HUBBARD STREET DANCE CHICAGO
The Music Center’s Ahmanson Theatre
Friday, September 29, 2023 / 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, September 30, 2023 / 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, October 1, 2023 / 2:00 p.m.
Glorya Kaufman Presents Dance at The Music Center
Hubbard Street Dancer Simone Stevens. Photo by Frank Ishman.
SophiStication
Jeff Dunham Nov. 9
MUST BE 21 OR OVER TO ENTER. PLEASE GAMBLE RESPONSIBLY. 1-800-GAMBLER.
Ken Jeong Oct. 27
Tom Segura Nov. 2
SophiStication BUY TICKETS TODAY AT YAAMAVATHEATER.COM Segura
aDDitionaL UpcoMing ShoWS • the KiLLeRS - Sept. 21 • KaLi UchiS - oct. 1 • WU-tang cLan & naS - oct. 22 SpeciaL gUeSt - De La SoUL
Trevor Noah Off the Record Tour Dec. 16
contents
P1 Program
Cast, performances, who’s who, director’s notes and donors
8 In the Wings Akram Khan Dance Company's Jungle Book Reimagined at BroadStage in Santa Monica; the new season brings plenty to celebrate at the Colburn School downtown.
12 A New Music State of Mind
Nearly 100 organizations up and down the state collaborate in November's California Festival, an expansive celebration of musical innovation.
18 Inside-Out
BassamFellows introduces a sleek new indoor-outdoor collection to complement an entire portfolio reflecting the company’s “Craftsman Modern” aesthetic
22 A New Note
Innovative chef Ray Garcia's Asterid, in the former Patina space at Walt Disney Concert Hall, reflects the constant evolution of L.A. dining.
32 Parting Thought
Performances’ new program platform for shows and concerts can be accessed from any digital device.
CLOCKWISE
Y
WEAVER / SFO OCTOBER 2023 MAGAZINE 12 22 18
FROM TOP: JIM SULLIVAN; JOE FLETCHER; FRIDA
DIEGO CORY
4 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
Your wealth, masterfully conducted. Experience investments, banking and wealth planning that's expertly orchestrated to bring you the capabilities you need and the service you expect. usbank.com/wealthgoals Investment and insurance products and services including annuities are: Not FDIC-insured · Not Bank Guaranteed · May Lose Value Member FDIC
Join the Patron Program and get closer to Getty’s world of art and culture
Our community of Patrons receives invitations to exhibition openings, lunch and learns, live music performances, outdoor theater productions, and that’s just this fall!
Learn more about the Patron experience
PUBLISHER Jeff Levy
EDITOR
Benjamin Epstein
ART DIRE CTOR
Carol Wakano
CONTIBUTING WRITERS
Roger Grody, Sherry Stern, Caleb Wachs
PRODUCTION MANAGER
Glenda Mendez
PRODUCTION ARTIST
Diana Gonzalez
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Walter Lewis
ACCOUNT DIRE CTORS
Kerry Baggett, Jean Greene, Tina Marie Smith
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Christine Noriega-Roessler
BUSINESS MANAGER
Leanne Killian Riggar
MARKETING/
PRODUCTION MANAGER
Dawn Kiko Cheng
DIGITAL PROGRAM MANAGER
Audrey Duncan Welch
DIGITAL MANAGER
Lorenzo Dela Rama
Contact Us
ADVERTISING
Walter.Lewis@ CaliforniaMediaGroup.com
WEBSITE
Lorenzo.DelaRama@ CaliforniaMediaGroup.com
CIRCULATION
Christine.Roessler@ CaliforniaMediaGroup.com
HONORARY PRESIDENT
Ted Levy
For information about advertising and rates contact California Media Group 3679 Motor Ave., Suite 300 Los Angeles, CA 90034
Phone: 310.280.2880
Fax: 310.280.2890
Visit Performances Magazine online at socalpulse.com
Performances Magazine is published by California Media Group to serve performing arts venues throughout the West.
© 2023 California Media Group. All Rights Reserved.
© 2023 J. Paul Getty Trust
Printed in the United States. MAGAZINE 6 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
COFFEE OR COCKTAILS. JAZZ OR VINYL. PIZZA OR PASTA. SUNNY OR SHADY. THERE’S SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE AT ELLA. ELLA BEVERLY HILLS LOCATED AT SIXTY BEVERLY HILLS 9360 WILSHIRE BLVD, BEVERLY HILLS, CA 90212 ELLABEVERLYHILLS.COM 310-388-6860 RESERVATIONS FOR ELLA RESTAURANT & ELLA ROOFTOP VIA OPENTABLE
MOWGLI REDUX
FROM INFLUENTIAL choreographer Akram Khan comes Jungle Book Reimagined, based on the much-loved Rudyard Kipling classic. The Akram Khan Company presents the multimedia dance work Oct. 26-28 at BroadStage. The mesmerizing and haunting new spin recasts young Mowgli as a refugee in a world devastated by climate change. Bold movement, startling animation,
and video and sound design serves to “remind, relearn and reimagine” a new world together. “We are living in unprecedented and uncertain times, not only for our species but for all species on this planet,” Khan says. “We inhabit it, we take from it, and we build on it, but we have forgotten to return our respect for it.” 1310 11th St., Santa Monica, 310.434.3200, broadstage.org
IN THE WINGS
DANCE
8 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
Akram Khan Company, Jungle Book Reimagined
IT TOOK EXPERIENCE and a great plan to grow your estate and you’ll need both to start giving it away.
We’re the Jewish Community Foundation of Los Angeles and we exist to better the community. We can guide you through strategic planning and explain the tax laws clearly.
With over $1 billion of assets and 1400+ donor families, we’ve helped people like you develop tax efficient charitable accounts for nearly 70 years.
Why not reach out to us. It couldn’t hurt.
jcfla.org
Your good intentions are like a garden. They need constant attention.
Colburn’s Special Season
THIS SEASON MARKS a pair of anniversaries at the Colburn School: Its Conservatory of Music celebrates 20 years and its Zipper Hall 25 years. The school also participates in the California Festival: A Celebration of New Music (see page 12): San Francisco Symphony music director Esa-Pekka Salonen—head of Colburn School’s conducting pro-
gram—leads the Colburn Orchestra at the Soraya in Northridge on Nov. 4; Colburn Chamber Music Society presents flutist Jennifer Grim in woodwind works Nov. 12; the Colburn Contemporary Ensemble performs Nov. 16; and Emmy Award winner Kris Bowers—who scored Bridgerton for Netflix and Academy Award-winning films King Richard
and Green Book—offers a program of his music Nov. 19. Among nonfestival highlights, Colburn Chamber Music Society presents trumpeter Tine Thing Helseth Oct. 22, and the Colburn Center, a campus expansion designed by renowned architect Frank Gehry, is about to break ground. 200 S. Grand Ave., downtown, 213.621.2200, colburnschool.edu
IN THE WINGS ANNA-JULIA GRANBERG / BLUNDERBUSS
MUSIC
10
Trumpeter Tine Thing Helseth
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
by GABRIELA LENA FRANK and NILO CRUZ conducted by LINA GONZÁLEZ-GRANADOS EL ÚLTIMO SUEÑO DE & “VISUALLY SEDUCTIVE” — THE NEW YORKER OPENS NOV 18 LAOPERA.ORG 213.972.8001 Tickets from $16 LearnMore CHRISTOPHER KOELSCH JAMES CONLON RICHARD SEAVER MUSIC DIRECTOR PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER SEBASTIAN PAUL AND MARYBELLE MUSCO of The conducted by LOUIS LOHRASEB ROSSINI’s OPENS OCT 21 FIGARO, FIGARO, FIII-GA-RO!
A NEW MUSIC STATE OF MIND
Nearly 100 organizations up and down the state collaborate in November’s California Festival, an expansive celebration of musical innovation.
/
BY SHERRY STERN /
Yet it’s much more.
The festival, fully called California Festival: A Celebration of New Music, is an unprecedented collective of performances from 95 organizations happening Nov. 3-19 (see complete schedule at cafestival.org).
Both wide-ranging and focused, the festival is described as a showcase of “the most compelling and forward-looking voices” of works written in the past five years.
THERE’S A SENSE OF OCCASION WHEN three in-demand musical directors gather in one spot. It happened in Paris earlier this year when the schedules of California’s leading conductors coalesced for the announcement of their brainchild, the California Festival.
The festival, taking place in November, is a collaboration of those maestros and their orchestras: Gustavo Dudamel and the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Esa-Pekka Salonen and the San Francisco Symphony and Rafael Payare and the San Diego Symphony.
“The important thing to remember is that every institution, large or small, is presenting music that they believe in,” Salonen said in Paris. “That’s a big difference between every other festival and this one: that we are open, that we want to showcase all the talent and all the ideas in the state.”
The festival extends beyond simple geography. The three conductors, all born and trained in other countries, agree that it starts with the essence of California.
“It is a big melting pot of many, many cultures. At the same time, everybody could still be who they are, and not one is going to [say] you need to fit in,” said Payare, who, like Dudamel, studied under El Sistema, Venezuela’s acclaimed music program for young people.
FEATURE
From left: maestros Rafael Payare, Esa-Pekka Salonen and Gustavo Dudamel announce California Festival in Paris.
Opposite: Daniela Mack as Frida Kahlo in Frida y Diego, coming to LA Opera.
12 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
CORY WEAVER / SFO. OPPOSITE: BORIS ALLIN VIA CALIFORNIA FESTIVAL PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE 13
Payare and the San Diego Symphony have scheduled four festival programs; they include the world premieres of Juan Colomer’s A Casual Walk to Extinction and Carlos Simon’s Wake Up: A Concerto for Orchestra
“California is a place of innovation naturally. It’s kind of that open [space] to discover new things that I find really interesting,” Dudamel said.
The LA Phil presents six programs as part of the festival. Dudamel conducts performances composed by and curated with Mexican composer Gabriela Ortiz that he said are “about the identity of what is California and how California in a way is connected to Central and South America.”
Before Salonen leads two programs with the San Francisco Symphony that feature four California composers, he will be in Northridge to conduct the Colburn Orchestra in a free concert that includes a contemporary work by Elizabeth Ogonek.
“California allowed me to become the kind of musician I wanted to be because there was no external pressure,” said the Helsinkiborn Salonen. “The people were like, yeah, do whatever feels right.”
That freedom to be innovative is a recurring theme when talking with musical leaders performing and presenting new works under the initiative.
“Music is a product of where we live,” said Carl St.Clair, the /CONTINUED ON PAGE 26
FEATURE
ADAM GURCZAK AND, BELOW, LISA SAKULENSKY
14 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
Silkroad brings American Railroad to eight California cities including San Diego, Aliso Viejo and Northridge. Below: Cellist Alisa Weilerstein performs her series “Fragments” at Walt Disney Concert Hall downtown and at the Conrad in La Jolla
CAP UCLA’s 2023–24 SEASON brings you a variety of voices and creative expressions in music, dance, theater, literary arts and collaborative disciplines. Join us at Royce Hall, The Theatre at Ace Hotel and our brand new venue, The Nimoy, open now. TICKETS ON SALE NOW cap.ucla.edu/2023–24 NEW SEASON NEW THEATER
Ursula Rucker by Sven W Frenzel
SEASON HIGHLIGHTS > Urban Bush Women > Bill Frisell & Ambrose Akinmusire > Alarm Will Sound > Béla Fleck, Zakir Hussain, Edgar Meyer > Pat Metheny > Magos Herrera > Nella > John Cameron Mitchell > Kronos Quartet > Meshell Ndegeocello > Luciana Souza > Ruthie Foster > Meow Meow > Alfredo Rodridguez > Dan Tepfer AND MANY MORE!
Nano Stern by Reed Hutchinson
Note from our President & CEO RACHEL S. MOORE
It’s our boldest dance season yet, and I’m so pleased you have joined us to experience it! Welcome to the 21st season of Glorya Kaufman Presents Dance at The Music Center, the West Coast’s longest-running series of dance residencies featuring some of the world’s most compelling ballet and contemporary dance companies and works by amazingly talented choreographers.
The inaugural company for this season, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, is certainly no exception. This incredible company, known as an original force in contemporary dance, takes the stage here at The Music Center’s Ahmanson Theatre with two West Coast premieres — Coltrane’s Favorite Things and Dear Frankie — along with BUSK, a creation by the company’s artist-in-residence Aszure Barton, whose work we have had the honor to present in the past.
Under the leadership of its new Artistic Director, Linda-Denise Fisher-Harrell, a former principal dancer at Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago has pushed the boundaries of contemporary dance in ways that align with our vision to deepen the cultural lives of Angelenos with captivating, innovative and thought-provoking works. Linda-Denise’s artistic vision highlights her understanding of the intersection between tradition and innovation, offering a new dimension and a renewed sense of energy and creativity. The dancers are extraordinary, with raw energy, athleticism and undeniable beauty that draws us in. Brava to Linda-Denise and to all the dancers for their accomplishments.
Linda-Denise’s joining Hubbard Street Dance Chicago is a prime example of the rise of female artistic leaders in dance companies, a trend that is transforming the dance field. This diversification of artistic voices brings unique perspectives and narratives to the forefront, often with a more distinctive range of choreographic styles and thematic explorations. This season, we are proud to present works by strong, incredible women and about strong, dynamic women. I hope you will go on this journey with us as we explore artistry that is contributing to a vibrant future for dance.
