View Magazine Summer 2017, May 5-18, 2018

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THE VIEW SPRING 2018

R E M A R K A B L E

P R O G R A M M I N G

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10075 Commons Street, Lone Tree, CO 80124 Box Office: 720.509.1000 www.LoneTreeArtsCenter.org

PRODUCING PARTNERS Scott Leonhart and Maggie Eichenlaub Betty A. and Don E. Winslow

SEASON SPONSORS

EDUCATION SPONSORS

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Lone Tree City Council Mayor Jacqueline A. Millet Mayor Pro Tem Susan Squyer Councilmember Cathie Brunnick Councilmember Jay Carpenter Councilmember Wynne Shaw

Lone Tree City Management The Lone Tree Arts Center is owned and operated by the City of Lone Tree.

City Manager Seth Hoffman Deputy City Manager Steve Hebert Assistant City Manager Kristin Baumgartner

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LONE TREE ARTS CENTER


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LONE TREE STAFF LISTINGS

Lisa Rigsby Peterson, Executive Director,

and Communications for the Flynn Center for the Performing Arts in Burlington, Vermont for eight years. Leigh grew up outside of New York City and is a graduate of Cornell University.

helped open the Lone Tree Arts Center in 2011 as its first Executive Director. Over her 32 year career in performing arts management, she has been a part of many of Colorado’s leading cultural organizations—including The Denver Center for the Performing Arts, Curious Theatre Company, and PHAMALY; served on multiple arts and cultural boards and committees, and also worked abroad. A Colorado resident since 1975, Lisa is a graduate of the University of Colorado and the Yale School of Drama.

Elaine Caras, Events Manager

Paul Ackerman, Production Manager,

Chris Husted, Audio Visual Manager

is a native of Long Island, NY. Paul received his degree in Technical Theatre and Design from the University of Virginia. He has worked in Atlanta with The Alliance Theatre/Atlanta Children’s Theatre, Atlanta Ballet, and the Georgia Institute of Technology. Paul joined the team at LTAC prior to its opening in 2011 after serving as the Senior General Manager of Production for Blue Man Group.

Courtney Ozaki Moch, Operations and Business Director, returned to her home state of Colorado after residing in New York City, where she received her MFA degree in Performing Arts Management from Brooklyn College. As a producer and arts manager in NYC, she worked with cultural and interdisciplinary institutions, including the inaugural PROTOTYPE festival, Brooklyn Academy of Music, Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, and The Joyce Theater. Her prior experience includes work with the Aspen Music Festival, as well as the Boulder Chamber Orchestra.

Allissa Dailey, Events Manager Kathy Denzer, Administrative Assistant Adrien Hoff, Marketing Specialist

Jen Kiser, Assistant Technical Director Katie Konishi, Marketing Specialist Don Post, Lead Stage Technician Robin Scurto, Annual Giving Manager Michelle Sosa-Mallory, Corporate and Foundation Manager Ashley Vander Weg, Box Office Manager

Technical Staff: Mallory Hart, Randy St. Pierre, Elizabeth Woods, Meagan Holdeman, Kathryn Gunderson, James Bryant, Rick Thompson

Front of House Staff: Jean Chavez, Ken Fisher, Bonnie Kobzoff, Jim Murphy, Christina Roberts, Thaddeus Valdez

Bar Staff: Leigh Chandler, Marketing Director, joined the Lone Tree Arts Center staff in the fall of 2015, when she moved to Colorado. Prior to her move, she served as the Director of Marketing

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Richard Davis, Elena De Prado, Marcia Gray, Michelle Hendershott, Nicole Hubbell, Charine Lung, Nicole Mills, Josh Molina, Natasha Molina, Roberta Seifert, Kami VerWoert


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LTAC POLICIES & PROCEDURES

At Your Service The House Manager is responsible for the overall front-of-house operation. Ushers (dressed in white and black with green scarves/ ties) can direct patrons who have questions or concerns to the House Manager.

Late arrivals will be seated at a suitable break in the performance, and at the discretion of the house manager and/or artist. Late seating may not be possible in some cases. In consideration of all theater-goers, please arrive in plenty of time for the scheduled curtain.

Cameras and recording devices are not allowed in the theater. The taking of photos during a performance may violate our contract with the performers and producers. In addition it can distract performers and negatively affect their safety and the show. Pre- and post-show photography also is not permitted. Cell phones and any other electronic devices may not be used in the theater. The use of a laser pointer at any time by any patron subjects that patron to expulsion from the theater without a ticket refund.

