The Arts at
Spring 2013
CENTER
Ailey II. Photo: Eduardo Patino, NYC.
Thank you to our sponsors: Season Partner Rodgers & Associates Season Sponsors Ann B. Barshinger Aussie & The Fox Peggy Neff Media Sponsor Fine Living Lancaster Magazine FamFunFest Sponsor Fig Magazine Dance Sponsor Mary S. Burton & Laurent Horne Music Sponsor Pam & Hugh McGettigan Lee Miller: Photographer of War Exhibition Sponsor Eleanor Isaacson Film Series Co-sponsor Carmen & David’s Creamery
Table of Contents Variety and Popular 4 Music 6 Jazz Series 14 Cabaret Series 16 Theater 17 OperaLancaster 20 Dance Series 21 FamFunFest 24 Film Series 27 Art Galleries 32 Lectures 35 Lancaster First Night Events 41 Art Symposium 43 Music Masterclasses and Workshops 44 Calendar of Events 48 Tickets 52 Directions and Venue Information 53 All events are subject to change. Check millersville.edu/muarts for up-to-date information.
We have more than a hundred events and performances scheduled at the Ware and Winter Centers during the upcoming winter/spring arts season (February through May 2013.) In the first part of this brochure, we have separated our programs by category. This will enable you to search for your favorite type of program, find what is playing when and where, a brief description of the event MILLERSVILLE and its ticket price structure. Millersville University aims to make the arts at MU accessible for all to enjoy; therefore ticket prices are kept as low as possible, if not FREE. The last few pages show all of our events listed in chronological order, with a reference to the page on which a full description may be found and how to reserve tickets.
THE ARTS AT
As you are perusing this brochure, here are a few highlights. - The very successful programming for kids and their caretakers in the FamFunFest series, which not only includes performances from professionals around the country, but also opportunities for kids to participate in hands-on, fun and educational activities. - A full schedule of classical music—opera, choral and vocal, instrumental, orchestral—performed by our student ensembles, faculty and musicians of international renown. - A variety of vibrant music presentations, including Broadway cabarets, jazz performances, popular bands and more. - Theater, including professional, traveling presentations, local favorites and student productions. - A fabulous film schedule featuring the best independent, documentary, foreign and locally made films that you cannot see in any other theater in the county. - Lectures & poetry by luminaries such as Garrison Keillor and Hilary Knight (the illustrator of the famous Eloise series). - Art exhibits featuring local artists and museum-quality traveling exhibitions, such as the works of famed World War II photographer Lee Miller. - Dance, such as Carbon Dance Theatre, Alvin Ailey II, local dance company programs, ballets on film, plus more. - New Creative Campus Initiative, where students may engage with visiting artists from Philadelphia-based theater company Gas & Electric Arts. - Special discounts for students, seniors, veterans and MU alumni. We hope to see you at many of these upcoming events. Harvey Owen Laura Kendall Ware Center Winter Center
Variety & Popular
Mree Saturday, March 2, 7:30 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $15 general admission; $5 students Mree is an emerging indie folk singer/ songwriter from New Jersey whose music has drawn the attention of music industry professionals including Grammy Award-winning artist Bon Iver (Justin Vernon). She is a skilled multi-instrumentalist whose voice is often described as “angelic,� while her lyrics portray a depth well beyond her 18 years of age.
Night of Comedy Friday, March 15, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $25 general admission; $10 students Come out and have an adult, fun-filled night of comedy featuring four comedians that all have a different perspective but complement each other very well. This showcase features M.C. Jess Carpenter, Tommy Highland, LaTice and Keith Purnell.
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An Evening with C.S. Lewis Starring David Payne Wednesday, April 10, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $15 general admission; $12 seniors; $1 MU students, reserved seating Some 30 years following the death of the author C.S. Lewis, British actor David Payne won the lead role in “Shadowlands” at the prestigious Tennessee Performing Arts Center. Payne’s interest in Lewis was ignited. He began to study Lewis and his writings in much detail and adapted his first one-man play from the book A Grief Observed, the diary of grief Lewis kept in the first few months following his wife’s death.
An Evening with Garrison Keillor Thursday, April 18, 7:30 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $50/$35 reserved seating America’s premier storyteller, bestselling author and beloved host of A Prairie Home Companion, Keillor shares hilarious anecdotes about growing up in the American Midwest, the people of Lake Wobegon and “late-life fatherhood.” With a wonderful, dry sense of humor, he captivates audiences and delivers with class, charisma and wisdom.
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Music
The Soldier’s Tale Sunday, February 3, 4 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $15 general admission; $5 MU students with ID Igor Stravinsky’s famous “The Soldier’s Tale,” based on a Russian folk story about a soldier who trades his fiddle to the devil, will be narrated by Jill Brown, Vance Renfroe and Mark Boyle, and by dancer Annika Sheaff, who will perform the role of the Ballerina. Fresh and witty, Stravinsky’s music evokes jazz sounds and includes tango, waltz, ragtime and several marches. The chamber ensemble will feature violinist Netanel Draiblate, acting concertmaster of the Lancaster Symphony Orchestra, and will be conducted by Vera Volchansky.
Department of Music
Musical Valentines Sunday, February 17, 7:30 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $10 general admission; MU student free with ID Special guest artist Emilio Colon, cello, will join Millersville faculty Anita Renfroe, piano, Madeleine Darmiento, viola, and Vera Volchansky, violin, and friends in a performance of musical treats culminating with Schubert’s finest chamber music masterpiece—the great Cello Quintet in C major.
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A Little Taste of Asia II featuring Tuvan Throatsingers Alash Ensemble and Special Guests Music from China Duo Saturday, February 23, 7 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $20 reserved, $5 students Tuvan Throatsingers Alash Ensemble Siberian superstars are masters of Tuvan throatsinging, a remarkable technique for singing multiple pitches at the same time. In America, Alash has performed at Lincoln Center, Kennedy Center and Carnegie Hall. They’ve also taken Tuvan culture into the classroom, performing concerts for thousands of school students. Music From China Duo brings traditional Chinese music to life in a new/old way.
Department of Music
Concert Band, Wind Ensemble and Guest High School Ensemble Sunday, March 3, 2:30 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $10 general admission; MU students free with ID Contemporary and standard works for wind band, as well as a local area high school wind ensemble.
Department of Music
University Orchestra and Guest Soloists Friday, March 8, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $10 general admission; MU students free with ID Millersville University Orchestra concert featuring competition winners pianist Xiaopei Xu and violist David Houck, Vera Volchansky, conductor, performing music of Peter Tchaikovsky and Ernest Bloch.
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Music
Bach Choir of Bethlehem with the Millersville University Keystone Singers Saturday, March 9, 3 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $35 ($30 seniors) center section reserved/$25 side section reserved; $10 students
Mendelssohn’s choral masterpiece “Elijah” is a fiery oratorio that recounts the story of the biblical prophet with vast and intense drama. Distinguished soloists include Washington favorite Rosa Lamoreaux, soprano, and in the title role of Elijah, bass-baritone Dashon Burton. The Keystone Singers are under the direction of Mark A. Boyle, also a featured singer with the Bach Choir.
NakedEye and Sqwonk present
Make Noise!
Saturday, March 9, 7:30 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $20 general; $10 students NakedEye teams up with bass clarinet duo Sqwonk for an electric show featuring the music of Jonathan Russell and a new arrangement of Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring.
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The University of Virginia Glee Club Under the direction of Frank Albinder Monday, March 11, 8 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $10 general admission; MU students free with ID
The Virginia Glee Club is a critically acclaimed men’s chorus based at the University of Virginia. Founded in 1871, the Glee Club is the University’s oldest musical organization and one of the oldest all-male collegiate vocal ensembles in the United States.
Lancaster Classical Guitar Festival Thurs.-Sat., March 21-23 Ware Center - Lancaster $10 general admission; $5 students with ID World-famous classical guitarist Ernesto Tamayo’s guitar competition, which also features world-class, internationally known guitarist concerts.
Department of Music Faculty Recital
Marcia Englar, classical guitar, with Kristin Sims, soprano, & Ryan Nicholls, classical guitar student Sunday, March 24, 2:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster Free, but tickets required. Advance ticket reservations are available. Marcia Englar, classical guitar, will perform solo guitar works by Couperin, Bach, Albeniz, Villa-Lobos and Walton; voice and guitar works by Dowland and Giuliani, with Kristin Sims, soprano; and a guitar duet by de Falla with student Ryan Nicholls.
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Music
California State University East Bay Singers Under the direction of
Dr. Buddy James Monday, March 25, 8 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $10 general admission; Students free with ID
The East Bay Singers perform regularly on California State University’s campus, in the community, and on annual tours. Comprised of 32 voices of both nonmajors and music majors, their engaging repertoire is chosen from the vast history of the choral music. Joining the East Bay Singers will be Millersville’s own Keystone Singers.
Together Again: Pianists Anita Renfroe and Ioannis Potamousis Saturday, April 6, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $15 general admission; students free Lancaster favorite Ioannis (Yanni) Potamousis returns from his professorship in Abu Dhabi to present a one-time only piano concert with Anita Renfroe.
