Performances Magazine | Segerstrom Center for the Arts, April 2023

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SEGERSTROM HALL:

Dorrance Dance

April 8 | DANCE

SAMUELI THEATER:

Emerson String Quartet

April 15 | CHAMBER

Jason Robert Brown

April 27–29 | CABARET

RENÉE AND HENRY SEGERSTROM CONCERT HALL:

Dream House Quartet

April 28 | CHAMBER

APRIL 2023 Scan for Digital Program

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2 SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS APRIL 2023 Contents 6 Welcome From the Chairwoman of the Board and the President 7 Calendar of Events 8 A universal story... with all that jazz 10 Supporting generations of dancers 12 Henry T. Segerstrom Centennial 2023 14 No auditions for this Broadway role Kids love Five Days of Broadway summer camp P1 Program Cast, performances, who’s who, program notes and more 18 Make the Center your laboratory The Beckman Arts and Science Family Festival has family fun for everyone 10 Not your usual Shakespeare LA Dance Project brings a fresh perspective to Romeo and Juliet 12 The Gospel truth Alonzo King LINES Ballet returns to the Center 20 Donors Thank you to our supporters 32 Center staff
Beckman Arts & Science Family Festival Photo: Jeremy Daniel

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Dear Friends,

As the largest arts community in Orange County, we strive to create a fun and enriching space for everyone. We have been diligently planning to bring you a wide array of entertainment so that you can welcome spring with endless excitement and love for the arts. With our abundance of shows this month, you are sure to find something you’ll love and cherish. For music lovers, we have a celebration of music by Dream House Quartet, Emerson String Quartet, and a special Orange County performance by legendary cellist Yo-Yo Ma presented by our resident company, Philharmonic Society of Orange County. Dorrance Dance will undoubtedly fascinate dance lovers with a unique experience displaying the powerful legacy of tap dance. If you’d like to be the one dancing, Tuesday Night Dance returns this month for free! And making his Center debut, Jason Robert Brown brings his theatrical songs and orchestrations to Samueli Theater.

For the family, Grimmz Fairy Tales will feature a retelling of your favorite, classic fairy tales through hip-hop. And Broadway fanatics will appreciate the beloved story of Hairspray, Broadway’s Tony Award-winning musical comedy phenomenon. At the Center, the arts are something for everyone to enjoy!

Casey Reitz President

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Jane Fujishige Yada, Chairwoman of the Board

Casey Reitz, President

David H. Troob*, Treasurer

Sally S. Crockett*, Secretary

Wylie A. Aitken

Julia Argyros

Bart Asner

Jesse Bagley

Marta S. Bhathal

Deborah Bridges

Mark Chan

Sandy Segerstrom Daniels

James A. Driscoll*

Moti Ferder

John C. Garrett

John Ginger*

Jackie Glass

Carole Haes Landon

Wendy Hales

Lawrence M. Higby*

Betty Huang

Molly Jolly

Roger T. Kirwan*

Karla Kraft

Shanaz Langson

William F. Meehan*

Britt Meyer

Ethan F. Morgan*

Rick J. Muth*

Walter Parsadayan

Mark C. Perry*

John Phelan*

Chris Rommel*

Elizabeth Segerstrom

Steve Sherline

Stewart R. Smith*

Tony Smith

Steven M. Sorenson, M.D.

Connie Spenuzza

John E. Stratman, Jr.

Samuel Tang

Kelly Thomson

Gaddi H. Vasquez*

Jaynine Warner

Carol L. Wilken*

Henry T. Segerstrom,± Founding Chairman

DIRECTORS EMERITUS

Anthony A. Allen

Pat Poss±

Timothy L. Strader

* Member of Executive Committee ± in memoriam

RESIDENT COMPANIES

John Evans, Chairman, Pacific Symphony

John Flemming, Chair & CEO, Philharmonic Society

Craig Springer, Chairman, Pacific Chorale

ARTS SUPPORTERS

Susan Condrey, Chair, The Guilds of the Center

Laraine Eggleston, President, Angels of the Arts

Lupe Erwin, Chair, Arts and Business Leadership Council

Gloria Kern, President, The Center Stars

Cindy Ramirez, Chair, The Center Docents

6 SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Welcome
Photo: Todd Rosenberg

Calendar of events

May 2023

Tuesday Night Dance: Hula

May 2, 9, 16, 23, 30 | FREE

Music of the Rolling Stones

May 5–6 | POPS

Beckman Arts and Science

Family Festival

May 6 | FAMILY FUN

Look Out!

Science Is Coming!

May 6–7 | FAMILY

The Concert— A Tribute to ABBA

May 6 | SPECIAL EVENT

Gershwin’s Rhapsody

May 11–13 |

LA Dance Project

Romeo & Juliet

Suite

May 12–14 | DANCE

Rhapsody in Blue

May 14 | CLASSICAL

Chicago

May 16–21 | BROADWAY

Price & Haydn

May 20 | CLASSICAL

Plaza Prom

May 27 | FUN FOR ALL

Alonzo King Lines

Lines 40th

May 27 | DANCE

June 2023

Grieg Piano Concerto

June 1–3 | CLASSICAL

Summer Sounds

June 2, 9, 16 | FREE

Hansel and Gretel:

Opera for Kids

June 3 | FAMILY

Ballet BC

June 3 | DANCE

Organ Virtuoso

Christopher Houlihan

June 4 | ORGAN

Tuesday Night Dance

June 6, 13, 20, 27 | FREE

Renee Elise Goldsberry

June 9–10 | POPS

Six

June 13–25 | BROADWAY

Cathedrals of Sound

June 15–17 | CLASSICAL

Silent Disco

June 23 | FUN FOR ALL

An Evening with Brian Stokes Mitchell

June 23 | HEADLINERS

Veronica Swift

June 24 | JAZZ

Artists, events and dates subject to change; visit www.scfta.org for details and times. Segerstrom Hall • Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

Samueli Theater • Julianne and George Argyros Plaza

APRIL 2023 7
Photo: RJ Muna
SIX
Alonzo King Lines Ballet Photo: Joan Marcus

A universal story... and all that jazz

“MURDER, GREED, CORRUPTION, violence, exploitation, adultery and treachery.” That’s what Ben Brantley wrote in The New York Times about Chicago the Musical 20 years after a revival premiered. What more could a show want?

Chicago has it all, and 25 years after a reworking of the original show premiered, audiences still can’t get enough. Now it’s coming back to Segerstrom Center for one week only, May 16-21.

Chicago is still the musical with everything that makes Broadway shimmy-shake: a universal tale of fame, fortune, and all that jazz, with one show-stopping song after another and some of the most astonishing dancing you’ve ever seen.

The story itself has been in front of an audience for almost 100 years. The 1926 Chicago trial of a woman who was acquitted of shooting her husband dead was covered by a female reporter who, shortly after the trial ended, turned it into a stage play. The next year, famed film director Cecil B. DeMille made it into a silent movie. Another film version was made in the 1940s and starred Ginger Rogers.

But none of them had Bob Fosse’s distinctive choreography—later channeled through his close protégé Anne Reinking—that has become synonymous with Chicago Opening in 1975, the score was written by John Kander and Fred Ebb, and Ebb and Fosse wrote the book. In 1996 Reinking adapted Fosse’s choreography for a City Center Encores! concert staging, which was then expanded into a full production for a Broadway run. It was a hit, and Anne won a Tony for Best Choreography.

Today the show holds the record as the longest-running American musical in Broadway history. That history includes 6 Tony Awards®, 2 Olivier Awards, a Grammy®, and thousands of standing ovations. As “Roxie Hart” says, “I love the audience, and the audience loves me for loving them.”

As we celebrate the show’s 25th anniversary, you’ve got to come see why the name on everyone’s lips is still…CHICAGO

SEGERSTROM HALL

May 16–21 | Tickets start at $29

Chicago is presented with generous support from Omaha Steaks

8 SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Photo: Jeremy Daniel
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Supporting generations of dancers

DANCERS AT the American Ballet Theatre

William J. Gillespie School at Segerstrom Center for the Arts, who range in age from 3 to 18, are nothing if not dedicated. Upper Level pre-professional students take as many as four hours of class a day, six days a week. Even the tiniest dancers are eager to follow their teacher’s lead in the studio. But the cost of class tuition can be a substantial obstacle for some students who aspire to do a grand jeté across a real theater stage.

This is where the Pas de Deux Chapter of The Guilds of the Center comes in: The members are passionate about dance and the ABT Gillespie School. The chapter’s goals include raising scholarship funds for students as well as increasing public awareness and support for the school and its students. Without this assistance there would be young dancers who could not afford to attend. It also helps fund essential projects at the school, including special opportunities that enhance the students’ education such as master classes, guest artist classes and lectures, and costumes for performances.

The chapter is not only for parents and grandparents of students at the school but also ballet enthusiasts who want to help raise money and plan special events that generate funds and recognition for the school.

Every year, Pas de Deux members, donors, and guests are invited to attend Evening of Dance, an event that showcases the top levels of the school. This year it will be held on April 29 in the Judy Morr Theater. It’s a nice opportunity to mingle and

meet other school supporters and see some of the students perform. Attendees will hear from ABT school leadership and students, and our scholarship students also have an opportunity to shine and show their passion for dance.

The highlight is a beautiful production of dance pieces by the Upper Level pre-professional students that demonstrate their training. This is not just another recital. Guests can see for themselves the passion and talent these dancers bring to their art, and the importance of support to help continue to their dreams.

A membership in Pas de Deux includes many special privileges aimed at the ballet fan, such as exclusive access to observe select dress rehearsals of the professional touring companies that visit the Center and special members-only masterclasses and discussions. New members are always welcome! For more information, contact ocpasdedeux@gmail.com.

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Henry T. Segerstrom Centennial 2023

HENRY SEGERSTROM MADE a profound difference in the worlds of business and culture, setting the highest standards as a businessman, philanthropist, and arts patron.

He believed wholeheartedly in the incomparable power of the arts. This conviction, coupled with his constant drive for excellence, inspired him in creating a cosmopolitan center on what was once farmland in the heart of Orange County. South Coast Plaza led the way, opening in 1967. For Henry, this was just the beginning of his vision, which also included ambitious plans to make the arts central to the area.

In 1979 he commissioned the renowned artist Isamu Noguchi to create a 1.6-acre sculpture garden. Named California Scenario, the garden is widely recognized as one of Noguchi’s most important and quickly became one of the most significant public gardens in Southern California upon its opening in 1982. Other artists including Richard Serra, Richard Lippold, Joan Miró, Henry Moore, Jean Dubuffet, and Aiko Miyawaki were engaged over the years to add to this iconic work, creating a unique collection of publicly accessible works of art.

Henry Segerstrom’s ongoing leadership and philanthropy led to the development of a world-renowned multidisciplinary arts complex on land donated by the Segerstrom family. South Coast Repertory set the stage, opening in 1978. Orange County Performing Arts Center opened in 1986. Both organizations expanded on additional land donated by the Segerstrom

Family to create Segerstrom Center for the Arts. The Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall opened in 2006 along with Samueli Theater. The vision was completed this past year with the opening of the Orange County Museum of Art on the campus.

Today, South Coast Plaza and Segerstrom Center for the Arts stand as an enduring testament to Henry Segerstrom’s bold vision, constant drive for excellence, and dedication to giving back.

Elizabeth Segerstrom is proud to honor this legacy in celebrating the Henry T. Segerstrom Centennial.

12 SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Photo: Yousef Karsh, courtesy of Segerstrom Family Archive

No auditions for this Broadway role

YOU DON’T HAVE TO BE Broadway bound to have a blast at Five Days of Broadway camp. Whether you want to one day be a star or just want to have fun learning to sing and dance, this is where you want to be—no auditions needed. Five Days of Broadway is the Center’s musical theater summer camp where students of all experience levels are coached in performance and technique by some of the leading professional artists and educators in the musical theater industry. It focuses on building a strong foundation in music, acting and dance and introduces students to some of the design and backstage aspects of professional theater. Since the program began in 2010 more than 600 students have attended, many of whom have returned year after year.

Campers will also have the opportunity to take a backstage tour, practice their improvisation and learn an ensemble number together. While some classes include all campers, most classes are held in smaller groups to provide more personalized coaching and hands-on opportunities.

There are two sessions scheduled depending on the camper’s age. Middle School week is for students ages 11–13 and will be held June 19–23. In addition to acting, singing and dancing, this group will enjoy class options such as puppetry, stage combat, makeup, and introduction to theatrical design.

The high school session for students ages 14–19 will be held June 26–30. While mostly focused on young artist training in the three musical theater disciplines, students will also have the opportunity to explore the basics of Shakespeare., theatrical makeup, and ensemble work.

Spaces are filled on a first come, first served basis and scholarships are available for those with financial need. For more information, visit our website at scfta.org/fivedays.

Here are just a few of our incredibly talented Five Days of Broadway instructors:

CHANDRA LEE SCHWARTZ is a stage actress, singer, and theater educator known for her portrayal of Glinda in the Broadway and National Touring productions of the musical Wicked. She has been teaching musical theater to students since 2013.

MARTY AUSTIN LAMAR is an accomplished actor, singer, musician, and songwriter. Currently, Marty is co-coordinator and assistant professor of musical theatre at California State University at Fullerton.

HECTOR GUERRERO has traveled throughout the world as a director, choreographer, performer, and master teacher working extensively in film, television, theatre, and opera. He is on faculty at AMDA (American Musical and Dramatic Academy) and UCLA.

JENNY MOON SHAW started performing professionally at the age of 6 in her native UK. She moved to California in 2012 and resumed her career in professional theater. She has a passion for introducing kids to the exciting world of theater.

14 SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS
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April 8, 2023

Saturday at 7:30 pm SEGERSTROM HALL

SEGERSTROM CENTER PRESENTS DANCE

Dorrance Dance

Artistic Director

Michelle Dorrance

Dancers

Elizabeth Burke

Michelle Dorrance

Sterling Harris

Luke Hickey

Addi Loving

Claudia Rahardjanoto

Leonardo Sandoval

Musicians

Kyle Everett

Aaron Marcellus

Matt Parker

Gregory Richardson

Support for the Center’s International Dance Series provided by

Audrey Steele Burnand Endowed Fund for International Dance

The Segerstrom Foundation Endowment for Great Performances

The Center applauds

Please refrain from using cellular phones, pagers, watch alarms and similar devices. The use of any audio or videorecording device or the taking of photographs (with or without flash) is strictly prohibited. Thank you.

DORRANCE DANCE | DANCE P1
MEDIA PARTNER

About the Program

SOUNDspace (2013)

Choreography by Michelle Dorrance, with solo improvisation by the dancers

Original Music by Gregory Richardson

Original Body Percussion Score by Leonardo Sandoval

Lighting Design by Kathy Kaufmann

Costumes by Mishay Petronelli, Michelle Dorrance, and Byron Tittle

Dancers

Elizabeth Burke

Michelle Dorrance

Sterling Harris

Luke Hickey

Addi Loving

Claudia Rahardjanoto

Leonardo Sandoval

Musician: Gregory Richardson (bass)

The creation of SOUNDspace was made possible, in part, by the Danspace Project 2012–13 Commissioning Initiative, with support from the New York State Council on the Arts. As part of Danspace Project’s Choreographic Center Without Walls, Dorrance received a production residency supported by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

45th & 8th (2022)

Choreography by Michelle Dorrance, in collaboration with Elizabeth Burke, Luke Hickey, Claudia Rahardjanoto, Leonardo Sandoval, and Byron Tittle and featuring improvisation by the dancers

Original Music by Aaron Marcellus, in collaboration with the musicians

Lighting Design by Kathy Kaufmann

Costumes by Dede Ayite

Dancers:

Elizabeth Burke

Michelle Dorrance

Luke Hickey

Sterling Harris

Claudia Rahardjanoto

Leonardo Sandoval

Musicians:

Aaron Marcellus (vocals/keys)

Kyle Everett (drums)

Matt Parker (saxophone/flute/clarinet)

Gregory Richardson (bass)

This work was created in part during a residency at Kaatsbaan Cultural Park.

