$49,999 Anonymous Marlene Breslow-Blitstein and Berle Blitstein Meg and Tim Callahan Lew, Steven and Caralynn Collens Lauren Robishaw Timothy R. Schwertfeger and Gail Waller Richard and Barbara Silverman Bill and Orli Staley Richard and Ann Tomlinson Elizabeth Yntema
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$10,000–$24,999 Anonymous Ross B. Bricker and Nina Vinik Douglas and Carol Cohen Joel and Katie Cory Pamela Crutchfield R. Penny Rodes DeMott Larry and Marla Gilbert Adam Grymkowski Carey Heckman Caryn Jacobs Anne Kaplan Jim and Kay Mabie Abby McCormick O’Neil and D. Carroll Joynes Jonathan and Sally Kovler Marc Miller and Chris Horsman Adrienne Parker and Peter Foley Byron and Judy Pollock J.B. and M.K. Pritzker Family Foundation Richard L. Rodes Mary Kay Shaw Elizabeth Louise Smith Revocable Trust Deborah and Kelly Stonebraker Robert and Jamie Taylor Randy and Lisa White
$5,000–$9,999 Anonymous The AMD Family Fund Andrew Alexander Robert and Marilyn Arensman John and Caroline Ballantine Michael Downing and Kathy Bernreuter Sondra Berman Epstein Corinne Brophy James and Edie Cloonan Michael and Janet Colleran Kristin Conley and Andrew Sudds Dirk Denison and David Salkin Damian Dolyniuk and Kelly Royer Dolyniuk Shawn M. Donnelley and Christopher M. Kelly Mary Galvin Helen Goldenberg and Michael Alper Jim Gordon, The Edgewater Funds Sandra and Jack Guthman Harry and Marcy Harczak Trish and Harp Harper Linda Hutson Matt and Mikelle Kruger Lynette M. Lilly
Ron and Elise Magers John E. Miller, Jr. Jane Ellen Murray Alexandra and John Nichols Sarah J. Nolan Thomas J. O’Keefe Alyssa Rapp and Hal Morris Ellis and Sally Regenbogen Eleanor and William Revelle Burton and Sheli Rosenberg Jane and Michael Strauss Dr. John Vazquez and Dr. Paul Gleixner Sallyan Windt Sustaining DanceMakers $2,500–$4,999 Anonymous (3) Bija Bennett John Blosser John and Leslie Henner Burns Jeffrey and Judith Bramson Catherine and Hugo Chavez The Patti Eylar Scholarship Fund for the HS Pro Paul and Christine Fisher Jana French and Peter Gotsch Aliza Fulton Richard and Mary Gray John Grinney and Heidi Westland Bruce and Jamie Hague Karena Fiorenza Ingersoll and Emrys Ingersoll Ian Jacobs and Valerie Chang Mark and Mary Ann Kaufman Dietrich and Andrew Klevorn Karen and Peter Lennon Daniel and Fay Levin Bradley T. Nelson Victoria Priola Kevin and Camille Rudge Carleen Schreder and Ralph Musicant Louise Silberman Eric and Tammy Steele Jack and Niki Tovin Marilee C. Unruh Richard and Diane Weinberg Premier DanceMakers $1,000–$2,499 Anonymous (5) Aurora and Jerome Austriaco Marshall and Arlene Bennett Kevin and Jane Berg Heiji Black Abram and Ilene Bluestein Paul and Christine Branstad Jeanne Brett Steven Brown Linda S. Buckley Valerie Carberry and Richard Wright David Chen
