Michael Clark Company Program Book

Page 1

2014-15

MICHAEL CLARK COMPANY

“come, been and gone”

October 11-12, 2014


wit style power grace Featuring

MICHAEL CLARK COMPANY OCTOBER 11-12

MOMIX MARCH 11

COMPAGNIE KÄFIG APRIL 7

MARK MORRIS DANCE GROUP MAY 15-16 Series support provided by the

PLUS BROADCAST FROM LONDON HD SCREENING OF

DV8 PHYSICAL THEATRE

JOHN - JANUARY 8

2 | IRVINE BARCLAY THEATRE

Cheng Family Foundation

With additional support by

Bobbi Cox Realty Philharmonic Society of Orange County Sonnet Technologies


WELCOME Here we are with the Michael Clark Company and the initial stop in its premiere U.S. tour. It is also the first concert in the Barclay’s 25th season line-up of international artists and entertainers, and the first company in its contemporary dance series, a bright and bold one to be sure. When discussing the upcoming 25th season with a good friend recently, he paraphrased some Broadway musical theater lyrics that came to him suddenly. From Follies: “Good times and bum times, I’ve seen them all…I’m still here” and from West Side Story: “Something’s coming. I don’t know what. But it’s gonna be great.” He is savvy about the Broadway theater and Stephen Sondheim to a degree that I am not, but I appreciated the sentiment, that the Barclay has endured and prospered through all this time, with the promise of exciting things to come. During the past 24 seasons, the City of Irvine, whose residents taxed themselves to build this performance space and have supported it since then, has grown into an amazing economic and residential environment. The University of California, Irvine, which partnered with the 2.3-acre parcel of land and has provided additional annual operating support, is now a top-ranked public university. The theatre’s nonprofit operating company was a great invention back in 1986, a public/private group whose volunteer leadership and professional staff, combined with the participation of the city

and university, have made the clock tick and chime. Now as then, the theatre itself presents an array of international artists of diversity and of top quality; provides a facility with extraordinary amenities and capabilities to community, regional and educational cultural organizations; and, hosts UCI activities which are as likely to be a visit by the Dali Lama, as a student symphony concert or a lecture on brain function by a distinguished scientist. It is now decades of enthusiasm and support from citizens, public institutions, individual patrons, companies and foundations, artists, faculty, and audience members that have brought the Barclay to the threshold of its 25th season. How do we thank you all?

Douglas C. Rankin President Irvine Barclay Theatre

Board of Directors CHAIR Robert Farnsworth CEO Sonnet Technologies, Inc. Francisco J. Ayala Professor and National Medal of Science Laureate University of California, Irvine Jennifer Cheng Community Leader

Michael P. Clark Vice Provost University of California, Irvine

Joseph S. Lewis III Dean, UCI Claire Trevor School of the Arts

Mary Ann Gaido Community Leader

Patricia Murphy Hirata Partner McGladrey LLP

Michelle Grettenberg Assistant to the City Manager City of Irvine Michael Kerr Community Leader

Leason Pomeroy LP3 Architecture Mickie L. Shapiro Community Leader

Lynda Thomas Community Leader EX OFFICIO Steven S. Choi, Ph.D. Mayor, City of Irvine Michael V. Drake, M.D. Chancellor, UCI


10/11 MICHAEL CLARK COMPANY COME, BEEN AND GONE October 11-12, 2014 | Cheng Hall There will be a 20-minute intermission. This event is sponsored by SONNET TECHNOLOGIES 2013-2014 CONTEMPORARY DANCE SERIES Support provided by the Cheng Family Foundation and an Anonymous fund of the Orange County Community Foundation

ACT I (SWAMP)

ACT II

Michael Clark Choreographer

Michael Clark Choreographer

Charles Atlas Lighting Designer

Charles Atlas Lighting Designer

Bruce Gilbert & Wire Composers Bodymap Costumes

Music Feeling Called Love – Wire Do You Me? and I Did – Bruce Gilbert

Dancers Harry Alexander Julie Cunningham Joshua Harriette Melissa Hetherington Oxana Panchenko Benjamin Warbis

David Bowie Composer

Stevie Stewart, Michael Clark Costumes

Music Mass Production – Iggy Pop Sense of Doubt, “Heroes”, After All, Future Legend, Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family, Aladdin Sane, The Jean Genie – David Bowie Dancers Harry Alexander Julie Cunningham Joshua Harriette Melissa Hetherington Oxana Panchenko Benjamin Warbis