P2 DORRANCE DANCE | DANCE
Photo: Stephanie Berger

About the Company

DORRANCE DANCE is an award-winning tap dance company based in New York City. Led by Michelle Dorrance, the company supports dancers and musicians who embody and push the dynamic range that tap dance has to offer. The company’s mission is to engage with audiences on a musical and emotional level, and to share the complex history and powerful legacy of this Black American art form through performance and education.

Founded in 2011 by artistic director and 2015 MacArthur Fellow Michelle Dorrance, the

company has received countless accolades and rave reviews and has performed at venues including Danspace Project, Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival, The Joyce Theater, New York City Center, Brooklyn Academy of Music, Vail Dance Festival, the Kennedy Center, Lincoln Center Out of Doors, Works and Process at the Guggenheim, Carolina Performing Arts at UNC Chapel Hill, Cal Performances at UC Berkeley, among many others, including international venues in Canada, France, Germany, Spain, England, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Russia.

DORRANCE DANCE | DANCE P3
Photo: Steven Pisano

About the Artists

Michelle Dorrance (artistic director/ choreographer/dancer) is a New York Citybased artist. Mentored by Gene Medler (North Carolina Youth Tap Ensemble), she was fortunate to study under many of the last master hoofers. Career highlights include: Stomp, Derick Grant’s Imagine Tap!, Jason Samuels Smith’s Charlie’s Angels/Chasing the Bird, Ayodele Casel’s Diary of a Tap Dancer, Mable Lee’s Dancing Ladies, and playing the bass for Darwin Deez. Company work includes: Savion Glover’s Ti Dii, Manhattan Tap, Barbara Duffy and Co., JazzTap Ensemble, and Rumba Tap. Solo work ranges from The Late Show with Stephen Colbert to commissions for the Martha Graham Dance Company, Vail Dance Festival, American Ballet Theatre, and New York City Center. Michelle made her Broadway choreographic debut with James Lapine’s Flying Over Sunset at Lincoln Center Theater in 2021. A 2018 Doris Duke Artist, 2017 Ford Foundation Art of Change Fellow, and 2015 MacArthur Fellow, Dorrance is humbled to have been acknowledged and supported by United States Artists, the Joyce Theater, the Alpert Awards, Jacob’s Pillow, Princess Grace Foundation-USA, The Field, American Tap Dance Foundation, and the Bessie Awards. Dorrance holds a B.A. from New York University and is a Capezio Athlete.

Aaron Marcellus (composer/musician), singer songwriter, vocal coach, musician, dancer, and actor, was born and raised in Atlanta and has been entertaining crowds around the world for over 25 years. He got his start in Gospel music with his first major record deal with the Warner label Word Records. After placing top 24 on American Idol, he was sent on a world tour sponsored by the U.S. Armed Forces, where he performed for thousands in England, Italy, Holland, Germany, France, Korea, Kuwait, and Japan. Aaron has been featured in a Chapstick commercial, NBC’s Next Caller, and is a veteran member of New York City’s OffBroadway hit Stomp. He was also supporting lead in National Black Theater’s production of Dreaming Zenzile. Marcellus can be found hosting weekly at a local Burlesque and live music restaurant Duane Park. In addition to singing all over New York City, directing showcases, tap dancing, acting, and serving as a vocal coach, Aaron is founder and creative director of The Marcellus Collective and CEO of Surrender To Love LLC, a foundation that financially supports music and arts programs and feeds hungry bellies.

P4 DORRANCE DANCE | DANCE
Photo: Matthew Murphy Photo: Matthew Murphy

Elizabeth Burke (co-dance captain/dancer) has worked full time with the company since its inaugural 2010–2011 season. Before Dorrance Dance became her artistic focus, she spent 11 years under the mentorship of Gene Medler in the North Carolina Youth Tap Ensemble. She’s also an alumna of The School at Jacob’s Pillow. Elizabeth teaches, choreographs, and performs at tap dance festivals across the country, and works with fellow Carolinian Luke Hickey. She thanks Amelia Peden for their inimitable support.

Kyle Everett (musician) is delighted to be performing with the Dorrance Dance. He has done various performances and programs with Juilliard School of Music, All City Jazz bands and performed for various celebrities, events, TV programs and much more.

Sterling Harris (dancer) (he/him), a Chicago native, holds a B.A. in neuroscience from Northwestern University but has a strong passion for tap dance. He is the artistic associate of Chicago Tap Theatre, a company member of M.A.D.D. Rhythms, and has performed with Music from the Sole, YellowShed, and 333. Sterling is also an alumnus of the tap program at The School at Jacob’s Pillow and the recipient of the 2021 Lorna Strassler Award.

Luke Hickey (dancer) is a NYC-based tap dance artist and choreographer, named by Dance magazine among “25 To Watch” in 2020. Hickey credits his knowledge and achievements to the incomparable brilliance of his mentor, JUBA Award recipient Gene Medler (North Carolina Youth Tap Ensemble). His choreography has been presented by Jacob’s Pillow, Birdland Jazz Club and the Chelsea Factory, to name a few. Luke is honored to be a company member of Michelle Dorrance’s Dorrance Dance.

Addi Loving (dancer) is thrilled to join Dorrance Dance on this season’s tour! Hailing from North Carolina and St. Louis, she trained under Gene Medler and later had involvement with the MUNY St. Louis. Now stationed in New York, she is currently a junior at Pace University studying arts management in hopes to further her dance

career. “Anything you do, let it come from you, then it will be new…”—Stephen Sondheim

Matt Parker (musician) is a saxophonist and composer whose highlights include Dr. Lonnie Smith, Al Hirt, Pete Fountain, The Mingus Big Band, Cape Town Youth Choir, Bridgett Everett, and spending two years touring with Maynard Ferguson. Parker has written and released two albums, World Put Together (2014) and Present Time (2016), both albums receiving album of the year awards. He is the composer and musical director for multiple theater companies that create original content.

Claudia Rahardjanoto (dancer), born and raised in Berlin, Germany, started her professional dance career at the Deutsche Oper Berlin at the age of 9. At 15, she fell in love with tap dance under the tutelage of Sven Göttlicher and Marie-Christin Zeisset and moved to NYC in 2003 to pursue a career in tap dance. A Dorrance Dance member since the company’s inception, Claudia hopes to continue to share her love and passion for music and the art of tap dance through her teaching and performing worldwide.

Gregory Richardson (musical director/ musician) is a multi-instrumentalist focusing on upright and electric bass. He’s the co-creator of Music from the Sole, an AfroBrazilian tap dance and live band show that is currently in residence at Lincoln Center Education. He’s played drums, keys, and guitar with the band Darwin Deez at the world’s largest music festivals in the UK, Australia, Japan, Germany, and Austria.

Leonardo Sandoval (dancer), Brazilian tap dancer and choreographer, is renowned for blending America’s great tap tradition with Brazil’s rich rhythmic and musical heritage. A member of Dorrance Dance since 2014, he also directs Music from the Sole, a tap and live music company, with composer Gregory Richardson. Leonardo is a 2021 Dance magazine “25 To Watch,” received a 2022 Vilcek Foundation Prize for Creative Promise, and is a 2022 NYSCA/ NYFA Artist Fellow in choreography.

DORRANCE DANCE | DANCE P5

Credits

www.DorranceDance.com

Instagram: @dorrancedance

Facebook: facebook.com/dorrancedance/

As seen in tonight’s performance, Dorrance Dance is deeply committed to creating new works and employment opportunities for tap dancers. Please join our mailing list for updates and consider donating to support the art and artists!

Dorrance Dance Staff

Artistic Director .............. Michelle Dorrance

Executive Director Andrea Nellis

General Manager Tina Huang Abrams

Production Manager/ Sound Designer Christopher Marc

Development Manager Amanda Hameline

Asst. to Artistic Director ....... Gabby Benavides

Co-Dance Captains Elizabeth Burke & Byron Tittle

Musical Director ........... Gregory Richardson

Lighting Designer Kathy Kaufmann

Lighting Supervisor Devin Koenig

Stage Manager Olivia Brown

Financial Administrator Belina Mizrahi, Arts FMS

Dorrance Dance is generously supported by the Mellon Foundation, Howard Gilman Foundation, MacMillan Family Foundation, Shubert Foundation, Rockefeller Brothers Fund, The Evelyn Sharp Foundation, The Hyde and Watson Foundation, and Harkness Foundation for Dance.

Rehearsal and development for this performance was supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts. These performances are made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature. This program is also supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the city council. Dorrance Dance is a recipient of a U.S. Small Business Administration Shuttered Venue Operators Grant, made possible by the leadership of Senate Majority Leader Charles D. Schumer.

Artist Representative Barbara Frum, outer/most

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SEGERSTROM CENTER PRESENTS CHAMBER MUSIC

Emerson String Quartet

Philip Setzer, violin

Eugene Drucker, violin

Lawrence Dutton, viola

Paul Watkins, cello

String Quartet in G Major, Op. 33, “Russian,” No. 5, Hob. III:41

JOSEPH HAYDN ( 1732 – 1809 )

I. Vivace assai

II. Largo e cantabile

III. Scherzo: Allegro – Trio

IV. Finale: Allegretto

Eugene Drucker, first violin

String Quartet No. 2, Op. 17, Sz. 67

BÉLA BARTÓK ( 1881 – 1945 )

I. Moderato

II. Allegro molto capriccioso

III. Lento

Philip Setzer, first violin

INTERMISSION

String Quartet in No. 8 in e minor, Op. 59, No. 2, “Razumovsky”

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN ( 1770 – 1827 )

I. Allegro

II. Adagio molto

III. Allegretto

IV. Finale: Presto

Philip Setzer, first violin

The Emerson String Quartet appears by arrangement with IMG Artists and records exclusively for Deutsche Grammophon. www.emersonquartet.com

April 15, 2023

Saturday at 7:30 pm

SAMUELI THEATER

Artists and program subject to change

The Center applauds

Please refrain from using cellular phones, pagers, watch alarms and similar devices. The use of any audio or videorecording device or the taking of photographs (with or without flash) is strictly prohibited. Thank you.

EMERSON STRING QUARTET | CHAMBER P7
MEDIA PARTNER
CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES SPONSOR

About the Program

a remarkable profusion of Classic stylistic elements whether or not they represent a turning point. Commentators have speculated, with the usual cautionary asides about art and life circumstances, that the lightness and humor of these Quartets were linked to Haydn’s personal happiness at this time— the beginning of his affair with singer Luigia Polzelli, hired by Prince Esterházy in 1779. Both were in unhappy marriages at the time and she became Haydn’s mistress by 1781. Over a decade later he was writing her from London: “Perhaps I shall never again regain the good humor that I used to have when I was with you.”

String Quartet in G Major, Op. 33, “Russian,” No. 5, Hob. III:41

JOSEPH HAYDN

Born: March 31, 1732,Rohrau, Austria

Died: May 31, 1809, Vienna

HAYDN COMPOSED his six Opus 33 Quartets in 1781, nine years after his previous set of six, Op. 20. A debate has raged for over a century about whether Haydn marked the attainment of perfect Classic Viennese style with these new quartets when he noted to possible buyers they were written “in a new and special way.” The latest thinking is that “new and special” was a phrase designed to sell works rather than a statement about arriving at the perfection of Classical style, since that would ignore the merits of the Opus 20 Quartets, the symphonies written around 1772, or, as scholar Robbins Landon suggests, the opera L’infideltà delusa or the Missa Cellensis of 1782.

What scholars and listeners do agree on is that there is something different about the Opus 33 Quartets, chiefly a tendency toward popular, folklike expression and outwardly simple structures that hide an inner complexity—and, yes, they include

Some of Haydn’s greatest wit and lightheartedness lies in the Opus 33 finales, which move away from sonata form or the contrapuntal complexity of fugues in favor of rondos or variation forms. On the other hand, and no doubt for balance, these works show more profundity in their slow movements. As to his “Scherzo” and “Scherzando” movements, though they are the first in his quartets to be so-designated instead of “Minuet,” they actually differ little from his previous minuets. Thus the aptness of the sometime nickname “Gli scherzi” (with scherzos) for the Opus 33 Quartets applies not so much to these movements as to the entire set’s many “jokes”—the literal Italian meaning of scherzi.

Haydn first published the Opus 33 Quartets in 1782 with no dedication but added one to Grand Duke Paul of Russia with the second edition of 1796, which led to their most common nickname, “Russian.” This belated dedication had to do with the fact that most, if not all, received their first performance at the Vienna home of the Duke’s wife, Grand Duchess Maria Feodorovna, on Christmas Day, 1781. The Opus 33 Quartets gained instant popularity, so much so that fraud was immediately detected when a composer from Mainz tried to pass them off as his own.

Haydn begins the G major Quartet— likely the first in order of composition—with a quiet, graceful “curtsey” or “bow” in a rhythm that prompted the English mid-19th-

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century nickname, “How do you do.” Many commentators have seen its cadential gesture as a supreme example of his wit—an ending as a beginning. The immediate contrast of the rhythmic main theme with its bold, repeating bass notes sets the stage for an almost symphonic movement in which Haydn often thickens the texture with double stops. Unlike the monothematic tendencies in many of the other sonata-form movements of the Russian Quartets, Haydn’s second theme introduces a lyrical idea over a cello pedal. In his development section he takes apart and recombines his thematic fragments with creative resolve, and his recapitulation expands into what approaches a second development.

The slow movement unfolds in a tragic mood with the first violin “singing” an aria-like lament over individualistic accompaniment lines by the other three instruments. Many commentators have noted that Haydn may have been influenced by Orfeo’s “Che puro ciel” from Gluck’s opera Orfeo e Euridice, which he had directed at Esterhazá in 1776. The four instruments finally come together at the end in a forceful unison phrase, capped by a unison pizzicato that has elicited much speculation about whether it can fit the somber mood or should be heard as Haydenesque humor.

Haydn certainly makes jokes in the third movement, taking the Italian term “scherzo” in its literal meaning. He teases the listener with meter-busting displacements and shows supreme comic timing when, just after seeming to get on track, he inserts a bar of rest. The graceful regularity of the trio provides tongue-in-cheek foil.

The Finale, marked Allegretto, unfolds as an easy-going siciliano theme with three variations. The decoration increases in the third variation, first for the viola then the cello, and Haydn caps the movement with a presto coda that gallops toward the finish—but not without some final soft-loud playfulness.

Quartet No. 2

BÉLA BARTÓK

Born: March 25, 1881, Nagyszentmiklós, Hungary (now Romani)

Died: September 26, 1945, New York City

THE FIRST MOVEMENT of the Second Quartet is in sonata form, with the classical sequence of exposition, development, and recapitulation sections, but the process of development begins in the opening measures. Against a pulsating accompaniment in the inner voices, the first violin plays a theme in search of itself. That is, the first few notes of the violin line generate the entire theme-group. The first three notes rise by fourths; then the motive turns back, descending a half-step and falling a fourth. This motive is extended, shared with the cello, and augmented until it becomes a pedal-tone of G-s played in four different octaves, while the three lower instruments play ascending triads to build the first climax of the piece. Within 18 measures, the original motive is gradually transformed beyond recognition. Then, closer to its original shape, it is taken up imitatively by all the instruments, leading to a second theme-group. Here the two violins, playing in octaves, outline an augmented triad. The music lingers nostalgically in F-sharp minor for a moment before it is propelled into a turbulent appassionato section. A haunting third theme (derived from the appassionato material) closes the exposition. The development starts quietly but nervously, with imitative entrances of the main motive. The harmonies become more acidic. An accelerando led by the second violin culminates in an extremely excited section where the outer voices sustain long notes, punctuated by declamations of an important three-note motive, while the inner voices make throbbing crescendos and diminuendos.