Bridget and Jim Coffing Mary and Jack Connelly Jack Cooksey and Brenda Russell Ann and Stephen Curley Tom Doherty Marsha and Philip Dowd Allan and Ellen Drebin Terry Dvorak Warren and Joan Eagle Miguel Edwards Steve and Lois Eisen Bill Escamilla and Lisa Dollar Buehler The Patti Eylar Scholarship Fund Thomas J. Feie Susan Feibus Steven and Randy Fifield Lisa Genesen and David Tabolt Meredith George Bill and Ethel Gofen David and Carol Golder Jo Ellen and Peter Granson David and Penelope Greenspahn Madeleine Grynsztejn and Tom Shapiro Beth and Bill Hager Stephanie Hickman Rick and Cathy Hirschman Steven Hodges Jastromb Family Philanthropic Fund Linda and Bernard Kastory Sarah and Julie Kennedy Tim King Christine E. Knuth Steve Koch Koldyke Family Fund Howard and Gail Lanznar Monica Leccese Dale and Julie Leibert Tammy Lipson Jeffrey and Leticia Mann Ellen McCabe Sandra McNaughton Martha and Richard Melman Diane and Bob Merna Pamela G. Meyer Sally and Ted Miller Mike and Laura Mleko Richard and Beverly Moody Maureen Mosh Kenneth Norgan Julie O’Connell Melissa O’Malley Charlene Osborne Jason Ott, Aon Private Risk Management Sheila Owens Patricia and Candace Parchem Melvin and Lynn Pearl D. Elizabeth Price and Louis Yecies David and Gabrielle Rousso Jeffrey C. Rubenstein Richard and Ellen Sandor Family
Foundation TJ Saye Donald and Eileen Schiller Katherine V. Schostok Tatjana and Chelsea Schuster Michael Solomon and Carol McCardell Dawn Stanislaw Dan Thorson Steve Traxler Lynn and Jeff Vilker Edward and Dia Weil Michael and Linda Welsh Daniel Wheeler Keven and Nick Wilder David Williams and Eric Ceputis Pat Young William Ziemann DancePartners $500–$999 Anonymous (3) Greg Albiero and Mark Zampardo James and Sheila Amend Joanne Baizer Sarah Bannister Randy and Lorraine Barba Lawrence Berlin Tom and Tina Berry The Robert Thomas Bobins Foundations Stuart Brainerd and Elise Paschen Robert and Joell Brightfelt Charles Capwell and Isabel Wong Paul and Amy Carbone Christopher and Sally Coder Tamara and Robert Cosentino Elizabeth Cummings Francesca DeBiase and Jassem Mahmoud Cindy Delmar Craig and Janet Duchossois Bryan Dunn and Barbara Larsen Thomas Durica Jennifer Edgcomb Richard and Marjorie Ettlinger Ginger Farley Daniel Fischel and Sylvia Neil Joel Frader Lio Getty Michael Grant and Carol McMahan Paul and Dedrea Gray, In the Works Fund Shana Guthman Ted and Mirja Haffner Josephine Heindel Peter Hood and Christine Worley Dori Howell Douglas Howell Jim Huberty and Marc Giles Alan Jones
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George T. Jones, M.D. and V. Lynn Jones Diana Joseph Michele Kadich Lawrence Kearns Krystyna Kiel and Alexander Templeton Daisietta Kim Michele King Kurtis Kossen Kevin Kranzusch Linda and Peter Krivkovich Lew and Laurie Leibowitz Richard Levy Robert Liem Laura Lindner Margie Liotta Donald L. MacCorquodale Stephen D. and Susan Bass Marcus Maria McCabe Bill Melamed and Jamey Lundblad Helen Melchior Gary Metzner and Scott Johnson Theodore Milby John Miller Robert Mueller Edward and Gayla Nieminen Tom O’Holloran and Teresa Woodruff Hiroshi and Kathleen Okano Hans Olsen Steve Palmquist and Kathryn Nuss Karen Pierce Jonathan and Robin Plotkin Bonnie Podolsky Eleanor Pollack David Pritchard Patricia Schostok Reese Warner and Judy Rosenthal Michael and Bonnie Rothman Dan and Julie Schmidt Mary Schostok Merry Schroeder Terry Schwartz Susan and Matthew Shattock Alan and Beth Singer Thomas Sinkovic Fangji Slaymaker Janet Carl Smith and Mel Smith Diane Sprenger Patricia Sternberg George Streeter and Kristina Howard Gregory and Cynthia Taylor Kimberly Taylor Kim Theiss Christine Tierney Wayne F. Tjaden John Tullsen and Evan Siegel Renee Tyree W. Keren Vishny Douglas and Pam Walter Craig White Karen Wilmot Jackie Kott-Wolle and David Wolle Dr. Sherry Young and Family