Please note: music list is subject to change 4 | IRVINE BARCLAY THEATRE


Michael Clark’s come, been and gone is made primarily to the music of David Bowie. It also embraces the work of key collaborators – Lou Reed and Brian Eno – and touches on some of his influences – the Velvet Underground, amongst others. “Rock is my rock. It has been vital to me at a personal level; it has shaped me as an individual as well as an artist.” – Michael Clark ABOUT MICHAEL CLARK COMPANY Hailed as “British dance’s true iconoclast,” Michael Clark is a defining cultural figure. Since emerging in the 1980s as a prodigy at London’s Royal Ballet School, he has remained at the forefront of innovation in dance, collaborating with – among others – such compelling artists as Sarah Lucas, Leigh Bowery, Peter Doig and Charles Atlas; and musicians Mark E. Smith, Wire, Scritti Politti and Relaxed Muscle.

 From the outset, Michael Clark’s performances have been marked by a mixture of technical rigor, experimentation, and intense and fine-tuned choreography, intersecting with elements of punk, Dada, pop and rock. His productions repeatedly break new ground, provoking and electrifying audiences. As The Guardian noted of a recent performance at the Barbican, London: “Throughout the evening, the dancers’ prodigious command and affectless efficiency make them look superhuman.”

 Michael Clark founded his own company in 1984. It has since toured worldwide and performed at leading houses in Europe, North America, Asia and Australia, as well as on its home stage at the Barbican, where it has been a resident company since 2005. Michael Clark Company has also introduced dance to new audiences by performing at unorthodox venues, including the legendary Barrowland Ballroom in Glasgow, the Turbine Hall at Tate Modern in London and at the Whitney Biennial 2012 in New York, where the company occupied an entire floor for four weeks; and through Clark’s collaborations with leading artists, fashion designers and musicians. ABOUT THE ARTISTS Michael Clark (Artistic Director/ Choreographer) was born in Scotland and trained at The Royal Ballet School in London (1975 -1979). In 1979, he joined Ballet Rambert, working primarily with Richard Alston. Later, attending a summer school with Merce Cunningham and John Cage led him to work with Karole Armitage, through whom he met Charles Atlas. The first concert of his own choreography was in 1982 at London’s Riverside Studios, where he became resident choreographer. By 1984, Clark had made 16 original pieces. Michael Clark and Company was launched in

1984. The company was an immediate success and toured internationally. During this time, Clark collaborated with fashion designers Bodymap, artists Leigh Bowery and Trojan, as well as The Fall, Laibach, and Wire. Clark’s commissions for major dance companies include the G.R.C.O.P., The Paris Opera, Scottish Ballet, London Festival Ballet, Ballet Rambert, Phoenix Dance Company and the Deutsche Oper Berlin. Clark has produced considerable work for film and video, including Hail the New Puritan (1984) and Because We Must (1989) with Charles Atlas. He also choreographed and danced the role of Caliban in Peter Greenaway’s Prospero’s Books (1991). After three years of commissions and solo work, he created the original version of Mmm... (1992) and O (1994). In 1998, he presented a new full-length work, current/SEE, in collaboration with Susan Stenger, Simon Pearson, Big Bottom and Hussein Chalayan, which became the subject of a BBC documentary, The Late Michael Clark, directed by Sophie Fiennes. Before and After: The Fall (2001) was Clark’s first major collaboration with the visual artist Sarah Lucas. In 2003, Clark created the first Satie Stud for William Trevitt of George Piper Dances; produced an evening entitled Would, Should, Can, Did for the Barbican Theatre in London; and choreographed a solo for Mikhail Baryshnikov. In the same year, OH MY GODDESS opened London Dance Umbrella’s 25th anniversary season. In 2004, Rambert Dance Company revived SWAMP, which received the Olivier Award for Best New Dance Production. In 2005, Michael Clark became an artistic associate of the Barbican Centre, London and embarked on the Stravinsky Project, a three-year project that produced a trilogy of works using seminal dance scores by Igor Stravinsky. He radically reworked O and Mmm... for this project; and in 2007, he premiered the final part of the trilogy, I Do. The Stravinsky Project had its U.S. premiere at the Lincoln Center, New York in June 2008. In June 2009, Clark premiered come, been and gone at La Biennale di Venezia. This work has toured nationally and internationally for the past five years to great critical acclaim, including performances at the Edinburgh Internal Festival, the Barbican, London and the Melbourne International Arts Festival. In 2012, a new theatrical work premiered at the Barbican, London, amongst other international venues; and in 2013, this work was extended into the triple bill, animal / vegetable / mineral. It has been presented at The Lowry, again at the Barbican, and at the Norfolk & Norwich Festival in England. The show has also toured Scotland, Germany, Belgium and Finland. Clark has also undertaken several large-scale projects in non-theatre spaces, including museums and galleries. In 2010, the company spent the summer in residence at Tate Modern, London in preparation for a new, largescale performance commission for the Turbine Hall. The production, th, premiered in June 2011; and in 2012, Michael Clark presented WHO’S ZOO?, a specially commissioned piece for the Whitney Biennial in New York as well as The Barrowlands Project in Glasgow, part of the London 2012 Festival. In 2011, Robert Gordon University in Aberdeen conferred on Michael Clark an honorary degree of Doctor of Arts (Hon DArt) in recognition of his distinguished career in the field of