Department of Music
University Choral Ensembles Love Letters Sunday, April 7, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $10 general admission; MU students free with ID Join the Millersville University Choral Ensembles, under the direction of Mark A. Boyle, for a concert featuring the music of love. Settings of beautiful letters, prose and more including “Last Letter Home” by the late Lee Hoiby, “If Ever Two Were One” by Gwyneth Walker and many more. Come hear the Pennsylvania premiere of “The 21st Century (A Girl Born in Afghanistan),” a touching setting of Kofi Annan’s Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech.
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Xun Pan, piano Wednesday, April 17, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster Free, but tickets required. Advancedticket reservations are available. Chinese-American pianist Pan is an adjunct professor of piano, director of the gifted & talented program at Millersville University and a visiting professor at many universities and conservatories in China. He also serves as artistic director of the Lancaster International Piano Festival.
Allegro presents
Lancaster’s Music Hour Friday, April 19, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $15 general admission A new kind of music experience offered up by Allegro, this hour-long concert is held in the round so the audience can get up close and personal with the music in the Ware Center’s breathtaking 3rd-floor atrium. No stuffiness, no formalities; just great music performed by Lancaster musicians in a unique setting.
Department of Music
Percussion Ensemble Showcase Sunday, April 21, 7:30 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $10 general admission; MU students free with ID Featuring the finest high school and college level percussion ensembles the region has to offer and hosted by the Millersville University Percussion Ensemble, each guest ensemble will perform a number of works culminating in a collaborative effort as a finale.
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Music Department of Music
Flute Choir and Guitar Ensemble featuring Marcia Englar and Joel Behrens Sunday, April 28, 2:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster Free, but tickets required. Advance ticket reservations are available. The ensembles will perform a variety of music from Broadway show arrangements to classical pieces composed specifically for these ensembles.
Department of Music
Dueling Harpsichords Sonia Lee Sunday, April 28, 7:30 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville Free, but tickets required. Advance ticket reservations are available. Hear this program of 18th-century music composed for two keyboard players. Guest harpsichordist Sonia Lee joins Anita Renfroe in presenting works by Bach, Soler and two unrecorded selections by Charles Burney and George F. Handel. Lee and Renfroe will be performing on two of the University’s harpsichords, a Flemish double built by Richard Kingston and a Hubbard double built by Clark McSparren.
Department of Music
Chamber Percussion Recital Friday, May 3, 7:30 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville Free, but tickets required. Advance ticket reservations are available. Join the Millersville University Percussion Chamber Ensembles as they present a variety of works.
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Department of Music
Concert Band & Wind Ensemble Sunday, May 5, 2:30 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $10 general admission; MU students free with ID Performance of a varied concert of works for wind band.
Department of Music Orchestra featuring guest artist
Paul Jacobs
Friday, May 10, 7:30 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $10 general admission; MU students free with ID The Millersville University Orchestra performs with Grammy Award-winning organist Paul Jacobs, who will perform on the newly installed Reuter Organ. The concert will close with the famous Symphony No. 3 “Organ Symphony” by Camille Saint-Saens. Vera Volchansky, conductor.
Department of Music
Choral Ensembles - Songs for Spring Saturday, May 11, 7:30 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $10 general admission; MU student free with ID The spring choral concert, with direction by Mark A. Boyle, features music of renewal and rebirth. Join the University Choir, 8 to the Bar, Cantilena and the Keystone Singers as they perform choral gems for a beautiful spring including Harvey Enders’ Russian Picnic, Ben Alloway’s Prescription for a Wayside Spring and many more.
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Jazz Series Jazz in the Sky presents
100 Years of Saxophone Sidney Bechet to John Coltrane Saturday, February 2, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $20 general admission; $5 students; $65 table of four Paul Carr and the Fred Hughes Trio re-create 100 years of amazing jazz saxophone sounds.
Department of Music
Jazz at the ‘Ville
Friday, Feb. 22, 7:30 p.m. Winter Center – Millersville $10 general; Free for MU staff, faculty, all students free w/ ID MU Jazz Bands with Trumpet Guest Artist Larry McWilliams
Latino Arts Festival presents
Braziliance
Friday, March 8, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $10 general admission; $5 students Classic jazz standards played and arranged in a Latin style. Band member and renowned percussionist Hector Rosado has performed throughout the U.S. and worldwide with legendary Latin artists Tito Puente and Celia Cruz. He has also toured with Rock & Roll Hall of Famer David Byrne, founding member of Talking Heads.
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Jazz in the Sky presents
Next Generation Concert Sunday, March 17, 5 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $15 general admission; $50 for table of four; $5 students Discover amazing young rising talent of the jazz world.
Department of Music
Jazz & Java
Saturday, April 13, 7:30 p.m. Gordinier Hall - Millersville $15 general admission Saxophonist Dave Camwell is a distinguished, versatile and dynamic performer. He has been a Yamaha Performing Artist since 2004, a Rico Artist since 2009 and currently serves as associate professor of saxophone and jazz studies at Simpson College, Indianola, Iowa.
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Cabaret Series Cabaret in the Sky presents
New Voices of Cabaret Saturday, April 20, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $25 general admission; $10 students Join us for an evening of emerging new, next generation cabaret singers of all ages.
Marieann Meringolo Crazy Love Friday, May 3, 8 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $40 premium ticket; $25 adult; $10 students; reserved seating Acclaimed vocalist Marieann Meringolo who sold out her concert last year, is back with a brand-new show. Marieann explores the search for that “special someone” in Crazy Love. Meringolo takes you on a funny and poignant musical journey of the heart. Premium seating includes “best of house” seats, plus a post-show reception with Ms. Meringolo.
Too Marvelous! The Songs of Johnny Mercer Friday, May 17, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $25 general admission; $10 students Written and performed by Don Stitt, the actor and playwright has fashioned the revue “Too Marvelous! The Songs of Johnny Mercer” to help us better understand the man behind the hits. Mercer wrote the lyrics (and occasionally the melodies) to popular hits for big bands, Broadway shows and Hollywood musicals, including “One for My Baby,” “Accentuate the Positive,” “Alexander¹s Ragtime Band,” plus dozens of other standards.
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Theater
The Unconquerable Spirit of Harriet Tubman Friday, February 15, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $15 general admission; $12 seniors; $1 MU students; reserved seating Born into slavery in Maryland, Harriet Tubman not only ran away alone to escape slavery, she returned to the South 19 times to lead more than 300 other slaves to freedom in the northern United States and Canada. Unable to rest as long as there are those who need guidance, the spirit of Harriet Tubman returns time and again sharing her life story and the things she learned along the way. Awardwinning Leslie McCurdy captivates her audience in the one-woman show with only a trunk of costumes and a barren stage as her landscape.
Core Ensemble’s Of Ebony Embers:
Vignettes of the Harlem Renaissance
Monday, February 18, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $6 general admission A chamber music theater work for actor and trio (cello, piano, and percussion) celebrating the lives of the great African-American poets Langston Hughes, Countee Cullen and Claude McKay as seen through the eyes of the great muralist and painter Aaron Douglas. The musical score includes works by jazz giants Duke Ellington, Jelly Roll Morton, Billy Strayhorn, Thelonius Monk and Charles Mingus, as well as concert music by Jeffrey Mumford and George Walker.
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Theater Millersville University Theatre
Proof
by David Auburn March 1, 2, 7, 8, 9 - 8 p.m.; March 3, 10 - 2 p.m. Rafters Theatre, Dutcher Hall - Millersville $10 general admission; $7 ($5 in advance) MU ID, senior citizens Winner of the 2001 Pultizer Prize and Tony Award for Best Play, Playwright David Auburn combines elements of mystery and surprise with old-fashioned storytelling to provide a compelling evening of theatre. Catherine is dealing with her recently deceased mathematical genius father, Robert, a professor at the University of Chicago. Towards the end of his life, he suffered from mental illness and Catherine was his sole-caretaker. Throughout, the play explores Catherine’s fear of following in her father’s footsteps, both mathematically and mentally.
All Campus Musical Organization
Legally Blonde
Music and Lyrics by Laurence O’Keefe and Nell Benjamin Book by Heather Hach, Based on the novel by Amanda Brown and the
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer motion picture
April 4, 5, 6 - 7:30 p.m.; April 7 - 2 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $10 general admission; $7 MU ID, senior citizens Legally Blonde the Musical is the awrd-winning Broadway sensation created by a top-of-their-class creative team, led by Tony Award-winning director and Olivier Award-nominated choreographer Jerry Mitchell (Hairspray). This all singing, alldancing, feel good musical comedy will be the highlight of your year.
Millersville University Silencing the Hate and Citamard Players present
“8”
Monday, April 15, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $10 general admission; $7 ($5 in advance) with MU ID, senior citizens Ticket proceeds & donations will benefit the AFER, an organization that fights for marriage equality. “8,” a play chronicling the historic trial in the federal constitutional challenge to California’s Proposition 8, was written by Academy Award-winning screenwriter and American Foundation for Equal Rights (AFER) founding board member Dustin Lance Black. There will be a talk back after the performance led by Dr. Blaise Liffick, director of Silent Witness Peacekeepers Alliance (SWPA) on LGBT rights in Pa.
