April 2023
Zakir Hussain and the Masters of Percussion April 4
Takács Quartet April 16-17
The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain
April 18
Chicago April 27-30
April 2023
Zakir Hussain and the Masters of Percussion April 4
Takács Quartet April 16-17
The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain
April 18
Chicago April 27-30
Boulder Ballet Presents May 19–21, Dairy ARTS Center
Join us in May for Boulder Ballet’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Enter an enchanted land filled with star-crossed lovers, mischievous pranksters, and ethereal woodland fairies. Set to Felix Mendelssohn’s romantic score and choreographed by Ben Needham-Wood. Suitable for all ages.
Tickets + info: BoulderBallet.org
1402 Pearl St. | Boulder, CO
303.443.1084 | hurdlesjewelry.com
“Pieces for the woman who sees jewelry no differently than the art she displays on the walls of her home.”
—Amáli Designer, Sara Freedenfeld
08 The CU Presents season
15 Chicago Offers a Fresh Take on an Iconic Work
12
CU Presents is the home of performing arts on the beautiful University of Colorado Boulder campus. With hundreds of concerts, plays, recitals and more on our stages each year, there’s something for everyone to enjoy.
The Artist Series, which for more than 80 years has welcomed worldrenowned musicians and dance troupes to historic Macky Auditorium.
The Colorado Shakespeare Festival, a professional theatre company devoted to the Bard’s works.
The Takács Quartet, a world-renowned chamber ensemble in residence at CU Boulder.
The CU Performing Arts, offering a broad range of both free and ticketed performances from CU Boulder faculty, students and guest artists: exciting new and classic works from the College of Music, spellbinding performances at the Department of Theatre & Dance and CU Boulder’s beloved annual Holiday Festival
APRIL 2023
Editors: Laima Haley, Sabine Kortals Stein
Designer: Sabrina Green
Contributors: Adam Goldstein
Photo/image credits: Glenn Asakawa, CU Boulder Photography, Sharen Bradford, Allison Burke, Jeff Fasano, John Mac, Jim McGuire, Nina Yoshida Nelsen, KT Kim, Amanda Tipton
Cover, Artist Series: The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain. Photo by Allison Burke. Cover, Musical Theatre Program: Chicago promotional art.
Cover, Takács Quartet: Photo by Amanda Tipton.
The University of Colorado Boulder—founded the same year Colorado became a state in 1876—recognizes that it sits on the traditional territories and ancestral homelands of the Arapaho, Cheyenne, Ute and many other Native American nations. Recognizing the history of the state, the university and the campus’ origin story, however difficult, and the histories and experiences of the Indigenous peoples who have lived in these territories for millennia aligns with the campus’ academic and research missions as Colorado’s flagship public research university. Full CU Boulder land acknowledgment: colorado.edu/land-acknowledgment
Artist Series Advisory Board: Daryl James, Chair; Gil Berman, Donalee Brown, Shirley Carnahan, Mike Gallucci, Alan Halpern, Willie Hill (emeritus), Maryann K. Jaross, Erika Randall, Greg Silvus, Ellen Taxman, Ann Yost
Music Advisory Board: Laurie Hathorn, Chair; Sue Baer, Chris Brauchli, Bob Bunting, Jan Burton, Bob Charles, Marty Coffin Evans, Paul Eklund, Jonathan Fox, Dave Fulker, Grace Gamm, Lloyd Gelman, Doree Hickman, Daryl James, Maria Johnson, Caryl Kassoy, Ben Nelson, Susan Olenwine, Rudy Perez, Mikhy Ritter, Becky Roser, Firuzeh Saidi, Lynn Streeter, Jeannie Thompson, Jack Walker, Celia Waterhouse
This CU Presents program is published by: The Publishing House, Westminster, CO.
Publisher: Angie Flachman Johnson
Production Manager: Stacey Krull
President Emeritus: Wilbur E. Flachman
For advertising, call 303-428-9529 or email sales@pub-house.com. ColoradoArtsPubs.com
CU at Boettcher returns! Join CU Boulder’s choirs, CU Symphony Orchestra and faculty and alumni soloists for a spectacular free concert. The exciting program includes Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana, the world premiere of a new work by the College of Music’s Professor of Composition Carter Pann and a collaboration with El Sistema Colorado.
7:30 p.m., Tuesday, May 2, 2023
Boettcher Concert Hall
1000 14th St, Denver, CO 80202
FREE—no tickets required
Tuesday, April 4, 7:30 p.m. Macky Auditorium
April 16-17
Grusin Music Hall
Streaming April 16-24
Tuesday, April 18, 7:30 p.m. Macky Auditorium
Chicago
April 20-23
Charlotte
April 27-30
Music Theatre
Tuesday, May 2, 7:30 p.m. Boettcher Concert Hall
1000 14th St, Denver, CO
Sarah Stoneback was already an accomplished musician when she enrolled in the master’s program at the University of Colorado Boulder College of Music in 2008.
She had earned a bachelor’s at Arizona State University in Tempe and she’d built up an impressive performance résumé with band members who just happened to be family: The Stoneback Sisters and Brass featured Sarah and her sisters, as well as her mother and father—all of whom played trumpet and brass. Complementing her undergraduate studies, this experience offered Stoneback real-world credits as a touring musician and a professional artist.