IRVINE BARCLAY THEATRE | 5


choreography and dance; the first monograph on Michael Clark, celebrating the whole of his career to date, from the late 70s to the present, was published by Violette Editions. Clark was awarded a CBE for services to dance in the Queen’s Birthday Honours in June 2014.

Charles Atlas (Lighting Designer) has been designing lighting for Michael Clark Company since 1984, though his primary work since the mid-1970s has been as a film director and video artist, producing media/dance works, multichannel video installations, feature-length documentaries, video art works for television and live electronic performances. He has collaborated with numerous performers and choreographers, including Merce Cunningham, James Waring, Douglas Dunn, Karole Armitage, Phillippe Decouflé, Michael Clark, DANCENOISE, Bill Irwin, John Kelly, Richard Move, Diamanda Galás, Marina Abramović, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Yvonne Rainer, Johanna Constantine and Mika Tajima/New Humans. Atlas worked as filmmaker-in-residence with the Merce Cunningham Dance Company for ten years (1974-83). In more recent years (1999-2009), he again collaborated with Cunningham on new video/dance projects. He documented much of the choreographer’s repertory, culminating in the 2008 filming of Cunningham’s epic production of the 1994 work, Ocean. His film, Merce Cunningham: A Lifetime of Dance, a 90-minute international co-production for television, won the “Best Documentary” award at Dance Screen 2000 in Monaco. Atlas has created several portraits of the late performance artist/fashion icon Leigh Bowery: the video installation, Teach (1998); the short film, Ms. Peanut Visits New York (1999); the multi-channel video installation, Dizzy Remix at Kunstverein Hannover in Germany (2008); and the documentary feature, The Legend of Leigh Bowery (2002). Atlas has created several large-scale gallery installations, which have been exhibited at the Whitney Museum of American Art; the Aldrich Museum for Contemporary Art, CT; the Centre Pompidou, Paris; and the Tate Modern, London. Other installation and video work has been shown at galleries and museums in New York and throughout Europe and the U.S. His most recent multichannel video installations were MC9 (2012), created for Museum De Hallen in Haarlem, Netherlands; The Illusion of Democracy (2012), shown at Luhring Augustine Bushwick, New York; and Glacier (2013), commissioned for the Bloomberg Space in London. Since 2003, Atlas has been interested in exploring different contexts that exploit the use of live video. Instant Fame (2003), shown at Participant, Inc. in New York and then remounted in London (2006) at the Vilma Gold Gallery, consisted of a series of real-time video portraits of performers and artists, created live in the gallery space. He created the live video component for Turning, a collaboration with Antony and the Johnsons, which premiered at St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn in 2004 and later toured Europe in 2006. In 2012, Turning, a mixed-form documentary feature based on the European performances, had a theatrical release; it was released 6 | IRVINE BARCLAY THEATRE

on DVD in early 2014. In 2011, he collaborated with Mika Tajima/New Humans on The Pedestrians, a 10-day continuous installation/performance presented at the South London Gallery. Atlas has also collaborated with a variety of musicians (most extensively with Christian Fennesz and William Basinski) on a series of live video/music improvisation pieces, which he performed in Europe, Canada and the U.S. Charles Atlas and Collaborators, which was presented at the Tanks in the Tate Modern in 2013, included collaborations with choreographers Cecilia Bengolea and François Chaignaud, performance artist Johanna Constantine and sound artist Helm. Atlas has received a Guggenheim Fellowship, three “Bessie” (New York Dance and Performance) awards and was the 2006 recipient of the Foundation for Contemporary Arts’ biennial John Cage Award.