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Millersville University Theatre
Behind the Eye
by Carson Kreitzer Guest Directed by Lisa Jo Epstein, Ph.D., artistic director of Gas and Electric Arts in Philadelphia April 26, 27 - 7:30 p.m.; April 28 - 2 p.m.; May 2, 3, 4 - 7:30 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $10 general admission; $7 ($5 in advance) MU ID, senior citizens A new play from Carson Kreitzer about the life of World War II photographer Lee Miller, a woman at the center of some of the most exciting times of the 20th century. From a Vogue model in the ’20s to muse of the Paris Surrealists in the ’30s, she then became an acclaimed war photographer, covering the front lines, as well as the London Blitz and the liberation of Paris. “Behind the Eye” chronicles Miller’s fascinating adventures and her personal struggle of what to do with yourself when you’ve done it all. Strong language and mature themes, brief nudity; parental discretion advised.
Theatre for Transformation’s
Emancipation Sweet
Thursday, May 30, 7:30 p.m.; Saturday, June 1, 7:30 p.m.; Sunday, June 2, 3 p.m., Ware Center - Lancaster $20 for Saturday and Sunday; Thursday night-pay what you want Reserved seating A 45-minute performance to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation. A moving meditation featuring Amanda Kemp and virtuoso violinist Michael T. Jamanis, this multimedia performance includes the entire text of Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation and Bach’s Chaconne. Weaving text and images from W.E.B. Dubois’ pageant in honor of the 50th anniversary, Martin Luther King’s speech on the 100th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation and Kemp’s own call to emancipation in the 21st century, this performance looks at the past and asks what will we create with our future.
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OperaLancaster
The Telephone & Love Duets Saturday, February 16, 2 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $21 general admission; $16 seniors and students; reserved seating Take a trip back in time to the swinging ‘60s with an evening of operatic highjinks, intrigue and comedy. Updated to the 1960s for this production by director Sarah Daugherty, this comic gem foreshadows today’s love affair with our smartphones.
Meanwhile, Back at Cinderella’s Saturday, April 13, 2 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $21 adults; $16 seniors and students In a joint collaboration with OperaLancaster, Millersville University students will venture into the realm of fantasy and fairy tale with their one-act opera. Told from the point of view of the two stepsisters, Daphne and Ariadne, this version of the tale paints the two sisters in a favorable light while making Cinderella out to be the villain! Family-friendly and performed in English.
Faust Friday & Saturday, May 10 & 11, 7:30 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $36 adults; $26 seniors and students; reserved seating Faust, an aging scholar, determines he has missed out on the pleasures in life. He tries to kill himself by drinking poison but is unable to bring himself to commit the deed. Desperate, he seeks the help of Mephistopheles, the devil. Under the direction of Simon Andrews, presented with full orchestra, presented in multimedia, performed in English.
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Dance Series
Carbon Dance Theatre Sunday, February 17, 5 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $15 general admission; $12 seniors; $1 MU students; $5 non-MU students; Reserved seating Carbon Dance Theatre, hailed by the Philadelphia Inquirer as “the new jewel in Philadelphia dance diadem,” will present Shorts. A program of intimate works that explores and examines themes of the human condition, Shorts delves into love and longing, joy and fear, independence and co-dependence as some of the motifs that you will experience in this evening filled will skillful artists and beautiful dance. Included on the program (and not presented since Meredith Rainey won Best Choreographer in “The A.W.A.R.D. Show 2010! Philadelphia”) will be This Is It/It Is This, performed by the original dancers Meredith Rainey (artistic director) and Sun Mi Cho (assistant director) of CDT.
Millersville University Cultural Affairs Committee presents
Ailey II
Tuesday, February 26, 7:30 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $15 general admission; $10 MU students with ID and senior citizens
Ailey II’s Gentry George. Photo: Eduardo Patino, NYC
Troy Powell, Artistic Director
Ailey II is universally renowned for merging the spirit and energy of the country’s best young dance talent with the passion and creative vision of today’s most outstanding emerging choreographers. Started in 1974 as the Alvin Ailey Repertory Ensemble, Ailey II embodies Ailey’s pioneering mission to establish an extended cultural community that provides dance performances, training and community programs for all people. Today, it has become one of the most popular dance companies in the United States.
is the official U.S. Tour Sponsor of Ailey II.
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Dance Series
Rite of Spring: Historic and Contemporary Choreographies Film and live dance performance by the Flying Lions Dance Company under the direction of Ting-Yu Chen, with discussion led by Lynn Brooks, director of dance at Franklin & Marshall College Wednesday, February 27, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $10 general admissions; students free with ID
Film excerpts of dance versions of The Rite of Spring including choreographies by world-renowned choreographies and historic greats Vaslav Nijinsky (reconstructed by Millicent Hodson and Kenneth Archer), Maurice Bejart and Pina Bausch. Followed by a dance performance by the Flying Lions Dance Company under the direction of Ting-Yu Chen—a new choreography of The Rite of Spring, titled “Red Dress.” Set as a story within a story, Red Dress takes the audience into the backstage world of a dance company. As the company director prepares a work based on Russian pagan tales of sacrifice (inspired by drawings of philosopher and painter Nicholas Roerich), the parallels with real life are unmistakable.
Downtown Dances
Steps in Time
Contemporary Dance Performance Sunday, March 10, 4 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $15 general admission; $5 students; $1 MU students, reserved seating A collection of performances by local contemporary, modern and jazz choreographers and studios. A popular event, we encourage you to get your tickets early. A family-friendly reception will follow the performance.
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Celebrate Ballet and World Dance Sunday, April 14, 4 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $15 general admission; $5 students; $1 MU students, reserved seating A community celebration of dance excellence featuring local ballet studios, companies and choreographers. A family-friendly reception follows the performance.
COBALT Dance Company Saturday, May 18, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, May 19, 2:30 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville $20 general admission; $15 child; $10 with MU student ID In a program sure to delight the ear as well as the eye, COBALT Dance Company presents Vivaldi’s “Four Seasons,” Bach’s “Brandenburg Concerto No. 6,” and the Choreographer’s Apprentice to music of Paul Dukas. The Four Seasons begins with humble walks and skips and finishes with dazzling leaps and slides in glorious ever-changing rustic colors. Bach’s uplifting music is mirrored and illuminated in a new work for COBALT’s most accomplished dancers. And, in a magical new story ballet, technique runs amok and the wild force of contemporary ballet is unleashed when a child dares to step in for the absent dance teacher.
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Family Fun Fest
Enjoy time as a family at the Ware and Winter Centers! FamFunFest features a wide array of engaging performances, with opportunities to meet the artists, take part in creative, hands-on activities, enjoy a snack and bring home a very cool surprise giveaway, turning each visit into a truly unique and enriching experience.
Reach! by Jason Reed Saturday, February 9, 11 a.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $8 adults; $4 children 10 and under The lobby opens one hour early for all the activities. Most performances are one hour. Juilliard-trained Jason Reed leads his talented team of REACH performers in an exhilarating show of family-friendly hip-hop dancing, singing and rapping! You’re bound to head home with dancing feet, clapping hands, and a happy heart. Great for all ages. After the show, Reach! USA will provide a dance workshop.
Comedy In Motion featuring Dan Kamin Saturday, February 23, 11 a.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $8 adults; $4 children 10 and under The lobby opens one hour early for all the activities. Most performances are one hour. Nationally acclaimed comedian Dan Kamin, who taught Robert Downey Jr. and Johnny Depp their physical comedy chops (for Chaplin and Benny and Joon), brings us his tour-de-force one-man show, a grand tour of the performing arts with loads of laughs along the way. Great for all ages. This project is partially supported by a grant from Pennsylvania Performing Arts on Tour, a program developed and funded by The Heinz Endowments; the William Penn Foundation; the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, a state agency; and the Pew Charitable Trusts; and administered by Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation.
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“Cuentos del Arbol” (Tree Tales) A Pushcart Players Production Saturday, March 9, 11 a.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $8 adults; children 10 and under free The lobby opens one hour early for all the activities. Most performances are one hour. The celebrated Pushcart Players present this delightful bilingual musical drawn from Spanish and Latin American folklore. At its center stands a tree (un arbol) that has sheltered and nurtured countless characters that have passed her way over the years. Here are universal stories told with a lively Latino beat – both in English and in Spanish. Great for all ages.
Global Kids’ Animated Short Film Festival Saturday, March 23, 11 a.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $8 adults; $4 children 10 and under The lobby opens one hour early for all the activities. Most performances are one hour. A festival of award-winning children’s films from around the world, where the kids in the audience serve as the judges and select the winning entry. Great for ages 8 and up.
The Cashore Marionettes, “Simple Gifts” Saturday, April 6, 11 a.m. Winter Center - Millersville All tickets $8 The lobby opens one hour early for all the activities. Most performances are one hour. Through a series of touching stories set to music by classic composers, this exquisite puppetry explores a range of emotions with characters and actions that are amazingly alive. Great for ages 8 and up. Introduction by Rob Brock of “Hole In the Wall Puppet Theatre.” This project is partially supported by a grant from Pennsylvania Performing Arts on Tour, a program developed and funded by The Heinz Endowments; the William Penn Foundation; the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, a state agency; and the Pew Charitable Trusts; and administered by Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation.