Emphatic syncopations begin the bridge back to the recapitulation, which is remarkable for the way it transforms the emotional climate. The opening of the piece created a reflective, nostalgic mood; here the same theme, with the

EMERSON STRING QUARTET | CHAMBER P9

About the Program

changing. Bartók may not have consciously intended it as such; his uncompromising esthetic principles may have prevented him from allowing too easy a programmatic explanation of his creative process. But in a historical perspective, this work must be seen as a borderline between two eras; it looks backward to a time of romantic yearnings, reflects the violence of the present, and expresses despair for the future.

same pulsing accompaniment, is much more distant, depressed, anemic. The first violin extends its melody into the upper reaches of the D-string, one of the less sonorous and more nasal regions of the instrument. The accompanying harmonies are more static. It is as if the music were trying to recapture the spirit of the beginning but couldn’t. From here to the end of the movement, the rest of the material from the exposition is heard again. There are many forceful, defiant moments, alternating with phrases of bittersweet tenderness, but something has happened to the flow of the music. It stops and starts, changes tempo and character often without a feeling of transition or resolution. These fragments, sometimes simplified, sometimes exaggerated, sometimes grotesque. These fragments point in many different directions but don’t really go anywhere. Together they form a mosaic of nostalgia and despair. This piece was completed in 1917, while Europe was in the throes of war and the old order was being swept away. Perceptions of the world and of oneself had to change. Symbolically, the Second Quartet is about that

The second movement is a diabolical scherzo. With relentless rhythmic energy and percussively repeated pedal-tones, it creates the most savage sonorities that had yet been heard in chamber music. The whole movement is built from primitive motivic blocks, rocking back and forth between two or three pitches. The central section is satiric, even cynical, momentarily creating the ambiance of a perverted dance hall. In the prestissimo coda, all the instruments are muted, and the first violin and viola create a sandstorm of fast notes with rhythmic outlining from the other instruments. The movement reaches a breathtaking climax as the mutes fly off, the pace slows, and we are riveted to the repetitions of the motive F-sharp, F, D. his is broken down even further to the last angry notes of the piece: F,D,F,D.

The Lento unfolds as a series of sections, which sound vaguely like variations. There are motivic links between the sections and also with material from the earlier movements. The second section features an elegiac transformation of the F-sharp, F, D cell with which the Scherzo ended. Chords based on fourths—quartal harmonies—assume a central importance, while the tritone (the augmented fourth) is prevalent melodically. After a wrenching accelerando later in the movement, there is a lifeless dialogue between the two pairs of instruments, each pair playing in octaves. The music can become passionate only in gestures of defiant despair, and it always sinks back, retreats into itself, into the

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abyss. The Quartet ends with two pizzicato notes that sound like a death-knell.

Quartet in E Minor, Op. 50, No. 2

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN

Born: December 16, 1770, Bonn

Died: March 26, 1827, Vienna

The Quartet in E minor, Op. 59 No. 2 is the second in the series of three commissioned by Count Rasumovsky in 1806. At the beginning of the Allegro, Beethoven suddenly repeats the terse opening statement a half tone higher, in the Neapolitan key of F, without preparation and after the home key is barely established. This creates an unsettled, tense feeling which permeates the movement. There is much sixteenth-note motion and hardly any real themes, only motivic fragments often punctuated by silence. The second subject, though in major, is hardly relaxed, being propelled by restless accompaniment. In the development, Beethoven moves through thirteen keys, with passing harmonies in between, before arriving at E minor for the recapitulation. The return, coming after a series of fortissimo trills, is somewhat disguised by the filling in of the spaces between the original opening chords. Even the coda, with its brief calm, moves through several keys. A crescendo builds toward the end in a flurry of notes, and the main theme, heard previously only in pianissimo, is played fortissimo in the final bars.

Carl Czerny, a close friend of Beethoven’s, wrote that “The Adagio, in E Major, in the second Rasumovsky Quartet, occurred to him while he was contemplating the starry sky and thinking of the music of the spheres.” There exists no proof of this other than the extraordinary quality of the movement itself. The tension in the first movement is transcended here by timeless ecstasy, an other-worldly atmosphere. The opening hymn is soon punctuated by quiet dotted rhythms

and the sound of celestial mechanics, if one believes Czerny’s statement. At the end of the second theme this dotted rhythm finally gives way to leisurely triplets, which spin slowly like orbiting planets. After the development, which contains more contrasting material and some very dramatic moments, the recapitulation is slightly extended within itself, contributing to the timelessness even more. The hymn makes an impassioned appearance in new harmonic guise, and the triplets float down through the instruments at the end, leaving the cello murmuring contentedly.

The third movement is in two sections, the first Allegretto, the second a trio titled Maggiore and bearing the obligatory Russian Theme. The melancholy Allegretto is obsessed by a single rhythmic idea, heard in the first measure. The trio is a lively fugue on the Russian tune first heard in the viola against a triplet countersubject. At the climax, the theme is played fortissimo in canon by all four instruments. Beethoven indicates that the Allegretto should be repeated twice and the Maggiore once, perhaps to properly proportion this movement to the others.

The Finale opens with a burst in C Major, only to turn to the home key of E minor in the seventh bar. This unusual harmonic trick starting on the flatted sixth degree and fooling the listener, rekindles a charged atmosphere. Dotted rhythms in both melody and accompaniment create a martial, even relentless mood. The second subject provides contrast; it is a steady stream of even notes, played legato, and utilizes the Neapolitan harmony so central to the first movement. The coda is long and dramatic, with fortissimo explosions in the Neapolitan key. The main theme is finally heard in fortissimo, as in the end of the first movement, and the work concludes with a dashing Presto.

EMERSON STRING QUARTET | CHAMBER P11

About the Artists

THE EMERSON STRING QUARTET will have its final season of concerts in 2022–23, disbanding after more than four decades as one of the world’s premier chamber music ensembles. “With musicians like this,” wrote a reviewer for The Times (London), “there must be some hope for humanity.” The Quartet has made more than 30 acclaimed recordings and has been honored with nine Grammys® (including two for Best Classical Album), three Gramophone Awards, the Avery Fisher Prize, and Musical America’s “Ensemble of the Year” award. As

part of their larger mission to keep the string quartet form alive and relevant, they have commissioned and premiered works from some of today’s most esteemed composers and have partnered in performance with leading soloists such as Renée Fleming, Barbara Hannigan, Evgeny Kissin, Emanuel Ax, Mstislav Rostropovich, and Yefim Bronfman, James Galway, Edgar Meyer, Menahem Pressler, Leon Fleisher, André Previn, and Isaac Stern, to name a few.

In its final season, the Quartet will give farewell performances across North America and Europe, including San Francisco’s Herbst Theater, Chicago’s Orchestra Hall, Toronto’s Royal Conservatory of Music, Vienna’s

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Eugene Drucker and Philip Setzer – violins Lawrence Dutton – viola Paul Watkins – cello Photo: Jürgen Frank

Musikverein, Prague’s Rudolfinum, London’s Southbank Centre for the completion of its acclaimed cycle of Shostakovich quartets, and more, before coming home to New York City for its final series there with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, in a trio of programs entitled Emerson Dimensions, where the Quartet will perform some of its most storied repertoire. They will give several performances of André Previn’s Penelope with Renée Fleming and Uma Thurman, including at the Los Angeles Opera, and they will appear at Carnegie Hall with Evgeny Kissin to perform the Dvořák Quintet as part of a benefit concert for the Andrei Sakharov Foundation. The final performance as the Emerson String Quartet will take place in October 2023 in New York City and will be filmed for a planned documentary by filmmaker Tristan Cook.

The Quartet’s extensive discography includes the complete string quartets of Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Brahms, Bartók, Webern, and Shostakovich, as well as multi-CD sets of the major works of Haydn, Mozart, Schubert, and Dvořák. In its final season, the Quartet will record Schoenberg’s Second Quartet with Barbara Hannigan for release in 2023, with the sessions video documented by Mathieu Amalric for a short film. Deutsche Grammophon will also reissue its box set of the Emerson Complete Recordings on the label, with two new additions. In October 2020, the group released a recording of Schumann’s three string quartets for the Pentatone label. In the preceding year, the Quartet joined forces with Grammy®-winning pianist Evgeny Kissin to release a collaborative album for Deutsche Grammophon, recorded live at a sold-out Carnegie Hall concert in 2018.

Formed in 1976 and based in New York City, the Emerson String Quartet was one of the first quartets whose violinists alternate in the first violin position. The Quartet, which takes its name from the American poet and philosopher Ralph Waldo Emerson, balances busy performing careers with a commitment to

teaching, and serves as Quartet-in-Residence at Stony Brook University. In 2013, cellist Paul Watkins—a distinguished soloist, awardwining conductor, and devoted chamber musician—joined the original members of the Quartet to form today’s group.

In the spring of 2016, the State University of New York awarded full-time Stony Brook faculty members Philip Setzer and Lawrence Dutton the status of Distinguished Professor and conferred the title of Honorary Distinguished Professor on part-time faculty members Eugene Drucker and Paul Watkins. The Quartet’s members also hold honorary doctorates from Middlebury College, the College of Wooster, Bard College, and the University of Hartford. In January of 2015, the Quartet received the Richard J. Bogomolny National Service Award, Chamber Music America’s highest honor, in recognition of its significant and lasting contribution to the chamber music field.

The Emerson String Quartet enthusiastically endorses Thomastik strings.

EMERSON STRING QUARTET | CHAMBER P13

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Matt Doyle

October 19–21, 2023

Forbidden Broadway

November 16–18, 2023

Megan Hilty

December 14–16, 2023

Salute to Olivia Newton-John

January 11–13, 2024

Jeremy Jordan

February 22–24, 2024

Seth Rudetsky & Lilias White

May 16–18, 2024

Photo: Stephanie Diani Jeremy Jordan Photo: Anthony Matula Megan Hilty

SEGERSTROM CENTER PRESENTS

CABARET

Jason Robert Brown

piano and vocals

featuring

Mykal Kilgore

vocals

Linda Taylor, guitar

Trey Henry, bass

Jamie Eblen, drums

April 27–29, 2023

Thursday–Saturday at 7:30 pm

SAMUELI THEATER

Artists and program subject to change

The Center applauds

Please refrain from using cellular phones, pagers, watch alarms and similar devices. The use of any audio or videorecording device or the taking of photographs (with or without flash) is strictly prohibited. Thank you.

JASON ROBERT BROWN | CABARET P15
MEDIA PARTNER

About the Artists

JASON ROBERT BROWN is the ultimate multihyphenate—an equally skilled composer, lyricist, conductor, arranger, orchestrator, director, and performer. He is best known for his dazzling scores to several of the most renowned musicals of our time, including the generation-defining The Last Five Years, his debut song cycle Songs for a New World, and the seminal Parade, for which he won the 1999 Tony Award for Best Score.

Jason Robert Brown has been hailed as “one of Broadway’s smartest and most sophisticated songwriters since Stephen Sondheim” (Philadelphia Inquirer), and his “extraordinary, jubilant theater music” (Chicago Tribune) has been heard all over the world, whether in one of the hundreds of productions of his musicals every year or in his own incendiary live performances. The New York Times refers to Jason as “a leading member of a new generation of composers who embody high hopes for the American musical.”

Jason’s score for The Bridges of Madison County, a musical adapted with

Marsha Norman from the bestselling novel, received two Tony Awards (for Best Score and Orchestrations). Honeymoon in Vegas, based on Andrew Bergman’s film, opened on Broadway in 2015 following a triumphant production at Paper Mill Playhouse. A film version of his epochal Off-Broadway musical The Last Five Years was released in 2015, starring Anna Kendrick and Jeremy Jordan and directed by Richard LaGravenese. His major musicals as composer and lyricist include: 13, written with Robert Horn and Dan Elish, which opened on Broadway in 2008 and was subsequently directed by the composer for its West End premiere in 2012; The Last Five Years, which was cited as one of Time Magazine’s 10 Best of 2001 and won Drama Desk Awards for Best Music and Best Lyrics (and was later directed by the composer in its record-breaking Off-Broadway run at Second Stage Theatre in 2013); Parade, written with Alfred Uhry and directed by Harold Prince, which won both the Drama Desk and New York Drama Critics’ Circle Awards for Best New Musical, as well as garnering Jason the Tony Award for Original Score; and Songs for a New World, a theatrical song cycle directed by Daisy Prince, which has since been seen in hundreds of productions around the world since its 1995 Off-Broadway debut, including a celebrated revival at New York’s City Center in the summer of 2018. Parade was also the subject of a major revival directed by Rob Ashford, first at London’s Donmar Warehouse and then at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles.

Jason conducted his orchestral adaptation of E.B. White’s novel The Trumpet of the Swan with the National Symphony Orchestra, and recorded the score for PS Classics. Future projects include a new chamber musical created with Daisy Prince and Jonathan Marc Sherman called The Connector; an adaptation of Lilian Lee’s Farewell My Concubine, created with Kenneth Lin and Moisés Kaufman; and a collaboration with Billy Crystal, Amanda Green, Lowell Ganz, and Babaloo Mandel on a musical of Mr. Saturday Night. Jason is the

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BROWN | CABARET
ROBERT

winner of the 2018 Louis Auchincloss Prize, the 2002 Kleban Award for Outstanding Lyrics and the 1996 Gilman & Gonzalez-Falla Foundation Award for Musical Theatre. Jason’s songs, including the cabaret standard “Stars and the Moon,” have been performed and recorded by Ariana Grande, Jennifer Nettles, Audra McDonald, Kristin Chenoweth, Billy Porter, Betty Buckley, Renée Fleming, Jon Hendricks and many others, and his song “Someone To Fall Back On” was featured in the Walden Media film, Bandslam.

As a soloist or with his band, Jason has performed concerts around the world. For six years, his monthly sold-out performances at New York’s SubCulture featured many of the music and theater world’s most extraordinary performers. His newest collection, Coming from Inside the House, featuring Ariana Grande and Shoshana Bean, commemorates the final SubCulture concert, recorded remotely during the pandemic. His previous albums, How We React and How We Recover and Wearing Someone Else’s Clothes are available from Ghostlight/Sh-K-Boom Records. Jason’s 2012 concert with Anika Noni Rose was broadcast on PBS, and he was the featured soloist for a live episode of Friday Night Is Music Night, broadcast live from the London Palladium and featuring the BBC Concert Orchestra. His collaboration with singer Lauren Kennedy, Songs of Jason Robert Brown, is available on PS Classics. Jason is also the composer of the incidental music for the Broadway revival of You Can’t Take It With You, David LindsayAbaire’s Kimberly Akimbo and Fuddy Meers, and Kenneth Lonergan’s The Waverly Gallery, and he was a Tony Award nominee for his contributions to the score of Urban Cowboy the Musical. He has also contributed music to the hit Nickelodeon television series The Wonder Pets as well as Sesame Street. Jason spent ten years teaching at the USC School of Dramatic Arts, and has also taught at Harvard University, Princeton University, and Emerson College.

For the musical Prince of Broadway, a celebration of the career of his mentor Harold Prince, Jason was the musical supervisor and arranger. Other New York credits as conductor and arranger include Urban Cowboy the Musical on Broadway; Dinah Was, offBroadway and on national tour; When Pigs Fly off-Broadway; William Finn’s A New Brain at Lincoln Center Theater; the 1992 tribute to Stephen Sondheim at Carnegie Hall (recorded by RCA Victor); Yoko Ono’s New York Rock, at the WPA Theatre; and Michael John LaChiusa’s The Petrified Prince at the Public Theatre. Jason orchestrated Andrew Lippa’s john and jen off-Broadway at Lamb’s Theatre. Additionally, Jason served as the orchestrator and arranger of Charles Strouse and Lee Adams’s score for a proposed musical of Star Wars. Jason has conducted and created arrangements and orchestrations for Liza Minnelli, John Pizzarelli, and Michael Feinstein, among many others.

Jason studied composition at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, N.Y., with Samuel Adler, Christopher Rouse, and Joseph Schwantner. He lives with his wife, composer Georgia Stitt, and their daughters in New York City. Jason is a proud member of the Dramatists Guild and the American Federation of Musicians Local 802. Visit him on the web at www.jasonrobertbrown.com.