Children

Smoking

Children are welcome in our theater, but bringing infants to a performance is highly discouraged, as they can become a distraction to performers and other audience members. Each individual must be ticketed to enter the theater and no babes-in-arms will be permitted without a ticket. The Arts Center may deny entry to any person accompanied by another who may become a disruption to the performers or audience, and may likewise remove disruptive patrons from the audience. Occasionally, individual productions may have recommended age limits. Refunds are at the discretion of the Lone Tree Arts Center Box Office.

The Lone Tree Arts Center is a smoke-free facility. Smoking e-cigarettes is not permitted inside the building.

Late Arrivals

Refreshments Food is not allowed in the theater. Drinks purchased at our concessions stand are permitted in the theater. At most performances, you may pre-order a drink to avoid intermission lines.

Restrooms Restrooms are located in the center of the lobby near the front entrance, as well as on the north side of the lobby near the north entrance, across from the Event Hall. Wheelchair accessible restrooms are located near the north entrance.

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Cameras, Tape Recorders, Pagers, and Cell Phones

LONE TREE ARTS CENTER

Parking The Lone Tree Arts Center has a large, free on-site parking lot as well as a convenient drop-off point at the front entry. The parking lot can be found on the south side of the building. Patrons are also permitted to park across Sky Ridge Avenue in the Target parking lot.

Hearing Assistance The Lone Tree Arts Center has installed an inductive hearing loop. The loop system broadcasts directly into hearing aids that are equipped with a T-coil switch (tele-coil or telephone switch). For hearing aids with a T-coil switch, simply turn that switch and sound is broadcast directly to the hearing aid. For hearing aids without a T-coil switch, wireless headset receivers are also available free of charge at the Box Office.


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PROFILE

AUGUST WILSON’S AUGUST WILSON All About

August Wilson, who wrote our upcoming production of Fences, is one of the most revered contemporary playwrights, and for good reason. His groundbreaking American Century Cycle encompasses ten plays chronicling the African-American experience in the 20th century, each set in a different decade. Two won Pulitzer Prizes for Drama, including Fences. The entire American Century Cycle has been produced only a handful of times, including at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts, directed by the late Israel Hicks. Wilson used his childhood in Pittsburgh as the basis for his writing. During the early part of his childhood, Wilson lived in the Hill District of Pittsburgh, an economically depressed neighborhood. When his mother divorced his father and remarried, Wilson moved to a predominantly white workingclass neighborhood where he experienced bouts of racism that would later inform his work. Wilson cofounded Black Horizons Theatre in Pittsburgh in the late 1960s; he began to direct plays there despite not having any directorial experience. While his early writing focused on poetry, he didn’t begin to work on playwrighting until he moved to Minnesota in the late ‘70s; he wrote his first play, Jitney, in 1979.

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During the 1980s, Lloyd Richards, the artistic director of Yale Repertory Theatre, recognized Wilson’s talent, and he helped Wilson nurture and refine the plays in the American Century Cycle. In 1987, Fences was produced on Broadway, earning Wilson a Tony Award and his first Pulitzer Prize. Three years later, The Piano Lesson earned him his second Pulitzer. Wilson had a clear vision about how his work should be produced. He famously refused to give the rights to make Fences into a film unless a black director was chosen; he believed that because the film was written from the African-American perspective, a white person would not be able to accurately reflect its intent. It took nearly thirty years for Fences to be filmed, with Denzel Washington directing and starring; the film earned numerous awards and received four Academy Award nominations, including Best Adapted Screenplay. Wilson’s estate continues to be strict in its allowance of the rights to his plays, with a rigorous request process. Along the same lines, Wilson ignited an industry-wide controversy when he said that he believed “colorblind” casting in the theatre was nonsense, because plays written for white actors focused on the


AUGUST WILSON’S white experience, and plays written for African-American actors were written for the black experience. While Wilson didn’t live to see the Academy Award-winning version of Fences¸ nor any of the Tony Award-winning revivals of his plays on Broadway, his eloquent, lyrical plays have taken their place in the pantheon of great American writing. Perhaps playwright Tony Kushner summed up Wilson’s importance the best when, upon Wilson’s death, he said, “The playwright’s voice in American culture is perceived as having been usurped by television and film, but he reasserted the power of drama to describe large social forces, to explore the meaning of an entire people’s experience in American history. For all the magic in his plays, he was writing in the grand tradition of Eugene O’Neill and Arthur Miller, the politically engaged, direct, social realist drama. He was reclaiming ground for the theater that most people thought had been abandoned.”