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Family Fun Fest
‘Villepalooza’ Celebration featuring Dancing Wheels Saturday, April 20, starting at 9 a.m. Ware Center - Lancaster All tickets $8 A day-long celebration of world-class storytelling, personal performing and visual arts experiences, and a featured performance by Dancing Wheels, one of the premiere arts and disabilities dance companies in the USA, a group that includes wheelchair users and celebrates the universal spirit of the arts. The building-wide fun begins at 9 a.m. and culminates in a free picnic lunch for all after the 11 a.m. Dancing Wheels performance. Great for all ages.
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Film Series
Searching for Sugarman Monday, January 28, 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $7 general admission; $5 seniors and students In the late ’60s, two celebrated producers, who were struck by his soulful melodies and prophetic lyrics, discovered a musician in a Detroit bar. They recorded an album that they believed was going to secure his reputation as one of the greatest recording artists of his generation. In fact, the album bombed and the singer disappeared into obscurity amid rumors of a gruesome on-stage suicide. But a bootleg recording found its way into apartheid South Africa, and, over the next two decades, it became a phenomenon. Two South African fans then set out to find out what really happened to their hero. Their investigation led them to a story more extraordinary than any of the existing myths about the artist known as Rodriguez. Searching For Sugarman is a film about hope, inspiration and the resonating power of music.
Holy Motors Monday, February 4, 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $7 general admission; $5 seniors and students Perennial French bad boy auteur Leos Carax (The Lovers on the Bridge, Mauvais Sang, Pola X) re-imagines the City of Light as the backdrop for nearly a dozen surreal adventures starring the filmmaker’s longtime collaborator Denis Lavant as a 21st-century man of a thousand faces. Voted one of the best films of 2012 by the Associated Press.
The Queen of Versailles Wednesday, February 6, 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $7 general admission; $5 seniors and students A documentary about a billionaire family and their financial challenges in the wake of the economic crisis. With epic proportions of Shakespearean tragedy, the film follows two unique characters, whose rags-to-riches success stories reveal the virtues and flaws of the American Dream.
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Film Series
Sleepwalk With Me Monday, February 11, 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $7 general admission; $5 seniors and students Winner of a 2012 Audience Award at Sundance, comedian Mike Birbiglia wrote, directed and stars in this sincere and hilarious film, based on his off-Broadway show and bestselling book. When an aspiring stand-up comic fails to express his true feelings about his girlfriend and his stalled career, his anxiety comes out in increasingly funny and dangerous sleepwalking incidents.
2012 Academy Nominated Shorts Animated Wednesday, February 13, 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $7 general admission; $5 seniors and students
2012 Academy Nominated Shorts - Live Wednesday, February 20, 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $7 general admission; $5 seniors and students
Dan Kamin’s “Funny Bones: The Work of Charlie Chaplin” Friday, February 22, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $8 general admission Dan Kamin deconstructs Charlie Chaplin’s comedy with film clips, live demonstrations, audience participation and a classic Chaplin short with live musical accompaniment. You’ll never look at comedy the same way again after this extraordinary two-hour program. Family-friendly. This project is partially supported by a grant from Pennsylvania Performing Arts on Tour, a program developed and funded by The Heinz Endowments; the William Penn Foundation; the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, a state agency; and the Pew Charitable Trusts; and administered by Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation.
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A Royal Affair Monday, February 25, 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $7 general admission; $5 seniors and students The true story of an ordinary man who wins the queen’s heart and starts a revolution centers on the intriguing love triangle between the ever more insane Danish King Christian VII (Mikkel Boe Følsgaard), the royal physician who is a man of enlightenment and idealism Struensee (Mads Mikkelsen) and the young but strong Queen Caroline Mathilda (Alicia Vikander).
Miss Representation Friday, March 1, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster Free, but tickets required. Advance ticket reservations are available. In a society where media is the most persuasive force shaping cultural norms, the collective message that our young women and men overwhelmingly receive is that a woman’s value and power lie in her youth, beauty and sexuality—and not in her capacity as a leader. Presented by the Department of Social Work, Miss Representation includes stories from teenage girls and provocative interviews with politicians, journalists, entertainers, activists and academics like Condoleeza Rice, Lisa Ling, Nancy Pelosi, Katie Couric, Rachel Maddow, Rosario Dawson, Jackson Katz, Jean Kilbourne and Gloria Steinem. The screening of this 90-minute film will be followed by a panel discussion.
A Late Quartet Monday, March 11, 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $7 general admission; $5 seniors and students Set in New York City, this is the story of four musicians, bound together by their passion for music and years of working together. But when their patriarch Peter (Christopher Walken) is diagnosed with a terminal illness, the repercussions hit the group deeper than they could imagine. First and second violinists Robert, (Philip Seymour Hoffman) and Daniel (Mark Ivanir) row over first chair, Robert and violinist Juliette’s (Catherine Keener) marriage hits the rocks when he has an affair, and their daughter embarks on her own explosive affair. As their 25th anniversary performance looms, the musicians must either find a way to overcome their troubles or part ways forever.
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Film Series
The Flat Monday, March 25, 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $7 general admission; $5 seniors and students At age 98, director Goldfinger’s grandmother passed away, leaving him the task of clearing out the Tel Aviv flat that she and her husband shared for decades since immigrating from Nazi Germany in the 1930s. Sifting through a dense mountain of photos, letters, files and objects, Goldfinger begins to uncover clues that seem to point to a greater mystery and soon a complicated family history unfolds before his camera.
Chasing Ice Wednesday, April 3, 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $7 general admission; $5 seniors and students Environmental photographer James Balog deploys a time-lapse camera to capture a multi-year record of the world’s changing glaciers. His videos compress years into seconds and capture mountains of ice as they disappear at a breathtaking rate.
Chicken with Plums Monday, April 8, 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $7 general admission; $5 seniors and students Teheran, 1958. Since his beloved violin was broken, Nasser Ali Khan, one of the most renowned musicians of his day, has lost all taste for life. Finding no instrument worthy of replacing it, he decides to confine himself to bed to await death. As he hopes for its arrival, he plunges into deep reveries, with dreams as melancholic as they are joyous, taking him back to his youth and even to a conversation with AzraĂŤl, the Angel of Death, who reveals the future of his children. As pieces of the puzzle gradually fit together, the poignant secret of his life comes to light: A wonderful story of love which inspired his genius and his music.
Compliance Monday, April 22, 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $7 general admission; $5 seniors and students Based on true events, Compliance tells the chilling story of just how far one might go to obey a figure of authority. Writer/director Craig Zobel recounts this riveting nightmare in which the line between legality and reason is hauntingly blurred.
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Side by Side Wednesday, April 24, 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $7 general admission; $5 seniors and students Join Keanu Reeves on a tour of the past and the future of filmmaking. Reeves explores the development of cinema and the impact of digital filmmaking via in-depth interviews with Hollywood masters, such as James Cameron, David Fincher, David Lynch, Christopher Nolan, Martin Scorsese, George Lucas, Steven Soderbergh and many more.
The Well-Digger’s Daughter Monday, April 29, 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $7 general admission; $5 seniors and students Twenty-five years after rising to international acclaim in Jean de Florette and Manon of the Spring, Daniel Auteuil returns to the world of Marcel Pagnol as director with this remake of the 1940s classic. Auteuil stars as the well-digger Pascale, a widower living with his six daughters in the Provence countryside at the start of World War I.
Liberal Arts Monday, May 6, 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $7 general admission; $5 seniors and students Newly single, 35 and uninspired by his job, Jesse Fisher (writer/director Josh Radnor) worries that his best days are behind him. But life keeps pulling Jesse back. When his favorite college professor invites him to campus to speak at his retirement dinner, he jumps at the chance. Prepared for the nostalgia, the parties and poetry seminars; what he doesn’t see coming is Zibby (Elizabeth Olsen)—a beautiful, precocious, classical-music-loving sophomore. Zibby awakens scary, exciting, long-dormant feelings of possibility and connection that Jesse thought he had buried forever.
The Little White Lies Monday, May 20, 5 & 8 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $7 general admission; $5 seniors and students This French box-office sensation is a sparkling ensemble dramatic comedy. Bringing together the top names from France’s current generation of actors including Jean Dujardin, Marion Cotillard and Francois Çluzet, Canet weaves a joyous and heartfelt film out of the dilemmas of eight thirty- and forty-something close friends. With its nostalgic soundtrack of classic hit songs from Creedence Clearwater Revival, Janis Joplin, Nina Simone and others.
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Art Galleries
Unarchived February 1- 25 Exhibition hours: Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Opening reception: Friday, February 1, 6 - 8 p.m. Ware Center Art Gallery - Lancaster Free Millersville University Art & Design Faculty Exhibition featuring Ben Cunningham and Line Bruntse.