JASON ROBERT BROWN | CABARET P17

About the Artists

A born and raised Floridian, Mykal moved to Nashville as a hopeful singer and songwriter after attending Florida State University. Eventually, his voice caught the attention of Tony® and Grammy® Award winner, Billy Porter during an audition. Porter’s careful mentorship opened lanes for Kilgore to move to New York City and to enter the Broadway world. To date, his credits include Motown the Musical, The Book of Mormon, and Hair. Mykal has consistently chosen roles that elevate positive representation of people of color including The Wiz Live! (NBC) and Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert (NBC).

MYKAL KILGORE’S ARTISTRY cuts through traditional barriers and represents the hope of gospel, the soul of R&B and the vulnerability of country. The singer/songwriter’s debut album, A Man Born Black, was released in 2019 and was an exploration of faith, loss, the stumble and spills on the way to maturity, and the beauty of hope and love.

In 2021 Kilgore released his single “The Man in the Barbershop” (via Affective Music,) a story told from a Black gay man’s perspective about his and many others’ experiences at the neighborhood barbershop where people gather and gossip about their community and the world. “The Man in the Barbershop” is the first single from Kilgore since his Grammy® nominated single “Let Me Go,” from his debut album. At the 63rd Annual Grammy® Awards, Kilgore made history as the first openly gay artist to receive a nomination in the “Best Traditional R&B Performance” category. “The Man in the Barbershop” was produced by Jamison Ross, Cory Irvin, and John Michael Rouchell and executive produced by David S. Hargrett.

Most recently, he appeared in Songs for a New World, Stephen Sondheim’s Into the Woods and The MUNY’s Smokey Joe’s Cafe. With the release of “The Man in the Barbershop,” Mykal has once again stepped into the forefront to share his unique perspective with the world. As a Black queer man, Mykal uses his platform to serve as a change agent for civil rights as well as issues affecting the LGBTQ+ community. His instrument is guaranteed to educate, entertain and elevate the lives of all who have the luxury of experiencing his unmatched sound. Mykal is eager and hungry to share his new creations as his star continues to shine brighter and brighter in the post-pandemic world.

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SEGERSTROM CENTER PRESENTS CHAMBER MUSIC

Dream House Quartet

Katia Labèque, piano

Marielle Labèque, piano

Bryce Dessner, guitar

David Chalmin, guitar

Dan Bora, sound

Haven (2019), Chester Music

BRYCE DESSNER ( B. 1976 )

Ellis Island (1981), Boosey & Hawkes

MEREDITH MONK ( B. 1942 ) ; ARR. LISA KAPLAN

Electric Counterpoint (1987), Arr. for 2 Guitars & Tape by Bryce Dessner

STEVE REICH ( B. 1936 )

4 Movements for 2 Pianos (2008), Dungaven/Chester Music

PHILIP GLASS ( B. 1937 )

INTERMISSION

Don’t Fear the Light, Part 1 & 2 (2019)

THOM YORKE ( B. 1968 )

Sonic Wires (2023), Chester Music

BRYCE DESSNER

Movement 1 Spiral Movement 2 Nono Movement 3 Clouds

Eclipse (2023)

DAVID CHALMIN ( B. 1980 )

Movements 1, 2 & 3

Cherchebruit BRYCE DESSNER

North American Premiere Tour Produced by ArKtype / Thomas O. Kriegsmann

Sami Pyne, Associate Producer & Tour Manager

Pianos by Steinway & Sons

April 28, 2023

Saturday at 7:30 pm

RENÉE AND HENRY SEGERSTROM CONCERT HALL

Artists and program subject to change

The Center applauds

Please refrain from using cellular phones, pagers, watch alarms and similar devices. The use of any audio or videorecording device or the taking of photographs (with or without flash) is strictly prohibited. Thank you.

DREAM HOUSE QUARTET | CHAMBER P19
MEDIA PARTNER CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES SPONSOR

About the Artists

KATIA AND MARIELLE LABÈQUE are sibling pianists renowned for their ensemble of synchronicity and energy. Their musical ambitions started at an early age and they rose to international fame with their contemporary rendition of Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue (one of the first gold records in classical music) and have since developed a stunning career with performances worldwide.

They have played with the most prestigious orchestras such as the Berlin Philharmonic, Bayerischer Rundfunk, Boston Symphony, Chicago Symphony, Cleveland Orchestra, Czech Philharmonic, Dresden Staatskapelle, Filarmonia della Scala, Leipzig Gewandhaus, London Symphony, London Philharmonic, Los Angeles Philharmonic, New York Philharmonic, Orchestre de Paris, Philadelphia Orchestra, Ditto Royal Concertgebouw Amsterdam, Santa Cecilia and Vienna Philharmonic, under the direction of John Adams, Semyon Bychkov, Sir Colin Davis, Gustavo Dudamel, Gustavo Gimeno, Mirga Grazinyte-Tyla, Pietari Inkinen,

Louis Langrée, Zubin Mehta, Juanjo Mena, Andres Orozco-Estrada, Seiji Ozawa, Antonio Pappano, Matthias Pintscher, Georges Pretre, Sir Simon Rattle, Santtu Matias Rouvali, EsaPekka Salonen, Michael Tilson Thomas and Jaap van Zweden.

They have appeared with Baroque music ensembles such as The English Baroque Soloists with Sir John Eliot Gardiner, Il Giardino Armonico with Giovanni Antonini, Musica Antica with Reinhard Goebel, and Venice Baroque with Andrea Marcon, il Pomo d’Oro with Maxim Emelyanichev and also toured with The Age of Enlightenment and Sir Simon Rattle. Katia and Marielle have had the privilege of working with many composers including Thomas Adès, Louis Andriessen, Luciano Berio, Pierre Boulez, Bryce Dessner, Philip Glass, Osvaldo Golijov, György Ligeti, Nico Muhly and Olivier Messiaen. At Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles they presented the world premiere of Philip Glass’s new concerto with the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra under the direction of Gustavo Dudamel, the world premiere of Bryce Dessner’s concerto at Royal

P20 DREAM HOUSE QUARTET | CHAMBER
Katia Labèque and Marielle Labèque, pianos Photo: Jonathan McCallum

Festival Hall with the London Philharmonic Orchestra and John Storgards, and the new concerto written by Nico Muhly, “In Certain Circles,” was premiered by Orchestre de Paris with Maxim Emelyanichev in 2021 and New York Philharmonic with Jaap van Zweden in 2022.

Another recent highlight was the tour with the Filarmonica Joven de Colombia under Andrés Orozco-Estrada, through Germany, Austria and Holland.

Katia and Marielle Labèque play in festivals and renowned venues worldwide including the Vienna Musikverein, Hamburg Musikhalle, Munich Philharmonie, Carnegie Hall, Royal Festival Hall, La Scala, Berlin Philharmonie, Blossom, Hollywood Bowl, Lucerne, BBC Proms, Ravinia, Tanglewood, and Salzburg. An audience of more than 33,000 attended a gala concert with the Berlin Philharmonic conducted by Sir Simon Rattle at Berlin’s Waldbuhne, now available on DVD (EuroArts). A record audience of more than 100,000 attended the Vienna Summer Night Concert in Schonbrunn (now available on CD and DVD by SONY). More than 1.5 million viewers followed the event worldwide on television.

Bryce Dessner, guitar & composer

BRYCE DESSNER IS A VITAL and rare force in new music. He has won Grammy Awards as a classical composer and with the band The National, of which he is founding member, guitarist, arranger, and co-principal songwriter. He is regularly commissioned to write for the world’s leading ensembles, from Orchestre de Paris to the Los Angeles Philharmonic, and is a high-profile presence in film score composition, with credits including The Revenant, for which he was Grammy-and Golden Globe-nominated, Fernando Mereilles’ The Two Popes, Mike Mills’ C’mon C’mon, and Alejandro González Iñárritu’s Bardo Dessner collaborates with some of today’s most creative and respected artists,

including Philip Glass, Katia and Marielle Labèque, Paul Simon, Alejandro González Iñárritu, Sufjan Stevens, Fernando Mereilles, Thom Yorke, Bon Iver, Nico Muhly, and Steve Reich, who named Dessner “a major voice of his generation.” Dessner’s orchestrations can be heard on the latest albums of Paul Simon, Bon Iver, and Taylor Swift. Dessner has had works commissioned and premiered by today’s leading conductors including EsaPekka Salonen, Gustavo Dudamel, Semyon Bychkov, and Santtu Matias-Rouvali. This season alone sees performances of his works by London’s Philharmonia Orchestra, Orchestre de Paris, BBC Symphony Orchestra, HR Sinfonieorchester, Scottish Chamber Orchestra, and San Francisco Symphony, among others.

Dessner’s new works—Violin Concerto, commissioned by partners including Orchestre de Paris, Philharmonia Orchestra, and San Francisco Symphony; and Mari, commissioned and performed by Tonhalle Orchester Zurich, Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchester, Czech Philharmonic, Oslo Philharmonic, and BBC Symphony Orchestra—have been met with widespread public and critical success.

Last autumn Bryce was composer in residence at a number of European festivals including the Approximation Festival and November Music. “Dessner [..] moves fluidly between rock and classical and everywhere in between,” wrote the Guardian (October 2021). In addition to his role as one of eight San Francisco Symphony Collaborative Partners, Bryce Dessner is currently artist-inresidence at London’s Southbank Centre and with Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra. Major works include Concerto for Two Pianos premiered by Katia and Marielle Labèque and London Philharmonic Orchestra and recorded for Deutsche Grammophon; Violin Concerto premiered and performed internationally by Pekka Kuusisto, Trombone Concerto for Jorgen van Rijen commissioned by Dallas Symphony and l’Orchestre National d’Île de France; Voy a Dormir for mezzo soprano Kelley O’Connor and

DREAM HOUSE QUARTET | CHAMBER P21

About the Artists

Orchestra of Saint Luke’s and the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra; Skrik Trio for Steve Reich and Carnegie Hall; the ballet No Tomorrow, co-written with Ragnar Kjartansson; Wires for Ensemble Intercontemporain; The Forest for large cello ensemble, Gautier Capuçon, and Fondation Louis Vuitton; and Triptych (Eyes for One on Another), a major theater piece integrating the photographs of Robert Mapplethorpe and premiered by Los Angeles Philharmonic. Dessner also scored the music— involving full orchestra and a 200-member choir—for the Louis Vuitton show at the Louvre in Paris as part of Paris Fashion Week 2020

Dessner’s recordings include El Chan; St. Carolyn by the Sea (both Deutsche Grammophon); Aheym, commissioned by Kronos Quartet; Tenebre, an album of his works for string orchestra recorded by Germany’s Ensemble Resonanz and which won a 2019 Opus Klassik award and a Diapason d’Or; When we are inhuman with Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy and Eighth Blackbird (2019); and Impermanence (2021) with the Australian String Quartet.

Dessner’s film score credits include The Two Popes, which won Discovery of the Year at the World Soundtrack awards; C’mon C’mon (2021) directed by Mike Mills; and Cyrano (2021), the major musical by Joe Wright. Also active as a curator, Dessner is regularly requested to program festivals and residencies around the world at venues such as at the Barbican, Philharmonie de Paris, and Hamburg’s Elbphilharmonie. He co-founded and curates the festivals MusicNOW in Cincinnati, HAVEN in Copenhagen, Sounds from a Safe Harbour and PEOPLE. Bryce Dessner lives in France.

David Chalmin, guitar & composer

OVER THE PAST TEN YEARS, David Chalmin has assumed an increasing number of roles: as a producer, arranger and sound engineer alongside some of the most respected indie figures worldwide (The National, Shannon Wright, Richard Reed Parry, Efterklang...); as a contemporary music composer, having founded the Dream House Quartet with Bryce Dessner and Katia and Marielle Labèque (who hosted Thom Yorke on stage in 2019); and as a mastermind of dense, heady electronica with his album la terre invisible in 2019. The sixth movement of the piece Sept particules, composed in 2018 for harpsichordist Justin Taylor and his ensemble le consort, was sung to critical acclaim. And now, his soft, sensitive voice has become an integral part of all five tracks on Innocence, an EP released on Yotanka records in June 2022.

He has recently worked on Electric Fields, a new project for Barbara Hannigan, Katia and Marielle Labèque with live videos by Netia Jones in which he performed live electronics. This work, co-written with Bryce Dessner premiered in November 2022 in Disney Hall, Los Angeles. Among his other compositions: a piece for organ constellation premiered at Variations Festival Nantes; a piece for 100 pianos, piano orchestra premiered at Paris Philharmonie; a ballet, Star-Cross’d Lovers, for two pianos, drums, electronics, and guitar created at the Cité de la Musique in Paris (recorded for Deutsche Grammophon); and an original music for Madonna’s short film Her Story filmed by Luigi & Iango. He also created with pianist Katia Labèque a project on moondog’s music premiered at Les Nuits de Fourvières in Lyon. The moondog album was released by Deutsche Grammophon. With the trio Triple Sun, bass player Massimo Pupillo (zu) and drummer Raphaël Séguinier (ubunoir), Chalmin joined the Dessner Brothers (The National) and Justin Vernon (Bon Iver) for the project Invisible Bridge at the Paris Philharmonie.

P22 DREAM HOUSE QUARTET | CHAMBER

Dan Bora, sound mix

DAN BORA IS A DESIGNER, producer, and engineer for albums, film scores, and live sound. He has worked with Marina Abramovic, Anohni, Danny Elfman, Philip Glass, The Magnetic Fields, Nico Mühly, Michael Nyman, Ryuichi Sakamoto and many others. His credits include the Academy Award-winning Fog of War as well as the revival of Robert Wilson’s Einstein on the Beach. Dan’s live work has been praised as “deft,” “provocative and even poignant…” (New York Times).

Sami Pyne, associate producer, tour manager Sami Pyne is the associate producer at ArKtype, one of the world’s leading supporters of new, experimental work. She is also an NYCbased independent producer passionate about decluttering and demystifying the production process for creators. Sami’s had the pleasure of working with companies such as 600 HIGHWAYMEN, The Arts & Climate Initiative, The Exponential Festival, Clubbed Thumb, New York Theatre Workshop, Aeon’s Sophia Club, The Martin E. Segal Center, Signature Theatre, Park Avenue Armory, The Play Company (PlayCo), The Tank, The New Ohio, Theatre Development Fund (TDF), and HERE Arts Center. Shenandoah Conservatory BFA, 2017. Graduate of the Columbia University Theatre Management & Producing MFA program, 2020. Operations Committee leader of the Creative & Independent Producers Alliance. Fellow of WP Theater’s 2022-2024 Producers Lab. www.samipyne.com for more info.

ArKtype/Thomas O. Kriegsmann

ARKTYPE/THOMAS O. KRIEGSMANN specializes in new work development and touring worldwide. His past work includes projects with Kaneza Schaal, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Peter Brook, Daniel Fish, Victoria Thiérrée-Chaplin, Yael Farber, Anna Deavere Smith, Annie-B Parson & Paul Lazar, Jessica Blank and Erik Jensen, Peter Sellars, Julie Taymor, John Cameron Mitchell, and Tony Taccone. Recent premieres include 600

HIGHWAYMEN’s A Thousand Ways, nora chipaumire’s Nehanda, Sam Green’s 32 Sounds wth JD Samson, Bryce Dessner’s Triptych (Eyes of One on Another) directed by Kaneza Schaal, John Cameron Mitchell’s The Origin of Love, Kaneza Schaal & Christopher Myers’ CARTOGRAPHY, Sam Green and Kronos Quartet’s A Thousand Thoughts, Big Dance Theater/Mikhail Baryshnikov’s Man In a Case, and Nalaga’at Deaf-Blind Theater’s Not By Bread Alone. Ongoing collaborations include Basil Twist, 600 HIGHWAYMEN, Sam Green, Timothy White Eagle, Andrew Schneider, Big Dance Theater, Toshi Reagon, and Compagnia T.P.O. Upcoming premieres include Justin Peck and Sufjan Stevens’ Illinois, 600 Highwaymen’s The Following Evening, Timothy White Eagle’s Indian School, and Scott Shepherd’s This Ignorant Present. He is a founding member of CIPA (Creative & Independent Producer Alliance). More information at arktype.org.