We’ll take a short break for the holidays but will be back on February 9–11, 2024, at The Music Center’s Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, for The Rite of Spring (Pina Bausch) paired with common ground[s], a new work created, performed and inspired by the lives of two remarkable women who juggled roles as choreographers, professors and grandmothers. I know this will be a very special experience as we witness the talents of a specially assembled company of 34 dancers from 14 African nations.
We are enormously grateful for the support and dedication of our series namesake, Glorya Kaufman, and offer much thanks to Center Dance Arts, founding supporter of our dance series, for their commitment to The Music Center and to dance and dancing in Los Angeles.
Enjoy the performance!
Rachel S. Moore, President & CEO
OFFICERS
Cindy Miscikowski Chair
Robert J. Abernethy Vice Chair
Darrell R. Brown Vice Chair
Rachel S. Moore President & CEO
Diane G. Medina Secretary
Susan M. Wegleitner Treasurer
William Taylor Assistant Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer
MEMBERS AT LARGE
Charles F. Adams
William H. Ahmanson
Jill C. Baldauf
Susan E. Baumgarten
Phoebe Beasley
Thomas L. Beckmen
Kristin Burr
Dannielle Campos
Elizabeth Khuri Chandler
Amy R. Forbes
Greg T. Geyer
Joan E. Herman
Jeffrey M. Hill
Mary Ann Hunt-Jacobsen
Carl Jordan
Richard B. Kendall
Terri M. Kohl
Lily Lee
Cary J. Lefton
Keith R. Leonard, Jr.
David B. Lippman
Susan M. Matt
Elizabeth Michelson
Darrell D. Miller
Teresita Notkin
Michael J. Pagano
Cynthia M. Patton
Karen Kay Platt
Joseph J. Rice
Melissa Romain
Beverly P. Ryder
Maria S. Salinas
Corinne Jessie Sanchez
Mimi Song
Johnese Spisso
Michael Stockton
Philip A. Swan
Timothy S. Wahl
Jennifer M. Walske
Jay S. Wintrob
GENERAL COUNSEL
Rollin A. Ransom
DIRECTORS EMERITI
Wallis Annenberg
Peter K. Barker
Judith Beckmen
Ronald W. Burkle
John B. Emerson **
Richard M. Ferry
Brindell Gottlieb
Bernard A. Greenberg
Stephen F. Hinchliffe, Jr.
Glen A. Holden
Kent Kresa
Edward J. McAniff
Mattie McFaddenLawson
Fredric M. Roberts
Richard K. Roeder
Claire L. Rothman
Joni J. Smith
Lisa Specht **
Cynthia A. Telles
James A. Thomas
Andrea L. Van de Kamp **
Thomas R. Weinberger
Alyce de Roulet
Williamson
** Chair Emeritus
Current as of September 11, 2023
Hubbard Street Dancers Alysia Johnson and Abdiel Figueroa Reyes. Photo by Michelle Reid. Styling by Imani Sade.
2023/2024 BOARD OF DIRECTORS PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P1
TMC Arts: Arts and Cultural Experiences for All
The Music Center is a cultural anchor in Los Angeles and home to some of the world's greatest and most highly regarded artistic programs and events.
Rooted in a strong commitment to equity, excellence and access, TMC Arts, The Music Center’s programming engine, provides year-round programming inside The Music Center’s theatres, on Jerry Moss Plaza at The Music Center, outside at Gloria Molina Grand Park — a 12-acre adjacent green space — and in schools and neighborhoods all over Los Angeles County. From Glorya Kaufman Presents Dance at The Music Center to free and low-cost concerts and events, to customized
learning experiences for all ages and more, TMC Arts' programs reflect the diverse voices and interests of the many communities in Los Angeles County, bringing Angelenos together in ways that enable them to discover their shared humanity. TMC Arts' programs connect people, offering participatory and immersive experiences with the chance to get creative and learn.
The Music Center is truly a performing arts center for the 21st century, continually pushing the boundaries to engage communities and further inspire and contribute to the artistic voices of Los Angeles.
P2 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
Dance DTLA Salsa, photo by Will Tee Yang.
Dance DTLA Bollywood, photo by Will Tee Yang.
Summer SoundWaves featuring Oumou Sangare.
Photo by Michelle Shiers.
Live at The Music Center: La Marisoul and Eliades Ochoa. Photo by John McCoy.
THE MUSIC CENTER EXECUTIVE TEAM
Rachel S. Moore
President & CEO
Howard Sherman
Executive Vice President & COO, TMC Ops
Josephine Ramirez
Executive Vice President, TMC Arts
Shelby D. Boagni
Senior Vice President, People & Culture
Cheryl Brown
Interim Senior Vice President, Advancement
William Taylor
Senior Vice President, Finance / CFO
Bonnie Goodman
Senior Vice President, Marketing & Communications
TMC OPS
BUILDING SERVICES
Carlos Acosta Engineer
Eric Amaya Engineer
Emmanuel Campos Engineer
Ramon DeLeon Lead Engineer
Erik Ekserjyan Mailroom Clerk
Ruben Enriquez Mailroom Clerk
Nick Garcia Engineer
Jose Godinez Engineer
Damon Joseph Apprentice Engineer
Francisco Loayza Lead Engineer
Delia Martin Office Services Manager
Adrian Padilla Engineer
Jorge Padilla Engineer
Jose Quintero Landscaping
Ismael Rodriguez Engineer
Alex Romero Engineer
Jose Santillan Engineer
Edgar Vasquez Coordinator
Brandon Villalobos Engineer
FOUNDERS
Daniel Cristante Coordinator
Lisa King Manager
Georgi Nikolov Director
Elia Ortega Coordinator
GUEST RELATIONS
Peggy Alvarez Head Usher
Alvin Broussard Senior Manager, Special Services
Jenny Calvo Head Usher
Christine Cox House Manager, Ahmanson Theatre
Robert Devis House Manager, Dorothy Chandler Pavilion
Greg Flusty House Manager, Walt Disney Concert Hall
Omar Garcia Head Usher
Jose Agustin Garibaldi Head Usher
Ruben Lopez Special Services Coordnator
Alexander Mochizuki Event Staff Coordinator
Seng Neth Head Usher
Steve Olear Manager, Guest Services
Courtney Rabena Head Usher
Jose L. Rivas Head Usher
Santa Roman-Garcia Head Usher
Carolyn Van Brunt Vice President
Linda Walker House Manager, Mark Taper Forum
Jeanice Williams Coordinator, Tours & Special Events
Demetra Willis Head Usher
OPERATIONS ADMINISTRATION
Carol Zamora Executive Assistant
PRODUCTION
Shawn Anderson Head Carpenter, Ahmanson Theatre
Shane Anderson Head Flyman, Ahmanson Theatre
Jared Batty Head Electric, Ahmanson Theatre
Jason Clark Director, Production
Marcus Conroy Head Electrician, Walt Disney Concert Hall
Timothy Conroy Head Carpenter, Dorothy Chandler Pavilion
Dennis Holbrook Head Property, Dorothy Chandler Pavilion
Emmet Kaiser Head Carpenter, Mark Taper Forum
Ryan Lebetsamer Head Electric, Dorothy Chandler Pavilion
Christian Lee Head Audio/Video, Mark Taper Forum
Scott Lucas Head Property, Ahmanson Theatre
Charlie Miledi Head Carpenter, Walt Disney Concert Hall
Katie Miller Production Manager
John Phillips Head Property, Walt Disney Concert Hall
Lisa Quang Senior Production Coordinator
Todd Reynolds Head Audio/Video, Dorothy Chandler Pavilion
Mary Romero Head Property, Mark Taper Forum
Spencer Saccoman Production Project Manager
Lee Smilek Head Wardrobe
Robert Smith Head Audio/Video, Ahmanson Theatre
Aaron Staubach Head Electrician, Ahmanson Theatre
Kevin Wapner Head Audio/Video, Walt Disney Concert Hall
SCHEDULING & EVENTS
Taylor Ford Event Operations Coordinator
Liliana Gonzalez Senior Event Operations Manager
Marisol Moro Garcia Scheduling & Lease Events
Colin Perkins Lease Events Manager
Sharon Stewart Director
Ken Talley Senior Scheduling Administrator
Ismael Tenorio Events Operations Manager
Jessica Vad Event Operations Coordinator
SECURITY MANAGEMENT & ADMINISTRATION
Juan Macias Captain, Events Operations Group
Jonathan Ng Commander, Field Services Division
Bedros Ohanian Director Security & Life Safety
Scott Pollack Commander, Events Operation Group
Vivian Sanchez Adjutant
Gonzalo Silvia Commander, Field Services
Edward Too Captain, Administration
Curtis Vanterpool Logistics and Scheduling Manager
THE BLUE RIBBON
Suzy Boyett Associate Director
Cinda Rosenberg Senior Coordinator
TMC ARTS
Julia Diamond Vice President
CIVIC STRATEGIES, PARTNERSHIPS & IMPACT
Caroline Chang Program Manager
Letitia Fernandez Ivins
Senior Director
DANCE & DANCING PROGRAMS
Martin Wechsler Senior Advisor
DIGITAL INNOVATION
Jamie McMurry Associate Director
Kamal Sinclair Senior Director
EDUCATION/SCHOOLS AND NEIGHBORHOODS
Keith Wyffels Associate Vice President
Patrice Cantarelli Associate Director, School Programs
Rada Jovicic Program and Events Manager
Ebony Ruffin Manager, Professional Development
Monk Turner Manager, The Music Center On Tour
Sydney Ko Coordinator
Vincent Lopez Coordinator
Juan Sanchez School Programs Coordinator
GRAND PARK
Cristabel Campos Ruiz Marketing Manager
Adam Epelbaum Senior Digital Marketing Coordinator
Brian Foreman Production Manager
Robert Gonzalez Director
Cristina Lucio Associate Program Manager
Anna Morrison Events Promotion Coordinator
Dawn Robinson-Patrick Senior Programs Manager
Angela Tsai Business Manager
Carolina Xique Program Coordinator
PRODUCING & CONCERTS
Patrick Traylor Senior Production Manager
Lily Alia General Manager
Jasira Woods Senior Coordinator
U-Jung Jung Coordinator
SPOTLIGHT & CREATIVE WORKFORCE READINESS
Jeri Gaile Fredric Roberts Director, Spotlight program
Monique Carroll Program Manager
Corisa Moreno Program Manager
Jordan Adelman Coordinator
BUSINESS RESOURCES
ADVANCEMENT
Belby Aguillon Coordinator, Major Gifts
Serena Bernolak Director, Events and Stewardship
Katrina Bulay Membership Manager
Rob Carson Director of Leadership Giving
Hillary Chisum Director of Board Relations
Hannah Doerr Coordinator, Events and Stewardship
Jason Frazier Assistant Director, Corporate Giving
Erica Goodrich Coordinator, Advancement Services
Rosalind Grush Assistant Director of Grants & Philanthropy
Veronica Green Director, Annual Giving
Sarah V. Harnden Coordinator, Institutional Giving
Mayra Medina Donor Records Clerk
Traci Mueller Senior Director, Advancement Services
Lorena Panfilo Prospect Research Analyst
Laurie A. Selik Senior Director, Institutional Giving
Melanye Taylor Assistant Director, Data and Analytics
FINANCE
Michelle Alfonso Controller
Laura Canon Accounts Payable Specialist
Jazmine Centeno Payroll Clerk
Maria Justo Clerk, Accounts Payable / Accounts Receivable
Andrew Kayano Manager, General Accounting and Financial Systems
Jane Lin Senior Payroll Specialist
David Modisett Manager, Financial Planning
Kirman Ng Staff Accountant
Cindy Rauch Manager, Accounts Payable /Accounts Receivable
Sandra Wright Director of Payroll Services
PEOPLE & CULTURE
Erin Jackson Generalist
Victoria McElroy Director
Aurora Nunez Coordinator
MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS
Danielle Bliss Coordinator, Ticketing & Marketing Strategy
Gil Diaz Manager, Media Relations
Lisa Ducore Assistant Vice President, Marketing and Brand Communications
Stephanie Kao Manager, Web Content and Digital Analytics
Hillary Litherland Manager, Social Media & Content Creation
Mike Mancillas Manager, Digital Programming
Daniela Messarina Marketing & Communications Manager
Sofia Saenz Coordinator, Marketing & Brand Communications
Marielle Shrock Marketing Specialist
Melissa Tan Assistant Vice President, Ticketing and Marketing Strategy
PRESIDENT’S OFFICE
Susan Hutcheon Executive Assistant to the President & CEO
CREATIVE SUPPORT
Keith & Co. Graphic Design
The stage crew, wardrobe crew and box office staff are represented by the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, Moving Picture Technicians, Artists and Allied Crafts of the United States of America and Canada, AFL-CIO, CKC, Local Numbers 33, 768 and 857, respectively.
The House Managers employed by The Music Center are represented by the Association of Theatrical Press Agents and Managers.
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P3 THE MUSIC CENTER STAFF
Partners
the Arts
Dive into a network where business meets passion. Become a part of The Music Center’s Business Partners for the Arts — a dynamic alliance of forward-thinking businesses that recognize the transformative power of arts philanthropy in reshaping our society.
When you join, you don’t just sponsor — you experience. You will:
• Forge Valuable Connections: Engage with a community of visionary business leaders, united by a shared commitment to the arts.