Department of Art & Design
Tove Nyholm: Voices From Within February 4 - March 31 Monday-Friday, 1-7 p.m., Saturdays 1-4 p.m. Opening Reception & Panel Discussion: Thurs., Feb. 6, 5-8 p.m. Winter Center Art Gallery - Millersville Free Danish artist Tove Nyholm has created a sound maze installation. This threedimensional maze provides an enclosed, intimate, yet public space for the viewer to witness, with audio recordings the experience of forgiveness. Inspired by the German American political theorist and philosopher Hannah Arendt (1906-1975), Nyholm wishes Installation view of Stemmer Indefra at Arhus, Denmark; to “try out Arendt’s philosophy 2010. Courtesy of the artist. Photo by Ulrik Lund. in a practical field, because her thoughts inspire trust in action.” The intimate and shared space of the maze coupled with the nature of the narrator’s stories allows Nyholm to bring us closer to Arendt’s concepts – in particular that forgiveness is one of the basics of morality, which is needed in order to create and maintain a common society. Due to the nature and concept of this work of art, wheelchairs will not have access to the maze. In lieu of access listening stations will be available. The panel discussion will feature artist and Arendt scholar Dr. Dean Hammer of Franklin & Marshall along with Millersville’s Joyous Bethel, assistant professor, social work, will focus on Arendt’s philosophy, the relationships between her writing, Nyholm’s visual interpretation, and forgiveness as a societal necessity. Moderated by Christine Filippone, associate professor, art history, Millersville University. Discussion starts at 6:15 p.m.
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2012 Lancaster County Young Artists Awards March 1 - 28, Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Opening reception: Friday, March 1, 6-8 p.m. Ware Center Art Gallery - Lancaster Free A show, featuring more than 400 pieces of work from the Gold and Silver and Special Award Winning high school students throughout the county.
Department of Art & Design
Lee Miller: Photographer of War Curated by Caitlin Davis
April 7-June 30, Monday-Friday, 1-7 p.m., Saturdays 1-4 p.m. Opening Reception: April 26 5:30-7:30 p.m. Gallery Talk with Lisa Jo Epstein: 6 p.m. Winter Center Art Gallery - Millersville Free This exhibition examines the photographic output of Lee Miller during World War II (1939Fire Masks, 1941. 1945). Miller’s wartime photographs formulate © Lee Miller Archives, England an important statement by an artist who viewed 2012. All rights reserved. the canvas of war through Surrealist eyes and documented the event with photographs and essays. The mélange formed by Miller’s temperament, artistic background and training, personal relationships, as well as the fact that she photographed for elite Vogue magazine, rather than an arm of the “hard news” media, influenced the nature of her documents of the Second World War. These photographs exist simultaneously as photo reportage and Surrealist art; accurate representations of the reality of war, yet also carefully selected vignettes providing ambiguous and evocative statements. Miller’s documentation of the war began in the besieged city of London, continued over the battlefields of Europe, and ended in the concentration camps in Germany. Although she was trained within the milieu of Surrealism, Miller attained the height of her artistic abilities when, spurred by the cataclysm of war, she conflated her Surrealist aesthetic with the genre of documentary photography and succeeded in creating a category all her own. Lee Miller’s records of the Second World War reveal a revolutionary method of documenting a horrifying reality. Exhibition contains some strong content. Reception, Gallery Talk, and Opening Night of “Behind the Eye”: The exhibition is presented in conjunction with the play “Behind the Eye” (see “Theater” section for more detail). Join us in the gallery on opening night of the play, April 26, for a reception and gallery talk. Lisa Jo Epstein, guest director for the play, will provide a short talk in the gallery referencing the research she conducted on Lee Miller as the director of “Behind the Eye.”
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Art Galleries
Echo Valley Art Group Exhibition May 2 -31 Monday-Friday 9 a.m. - 足4 p.m. Opening reception: Friday, May 3, 6 - 8 p.m. Ware Center Art Gallery - Lancaster Established in 1945, this organization of 25 professional artists represent a broad range of styles working and creating in Lancaster County area. Members include Ann DeLaurentis, Bruce Fry, Clair Giblin, Susan Gottlieb, Richard Ressel, Abby Rudisil, and Richard Whitson.
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Lectures OperaLancaster Lunch Lecture
Opera Unmasked: “Opera and Government” Friday, January 25, Noon Ware Center - Lancaster Free, but tickets required. Advance ticket reservations are available. A discussion of government’s role in the world of American opera, including current trends and issues of interest to community opera companies. Presented by Brandon Gryde, director of government affairs, OperaAmerica.
Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration
Ruby Bridges
Wednesday, February 6, 7:30 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville Free, but tickets required. Advance ticket reservations are available. Ruby Bridges, civil rights activist and author, will share her experience as the first African-American child to attend an all-white elementary school in the South and her life since then.
Robert A. Christie Lecture in Economics
Ann Markusen, Creative Placemaking Thursday, February 7, 7:30 p.m. Gordinier Hall - Millersville Free Ann Markusen is director of the arts economy initiative and the project on regional and industrial economics at the University of Minnesota’s Humphrey School of Public Affairs.
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Lectures
Lancaster Literary Guild presents
The Myriad of Roads Not Taken: An Evening with Robert Frost Thursday, February 7, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $10 general admission; MU students free Tickets required. Advanced ticket reservations are available. Lancaster’s Poet Laureate Christine Longenecker and her husband Rick Shoup recite Frost poems, some of which are set to music. Benefits the Lancaster Public Library.
Millersville University
South Central PaARTners: Poetry Out Loud Thursday, February 21, 7 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster Free Regional contest for Poetry Out Loud: National Recitation Contest. The competition, presented in partnership with the Pa. Council on the Arts, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Poetry Foundation, is part of a national program that encourages high school students to learn about great poetry through memorization, performance and competition. Students from Berks, Lancaster, and Lebanon counties will participate in the regional Poetry Out Loud school contest. The winner will go on to compete in the state competition.
Hazel I. Jackson Lecture
Patricia Hill-Collins Wednesday, March 27, 7:30 p.m. Gordinier Hall - Millersville Free Perhaps best known for award-winning Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness and the Politics of Empowerment, Patricia Hill Collins outlined American Black feminism expressed in music, fiction, poetry and oral history.
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Lancaster Literary Guild presents
Poet & Soul: An Adaptation of Walt Whitman’s Song of Myself Thursday, March 28, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $15 general admission; $10 seniors; free for students Poet & Soul is arranged by A. Bryan Humphrey, featuring well-known actors Jane Ridley and A. Bryan Humphrey.
Women in Mathematics & Science Lecture
Innovations that Cross Boundaries: Why People Matter Dr. M. Bernardine Dias Tuesday, April 2, 9 a.m. Student Memorial Center - Millersville Free Dr. Dias’ principal research objective is to create culturally appropriate computing technology accessible to underserved communities. She founded and directs the TechBridgeWorld research group that innovates and field tests computing solutions that address the needs of underserved communities such as low-cost automated Braille Writing Tutor for blind children, to computing and mobile phone-based tools for enhancing English literacy education. She is an Associate Research Professor at Carnegie Mellon University, where she earned master’s and doctoral degrees in robotics.
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Lectures
CCERP Distinguished Leadership Awards Andrew Slack, keynote speaker Thursday, April 18, 7 p.m. Gordinier Hall - Millersville Free Andrew Slack is co-founder and executive director of the Harry Potter Alliance (HPA), a nonprofit organization that inspires Harry Potter fans to act as heroes in our world through civic engagement and human rights advocacy. Under his leadership, the HPA has sent five cargo planes to Haiti, built libraries across the world, advocated for human rights, media reform, and equality on LGBTQ, education and immigration.
Lancaster Literary Guild presents
Hilary Knight
Tuesday, April 23, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster $15 general admission; $10 members; MU students free with ID Hilary Knight is an American writer/artist who is the illustrator of more than 50 books and the author of nine books. He is best known as the illustrator of Kay Thompson’s Eloise, first published in 1955, and others in the Eloise series. Knight has illustrated for a wide variety of clients, creating artwork for magazines, children’s fashion advertisements, greeting cards, record albums and posters for Broadway musicals including Gypsy, Irene, Half A Sixpence, Hallelujah Baby! and No, No Nanette.
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Harriet W. Kenderdine Lecture
Democracy: We Have to Fix That Judith Browne-Dianis Wednesday, April 24, 6:30 p.m. Myers Auditorium, McComsey Hall - Millersville Free Judith Browne-Dianis has an extensive background in civil rights litigation and advocacy in the areas of education, voting rights, housing, immigrants’ rights and employment. She joined the Advancement Project, a next generation, multiracial civil rights organization, at its inception in 1999, where she directed the Opportunity to Learn Project and the Strategic Initiatives Project prior to serving her current role as co-director. From its inception, Advancement Project has worked with grassroots organizations to eliminate zero tolerance, as well as advocating for equitable schools. Under Browne-Dianis’ leadership, Advancement Project has been successfully dismantling the Schoolhouse to Jailhouse Track, reducing the unnecessary criminalization of students by their schools. Browne-Dianis, an adjunct professor of law at Georgetown Law Center, was named one of the “Thirty Women to Watch” by Essence Magazine.