Photo: David Cooper Photography

Make sure you join us for

August Wilson’s Fences April 5—21

w w w. L o n eT r e e A r t s C e n t e r. o r g

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Come Sing with Us! 2017–18 Highlights

Black Violin

We want to meet children in 2nd-5th grades who love to sing and perform! ChildrensChorale.org/Audition No previous musical experience is required and financial assistance is available.

September 28–29 at 7:30 pm

Martha Graham Dance Company October 7 at 7:30 pm

A New World: Intimate Music from Final Fantasy October 20 at 7:30 pm

Erth’s Dinosaur Zoo Live

November 11 at 2:00 and 7:30

The King’s Singers

November 19 at 2:00 pm

Spanish Harlem Orchestra December 7 at 7:30 pm

Join us in Boettcher Concert Hall at the Denver Performing Arts Complex CHRISTMAS WITH THE CHILDREN’S CHORALE Saturday, December 2 • 1:00 pm Sunday, December 3 • 6:00 pm SPRING WITH THE CHILDREN’S CHORALE Saturday, April 21 • 1:00 pm Tickets $14 - $80 ChildrensChorale.org/Tickets

Spectrum Dance Theater

January 26, 2018 at 7:30 pm

Sarah Chang

March 13, 2018 at 7:30 pm

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PROFILE

Grammy Award Winners

SFJAZZ COLLECTIVE Seeing the SFJAZZ Collective perform is the chance to see masters at work, on a few levels. First, the members are contemporary jazz super-stars in their own right, with multiple Grammy awards and nominations. Combined, they form a supergroup, the likes of which are rarely seen. The icing on the cake? In addition to performing their own compositions, they also honor a jazz master, with new arrangements of familiar pieces. When the SFJAZZ Collective performs in Lone Tree this April, they will be honoring the one and only Miles Davis—the king of cool. Davis transformed the world of jazz in the late 40s/early 50s with his album Birth of Cool, which was the start of experimentation and the development

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of new kinds of jazz music. The SFJAZZ Collective explores Davis’ music with new interpretations of his most famous compositions, including “So What,” “Tutu,” “Milestones,” and “Bitches Brew.” In addition, we’ll hear new compositions by members of the SFJAZZ Collective inspired by Davis, including pieces by alto saxophonist Miguel Zenon, vibraphonist Warren Wolf, trombonist Robin Eubanks, and tenor saxophonist David Sanchez.

SFJAZZ Collective Wednesday, April 25 at 7:30pm


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Classic Albums Live Performs: Fleetwood Mac: Rumours Saturday, May 5 at 8pm Founded in 2003 by Craig Martin, Classic Albums Live takes the greatest albums and recreates them live on stage—note for note, cut for cut, using the best musicians. “Think of it as a recital,” says Martin. “These albums are historic and stand the test of time.” Forgoing costumes and impersonations, Classic Albums Live has found success in concentrating solely on the music. “We don’t dress up or wear any sort of costume. We just stand there and play. All of our energy is put into the music. We want the performance to sound exactly like the album,” says Martin. With over a hundred shows a year across North America, Classic Albums Live has seen massive success in performing arts centers and theatres. Fans in Texas, Las Vegas, Florida, New York, and central and east coast Canada have all continued to support the series and make it a sustaining, successful show. “We grew while others withdrew,” says Martin, commenting on the decline of concert ticket sales. “We created something that endures and connects. These albums are sacred to people. We deliver exactly what we promote— ‘note for note, cut for cut’ accuracy.” It’s this type of accountability that works for the series.

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ABOUT FLEETWOOD MAC’S RUMOURS FROM FOUNDER AND MUSIC DIRECTOR, CRAIG MARTIN: The very first track of the album, “Second Hand News,” lets you know that heartache awaits. Fleetwood Mac were the first ones to genuinely sing about the emotion and turmoil that comes from losing love. It’s not easy to confront ones vulnerabilities and then credibly put them to song. This was therapy for them. And it paid great. Rumours is the hardest album for Classic Albums Live to perform. That’s quite a statement. The arrangements aren’t that hard and the vocals don’t take off for crazy heights. But the sound, the feel, the absolute vibe of the album is tough to recreate. I wanted the band to move into a three bedroom house for a month to prepare for the album. But that didn’t fly, so we opted for a heavy amount of vocal rehearsal and many, many full band rehearsals. Everyone can rest now. We got it. We finally know how to perform this album. I want the floorboards of the Lone Tree Arts Center to moan along with us on this album. I’d love to see the ushers singing along. Everyone in the audience has owned a format of this album. If ever there was a definition of a classic album—Rumours is it. Classic Albums Live is the modern day symphony. And we love you when we’re playing.