• Entertain Your Clients: Offer them exclusive, unforgettable arts experiences that underscore your brand's sophistication and commitment to culture.
• Amplify Your Brand's Impact: Elevate your company's presence and legacy in the realm of philanthropy, making a statement that resonates far beyond the boardroom.
Stand out. Make a difference. Celebrate the arts with us.
For more information: musiccenter.org/businesspartners or
jfrazier@musiccenter.org
(213)
JOIN US in bringing the transformative power of the arts to all Angelenos!
contact Jason Frazier
|
972-3319
THANK YOU TO OUR MEMBERS!
Your Impact with The Music Center's
Photo Credits: (Above) Michelle Shiers for The Music Center. (Right) Will Tee Yang for The Music Center.
Elevate
Business
for
P4 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
OUR BOLDEST
YET
DANCE SEASON
Dance
Hubbard Street Dance Chicago Sept. 29–Oct. 1, 2023 The Rite of Spring & common ground[s] Feb. 9–11, 2024 Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater March 20–24, 2024 The Joffrey Ballet Anna Karenina June 21–23, 2024 Ballet Hispánico Doña Perón July 12–14, 2024
The Music Center’s 2023–2024
Season
musiccenter.org | (213) 972-0711 SCAN FOR MORE INFO
Ailey’s Khalia Campbell. Photo by Dario Calmese.
Center Dance Arts (CDA) is a dynamic community of patrons with a passion for dance. CDA brings dance to life in Los Angeles by promoting The Music Center’s world-class dance performances, extensive arts learning and free, low-cost community experiences; and celebrates local dance, helping ensure that all may know and experience the transformative power of this incredible art form.
Connect with arts patrons and dance enthusiasts in a variety of fun social settings around Los Angeles.
Celebrate
dance and enjoy behind-thescenes access such as salons, receptions and artist talks featuring dance luminaries.
JOIN US!
Inspire
thousands of people with extraordinary performances, groundbreaking new works, innovative dance learning in schools and community dancing experiences.
Membership begins at $1,000. Join before the end of 2023 to receive 10 – 20% off membership. To learn more about becoming a member, please contact us at (213) 972-3359 or cda@musiccenter.org.
P6 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
Joan Herman, Richard M. Rasiej, Diane Wittenberg and JoAnn Bourne. Photo by Capture Imaging Photography.
Hubbard Street Dancer Shota Miyoshi.
Photo by Michelle Reid, styling by Imani Sade.
The Music Center Thanks
Center Dance Arts
From all of us at The Music Center, we thank Center Dance Arts members for their unwavering support of dance. We welcome you and look forward to many seasons of dance ahead!
Center Dance Arts Board of Directors
Susan Baumgarten President
Jane Jelenko*
Founding President
Liane Weintraub*
Founding Chair
Mattie McFadden Lawson
Chair Emerita
Catharine Soros
Chair Emerita
Charlene Achki-Repko
Jane ArnaultFactor, Ph.D.*
JoAnn Bourne
Mira Hashmall
Joan Herman
Liz Levitt Hirsch*
Edward Lazarus
Judith Reichman, M.D.
Dominque Shelton Leipzig
Julia Strickland
Bradley Tabach-Bank
Sue Tsao
Ana T. Valdez
Diane Wittenberg
Center Dance Arts Members
DANCE SPONSOR ($25,000+)
Allen and Anita Kohl Charitable Foundation
Jane Arnault-Factor*
Marie H. Song
DANCE AMBASSADOR ($10,000 – $24,999)
Charlene Achki-Repko
Susan Baumgarten
JoAnn and Wayland Bourne
Walter and Ruth Chameides
Helen Funai Erickson
Joan A. Friedman, Ph.D. and Robert N. Braun, M.D.
J. Mira Hashmall, Esq.
Joan E. Herman
Liz Levitt Hirsch*
Jane Jelenko*
Patrick Kinsella
Maddocks Brown Foundation
Max Factor Family Foundation
David Minning and Diane Wittenberg
Mortimer & Mimi Levitt Foundation, Inc.
Anthony and Olivia Neece
Judith Reichman, M.D.
Dominique Shelton
Julia Strickland
Bradley Tabach-Bank and Dee Dee Dorskind
Sue Tsao
Cynthia Watson, M.D. and David B. Katzin, M.D., Ph.D.
Anna T. Valdez
Alyce Williamson*
DANCE ADVOCATE ($5,000 – $9,999)
Karla and Richard Chernick
Terri and Timothy Childs Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles
Elizabeth and Brack Duker
Lisa Field
Edward Lazarus and Amanda Moose
June Li
Anita Lorber
Mary Nichols
David and Janet Polak
DANCE ENTHUSIAST ($2,500 – $4,999)
Donna Altmann
Barry Baker
Paul N. Barkopoulos, M.D.
Catherine Cristall
Sharon Davis
Lynne and James DeWitt
Jennifer Diener*
Gerry Friedman*
Leslie and Frederick Gaylord*
Bonnie Oda Homsey and Philip R. Homsey II
Freya and Mark Ivener
Jay Kinn and Jules Vogel
Aliza Lesser
Beth Michelson
Kathy and Michael Moray
Renae Williams Niles and Greg Niles
Ellen Pansky
Kathleen Reiss
Julia M. Ritter
Helene Rosenzweig, M.D.
Catharine and Jeffrey Soros
I.H. Sutnick
Stuart M. Warren
DANCE PATRON ($1,000 – $2,499)
Josephine Baurac
David Bender
David Shaw and Sheila Blackwell
Irene and Stuart Boyd
Rose Chan and Warren Loui
Nancy Cotton
Henry Fetter and Lois Fishman
Susan Friedman*
Paul Greenberg
Leonie Gross
Marcy Gross
Penny Haberman
Claire and Robert Heron
Christine M. Hessler
Linda and David Kagel
Household
Barbara and Richard Kernochan
Vivian Krepack
Rosanne Lapan
Carl Large
Paula Marcus
David Richard Pullman
Richard Rho and Steven DeMille
Hadley and Lee Rierson
Ken Ballard and Renee Rinaldi
Nancy Lee Ruyter
Desiree Samuels
Maxine Savitz
Bob and Helene Schacter
Sherie and Alan Schneider
Roni Tunick
Laurie Vender and Stephen Halper
Daniel and Janice Wallace
Marcia and Charles Wasserman
CDA Meet The Artists receptions. Left and right photos: Will Tee Yang. Center image: Michelle Shiers.
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P7
* Founding Member Center Dance Arts
Uplift Through the Arts
It takes all of us to create meaningful arts experiences that champion the diverse voices and communities of Los Angeles. Join The Music Center as we bring together artists, children, teachers and people of all ages and backgrounds to make Los Angeles a better place. Your gift to The Music Center’s annual fund supports unforgettable performances, immersive programs for all, learning in hundreds of schools and community partnerships across L.A.
Contact Friends of TMC Arts at (213) 972-4349 or membership@musiccenter.org | musiccenter.org/give
P8 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
Dream in Ribbons on Jerry Moss Plaza at The Music Center. Photo by Will Tee Yang for The Music Center.
SCAN TO MAKE A GIFT
Glorya Kaufman Presents Dance at The Music Center Presents
HUBBARD STREET DANCE CHICAGO
The Music Center’s Ahmanson Theatre
Sep. 29–Oct. 1, 2023
— The New York Times
Support for this presentation is provided, in part, by:
Glorya Kaufman Foundation
Tina and Jerry Moss/Moss Foundation
Center Dance Arts
Dorothy Buffum Chandler Program Fund
Elisabeth Katte Harris
The Music Center Foundation
The Music Center Annual Fund
Hubbard Street Dancer Simone Stevens. Photo by Frank Ishman.
“Hubbard Street Dance Chicago ought to bottle itself as a cure for the ills of the era.”
HUBBARD STREET DANCE CHICAGO
LINDA-DENISE FISHER-HARRELL, Artistic Director
DAVID McDERMOTT, Executive Director
LOU CONTE, Founder
THE COMPANY
ALEXANDRIA BEST*
JACQUELINE BURNETT*
AARON CHOATE
MORGAN CLUNE
MICHELE DOOLEY
ABDIEL FIGUEROA REYES*
ELLIOT HAMMANS
JACK HENDERSON
ALYSIA JOHNSON*
SHOTA MIYOSHI
DAVID SCHULTZ*
SIMONE STEVENS
CYRIE TOPETE
MATT WENCKOWSKI
HUBBARD STREET DANCE CHICAGO STAFF
LEADERSHIP
LINDA-DENISE FISHER-HARRELL , Artistic Director
DAVID MCDERMOTT, Executive Director
ARTISTIC STAFF
JONATHAN E. ALSBERRY, Senior Rehearsal Director & Director of Summer Intensives
CRAIG D. BLACK, JR.*, Rehearsal Director
KRISTA ELLENSOHN, Manager of Training Operations
ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF
ABBY OLSON, General Manager
JESSICA ADLER, CORINNE KIBLER, JEN SOLOWAY, ARTS FMS
Financial Management Services
EXTERNAL AFFAIRS
KATIE GROGAN, Director of Development
MELISSA ROSENBERG, Special Events & Development Operations Manager
HALEY GILLESPIE, Development Coordinator
NIKKI HORWITZ, Grants Coordinator
ERIK KAIKO, Director of Marketing & Communications
MEGAN MORAN, Manager of Marketing & Communications
YOUTH, EDUCATION, AND COMMUNITY PROGRAMS
EBONÉ HARDEN, Director of Education
PRODUCTION
HARRISON PEARSE BURKE, Director of Production
KATE DARBY, Stage Manager and Head of Props
JACK HORWITCH, Head Electrician
JENAH HENSEL, Head of Wardrobe
MICHAEL KROLL , Head Carpenter
* Denotes Princess Grace Award Recipient
P10 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
The mission of Hubbard Street Dance Chicago (HSDC) is to bring artists, art and audiences together to enrich, engage, educate and change lives through the experience of dance.
Hubbard Street Dance Chicago grew out of the Lou Conte Dance Studio at LaSalle and Hubbard Streets in 1977, when Lou Conte gathered an ensemble of four dancers to perform in senior centers across Chicago. Barbara G. Cohen soon joined the company as its first executive director. Conte continued to direct the company for 23 years, during which he initiated and grew relationships with both emerging and established artists including Nacho Duato, Daniel Ezralow, Jiří Kylián, Ohad Naharin, Lynne Taylor-Corbett and Twyla Tharp.
Conte’s successor, Jim Vincent, widened Hubbard Street’s international focus, began Hubbard Street’s collaboration with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and cultivated growth from within, launching the Inside/ Out Choreographic Workshop and inviting Resident Choreographer Alejandro Cerrudo to make his first work. Gail Kalver’s 23 years of executive leadership provided continuity from 1984 through the 2006–2007 season, when Executive Director Jason Palmquist joined the organization. Glenn Edgerton became artistic director in 2009 and, together with Palmquist, moved this legacy forward on multiple fronts.
In 2021, former company dancer LindaDenise Fisher-Harrell was named the fourth artistic director of Hubbard Street Dance Chicago. Season 44: RE/CHARGE marked her debut season as the artistic leader of the organization, with the goal of continuing to diversify the company’s repertoire and ensemble while building on the incredible legacy and reputation that HSDC had already established. Along with David McDermott, executive director since 2017, the company is looking forward to expanding its audience reach and increasing the local, national and global reputation of Hubbard Street Dance Chicago.
For 46 years, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago has been one of the most original forces in contemporary dance — bringing top choreographers and works to Chicago and beyond. HSDC's ever-evolving repertory, created by today’s leading choreographic voices, makes them a company that dancers aspire to join and performance venues all over the world are eager to host. To date, the main company has performed globally in 19 countries and 44 U.S. states.
At home in Chicago, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago performs 20 times a year and delivers renowned education programs in 50 classrooms across 17 Chicago schools. HSDC Education utilizes the choreographic process to teach essential problem-solving skills, creativity and collaboration — expanding its reach beyond traditional concert dance audiences, ensuring that everyone has access to world-class dance and instruction.
ABOUT HUBBARD STREET DANCE CHICAGO
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P11
Hubbard Street Dancers Alexandria Best and Shota Miyoshi. Photo by Michelle Reid. Styling by Imani Sade.
BUSK (2009)
Company Premiere: 2021
Choreography & Direction: Aszure Barton
Stager: Jonathan E. Alsberry
Music: V. de Moraes, August Söderman, Ljova, Moondog, Daniel Belanger, Camille Saint-Saëns, David Wikander
Musical Arrangement & Editing: Aszure Barton with Jonathan E. Alsberry
Costume Design: Michelle Jank
Lighting & Stage Design: Nicole Pearce*
Originally created by Aszure Barton & Artists, BUSK was conceived at The Lobero Theatre in Santa Barbara during a residency hosted by Dianne Vapnek’s DANCEworks. The work was further developed in residency at The Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity. BUSK was made possible by generous support from DANCEworks, The Banff Centre for Arts, and the Ringling International Arts Festival, John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art in association with the Baryshnikov Arts Center. Additional support also provided by White Oak Conservation Center, the Howard Gilman Foundation, and The Canada Council for the Arts. BUSK, in its original form, is a full evening length work. Official premiere: Aszure Barton & Artists, October 8, 2009, Ringling International Arts Festival.