OperaLancaster Lunch Lecture
Opera Unmasked, “The Metropolitan Opera: A Look Behind the Scenes” Friday, April 26, Noon Ware Center - Lancaster Free, but tickets required. Advance ticket reservations are available. Presented by John Darrenkamp, former Metropolitan Opera principal singer, and Carolyn Moody, former Metropolitan Opera administrative assistant. A free-flowing look behind the scenes of big-time opera, a sharing of real-life experiences and anecdotes and plenty of opportunities for questions from the audience.
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Lectures
Yona Harvey and Fledgling Rag #12 Present An Evening of Poetry Tuesday, April 30, 7:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster Free, but tickets required. Advance ticket reservations are available. Donations will be accepted and will benefit The Lancaster Cleft Palate Clinic. A journal release event for Fledgling Rag, Issue #12. Yona Harvey is the featured poet for this issue. She will also have her new book of poetry available, Hemming the Waters, and will read her poems from both publications. There will most likely be a guest poet, or two; Fledgling Rag is the journal produced by Iris G. Press.
Poetry Paths Kids Poetry Reading Wednesday, May 1, 6:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster Free From September 2012 through January 2013, students from Lancaster’s public elementary schools have been studying and writing poetry inspired by our city. Celebrate their work featuring original poetry and art by more than 60 students from Burrowes, Wharton, Buchanan, King and Carter & McRae Elementary Schools; Words from our Poet in the Schools, Barbara Strasko; music performances; light refreshments served afterwards.
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Lancaster First Night Events
FEBRUARY All events are free and open to the public.
Adam Blessing & Austin Criswell Friday, February 1, 6 - 8 p.m. Ware Center – Lancaster Blessing... is a fixture in Central Pennsylvania’s acoustic scene, peddling lilting, almost jazzy folk songs, performing with singer/songwriter Criswell.
First Thursday Latino Thursday, February 7, 6 - 9 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster Free Lancaster’s and Central Pennsylvania’s monthly networking gathering for diverse professionals, leaders, and entrepreneurs in the region who are Latino, and/or are interested in Latin culture.
MARCH All events are free and open to the public.
Singer Leo Disanto Friday, March 1, 6-8 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster Leo DiSanto, a singer-songwriter and modern troubadour from rural Pennsylvania, resounds with a diversity of influences from Sun Records-era Elvis to Leonard Cohen to Bob Dylan, from country junkyard rock to acoustic folk to warped, circus music.
First Thursday Latino Opening Night of the Latino Arts Festival Thursday, March 7, 6 - 9 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster The kick-off of the Latino Arts Festival featuring music, poetry, art and an all-out reception.
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Lancaster First Night Events
APRIL Event is free and open to the public.
Downtown Artists Friday, April 5, 6 - 8 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster Artist: “Downtown Artists” : An exhibit of exceptional art from Lancaster city artists. Fashion Show: Choreographed by Annaliese Kambouroglos Poetry Aloud: features poetry readings from students and community members Music: “Footnote,” An original score performed by 7th and 8th graders of Susquehanna Waldorf School
MAY Event is free and open to the public.
Echo Valley Art Group Exhibition Friday, May 3, 6 - 8 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster
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Arts Symposium
School of Humanities and Social Sciences presents
Arts Symposium
Fridays, 10 a.m. Winter Center - Millersville Free, but tickets required The purpose of the art symposium series is to expand and deepen the discussion of the role and potential of the arts in our community. Each symposium includes a key presenter to introduce the theme, followed by a question-and-answer session and a panel discussion. Panelists will be representatives from the regional arts community, as well as students, alumni and faculty.
February 8
Social, Cultural and Financial Ties: Innovating Economies through the Arts
Dr. Ann Markusen, principal, Markusen Economic Research Services, and the Robert A. Christie Lecturer, will discuss “Arts, Culture and Place: Economic and Planning Challenges.� Panelists representing players on the local economic scene will explore how communities transitioning away from industrial-based economies can successfully turn to the arts as a primary method of community development, discuss the interrelationships of social, cultural and financial ties, which best build and understand the deployment of arts for community development.
March 8
The Arts, Creativity and Learning: Integrating the Innate Habits Required for Art-Making into Learning for Transformation
Lisa Fitzhugh, founder of Seattle-based Arts Corps and a creativity catalyst within organizations, offers an expanded view on how creativity emerges, what stifles it, and what role it can play in our growth, evolution and health as individuals and as organizations in any sector. The panel will feature a broad group of individuals representing community-based organizations, the healing and social work fields and the business community, who will explore how their understanding of what happens when we learn in the arts and, more broadly, within the creative process is essential for growth, innovation and transformation in their fields.
April 12
Behind the Art: Reflections on Creativity and Collaboration The mini-conference will showcase the creative works, research and collaborative projects of faculty, students and artists in residence. The projects will reflect on how collaboration fosters creativity, innovation and engagement, and how the arts can cultivate social change. Artist-in-Residence Lisa Jo Epstein of Gas and Electric Arts will reflect on her interactions with the faculty and students during the academic year. Her work regularly uses interactive, experiential theater with a variety of populations around issues of identity and empowerment, community and social justice.
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Music Masterclass & Workshops Melva S. McIlwaine Master Class Department of Music
Grace McFarlane Bottelier, piano
Friday, February 1, 3 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville Free, no tickets required Jamaican-born pianist, Grace McFarlane, made her professional debut in Kingston, Jamaica, and has subsequently appeared as soloist and chamber artist in North America, China, Argentina and in her native country. Her performances have consistently elicited enthusiastic responses. As a member of the Trio dell’Arte, she performed extensively throughout the United States and Canada and made her New York debut at Carnegie Recital Hall. Her Washington, D.C., appearances include the Kennedy Center, The Phillips Collection, the Corcoran Gallery, the Sumner School Museum, The Lyceum, George Mason University, Lisner Auditorium, The Music Center at Strathmore, THEARC and Church of the Epiphany. She served as a guest-lecturer for the Smithsonian Institution’s “Campus on the Mall” and participated in the Smithsonian/PBS Documentary, “People and Pianos - 300 years”. She has also recorded Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue with the Wheaton Symphony Orchestra.
Department of Music
The Louis Vyner Scholarship Competition Sunday, February 10, 2:30 p.m. Ware Center - Lancaster Free, no tickets required The best and the brightest musical stars of the junior class vie to become the 2013 Louis Vyner Competition winner. The winner will receive a monetary award, as well as the honor of performing a concerto during their senior year.
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Disability and the Arts Conference Friday, Feb. 18, 8:30 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Bolger Conference Center - Millersville Free, no tickets required. Accessibility services provided. The Millersville University Family Arts Collaborative will join the School of Humanities and Social Sciences and the University Honors College to host a half-day conference on “Disability and the Arts.� Disability advocates, scholars, and performance artists will join to advance a local agenda to celebrate disability awareness and artistic expression. Participants will include Betty Siegel, Director of VSA & Accessibility at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts; Beth Ziebarth, Director of Accessibility Programming at the Smithsonian Institute; Mimi Kennedy Smith, Director of VSA Pennsylvania, and Amy Gabriele, Deputy Director of the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts. For more information contact Barry Kornhauser at barry.kornhauser@millersville.edu.
Department of Music
MU Invitational Jazz Band Workshop Friday, February 22, all day Winter Center - Millersville $10 general admission; students free with ID Participating jazz bands will be taking part in performances, rehearsals and various clinic sessions presented by U.S. military musicians and Millersville University faculty members.
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Music Masterclass & Workshops Melva S. McIlwaine Master Class Department of Music
Jonathan Carney, violin
Friday, April 3, 3 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville Free, no tickets required Jonathan Carney hails from a musical family with all six members having graduated from the Juilliard School. After completing his studies with Ivan Galamian and Christine Dethier, he was awarded a Leverhulme Fellowship to continue his studies in London at the Royal College of Music. After making successful tours of the Americas, Europe and the Far East as both leader and soloist with numerous international ensembles. Carney was invited by Vladimar Ashkenazy to become leader of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. He made his debut with the orchestra at the Royal Festival Hall in 1991 and has since appeared as a soloist in many of the concert halls in Britain and the continent working with conductors such as Gatti, Kreizberg and Yuri Temirkonov, as well as an extensive tour of South America with Yehudi Menuhin. Other recent engagements include the BBC Philharmonic, the Residentie Orchestra of the Hague and the Baltimore Symphony.
Department of Music
Single Reed Symposium Friday, April 12, all day Ware Center - Lancaster $15 tuition/$10 for concerts; students free with ID The symposium is a day-long celebration of the clarinet and saxophone. Open to single reed enthusiasts of all ages and ability levels, this festival includes recitals by internationally acclaimed guest artists, master classes and workshops given by top-notch pedagogues and performance opportunities. Bring your instrument, eagerness to experience new ideas and your passion for music!