Solo Piano with Stacey Rose Saturday, May 12 at 8pm On a snowy, blistery night in January of 1967, Micky and Louann Miller brought their five-year-old daughter, Stacey, to hear the Denver Symphony Orchestra. That same summer, when the Colorado wild flowers were in full bloom, the couple presented their daughter with a pair of “clutter boots” and introduced her to hiking. The footwear was exquisite: soft brown leather, the color of the soil from the Rockies, with red laces like Indian Paintbrush flowers. Their luster faded, however, as the precocious child quickly determined that hiking is a punitive activity. But then… through the sparkling sun-drenched leaves, sounds emanated from under the tent of the Aspen Music Festival. All discomfort vanished. Hands seemed to be dancing up and down the keyboard, somehow creating unimaginable beauty. Listening in awe to the legendary pianist, Alicia de Larrocha, a 4’10” titan of the piano, Stacey knew then that she must aspire to become a concert pianist. Since graduating from Thomas Jefferson High School, Stanford University, and the Mannes School of Music, Stacey has been fortunate to enjoy a performance career as a guest soloist with orchestras and in recital on all seven continents. As a composer, she has to her credit works for solo piano, songs for voice and piano, a concerto for piano and orchestra (that she performed with Colorado’s National Repertory Orchestra and the New Haven Symphony Orchestra), “Music Stories for Children Ages 5-105,” a musical drama in progress, and tonight’s repertoire—her interpretations of three traditional musical forms as well as her paraphrases of well-known American standards. Sponsored by


Notable performances have included three recitals at Weill Recital Hall of Carnegie Hall, Gracie Mansion, the Masters Series in St. Catherine’s, Canada, Five Burroughs Festival, and Mexico City’s Palacio de Bellas Artes. A Steinway Artist since 1992, Stacey takes tremendous pride and joy in sharing her love of music. PROGRAM

(Recent original compositions) *In performances of Classical music, it has become customary for the audience to hold applause until the end of compositions that contain multiple sections or movements. This is so that the work can be heard as a continuous whole, as the composer likely intended. But if you feel compelled to clap before the end, please don’t be inhibited to do so! **Listening to unfamiliar music is demanding a lot from our strongly-shaped tastes and sensibilities. I ask that you try to listen with openness; that you let this music take your thoughts and experience wherever it may.

American Suite in A Major This piece replicates the structure of 14th century suites. The standard seven movements are modeled after courtly dances of the time. While they share a common key signature, they contrast greatly in character and tempo. Preludia—Introduction Courante—Meaning “running” in Italian, a spritely dance that was fashionable in 16th century aristocratic ballrooms Sarabande—A slow, stately dance containing four distinct linear voices with the atypical accent on the second beat. Its slowness promoted close physical contact so it was considered a disreputable dance form of the time Gavotte—A French folk dance in a moderate tempo. Kissing at a pause in the music was amidst the formal courtly gestures, but was later replaced by the presentation of flowers Minuet & Trio—A social dance of controlled, ceremonious, and graceful small steps with two sections of contrasting mood Air—A song–like lyrical piece derived from the Italian aria Gigue—Originating in Britain and Ireland, this is a brisk and lively dance featuring a running melodic passage overlaying a rhythmic bass line


Five Études Meaning “studies” in French, études were composed in the 19th century as a musical means of developing technical acumen. Études were meant to accomplish the same goals as pedantic exercises while providing more pleasant listening for all inhabitants of a student’s household. The form is comprised of a central theme separated by a contrasting inner section. Each study focuses on a particular technical challenge of the instrument. 1. A Waltz in Time 2. Jelly Fish 3. Traffic 4. Streams 5. Schpilkes (Yiddish word for agitation or restlessness) INTERMISSION Two Preludes & Fugues Modeled after the structure of the 24 Preludes and Fugues of J.S. Bach. Prelude in G Major Fugue in G Major Prelude in g minor (Homage to three Israeli schoolboys) Fugue in g minor (Based upon the sound of a coffee machine) Paraphrases of American Standards Film: Raiders of the Lost Ark Jazz: Body and Soul Broadway: My Favorite Things