It was her experience at the College of Music, however, that helped steer the course of her chosen career.
“When I think about the College of Music, I think about a vibrant learning environment and a vibrant space to grow,” says Stoneback, an active Conn-Selmer Bach clinician and artist. “I had the opportunity to work with faculty and administration in ways that helped me learn about the way the academic system runs and operates. That’s how I navigate my career at Montana State University.”
At MSU—as Assistant Professor of Trumpet Pedagogy and Performance—Stoneback is a respected educator, clinician, soloist and chamber musician who’s been featured on stages across the globe in various ensembles. She credits many of her accomplishments directly to the guidance, inspiration and encouragement she found at our
college, where she earned a Master in Music degree and a Doctorate of Musical Arts in performance and pedagogy.
At CU Boulder, Stoneback embraced world-class performance opportunities: As a member of Flatirons Brass, she participated in numerous national competitions and world tours. In 2009, the ensemble was a Bronze medalist in the Fischoff National Chamber Music Competition. And in 2011, Flatirons Brass worked as artists in residence at the University of Renmin in Beijing, China; the group conducted workshops, provided individual instruction and performed recitals.
“That was a major part of my time at CU Boulder,” Stoneback recalls. “We did competitions, traveled internationally and did a lot of educational outreach. We had so many experiences that were musically enriching.”
Stoneback also leveraged opportunities to record professionally—and to participate in the marketing, design and packaging of the “Of Love and Life” CD, a performance she participated in with the CU Boulder Wind Symphony under Professor Emeritus Allan McMurray.
“The university invested in me by inviting me to work with them,” Stoneback says. “They welcomed my skills and interests. It was a pivotal experience.”
Just as critical to Stoneback’s development were the teaching opportunities she found at the University of Colorado. Stoneback participated in the college’s graduate teacher program, an opportunity that taught her how to teach students of all backgrounds and specialties how to build a professional portfolio, refine different performance styles, and effective ways of becoming better musicians and scholars of their chosen discipline. These teaching experiences, along with the chance to serve as an adjunct professor at Denver’s Regis University, laid the groundwork for her current role.
“The College of Music provided me the tools that I keep developing in pursuing my own teaching career,” notes Stoneback whose approach to teaching incorporates her evidence-based research in applying the Kolb Learning Style Inventory. “The academic side of my experience at CU Boulder helped me become more multifaceted.”
She concludes, “I loved every aspect of studying at the College of Music. I loved earning my graduate degrees in Boulder. I remember driving in the first time and thinking, ‘I just have to be here. This is exactly where I want to be.”
A love story set in the heart of America.
Carsen Theater
The Dairy Arts Center
2590 Walnut St., Boulder
Opening Night: Saturday, April 8
On the night Apollo 15 lands on the moon, a draft dodger steals home from Canada to Eden Prairie, Minnesota. He risks arrest to deliver a message to a young woman from his high school class. This beautifully etched play challenges notions of our own bravery and the true cost of freedom. Join BETC for this love story set in the heart of America.
Eden Prairie, 1971 is produced at Butterfly E ect Theatre of Colorado (BETC) as part of a National New Play Network (NNPN) Rolling World Premiere. Other Partner Theaters are Riverside Theatre (IA) and New Jersey Repertory Company (NJ). For more information on NNPN, please visit nnpn.org.
"Deeply moving and thought-provoking... you must see it."
– ALLEN NEUNER, OUT IN JERSEY MAGAZINE
The founders of the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain had plenty of high-profile credits on their resumes when they started the ensemble in 1985.
Players had specialized in a wide array of instruments for internationally known artists like Martha Reeves and Mary Wells. They were musicians who could claim titles of expertise and professional achievements, and they were in-demand and qualified to play any kind of serious, highprofile gig one could imagine.
“The premise of the orchestra was to avoid pomposity, cults of personality and any egomaniac prima-donna vanity,” says George Hinchliffe, director of the Ukulele Orchestra of Great
Britain and one of its founding members. “My background was in piano, ukulele, viola and experimental instruments. I chose the ukulele because it was not commonly regarded in those days as a serious instrument. An ensemble, indeed an orchestra, composed entirely of ukuleles would subvert any expectations of conventionality.”
Nearly 40 years later, the orchestra has evolved far beyond a joyful experiment by musicians looking for a sense of adventure. Starting from early gigs in pubs, village halls and arts centers in and around London, the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain has evolved into a worldwide sensation, appearing at venues ranging from Carnegie Halls (both in New York and on the Shetland Islands) to the Shanghai Symphony Hall, the Sydney Opera House and Buckingham Palace.
One of those destinations has been the University of Colorado Boulder where the orchestra easily won a reputation as an audience favorite. In the past, the ensemble has delivered unique renditions of musical styles
ranging from ABBA to ZZ Top, and from “Tchaikovsky to the Beverly Hillbillies” for Boulder audiences. They’ve also offered mass audience participation, hosting a ukulele playalong for the crowds. Their flair for theatrics, audience engagement and pure joy is bound to repeat when the orchestra returns to Macky Auditorium on April 18.