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$250–$499 Anonymous (3) Carol Albrecht James Allan Cindy Alpert Gregg Auby Judy and Andy Axler Marilyn Bartter Julie Basrak Linda Bierig Frederic Boyer and Claire Guis Albert and Jean Broday Bonnie Brooks Nicole Brown Kalena Chevalier Scott and Jen Christiansen Roger and Ann Cole Susan Curry Alexandra Darrow Nancy Davidson Beth Davis Edward and Cathy Davis Katherine Davis Robert Delaney Duane M. DesParte and John C. Schneider Alec Dike Andrew and Diann Dincolo Diane Erickson Elizabeth Fama and John Cochrane Jim and Deb Ford Arthur L. Frank, M.D. Tracy Frein Stephen and Rebecca Galler Julie L. Gentes Lori Gordon Camille Grejczyk Martin Grochala and Fred Reuland Krista and Gene Haake Harry and Lyne Halme Jayne and Stephen Hanauer Susan Harris Katharine Hathaway Marvin and Karen Herman Ben Hladilek Michael Holtzmann Craig Hanenburg and Bill Kuczek Charles and Caroline Huebner Bonnie Humphrey and John O’Donnell Ilter Ibrahimof Mira Iliescu Peter Ivanovich John Jawor Jason Johnston Julia Joseph Mary Kamraczewski Lorraine Kaplan Theresa Karutz Katarzyna Kay Connie Kendall John and Anne Kern Andy Kurkulis Megan Levin
Katherine Lin Joan Lovell Jessica Malkin Melissa Matarrese and Dan McEnerney Jaimie Mayer Susan McBride Michelle McCarthy Ed and Debby Mellinger Tanya Mena Floyd Mittleman and Julia Guerrero Betsy Morgan Eileen Murray Stacey and Tom Newman Susan Noel Susan Norvich Karen Oldeg Julia Parzen and Daniel Johnson Audrey Paton Jose Perez-Sanz Sarah Pesetsky Andrew and Judy L. Porte Gary Prior Gail Regenbogen Stephen and Shari Reiches Linda Rosencranz Joanna Rupp Richard Rusz Nancy Schroeder Elizabeth and Steven Schultz Linda Schurman Bud and Diane Schwarzbach John and Cheryl Seder Stephen Silverman and Janet Leder Michael Simonski Howard Sitron Mary Splude Randel Steele and Margaret Gonzales Daniel and Rena Sternberg William and Mary Summers Karen Teitelbaum Mary Ellen Toll and William Heimann Marc VanOverbeke Paul Waas Gary Warfel Jerold Wasserman Jennifer Weuve and Jeffrey Gitelle Julia Wheeler Brad and Carol White Jon Will Jay and Donna Williams Kirk and Jasmine Young Sharlene Young Hubbard Street appreciates the support of the corporations, foundations and individuals that contribute gifts up to $250 and regrets the inability to list their names due to space limitations. For any corrections to program name listings please contact the Development Office at 312.850-9744 Ext. 172 or development@hubbardstreetdance.com
Join our DreamTeam for DreamTix!
Support Hubbard Street’s innovative new initiative, DreamTix, an exciting partnership with Chicago Public Schools and the City of Chicago. This one-of-a-kind program allows Hubbard Street to offer at least 400 free tickets to CPS students and their families to every one of our performances at the Harris Theater. With your help we will bring nearly 6,500 kids to experience the arts free of charge during our dance season. We also provide educational materials to be used in the classrooms before and after each performance.
Please consider joining our DreamTeam for DreamTix today.
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hubbardstreetdance.com Photo by Todd Rosenberg.