Nature Roars Back With Cinematographer Bob Poole Friday, May 18 at 10am and 8pm Bob Poole grew up in East Africa, where his father was the director of the Peace Corps, and later the director of the African Wildlife Foundation. His family spent much of their time with the abundant wildlife that thrived there during the 1960s and 1970s. Poole’s unique upbringing gave him an appreciation and curiosity of the natural world, a highly adventurous spirit, and a strong sense of self-reliance. Bob’s relationship with National Geographic began when he was a teenager working with a crew who had come to Kenya to film elephants. After completing a university degree in science, Bob traveled the world as a camera assistant before landing his first assignment as a cinematographer for National Geographic. The film Coming of Age with Elephants was about his sister, Dr. Joyce Poole, the renowned elephant zoologist.

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Now an Emmy Award-winning director of photography, Bob films both people and wildlife and has made a career in front of the camera as well. His extensive credit list includes documentaries for PBS, NATURE, NOVA, BBC, over 30 films for Discovery Networks, and an additional 35-plus films for National Geographic Television. Bob works around the world and his passion for wildlife conservation has taken him to some of the African continent’s most remote locations. Whether tracking elephants in extreme desert environments of Mali, following wildebeest across the Serengeti, or traveling road-less regions of war-torn Sudan, Poole’s lifetime experience, and unfailing tenacity, help him to capture remarkable moments. For this, he won an Emmy for Outstanding Individual Achievement in a Craft: Cinematography while working on the series Great Migrations for National Geographic. Working on the other side of the camera, Bob is the main character in a National Geographic film, War Elephants, which premiered in March of 2012. The film was nominated for an Emmy: Best Nature Program 2013, was a Finalist at Jackson Hole for Best People and Nature Program, and won Best Documentary at the Sun Valley Film Festival. Bob spent two and a half years working on Gorongosa Park: Rebirth of Paradise, a six-hour primetime series for PBS and National Geographic International, which premiered September 22, 2015. He is the presenter, narrator, and wildlife cameraman for the series. In 2015, he spent three months following and filming a family group of elephants for a National Geographic film called Little Giant and worked as a “Cameraman in Vision” on a new BBC One series. Currently Bob is on tour with National Geographic Live speaking in cities across the world. Bob sits on the board of the Gorongosa Restoration Project, is a Fellow with the Explorers Club and a member of National Geographic Speaker’s Bureau.



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PROFILE

MANDY GONZALEZ Straight from Broadway’s Hamilton, Mandy Gonzalez is returning to LTAC for a solo concert, after her appearance alongside Marcus Paul James, Robin de Jesús, and Adam Pascal in 2014’s concert Seasons of Broadway. Taking a break from starring as Angelica Schuyler in Hamilton, Mandy brings her show “Raise the Roof” to the Arts Center on Sunday, March 18. Mandy and her powerhouse voice debuted on Broadway alongside the legendary Michael Crawford in Jim Steinman’s Dance of the Vampires, but the role that she is probably best known for is Nina Rosario in Lin-Manuel Miranda’s In The Heights. She created the role in the original Broadway production and was with the company until January 2010. She’s also starred on Broadway in Wicked as Elphaba, where she brought down the house each night with “Defying Gravity.” She took over her current role of Angelica Schuyler in Hamilton

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from original cast member Renée Elise Goldsberry. She’s also recently released her first studio album, Fearless. Even if you don’t make it to the Great White Way as much as you’d like, you still would recognize Mandy. She’s also known for her television work, most recently as Lucy Knox on Madam Secretary and Agent Susan Coombs on Quantico. She’s also appeared in White Collar, The Good Wife, and the feature film Across the Universe. After experiencing Mandy’s dynamic vocals, capable of making you cry and sending shivers down your spine all in one song, you’ll no doubt want to become a member of her #FearlessSquad, a group of fans that got their name from her album.

Mandy Gonzalez Sunday, March 18 at 7pm


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Exciting Rehearsals with New Friends

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LONE TREE

CULTURAL ARTS FOUNDATION

We are pleased to support the purchase and placement of Michele Gutlove’s Light Play, a visual metaphor for stage lights and theatrical performance [at the Lone Tree Arts Center].