Special Thanks

To Aaron Egigian and the amazing team at Segerstrom Center for the Arts, Vivian Chiu, Gill Graham, Samantha Holderness, The Kitchen, Rachel Fine, Jennifer Newman and Yale Schwarzman Center, Shanta Thake, Guillaume Loubère, Paschalis Zervas, Melay Araya, Deutsche Grammophon, and the team at Unison Media.

Dream House Quartet debut EP now available—new LP slated for fall release, both on Universal / Deutsche Grammophon.

For further information on Dream House Quartet, please contact: Thomas O. Kriegsmann, President ArKtype tommy@arktype.org

Press Representation: Andrew Ousley, Unison Media andrew@unison.media

DREAM HOUSE QUARTET | CHAMBER P23

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Calder Quartet & Timo Andres

October 6, 2023

Theotime Langois de Swarte and Le Consort

November 9, 2023

Takács Quartet and Marc André Hamelin

January 27, 2024

Schumann Quartet

February 16, 2024

Castalian Quartet and Stephen Hough

March 2, 2024

Bennewitz Quartet and Arsentliy Kharitonov

April 5, 2024

Ebene String Quartet

April 11, 2024

Photo: Harald Hoffmann Schumann Quartet Photo: Julien Benhamou Le Consort

Make the Center your laboratory

THE CENTER LOVES festivities for kids that celebrate the connections between the arts and science, and the Beckman Arts and Science Family Festival fits the bill. This year the festival will be held on Saturday, May 6 on the Julianne and George Argyros Plaza from 11:30 am to 2:30 pm. Best yet, it’s FREE!

“We are pleased to be offering a fun family day on Segerstrom Center’s beautiful Julianne and George Argyros Plaza, where everyone will have a chance to be a curious, creative explorer for a day,” says Talena Mara, the Center’s vice president of education. “Providing space for students and families to be curious and creative together is a priority at the Center.”

The day will feature performances and an assortment of engaging, hands-on activities for the entire family. Supported by the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation, this popular annual event returns after several years off due to the pandemic.

Doktor Kaboom will be on hand with his show Look Out! Science is Coming! which is part of Segerstrom Center for the Arts’ Family Series. The good Doktor will captivate audiences with his hilarious and fun series of increasingly spectacular and (often) successful, demonstrations of the physical sciences.

The festival also will include performances by Circo Etero circus, whose jugglers and stilt walkers will roam throughout the festival wowing guests with their spectacular skills. Dancing Storytellers will delight children with their performances utilizing South Asian music and dance, and the Alley Cats, America’s Doo-Wop group, will serve up great music and hilarious comedy.

Don’t miss the Building Area, which will encourage creative play and feature oversized building kits, including Imagination Playground, Rigamjig, and Panelcraft. Other hands-on activities and workshops will include face painting, balloon twisters, mini trains, and bubbles, lots of bubbles!

There will be exhibits from the Arnold and

Mabel Beckman Foundation as well as other community partners.

“The Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation is committed to encouraging our next generation to approach science and technology with curiosity and excitement to unlock the full creative potential of tomorrow’s inventors and explorers,” says Dr. Anne Hultgren, executive director of the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation. “We are proud to partner with Segerstrom Center for the Arts and so many different organizations across Orange County who will be bringing their unique approaches to engaging young minds in STEM to the Argyros plaza. This venue offers a unique setting to host such a variety of hands-on activities in a relaxed, festival-style event to make STEM approachable and fun! We hope to see you there!”

Food will be available for purchase at George’s Café as well as food trucks Cali Delight and Kala. Mmmmm, churros!

Be sure to arrive early to enjoy all the free fun. For more information please visit our website at scfta.org.

6 | FREE

JULIANNE AND GEORGE ARGYROS PLAZA May
APRIL 2023 17

Not your usual Shakespeare

18 SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Photo: Josh S. Rose

LA DANCE PROJECT doesn’t do things by the rules. The company is bringing Romeo & Juliet Suite to the Center and it’s going to be a different story than you’ve been used to.

Company founder and choreographer Benjamin Millepied has created a contemporary vision of the world’s most famous love story. He navigates between cinema, dance, and theater, reinterpreting Shakespeare’s fated couple as young adults in an urban environment. Each performance will feature a different cast and highlight diverse couples: It can be male/female, female/female or male/ male, reflecting our time and making the production a universal celebration of love.

“This one-of-a-kind interpretation of Shakespeare’s classic allowed me to feel the most empathy I have ever felt for the characters of Romeo and Juliet,” says LA Dance Chronicle. “It was a complete rediscovery of a familiar tale, which transformed it from overdone to timeless once again.”

On stage and off, the plot unfolds using a unique projection system. Some of the action is broadcast in real time from unexpected places inside the theater and backstage as the dancers pass from stage to screen and back. The audience might see Romeo on screen at the loading dock while at the same time they see Juliet (in real life) entering the stage. Millepied presents this mythical take through a modern prism, embellished by Prokofiev’s beautiful music.

“I love the idea of using dance, live performance and cinematographic images to express a timeless story that

really speaks to the audience,” says Millepied. “This production creates a comprehensive artistic experience while echoing current social issues, all with a cast that changes from night to night.”

“Millepied’s choreography is full of life,” says the Los Angeles Times. “Ballet steps and street steps and quirky outof-nowhere steps all seeming part of the same dance vocabulary.”

Frenchman Millepied is a dancer, choreographer and filmmaker. He danced with New York City Ballet for 16 years and in 2010, choreographed and starred in the film Black Swan. In 2012 he founded LA Dance Project.

In 2014 he was appointed director of dance at Paris Opera Ballet. This big job included commissioning works by renowned choreographers including William Forsythe, Justin Peck, and Wayne McGregor. But two years later he resigned, wanting to focus on his vision for LA Dance Project. Now just a decade old, the company’s repertoire includes new creations by Millepied, historical reconstructions and multidisciplinary collabs with visual artists, musicians, filmmakers, and composers. It has been around the world, performing in the U.S., Europe, Dubai, Shanghai, and Beijing.

This will be LA Dance Project’s debut engagement at the Center. Don’t miss this opportunity to see a classic tale in a way the New Yorker calls “Startling, dazzling and wrenching in equal measure.”.

SEGERSTROM HALL

May 12–14 | Tickets start at $29

APRIL 2023 19

The Gospel truth

Oh, don’t you want to go To the Gospel feast That Promised Land Where all is peace?”

—Deep River

20 SEGERSTROM
FOR
CENTER
THE ARTS
Photo: RJ Muna

ALONZO KING LINES BALLET returns to the Center with a special evening of dance celebrating the company’s 40th anniversary. The program will feature Deep River, a new work by Alonzo King that combines Black spirituals with dance. The music is arranged by jazz pianist and MacArthur Fellow Jason Moran, with Grammy-winning vocalist Lisa Fischer, who will be onstage with the dancers, providing a live accompaniment. Fischer was a back-up singer with The Rolling Stones (that’s Lisa on “Gimme Shelter”) and has performed in the Center’s Jazz Series several times.

“Seeing how these Black Christian spirituals could meld so naturally with dance imagery that suggests influences from both yogic philosophy and Islam, is a striking reminder of the universality King has reclaimed for ballet,” says the San Francisco Chronicle. “King is one of the few bona fide visionaries in the ballet world today.”

Deep River is rich in themes of cultural collaboration, and King thinks nothing of mixing classical ballet with diverse traditions. The company’s vision statement says, in part, “LINES Ballet investigates deeply rooted affinities between Western and Eastern classical forms, elemental materials, the natural world and the human spirit. The artistic investigation… leads to what unites us as human beings.”

“The intention behind the work is to remind me, the artists, and the viewers that love is the ocean that we rose from, swim in, and will one day return to, and that love, if listened to and deeply cultured, can bring us to liberation,” King said to DBusiness.com. “As we look back on 40 years of work in the community, in ourselves,

the programs, classes, and performances, both live and on film, we recognize that it is the same vision and belief that have carried us to this moment and will continue to carry this organization into the future,” says King.

Alonzo King LINES Ballet has collaborated with noted composers, musicians and visual artists from around the world to create performances that alter the way we look at ballet today. King’s unique artistic vision adheres to the classical form with a commitment to cultural collaborations which enthrall audiences and draw on diverse traditions with new expressive potential.

“The talent, the expertise and the intent of this stellar company is incomparable!” says Broadwayworld.com. “The technique of every member of the company, with every movement they make, will fill you with awe.” Beautiful and glorious on stage, this is a must-see performance for Center dance fans.

SEGERSTROM HALL

May 27 | Tickets start at $29

APRIL 2023 21
Photo: RJ Muna

Corporate and Foundation Support

Segerstrom Center for the Arts is pleased to thank the following corporations and foundations for providing annual contributions to the Center in support of our artistic and community education programs and our special event and performance sponsorships throughout the year.*

LEAD PERFORMANCE AND EDUCATION SPONSORS

2022 CORPORATE AND FOUNDATION SUPPORTERS

African American Alliance Fund

Anonymous

Autism Speaks

Bloomingdale’s South Coast Plaza

Canterbury Consulting

Crean Foundation

Definitely Dance, Inc.

EnergizeStudents.org

First Republic Bank

The Fletcher Jones Foundation

GCM Grosvenor

Orange County Community Foundation

Pacific Life Foundation

SPECIAL THANKS

Total Wine & More

Viking

ARTS AND BUSINESS LEADERSHIP COUNCIL

Katheryn Baker

Jesse D. Bagley

Lupe Erwin, Chair

Cory Glass

Steve Joseph

Fiona T. LeCong-Ly

Sarah J. McElroy

Jill Meznarich

Maurice Murray

Patrick Strader

Jaynine Warner

Bill Meehan, Founding Chairman

To learn more about the Center’s corporate and foundation partnership opportunities and the benefits available, please contact CorpSupport@scfta.org or (714) 942-6302.

Segerstrom Center for the Arts applauds the following business and community leaders who support Segerstrom Center through fundraising, advocacy, and community outreach with a particular emphasis on expanding audiences and developing the next generation of leadership for Segerstrom Center. * as of

22 SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS
JAMES PREVITI FAMILY FOUNDATION
Family Owned Since 1946 BLOCK
THE SEGERSTROM FOUNDATION
& HARDSCAPE
Feb. 22, 2023
A TRIBUTE PORTFOLIO HOTEL

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.

LINKS TO PERFORMERS’ SOCIAL MEDIA ACCOUNTS

MULTI-MEDIA PRESENTATIONS ABOUT THE PERFORMANCE.

UNDERSTUDY UPDATES

THEATER SUPPORT OPPORTUNITIES

UPCOMING SHOWS AND CONCERTS AROUND TOWN

INSIDER SCOOPS FROM THEATER AND MUSIC PROFESSIONALS

It’s the new way to read the program, it’s

Donors

Segerstrom Center for the Arts is enormously grateful for the support from the donors listed on the following pages. Your generosity empowers the Center to provide dynamic performances and artistic education programs for all of Orange County. You allow us to continue our promise to become an inclusive cultural resource for our entire community. Thank you!

CUMULATIVE GIVING

Segerstrom Center for the Arts is deeply grateful to the following donors who have provided extraordinary support during their lifetime:

$10,000,000 +

Anonymous

Angels of the Arts

Julia and George Argyros/ Argyros Family Foundation

Audrey Steele Burnand*

Sandy Segerstrom Daniels

William J. Gillespie*

Mr. and Mrs. David Wayne Grant

The Guilds of the Center

Richard C.* and Virginia A.* Hunsaker

Mr. Donald E. and Lacy Moriarty

Eugene* and Ruth Ann* Moriarty

Jean Moriarty

Richard A. and Marilyn Kayla Moriarty

Steven and Susan Perry

Susan and Henry Samueli

Sally E. Segerstrom and Toby Andrews

Jennifer and Anton Segerstrom

Elizabeth and Henry T.* Segerstrom

Hal and Jeanette Segerstrom Family Foundation

Henry T* and Renée* Segerstrom

Ruth Segerstrom*

Mr. and Mrs. Theodore W. Segerstrom

Mr. Toren H. Segerstrom

Veronica P. Segerstrom

Mrs. Yvonne Segerstrom*

South Coast Plaza

Mrs. Richard Steele*

$5,000,000 +

Bank of America/ Bank of America Foundation

Jane and Jim Driscoll

Steve* and Cindy Fry/ Fry Family Foundation

The James Irvine Foundation

The Ralph Leatherby Family

General* and Mrs. William Lyon

Harry and Grace Steele Foundation

Swenson Family Foundation

$1,000,000 +

Anonymous (4)

Bette and Wylie Aitken

Ginger and Tony Allen

Zee M. Allred, Dean C. Allred, Carol Ann Allred Starr

Automobile Club of Southern California

Mr.* and Mrs. James P. Baldwin

The Beall Family

Mrs. D. James Bentley*

Mr.* and Mrs.* Grant Bettingen

Mr.* and Mrs.* William J. Bettingen

Marta and Raj Bhathal

The Boeing Community Foundation

Deborah and Larry J. Bridges

Broadway Across America California Bank & Trust

Missy and Chris Callero

Eileen J. Cirillo

Mrs. Mary Ellen Conzelman

Cox Communications/Cox Media

Sally and Randy Crockett

Delta Air Lines

Benjamin and Carmela Du

Edison International

Mr. and Mrs. Moti Ferder, Lugano Diamonds

The First American Corporation

Fluor Corporation/The Fluor Foundation

Paul F. and Daranne Folino

Leo Freedman Foundation

Patricia Fredricks-Dolson

Freedom Communications, Inc.

June M. Fry*

John and Toni Ginger

Michael and Eleanor Gordon

Nora* and Charles* Hester and the Hester Family Foundation

Lawrence and Dolores Higby

George Hoag Family Foundation

Mark and Kristine Howlett

The Irvine Company

Mark Chapin Johnson

W. M. Keck Foundation

Kia Motors America, Inc.