GIFTS IN HONOR AND MEMORY Tribute and Memorial gifts are a meaningful way to recognize individuals who have a connection to Hubbard Street. For more information or to make a gift please contact the Development Office at 312-850-9744 Ext. 172 or development@hubbardstreetdance.com. In Honor of Sara Albrecht Sandra Jaggi DiPasquale Anne Kaplan Lisa Key Sylvia Neil Richard and Ellen Sandor Family Foundation In Honor of Suzanne Appel Jamie Mayer In Honor of Ross Bricker Sally Coder In Honor of Meg Callahan Jonathan and Robin Plotkin David and Gabrielle Rousso In Honor of Carol Coletta Lio Getty Philanthropy Ohio In Memory of Marge Collens Anonymous Lindsay Avner and Gregg Kaplan David Baker Harold and Roberta Barron Melvyn H. Bloom Abram and Ilene Bluestein The Robert Thomas Bobins Foundations Michael and Sheila Bradford Jean and Al Broday Kathleen Buenik Vincent and Ann Cabansag Judith Carr Pamela Crutchfield Lynn Cutler Craig and Janet Duchossois Rachel and Fred Dulin Bryan Dunn and Barbara Larsen Sidney and Sondra Berman Epstein Burt and Marion Fainman Patti Eylar and Charles Gardner Robert and Linda Dunn Glick Naama and David Goldenberg Steven Gould, M.D. Martin Grochala and Fred Reuland Sandra and Jack Guthman Mirja and Ted Haffner Yvonne Heyden Austin Hirsch Linda Hutson Gary Johnson Adrienne Kaplan Melvin Katten Kelly Kleiman
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Robyn Kobes Gary and Joan Laser Stephanie Letchinger Adam Levine Hazel Lewis Jessica Malkin Charlotte Marks Marc Miller and Chris Horsman William E. Moeller Maureen Mosh Thomas and Valerie Nowinski Gustavo Pesquin William Pomerantz J.B. and M.K. Pritzker Family Foundation Frances Putnoi Lisa Reeder Burton and Sheli Rosenberg John and Jeanne Rowe Jeffrey C. Rubenstein Kevin and Camille Rudge Lewis and Barbara Schneider Douglas and Pam Walter Randy and Lisa White Keven and Nick Wilder Jay and Donna Williams Sallyan Windt Nan and Shelly Winner In honor of Joel Cory’s birthday Donald and Gail Segal In Memory of Gilbert Ghez Michael Grossman Katharina Kopp Melynda Lopin Maurice Rabb In Honor of the marriage of George Halik and Scott Wechsler George and Mary Perlstein In Memory of Dr. Jack Hsu Steve Brown Sheila McGinn Dorman Warren and Joan Eagle Alexander and Diane Geha Irene Huang Bonnie Humphrey and John O’Donnell Jason Johnston Lawrence Kearns Diana Lee Kathleen McComb Joy Meek Dale Schlafer Peter Shull
Daniel Wheeler Judy Yeung Kirk and Jasmin Young Dr. Sherry Young and Family Julia Wheeler In Honor of Elliot Hammans Diane Pick Merry Schroeder In Honor of Chris Horsman’s birthday Donald Santoski and April Brazell In Honor of Linda Hutson’s birthday Sallyan Windt In Honor of Karen Lennon/Wessex Daniel Bleil In Honor of Karen and Peter Lennon Keven and Nick Wilder In Honor of Florian Lochner Athena Lo In Honor of Cheri Lundin Cassidy Lundin In Honor of Marc Miller Beth Davis In Honor of Lynn Morgan Patricia Marchant In Honor of Bradley Nelson Crose Horwath Foundation In Memory of Jim Oates Corinne Brophy Kirk and Beverly Busby Adam Grymkowski Linda Hutson The Rhoades Foundation Sherry Simmons In Honor of Jason Palmquist Scott Eggers In Honor of Melissa Platt Karen Platt In honor of Byron Pollock Sheldon Holzman In Honor of Sally and Ellis Regenbogen Lisa Regenbogen Judy and Andy Axler
In Honor of Lauren Robishaw Diane Pascal
In Honor of Katherine Schostok Patricia Schostok Reese
In Honor of Beverly Grace Wiener Julia Joseph
In Honor of Richard L. Rodes Thomas J. Feie
In Memory of Elizabeth Silverstein Arthur and Ann Fox
In Honor of Sallyan Windt Henry and Cookie Kohn
In Memory of Susan Schlafer Anonymous
In Honor of Denise Stefan Ginascol Liza Yntema
In Memory of Yuk Yiu Yee Wai Gen Yee
In Honor of Kevin Shannon Fred Follansbee
In Honor of Denise Stefan Ginascol and John Ginascol’s anniversary John Ginascol