This dynamic—a carefree approach combined with wellhoned musical expertise—has remained consistent over the decades of the group’s existence, even as the ensemble has shifted in size and personnel. Each player performs on a uke in a different register (soprano, concert, baritone, bass, etc.)
Seven may seem like a humble number for the title of “orchestra,” but Hinchliffe insists that they earn the status through their dedication to their instruments and the sheer range of their repertoire.
“The idea of an orchestra playing only ukuleles would have seemed amusing in itself in the early days,” he says.
“Currently this is less remarkable, though the orchestra is known as the first group of ‘ukuleleators’ calling itself an orchestra in history.
“We often perform music that plays with the conventions, such as combining several songs simultaneously or changing the genre of the music.
“When the music is played more faithfully to the original styles, the works range from Wagner to Heavy Rock, from Lady Gaga to Otis Redding and from Jug Bands to Billie Eilish,” he adds.
Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain
April 18, 2023
Macky Auditorium
Tickets at this QR Code:
There’s a certain excitement to producing a bona fide theatrical blockbuster.
The 1975 musical Chicago certainly claims those bragging rights. With music by John Kander, lyrics by Fred Ebb and a book by Ebb and Broadway legend Bob Fosse, the production has achieved a rare status as one of the longest running musicals on Broadway and in London. It spurred a popular film adaptation and features a score, a story and choreography that are undisputed musical theatre standards.
That global allure is part of what made Chicago an obvious choice to present as part of the University of Colorado Boulder Musical Theatre Program’s current season. The show, which runs in the Imig Music Building’s Music Theatre April 27 to 30, gives students the chance to sink their teeth into a proven theatrical standard. It’s one that many know from high school productions and one that many are bound to see again in careers as professional performers.
“It’s a classic show, soon to be one of the longest running shows on Broadway,” says Matthew Chellis, Director of the Musical Theatre Program at CU’s College of Music. Chellis added that with eight principal roles and an ensemble of 13 to 14, the musical offered the opportunity for double-casting, which offered more students the chance to explore this iconic show. “We have a mission to make sure our student cohort has as many opportunities to perform as possible.”
The Musical Theatre Program strives to connect its students with a wide range of programming, from less known works that they may have never seen to iconic titles like Chicago . It’s an approach that benefits students, faculty and audience members alike. In this case, theatergoers will have the chance to see a professional production in a setting that’s intimate and immediate. The Music Theatre in the Imig building has about 240 seats, a venue size that complements the show’s sometimes stark dynamic.
“It’s actually a small show, especially in its newer iteration. It’s been pared down, which emphasizes the storydriven nature of the piece,” Chellis says, adding that the upcoming production will highlight original elements of the show, including choreography designed by Bob Fosse. “We’re doing a little bit of movie and a little bit of Broadway. We’re going to have the pit band on stage and an innovative, multi-level set.”
All of these touches, along with direction by Justin Johnson, choreography by Tracy Doty and musical direction from Collin Sinclair, are bound to offer audience members a new perspective on this well-known staple from the American musical theatrical canon.
Chicago
April 27-30
Music Theatre Tickets at this QR Code:
7:30 p.m., Tuesday, April 18, 2023
Macky Auditorium
Peter Brooke Turner
Laura Currie
Dominic Howles
Leisa Rea
Ben Rouse
Chris Walker
Ewan Wardrop
Tonight’s program will be announced from the stage. There will be a 20-minute intermission.
Musical Director: George Hinchliffe
Tour management: Viola Farrington
Sound: Verena Rogler
Arts Management Group, Inc.
130 W. 57th St.
New York, NY 10019
• Masks are optional in public indoor spaces on the CU Boulder campus.
• Latecomers will be seated at the discretion of the house manager.
• Photography and video recordings of any type are strictly prohibited during the performance.
• Smoking is not permitted anywhere. CU Boulder is a smoke-free campus.
The Ukulele Orchestra is a touring musical group which has been delighting audiences, raising the roof, selling out performances, and receiving standing ovations since 1985. This all-singing, all strumming group has been performing for 38 years using only a fistful of ukuleles and maintaining that all genres of music are available for reinterpretation.
The premise sounds astoundingly simple: instruments, voices, no gimmicks, no light show. Yet the New York Times exclaim that ‘they extract more than seems humanly possible from so small and so modest an instrument” and millions have enthused over the years about the fact that the Orchestra tears the house down with a lively, touching, catchy, emotive, stomping show, threaded with humour and wit which inexplicably draws the audience in, to a joyous world beyond the conflicts of musical genres and transcending differences between a serious concert and entertainment.
As soon as the performers walk on stage, the audience feels that they are in safe hands, at home with friends who are totally in command of the art, craft and magic of the stage. Sitting in chamber group format and dressed in formal evening wear (regardless of the time of day or the venue, whether Glastonbury Festival or Carnegie Hall), it uses the limitations of the instrument to create a musical freedom as it reveals unsuspected musical insights.
At this point, the audience may well sit back, all prior assumptions forgotten, and allow the Orchestra, which has 16-handedly changed the face of the ukulele world, to give what the Independent raved as “the best musical entertainment in the country”.