Roger and Tracy Kirwan

Kling Family Foundation

Margaret G*. and Thomas E*. Larkin

Corey and Leslie Leyton

Sharon D. Lund Foundation

Times Mirror Foundation and Los Angeles Times

Phillip N. and Mary A. Lyons

Mrs. Colleen Manchester

Paul and Lilly Merage

Mercedes-Benz USA

David and Kathryn Moore

Mrs. Mary E. Moore

Rick Muth Family/ORCO Block

Pam and Jim Muzzy

Dr. Henry Nicholas, III

Ms. Stacey Nicholas

Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. O’Bryan

Pacific Life

Bill and Pat Podlich

Mrs. Marjorie T. Rawlins*

Mr. and Mrs. William Roberts

Michelle Rohé

Rutan & Tucker, LLP

The Samueli Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. George Schreyer

The Segerstrom Foundation

Ms. Donna Shannon

Mr. and Mrs. Ron Simon

Mr. and Mrs. Douglas H. Smith

The Sommerville Trust

Spectrum Reach

Georgia Hull Spooner*

Dorothy Stillwell*

Tara and David Troob

Union Bank

Elizabeth Colyear Vincent*

Jean and Tim Weiss

Wells Fargo Bank/Wells Fargo Foundation

Mrs. Constance T. Whitney*

Cecil C.* and Kathryn H.* Wright

$500,000 +

Anonymous

Howard and Roberta Ahmanson

Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Allen

The Allergan Foundation

Doug and Jaimee Baker

Dr.* and Mrs.* Arnold O. Beckman

Mr.* and Mrs. Benton Bejach

Drs. Fran* and Charlie* Cacha

Cartier

David and Victoria Collins

Mary and Richard* Cramer

James* and Catherine Emmi

Andy and Joan Fimiano

Carole and Robert* Follman

Carol Frobish

Harriett F. Grant*

Rondell B. and Joyce P. Hanson

Maralou and Jerry Harrington

Clifford S. Heinz*

S.L. and Betty Huang/ Huang Family Foundation

JPMorgan Chase/ JPMorgan Chase Foundation

Barbara and Robert Kleist

Curtis A. and Varla E. N. Knauss

Robert D.* and Patricia B. MacDonald

Dr.* and Mrs. Randall R. McCardle

Marcia L. Millen, in memory of James and Leath Millen

Mrs. Mary M. Muth*

NORDSTROM

The Peter Ochs Family

Trish and John* O’Donnell

Mr. John E. Pope and Ms. Jackie Singer

Charles* and Patricia Poss

Ralphs/Food 4 Less

The Reinhold Foundation

Rockwell International

Carlene Rona*

Eve and Michael J. Ruffatto

Bev and Bob Sandelman

Karalyn and Joseph* Schuchert

Nick and Heidi Shahrestany

The Shanbrom Family

Mr. and Mrs. Peter Owen Shea

Shea Homes Foundation

Janice and Ted Smith

Justice Sheila Prell Sonenshine (Ret.) and Mr. Ygal Sonenshine

David and Diane Steffy

Susan M. and Timothy L. Strader Family

Mr.* and Mrs. Joseph M. Thomas

Mr. and Mrs. William Thompson

Thomas and Elizabeth Tierney

Thomas and Joyce Tucker Family

Valeant Pharmaceuticals

Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Warmington

Jaynine and Dave Warner

Carol and Kent Wilken

*in memoriam

24 SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS

PREPARE for your calling AT

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FIND your voice INVEST in your craft

PREPARE for your calling AT VANGUARD UNIVERSITY

VANGUARD UNIVERSITY OFFERS

Scholarships available for music majors and non-majors

Degrees offered: BA Music, BA Worship Leadership, BM Pre-Teacher Certification (Music Education)

FOR MORE INFORMATION VISIT

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Scholarships available for music majors and non-majors

Degrees offered: BA Music, BA Worship Leadership, BM Pre-Teacher Certification (Music Education)

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VANGUARD UNIVERSITY OFFERS

a vibrant music program that fosters skills development, encourages experiential education, and instills community engagement, while preparing students for careers in music education, performance, ministry, and the surrounding arts industry.

a vibrant music program that fosters skills development, encourages experiential education, and instills community engagement, while preparing students for careers in music education, performance, ministry, and the surrounding arts industry.

Music majors studying General Music, Worship Leadership, and Pre-Teacher Certification (Music Education) along with students from nearly 20 different disciplines participate in our esteemed university performing groups reaching 30,000 people annually.

Music majors studying General Music, Worship Leadership, and Pre-Teacher Certification (Music Education) along with students from nearly 20 different disciplines participate in our esteemed university performing groups reaching 30,000 people annually.

1:9 Faculty to student ratio

in your
1:9 Faculty to student ratio

Donors

CENTER FUND

The Center Fund provides general operating support on an annual basis for Segestrom Center for the Arts and its programs. We are honored to recognize the following individuals, corporations and foundations for their gifts between January 1 and December 31, 2022. Your generosity makes a difference every day—and we thank you! To learn more about the Center Fund and the benefits of giving, please contact Malika Middlebrooks at MMiddlebrooks@scfta.org or (714) 942-6214.

$1,000,000+

Phillip N. and Mary A. Lyons

$500,000+

Anonymous

Kevin and Denise Cassin

$200,000+

Julia and George Argyros / Argyros Family Foundation

The Guilds of the Center

Elizabeth and Henry T.* Segerstrom

Sandy Segerstrom Daniels

$100,000+

Sally and Randy Crockett

Jane and Jim Driscoll

John and Toni Ginger

Mr. and Ms. Mark Hales

Mr. and Mrs. Hans Imhof

Kling Family Foundation / Jackie Glass

Mr. and Mrs. Moti Ferder / Lugano Diamonds

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Meyer

Michelle Rohé

Michael* and Stacy Schlinger

Sally E. Segerstrom

Connie and Dr. Peter Spenuzza

David and Diane Steffy

$50,000+

Howard and Roberta Ahmanson

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Best

Marta and Raj Bhathal

Deborah and Larry J. Bridges

Katherine and Howard Bland

Mr. and Mrs. Mark Chan

Mr. and Mrs. Andy Fimiano

S.L. and Betty Huang / Huang Family Foundation

Burt and Molly Jolly

Roger and Tracy Kirwan

Kling Family Foundation

Karla Kraft and Anderee Berengian

Dale Landon and Carole Haes Landon

Ms. Suki McCardle

Rick Muth Family/ORCO Block

Lana and Walter Parsadayan

John and Sherry Phelan

Bill and Pat Podlich

David and Molly Pyott Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. George Schreyer

Stewart R. Smith and Robin A. Ferracone

Steven M. Sorenson, M.D.

Tammy and Samuel Tang

The Tappan Foundation

Tara and David Troob

Jaynine and Dave Warner

Carol and Kent Wilken

$35,000+

Dr. and Mrs. Bartley Asner

Steven and Herma Brenneis

Eileen J. Cirillo

Mary and Richard* Cramer

Frome Family Foundation

Paul and Bonnie Lubock

Mr. and Mrs. Keith Murray

Neil and Barbara Phillips Trust

Mr. and Mrs. James P. Previti

The Schreiber Family

Mindy and Glenn Stearns

Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Vanderhook

Wilfred M. and Janet A. Roof Foundation

$25,000+

Anonymous

Mr. and Mrs. Eyal Aronoff

The Beall Family

Bobbi Cox

Janet L. Curci

Benjamin and Carmela Du

Allan* and Sandy Fainbarg

Diane and Joyce Froot

GOAL Foundation

Maralou and Jerry* Harrington

Lawrence and Dolores Higby

Mr. Reza Jahangiri and Mrs. Kate Levering-Jahangiri

Mike and Lynn Joseph

Nicole and Steve Joseph

Donna L. Kendall Foundation

Harmon and Lea Kong

Dr. Allan H. Lifson and James W. Neuman

Marcia L. Millen in memory of James and Leath Millen

Haydee and Carlos A. Mollura

PeopleSpace

Carolyn Zarate-Ramsey and Robert Ramsey

Carl and Mary Raymond

Ms. Christy A. Rosen

Bev and Bob Sandelman

Ms. Holly B. Schwartz

Honorable H. Warren and Janet Siegel

Mrs. Valaree Wahler

$15,000+

Pamela and Al Baldwin

Mr. and Mrs. James R. Bergman

Mr. and Mrs. Colin Best

The Cameron Family Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence D. Cancellieri

Dr. and Mrs. David Eggleston

Ms. Lupe Erwin

Cliff and Kathy Fleming

Carole and Robert* Follman

Angela Friedman

Doug* and Julie Garn

Rondell B. and Joyce P. Hanson

Kim and Scott Harris-Weiner

Mr. and Mrs. Jason Howard

Barbara Hiller Johnson

Mary Phillipp and David Johnson

Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy M. Jones

Mr. and Mrs. Bruce W. Kuluris

Mr.* and Mrs. C. Ronald Livingston

Douglas (Tad) Lowrey and Gayle Lowrey

Robert D.* and Patricia B. MacDonald

Charles* and Twyla Martin

Mr. John Massa and Mrs. Lisa Argyros

Ms. Diana Martin and Mr. Mark Tomaino

Rebecca and Carl McLarand

Louise Merage

Lisa and Richard Merage

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Moorhead

Pam and Jim Muzzy

Cheryl Hill Oakes

Patrick E. Paddon and S. Leslie Jewett

Mr. John R. Patterson

Kathryn Rousek Smith

Mr. and Mrs. Scott D. Seigel

Mr. and Mrs. Bert Selva

Ronna and Bill Shipman

Shorebreak Foundation, LLC

Mr. and Mrs. Ron Simon

The Sommerville Trust

John* & Elizabeth Stahr

Sue and Ralph Stern

Susan M. and Timothy L. Strader Family

Stephanie and Cory Sukert

Swenson Family Foundation

Donna and Ray Thagard, Jr.

Ambassador and Mrs. Gaddi H. Vasquez

Amy and Jeffrey Vieth

Stacey and Paul Von Berg

Dr. Christina Wainwright and Mr. Shep Wainwright

$10,000+

Anonymous (2)

Ginger and Tony Allen

Elizabeth An and Gordon Clune

Katheryn Baker

Tom and Pam Bender

The Bish Family

Barbara and Alex Bowie

Mr. Sean S. Cao and Ms. Jade Ho

Mary and John Carrington

Gunnel Cole

Robert* and LaDorna* Eichenberg

Anthony & Carie Ferry

Anthony and Carie Ferry

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Flanagan

The Grosvenor Family

Kling Family Foundation / Mrs. Vicki Gumm

Ms. Gail Haft

Constance Hsu

Dr. and Mrs. Gary T. Jenkins

Gay and Rob Johnson

Dr. and Mrs. William J. Link

Patricia Ann and Robert M. Marshall

Mr. and Mrs. James V. Mazzo

Harvey and Leslie Moore

Richard A. and Marilyn Kayla Moriarty

Mr. Maurice Murray and Dr. Jennifer Ballinger Murray

South Coast Plaza / Stephanie Rogers

RT Specialty

Patricia and Stephen Scarborough

David and Orva Schramm

Mr. and Mrs. Theodore W. Segerstrom

Marca and Brian Singer

Mr. and Mrs. Dean Spanos

Dr. and Mrs. Charles Steinmann

City of Hope / Larry Zeiber

Charles and Ling Zhang

$5,000+

Dr. and Mrs. Cyrus Arman

Dr. Fernando H. Austin

Sally Bender

26 SEGERSTROM
CENTER FOR THE ARTS

May 20, 2023 at 5 p.m.

Grammy-Award winning Pacific Chorale proudly presents the West Coast premiere of pioneering composer Florence Price’s rediscovered Abraham Lincoln Walks at Midnight, alongside Joseph Haydn’s stirring and majestic Nelson Mass with Pacific Symphony.

GET REVVED UP FOR A PARTY

with fast cars and freedom to host your one-of-a-kind event!

The newest venue in Orange County, where celebrations occur next to one of the greatest Shelby Automobile showcases, boasting over 8,000 sq. ft. of flexible event space on the first floor alone, the Segerstrom's Collection is guaranteed to captivate guests! Come take a stroll through iconic American history; from the earliest GT350's to Carroll Shelby's final wish, the 1000hp GT500, the immersive experience at the Segerstrom Shelby Event Center is one you will never forget.

For information on events or museum tours, visit SegerstromShelbyEventCenter.com, or call (949) 969-4368.

92618

Haydn+Price
Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall Pacific Chorale’s Annual Gala to Follow
Order tickets today! PacificChorale.org (714) 662-2345 TICKETS FROM $26 Pacific Chorale is a proud Resident Company of “a musical excursion beyond expectation” - Los Angeles Times
Robert Istad, Artistic Director & Conductor
5 Whatney Irvine, CA
APRIL 2023 27

Donors

Toni and Steven Berlinger

Mr. and Mrs. David C. Brown

Mr. and Mrs. David W. Chonette

Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Cohn

Mr. Gordon Cowan

Mr. and Mrs. Timothy J. Dean

Leah DeCono

Mrs. Ishani M. Dhillon

Michael Dreyer & Hannah An

Ms. Laurie Duncan

Kelly & David Emmes II

Shari and Harry Esayian

Dottie and Bill Feeney

Ray* and Pat Felbinger

Floriani Family

Ms. Renee Fourcade

Elaina Francis

Lynn and Douglas K. Freeman

Mr.* and Mrs.* T. Fukunaga/ Kay K. Fukunaga

Mr. and Mrs. John C. Garrett

Dr. and Mrs. Alan B. Gazzaniga

Cory Glass

Howard Gleicher / Damon Chen

Antoinette Green, Joanne Scott* and Peggy Wiemann

Karen Hardin-Swickard

Ms. Kerry L. Hedley

Gavin and Ninetta Herbert

Mr. and Mrs. William K. Hood

Dr. Douglas and Sandra Jackson

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Jaffee

Donna and David* Janes

Janice M. and Roger* W. Johnson

Don and Soogie Kang

Curtis A. and Varla E. N. Knauss

Eve A. Kornyei

Peter C. and Bonnie S.* Kremer

Ms. Fiona LeCong-Ly and Dr. Vietnam Ly

Dr. and Mrs. Milton Legome

Linda I. Smith Foundation

Jim and Gale Luce

Mr. and Mrs. William F. Meehan

John and Karen Meston

Scott and Jasmine Morielli

Bob and Christie Narver

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen G. Oswald

Yvette Pergola

Robert and Helga Pralle Family Foundation

Walter and Renate Rados

Joel and Lilya Reiss

Charles and Kathy Rosenberger

Paul and Mary Sackman

Sandy and Harriet Sandhu

Mrs. Meryl Schrimmer

Claudette Shaw

Mr. and Mrs. Tony Smith

Justice Sheila Prell Sonenshine (Ret.) and Mr. Ygal Sonenshine

Ms. Marci Hollander

Ms. Michele Suire

Jerry Sutton and Doniel Sutton

Peter and Mary Tennyson

Kelly Thomson

Mr. and Mrs. Dan Ugalde

$2,500+

Anonymous (2)

Mr.* and Mrs. Howard Abel

Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Abelove

The Ackerman Family

Bette and Wylie Aitken

Ms. Kathy R. Akashi

James and Elaine Alexiou

Mr.* and Mrs. Byron Allumbaugh

Dr. Chris Apodaca

Ms. Stephanie Argyros

Dr. and Mrs. Leslie A. Bain

Ms. Diane Bangar

Sharon Barrett

Patricia Price and Craig Behrens

Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Bein

Mr.* and Mrs. Dror J. Benjamin

Mr. and Mrs. Joel Benkie

Barbara J. Benson

Mr. and Mrs. Michael M. Berns

Dr.* and Mrs. John R. Betson

Mrs. Frances Buchanan

Sylvia Burnett

Mr. Joseph Busch

Cheryl Carlson

John J. Carvelli and Kathryn Carvelli

Marty Chao and Jean Chung

Dr. and Mrs. Shigeru Chino

Ronna and Donald Coe

David & Victoria Collins Family Fund

Corkett/Myers Families

Michael and Anne Crawford

Mr. and Mrs. John Cunningham

John L. Curci

Noël Davis

Gregg Denicola, M.D.

Mrs. Sandra DiSario

Judi Dutton

Mr. and Mrs. W. James Edwards III

Susan and Robert Ehrlich

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Eng

Michael G. Ermer

Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Estabrooks

Mr. and Mrs. Donald P. Evarts

Farmers & Merchants Bank

Robert Farnsworth

Ashley and Zach Fischer

Dr. and Mrs. Gordon R. Fishman

Fountain Orthotics & Prosthetics

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Francis

Iris and Arnold Frankel

Steve* and Cindy Fry

Mike and Sharon Galassi

Margaret Gates

Michael and Eleanor Gordon

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Grody

Jenny and Jeff Gross

Marlene and Sam* Hamontree

Pat and Gene Hancock

Bruce and Eileen Harrigan

Mr. and Mrs. Terry Hartshorn and Family

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. Himes

David L. Horowitz Family

Mark and Kristine Howlett

Mark Ike

Mr and Mrs Jim Irwin

Jackson Tidus

Tom Jenkins

Diane and Harry Johnson

Jessica and James Johnson

Dr. Burton L. Karson

Randy and Linda Kearns

Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Keith

Teri Kennady

Mr. and Mrs. William A. Klein

Dr. Elliott Kornhauser

Michelle A. Lund

Dr.* and Mrs. Paul K. Lam

Latham & Watkins

Joann Leatherby and Greg Bates

Ms. Michelle Lee

Kevin and Doris Lee

Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Edward LeVasseur, Jr.