The Lone Tree Cultural Arts Foundation supports and promotes the arts in Lone Tree and surrounding neighborhoods.

www.lonetreearts.org


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DONOR PROFILE

Terry Virts National Geographic Live: View from Above

Bellco is both passionately dedicated to your financial success and to contributing to the quality of life in the communities we serve. We donate funds and employee volunteer hours to many Denver-metro and Western Slope area organizations, including youth and family programs provided at Lone Tree Arts Center. Bellco takes great pride in giving back to the communities that have made us successful for more than 80 years. The Denver metro area is composed of many diverse neighborhoods that present unique opportunities for Bellco to make a difference on a local level. We appreciate that our members and employees frequently suggest ways we can connect with local programs, nonprofits, and events that support the communities we serve.

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Our commitment is to ensure that programs which impact our communities, like those offered at the Lone Tree Arts Center, continue to flourish. We are proud to be entering our sixth year of helping to make these programs a reality. Stop by our branch located in Lone Tree at 9220 Park Meadows Drive to learn about Bellco, and to get more information on how Bellco serves your community. Bellco is Federally Insured by NCUA.


Learn •

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DONOR PROFILE

Even before the Arts Center opened, the LTAC Guild was ready to help. Donating time and resources, this group of motivated women and men work behind the scenes to fundraise and bring awareness about LTAC. One of the most important ways they support LTAC is by underwriting children’s access to theater by providing ticket fees and bus fees for hundreds of students to attend live theater at LTAC. It’s exciting to see their faces light up when an actor comes on the stage—and the Guild makes that happen! The Guild also uses its fundraising reach for other projects at LTAC, such as providing booster seats for

children in the Main Stage Theater and paying for the installation of a permanent bar in the Terrace Theater. This dynamic group works hard year-round with fundraisers, including an opening night Gala and spring fashion show. They also host events and “friend-raisers” with behind-thescenes tours and other unique activities. The Guild’s annual holiday community tradition of a tree lighting Holiday Kick-Off has now become part of the new City of Lone Tree Merry Days. Sound like too much fun to miss? Join this dynamic group today by visiting lonetreeartscenterguild.org.

LONE TREE COUTURE

SPRING COLLECTION Thursday, May 17, 2018 at 6pm Lone Tree Arts Center Hors d’oeuvres | Drinks | Fashion Tickets $50 Presented by the LTAC Guild Contact: Lynn Pender, 303-517-4831 Tickets: lonetreeartscenterguild.org

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LONE TREE ARTS CENTER


Donors at 2017 Gala

Photo by Danny Lam

Susan Adams Brent and Marie Bailey Carol and Todd Barrington Guida and Wayne Bellinger Ben and Shirley Benton Cheryl and Kent Brown Greg and Yolanda Bruce Cathie and Leo Brunnick Charlie Butler Richard and Lynn Cavaliero Luella Chavez d’Angelo Dave and Betty Jo Cottrell Maggie Eichenlaub and Scott Leonhart Carrie Evans Tonya Fallows Emily and Nick Goodenow Guy Gunther Debi and Tom Haning Janet Hanna Michael Harris and Charlotte Min-Harris

2017 Table Sponsors

Gala Committee

City of Lone Tree

Tonya Fallows, Chair

Tonya Fallows, ReMax Professionals

Marie Bailey

Lone Tree Cultural Arts Foundation

Audrey Fisher

Janet Morley, Nova Home Loans Cathy Murphy Park Meadows Retail Resort

Sandi Hewins and Tom Jensen

Live Auction Sponsors

Seth and Sara Hoffman

Algodon Wine Estates

Arlene Johnson

Richard and Lynn Cavaliero

Pamela and Jim Kelly

Lone Tree Arts Center

Bruce and Mary Lou Laubach

Lone Tree Arts Center Guild

Joyce and William Lew

Lone Tree Golf Club and Hotel

Cathy Murphy

Tom Martino

Terry and Linda Porter

Leslie and Jeff Modesitt

Daphyne Reiff

Daphyne Rieff

Wynne Shaw

Additional Sponsors

Janice Sinden

Auctioneer Sponsor— Doug Tisdale

Bill Steen Susan Stiff Allen and Becky Takeda-Tinker Jim and Gail Wilson Don and Betty Winslow Susan Wright

Lori Maddox Leslie Modesitt Margie O’Boyle Ann Pounds

Lone Tree Arts Center Guild 2017 Board Susan Stiff, President Tonya Fallows, President Elect Susan Riehl, Treasurer Leslie Modesitt, Recording Secretary Margie O’Boyle, Communication Secretary Lori Maddox, Member at Large