The first gig, intended as a one-off bit of fun was an instant sell out and led to national radio, TV, album recordings and international tours. Since then, the Orchestra has become what the Observer called “a much-loved institution” giving thousands of concerts, TV, and radio appearances all over the world. There have been tours in Britain, across Europe, Scandinavia, New Zealand,
Australia, Japan, China America, Canada and the North Pole. They also had the honour to perform, by invitation of The Prince of Wales, at the private 90th Birthday party of Her Majesty the Queen at Windsor Castle.
The Ukulele Orchestra have released CDs and DVDs on their own independent label. The orchestra’s music has been used in films, plays, and commercials. The Financial Times praised “The sophisticated sound they make—both percussive and melodic—is at once hilarious and heartfelt.”
At over 2 metres tall, Peter Brooke Turner may well be the tallest ukulele player in the world—he is certainly the tallest in the Ukulele Orchestra. He was born in Portugal and grew up in the Soviet Union, Brazil, America, Finland and Italy. After false starts on the violin, trumpet and guitar, he finally discovered the ukulele and joined the Ukes in 1995. He has released three albums under his pseudonym Tony Penultimate and has worked with many well-known showbiz names in the UK and has even lent his uke to Tiny Tim. He fronted his own ‘Ukulele Kings’ rock group in the 90s. Turner has started the world’s first high-altitude drama company—the ATTC (Airline Toilets Theatre Company) which has subsequently produced over twenty high quality, low budget songs, sketches and shows (all on Peter’s iPhone) from this oft neglected performance area. They can be viewed online.
The youngest member of the orchestra. Laura Currie was born in Dumfries, Scotland, and studied English Literature at the University of Edinburgh. She started playing the ukulele at the age of fifteen after seeing the Ukes in concert and used the instrument to front her first rock band at sixteen years old. She began performing with the Ukes in 2019, and has since toured with them across China, France and Switzerland. When not touring with the orchestra, Currie performs under the solo stage name Ra. She writes and releases original songs and covers, and one of her collaborative singles was recently featured in a Netflix show. Currie has garnered an active online following for her eclectic mix of elaborately self-
produced YouTube videos. During the COVID-19 lockdown in the U.K., she used these video editing skills to produce the Ukulele Lockdown series that the Ukes released weekly on Youtube. Laura also plays piano, bass and guitar.
Dominic Howles grew up in Jamaica, Hong Kong and Somerset. He is a very experienced bass player, using double bass and electric bass, and has worked with many well-known jazz names and in classical ensembles. He has worked with Tommy Chase, Stacey Kent, Bobby Wellins, Don Weller, Julian Siegel and many others. He studied at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and has performed in Europe, the Middle East and Asia, on TV, radio and theatre. He has undertaken, directed and written multi-media work, and is well-respected as a composer and arranger. His own groups have performed successfully for many years. He is a first-class bass soloist and has an engaging sense of humour, which is ... ahem… always useful when working with ukulele players. He lives in London.
Leisa Rea has a background in theatre, comedy, writing and music. She’s worked as an actor and director, written for stage, television and radio, and has played with the Orchestra for the past 15 years. She’s taught stand up comedy, written for the BAFTA nominated series Miranda (BBC), performed in her own critically acclaimed shows, and was the winner of the inaugural Musical Comedy Awards in 2009. Away from Orchestral duties, Rea brings her considerable experience as a performer and artist, to people all over the world, through her online ukulele teaching and workshops. Recently, Rea won an Arts Council of England grant to allow her to train as an audio digital producer.
Ben Rouse was born in Cornwall but grew up in Hampshire. At the age of 8 he began playing the drums, turning to the guitar at age 11. At 23, Rouse formed the rock band Purple Monkey, which became a popular band along the South coast of England. At 25, he decided to learn the violin and mandolin and formed the folk duo Teapot Junkies, releasing two albums of
original material. He went on to teach himself the saxophone, flute, trumpet and banjo. At 30, Rouse decided that a proper job might be necessary and earned himself an HND in electronics, but in 2007 was drawn back to music when he saw the Ukulele Orchestra perform on Jools Holland Hootenanny The next day he bought a ukulele and began performing and teaching workshops at festivals around the U.K. until, in 2014, he was invited to play with the Orchestra. He has since toured America, China, Europe, Scandinavia and the U.K. with them.
Ewan Wardrop started playing the ukulele in 1998 but also plays mandolin, guitar and the penny whistle. Wardrop trained as a ballet dancer and appeared in a record-breaking run of Matthew Bourne’s Swan Lake on Broadway. He has a long history of working in theatre on an international stage, and has worked with companies such as the The Royal Shakespeare Company and Kneehigh Theatre. He also has an experimental Morris Dance group called the Bo Diddlers.
Chris Walker studied drama originally, but has worked as a musician for many years, including giving a huge number of performances with his own skiffle group. He is an experienced ukuleleator, singer, raconteur, administrator and tea-chest bass player. Walker’s experience in theatre and in venues of a bewildering variety means that he is comfortable bringing both a seriousness and a devil-may-care lightheartedness to performances with the Orchestra. Walker has performed on radio and TV, at the Cambridge Folk Festival, Singapore International Arts Festival, Glastonbury Festival, Linz International Street festival and many other venues in the UK and Europe. He lives in Cardiff, in Wales, which, usefully for the Orchestra, and like Scotland, is still part of the U.K. and Great Britain.