Jaye Ruth Levy

Pamela Lewin

Mr. and Mrs. Randall W. Lewis

Corey and Leslie Leyton

Paula Lingelbach

Mr. and Mrs. Brent Lynn

Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Mairena

Brian and Michele Maryott

Mr. and Mrs. Mawhorter

R. Patrick* and Jeannette L. McDaniel

Toni and Terry McDonald

Susan Mears

Ms. Olga Megdal

Mr. and Mrs. David J. Melilli

Suzanne and James Robb Mellor

Mr. and Mrs. Peter T. Meltzer

Michelle Merage

Mr. and Mrs. Norman J. Metcalfe

Kathy Michel

Thomas and Deanna Mitro

Tom and Naomi Moon

Ms. Jerra L. Morris

Evonne Morton

Mr. and Mr. Janis Murray

Newmeyer & Dillion

Chien and Linh Nguyen

The Minoru Nitta Family

The Peter Ochs Family

Trish and John* O’Donnell

Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Packard

Mr. and Mrs. William O. Passo

Pamela Paul

Mr. Keith A. Pelan

Mr. and Mrs. Joe Perricone

Mr. Willard Pierce

Pirzadeh & Associates, Inc.

Dr. and Mrs. Richard Pitts

Mr. and Mrs. Gary Primm

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Proctor

Marcia Kay and Ron Radelet

John Rallis and Mary Lynn Bergman-Rallis

Suzanne C. and Jim H. Reinhardt

Joan Riach Gayner

Marilyn Hester Robbins and William H. Robbins

David and Linda Roberson Family

Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Roedersheimer

Georgia and Robert Roth

Jan Vitti Rubel

Ms. Lori Rudin

Judy Fluor Runels, Dick Runels, Jayne & Lisa, in memory of Gregory Osborne

Mr.* and Mrs. Jack A. Sage

Melinda Grubbs-Sanders and Steve Sanders

Elizabeth and Justus Schlichting

Ms. Pamela M. Schmider

Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Schneider

Anita Seiveley and Jim Collins

Joan and Alan Sellers

Roger and Phyllis Shafer

Mr.* and Mrs. William N. Shattuck

Mary Shebell and Merle McCormick

Dr. John J. Smith and Mr. Edward R. Escoto

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Soderling

Nancy and Geoffrey Stack

Mr. and Mrs. Morris Stark

Dr. and Mrs. Barry D. Steele

Dr. and Mrs. Daniel Stein

Lisa and Wayne Stelmar

Mr. Lee R. Sutherland

Mr. and Mrs. Dennis J. Sweeney

Pharris Group

Mr. and Mrs. R. David Threshie, Jr.

Mr. Christopher Trela

Dr. David L. Tsoong and Dr. Betty K. Tu

Ann Van Ausdeln

S. Vander Wal and S. Vincent

Megan and John Waldeck

Mr. and Mrs. Laurence M. Watson

Geofrey Wickett and Normand Lessard

S. Gayle Widyolar, M.D.

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Witt

28 SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS

Hal and Cheri Wright

Paul and Cheryl Wyrick

Mr. Darren Xanthos

Mr. and Mrs. Allen Yourman

The Beverly & Albert Zacky Family Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. Dean J. Zipser

$1,500+

Anonymous (4)

Jeannie Adams

Ms. Janis Agopian

Ms. Donna Anderson and Mr. Ronald Willut

Mr. and Mrs. Enrico Arvielo

Babilo Family

Dr. Thomas Bailey

Jim and Diane Bailey

Ms. Barbara D. Baranski

Paul Barkopoulos

Ms. Billie K. Baron

Dorothy and Donald* Bendetti

Mrs. Jennifer Berg

Berwood Management, Inc.

John and Kathy Besnard

Ms. Donna S. Bianchi

Suzanne and Bert Bigelow

Phil and Judy Binder

Blackbaud Giving Fund

Randy and Maria Blake

Blue Violet Networks

Mr. Peter F. Bowie

Bill and Judy Brady

Mr. and Mrs. R.J. Brandes

Carol and Peter Bregman

Dr. Andrew Breiterman

Paul and Rose Briscoe

Jim and Wendy Brooks

Ms. Karly Brown

Ms. Pauline Bukantz

Mrs. Kerrie Buncher

Charlie and Margie Bunten

Kimberly Burge

Nancy N. Burnett

Mr. and Mrs. John C. Callard

Ms. Donna F. Calvert

Jean Campbell

Ms. Deidre Campbell

Ms. Greta Campbell

Luisa Cano

Mrs. Cynthia Carson

Mr. and Mrs. John L. Cashion

Ms. Bertha Cerda

Mr. John Chadwick

Michael and Elizabeth Chao

Derek Chen

Ms. Sandra Chiles

Lori and Harper Chozen

Ms. Sharon A. Cleaver

Robert and Diana Clemmer

Mr. Otis Cliatt II

Ms. Mary Coates

Michelle Colburn

Kevin and Lisa Corrigan

Greg and Donna Crandall

Ms. Patsy Cundiff

Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Currie

Mary E. Dalessi

Mr. William G. Daly

Gail and Jim Daniels

Mr. and Mrs. Larry K. Dart

Dr. Robert F. and Julie A. Davey

Roger and Marjorie Davisson

Pieter and Keren de Zwart

Ms. Mary Debar

Jeannie Denholm

Dr. Daniel P. Dennies

Mary Allyn and Earl Dexter

Claus Dieckell

Richard and Lisa Doebler

Joan M. Donahue

Jolyon and Sharon Druce

Jerry and Kathy Dunlap

Frances L. Dye

Karen Ellis and Sandra Hartness

Cyndee Ely

Gareth Thomas Evans, Esq.

Jean-Claude and Dina Falmagne

Mr. and Mrs. Tony Fang

Mr. and Mrs. Marc Ferguson

Ms. Epifania Fernandez

Ms. Kaaryn File

Mrs. Cristy Fischbeck

Mr. Todd Fjield

Drs. Lisa Flanagan and Edwin Monuki

Elizabeth and John Fleming

Christine Flowers

Mr. and Mrs. J. Robert Fluor III

Janet Ford

Ms. Gwen Forquer

Ms. Rebecca Francis

James and Martha Freeman

Marilyn French and Bill Behr

Loretta Freund and Howard DeMar

Dr. Robert Furman

Ms. Yolanda Galloway

Marte* and Jack Ganoung

Ms. Jerra L. Morris

Mary and Dennis Ghan

Mr. James C. Gianulias

William J. Gillespie*

Susan Glass

Lawrence and Sharlene Goodman

Gerrie Goodreau

Mr. William Gordon and Dr. Susan M. Condrey

Mr. Donald Gormly

Mr. and Mrs. Larry Gorum

Dina L. Gray

Mary and Peter Rooney

Gary and Linda Greene

Sharon and John Gregg

Mr. Chad Hainley

Mr. and Mrs. David Hale

Heidi Hall and Steven Guzowski

Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hartline

Tim and Mary Harward

Vicki and David Hatfield

Angela Sue Helin

Mr. Frank T. Henry

Mr. and Mrs. Jose F. Herrera

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hinkle

Gary* and Sara, Frank and Brad Hinman

Hoelscher-Bell-Elliott Foundation

Peter and Susan Holliday

Dan and Lara Horgan

Toni Hoyt

Hing and Doris Hung

Mr. Darrel Huntington

Buzz* and Joan Jackson

Kristin Jackson

Laurie Jacobs

The Jaffe Family Foundation

Russell Jeffrey

Ms. Cynthia L. Jennings

Dolores and Mike Johnson

Kenneth L. and Marilyn C. Jones

Mr. David Julifs and Ms. Roxann Marumoto

Lynn L. Kambe

Irene B. Kamin

Ms. Gladys Kares

Mr. and Mrs. Reynold Kern

Marianne and Arthur Kidman

Mr. Daryl S. Kling

Mr. and Mrs. James Knapp

Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Knoth

Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Kobayashi

Mr. and Mrs. Barry Konier

Mrs. Debra Kornswiet-Shandling and Dr. Adrian Shandling

Richard and Lynne Kramer

Bill and Mona Kratzert

Tamara and Jon Krause

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Krause

Margarita Kruse

Ira and Riki Kucheck

Mr. Robert Kulpa and Ms. Linda S. Pabian

Linda A. Kurtz

Dr. and Mrs. KiHong Kwon

Mr. Jesse W. Laney

Betty Jane Lang

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Lester

Allan and Patricia Lewis

Dr. Carolyn C. Light

Robert* and Janet Lind

Mr. Brian Lindley and Mrs. Maile Busby-Lindley

Ms. Karen Linton

Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Logan, Jr.

Richard and Jacqueline Lombardi

Ms. Margaret M. Lord

Dr. and Mrs. Paul and Jana Lu

Christopher and Mary Lubner

In memory of Ed Lynch

Ms. Lynne E. MacVean

In memory of Victorio Adan Maestas

Kay and John Maglica

Mrs. Colleen Manchester

Dr. and Mrs. William Manclark

Dave and Diana Margileth

Mr. and Mrs. Dale Marquis

Ms. Laila Marshall-Pence

Mr. and Mrs. Don W. Martens

Joe and Linda Martin

P. Dennis Mattson and Melinda K. Harris

Brandon and Melissa Mazzacavallo

George and Sarah McDaniel

Mr. Thomas E. McKnight

Robert and Patricia McLaughlin

Ray Melissa and Elena Bedford

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Meyer

Pamela Michael

Steven and Jenny Mizusawa

Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Molina

Scott and Susan Moore

Mr. Corey Moore

Priscella J. Moore

Ms. Janice L. Moroney

Mr. Berto Muniz RN

Steven M. Murow

Debi Murray

Linda Myers

Mr. and Mrs. William Naeve

Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Naeve

Tom and Marian Nau

Ms. Sheri Nazaroff

In Memory Of Mr. Robert T. Newell

Ms. Shayna M. Newman

Dr. Abdel Salam M. Niazy

Mr. and Mrs. Don M. Norman

Mr. and Mrs. Merlin J. Norton

Dr. Kevin O’Grady and Mrs. Nella Webster

Ms. Dawn O’Rourke

William and Linda Owen

Jae Pak

Evelyn and Pete Parrella

Raj Patel

Ms. Pamela S. Pedego

Ms. Katrina L. Pelto

Ms. Barbara Perez

Judy and Jack Perry

Beverly and Jim Peters

APRIL 2023 29

Donors

Dr. Ronald O. and Donna J. Phelps

The Penn Air Group

Johni Pittenger

Mr. Keith I. Polakoff

Mr. Mark Prendergast

Mr. Paul Proulx

Mr. Michael Reimer

Michelle A. Reinglass

Mr. Rick Reischman

Laurie and Richard M.* Rodnick

Ronna and Marshall Rown, M.D.

Lisa Rutherford

Ms. Janet Sanders

Yolanda Santos

Ms. Suzanne Schaumburg

Dale and Cindy Scheffler, and Mark Nye

Dolores Schiffert

Ms. Denise Schuler

Bud and Sandy Scott

Ms. Barbara L. Sentell

Emmanuel Sharef

Linda and Ed Sherman

Mrs. Ingrid R. Shutkin

Ms. Virginia D. Silverman

Lance and Deborah Slimmer

Ms. Kim Smith

Stephen E. Smith and Kathy Coyle Smith

Barbara E. Sorenson

Karyn Spear

N. Vicky Staub

Dr. Melvyn and Patricia Sterling

Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Stirrat

Rob and Joan Stratton

Carol Lipp Strauss

Mandi Strelow Burch

Susan and Richard Stuelke

David and Jill Susson

Mr.* and Mrs. Arthur E. Svendsen

Michael and Suzanne Tague

Toni Tartamella

Kristin Taylor

Ms. Alveris B. Van Fleet-Corson

Henry and Sally Viets

Amy Villa

Fritzie Walker

Ms. Geraldine Walker

In memory of Robert D. Walters

Marilyn and Steve Weber

Mr. and Mrs. Gary Weisenberg

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne W. Weisman

Mrs. Lorraine Welty

Shanna White

Ms. Susan Wiens

D and G Winzey

Patricia Wright

Howard and Sumi Yata

David Zimmerman

Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Zimmon

*in memoriam

Nora* and Charles* Hester and the Hester Family Foundation

W. M. Keck Foundation

Barbara Steele Williams Fund

Mr.* and Mrs. Richard Steele

Harry and Grace Steele Foundation

Swenson Family Foundation

The James Irvine Foundation

The Segerstrom Foundation

Patron of Eminence ($500,000 +)

Fluor Corporation

The Fluor Foundation

Carol Frobish*

Times Mirror Foundation and Los Angeles Times Rockwell

Mrs. Constance T. Whitney*

Patron of Distinction ($250,000 +)

Bank of America

Nancy Marie Biram*

Patricia Fredricks-Dolson

Edison International

The First American Corporation

Patron of Honor ($100,000 +)

Daniel C.* and Janet S. Bonbright and Sons

Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Engman

Helen B. Fait

Elizabeth E. Fleming*

The Orange County Register

William Randolph Hearst Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Heinz

Richard C.* and Virginia A.* Hunsaker

Peter G.* and Mary M. Muth and Family

Nestle USA, Inc.

Mr. and Mrs. Douglas H. Smith

Ronald E. Soderling

Virginia Valentine

Nancy B. Veitch and Chris and Irene Veitch

Patron of Acclaim ($50,000 +)

The Birtcher Family

Founders Plus

Evelyn and Richard Francuz

Sonia and Earle Ike

Mark Chapin Johnson and Barbara Hiller Johnson

Isidore C. and Penny W.* Myers

Palley-Needelman Asset Management

Ralphs/Food 4 Less

Mr. Stewart R. Smith

Ms. Anita Sparrow*

Wells Fargo

In memory of Barbara Steele Williams

Dr. and Mrs. David E. Zinke, Brandon, Heidi & Benjamin

Center Ambassador ($25,000 +)

In honor of Mary Isabelle Sandberg

In memory of Renée Segerstrom

Dr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Shaver and Family

Thomas and Joyce Tucker Family

Dr. and Mrs. Douglas A. Wilson

Center Diplomat ($10,000 +)

Mrs. Donald V. Bassler

Mr. and Mrs. Peter F. Bowie

Susan Boyd

Mr. Lawrence H. Butler, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Callahan

Chris and Lee Ann Canaday

Con Gusto Chapter of The Guilds of the Center

Bjorn and Gloria Dahlberg and Family

Mr. and Mrs. Warren C. Dean, Jr.

Mr. Aaron Egigian

Alan* and Sandy Fainbarg Family

Dr. Dennis R. Fratt

John and Carolyn Garrett

Mr. and Mrs. Gerald H. McQuarrie

GoodSmith & Co., Inc.

William K. and Maxine Gresswell*

Nat S. and April D. Harty

Gayford and Mary Hinton

Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Hoshaw

Mr. and Mrs. Jay D. Jaeger

Ronald E. and Debra P* Jagner

Hunter B. Keck

Dr. Elliott Kornhauser

Mrs. Susan Lambrose

Ronald C., Vincencia M., Elisabeth L. and Heather D. Lazof

Mr. and Mrs. George Leeper

Mr. and Mrs. Christopher B. Lucas

Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Mallory

Charles W. and Candace J. McBrayer

Mr. and Mrs. Brad McCroskey

Mr. and Mrs. Steven A. McHolm

Dr. and Mrs. Seymour J. Melnik

Estate of Ralph and Rose Meyer*

Mr. and Mrs. J. Stanley Mullin, Jr.

Dr. and Mrs. Richard P. Mungo

Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Nelson

Joseph and Mary Norton Family

Ms. Cheryl Oakes

Nicholas S. Patin

Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker

Mr. and Mrs. Chris F. Pauls

Mr. Charles Peyton, II

Dr. and Mrs. James E. Pierog, Jessica and Margaux

Betty Mower Potalivo

Stanley R. Robb Family

Ted and Jean Robinson and Family

The Clubhouse

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen L. Salyer

Douglas F. Schneider and Family

Rudolph C. Schweitzer*

Robert J. Searles

In memory of Hartley M. Sears

ENDOWMENT

Segerstrom Center for the Arts

thanks the following donors who have generously provided support to the Center’s Endowment Funds. Gifts to the Endowment provide financial support for our artistic and education programs every year. Funds exist in perpetuity as investments whose earnings make the arts accessible for future generations.