ENDOWMENTS Hubbard Street Dance Chicago gratefully acknowledges the generous support of the following donors to its endowed funds, including the Meg & Tim Callahan Fund for Dancers, the Jane Ellen Murray Endowment, and the Artistic Program Endowment, which was established with a generous grant from the Ford Foundation. $100,000 and above Meg and Tim Callahan Pamela Crutchfield Josephine H. Deutsch Trust The Ford Foundation Jay Franke and David Herro Jim and Kay Mabie The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Nancy Lauter McDougal Timothy R. Schwertfeger and Gail Waller $50,000–$99,999 Sara Albrecht John and Caroline Ballantine Sidney and Sondra Berman Epstein Deborah Bricker Sandra and Jack Guthman The Rhoades Foundation Earl and Sandra Rusnak Randy and Lisa White Mrs. Eleanor Wood Prince William N. Wood Prince $25,000–$49,999 Lew Collens Harold Florsheim Paul and Ellen Gignilliat Bernard and Averill Leviton Dale and Dana Machalleck James F. Oates Randy White and Hope Wollman
$10,000–$24,999 Dean Balice Katherine and Christopher Barber Roger and Julie Baskes Joseph and Anne Bohne Janice Y. Burnham and Raymond B. Carney James and Edie Cloonan Joel and Katie Cory Allan and Ellen Drebin Susan and Bryan Erler Trudy Giesel Mary Louise Gorno Jacqueline Hurlbutt and Norman Waite Sarah J. Nolan Dina Norris and Steve Young Byron and Judy Pollock Ellis and Sally Regenbogen Eleanor and William Revelle Dana and Andre Rice Kevin and Camille Rudge Warren D. Shifferd Jr. Denise Stefan-Ginascol and John Ginascol Richard and Ann Tomlinson Robert and Nancy Unglaub Earl and Susan Webb Sallyan Windt
Corinne Brophy Carla J. Eyre and Peter F. Gallagher Patti Eylar and Charles Gardner Judith Grubner and Craig Jobson Stephanie Hickman Linda Hutson Marc Miller and Chris Horsman Pat Pulido Sanchez and Manuel Sanchez John Schwartz Kenneth Shanoff and Steve Young Deborah and Kelly Stonebraker Jack and Niki Tovin
$5,000–$9,999 Julia Antonatos Sanchen Barnum William and Donna Barrows The Sidney And June Barrows Foundation
$250–$999 Todd Magazine Bill Nygren Foundation Sheila Owens Steven and Frances Shapiro
$1,000–$4,999 Kathy Catrambone Carolyn Clift Thomas and Lois Colberg Elizabeth F. Cheney Foundation Jocelyn B. Hamlar and Leighton J. Toney Jastromb Family Philanthropic Fund Rachel Corn Kluge and Scott Kluge David Mekemson and Irene Petruniak Maureen Mosh Donald Ratner Patrick J. Schieble Richard Turner and David Jenkins
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LOU CONTE FOUNDERS SOCIETY Hubbard Street Dance Chicago is grateful to the following individuals who have included us in their estate plans. Our future is more secure because of their generosity. Meg and Tim Callahan Josephine H. Deutsch* Marge* and Lew Collens Jane Ellen Murray Edward and Gayla Nieminen
Sarah J. Nolan James F. Oates* Edna K. Papazian* Byron Pollock Alyssa J. Rapp Richard L. Rodes
Denise Stefan Ginascol and John Ginascol Landon N. Stigall* J. Randall White *deceased
SPECIAL SERVICES Affiliated Benefit Consultants Mesirow Insurance Services Insurance Services Allied Live Advertising Athletico Physical Therapy Official Provider of Physical Therapy Baker Tilly Virchow Krause, LLP Auditor Blue Plate Events Catering Partner Chicago Athletic Clubs Official Health Club Communiqué Graphic Design Graphic Design HFF Real Estate Services
HMS Media Video Services KlearSky Solutions, LLC Web Development and Design SP+ Parking Parking Partner MAC Cosmetics Official Make-up Sponsor Park Grill Preferred Restaurant Partner The PrivateBank Financing and Banking Service PWC Consulting Services Franczek Radelet, P.C. Baker McKenzie, LLP Legal Services
Sunny Artist Management Inc. North American Representation Ilter Ibrahimof, Director ilter@sunnyartistmanagement.com Synapse Networks, Inc. IT Services Tito’s Handmade Vodka Spirits Sponsor Todd Rosenberg Photography Photography Tourwerks, Inc. Tour Housing Negotiation Kathleen Weber, M.D. Midwest Orthopedic at Rush Delack-Johnson Associates Financial Services