Dancers: The Company
Music: Euridice composed by V. de Moraes, performed by Slava Grigoryan, courtesy of SME Australia Pty Ltd, by arrangement with Sony Music Entertainment (Canada), published by Universal Music Publishing Canada on behalf of Universal Music Corp. Ett Bondbrollop composed by August Soderman and performed by Orphei Drangär & Eric Ericson, performed with kind permission by BIS Records, Sweden. Plume composed and performed by Ljova. Queen Elizabeth Whistle composed and performed by Moondog, courtesy of Concord; these selections are used by special arrangement with Concord Music Group, Incl, on behalf of Prestige Music. All is Loneliness composed and performed by Moondog, courtesy of Concord; these selections are used by special arrangement with Concord Music Group, Incl, on behalf of Prestige Music. Amusements composed and performed by Daniel Belanger, (p) 2007 Daniel Bélanger
(exclusive licensed to Audiogram). Love Potion Expired composed by Ljova, performed by Ljova and the Kontraband. Saltarelle composed by Camille Saint-Saëns and performed by Orphei Drangär & Eric Ericson, performed with kind permission by BIS Records, Sweden. Kung Liljekonvalje composed by David Wikander and performed by Orphei Drangär & Eric Ericson, performed with kind permission by BIS Records, Sweden ©Nordiska Musikförlaget/2007 Gerhrmans Musikförlag AB.
— 15 MIN. INTERMISSION —
COLTRANE’S FAVORITE THINGS (2010)
Company Premiere: 2023
Choreography: Lar Lubovitch
Stager: Jonathan E. Alsberry
Music recording: John Coltrane Quartet’s live performance of “My Favorite Things”
Music by Richard Rodgers and Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II
Scenery: Jackson Pollock, “Autumn Rhythm (Number 30)”
Lighting: Jack Mehler*
“In his time, the music of John Coltrane was described as ‘sheets of sound’, due to the aural environment created by his innovative wall-towall, top-to-bottom, overall constancy of sound. Simultaneously, mid-century artist Jackson Pollock was creating pictures depicting a visual environment for which the entire surface of the canvas itself was an overall ‘action field,’ the term coined to describe his paintings. In this dance, I have sought to draw a parallel between Coltrane’s sheets of sound and Pollock’s field of action.” — Lar Lubovitch
Dancers:
Duet: Alexandria Best, Shota Miyoshi (9/29 + 9/30); Cyrie Topete, Abdiel Figueroa Reyes (10/1)
Quartet: Morgan Clune, Matt Wenckowski, Jaqueline Burnett, Aaron Choate (9/29 + 9/30); Alysia Johnson, David Schultz, Michele Dooley, Jack Henderson (10/1)
P12 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
PROGRAM
Trio: Elliot Hammans, Abdiel Figueroa Reyes, Jack Henderson (9/29 + 9/30); Shota Miyoshi, Simone Stevens, Matt Wenckowski (10/1)
Music: My Favorite Things. Music by Richard Rodgers. Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II. This selection is used by special arrangement with Rodgers & Hammerstein: A Concord Company, concord.com. All Rights Reserved.
Coltrane’s Favorite Things was commissioned in part by Ronald E. Creamer Jr., Elysabeth Kleinhans, W. Patrick McMullan III, Maxine Pollak, Dale L. Ponikvar and Lewis R. Steinberg. Autumn Rhythm (Number 30), 1950. Jackson Pollock (American, 1912-1956). Enamel on canvas, H. 105, W. 207 in. (266.7 x 525.8 cm), George A. Hearn Fund, 1957 (57.92) © 2010
The Pollock-Krasner Foundation/Artists Rights Society (ARS) New York. Location: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY, U.S.A. Photo credit: Image copyright © The Metropolitan Museum of Art / Art Resource, NY. Choreography copyright © Lar Lubovitch 2010
— 15 MIN. INTERMISSION —
DEAR FRANKIE (2023)
Choreography: Rennie Harris
Music: Darrin Ross, Rennie Harris
Costume Design: Imani Sade
Lighting Design: James Clotfelter
Assistant to the Choreographer: Angel D. Anderson
Letter to Frankie written by: Rennie Harris
“This work is an homage to the city of Chicago, the godfather of House Music DJ Frankie Knuckles, the infamous dance club The Warehouse and its club members. Frankie Knuckles and the other noted Chicago DJs introduced House music to the world. As a result, Chicago’s unique sound and dance have impacted not only music but fashion, television, film, radio and pop, and underground culture as we know it today.” —Rennie Harris
Dancers: The Company
Music: Requiem For Jay B, Lights Eternal, and We Gon Be Alright, composed, produced and mixed by Darrin Ross. Dear Frankie composed by Darrin Ross, produced by Darrin Ross and Rennie Harris. Letter to Frankie written by Rennie Harris. Vocals by Rennie Harris, Darrin Ross, Church Triumphant Choir, Hubbard Street Dancers.
*United Scenic Artists, Local USA 829 of the IATSE is the union representing Scenic, Costume, Lighting, Sound, and Projection designers in Live Performance
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P13 PROGRAM
Hubbard Street Dance Chicago in BUSK by Aszure Barton.
Photo by Danica Paulos; courtesy of Jacob's Pillow
ARTISTIC LEADERSHIP
LINDA-DENISE FISHERHARRELL, Artistic Director, (she/her) ascended to this role in 2021 after an extraordinary career as a professional dance artist and educator. She was born in Baltimore, MD, and began her dance training at the Baltimore School for the Arts under the guidance of Sylvester Campbell and Stephanie Powell. She was an apprentice with the Capitol Ballet in Washington, D.C., and a full fellowship student at The Ailey School. While a student at The Juilliard School, she was invited by Hubbard Street founder Lou Conte to join the main company at the age of 19, thus beginning her professional dance career. After three seasons with Hubbard Street, she became a principal dancer with the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, under the direction of Judith Jamison. During her 13-year tenure with the company, she performed all over the world and was featured in the works of Alvin Ailey, Robert Battle, Talley Beatty, Ron K. Brown, John Butler, Donald Byrd, Ulysses Dove, George Faison, Rennie Harris, Geoffrey Holder, Judith Jamison, Louis Johnson, Alonzo King, Lar Lubovitch, Donald McKayle, Elisa Monte, Jennifer Muller, David Parsons and Dwight Rhoden. She was invited to give a number of special performances throughout her career, including The White House State Dinner in honor of the President of Kenya, Mwai Kibaki and the 12th Annual Kennedy Center Gala with Nancy Wilson and Liza Minnelli. She has led a distinguished career as a dance educator in her hometown of Baltimore where, since 2005, she has been a professor of dance at Towson University and has served on the faculty of the Baltimore School for the Arts. Her research and scholarship in continuing the Ailey legacy within the Towson University and Greater Baltimore community has resulted in the Ailey II residencies from 2011–2019 hosted by Towson University and the establishment of AileyCamp Baltimore at Towson University in 2014 where she served as director. She holds a Master of Fine Arts degree in dance from Hollins University and is an ABT® Certified Teacher. As a scholar, her entry Alvin Ailey has been published by the Routledge Encyclopedia of Modernism. She and her husband have three children.
DAVID MCDERMOTT, Executive Director, (he/him), manages organization-wide strategy and administrative functions including oversight of Hubbard Street’s finances, operations, marketing and development departments. Most recently, he led Hubbard Street through a post-COVID restructuring, guided its new access-first digital strategy, and directed the
company’s recent move to Water Tower Place. Prior to joining Hubbard Street, he served as the first deputy commissioner at the City of Chicago’s Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events. In this role, he managed the day-to-day operations of the department and played instrumental roles in major initiatives such as creating the Chicago Cultural Plan, revitalizing the Taste of Chicago and ensuring the success of the Chicago Architecture Biennial. Prior to his employment with the city, he led Senator Durbin’s Department of Community Outreach, served as the Senator’s political director and has managed political campaigns at the congressional, county and municipal levels. He recently completed a fellowship at the University of Chicago’s Civic Leadership Academy and holds a degree in public policy from Trinity College at the University of Dublin.
LOU CONTE, Founding Artistic Director, (he/him), established the Lou Conte Dance Studio in 1974 after a performing career that included roles in Broadway musicals such as Cabaret, Mame and How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. Three years later, he founded what is now Hubbard Street Dance Chicago. Originally the company’s sole choreographer, he developed relationships with emerging and worldrenowned dancemakers Lynne Taylor-Corbett, Margo Sappington and Daniel Ezralow as the company grew. He continued to build Hubbard Street’s repertoire by forging a key relationship with Twyla Tharp in the 1990s, acquiring seven of her works as well as original choreography. It then became an international enterprise with the inclusion of works by Jiří Kylián, Nacho Duato and Ohad Naharin. Throughout his 23 years as the company’s artistic director, he received numerous awards including the first Ruth Page Artistic Achievements Award in 1986, the Sidney R. Yates Arts Advocacy Award in 1995 and a Chicagoan of the Year Award from Chicago Magazine in 1999. In 2003, he was inducted as a laureate into the Lincoln Academy of Illinois, the state’s highest honor, and, in 2014, was named one of five inaugural recipients of the City of Chicago’s Fifth Star Award. He has been credited by many for helping raise Chicago’s international cultural profile and for creating a welcoming dance culture in the city, where the art form now thrives.
JONATHAN E. ALSBERRY, Senior Rehearsal Director & Director of Summer Intensives, (he/him), from Normal, IL, is a dance educator, creator and coach focused on inspiring excellence and joy in the study of ballet, jazz, and modern techniques with a constant dedication to the exploration of artistry and the creative process. Currently the senior rehearsal
P14 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE WHO'S WHO
director and director of Summer Intensives with Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, he began dancing with his mother Lyndetta and went on to graduate from The Chicago Academy for the Arts where he has since been a guest faculty member. In 2006, he received his BFA from The Juilliard School where he met Aszure Barton. Alsberry is now dancer, rehearsal director and creative collaborator with Aszure Barton & Artists and has assisted Barton in over a dozen creations for dance companies including Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, Bayerische Staatsballett and Hubbard Street Dance Chicago. In 2007, he also joined the Lar Lubovitch Dance Company and is currently a performer, rehearsal director and teaching artist with the company. He has shared two tours with Mikhail Baryshnikov’s Hell’s Kitchen Dance as well as Evolution with Alessandra Ferri and Herman Cornejo. Other credits include The Chase Brock Experience, Daniel Gwirtzman Dance Company, Luna Negra Dance Theater, Nilas Martins Dance Company, and Eisenhower Dance Ensemble. Since 2007, he has been teaching, coaching and creating work at various educational institutions including Arts Umbrella, Harvard University; University of California; Irvine; Springboard Danse Montreal; Ballet Hispánico and University of Southern California.
CRAIG D. BLACK JR., (he/they) from San Jose, CA, is the rehearsal director of Hubbard Street Dance Chicago. He was appointed to this role in 2022 for the company’s 45th Anniversary: Sapphire Season
At the age of 10, Black began dancing at South Bay Dance Center and continued his dance training at Abraham Lincoln High School for the Performing and Visual Arts. In 2011, Black received his BFA from The Juilliard School. He obtained additional training at Springboard Danse Montréal, Nederlands Dans Theater, and the School at Jacob’s Pillow. Black is a recipient of the 2010 Princess Grace Award in Dance as well as the 2011 Lorna Strassler Award for Student Excellence from the School at Jacob’s Pillow. For six seasons, Black performed and toured with Aspen Santa Fe Ballet under the direction of Tom Mossbrucker and Jean-Philippe Malaty. In 2017, Black joined Hubbard Street Dance Chicago (HSDC) where he danced for five seasons before transitioning into the HSDC rehearsal director position. He has had the privilege of dancing works by Kyle Abraham, Aszure Barton, Cherice Barton, Rena Butler, Alejandro Cerrudo, Peter Chu, Nacho Duato, Jorma Elo, William Forsythe, Jirí Kylián, Fernando Melo, Robyn Mineko-Williams, Ohad Naharin, Crystal Pite and Cayetano Soto Ramirez, among many others. Black has had the pleasure of co-choreographing and rehearsal directing Cardi B and Offset’s 2019 BET Awards performance. Black is a passionate teacher and mentor. He is certified in IMAGE TECH for Dancers™ introductory through advanced level.
Black is on faculty for Dupree Dance and has served as guest faculty for the Hubbard Street Professional Program, Steps on Broadway, Peridance Center, The Joffrey Academy and New York City Dance Alliance.
CHOREOGRAPHERS
ASZURE BARTON has collaborated with celebrated dancers and companies including Mikhail Baryshnikov, Misty Copeland, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, American Ballet Theatre, English National Ballet, Martha Graham Dance Company, National Ballet of Canada, Nederlands Dans Theater, Sydney Dance Company and Teatro alla Scala, among many others. She is a Bessie Award winner and has received numerous honors including the prestigious Arts & Letters Award, joining the ranks of Oscar Peterson, Karen Kain and Margaret Atwood. She was the first Martha Duffy resident artist at the Baryshnikov Arts Center and is an official ambassador of contemporary dance in Canada. She is the founder of Aszure Barton & Artists, an interdisciplinary international dance project.