Patron of Esteem ($1,000,000 +)

Audrey Steele Burnand*

Estate of Edra E. Brophy/ William J. Gillespie Foundation

The Beall Family

Victor H. Boyd

Dr. and Mrs. Shigeru Chino

David and Victoria Collins, Jennifer, Nicole and David

Ruth Ding, in memory of Thomas and Mary Lee

James* and Catherine Emmi

The Baker Frenzel Family

Mr.* and Mrs. H. F. Hamann

In memory of Faye Wilkinson

Las Campanas of Orange County

Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Macklin

Mr. and Mrs. Bradford Harold Miller*

O’Neil Moving Systems, Inc.

Mr. and Mrs. Anthony H. Osterkamp, Jr.

Renée* and Henry T.* Segerstrom

Al and Susan Shankle

Mr. and Mrs. William Shryock and Family

Linda and Harvey A. Smith

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Soderling

Steven-Thomas Antiques

The Stone Family

Dr. Max Swancutt, Jr.

Mr. Stewart C. Woodard

Mr. and Mrs. Rob Ukropina

Ms. Lucia Van Ruiten

Mr. Edward H. Wale

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Wilson

Mr. and Mrs. Daniel K. Winton

Mr.* and Mrs.* Robert E. Yellin

30 SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS

LEGACY SOCIETY

Segerstrom Center for the Arts thanks the following donors who have included the Center in their estate plans. These gifts help ensure that we allow access to the arts for the entire community.

Patron of Esteem ($1,000,000 +)

Anonymous*

Richard C.* and Virginia A.* Hunsaker

Jean Ruth Miller*

Mr. and Mrs. George Schreyer

Cecil C.* and Kathryn* H. Wright

Dr. and Mrs. David E. Zinke, Brandon, Heidi & Benjamin

Deferred Estate Gifts

Anonymous

Michael and Sara Abraham

Edna and Julio Aljure

Mr. & Mrs. Richard D. Allen

Myrtle A. Anderson

Bart and Elizabeth Asner

Antoinette W. Ayres*

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Barnett

John and Betty Barr

Mrs. Donald V. Bassler

The William A. Baxter Family

Mr. and Mrs. Alan J. Beaudette

Gregory and Jennifer Beck

Dorothy and Donald Bendetti

Mr. and Mrs. Michael M. Berns

George and Jacqueline Birdsong

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Birtcher

Mr. Baron Birtcher

The Birtcher Family

Mr. Ronald E. Birtcher

Mrs. Bernice Bishop*

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bland

Roberta Bouillon Trust

Barbara and Alex Bowie

Mr. and Mrs. Peter F. Bowie

Susan Boyd

Victor H. Boyd

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Brown, Jr.

Gordon D. Brown and Jean D. Brown*

Ms. Kathy Buda

Douglas T. Burch, Jr.*

Mr. and Mrs. Irving* X. Burg

Audrey Steele Burnand*

Dr. and Mrs. Darrell J. Burnett

Barbara Baker Burnham*

Drs. Fran* and Charlie Cacha

Charles B. Caldwell

Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Callahan

Jean, Bob, Kristen and Kelly Campbell

Chris and Lee Ann Canaday

Dr. and Mrs. James H. Casey

Dr. and Mrs. Shigeru Chino

Eileen Cirillo

Mr. Barry H. Josselson, Esquire

Mr. Duncan M. Coffey

Elizabeth and David Cole

David and Victoria Collins, Jennifer, Nicole and David

John and Jennifer Condas

Mr. and Mrs. Edmond M. Connor

Bjorn and Gloria Dahlberg and Family

Mr. and Mrs. William K. Davis

Mr. and Mrs. Warren C. Dean, Jr.

Ford A. Dickerhoff* and Wilma Dickerhoff*

Mr. Kermit Dorius*

Harry J. and Edith M. Doyle

Estate of Bertha Duhan*

Mary Jane McArthur Edalatpour and Nasrola Edalatpour

Ms. Julie Brinkerhof Edwards

Mr. and Mrs. David Emmes, II

Shari and Harry Esayian

Mr. Harold W. Faber

Mr. Curtis S. Farrell

Jack and Janie Flammer

Dr. Dennis R. Fratt

Mr.* and Mrs.* T. Fukunaga/Kay K. Fukunaga

John and Carolyn Garrett

Estate of Edra E. Brophy*/ William J. Gillespie Foundation

GoodSmith & Co., Inc.

Harriett F. Grant*

Dr. and Mrs. G. Stanley Hall

Mr. and Mrs. Rondell Hanson

Nat S. and April D. Harty

Aart and Robert Hennekes

Lawrence and Dee Higby

Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Higgins

Lewis and Audrey Himmelrich

Mr. Harold Hofer

David L. Horowitz Family

Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Hoshaw

Mark and Kristine Howlett

S.L. and Betty Huang/ Huang Family Foundation

Lorne and Traute Huycke

Sonia and Earle Ike*

Mr. and Mrs. Jay D. Jaeger

Mr. Guy K. Johnson

Dr.* and Mrs.* Bertram W. Justus

Mrs. Suzanne Kline

Curtis A. and Varla E. N. Knauss

Dr. Elliott Kornhauser

Mr. Gary A. Kreitz and Ms. Joyce Singman

Mrs. Susan Lambrose

Ronald C., Vincencia M., Elisabeth L. and Heather D. Lazof

Richard and Gerrie Leeds

Mr. and Mrs. George Leeper

Mr. and Mrs. Christopher B. Lucas

Leon and Molly Lyon*

Phillip N. and Mary A. Lyons

Mr. and Mrs. Robert* D. MacDonald

James, Charlene and Katherine MacDonald

Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Macklin

Douglas and Sandra MacLennan

Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Mallory

Mrs. Hedda Marosi

Charles W. and Candace J. McBrayer

Mr. and Mrs. Brad McCroskey

R. Patrick* and Jeannette L. McDaniel

Mr. and Mrs. Steven A. McHolm

The McLarand Family Trust

Dr. and Mrs. Seymour J. Melnik

Mr. Robin B. Miner

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mitchell

Mr. and Mrs. George H. Mohr*

The Morrison & Foerste Foundation

Myron Mull*

Mr. and Mrs. J. Stanley Mullin, Jr.

Dr. and Mrs. Richard P. Mungo

Mr. and Mrs. James P. Murphy

Isidore C. and Penny W. Myers

Michael D. and Lorraine C. Nadler

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Neisser

Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Nelson

Newmeyer & Dillion

Joseph and Mary Norton Family

Jerry Nourse

Ms. Cheryl Oakes

O’Neil Moving Systems, Inc./ Carolyn O’Neill

Mr. and Mrs. Anthony H. Osterkamp, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. John Palafoutas

Mrs. Charlotte R. Paluzzi

Mr. and Mrs. Tim Paone

Nicholas S. Patin

Mr. and Mrs. Chris F. Pauls

Lenore and Carl Pearlston

Mr. Charles Peyton, II

Dr. and Mrs. James E. Pierog, Jessica and Margaux

Betty Mower Potalivo

Elaine M. Redfield*

Mr. Burton Reis

Howard G.* and Margaret C.* Richardson

Stanley R. Robb Family

David and Linda Roberson Family

Ted and Jean Robinson and Family

Carlene Rona*

Mrs. Annette Rosenthal*

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen L. Salyer

Bob and Bev Sandelman

Estate of Ernest J. Schag, Jr.*

Mr. and Mrs. Gordon A. Schaller

Mrs. Betty Scheidt

Douglas F. Schneider and Family

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Schoellerman

O. Carl Schulz

Robert J. Searles

Al and Susan Shankle

Dr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Shaver and Family

Dr. James B. and Muriel A. Sheets and Dr. Cherilyn G. Sheets

Mr. and Mrs. William Shryock and Family

Jackie Singer and John Pope

Estate of Norman and Rose Smedegaard*

Mr.* and Mrs. Allen O. Smith

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Sparks

Georgia Hull Spooner*

David and Diane Steffy

Mr. and Mrs. David H. Steinmetz

Richard R. and Phoebe Stenton

Steven-Thomas Antiques

Mr. and Mrs. Glen E.* Stillwell

The Stone Family

Dr. Arthur Strick

Dr. Max Swancutt, Jr.

A. Z. Taft, II*

Don L. Thompson

Libby and Herbert* Tobin

Thomas and Joyce Tucker Family

Mr. and Mrs. Rob Ukropina

Virginia Valentine

Nancy B. Veitch and Chris and Irene Veitch

Mr. Edward H. Wale

Ms. Jill Watkins

Margaret and Maurie Watman

Mr. and Mrs. Peter Weston

Estate of Hilda Everett Whiteley*

Kent J. and Carol L. Wilken Family

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth H. Williams

Fritzie Williams, in memory of Frank Williams

Dr. and Mrs. Douglas A. Wilson

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Wilson

Mr. and Mrs. Daniel K. Winton

Harriett F. Witmer Family Trust*

Mr. Stewart C. Woodard

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Orrin Wright

Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Yellin

Jane D. Zimmerman*

*in memoriam

APRIL 2023 31

Center Staff

EXECUTIVE OFFICE

Casey Reitz, President

Judy Morr, Executive Vice President, Producing Director •

Brian Finck, Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer•

Aaron Egigian, Senior Director, Music Programming•

ADMINISTRATION

Angelica Camarillo, Executive Assistant to the President & Board Liaison

Kelly Ornelas, Executive Assistant & Programming Coordinator•

Stacey Myers, Attorney/Contracts Manager•

FINANCE

Seila Heng, Controller

MeiMei Chiang, Senior Accountant

Andrew Hudson, Assistant Controller

Monica Drescher, Accounting Generalist•

HUMAN RESOURCES

Kerk Brown, Vice President, Human Resources

Maile Sagiao, Manager, Human Resources

Karen Duncan, Human Resources Generalist

MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS

Lisa Middleton, Vice President, Marketing & Communications

Carla Cruz, Senior Director, Communications

Roxanne Rothafel, Senior Director, Program Marketing

Jonathan Vietze, Senior Director, Series Marketing•

Christopher Alvarez, Director, Creative Services•

Karen Drum, Director, Publications•

Anne McNiff-Gaeta, Director, Group Services•

Jennifer Burroughs, Digital Marketing Manager

Joesan Diche, eCommerce Marketing Manager•

Kelly Hamilton, Manager, Annual Giving

Richard Ong, Manager, Calling Center•

Ken Catino, Senior Graphic Designer

Marianne Luwiharto, Graphic Designer

Jennifer Siglin, Graphic Designer

Hilary Leierer, Marketing Analyst•

Diana Torres, Group Services•

Emily Doughty, Social Media Coordinator

Lauren Knight, Content Creator Coordinator

William Olivieri, Marketing Coordinator

TICKETING

Ruth Mason, Director, Ticket Services

Karen Diche, Manager, Season Tickets•

Nicki Wilmot, Manager, Box Office

Karla Torres, Assistant Manager, Box Office

Amelia Lindquist, Supervisor, Ticket Services

Evan Silveria, Supervisor, Box Office

Marcie Bernal, Receptionist

Alberto Ponce, Office Services Coordinator •

Ashley Gaddis, Ticketing Functional Support•

Richard Todd, Ticketing Functional Support•

AUDIENCE SERVICES

Norm Major III, Director, Audience Services•

Sue Laird, Senior Manager, Audience Services

Ashleigh Hector, Asst. Manager, Audience Services•

Alex Lum, Asst. Manager, Audience Services•

Regine Rutherfurd, Clerical Assistant

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

Dean Yarborough, Director, Information Technology

David Frederick, Associate Director, Information Technology

Jana Young, Applications Manager•

Samwel Basweti, Network Support Specialist

Mario Hortizuela, IT Support Specialist

Erik Lomack, IT Support Generalist

DEVELOPMENT

Tyler Ennis, Vice President, Development

Malika Middlebrooks, Associate Vice President, Development•

Elizabeth Kurila, Senior Director, Gift Planning Strategies

Courtney Dudman-Donley, Senior Director, Special Events & Support Groups

Nikki Michela, Director, Institutional Giving

Ginger Cheverria, Associate Director, Development Operations

Abigail Jimenez, Senior Manager, Special Events

Kay Linan, Senior Manager, Individual Giving & Stewardship

Jamie Roff, Senior Manager, Development Systems•

Emily Spicer, Senior Manager, Support Groups

Brian Tom, Senior Manager, Institutional Giving

Jeremy Hillier, Manager, Events and Support Groups Administration

Bernadette Ramos, Manager, Donor Relations

Sierra Detar, Prospect Analyst

Katie Lockie, Assistant Manager, Stewardship

Shimin Zheng, Assistant Manager, Support Groups

Evelyn Flores, Coordinator, Donor Relations

April Kunowski, Coordinator, Individual Giving

Danielle McMahan, Coordinator, Special Events

Stefanie Goodenberger, Executive Assistant, Development

EDUCATION

Talena Mara, Vice President, Education•

Cristal Ochoa, Director, Education Programs

Bethany Umbach, Senior Manager, Education Programs

Sarah Sierszyn, Manager, Education Operations

Alexis Johnson, Manager, Education Partnerships

Michael Mariano, Assistant Manager, Education Partnerships

Katie Nguyen, Coordinator, Education Partnerships

Emily Pearce, Coordinator, Education Programs

COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT

Marytza Rubio, Vice President, Community Engagement, and Senior Director, Community & Culture

Emily Neely, Director, Community Engagement

Chloe Saalsaa, Manager, Studio D

Priscilla Reyes, Coordinator, Community Engagement

THEATER OPERATIONS

David Leavenworth, Vice President, Theater Operations & Facilities

Brian Keating, Director, Facilities and Engineering

Max Stossier, Director, Theater Operations

Kelly Ellerbrook, Event Operations Manager

Lindy Luong, Rental Manager

Glenn Powell, Production Manager

Aidan Daguro, Assistant Production Manager

Brennan Roach, Event Operations Supervisor

Jordan Smyth, Admin Coordinator

Denise Cruz, Production Coordinator

Zack Johnston, Clerical Assistant

SEGERSTROM HALL

John Oliphant, Technical Director/ Sr. Production Carpenter•

Sara Broadhead, Head Electrician

Willy J Pate, Head Carpenter

Alexis Vazquez Riggs, Head Wardrobe

James Wilcox, Head Audio

Chris Alva, Assistant In-Charge Carpenter/ Props•

Michael Clifford, Assistant

Scott Dale, Assistant•

Christopher Haugh, Assistant

Phil Harris, Assistant

Tim Ligatti, Assistant

TJ Simons, Assistant In-Charge Electrician

RENÉE AND HENRY SEGERSTROM

CONCERT HALL

John Downey, Head Audio•

Gregg Snider, Head Electrician•

John Vasquez, Head Carpenter

Eileen Jeanette, Tönmeister

SAMUELI THEATER

Mark Cook, Electrician•

Timothy Schmidt, Asst. Audio

ENGINEERING

Marc Lewis, Senior Engineer•

Bryan Vojtko, Senior Engineer•

Richard Whitfield, Senior Engineer•

Don Harvey, Engineer

Sean Robertson, Engineer

SECURITY

David Geck, Director of Security and Public Safety

Jon Hampe, Security Manager

Tyler Cole, Public Safety and Training Manager

Jaime Paz, Security Coordinator

Anthony Gonzales, Ramon Sanchez, Gary Spangler•, Lee Yepez, Security Supervisors

AMERICAN BALLET THEATRE

WILLIAM J. GILLESPIE SCHOOL

Sarah Jones, Interim Director

Zach Edwards, Coordinator

32 SEGERSTROM
CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Full-time staff as of Mar. 6 2023 10 or more years of service 20 or more years of service 30 or more years of service

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