CONTRIBUTED MATERIALS AND SERVICES Amazing Cosmetics Athletico Physical Therapy Barbara Bates Design Blue Plate Events Ross Bricker Cannonball Wine Company Chef Fredy Cuisine Chicago Athletic Clubs Chicago White Sox ComEd John and Pamela Cullerton Sandi Cooksey Kelly Royer Dolyniuk Karena Fiorenza Ingersoll and Emrys Ingersoll Garrett Popcorn Shops Denise Stefan Ginascol and John Ginascol Renee Gooch
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danc(e)volve: New Works Festival 2017
Goose Island Brew Co. Honey Butter Fried Chicken HMS Media Kehoe Designs SP+ Parking Lettuce Entertain You Lockwood Restaurant and Bar Lollapalooza Microsoft Corporation MAC Cosmetics Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago Neiman Marcus Lin Manuel Miranda MirRam Group, LLC Sarah J. Nolan Park Grill Perrier Jane Post
Potbelly Sandwich Shop Quartino Ristorante & Wine Bar Alyssa Rapp and Hal Morris Seabourn Sepia The Service Club of Chicago Tito’s Handmade Vodka United Airlines Eddie and Sherry Wechs Wine Sisterhood A Zaffarano Production Hubbard Street appreciates the support of in-kind contributors of gifts valued up to $250 and regrets the inability to list their names due to space limitations.
meet us in the kitchen
For over 30 years we’ve opened our kitchen to cater events, using fresh ingredients, delivering made-from-scratch bites. We’ll help you savor the occasion one plate at at time.
1362 W. Fulton St., Chicago, IL 60607 312.421.6666 | blueplatechicago.com
hubbardstreetdance.com
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Chicago Gay Men’s Chorus Presents:
May 19, 20 & 21 Welcome to Boyband Heaven www.cgmc.org/HSD $5 off coupon code: btown312
45 in 45 Before the curtain rises
Enjoy a 3 course $45 pre theater prix fixe dinner in 45 mins or less!
Please mention the prix fixe menu when placing your reservation
| 11 N Michigan Ave - Chicago, IL - 60602 | 312.521.7275 danc(e)volve: New Works Festival 2017 34ParkGrillChicago.com
hubbardstreetdance.com
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SUMMER SERIES JUNE 8–11, 2017
HUBBARD STREET AT 40
Hubbard Street’s Summer Series kicks off a full year in celebration of the company’s 40th anniversary, combining audience favorites representing all four decades of Hubbard Street’s history. Choreographers include Lou Conte, Twyla Tharp, Jim Vincent, William Forsythe, Crystal Pite, and Alejandro Cerrudo.
Performing at
hubbardstreetdance.com/summer Series Sponsors
Season Sponsors
Official Provider of Physical Therapy
Official Health Club
Official Media Sponsor
Diversity Partner
Community Engagement Partner
Lew, Steven and Caralynn Collens, John W. and Jeanne Rowe, the J.B. and M.K. Pritzker Family Foundation, The Tomlinson Family (Richard and Ann, and sons Richard and John), Elizabeth F. Cheney Foundation, Charles Gardner and Patti Eylar, Richard and Barbara Silverman, Berle Blitstein and Marlene Breslow-Blitstein, Larry and Marla Gilbert, Jonathan and Sally Kovler, Jim and Kay Mabie, Jane Ellen Murray, and Thomas J. O’Keefe.
From left to right: Hubbard Street alum Ron DeJesus and Claire Bataille in Lou Conte’s Georgia. Photo by Gordon Meyer. Hubbard Street Dance Chicago in Lou Conte’s The 40s. Photo by Jack Mitchell. Director of Lou Conte Dance Studio Claire Bataille, in Twyla Tharp’s The Golden Section. Hubbard Street Dancer Jason Hortin in Crystal Pite’s A Picture of You Falling. Photo by Todd Rosenberg. Hubbard Street alum Terence Marling and Sara Fueller in Jim Vincent’s Palladio. Hubbard Street dancers Jessica Tong and Jesse Bechard in Resident Choreographer Alejandro Cerrudo’s One Thousand Pieces. Photo by Todd Rosenberg. Hubbard Street dancer Jacqueline Burnett in Resident Choreographer Alejandro Cerrudo’s One Thousand Pieces. Photo by Todd Rosenberg.