Terry Reiff

Bernie and Elaine Spivak

Lynn Cavaliero

Nancy Yueh, Member at Large

Décor Sponsor—Park Meadows Retail Resort Dessert Sponsor—Seasons 52 Dinner Sponsor— Richmond American Homes Music Sponsor—Stan Lhotak and Mike Rich Wine and Champagne Sponsor—Ninety + Cellars

w w w. L o n eT r e e A r t s C e n t e r. o r g

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DONOR PROFILE

Classic Albums Live: Rumours

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David A. DeFore Jim Gunning Susan Hicks Seth Hoffman Joel and Janet Kaufman Peter Loeffler

The Colorado-based Company operates in 10 states across the West, Mountain, Texas and Southeast regions, and offers title and lending services in select markets through its Parkway Title and Inspire Home Loan subsidiaries.

Jackie Millet Charlotte Min-Harris Pamela Schenck-Kelly Keith Simon

To learn more about Century Communities, please visit www.centurycommunities.com

Linda Watson Betty A. and Don E. Winslow

COMMUNITY FUNDRAISING ADVISORY BOARD Carole and Bob Adelstein Sheryl Gurrentz Mel Semrad Betsy Schutte Sharon VanRamshorst

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LONE TREE ARTS CENTER


BRASS, BAGPIPES & CO: OFF KILT-ER March 16-18 Newman Center for the Performing Arts

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Buy One Get One Free Breakfast Item Mention Lone Tree Arts Center View Magazine

BRASS OF THE CARIBBEAN APRIL 21-22 Bethany Lutheran Church

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PARTNERS & SUPPORTERS

This list includes donors to the Lone Tree Arts Center from January 1, 2017 to March 30, 2018. If we have inadvertently omitted your name, please contact the Development Department at 720-509-1009 so that we can correct our listings. Thank you for your support.

$20,000+

$5,000-$9,999

SCFD: Scientific and Cultural Facilities District

BBVA Compass Bank

Arts in Society

Charles Schwab Foundation

Bellco Credit Union

CliftonLarsonAllen LLP

Lone Tree Arts Center Guild

D.A. Davidson Fixed Income Capital Markets

National Endowment for the Arts

David A. DeFore

Park Meadows Business Improvement District

Developmental Pathways

U.S. Bank

Hampton Inn and Suites Denver/

$10,000-$19,999

Merrick & Company

Andrews Winslow Foundation

Thrive Home Builders

Century Communities, Inc.

TownPlace Suites by Marriott

Charles Schwab and Company Douglas County Developmental Disabilities Mill Levy Grant

Denver South/Lone Tree U.S. Bank Foundation

In Memory of Heidi Kaufman

$2,500-$4,999

Janet and Joel Kaufman

Berkeley Homes and

Scott Leonhart and Maggie Eichenlaub

Harvard Communities—Bellwether

RidgeGate

Linda Bjelland

Sky Ridge Medical Center and Rocky

Denver Marriott South at Park Meadows

Mountain Hospital for Children

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South-RidgeGate

Nancy Gary

Xcel Energy Foundation

Michael R. Harris and Charlotte Min-Harris

Betty A. and Don E. Winslow

Leaffer Law Group

LONE TREE ARTS CENTER


McGeady Becher P.C.

Robert Murphy and Kathleen Kelly

MorningStar Senior Living at RidgeGate

Rainold Family Foundation

Robinson Waters & O’Dorisio, P.C.

Lisa Rigsby Peterson

Betsy Schutte

Robin and Chris Scurto

Sierra

Wynne Shaw

The Tappan Foundation

Sheila and Paul Shepherd

Western States Arts Federation (WESTAF)

Susan and Bill Smith

Brenda and Charles Vitaska

Gayle M. and Richard J. Spelts

$1,000-$2,499

Debra and Roland Stubblefield Heather Van Dusen

Carole and Bob Adelstein

Leon and Alla Veremeychik

Albert Vein Institute

James and Barbara Wightman

Brent and Marie Bailey Drs. Stephen and April Block

$250-$499

Greg and Yolanda Bruce - BYG, Inc.

A-B&C Enterprises, Inc.