We’re a poppin’ too! We’ve got more arborists, more trucks, and more services. The wait is over, we’re growing and we want to continue to grow with you.
The Dean’s Annual Fund provides critical support for programs throughout the College of Music. It enriches student and faculty experiences through diversity, equity + inclusion initiatives, faculty and staff professional development, student performances at Boettcher Concert Hall, distinguished visiting lecturers ... and more!
Thank you to all individuals who have contributed already. The below list consists of all gifts of $50+ made to the College of Music Dean’s Annual Fund between Sept. 1, 2021 and Feb. 28, 2023. If you are interested in making a donation to the Dean’s Annual Fund, please contact Assistant Dean for Advancement Andrew Todd at atodd@colorado.edu
$50,000+
The Estate of David Turner
Maria Johnson
$10,000-$49,999
Paul and Kristina Eklund
Wright Family Foundation
$5,000-$9,999
Chris and Margot Brauchli
Dave Fulker and Nicky Wolman
The Community Foundation
Serving Boulder County:
Aronson Family Fund
Lloyd and Mary Gelman
Babs and Mike Gerber
Rudy and Margaret Perez
Renaissance Charitable Foundation, Inc. (1)
Lynn Streeter
Daniel Trump
Jack and Sophie Walker
$2,500-$4,999
Bank of America Charitable Gift Fund (1)
Suzanne and Dave Hoover
Bonnie Kirschenbaum
National Philanthropic Trust
DAF (1)
The R. David & Suzanne A. Hoover Charitable Trust
Mikhy and Mike Ritter
Becky Roser and Ron Stewart
The Seaver Institute
$1,000-$2,499
Anonymous (1)
Ayco Charitable Foundation: The Dayem Family Foundation
Dave Bowers
Bob Bunting
Marty Coffin Evans and Robert Trembly
Karen Connolly
The Dayem Family Foundation
Fidelity Investments
Charitable Gift Fund (3)
Diane and Niles Flanders
The Halverson Foundation
Doree Hickman
Daryl and Kay James
Charlotte Kilpatrick*
Val and Bill Mooney
Ben and Pattie Nelson
Vivianne and Joel Pokorny
Schwab Charitable Fund (3)
gReg Silvus
Tyler Little Family Foundation
Barbara Wagner
Lucinda Waldron and Paul Ward
Margie and Tom Whittington
Anne and Peter Wood
Xcel Energy (Corporate Headquarters)
$750-$999
The Benevity Community
Impact Fund: FM Global Foundation
Laura and John Courier
Ruth and Richard Irvin
Heather and Brian O’Neill
Coco and Bret Peterson
Becky and John Shockley
$500-$749
Bank of America Charitable
Gift Fund (1)
David Becher
Sylvia and Charles Coats
Joan Braun
Fidelity Investments
Charitable Gift Fund (1)
Fox Trust
Ithiel Frame
Thomas Godfrey
Dave Grusin and Nan Newton
Ann Johnson and Robert Sprinkle
Edward Kellenberger
James and
Donna Klausman
Linda Laird Giedl
Merrill Lynch
Donna Meckley
John Moore
Normie Morin-Voillequé and Paul Voillequé
Lawrence Robins
Tana and Joe Rocco, Jr.
Suan and Russell Schnell
Robert Short
Frank Spaid
Cindi and John Stetson
Heidi and Scott
Vangenderen
Maria Vouras and Vasilios Lekkas
$300-$499
Anonymous (2)
The Benevity Community Impact Fund (1)
The Boeing Company
Timothy Brown
Fidelity Investments
Charitable Gift Fund (1)
Robert Garnett
Nicole and Thomas
Hasenpflug
Connie and Allen Hayden
George Kiteley
Kim and Bob Larsen
Jeff and Lois Linsky
Debbie and Rob Phillips
$150-$299
Terri Albright and Howard Bittman
Barbara and Myron Caspar
Elvis Coble
Elisabeth David
Deanna DeMarco
Jon Finson
Jon and Liz Hinebauch
Jennifer and Bob Kamper
Lenna and Jon Kottke
Harold and Joan Leinbach
Gretchen and James Lewis
Kerry Lightenburger
Cathy and Byron McCalmon
Mark Melendy
Patricia and Thomas Miner
Usha and Ramkumar
Narayanswamy
Diane Phillips*
Pamela Rafferty
Carol and Alvin Rivera
Rose Community Foundation (1)
Sarah Royall
Jan Schiff
Susanne Skyrm
Rose Terada
Trenton Warner
Xilinx, Inc.
$50-$149 Anonymous (1)
Sue and Barry Baer
The Benevity Community Impact Fund (2)
The Benevity Community Impact Fund: Ball Corporation
The Benevity Community Impact Fund: Intel Foundation
Tyler Benjamin
Steven Board
David Chadwick
Judy Cisel and Andrew Kramer
Judy Congdon
Sandra and Bruce Dudley
Nancy and Martin Egelhoff
Trent and Mary Ellis
Windy and Terry Gallagher, Jr.