RENNIE HARRIS is known for bringing social dances to the concert stage and coining the term Street Dance Theater. He has broken new ground as one of the first Hip-Hop choreographers to set works on ballet-based companies such as Ballet Memphis, Colorado Ballet, Pennsylvania Ballet, Philadelphia Dance Company (Philadanco), Giordano Dance Chicago, Lula Washington Dance Theatre, Cleo Parker Robinson Dance, Dallas Black Dance Theater, Dayton Contemporary Dance Company (DCDC), Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater and more. He is also the first street dancer commissioned to create an evening-length work on Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater and to serve as a resident artist at The Ailey School. He’s received three Bessie Awards, five Black Theater Alvin Ailey Awards, a Herb Alpert Award and been nominated for a Lawrence Olivier Award (U.K.) He has also received a Lifetime Achievement Award in choreography (McCullum Theater, 2019). Harris was also voted as one of the most influential people in the last 100 years of Philadelphia’s history (City Paper) and has been compared to Basquiat, Alvin Ailey and Bob Fosse. In addition, he has received a Guggenheim Fellowship, PEW Fellowship, a USA Artist of the Year Fellowship, a Governor’s Artist of the Year Award, and is noted as the first street dancer to receive two honorary doctorate degrees from both Bates College (Lewiston, ME) and Columbia College (Chicago). He served as a cultural ambassador
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P15 WHO'S WHO
WHO'S WHO
for Ronald Reagan’s U.S. Embassy Tour in 1986 and was invited to The White House by the Clinton administration in 2001 to share in the recognition of African American artists making a difference in the world. Rennie Harris Puremovement has performed for such dignitaries as the Queen Elizabeth II and the Princess of Monaco, and was chosen as one of four U.S. companies to serve as cultural ambassadors for President Obama’s Dance Motion USA and toured Israel, Jordan, Ramulah, Egypt, Palestine and surrounding countries. Lorenzo “Rennie” Harris is atop the Hip-Hip heap as its leading ambassador. Harris is a recent recipient of the 2020 Doris Duke artist award.
LAR LUBOVITCH is one of America’s most versatile and widely seen choreographers. He founded the Lar Lubovitch Dance Company in 1968. Over the course of 53 years, it has gained an international reputation as one of America’s top dance companies, produced more than 120 dances and performed before millions across the U.S. and over 40 countries. Many other major companies throughout the world have performed the company’s dances, including American Ballet Theatre, New York City Ballet, San Francisco Ballet, Paris Opera Ballet, Royal Danish Ballet, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, The Joffrey Ballet, Martha Graham Dance Company and more. Lubovitch has created ice-dancing works for Olympians John Curry, Peggy Fleming, Dorothy Hamill, Brian Orser, JoJo Starbuck and Paul Wylie, and he has created feature-length ice-dance specials for TV: The Planets for A&E (nominated for an International Emmy ® Award, a Cable AceAward, and a Grammy Award®) and The Sleeping Beauty for PBS and Anglia TV, Great Britain. His theater and film work includes Sondheim/ Lapine’s Into the Woods (Tony Award® nomination), The Red Shoes (Astaire Award), the Tony Award®-winning revival of The King and I (on Broadway and in London’s West End), Disney’s Hunchback of Notre Dame in Berlin, and Robert Altman’s movie The Company (American Choreography Award). In 2016, he premiered The Bronze Horseman, based on the Pushkin poem, for the Mikhailovsky Ballet in Russia. In 1987, he conceived Dancing for Life, which took place at the Lincoln Center. It was the first response by the dance community to the AIDS crisis, raising over $1 million dollars. Together with Jay Franke, in 2007, Lubovitch created the Chicago Dancing Festival, in collaboration with the City of Chicago and the Museum of Contemporary Art. It presented 10 seasons entirely free to the public. Recent awards: 2007 named Chicagoan of the Year by the Chicago Tribune; 2008 named similarly by Chicago Magazine; 2011 designated a Ford Fellow by United States Artists and received the Dance/ USA Honors Award; 2012 his dance Crisis Variations awarded the Prix Benois de la Danse for outstanding choreography at the Bolshoi Theatre; 2013 honored
for lifetime achievement by the American Dance Guild; 2014 awarded an honorary doctorate by The Juilliard School; 2016 received the Scripps/American Dance Festival Award for lifetime achievement and the Dance Magazine Award, named one of America’s Irreplaceable Dance Treasures by the Dance Heritage Coalition and appointed a Distinguished Professor at the University of California, Irvine. In honor of his company’s 50th anniversary in 2018, he was presented with the Martha Graham Award for lifetime achievement.
DANCERS
ALEXANDRIA BEST (she/ her) is a native of Raleigh, NC, where she began her preprofessional dance training. During that time, she acquired knowledge from instructors across programs such as American Ballet Theatre, Arts Umbrella, Carolina Ballet, DamianiDance, French Academie of Ballet, and Hubbard Street Dance Chicago. She is a 2021 graduate of Pace University where she earned her BFA in dance, with a concentration in performance and pedagogy, and a minor in business. Immediately following postgrad, Best joined Hubbard Street Dance Chicago as a company dance artist under the new direction of Linda-Denise Fisher-Harrell. Now going into her third season, she has had the opportunity to perform many great works by many great-minded artists alike. She is thrilled to be announced as a 2023 Princess Grace Foundation Award winner in Dance and to be joining its community of artists, including many past and present Hubbard Street Dance Chicago members as well. Best is elated to continue her time growing her artistry and community with Hubbard Street Dance Chicago in its upcoming season.
JACQUELINE BURNETT (she/ her) received her formative classical ballet training in her hometown of Pocatello, ID, from Romanian Ballet Master Marius Zirra. She moved to New York in 2005 for the Ailey School/ Fordham University joint BFA program, graduating magna cum laude with honors (2009). She joined Hubbard Street Dance Chicago in 2008 as a Center Apprentice and joined the main company in 2009. She received a Princess Grace Honorarium in 2011 and, with Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, was part of DanceMotion USA 2013, a cultural diplomacy tour in Algeria, Morocco and Spain. She has also served as an artistic lead and teacher for Hubbard Street Dance Chicago Summer Intensives, a repetitor for Penny Saunders and a freelance dancer with Robyn Mineko Williams and Artists and Seattle Dance Collective. She recently choreographed for Milwaukee Rep’s Murder on the Orient Express and premiered a new work, cochoreographed with David Schultz, for Danza Visual in Mexico City.
P16 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
AARON CHOATE (they/them) of Lexington, KY, is a graduate of The Juilliard School class of 2022. After studying at Diana Evan's School of Dance in Kentucky, they were named a 2018 Presidential Scholar in the Arts. They have performed the works of renowned choreographers, such as Aszure Barton, Ohad Naharin, Justin Peck, Jamar Roberts, Bobbi Jene Smith, Rennie Harris, Spencer Theberge, Lar Lubovitch, and Ted Shawn. They are also an avid choreographer. Most recently, they had a process at Gibney Dance called the Moving Towards Justice Fellowship, created by Scott Autry. In 2022, they presented a work at 92nd Street Y as a part of the Future Dance Festival. In 2021, they received the George J. Jakab Grant Award from Juilliard to create a dance film, and upon graduation, they were awarded the Juilliard Career Advancement Fellowship.
MORGAN CLUNE (she/her), from Barrington, IL, graduated from The Chicago Academy for the Arts in 2018. She was recognized as a National YoungArts Winner in New York for Contemporary dance in 2018 where she performed solo at Baryshnikov Arts Center. Upon graduation from Juilliard, Morgan was awarded the Martha Hill Prize for her achievement and leadership in Dance as well as a Juilliard Career Advancement Fellowship for her promise as an entrepreneur and engagement in the arts. She is an emerging choreographer, recently choreographing at Hubbard Street Dance Chicago’s CREATE summer intensive and The Juilliard School in 2023. Clune is currently entering her second season with Hubbard Street Dance Chicago under the direction of Linda-Denise Fisher-Harrell.
MICHELE DOOLEY (she/he/they) is a dance artist and teacher from Philadelphia. She began her dance training at The Institute of the Arts, graduated from The Philadelphia High School for Creative and Performing Arts, and later earned her BFA in dance from The University of the Arts. She has completed programs with Bates Summer intensive, BalletX Summer Program and DCNS Summer Dance Intensive and has worked with choreographers Gary Jeter, Tommie-Waheed Evans, Aszure Barton, Jermaine Spivey, Milton Myers, Spenser Theberge and Nora Gibson. She has had the privilege of working with Eleone Dance Theatre and Spectrum Dance Theater. She is thrilled to be back for her third season with the company!
ABDIEL FIGUEROA REYES (he/ they), from Las Vegas, NV, was born and raised in Guaynabo, Puerto Rico, before moving to the U.S. in 2011. Figueroa Reyes' training includes: The Rock Center for Dance, Las Vegas Academy of the Arts, The Joffrey Ballet summer intensive, Complexions summer intensive and Contemporary West Dance Theater (under Bernard H. Gaddis). In 2017, Figueroa Reyes became a member of Hubbard Street’s Professional Program HS Pro (under Alexandra Wells with mentorship from Peter Chu, Claire Bataille, Glenn Edgerton, Jonathan Alsberry, and more). In 2018, he became an Hubbard Street Dance Chicago (HSDC) apprentice and, in 2019, joined the main company. Dance Magazine named him a Top 25 to Watch and recognized him as one of four LatinX Dancers Breaking Boundaries in 2020. Starting his fifth year as a company member, Figueroa Reyes is delighted to be a 2022 Princess Grace Award Winner and was recently recognized on Forbes 30 Under 30 Local Chicago. He is grateful to continue his growth and development with Hubbard Street Dance Chicago and the Chicago community.
ELLIOT HAMMANS (he/him) from Santa Fe, NM, began his formal dance training in 2008 with Robert Sher-Machherndl and continued his ballet and modern dance education with Moving People Dance in Santa Fe, under the direction of Curtis Uhlemann. He joined Moving People Dance Company as an apprentice in 2010, trained on full scholarship at the Alonzo King LINES Dance Center in San Francisco and attended Hubbard Street Dance Chicago’s 2011 and 2012 Summer Intensives. Following studies abroad at Austria’s Tanzzentrum SEAD (Salzburg Experimental Academy of Dance), he earned his BFA in dance in 2014 from Tisch School of the Arts at NYU. He joined Hubbard Street 2 as a full company member in August 2014 and was promoted to Hubbard Street’s main company in August 2016.
JACK HENDERSON (he/him) grew up in Livermore, CA, where he began dancing at his local dance studio Tiffany's Dance Academy. He attended summer intensives and workshops during this time, including San Francisco Ballet, Dutch National Ballet and Hubbard Street intensives. In 2017, he moved to Vancouver, B.C., to attend Arts Umbrella’s pre-graduate program under the direction of Artemis Gordon. In 2018, he joined the graduate program at Arts Umbrella, performing repertoire and new creations by Crystal Pite, Lukas Timulak, Amos Bental, Ihsan Rustem and Jonathan E. Alsberry, to name a few.
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P17 WHO'S WHO
ALYSIA JOHNSON (she/her) from Dallas, TX, first found dance at Dallas Black Dance Theatre and later went on to graduate from Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts where she studied ballet, modern and composition. A graduate of The Juilliard School and a two-time recipient of Juilliard’s Entrepreneurship Grant, she has served the Dallas dance community by founding and directing programs that cater to young artists in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex since 2015. Recently, she was awarded the Princess Grace Honoraria Award for Dance, and she is endlessly thankful for the dance community at large for their support and unmatched creativity.
SHOTA MIYOSHI (he/him) from Kanagawa, Japan, started to train in Jazz and ballet at Nakura jazz Dance Studio. He received his BFA in dance from SUNY Purchase in 2022. He has performed works by Norbert De La Cruz III, Jamar Roberts, Martin Løfsnes, Doug Varone, George Balanchine, Martha Graham and José Limón. Additional training includes MOVE|NYC|’s S.W.E.A.T and Paul Taylor Summer Intensive. He hopes to become a versatile dancer who is able to collaborate with a variety of musicians in order to create something the world has never seen before.
DAVID SCHULTZ (he/him) from Grand Rapids, MI, began his training with the School of the Grand Rapids Ballet, where he then performed for four seasons with its company, the Grand Rapids Ballet. He joined Hubbard Street 2 in 2009 and was promoted to the main company, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, in 2011 where he has worked with many of the world's leading contemporary choreographers. He is a recipient of a 2012 Princess Grace Award. As a choreographer, he has had the honor of creating works for DanceWorks Chicago, Chambered Squared, Boston University and a co-choreographed piece with Jacqueline Burnett for Danza Visual in Mexico City. When he is not dancing or choreographing, he has spent many years studying music and has performed and scored many pieces for Hubbard Street Dance Chicago as well as for his own works.
SIMONE STEVENS (she/her) from Atlanta, GA, received her dance training in her hometown of Stone Mountain, GA at En Pointe School of Dance before graduating from Kennesaw State University in 2017 with a Bachelor of Arts in Dance and Minor in Anthropology.
Upon moving to Chicago in 2018, Stevens studied on scholarship at the Lou Conte Dance Studio while simultaneously performing as a freelance artist throughout the city. Since joining the company in 2021, Stevens has been recognized as one of Dance Magazine's 25 To Watch. Stevens has also actively sought to further expand her community as an instructor, both regionally at The Rooted Space and Chicago Movement Collective, as well as at her alma mater. Stevens is forever grateful for the spaces that continue to welcome her and the communities that continue to uplift.