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Department of Music Guest Artist Master Class
Sonia Lee, harpsichord Monday, April 29, 3 p.m. Winter Center - Millersville Free, no tickets required Performing on the harpsichord, fortepiano, clavichord, and organ, she has been featured as soloist at festivals, series, and conferences, including, among others, Rome Festival, Early Keyboard Music Cycle of Buenos Aires, National Music Museum Concert Series, Boston Early Music Festival Fringe and Concurrent Series, Society for Historically Informed Performance Concert Series, KEK-Japan Concert Series, Early Music Colorado Fall Festival, as well as the American Musical Instrument Society, Midwestern Historical Keyboard Society, Southeastern Historical Keyboard Society, Galpin Society, and International Committee of Musical Instrument Museums and Collections meetings.
Department of Music
Day of Percussion Saturday, May 4, all day, registration required Winter Center - Millersville $10 general; students free with ID This annual event is co-sponsored by the Millersville University Percussion studio and the Percussive Arts Society. Daily activities include clinics and master classes by esteemed guest artists, as well as performances by several regional college and high school percussion ensemble. The event culminates in an evening gala concert featuring guest artists in solo and ensemble settings.
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Calendar of Events January Date
Event
Wednesday 25 12:00 p.m. Monday 28 5 & 7:30 p.m.
Lecture: “Opera and Government” Ware Center, Lancaster Film: Searching for Sugarman Ware Center, Lancaster
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february Friday 1 3 p.m. Friday 1 6 p.m. 2/1 - 3/31 Saturday 2 7:30 p.m. Sunday 3 4 p.m. Monday 4 5 & 7:30 p.m. Feb. 4 - Mar. 31 Wednesday 6 5 & 7:30 p.m. Wednesday 6 7:30 p.m. Thursday 7 6 p.m. Thursday 7 7:30 p.m. Thursday 7 7:30 p.m. Friday 8 10 a.m. Saturday 9 11 a.m. Sunday 10 2:30 p.m. Monday 11 5 & 7:30 p.m. Wednesday 13 5 & 7:30 p.m. Friday 15 7:30 p.m. Saturday 16 2 & 7:30 p.m. Sunday 17 5 p.m. Sunday 17 7:30 p.m. Monday 18 8 a.m. - noon Monday 18 7:30 p.m.
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Master Class: Grace McFarlane Bottelier 44 Winter Center, Millersville Singers: Adam Blessing & Austin Criswell 41 Ware Center, Lancaster Art Exhibition: “Unarchived” - Reception 2/1, 6 p.m. 32 Ware Center, Lancaster Jazz: 100 Years of Saxophone 14 Ware Center, Lancaster Music: The Soldier’s Tale 6 Ware Center, Lancaster Film: Holy Motors 27 Ware Center, Lancaster Tove Nyholm Art Exhibition - Reception 2/6, 5 p.m. 32 Winter Center, Millersville Film: The Queen of Versailles 27 Ware Center, Lancaster Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration: Ruby Bridges 35 Winter Center, Millersville First Thursday Latino 41 Ware Center, Lancaster Poetry: An Evening of Robert Frost 36 Ware Center, Lancaster Christie Lecture: Creative Placemaking 35 Gordinier Hall, Millersville Arts Symposium 43 Winter Center, Millersville FamFunFest: REACH! by Jason Reed 24 Ware Center, Lancaster The Louis Vyner Scholarship Competition 44 Ware Center, Lancaster Film: Sleepwalk With Me 28 Ware Center, Lancaster Film: Academy Shorts - Animated 28 Ware Center, Lancaster Theatre: The Unconquerable Spirit of Harriet Tubman 17 Ware Center, Lancaster OperaLancaster: The Telephone & Love Duets 20 Ware Center, Lancaster Carbon Dance Theatre 21 Ware Center, Lancaster Department of Music: “Musical Valentines” 6 Winter Center, Millersville Disability Conference 45 Bolger Conference Center, Millersville Of Ebony Embers: Vignettes of the Harlem Renaissance 17 Ware Center, Lancaster
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Wednesday 20 5 & 7:30 p.m. Thursday 21 7 p.m. Friday 22 all day Friday 22 7:30 p.m. Friday 22 7:30 p.m. Saturday 23 11 a.m. Saturday 23 7 p.m. Monday 25 5 & 7:30 p.m. Tuesday 26 7:30 p.m. Wednesday 27 7:30 p.m.
Film: Academy Shorts - Live Ware Center, Lancaster South Central PaARTners presents Poetry Out Loud Ware Center, Lancaster Department of Music: Jazz Band Workshop Winter Center, Millersville Jazz at the ‘Ville Winter Center, Millersville “Funny Bones” the work of Charlie Chaplin Ware Center, Lancaster FamFunFest: Comedy In Motion Ware Center, Lancaster Music: A Little Taste of Asia II: Tuvan Throat Singers Ware Center, Lancaster Film: A Royal Affair Ware Center, Lancaster Dance: AILEY II Winter Center, Millersville Dance: Rite of Spring Ware Center, Lancaster
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MARCH Friday 1 Singer: Leo Disanto 6 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Mar. 1- 28 Art Exhibition: Lancaster County Young Artists Ware Center, Lancaster - Reception 3/1, 6 p.m. Friday 1 Miss Representation 7:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 9, 10 Theater: PROOF by David Auburn 1, 2, 7, 8, 9 - 8 p.m.; 3 & 10 - 2 p.m. Dutcher Hall, Millersville Saturday 2 Singer/Songwriter: Mree 7:30 p.m. Winter Center, Millersville Sunday 3 Concert Band, Wind Ensemble & High School Ensemble 2:30 p.m. Winter Center, Millersville Thursday 7 Latino Arts Festival Opening 10 a.m. Winter Center, Millersville Friday 8 Arts Symposium: The Arts, Creativity and Learning 10 a.m. Winter Center, Millersville Friday 8 University Orchestra and guest soloists 7:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Friday 8 Latin Fiesta Jazz: Braziliance 7:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Saturday 9 FamFunFest: “Cuentos del Arbol” (Tree Tales) 11 a.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Saturday 9 Bach Choir of Bethlehem “Elijah” 3 p.m. Winter Center, Millersville Saturday 9 Naked Eye & Sqwonk, “Make Noise!” 7:30 p.m. Winter Center, Millersville Sunday 10 Dance Performance, Steps in Time 4 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Monday 11 Film: A Late Quartet 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Monday 11 The Virginia Glee Club 8 p.m. Winter Center, Millersville Friday 15 Night of Comedy 7:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Sunday 17 Next Generation Jazz Concert 5 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster
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Thurs-Sat. 21-23 Saturday 23 11 a.m. Sunday 24 2:30 p.m. Monday 25 5 & 7:30 p.m. Monday 25 8 p.m. Wednesday 27 7:30 p.m. Thursday 28 7:30 p.m.
APRIL
Classical Guitar Festival Ware Center, Lancaster FamFunFest: Animated Short Film Festival for Kids Ware Center, Lancaster Marcia Englar, Kristin Sims, Ryan Nicholls Ware Center, Lancaster Film: The Flat Ware Center, Lancaster The California State University East Bay Singers Winter Center, Millersville Hazel I. Jackson Lecture: Patricia Hill-Collins Gordinier Hall, Millersville An Adaptation of Walt Whitman’s Song of Myself Ware Center, Lancaster
Tuesday 2 Women in Mathematics & Science Lecture: Dr. Bernardine Dias 9 a.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Wednesday 3 Film: Chasing Ice 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Wednesday 3 Master Class: Jonathan Carney, violin 3 p.m. Winter Center, Millersville Thurs.-Sun. 4-7 University Theatre: Legally Blonde 4, 5, 6- 7:30 p.m.; 7 -2 p.m. Winter Center, Millersville Friday 5 Downtown Artists 6 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Saturday 6 FamFunFest: The Cashore Marionettes 11 a.m. Winter Center, Millersville Saturday 6 Anita Renfroe & Yanni Potamousis: Together Again 7:30 p.m. Winter Center, Millersville Apr. 7 – Art Exhibition: Lee Miller: Photographer of War Jun. 30 Winter Center, Millersville Reception 4/26, 5:30 p.m. Sunday 7 Choral Ensembles: Love Letters 7:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Monday 8 Film: Chicken with Plums 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Wednesday 10 Theatre: An Evening with C.S. Lewis 7:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Friday 12 Art Symposium: Behind the Art 10 a.m. Winter Center, Millersville Friday 12 Single Reed Symposium All day Ware Center, Lancaster Saturday 13 Jazz and Java 7:30 p.m. Gordinier Hall, Millersville Saturday 13 Opera: Meanwhile, Back at Cinderella’s 2 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Sunday 14 Celebrate Ballet and World Dance 4 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Monday 15 Citamard Players: “8” 7:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Wednesday 17 Dr. Xun Pan, piano 7:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Thursday 18 CCERP Leadership Awards: Andrew Slack 7 p.m. Gordinier, Millersville Thursday 18 An Evening with Garrison Keillor 7:30 p.m. Winter Center, Millersville Friday 19 Allegro presents: Lancaster’s Music Hour 7:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Saturday 20 FamFunFest: ‘Villepalooza’ 9 a.m. Ware Center, Lancaster
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9 25 9 30 10 36 37
37 30 46 18 42 25 10 33 10 30 5 43 46 15 20 23 18 11 38 5 11 26
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Saturday 20 7:30 p.m. Sunday 21 7:30 p.m. Monday 22 5 & 7:30 p.m. Tuesday 23 7:30 p.m. Wednesday 24 5 & 7:30 p.m. Wednesday 24 6:30 p.m. Friday 26 12 p.m. Fri.-Sun. 26, 27, 28 Sunday 28 2:30 p.m. Sunday 28 7:30 p.m. Monday 29 3 p.m. Monday 29 5 & 7:30 p.m. Tuesday 30 7:30 p.m.