Susan Garland
Roberta and Cliff Goldstein
Lois Gould
Helen and Christopher Gray
Gayle and Lynn Gunderson
Bruce and Lynn Haines
Jonnie and Virgil Hoffman
Joan Hooper and Aaron Walters
Brenda and Yoshiyuki
Ishikawa
Hans Jordan and J. Mulcahy
Diana Kahn
Ellen and Stephen Kort
Joyce and Stewart Kull
Lydia and Geary Larrick
Nancy and Paul Levitt
Bill Lockhart
Andrea Martyn and Craig
McKenzie
Marianne and Johnny
Martin, Jr.
Marian Matheson
Janie and Harry
McDonald, Jr.
Kate and John McFerrin
Katherine Mead
Ken and Maria Mendelsberg
Jason Mieger
Gregg Miller
Deborah and Brian Mooney
Karen Musick
Hien Nguyen
Brooke and Gary Palumbo
Kelli and Evan Pfaff
Constance and Robert Primus
Tanya Ramond
Firuzeh and Navid Saidi
Janice Sanders
Rojana Savoye
Christy and Terry Smith
Gayle and Thomas Smith
Vivienne and Stephen Smithers
Cynthia Thompson Grubb and Richard Grubb
Wei Wang and Eric Hintsa
Patricia and Jim Wilmore
Barbara and John Wollan
Joann and Gerhard Wolter
Ann and Gary Yost
Sharon and Robert Young
*Deceased
MAY 12-27, 2023
Fridays & Saturdays at 7:30pm Sundays at 2:00 pm
THE P RESTIGIOUS M AGNET R ECOGNITION P ROGRAM HONOR GOES TO GOOD SAMARITAN MEDICAL CENTER. Collaborative care comes to life in so many ways. From open communication to trust and respect of our team members, we commit to collaboration each and every day. Congratulations to Good Samaritan Medical Center for achieving this recognition which is the nation’s top honor f or nursing excellence, patient care and innovations in practice. We want to thank all of our caregivers for their professionalism and passion for our patients.
303.772.5200
longmonttheatre.org
513 Main Street, Longmont, CO 80501
GoodSamaritanColorado.org
The 86th season of CU Presents’ Artist Series features an exciting lineup that includes familiar favorites, world-class artists and one-of-a-kind collaborations. The 2023-24 season includes an array of artists that span genres, cultures and expressions. From a special performance at Macky Auditorium by Mexican American superstar Lila Downs, to a tribute to the music of Disney performed by the house band from one of Harlem’s pre-eminent jazz museums, to an appearance by Western swing group Asleep at the Wheel, the menu for this season offers attractions that cover a broad spectrum of styles. “This series has always had an amazing diversity of genres, styles and cultural traditions. It’s such a natural fit for where we are today,” says CU Presents Executive Director Joan Braun. “It’s one of the most rewarding series we offer, and a program that has great value to our community and to our students.”
The Artist Series lineup kicks off with a performance by multiple Grammy Award-winning singer Lila Downs on Friday, Sept. 22. The concert will include selections from her album Al Chile , which pays tribute to the complex relationship that Mexican culture has established with the “fiery fruit” that summons happiness, sweat, pain and flavor.
“When You Wish Upon a Star” on Friday, Oct. 6, is a tribute to decades of Disney music. It features musicians from the National Jazz Museum in Harlem, which touts Jon Baptiste and Christian McBride as its artistic directors. The performance will reframe tunes that have become iconic in the pop culture consciousness in a way that is both familiar and fresh.
On Nov. 2, the female a cappella group Nobuntu returns to the Artist Series to deliver their signature interpretation of the traditional music of Zimbabwe and other genres. The group will offer a mix of timeless tradition and brand-new musical creations.
The holiday season at CU Boulder features a performance by the Canadian Brass on Dec. 13. It’s an ensemble Braun describes as a “perennial favorite” and one that is well versed in joyously sharing seasonal music with audiences.
The Grammy Award-winning Takács Quartet—the CU Boulder College of Music’s string quartet in residence— continues its popular, long-running
series in Grusin Music Hall. However this year, the group also appears on the Artist Series with pianist Joyce Yang on Jan. 12. Yang is a Van Cliburn International Piano Competition silver medalist with many other accolades to her name. The quartet and Yang join forces to perform Antonín Dvořák’s Piano Quintet, a work that Braun describes as “one of the most beautiful pieces of music you’ve ever heard.”
On Jan. 20, the dance company MOMIX will bring a different dimension to physical movement as they pair their choreography with a multimedia show that’s designed to immerse audiences in a fantasy world. The program Alice is based on Lewis Carrol’s magical Alice in Wonderland
Step Afrika! will follow up that performance on Feb. 2 with a percussive, immersive approach to dance. Step Afrika! sets African American, West and South African dance traditions in a decidedly contemporary framework.
Violinist Ray Chen, whose credits vary from traditional orchestral performances to soundtracks for video games to a social media presence of more than 1 million followers, will perform with pianist Julio Elizalde on March 21. The performance was originally slated for 2020 and rescheduled because of the pandemic.