Stevie Stewart (Costume Designer). Stevie Stewart – formerly one half of the innovative and influential fashion design label, Bodymap – now works with top creative names in fashion, music, film and advertising as a costume, set and production designer and a fashion stylist. She began collaborating with Michael Clark in 1984, creating memorable costumes for many of his productions. Other theatrical collaborations include costume design for Jan Willhem Van Den Bosch’s Mother Courage and Her Children for the Graeae Theatre Company, and costume design for The Importance of Being Earnest, directed by David Fielding for the Bristol Old Vic. Film credits include production design and costume design for Ruby Blue, directed by Jan Dunn, featuring Bob Hoskins and Josiane Balasko; costume design for Baillie Walsh’s Flashbacks of a Fool, starring Daniel Craig; and costume and production design for Jan Dunn’s The Calling. Stevie has also designed costumes for several international music tours including Kylie Minogue’s KYLIEX2008 world tour and previous Showgirl and Homecoming international tours, as well as The Circus Starring Britney Spears 2009 tour. She collaborated with William Baker to design and produce a men’s swimwear and underwear line – B Boy. She also designs and consults for leading Italian fashion houses. “Fashion lives for its moments of genius and this season, that moment is the reviving of the revolutionary style of Bodymap. In the early Eighties, Bodymap’s stretchjersey-body-contouring layers, designed by Stevie Stewart and David Holah, helped turn British fashion on its head. This spring, labels as diverse as Cacharel and Louis Vuitton are nodding to the Bodymap style with cutouts and stretchy stripes. ‘We are rebelling against the conservative, the bland…We are striving for excitement,’ says Stewart. That quest has lived on: she has forged a fertile career, consulting, directing adverts and designing sets… so the time is ripe to reissue some designs....” (Vogue UK, March 2003)


MICHAEL CLARK COMPANY Michael Clark Artistic Director Jo Stendall Producer

Chloe Seddon Administrative Manager Patrick Shier Administrator

Jamie Maisey Production Manager

Emma Cameron Company Stage Manager Leo Woolcock Lighting

Andy Pink Sound Designer Richard Moores Sound Operator

Tyrone Lebon Additional Video Footage Jake Walters Photography

Charles McDonald PR Malcolm Garett Graphic Design

Board of Directors Charles Asprey, Val Bourne, Sadie Coles, Marie Donnelly, Sarah Hickson, Howard Hymanson, Kathy Noble, Jane Quinn, Alice Rawsthorn Mikhail Baryshnikov, Kate Moss Founding Patrons

Melissa Hetherington Photo by: Jake Walters

Patrons’ Circle Anonymous, Charles & Badger Asprey, Bistrotheque, Val Bourne, Brian Boylan, Adam Clayton, Suzanne Cotter & Bruce Manson, Jamie Fobert, Sam Gainsbury & Anna Whiting, Jefferson Hack, Abel Halpern & Helen ChungHalpern, Fatima Maleki, Farshid Moussavi, Maureen Paley, Dominic Palfreyman, Yana & Stephen Peel, Jussi Pylkkänen, Jane Quinn, Alice Rawsthorn, Serena Rees, Libby Sellers & Patrick Fetherstonhaugh, Victoria Siddall & François Chantala, Maria Sukkar, Francis Sultana, Angelika Taschen, Susanne Tide Frater, Emily Tsingou and Geoff Westmore Artist Patrons Pablo Bronstein, Cecily Brown, Don Brown, Peter Doig, Martin Creed, Enrico David, Tracey Emin, Angus Fairhurst, Wade Guyton, Mark Handforth, Damien Hirst, Jonathan Horowitz, Gary Hume, Douglas Gordon, Anish Kapoor, Gabriel Kuri, Sarah Lucas, Jim Lambie, Tala Madani, Helen Marten, Nick Mauss, Adam McEwen, Tim Noble and Sue Webster, David Noonan, Eddie Peake, Elizabeth Peyton, Rob Pruitt, Ugo Rondinone, Wilhelm Sasnal, Raqib Shaw, Sam Taylor-Wood, Juergen Teller, Wolfgang Tillmans, Gavin Turk, Nicola Tyson, Rebecca Warren, Andro Wekua, T.J. Wilcox, Jordan Wolfson and Cerith Wyn-Evans

IRVINE BARCLAY THEATRE | 7


Credits Feeling Called Love performed by Wire, composed by Bruce Gilbert, Robert Gotobed, Graham Lewis and Colin Newman, published by Carlin Music Corp, licensed courtesy of EMI Records Ltd.