MAY
New Voices of Cabaret Ware Center, Lancaster Percussion Ensemble Showcase Winter Center, Millersville Film: Compliance Ware Center, Lancaster Lecture: Hilary Knight Ware Center, Lancaster Film: Side by Side Ware Center, Lancaster Kenderdine Lecture: Judith Brown - Dianis McComsey Hall, Millersville “The Metropolitan Opera: A Look Behind the Scenes” Ware Center, Lancaster University Theatre: Behind the Eye Apr. 26, 27- 7:30 p.m.; Apr. 28 - 2 p.m., Winter Center, Millersville Flute Choir, Guitar Ensemble Ware Center, Lancaster Dueling Harpsichords Winter Center, Millersville Guest artist master class - Sonia Lee, harpsichord Winter Center, Millersville Film: The Well-Digger’s Daughter Ware Center, Lancaster An Evening of Poetry Ware Center, Lancaster
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Wednesday 1 Poetry Paths 4th Annual Kids Poetry Reading 40 6:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster May 2-31 Echo Valley Art Group Exhibit Reception 5/3, 6 p.m. 34 Ware Center, Lancaster Thurs.-Sat. 2,3,4 University Theatre: Behind the Eye 19 7:30 p.m. Winter Center, Millersville Friday 3 Echo Valley Art Group Exhibition 42 6 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Friday 3 Cabaret: Marieann Meringolo “Crazy Love” 16 7:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Friday 3 Chamber Percussion Recital 12 7:30 p.m. Winter Center, Millersville Saturday 4 Day of Percussion 47 All day The Winter Center, Millersville Sunday 5 Concert Band and Wind Ensemble 13 2:30 p.m. Winter Center, Millersville Monday 6 Film: Liberal Arts 31 5 & 7:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Friday 10 Orchestra Concert, guest artist Paul Jacobs 13 7:30 p.m. Winter Center, Millersville Fri.-Sat. 10-11 OperaLancaster’s Faust 20 7:30 p.m. Winter Center, Millersville Saturday 11 Choral Ensembles: Songs for Spring 13 7:30 p.m. Winter Center, Millersville Friday 17 Cabaret: Too Marvelous! The Songs of Johnny Mercer 16 7:30 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Sat.-Sun. 18-19 COBALT Dance Company 23 Sat. 18-7:30 p.m., Sun. 19-2:30 p.m. Winter Center, Millersville Monday 20 Film: Little White Lies 31 5 & 8 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster Thurs.-Sun. Theatre for Transformation’s “Emancipation Sweet” 19 May 30-Jun 2 May 30, Jun. 1-7:30 p.m.; Jun. 2-3 p.m. Ware Center, Lancaster
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Tickets Three Convenient Ways to Order Tickets:
1.
In person Monday – Friday, 8 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. at: SMC Ticket Office located in Room 103 / SMC on Millersville campus or the Ware Center, Millersville University Lancaster, front desk.
2. Over the phone by calling 717-872-3811, Monday-Friday 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. 3. Online at Millersville.edu/MUArts Methods of Payment Cash Credit Card: Visa, MasterCard, American Express and Discover Marauder Gold Checks: Checks made payable to Student Services, Inc.
Ticket Information Discounted tickets (such as MU ID, Senior Citizen, MU alumni, Grades K-12, etc.) are not available for purchase online. Please purchase these tickets in person or over the phone. Processing fees may be applied to certain events. If you are purchasing tickets for an event that has a processing fee applied and would like to avoid the processing fees, please feel free to visit us during our business hours. All sales are final. No exchanges and no refunds. Pre-ordered tickets can be picked up at the box office during business hours prior to the event, mailed (if requested), or at “WILL CALL” one (1) hour before the event at the venue.
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Directions to: The Ware Center
42 N. Prince Street, Lancaster, Pa. From Baltimore and South: Take Interstate 83 North to Route 30 East. Take exit for Fruitville Pike & Downtown Lancaster. Turn right at light off exit then follow “From Fruitville Pike,” below. From Harrisburg and West: Take Route 283 East. Take exit for Fruitville Pike & Downtown Lancaster. Turn right at light off exit then follow “From Fruitville Pike,” below. From the Pennsylvania Turnpike, traveling East: Take Exit 247 (Harrisburg/East), onto Route 283 East. Take exit for Fruitville Pike & Downtown Lancaster. Turn right at light off exit then follow “From Fruitville Pike,” below. From the Pennsylvania Turnpike, traveling West: Take Exit 286 (Reading/Lancaster/Route 222) and follow Route 222 South to Route 30 West. From Route 30 West, take exit for Fruitville Pike & Lititz Pike. Continue to Fruitville Pike. Turn left at light then follow “From Fruitville Pike,” below. From Route 30 and points East: Take exit for Fruitville Pike & Downtown Lancaster. Turn left at light off exit then follow “From Fruitville Pike,” below. From Route 30 and points West: Take exit for Fruitville Pike & Lititz Pike. Continue to Fruitville Pike. Turn right at light then follow “From Fruitville Pike,” below. From Route 222, traveling South: Take exit for Route 30 West. Take exit for Fruitville Pike & Lititz Pike. Continue to Fruitville Pike. Turn left at light then follow “From Fruitville Pike,” below. From Fruitville Pike: Continue toward downtown Lancaster. The name Fruitville Pike will become Prince Street. About one (1) mile beyond Route 30, you will enter the downtown Lancaster city area. Continue following Prince Street through the Orange Street intersection. The Ware Center is located at 42 North Prince Street; building will be on the right. For directions to parking, follow “To Parking”.
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Ware Center Parking Central Market Lot: (discount vouchers available) After crossing the Orange Street intersection, the Central Market open parking lot will be ½ block on the left, directly across from The Ware Center at 42 North Prince Street. Prince Street Garage: (discount vouchers available) As you enter the downtown Lancaster city area via Prince Street, Prince St Garage (Lanc Parking Authority) will be located on your left at 111 N. Prince St. Another entrance would be located on Orange Street, between Prince and Queen Streets. Accessibility services available at the Ware Center Please request all access services when ordering tickets online, at the Ware Center Box Office (42 N. Prince St, Lancaster), by calling the Ticket Office at 717-872-3811 or 717-871-2308, or at the Student Memorial Center Ticket Office (Room 103) on campus. Relay calls are welcome by calling the 717-872-3811. All presentations at the Ware Center have accessible and companion seating available upon request. Please request when ordering tickets via phone or in person. When purchasing tickets online, please request access services in the box provided on the Order Details page; a box office representative will call you if changes need to be made to your seats. All events include personal curbside assistance on request. An accessible elevator is available for access to Steinman Hall front row seating, first, second, third and mezzanine levels. Accessible restrooms are located in the Ware Center on the first and third floors. Assisted Listening Devices are available for Steinman Hall, free of charge at the Front Desk upon request.
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Directions to: The Winter Visual and Performing Arts Center 60 West Cottage Avenue, Millersville, Pa. From Lancaster city, follow Manor Street/PA-999 west. Turn left on North George Street. Take the third right at the traffic light onto West Cottage Avenue. Proceed approximately two blocks and turn left at the entrance to the Winter Center, 60 West Cottage Avenue. Free parking for the Winter Center events is available at the parking garage located at Cottage Avenue and North Prince Street.
Winter Center Parking, Free Patrons are able to park in our secure, covered parking garage at the corner of Cottage and Prince Street in Millersville. There is a well-lit walking path from the garage to the Winter Center. Patrons may be dropped off at the Winter Center front door and park in the garage. Handicap parking is available in the surface parking lot adjacent to the Winter Center. Accessibility services available at the Winter Center Please request all access services when ordering tickets online, at the Winter Center Box Office (60 West Cottage Avenue, Millersville), by calling the Ticket Office at 717-872-3811, or at the Student Memorial Center Ticket Office (Room 103) on the MU Campus. Relay calls are welcome by calling the 717-872-3811. All presentations at the Winter Center have accessible and companion seating available upon request. Please request when ordering tickets via phone or in person. When purchasing tickets online, please request access services in the box provided on the Order Details page; a box office representative will call you if changes need to be made to your seats. All events include personal curbside assistance on request. Accessible restrooms are located in the Winter Center on the first floor. Assistive Listening Devices are available free of charge at the Front Desk upon request.
Millersville University is an Equal Opportunity /Affirmative Action institution. A member of Pennsylvania’s State System of Higher Education.
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P.O. Box 1002 Millersville, PA 17551-0302