The CU Presents season will wrap up on April 5 when the Austin, Texasbased Western swing group Asleep
at the Wheel teams up with the CU Symphony Orchestra for a one-ofa-kind performance that melds a kaleidoscope of sounds. According to Braun, this show neatly sums up the unique appeal of the series. Past Artist Series collaborations with the orchestra have featured renowned artists like the Indigo Girls. The collaborative projects have been a showcase not only for internationally renowned musicians, but also for CU Boulder student musicians who have a chance to show off their skills and prepare for future careers.
“During their time in Boulder, many Artist Series guests offer master classes in which CU Boulder music students participate. These are opportunities for our students to be on stage and to interact professionally with an award-winning touring band,” Braun said. “That is unique and valuable, like the series itself.”
“Part of our mission is to bring artists to Boulder that audiences wouldn’t otherwise experience,” she added. “It’s an opportunity to see a world-class act that you don’t have to go to New York or Los Angeles to see. You can see it right here on the Artist Series at Macky Auditorium. That is a huge value.”
Learn more at the QR code:
Annual contributions provide essential support for the Artist Series, Eklund Opera and Takács Quartet. With these gifts, donors support concert performances, opera productions, faculty recitals, guest artist appearances, the Takács Quartet residency and many other vital projects. Each contributor listed here helped make these performances possible. We are profoundly grateful for the generosity of our donors. If you would like to join our community of supporters, please contact our Advancement team at 303-492-3054 or visit cupresents.org/giving
Annual support listed below consists of all gifts of $50+ made to the Artist Series, Eklund Opera and Takács Quartet between Sept. 1, 2021 and Feb. 28, 2023. It is our intention to acknowledge each donor’s generosity as accurately as possible. Please contact Development Assistant Rachelle Dizon to address omissions, misspellings or other inaccuracies at rachelle.dizon@colorado.edu. Thank you!
$10,000+
Dick Dunn
Fidelity Investments Charitable Gift Fund (1)
Paul Bechtner Foundation
$5,000-$9,999
gReg Silvus
$2,500-$4,999
Joan Braun
Chris and Barbara Christoffersen
Daryl and Kay James
Maggie and John McKune
Vanguard Charitable Gift Fund: The Gil and Nancy Berman Fund
$1,000-$2,499
Fidelity Investments Charitable Gift Fund (1)
Mike and Carol Gallucci
Ruth Kahn*
Bob and Sandy McCalmon
Jane and Ric Reverand
Ellen and Josh Taxman
Larry and Ann Thomas
$750-$999
Gail Mock
Barbara Springer and Clay Robinson
Ann and Gary Yost
$500-$749
Marty Coffin Evans and Robert Trembly
Julie and Alan Halpern
Maryan Jaross and Thomas
Lepak
Melanie Mason
Gail Mock
National Philanthropic Trust
DAF (1)
Evelyn Taylor
Heather Van Dusen
$300-$499
Anonymous (1)
Carson-Pfafflin Family Foundation
Kumiko Iwata
Jerry and Heidi Lynch
Cynthia Reichman
Toni and Douglas Shaller
$150-$299
Anonymous (1)
Alice and Judah Levine
Kim and Richard Plumridge
$50-$149
Anonymous (1)
William Arndt
Elizabeth Bradley and Andee Rubin
Lucy Buckley and William Waggener
Cathy Cloutier
Rose and Dean Enix
Leslie and Merrill Glustrom
Judith and James Heinze
Chris and Vicki Meyer
Jerry Orten
Carol and Peter Tierney
$10,000+
The Academy Charitable Foundation, Inc.
$2,500-$9,999
John Hedderich
$1,000-$2,499
Ellen and John Gille
Dennis G. Peterson
Vivianne and Joel Pokorny
Theodore Ruskin*
Margaret and Chet Winter
$750-$999
Lloyd and Mary Gelman
Barb Grogan
Rudy and Margaret Perez
$500-$749
Marty Coffin Evans and Robert Trembly
Fidelity Investments Charitable
Gift Fund (1)
Ruth and Richard Irvin
Morgan Stanley Smith Barney
Global Impact Funding Trust: Poehlmann Family Charity Contribution Fund
Marti and Patrick Ritto
Alan and Stephanie Rudy
Ruth Schoening
Lynn Streeter
Larry and Ann Thomas
Vanguard Charitable Gift Fund: The Neil and Judy Bicknell Fund
$300-$499
Sarah Ashley
Jim and Judith Bowers
Annyce Mayer
Dave and Ann Phillips
Mikhy and Mike Ritter
Becky Roser and Ron Stewart
Toni and Douglas Shaller
Helen Stone
Evelyn Taylor
Jack and Sophie Walker
$150-$299
Betsy and Richard Armstrong
Elizabeth and Jason Baldwin
Sara-Jane and Bill Cohen
Harold and Joan Leinbach
Jerry and Heidi Lynch
Walter Taylor
$50-$149
Traci and Brian Bruckner
Susan and Robert Burton
Katherine Hansil
Cheryl and James Hogan
Frieda and Richard Holley
Martha and Irfan Hussain
Mutsumi Moteki and David Kirtley
Marian Matheson
Carol and Randall Shinn
Joyce Spencer
Michael Thomason
Ann and Gary Yost
$10,000+
Community Foundation Boulder County
Judy and Gary Judd
$5,000-$9,499
Chris and Margot Brauchli
$2,500-$4,999
Chris and Barbara Christoffersen
Carol Kovner
Rosemary Phelps
$1,000-$2,499
Tom and Carol Cech
Robbie Dunlap
Vivianne and Joel Pokorny
P.J. Decker and Beth Saperstein
Takacs String Quartet
Marion Thurnauer and Alex Trifunac
$750-$999
Louise and Bill Bradley
Keith and Nancy Hammond
Doree Hickman
Carol and Tony Keig
Kathleen Sullivan
John and Carson Taylor
Larry and Ann Thomas
Anne Heinz and Ran Yaron
$500-$749
Ellen and Dean Boal
Judith Dows and Norman Paulu
Carolyn and Don Etter
Lauren Frear
Ruth and Richard Irvin
Kyonggeun and Bruce Johnson
Medtronic
Mikhy and Mike Ritter
Eleanor Sims
Vanguard Charitable Gift Fund: The Robert and Joan Goddard Charitable Fund
Lena and James Wockenfuss
$300-$499
Ann and William Ford
Walter and Eileen Kintsch
Patience and Jim Linfield
Albert Lundell
Jerry and Heidi Lynch
Andrew Skumanich
Helen Stone
Lynn Streeter
Laurie and Arthur Travers, Jr.