CYRIE TOPETE (she/they) is from Peoria, AZ, where she trained in competitive dance starting at the age of 13. She then moved to New York City and received her BFA at The Juilliard School, class of 2022. During her time at Juilliard, she was given Juilliard’s FENDI Vanguard Award and attended programs including Springboard Danse Montreal, Jacob’s Pillow Contemporary Program, B12 in Berlin, Germany, Youngarts LA, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, and more. She was also recognized for choreographic opportunities including Juilliard’s Choreography and Composers in 2021, National Sawdust’s Blueprint Fellowship in 2019, and Juilliard’s Choreographic Honors in 2019. Topete has had the opportunity to perform works by Crystal Pite, Ohad Naharin, Alan Lucien Øyen, Kyle Abraham, Bobbi Jene Smith, Rennie Harris, Peter Chu, Justin Peck, Aszure Barton, Rena Butler, Jenn Freeman, and Jamar Roberts. During her first season with Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, she was featured in Dance Magazine’s “On the Rise”.
MATT WENCKOWSKI (he/him) from St. Charles, IL, received his early training at Moves Dance Studio in North Aurora and trained as a competitive dancer with Excel Dance Productions. In 2009, he joined The Joffrey Academy’s pre-professional programs under the direction of Alexei Kremnev and Anna Reznik, performing in The Nutcracker and more. He studied at Lou Conte Dance Studio under the guidance of Claire Bataille and joined DanceWorks Chicago in 2013, under the direction of Julie Nakagawa. In 2015, he joined the Grand Rapids Ballet performing soloist roles in classical and contemporary works. He has performed pieces by Alejandro Cerrudo, Trey McIntyre, Ben Stevenson, George Balanchine, Yuri Possokhov, Annabelle Lopez Ochoa, Val Caniparoli, Robyn Mineko Williams, Penny Saunders and more. He is thrilled and grateful to be part of Hubbard Street Dance Chicago and would like to thank his parents for all they have done to support him.
P18 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE WHO'S WHO
Imagine a child experiencing his first live performance, a teacher discovering new ways to inspire students, a couple enjoying a world-renowned dance company and a family learning new dance moves together. Know it is your everlasting kindness that allows The Music Center to provide these meaningful experiences that enrich the lives of all Angelenos.
Imagine the impact your legacy gift can make!
We invite you to consider a gift that will create inclusive arts and cultural experiences that champion the diverse voices and communities of Los Angeles for generations to come. The Music Center’s Dorothy Chandler Society honors and recognizes the generous individuals who have made a commitment with a planned or endowed gift to The Music Center.
To learn more about the Dorothy Chandler Society and other ways to meet your financial and charitable goals, contact Cheryl Brown at (213) 972-3316 or visit MusicCenterLegacy.org.
A LEGACY DARES TO INSPIRE
WAYS TO GIVE:
● Include a gift in your will or living trust
● Designate The Music Center as a beneficiary of your retirement plan or life insurance policy
● Establish a charitable gift annuity or charitable remainder trust
● Create an estate note, which is an irrevocable pledge against one’s estate
● Create an endowed fund
“I hope to see The Music Center grow and develop for generations to come."
— Shirley Ashkenas, Dorothy Chandler Society Member
Gloria Molina Grand Park's Día de los Muertos. Photo by Michelle Moro for Gloria Molina Grand Park and The Music Center. PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P19
Thank you for sustaining the arts!
OUR SUPPORTERS: ENDOWMENT AND PLANNED GIFTS
The Music Center is grateful for the generosity and support of our contributors who have established endowments and planned gifts in their estate plans. Over the years, planned gifts have significantly impacted our programs, and we are thankful for the foresight of these dedicated individuals who have made legacy gifts.
PLANNED GIFTS AND ENDOWMENT GIFTS
$1,000,000 AND ABOVE
The Ahmanson Foundation
The Ashkenas and Fabian Family Bank of America Foundation
The Blue Ribbon
Terri and Timothy Childs
David Conlon
Jill and Curtis Kaufman
Diane and Leon Morton
Merle and Peter Mullin
National Endowment for the Arts
Robert Olsen
Fredric M. Roberts
Frank J. Sherwood
Dorothy C. Waugh
PLANNED GIFTS AND ENDOWMENT GIFTS UP TO
$999,999
Anonymous (4)
Phyllis Abrams and Jules Smith
Caroline L. Ahmanson
The Annenberg Foundation
Kathryn A. Ballsun
Pamela and Dennis Beck
Judith and Thomas Beckmen
Miriam Birch
Judith Blumenthal
Borden-Rozner Trust
Linda and Maynard Brittan
Maurice and Jane Cattani Club 100
Margaret Sheehy Collins
Dorothy and Sherill Corwin
Mary Levin Cutler
James A. Doolittle Foundation
Kimberly Marteau and John Emerson
Sylvia Kunin Eben
Carolyn Dirks/James B. Gould Foundation
Thomas F. Grose
William Randolph Hearst Foundation
Joan E. Herman and Richard M. Rasiej
Ann and Steve Hinchliffe
Joan E. and John Hotchkis
Freya and Mark Ivener
Robert Jesberg and Michael J. Carmody
Carrie and Stuart Ketchum
Joyce and Kent Kresa
Helen Lamm
Dr. Stephen Lee
Mrs. J. Hart Lyon
Rachel S. Moore and Robert Ryan
Stephen D. Moses
Robin and Gerald Parsky
James B. Pendleton Foundation
Barbara and Sheldon Pinchuk
Nan Rae
Lee and Larry Ramer
Penelope C. Roeder
Constance E. RoPolo
Mimi Rotter
Barbara & Charles Schneider
Mary Shambra
Howard Sherman and J. Gregg Houston
Lisa Specht
I.H. Sutnick
Gretchen Valentine
Andrea and John Van de Kamp
Dietrich Eugene Wagner
Washington Mutual
Special thanks to our donors who wish to remain anonymous.
The following reflects gifts made as of July 31, 2023. If your name was misspelled or omitted from this list in error, please contact us at legacy@musiccenter.org.
The Music Center Thanks Its Supporters
INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILY FOUNDATIONS
$1,000,000 AND ABOVE
Robert J. Abernethy
Glorya Kaufman Foundation
Cindy Miscikowski / The Ring-Miscikowski Foundation / The Ring Foundation
Tina and Jerry Moss / Moss Foundation
Fredric Roberts
Mimi Song
$100,000–$999,999
Helen and Peter Bing
Dorothy Buffum Chandler Program Fund
Tammy and Eric Gustavson
The Herb Alpert Foundation
Freya and Mark Ivener
Anita Mann Kohl and Allen D Kohl
Terri and Jerry Kohl
Alexandra Seros and Bruni Ulloa
Marie H. Song
Estate of Roberta Turkat
Alyce de Roulet Williamson
$50,000–$99,999
Gregory Adams
Anonymous
Judith and Thomas Beckmen
Chan Soon-Shiong Family Foundation
Edgerton Foundation
Marcia Israel Foundation
Marc and Eva Stern Foundation
Linda L. Pierce
Julia Strickland and Timothy Wahl
Jennifer and Steven Walske
Kurt and Susan Wegleitner
$25,000–$49,999
Kathy and Charles Adams
Jane Arnault-Factor
Clarence Avant
Susan Baumgarten
Pamela and Dennis Beck
Helen Funai Erickson
Shelby and Greg Geyer
Erika and Jeff Hill
I.N. and Susanna H. Van Nuys Foundation
Dr. Susan Kendall
Marla and Cary Lefton
Lily Lee and Tom Chang
LSMK Investments
Susan M. and Steven F. Matt
Beth and Leslie Michelson
Darrell Miller
Teresita and Shelby Notkin
The Estate of Robert W. Olsen
Rose and Michael Pagano
Nan Rae
Melissa and Alex Romain
Wendy and Ken Ruby
Lisa See and Richard Kendall
Johnese Spisso and Ross Hartling
Hope Landis Warner
Wendy and Jay Wintrob
$10,000–$24,999
Charlene Achki-Repko
The Albert Parvin Foundation
Donna Altmann
Jill Baldauf and Steven Grossman
Barnard College
The Berry Gordy Family Foundation
JoAnn and Wayland Bourne
Claire and Brad Brian
Louise and John Bryson
Walter and Ruth Chameides
Ana and Robert Cook
Estate of Elizabeth H. Dailey
Estate of Herbert Mayer Berk
Richard Ferry
Patricia F.
Joan A. Friedman, PhD and Robert N. Braun, M.D.
Harold & Mimi Steinberg
Charitable Trust
Mira Hashmall, Esq.
Joan Herman and Richard Rasiej
Jane Jelenko
Cynthia Watson, M.D. and David B. Katzin, M.D., Ph.D.
Jill and Curtis Kaufman
Jackie and Gerald Kehle
Kathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall
Carol and Patrick Kinsella
Kent Kresa
Dr. Debra Luftman and Mr. Harlan Gibbs
Maria V. Altmann Foundation
Max Factor Family Foundation
Liz Levitt Hirsch
Muriel F. Siebert Foundation
Olivia and Anthony Neece
Chad Olsen and Brian Duck
Cynthia M. Patton
Karen Kay Platt and Lawrence B. Platt
Marie Queen
Rollin A. Ransom Esq
Judith Reichman, M.D.
Beverly Ryder
Lisa Specht
Cathy Stone
Bradley Tabach-Bank and Dee Dee Dorskind
Maynard and Linda Brittan/ Traub-Brittan Family Foundation
Sue Tsao
Ana Valdez
Paul and Liza Wachter
Seth Weingarten and Lynne Silbert
Mary Ann Weisberg and Bryce Perry Foundation
David J Wetman
Janis and William Wetsman/ The Wetsman Foundation
Iris M. Whiting
Robert Willett
Keenan and Orna Wolens
Laura-Lee Woods
$5,000–$9,999
Anonymous
Terri and Timothy Childs
Michael Dreyer
Lisa Field
Bobbi and Henry Fields
Laura C. Guthman
Suzanne and Richard Kayne
Edward Lazarus and Amanda Moose
June Li
Anita Lorber
MaddocksBrown Foundation
Diane G. Medina
David Minning and Diane Wittenberg
Thomas Weinberger and Leslie Vermut
$1,000–$4,999
Stanley and Joan Abrams
Aileen Adams
Thano A. Adamson
Addison Square Garden
Henning Andersen and Mary Pottala
Linda and Richard Adler
Keith and Ingrid Agre
Geraldine Alden
Steve and Barbara Allen
Barr Foundation
Barry Baker
Howard Banchik
Paul N. Barkopoulos, M.D.
Josephine Baurac
David Bender
Leigh Lindsey and Andrew Blaine
Irene and Stuart Boyd
Geri Brawerman
Darrell R. Brown
Burnand-Partridge Foundation
Reynolds Cafferata
Fanya Carter
Rose Chan and Warren Loui Household
Annie Chu
Margaret Sheehy Collins
Donors from 7-01-2022 through 08-25-2023
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P21
The Music Center strives to acknowledge all our supporters appropriately. If your name has been misspelled or omitted from this list in error, please contact the Advancement Office at (213) 972-3333.
The Music Center Thanks Its Supporters
INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILY FOUNDATIONS Continued
$1,000–$4,999 (CONT.)
Janet Cooper
Marilyn and Don Conlan
Alice Coulombe
Sharon and Gray Davis
Christina and Emmanuel Di Donna
Jennifer Diener
Mark Dipaola
Laura Donnelley
Dody Dorn and Kevin Hughes
Malsi Doyle and Michael R. Forman
Constance B. Elliot
Don and Jackie Feinstein
Malsi Doyle and Michael R. Forman
Susan Friedman
Diane Futterman
Leslie and Frederick Gaylord
Patricia Glaser and Sam Mudie
Larry Gold
Roslyn and Abner Goldstine
Kelly and Louis Gonda
Helen Gordon
Stuart and Adrienne Green
Paul Greenberg
Cynthia Griffin
Agnes Grohs
Leonie Gross
Marcy Gross
Cornelia Haag-Molkenteller, M.D.
Penny Haberman
Lisa and Steven Hansen
Claire and Robert Heron
Christine M. Hessler
Fritz Hoelscher
AC Hoffing
Katinka and Eugene Holt
Douglas Honig and Monique Gingold
Bonnie Oda Homsey and Philip R. Homsey II
Louise Horvitz
Joan Hotchkis
Nancy Huang-Sommer
Mary Ann Hunt-Jacobsen
Natsuo Kawada
Sandra Krause and William Fitzgerald
Rhonda Leal
The Bob Hope Legacy
Robert Iger and Willow Bay
Ana Iglesias
William H. Isacoff, M.D.
Tomoko Iwakawa
Judith Jenkins
Ruth Jervis
Randi and Richard Jones
Ruth M. Jones
Mary Ann Rosenfeld Kadish and Sheldon Kadish
Linda and David Kagel
Natsuo Kawada
James Kelly
Barbara and Richard Kernochan
Jay Kinn and Jules Vogel
Sandra Krause and William Fitzgerald/Strauss Foundation
Vivian Krepack
Kathleen and John Lacey
Rosanne Lapan
Carl W. Large
Rhonda Leal
Stephen Lee
Dr. Melvyn Lewis
Joanne and Ethan Lipsig
Anslyene Lloyd
Marlene and Sandy Louchheim
Lillian Lovelace
Maureen and Robert Lucas
Paula Marcus
Pauline Marks
Brian H. Martin
Julie McDonald
Beth McGlynn and James Zapp
Scott McKenney
Linda and Sheldon Mehr
Patricia Miller
Kathy and Michael Moray
Renae Williams Niles and Greg Niles
Michael I. Nissman
Frank O'Dea
Alan Oppenheimer
Robert Pagnotta
Ellen Pansky
Michael and Susan Patzakis
Rosalyn Laudati and James Pick
Debbie Powell
Travis Powers & Jeanne McDonald-Powers
The Present Family Foundation
David Richard Pullman
Leslie Raffel and Robert Wemischer
Paula Reach
Ellen Regenstreif
Freddie and Kathleen Reiss
Jennifer Revit
Dr. Richard Rho and Mr. Steven DeMille
Hadley and Lee Rierson
Julia M. Ritter
Robert and Maureen Lucas Family Foundation
Ann and Robert Ronus
Jaclyn Rosenberg
Laura and James Rosenwald
Helene Rosenzweig, M.D.