Do You Me? and I Did (track 1 and 2 ) performed by Bruce Gilbert, composed by Bruce Gilbert, published by Dying Art Ltd/Mute Song, licensed courtesy of Mute Records Ltd. Venus in Furs, White Light/White Heat, Heroin, and Ocean performed by The Velvet Underground, composed by Lou Red, published by EMI Publishing Ltd, licensed courtesy of Universal Records Ltd under license from Universal Group.

Sweet Thing, Candidate, Sweet Thing (Reprise), Future Legend, Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family performed by David Bowie, composed by David Bowie, published by Jones Music America-RZO Music Ltd/ EMI Music Publishing Ltd/ChrysalisMusic Ltd, licensed courtesy of RZO Music. Mass Production performed by Iggy Pop, composed by David Bowie and Iggy Pop, published by Tintoretto Music-RZO Music Ltd/ EMI Music Pub Ltd/ EMI Virgin Music Ltd

The Company would like to thank: All the commissioners and co-producers for their support of come, been and gone. Thanks also to: Modern Dance Club, Henry Wrenn-Meleck at RZO Music, Artsadmin, Chief, EMI London, Johan Brum, Edwin Shirley, Philip Stannard Associates (projection equipment), White Light London (lighting equipment).

come, been and gone was commissioned by barbicanbite09 and Dance Umbrella (London), La Biennale di Venezia (Venice) and Dansens Hus (Stockholm) as part of European Network of Performing Arts (ENPARTS). Co-produced by Dance Umbrella, barbicanbite09, Michael Clark Company, Edinburgh International Festival, Grand Théâtre de Luxembourg and Maison des Arts de Créteil. Michael Clark Company is supported by Arts Council England.

2014 US Tour supported by the British Council

Sense of Doubt performed by David Bowie, composed by David Bowie, published by Tintoretto Music-RZO Music Ltd/ EMI Music Pub Ltd, licensed courtesy of RZO Music

“Heroes” performed by David Bowie, composed by David Bowie and Brian Eno, published by Tintoretto Music-RZO Music Ltd/ EMI Music Pub Ltd/ Universal Music Publ. MGB Ltd, licensed courtesy of RZO Music.

After All, Aladdin Sane, The Jean Genie performed by David Bowie, composed by David Bowie, published by Tintoretto Music-RZO Music Ltd/ EMI Music Pub Ltd/ Chrysalis-Music Ltd, licensed courtesy of RZO Music.

“Heroes” video directed by Stanley Dorfman, licensed courtesy of RZO Music ©1977. Audio excerpt from THE SUNDAY SHOW: INTRODUCED BY JOHN PEEL 1970 used by kind permission of BBC Worldwide Limited. Music licensing by Music Matters

Michael Clark would like to thank David Bowie, Brian Eno, Bruce Gilbert, Iggy Pop and Lou Reed

8 | IRVINE BARCLAY THEATRE

Michael Clark Company is an Artistic Associate of the Barbican, London.

Michael Clark Company, Barbican Centre, Silk Street, London EC2Y 8DS T: +44(0) 20 7382 7170 E: info@michaelclarkcompany.com

Registered as Modern Masterpieces in England and Wales. A company limited by guarantee.

Company number 4889089, Registered Charity number 1109451

www.michaelclarkcompany.com @MichaelClarkCo


For Your Information Ticket Services Order online 24/7 at www.thebarclay.org or www.facebook.com/IrvineBarclay/events

Call the Box Office at (949) 854-4646 Monday through Friday from 10am until 6pm; Saturday and Sunday from noon until 4pm. On days of a performance, the Box Office remains open through intermission. MasterCard, VISA, American Express, and Discover accepted. Late Seating To prevent disruption of a performance in progress, patrons who have not entered the theatre when the performance begins may be asked to wait in the lobby until there is a suitable interval.

Ushers Ushers are located at each auditorium entrance and at designated stations in the lobby. Please consult an usher if you need assistance. If you are interested in joining the usher staff, please contact the Patron Services Manager at: (949) 854-4193; Main@thebarclay.org. Public Parking Parking is provided for a fee in the structure located at the corner of West Peltason and Campus Drive.