Lois and Gordon Ward, Jr.
$150-$299
Ingrid Becher
JoAnn and Richard Crandall
Barbara and Carl Diehl
Jon and Liz Hinebauch
William Hoffman
Harold and Joan Leinbach
Alice and Judah Levine
Lise Menn
JoAn Segal
Grietje Sloan
$50-$149
Anonymous (1)
Lloyd and Mary Gelman
Ruthanne and John Hibbs
Carrie Malde
William Wood
Jeffrey Zax *Deceased
“The whole menu is fantastic and 300 Suns brews a balanced, delicious rotation of beer.”
“This place is phenomenal!!... What a hidden gem, Longmont is lucky to have this spot. I love the atmosphere and patio vibe.”
“A+ experience!”
“I wish I could give a million stars!”
“I could have spent hours here sampling all the beer.... The service was top notch.”
As of March 15, 2023
Executive Director
Joan McLean Braun
Marketing and PR Director
Laima Haley
Operations Director
Andrew Metzroth
Marketing Manager
Elise Zabala
Multimedia and Content Manager
Lara Minichiello
Publications Manager
Sabrina Green
Senior House Manager
Rojana Savoye
Marketing Communications Assistant
Emma St. Lawrence
Box Office Manager
Christin Rayanne
Box Office Services Coordinator
Adrienne Havelka
Box Office Assistants
Alejandra Chavarria
Macy Crow
Belinda Nicholas
Skylar Pongratz
Morgan Ochs
Lily Valdez
Director
Rudy Betancourt
Assistant Director for Administration
Sara Krumwiede
Assistant Director for Production
Trevor Isetts
Assistant Director for Patron Services
Amanda Wells
Production Managers
Richard Barrett
Chris Evans
Senior House Manager
Rojana Savoye
Assistant House Manager
Devin Hegger
Dean
John Davis
Executive Assistant to the Dean
Lauren Petersen
Associate Dean for Graduate Studies
Margaret Haefner Berg
Associate Dean for Undergraduate Studies + Enrollment Management
Matthew Roeder
Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity + Inclusion
Susan Thomas
Assistant Dean for Concerts + Communications
Joan McLean Braun
Assistant Dean for Budget + Finance
Carrie Howard
Assistant Dean for Advancement
Andrew Todd
Director of Communications
Sabine Kortals Stein
Communications + Programs Assistant
Kathryn Bistodeau
Communications Assistant
MarieFaith Lane
Director of Development
Kelli Hirsch
Assistant Director of Development
Elise Collins
Program Manager for Stewardship + Donor Relations
Shih-Han Chiu
Interim Senior Program Manager for Events
Cindy Kraus
Development Assistant
Rachelle Dizon
Operations Manager + Head Piano Technician
Ted Mulcahey
Scheduling Coordinator
Brooke Balbuena
Piano Technicians
Mark Mikkelsen
Phil Taylor
Recording Engineer
Kevin Harbison
Facilities + Operations Coordinator
Peggy Hinton
Media Specialist
Dustin Rumsey
The University of Colorado is committed to providing equal access to individuals with disabilities.
For more information, scan this QR code or visit cupresents.org/ accessibility
Online: cupresents.org
By Phone: 303-492-8008
In Person: University Club, 972 Broadway, Boulder
Box Office Hours: Monday-Friday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m
Paid parking is available in the Euclid Parking Garage, and in Lots 310 and 204. Contact the box office or check the CU Presents website for more information.
Photography and video/audio recordings of any type are strictly prohibited during the performance.
Smoking is not permitted anywhere. CU Boulder is a smoke-free campus.
Ticket sales are final; no refunds. Exchanges are subject to availability and must be made at least one business day prior to the performance date.
Subscribers may exchange tickets for free. Single-ticket exchanges are subject to a $3 exchange fee. Upgrade fees may apply in all cases.
Please return your tickets to the box office prior to the performance if you are unable to use them.