Mimi Rotter
Linda and Tony Rubin
Nancy Lee Ruyter
Desiree and Joel Samuels
Carol Saikhon
Ariane & Lionel Sauvage
Maxine Savitz
Mariette and Alexander Sawchuk
Bob and Helene Schacter
Sherie and Alan Schneider
Shelly and Mark Scott
Stanley E. Sellers, Jr.
David Shaw and Sheila Blackwell
Joan Snyder
Catharine and Jeffrey Soros
Lev L Spiro
Rick Stone
I.H. Sutnick
Kristan and Philip A. Swan
Joanne Takahashi
Barbara Augusta Teichert
Charles and Geneva Thornton/ Thornton Foundation
William and Jessica Turner
Andrea Van de Kamp
Estevan Vasquez
Laurie Vender and Stephen Halper
Daniel and Janice Wallace
Marcia and Charles Wasserman
Doris Weitz and Alexander Williams III
John White
Susan and Josh Wieder
Hashim Williams
Donald Wing and Bonnie Nash
Kaitlyn R. Wuensch
Ellen and Arnold Zetcher
Rosanne J. Ziering
Susan Zolla
The Music Center strives to acknowledge all our supporters appropriately. If your name has been misspelled or omitted from this list in error, please contact the Advancement Office at (213) 972-3333.
CORPORATIONS, FOUNDATIONS AND GOVERNMENT
$1,000,000 AND ABOVE
The Ahmanson Foundation
County of Los Angeles
U.S. Small Business Administration
$100,000–$999,999
California Arts Council
The Hearst Foundations
The Herb Alpert Foundation
The Music Center Foundation
The Ralph M. Parsons Foundation
The Rosalinde & Arthur Gilbert Foundation
$50,000–$99,999
The Annenberg Foundation
The Capital Group Companies
Bank of America / Dannielle Campos
City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs
Dwight Stuart Youth Fund
Entravision Communications Corporation
Genesis Inspiration Foundation
Los Angeles County Department of Arts and Culture
Max H. Gluck Foundation
$25,000–$49,999
The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation
PMG LLP / Greg Geyer
The Louis and Harold Price Foundation
Porsche
The Robert Nelson Foundation
California Urban Housing, LLC
Edward A. and Ai O. Shay Family Foundation
U.S. Bank / Carl Jordan
$10,000–$24,999
California Wellness Foundation
Colburn Foundation
David Geffen Foundation
Edison International
Fox Rothschild LLP / Darrell D. Miller
HUB International Insurance Services, Inc.
The Kenneth T. and Eileen L. Norris Foundation
The Liberty Company Insurance Brokers
The Lucille Ellis Simon Foundation
Macy’s Munger Tolles & Olson LLP Foundation
National Endowment for the Arts
The Sidley Austin Foundation
Sony Pictures Entertainment
W. M. Keck Foundation
$5,000–$9,999
Downtown Works Los Angeles
Kaiser Permanente
Pasadena Showcase House for the Arts
Sidney Stern Memorial Trust
$1,000–$4,999
Anthem Blue Cross
Breslauer, Rutman & Anderson Inc.
Friars Charitable Foundation
Central City Association of LA
IATSE - Local 33
Justin Construction
Rodriguez, Horii, Choi & Cafferata LLP
M.J. Hellmuth Plumbing, Inc.
Pro One Stage Productions
SJM Industrial Radio
Structured Assets Sales LLC
Sunrise Window Cleaners, Inc.
Weingart Foundation
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P23
Photo by John McCoy for The Music Center. Special thanks to our donors who wish to remain anonymous.
Donors from 7-01-2022 through 08-25-2023
BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES
Support from the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors plays an invaluable role in the successful operation of The Music Center.
P24 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
Hilda L. Solis Supervisor, First District
Janice Hahn Chair, Fourth District
Kathryn Barger Supervisor, Fifth District
Holly J. Mitchell Supervisor, Second District
Lindsey P. Horvath Chair Pro Tem, Third District
Nov 1 –Nov 26 by
LAWRENCE
ROBERT E. LEE Directed by MICHAEL MICHETTI pasadenaplayhouse.org | 626-356-PLAY | Tickets start at $35 OCTOBER 6 – 29 EL PORTAL THEATRE elportaltheatre.com STARRING JOBETH WILLIAMS PETER STRAUSS Ruıns the PAPAZIAN HIRSCH ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTS
JEROME
and
DESIGN
INSIDE-OUT
BassamFellows introduces a sleek new indoor-outdoor collection to complement an entire portfolio reflecting the company’s “Craftsman Modern” aesthetic.
FURNITURE MANUFACTURER BassamFellows is headquartered near the architecturally notable community of New Canaan, Connecticut, where the Bauhaus movement took root in America and the site of Philip Johnson’s iconic Glass House. The “Craftsman Modern” aesthetic developed by Australian architect Craig Bassam and American creative director Scott Fellows suits Los Angeles, whose residential heritage is shaped by both traditional and contemporary styles.
“For us, Louis Kahn is a continual source of inspiration,” says Bassam. “He mixed traditional materials like brick, stone and wood with modern materials such as glass, concrete and steel for the perfect balance of opposites." Bassam notes that the architect’s projects were extremely detail-oriented.
Says Fellows of the Tractor Stool, the partners’ first signature product, “We liked the functionality of the tractor seat, designed over 100 years ago to provide comfort without the need for a back."
18 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE JOE FLETCHER PHOTOGRAPHY. LEFT, COURTESY BASSAMFELLOWS
Scott Fellows and Craig Bassam. Right, Rail collection of indoor-outdoor furniture by BassamFellows
/ by roger grody /
The idea of reimagining the tractor seat was not original, but Bassam and Fellows were the first to artistically carve it from a solid block of wood. Their stillpopular Tractor Stool represents that elusive balancing of opposites: minimal design versus traditional, warm materials; handcraftsmanship versus industrial production; functionalist simplicity versus meticulous detail.
The new Rail collection from BassamFellows was originally designed for a pool pavilion in New Canaan, but the indoor-outdoor lifestyle it accommodates has
greater utility in L.A. Rail system pieces are framed in horizontal planes (“rails”), available in iroko, a durable African hardwood. The furniture is upholstered in a hemp-based performance fabric—UV-resistant as well as soft to the touch—from a 150-year-old Italian mill.
“Rail is rooted in the Arts & Crafts movement, but is lighter, more sculptural and more pared down, continuing our commitment to our minimal artisanal vision of 'Craftsman Modern,’” explains Bassam. The collection represents a high-performance solution to the need to
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE 19
endure outdoor elements, whether Northeast rains or, in Southern California, the scorching sun. “Rail is the perfect anchor to any space, creating a balance of architectural rigor with sculptural, organic silhouettes.”
The firm is obsessed with handcraftsmanship, Fellows says. “For all of our products, we slow things down and return to something ... more considered, which takes a little bit more time.” Its rare calf leather from France is sourced from a tannery with a 16th-century heritage.
The Daybed, another BassamFellows signature, is partially inspired by daybeds from Mies van der Rohe, Charlotte Perriand and Hans Wegner, the partners’ modernist heroes. “Ours is distinguished by a solid wood frame by expert cabinetmakers using buttersoft leathers from the finest tanneries in Scandinavia,” Fellows explains.
A Wood Frame Lounge series was originally designed for British Airways’ first-class lounges. Its deconstructed traditional lounge seating exposes wood frames that suggest fine cabinetry and thin, layered cushions for comfort.
“We think a lot about who we’re designing for—and ultimately, we design products for ourselves,” says Bassam. “In doing so, we’ve found many other likeminded people who appreciate the beauty of proportion, meticulous craftsmanship and high-quality materials.”
BassamFellows furniture is available locally at the eponymous showroom/atelier of designer Una Malan in the La Cienega Design Quarter.
BassamFellows, bassamfellows.com. Una Malan, 800 N. La Cienega Blvd., L.A., 310.734.7077, unamalan.com
20 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
JOE FLETCHER PHOTOGRAPHY DESIGN
Daybed by BassamFellows inspired by midcentury masters
Sun Oct 22 | 7pm Anoushka Shankar Quintet Aparna Ramaswamy’s Ananta, The Eternal Thu Nov 2 | 8pm Joshua Henry’s GET UP, STAND UP! Thu Nov 9 | 8pm Midori with Festival Strings Lucerne CHOOSE ANY 3 OR MORE CONCERTS TO MIX & MATCH YOUR SEASON! Sat Oct 14 | 8pm Lila Downs DOS CORAZONES DÍA DE MUERTOS
A NEW NOTE
Asterid, in the former Patina space at Walt Disney Concert Hall, reflects the constant evolution of L.A.
Innovative chef Ray Garcia's Asterid inherited the coveted space long occupied by celebrated Patina at Walt Disney Concert Hall last year; closed by the pandemic, Joachim Splichal's fine-dining spot never reopened. Asterid offers an entirely different set of merits.
BA Collective (formerly Belzberg Architects), the original designers of Patina, returned to reconfigure the dining room for a new chef and a new attitude. The result is a stripped-down but seductively illuminated space whose floor-to-
ceiling windows make it feel more connected to the Grand Avenue scene than the cloistered sanctuary of Patina.
Further connecting Asterid to the streetscape is a wraparound patio steps above the sidewalk, providing very pleasant alfresco dining amid spectacular downtown views.
A curvilinear bar, encountered immediately upon entering, suggests that this is a place where a mezcal cocktail may be more appropriate than a first-growth Bordeaux. Gone is the crisp white linen, revealing
simple polished wood table surfaces with flickering amber flames.
The classically trained Garcia is best known for downtown’s muchlamented Broken Spanish, which offered a refined Mexican-inspired cuisine, and the also defunct B.S. Taqueria. His ¡Viva! in Las Vegas further establishes the chef’s expansive, contemporary approach to Mexican-American cuisine.
Garcia’s menu at Asterid is also informed by his Mexican heritage, but in quintessential L.A. fashion, it transcends the Americas to also
22 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
dining. / by roger grody /
FRANK WONHO LEE
DINING
Asterid at Walt Disney Concert Hall
FALL/WINTER SEASON
MUSIC / OCT 1
Stephanie J. Block & Seth Rudetsky
DANCE / OCT 6-7
BODYTRAFFIC
THEATER | FAMILY / OCT 7
It’s Ok To Be DifferentStories By Todd Parr
MUSIC / OCT 14
Michael Feinstein:
Liza & Vincente Minnelli:
The Music, The Movies, The Magic
FAMILY / OCT 14
Family Fest
MUSIC / OCT 19
Sandra Bernhard
TSR / OCT 19-28
The Sorting Room
MUSIC / OCT 27-28
Pacific Jazz Orchestra
FEAT. LEDISI & Ben Wendel
THEATER | FAMILY / OCT 29
Sugar Skull! A Dia De Muertos Musical Adventure!
All Tickets Now On Sale Starting At Only $10!
THEWALLIS.ORG
L.A.’S CULTURAL DESTINATION
Sandra Bernhard
encompass culinary influences from the Mediterranean to Japan.
The menu’s shareable dishes change periodically. Recent small plates included a memorable chicken liver mousse topped with pickled mustard seeds, nectarines, pearl onions and crunchy bits of fried chicken skin, accompanied by thick slices of grilled sourdough. Caviar
Bites brings an artistically plated trio of honeynut squash tamal disks also topped with crema.
Garcia’s risotto—carnaroli rice stained a dramatic purple by red beets and garnished with golden beets, crème fraîche and dill—is luxurious but not heavy. Feathery maitake mushrooms—coated in potato starch and lightly fried, plated with a dollop of aioli vibrantly transformed by turmeric—are addictive.
A perfectly cooked branzino is topped with fennel, preserved lemon and salsa Veracruz and presented in a pool of smooth, smoky romesco sauce. True to Garcia’s approach, the dish celebrates Mediterranean flavors with a coastal Mexican accent. Other entrees include a lamb shank plated with garbanzo beans and ancho chile sauce and an impressively bronzed half chicken with Tuscan kale and salsa verde.
Desserts of choice include a dark-chocolate budino layered with whipped ricotta and a coconut cream-infused rose-rice pudding with passion fruit.
The Euro-California wine list includes a value-priced Costantina Sotelo Albariño from Spain, a loftier Henri Gouges premiere-cru Burgundy from Nuits-Saint-Georges and trendy “orange” wines from Slovenia and the Czech Republic.
Cocktails include intriguingly “reimagined” martinis and El Zocalo, with mezcal, passion fruit, campari, yellow chartreuse and habanero.