Restrooms Restrooms are located on the main lobby level near the box office. Drinking fountains are located on either side of the main lobby staircase and on the second level.

Listening Devices Listening devices for amplifying stage sound are available at the concessions bar free of charge.

Cellular Phones, Beepers, Watch Alarms As a courtesy to all patrons, please turn these units to off or non-audible before the performance begins. Cameras and Recording Equipment The taking of photographs and use of any mechanical or digital recording devices are strictly prohibited.

Children Children are welcome. However, not all events are appropriate for small children. A paid ticket is required for everyone entering the theatre, including infants and children. The box office can provide advice regarding an event’s suitability. Theatre Tours Backstage tours of the Barclay are offered through the theatre’s ArtsReach program. For information, or to reserve tours for schools or community groups please call (949) 854-4193.

Irvine Barclay Theatre Online Get the latest information on what’s happening at Irvine Barclay Theatre by joining the Barclay’s E-list to receive email updates and special offers. Go to the Barclay’s website at www.thebarclay.org or email us at info@thebarclay.org. Follow us on social media

facebook.com/IrvineBarclay twitter.com/IrvineBarclay

youtube.com/IrvineBarclay

instagram.com/IrvineBarclay

Staff Douglas C. Rankin, President Ginny W. Hayward, Assistant to the President

Christopher Burrill, General Manager Lori Grayson, Special Projects - Development Karen Drews Hanlon, Director of Communications Gary Payne, Director of Finance

Jeff Stamper, Production Manager Tim Owens, Assitant Production Manager Luanne Bauer, Box Office Manager Brianna Sparks, Assistant Box Office Manager Ryan Main, Patron Services Manager Nathan Dwyer, Bar Manager Helena Danovich, Marketing Assistant Michelle Maasz, Social Media Manager Ingrid Strayer, Finance Assistant

IRVINE BARCLAY THEATRE | 9


Annual Fund for

EXCELLENCE

THANK

YOU

Irvine Barclay Theatre gratefully acknowledges the generous contributions of our donors who help support the “big talent” in our “small hall.” Gifts to the Annual Fund for Excellence assist the Barclay in presenting an international roster of performers while keeping tickets reasonably priced. They also support our ArtsReach programs provided to the schools at little or no cost and “family-friendly” programming on stage. The Barclay’s mission also embraces making its beautiful facilities available to diverse community organizations, UCI, and other educational institutions. Thank you to all of our generous donors listed here for their contributions during the previous 12 months! If you would like to join the ranks of those who make it all possible at the Barclay, you may make a donation online at www.thebarclay.org or call (949) 854-4607. BRAVO BARCLAY PRESENTING SPONSOR $10,000 AND ABOVE

Drs. Francisco and Hana Ayala* Cheng Family Foundation* Bobbi Cox* Anne C. Earhart* Haskell & White LLP James and Dolores Kase Kari and Michael Kerr* National Endowment for the Arts O’Melveny & Myers LLP Pacific Life Foundation Sonnet Technologies, Inc.* Elizabeth R. Steele Trisha Steele Lynda Thomas

BRAVO BARCLAY PARTNER $5,000 - $9,999

BRAVO BARCLAY BENEFACTOR $2,500 - $4,999

BRAVO BARCLAY PATRON $1,000 - $2,499

Allergan Foundation Erika Dadura-Crane and Marc Crane Michelle Rohe The HumanKind Philanthropic Fund William Gillespie Foundation

Rick and Wendy Aversano Damien and Yvonne Jordan Karen McCulley Salwa and Sabri Rizkalla Richard and Ann Sim Simon Foundation for Education and Housing Diane Stovall Alan and Barbara Wiener*

Mr. and Mrs. James Alexiou Robert and Delphi Ballinger Bravi9, Inc. Fiorenza Comunian and Fernando De La Fuente Ginny Davies Barbara Klein* Helen and Fritz Lin Carl Neisser Peter and Alexandra Neptune Tom and Amber Orradre William and Janice Parker William and Barbara Roberts Deborah and Frank Rugani Pamela and Martin Sapetto Edward and Helen Shanbrom Family Fund Western States Arts Federation

PUBLIC PARTNERS

City of Irvine University of California, Irvine *Denotes a member of Movementum, the Barclay’s dance support group