Leo and Cathie Brunnick

Harold and Ada Anderson

Matt and Greta Calkins

Anonymous (3)

Jay and Melissa Carpenter

Dr. Delfina Ashley-Baisden

Dave and Betty Jo Cottrell

Bob and Candy Birch

Donald E. Dillard and Janeen Kendall

Dennis and Melissa Blair

FirstBank

Nora and Rod Boschee

In Memory of Roy H. Goodearl

Jim and Tabby Briggs

Jim and Amy Gunning

Shelley and Greg Bryant

Sheryl and Andy Gurrentz

Linda and Fernando Castaneda

Hudick Excavating, Inc.

Mike and Linda Gusha

Fred Kaserman and Diane Webster

Janet Hanna

Launch Advertising

Dennis and Margaret Holman

Carl Mattson and Susan Alworth

Dr. Weston Johnson

Dr. and Mrs. Robert Mickelsen, II

In Memory of David James Kolstad

Jack and Margie O’Boyle

Bruce and Mary Lou Laubach

Regency RidgeGate

Kim Laudenslager

Richard and Jill Rogers

Helene and David Lawful

M.J. “Mel” and Virginia Semrad

Joyce and William Lew

Barbara and John Spisak

Michelle and Carson Mallory

Paul and Susan Squyer

Bobbie and David Marfitano

Ken Waugh

Mary M. Mathews

Hugh and Liz Whitmore

Norman C. and Florence R. Miller

Elton and Patsy Winters

Leslie and Jeff Modesitt

$500-$999

Michael and Sharon Modiz Becky and Brett Narlinger

Anonymous

Kent and Linda Osborn

Wes and Terry Colburn

Bess and Dale Pahl

Katy Dole

Col. Frank Romano

Judy K. Hall

Amy and Jay Sage

Don and Susan Hicks

Keith and Victoria Simon

Becky Leibman and John Hoskins

Art and Paula Stewart

Hurley and Claire Mitchell

Kathy Taigen and Jim Saracino

w w w. L o n eT r e e A r t s C e n t e r. o r g

35


$100-$249 Paul Ackerman Anonymous (6) Carla Augenstein Crista M. Bailey Julie and Michael Britti Jerry and Beth Burroughs Shirley and Roland Calhoun Angela Chan and George Chin Leigh Chandler Ron and Marilyn Cutler Marilyn and George Dockery Jack P. Duvall Tonya Fallows - ReMax Professionals Milton and Janice Ferry Ken and Bunny Fisher Eileen Flanigan Karen and C. Dale Flowers Jeff and Paula Fox Gene and Janet Francisco Gary and Barbara Godden Donald Hagengruber and Antoinette Macaluso Denise Hawkins Gloria E. Heyer Ruth Hiebert Michael and Marsha Jaroch In Memory of Don Johnson In Memory of Marvin Johnson Michelle Kelloff Hans and Evelyn Kriek Stuart and Janet Kritzer In Memory of Col. Joseph A. Kuhn Bob and Jean Lind In Memory of J. G. Linwood Smith Jack Lutz Dr. Bill and Billie Kay Maniatis

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LONE TREE ARTS CENTER

Mary McMillan Courtney and Shannon Moch The Monark Family Douglas Moore and Rebecca Beall-Moore Bill and Sue Morgan Martin and Barbara O’Brien Nancy Patton Ron and Linda Patton In Memory of Rev. Stanley Perea and Josie Perea Colonel Richardson Jane and Glenn Schnepel Marta G. Shaw Susan Stiff Sandy and John Stokely Kevin and Jennifer Stromberg Joseph Tatarka Whitney and Ann Thomas Michael J. Tomcykowski Roger and Ellen Vacco In Memory of Lee Van Ramshorst Rita Walensa Clarence and Eva Williams Jerry and Carol Wilson Barb Wisler Norma and Eli Zackroff Michael Zumwalt


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MAKE A REMARKABLE IMPACT From music to dance; theatricals to student matinees; timeless classics to world premieres— see, hear, and experience it all! Your tax-deductible financial support makes remarkable happen.

Many ways to give: • Monthly Recurring Gift

We were proud to be awarded three Henry Awards last summer for our production of EVITA, and we share this prestigious honor with you— THANK YOU for helping us make remarkable programming happen.

• Annual Gift

SHARE THE ARTS BY JOINING OUR FAMILY OF DONORS TODAY.

Please consider LTAC during your estate planning. Your generous contribution is tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.

Visit LoneTreeArtsCenter.org/give or contact Robin Scurto at 720-509-5009.

• Tribute Gift • Seat Plaque • Planned Gift


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