Asterid cannot compete with nostalgic memories of Patina—but it doesn't need to. The restaurant is striking beautiful new notes at Disney Hall all its own.
Disney Hall, 141 S. Grand Ave., downtown, 213.972.3535, asteridla.com
24 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE PHOTOS JIM SULLIVAN DINING
El Zocalo mezcal cocktail, chicken-liver mousse and, below, half chicken at Asterid.
LUX
The Music of Morten Lauridsen & Billy Childs
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18 AT 2PM
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 19 AT 7PM
MORTEN LAURIDSEN Lux Aeterna
BILLY CHILDS In the Arms of the Beloved* WORLD PREMIERE
In the spellbinding and rapturing Lux Aeterna, Lauridsen created a rich and intensely moving work that sparked a renaissance of choral music throughout the world. Paired with this masterpiece is the world premiere of In the Arms of the Beloved by Billy Childs – one of the world’s most celebrated jazz pianists and composers – performed by the brilliant violin virtuoso Anne Akiko Meyers along with the Chorale debuts of the Billy Childs Jazz/Chamber Ensemble and The Lyris Quartet.
PICTURED: SHARON CHOHI KIM, ALTO
*This program is made possible by generous support from The Susan Erburu Reardon and George Reardon Commissioning Fund.
ANNE AKIKO MEYERS, VIOLIN
LAMASTERCHORALE.ORG | 213-972-7282 TICKETS
START AT $45
Bond Furs ANNUAL PRIVATE SALE
/CONTINUED FROM PAGE 15
Austin-born music director of Pacific Symphony since 1990. “The West is known for its inventiveness. It’s in its creative juices, which do have a particular flair.”
The Pacific Symphony’s festival offering is called “California Dreamin’,” a program that aims to celebrate the state’s legacy of experimentation and free-spirited artistry and features a new composition by Berkeley composer Gabriella Smith.
Grant Gershon, California native and Los Angeles Master Chorale artistic director, said, “There’s a certain sense of artistic freedom in California and the West Coast in general that has influenced music across the United States, and around the world now.”
The festival features 172 works composed in the last five years, including 32 premieres. The L.A. Master Chorale and
Gershon present one of the premieres, In the Arms of the Beloved by jazz pianist Billy Childs, who was born in Los Angeles. What Gershon called the California ethos has permeated all musical genres, he said.
“A lot of it has to do with the polyglot complexity of communities that make up Los Angeles, San Francisco, the urban centers, the West Coast in general,” Gershon said.
“There are so many different histories, so many different stories, so many different experiences that people are bringing with them to California.”
Such layered stories are explored in American Railroad, a roots-music work to be performed by the Silkroad ensemble in eight California cities including San Diego, Aliso Viejo and Northridge.
With American Railroad, Silkroad and artistic director Rhiannon Giddens explore the impact
SATURDAY & SUNDAY DECEMBER 7 th & 8 th 626.471.9912 bondfurs.com 114 W. Lime Ave, Monrovia, CA 91016 Custom Designed or Ready Made Garments, Alterations, Restyling, Storage, Cleaning & Glazing.
THIS PAGE AND OPPOSITE, COURTESY THE ARTISTS
L.A.-born jazz pianist Billy Childs, composer of In the Arms of the Beloved. Opposite: Berkeley composer Gabriella Smith.
FEATURE 26 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
the African American, Chinese, Indigenous and Irish communities had on the creation of the U.S. Transcontinental Railroad connecting the East Coast to California.
Also making several stops will be the multiyear series “Fragments” from cellist Alisa Weilerstein, who lives part-time in San Diego with her husband, the San Diego Symphony’s Payare.
“Fragments” weaves movements of Bach’s solo cello suites with works by 27 composers commissioned by Weilerstein. She performs “Fragments” at Walt Disney Concert Hall and at the Conrad in La Jolla as part of an international tour.
La Jolla Music Society, which often leans into new music, presents American Railroad and copresents “Fragments” with San Diego Symphony.
“It’s not always been easy to draw audiences to contemporary music,” said Leah Rosenthal, artistic director of La Jolla Music Society. But as the music has changed so has audience acceptance.
“For so long, there was
BEETHOVEN VIOLIN CONCERTO MARCH 23, 2024 FRANÇOIS LÓPEZ-FERRER conductor FRANCISCO FULLANA violin TCHAIKOVSKY PIANO CONCERTO NO. 1 FEBRUARY 17, 2024 KYLE DICKSON conductor WYNONA WANG piano RHAPSODY ON A THEME OF PAGANINI NOVEMBER 18, 2023 WARD STARE conductor NATASHA PAREMSKI piano BEETHOVEN EMPEROR JANUARY 27, 2024 KENSHO WATANABE conductor GEORGE LI piano VIVALDI FOUR SEASONS APRIL 20, 2024 LINHAN CUI conductor CHARLOTTE MARCKX violin TCHAIKOVSKY 4 OCTOBER 21, 2023 BRETT MITCHELL conductor DIANA ADAMYAN violin 626.793.7172 | PASADENASYMPHONY-POPS.ORG AT AMBASSADOR AUDITORIUM 23 24 SEASON violin Cla ic Music’s Gre
Hits
t
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE 27
an idea of what new music sounded like,” she said. “It was atonal. Now it’s anything goes, from the most tonal beautiful melodies to still challenging sounds.
“It’s a work in progress and our audiences are ... more open to hearing and experiencing new music.”
Contemporary music might not first come to mind when one thinks of chamber music, the heart of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra.
“We’re nerds in the Baroque classical space and we’re excited to celebrate that nerdiness,” said LACO managing director Ricky Dean McWain. “So are our patrons.”
Yet LACO is so dedicated to championing contemporary composers that it has a club for audience members called South Investment; donors join to underwrite an annual commission by a composer from Los Angeles or with ties to the city.
Its program during the festival is a prime example of how LACO weaves traditional and new music. Traces, a violin concerto by Nina C. Young, makes its world premiere paired with symphonies by C.P.E. Bach and Felix Mendelssohn.
The new work by Young, associate professor of composition at the USC Thornton School of Music, is a LACO co-commission with the Philadelphia Orchestra.
FEATURE AN UPSCALE BOUTIQUE SIZES 12 UP 13606 VENTURA BLVD. SHERMAN OAKS 818.990.6128 AbundancePlusSizes.com Background art by Vecteezy “a wondrously conceived production, and a marvellous visual feast.” –The Quinntessential Review broadstage.org Akram Khan Company’s Jungle Book reimagined US Premiere October 26-28, 2023
28 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
LA Opera, a guardian for another art form that relies on a traditional cannon, infuses contemporary work into all aspects of its programming, said Christopher Koelsch, president and CEO.
This season, that includes El último sueño de Frida y Diego (“The Last Dream of Frida and Diego”), a new opera by Gabriela Lena Frank, a Californian, and Nilo Cruz.
Since its premiere a year ago, Frida y Diego has been, Koelsch said, “a monster hit for both San Diego and for San Francisco.”
An opera about the relationship between artists Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera could have been paint-by-numbers, but Frank and Cruz created something much more interesting, Koelsch said.
“I found the experience both aesthetically and spiritually deeply moving. It’s an unconventional structure and it’s an unconventional opera that people have found to be quite delightful.”
It’s scheduled for six performances at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion that overlap with the California Festival.
“I’m thrilled and delighted at the kismet that the two things lined up so, so perfectly,” Koelsch said.
In his 11 years running LA Opera, Koelsch said
GREAT VIOLINISTS OF OUR ERA
DIMENSIONS: HADELICH + MENDELSSOHN
Augustin Hadelich VIOLIN
Jaime Martín CONDUCTOR
OCT 21 | ALEX THEATRE
OCT 22 | ROYCE HALL
PATHWAYS: KOH + KAHANE
Jennifer Koh VIOLIN
Jeffrey Kahane
CONDUCTOR LAUREATE
NOV 11 | ALEX THEATRE
NOV 12 | ROYCE HALL
VISIONS TETZLAFF + BRAHMS
Christian Tetzlaff VIOLIN
Jaime Martín CONDUCTOR
DEC 9 | ALEX THEATRE
DEC 10 | ROYCE HALL GET
TICKETS AT LACO.ORG
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE 29
FEATURE
he has seen the audience appetite for new music grow exponentially. He gives much credit to Salonen, who made contemporary work essential during his association with the LA Phil.
“Esa-Pekka pretty much single-handedly created this marketplace for audiences for the reception of new music,” Koelsch said. “He was really the person who blew up that old model of how a symphonic program would go.”
As Salonen changed audience expectations at the LA Phil, LA Opera’s contemporary programming benefited.
“I feel like I inherited the mantle of a marketplace that he had created,” Koelsch said.
“Audiences are voting with their feet and with their wallets. They are signaling to us that they are as interested in contemporary artists as they are in the existing canon.”
The 95 organizations taking part in the festival are to one degree or another building back after the post-pandemic slowdowns.
“My hope,” McWain said, “is that a series of events like this with overlapping audiences is a boon for audience development and ... a return home for patrons of the arts.”
YOU’RE HERE. Congrats, You’ve Picked a Great Performance! Check out the interactive version of this theater program magazine and enjoy even more insight into the performers, creative talent and theater activities that are behind it all. It’s the new way to read the program, it’s LINKS TO PERFORMERS’ SOCIAL MEDIA ACCOUNTS UNDERSTUDY UPDATES UPCOMING SHOWS AND CONCERTS AROUND TOWN MULTI-MEDIA PRESENTATIONS ABOUT THE PERFORMANCE. THEATER SUPPORT OPPORTUNITIES INSIDER SCOOPS FROM THEATER AND MUSIC PROFESSIONALS We’re by your side so your loved one can stay at home. Call (626) 486-0800 or visit HomeInstead.com/479 • PERSONAL CARE • MEALS & NUTRITION • MEMORY CARE • SPECIALTY CARE
2023
HCO 194700130
Each Home Instead® office is an independently owned and operated franchise of Home Instead, Inc.,an Honor Company. ©
Home
Instead, Inc.
30 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
Los Angeles Jewish Health...Energizing Senior Life! • Independent Living • Assisted Living • Senior Behavioral Health • Short-Term Rehabilitation • Skilled Nursing • PACE • Hospice & Palliative Care • Nursing School • Geriatric Health • Memory Care Nonprofit Los Angeles Jewish Health, formerly Los Angeles Jewish Home, is committed to excellence in senior care for all. Our comprehensive selection of living options and awardwinning care meets seniors where they are in life, providing individualized services focused on mind, body, and spirit. Scan Me! Call (855) 227-3745 or go to LAJH.org Best Performance ...By A Realtor In The South Bay Lauren Forbes CEO / Founder 310.901.8512 lauren@laurenforbes.com laurenforbesgroup.com DRE 01295248 $1B+ Career Sales Volume Compass is a real estate broker licensed by the State of California and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. License Number 01991628, 01527235, 1527365. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only and is compiled from sources deemed reliable but has not been verified. Changes in price, condition, sale or withdrawal may be made without notice. No statement is made as to accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footage are approximate. WHERE TO EAT • SHOP • GO S CAL PULSE .COM SOAK IN SCENIC SOCAL EXPLORE NOW
reprogrammed !
Performances Magazine unveils a digital program platform for shows and concerts
SEARCH Find whatever it is you want to know—easily.
SIGN IN
Link to your performing-arts companies and venues.
CONTRIBUTORS
NO RUSTLING PAGES, no killing trees . . . Of all the innovations to have come out of the pandemic, the new Performances program platform, accessed on any digital device, may be least likely to disappear in the foreseeable future. Not only had its time come—it had been long overdue.
Performances provides the programs for 20 SoCal performingarts organizations, from the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the Ahmanson to San Diego Opera, where the app made its debut.
The touchless platform provides cast and player bios, donor and season updates and arts-centric features. Audiences receive a link and code word that instantly activate the app; QR codes are posted, too.
Screens go dark when curtains rise and return with the house lights. Updates—repertory changes, understudy substitutions, significant donations—can be made right up to showtime, no inserts necessary.
Other features include video and audio streams, translations and expanded biographies.
WHAT’S ON
What’s coming at a glance and ticket information.
For those who consider printed programs keepsakes, a limited number, as well as commemorative issues for special events, continue to be produced. Collectibles!
Meanwhile, there is less deforestation, consumption of petroleum inks and programs headed for landfills. For the ecologically minded, the platform gets a standing ovation.
Theaters and concert halls reopened after a long intermission. Stages are live, the excitement is back. Activate your link and enjoy the shows. —CALEB WACHS
COURTESY L.A. PHIL PARTING THOUGHT
REGISTER Stay arts-engaged, access past programs.
THE ESSENTIALS Acts, scenes, synopses, repertory and notes.
Donors and sponsors who make it all possible—you!
THE PLAYERS Bios and background for cast, crew and creators.
32 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
DROP DOWN MENU Table of app contents.
Affiliated real estate agents are independent contractor sales associates, not employees. ©2023 Coldwell Banker. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker logo are trademarks of Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. The Coldwell Banker® System is comprised of company owned offices which are owned by a subsidiary of Anywhere Advisors LLC and franchised offices which are independently owned and operated. The Coldwell Banker System fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. 239521-DC_GLA_9/23 ALWAYS LIKED THESE LYRICS: “You can’t buy happiness, but you can buy dirt. Find the one you can’t live without. Do what you love, but call it work.” Jade Mills 310.285.7508 | homes@jademills.com CalRE #00526877