10 | IRVINE BARCLAY THEATRE


ENCORE CIRCLE ENTHUSIAST $250-$999 Anonymous Oscar R. Aguirre Wendy Arraki John W. Ballantyne Dr. Michael Bear Linda Berquist Rosanna Brichta Bruce and Michelle Carter Dean and Kaly Corey Pamela Cotten John Coyne Kenneth J. Craig, Jr. Bob and Burnetta Denham Walter Dietiker Roger du Plessis* Joel and Melanie Durst Melissa and Michael Fox Mary Ann Gaido Alison Goldenberg Robert and Margaret Green Sanjiv and Geeta Grover Chuck and Ginny Hayward Richard and Sara Hess David Hulse and Kerry Bartelt Fred and Elise Karam Noboru Kasai Judy Kaufman and George Farkas Dr. and Mrs. Solly Krom Robert E. Lee* Phuong and Joseph S. Lewis III Molly Lynch and Alan Andrews Janie Merkle Donald and Ui Natenstedt Lauren and Richard Packard John and Charlene Pasko Rob and Randa Phair Edward Pope and Antoinette Olivera Helga Pralle Britta and Tracy Pulliam Claudia Ried and Alan Kraemer Sandy Robertson Rohl LLC - Kenneth and Amber Rohl Nancy Lee Ruyter Louise Schwennesen John Sorich Alison and Richard Stein* Thomas and Marilyn Sutton Jennifer Szabo* Erica and Fred Taylor Thomas and Elizabeth Tierney Kira Torreblanca Sylvia C. Turner Vendini, Inc. Alfred Villasenor Emily Vogler and Daniel Flynn Charles and Marilyn Wright Sophie Yang

NATIONAL CHOREOGRAPHERS INITIATIVE As a partner in the annual National Choreographers Initiative, Irvine Barclay Theatre is also pleased to acknowledge all those who support this important contribution to American dance. Anonymous Betty B. Anderson Betsy Andrews and Alex Moad Mrs. Alan V. Andrews Ann Marie Deangelo Productions Ballet Barres West William H. Bardens Victoria Barrett Fran Bass and Mark Ishimaro, MD Dr. Michael Bear Honorable Marian Bergeson Paul Blank Theodore Bradshaw

ENCORE CIRCLE SUPPORTER $100 –$249 Larry and Phyllis Agran Corinne Akahoshi and Daniel Futterman Richard Alexander Alice and Ara Apkarian Thomas and Linda Bacon Diane and Dennis Baker* Sarah and David Ball Joe Ball Ms. Lindy Balmer* Rivka Barasch Betty Barry George and Linda Bauer Craig Behrens Richard Belman Henry Bennett Scott Berry* Jeannie Berryman Susan and Steven Bierlich Richard H. Bigelow Eric S. Blum Suzanne Boras Dale Brandon Brien Amspoker and Ellen Breitman Scott Brinkerhoff Diana Brookes Jon and Donna Brownell Susan Bryant Douglas T. Burch, Jr. Linda and Roland Bye Harold and Eleanor Carpenter Terry Causey Cyndie Chen Deanna Choi Mrs. Roya Cole Frank Crance and Andrea Bouas Anahid Crecelius Hilary Davis and Dr. Sandy Ratner Shari Dill Joan M. Donahue Sharon Dubruyne Col. and Mrs. Alan Dugard Rad and Toni Dwyer* Dr. and Mrs. Robert T. Eagan Rosalie and Jon Elder Janet and Howard Emery David Falconer Nancy Field Cathie Fields Christine Fluor and Walter Scacchi* Roberta Fox Mark A. Franzen Thelma Friedel Elisabeth and Lester Fruth Heather Fuller Steve Geary Conrad Giedt and Linda Clemens Marcella Gilmore and Edward Muehl

S. Glass Family Valerie Glass Gilbert Gluck Ben and Sandie Goelman Janice and Raymond Grant Anita Gregory, M.D. Paul and Nancy Groner Nancy and Gary Guardabascio Matthew and Annemarie Hall Jim and Berri Harris Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Hartman Paul and Nancy Hegness Colin Henderson June and Miles Herman David Herzlinger Lance and Risa Hicks Emory Hillman* Robert and Virginia Hilton Bradley Hrbacek IBM Matching Grants Program Robert Ingold* Judy and Terry Jones Peg and Bob Jordan Joel and Jennifer Katz Dr. Mitchell Katz and Mrs. Linda Scott-Katz Raouf Kayaleh Mr. and Mrs. Van R. Kelsey III Gene Kent* Jay King Jeff C. Kough Jeannine Kouns Dr. and Mrs. John Lagourgue Dr. Martin G. Langer Christy Langer Edwina Lawrence Jeffrey Levy Alla Liberstein Anne Llewellyn* Willard and Bettina Loomis Junling Ma Christian and Sharon Maas Carolyn and Kerry Mangano William March Duane and Kathleen Mauzey David and Teryl McDermott Terry McDonald* Mary and Wm Scott McDonell Helen McMillan Ken and Gisela Meier Tony and Barbara Mendoza Mark and Jan Merryfield Hiroko and Yoshiharu Moriwaki Janis Morris Sayantani Mukherjee Mr. and Mrs. Mitsuhiko Nakano Julie Nakata Mr. and Mrs. Keith Nelson Teri Neumann Katherine Ahn Newen Ivy Ngo

Michael Noggle James Olney and Laura O’Connor Christian and Darcie Olson Rand Parker Robert Patterson and Renee Boblette Pam Paul Omar and Irene Perez Dolly A. Platt, PhD* Jill Prentice Edward and Betty Quilligan Elaine Ramsay Ramona Reveles Michael Recendez Stephanie Reich Kameel Renner Dennis Repp Laurie Riedinger Margaret C. Riggs Louise Ringwalt Dr. Stephen M. Rochford Mary Ann Schaepper Joann Schaum Karl and Elizabeth Schiller Judith M. Schmidt Linda and Herbert Schwarz* Frances Segal and Michael Friedson Trudy Vermeer Selleck Homayoun Shorooghi Mr. and Mrs. John L. Smith Dorothy J. Solinger Mary and David Solomon Paul Spas Beverly Spring Hugh Stevenson and Jan Burns* Daniel and Jeannette Stokols Beverly and Gary Stoney Michele Suire Margaret and John Sun Alice Swan Celia and Julio Taleisnik Johanna Tilley Hugh and Patricia Todd Gary and Peranza Topjon Marilyn and Angelo Vassos Kathy Vickers and Jeremy Freimund Mr. James Violette* Michael Voronel Kim Waterson Diane Wick Carlos and Peggy Williams Robert and Sara Winokur Jing Wu and Wing Wong Dr. and Mrs. Milford Wyman Dr. Lowell and Ina Zeleznick

Laurie and Bart Brown Gale Edelberg and Bob Butnik David and Beverly Carmichael Bobbi Cox Sophia and Larry Cripe Diane Diefenderfer and David Hanlon Roger du Plessis Gale Edelberg and Bob Butnik Henry and Janet Eggers David Emmes and Paula Tomei Robert Farnsworth Cliff Faulkner and Shigeru Yaji Gilian Finley and Robert Labaree Roberta Fox Mary and Andrew Franklin Sandra French Judith A. Gorski Dr. Burton L. Karson Joanne and Dennis Keith Kari and Michael Kerr Carolyn and Willaim Klein Don and Grace Laffoon Dr. Martin G. Langer

Phuong and Joseph S. Lewis III Kathryn Lynch and Robert McDonnell Molly Lynch and Alan Andrews Jack Lyons Debra Maxwell Sharon McNalley Ed Moen and Janek Schergen John and Margi Murray Mr. and Mrs. Mitsuhiko Nakano Carl Neisser Tom and Marilyn Nielsen Northern Trust Bank of California Anne B. Nutt Mrs. J. Matthew Osborne Marshall Parker John and Charlene Pasko James Penrod Janice and Richard Plastino Dolly A. Platt, PhD Edward and Diana Putz Susan Reeder Louise Ringwalt Barbara Roberts

Robinson Foundation Michelle Rohe Andrew Rose David and Cynthia Runstrom Bruce and Jan Scherer Jack and Katy Schellerman Sally Anne and Don Sheridan Nick and Donna Shubin Igal and Diane Silber Mrs. Ann Sim Jackie Smiley Elizabeth Stahr Elizabeth R. Steele Studio du Corps Pilates Center of Orange County Jennifer Szabo Chris Thayer Karen and Gary Thorne Barbara and Jack Tingley Mary Vensel White and T. Jason White William Gillespie Foundation

IRVINE BARCLAY THEATRE | 11


“Magical!

A perfect blend of virtuosic technique, fantasy, and poetry.” - La Presse, Montréal

February 27-March 1


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Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.