APRIL 2023 JEAN-YVES THIBAUDET YANIV DINUR
AWADAGIN PRATT
INTERACTIVE PROGRAM
RAFAEL
PAYARE HERA HYESANG PARK SCAN WITH SMARTPHONE CAMERA TO ACCESS THE
Discover San Diego’s Newest Life Plan Community. At The Glen at Scripps Ranch, residents enjoy beautiful, maintenance-free homes on 53 acres just steps away from resort-like amenities and services. What’s more, they have enhanced peace of mind with priority access to the adjacent health center for assisted living, memory care and long-term care in a skilled nursing center, if ever needed. it’s time for your encore! Take a bow Take a bow Take a bow CALL 1-858-905-5616 TO SCHEDULE A TOUR AND LUNCH. 9800 Glen Center Drive | San Diego | CA 92131 theglenSR.com State of California License #374603600. Certificate of Authority #339. For the well-being of residents, The Glen strives to follow CDC guidance and comply with recommendations from state and local health officials. Offerings depicted are subject to change
P1 Program
Cast, performances, who’s who, director’s notes, donors and more.
4 In the Wings
The return of Riverdance; two new exhibits at MCASD La Jolla; Exotic Deadly: Or the MSG Play at The Old Globe (director Jesca Prudencio is pictured); and more.
8 Feature: Theater Spotlight on the WOW Festival
La Jolla Playhouse presents its Without Walls (WOW) Festival at The Rady Shell this year—featuring myriad uber-creative productions. (Birdmen is pictured.)
13 Dining
Where to eat and imbibe in April—including Addison (the kanpachi is pictured); Captain’s Quarters; and The Kitchen @ MCASD.
24 Parting Shot
Niki de Saint Phalle’s Coming Together sculpture at the S.D. Convention Center is 30 feet tall and weighs 10 tons.
CLOCKWISE FROM
TOP: ERIC WOLFINGER; COURTESY THE OLD GLOBE; COURTESY LA JOLLA PLAYHOUSE
contents
13
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE 1
APRIL 2023 MAGAZINE 4
8
PUBLISHER
Jeff Levy
EDITOR
Sarah Daoust
ART DIRE CTOR
Carol Wakano
PRODUCTION MANAGER
Glenda Mendez
PRODUCTION ARTIST
Diana Gonzalez
CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Stephanie Saad Thompson
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Kerry Baggett
ACCOUNT DIRE CTORS
Walter Lewis, Jean Greene, Tina Marie Smith
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Christine Noriega-Roessler
BUSINESS MANAGER
Leanne Killian Riggar
MARKETING/ PRODUCTION MANAGER
Dawn Kiko Cheng
DIGITAL PROGRAM MANAGER
Audrey Duncan Welch
DIGITAL MANAGER
Lorenzo Dela Rama
Contact Us
ADVERTISING
Kerry.Baggett@ CaliforniaMediaGroup.com
WEBSITE
Lorenzo.DelaRama@ CaliforniaMediaGroup.com
CIRCULATION
Christine.Roessler@ CaliforniaMediaGroup.com
HONORARY PRESIDENT
Ted Levy
For information about advertising and rates contact California Media Group 3679 Motor Ave., Suite 300 Los Angeles, CA 90034
Phone: 310.280.2880
Fax: 310.280.2890
online
socalpulse.com
Magazine is published by California Media Group to serve performing arts venues throughout the West. © 2023 California Media Group. All Rights Reserved. Printed in the United States. YOU’RE HERE. Congrats, You’ve Picked a Great Performance! Check out the interactive version of this theater program magazine and enjoy even more insight into the performers, creative talent and theater activities that are behind it all. It’s the new way to read the program, it’s LINKS TO PERFORMERS’ SOCIAL MEDIA ACCOUNTS UNDERSTUDY UPDATES UPCOMING SHOWS AND CONCERTS AROUND TOWN MULTI-MEDIA PRESENTATIONS ABOUT THE PERFORMANCE. THEATER SUPPORT OPPORTUNITIES INSIDER SCOOPS FROM THEATER AND MUSIC PROFESSIONALS MAGAZINE 2 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
Visit Performances Magazine
at
Performances
Epstein Family Amphitheater
San Diego’s newest destination for art, culture and entertainment.
Step right off the UC San Diego Blue Line trolley and into the Epstein Family Amphitheater - your ticket to a new world of art, culture and entertainment. With deep gratitude to Daniel and Phyllis Epstein for facilitating connection, community and a space to gather around a shared love of the arts, this world class performing arts center brings globally-recognized talent to campus and invites a cultural exchange between students, faculty and SoCal residents.
Epstein Family Amphith ea ter UC San Diego
amphitheater.ucsd.edu
IRISH DANCING & BALLET
KICK YOUR HEELS UP for Riverdance, in town for its 25th anniversary show, April 11-13.
Presented by Broadway San Diego (broadwaysd.com) at the Civic Theatre, the newly reimagined production is an electric fusion of Irish and international dance. Its Grammy Award-winning score has been re-recorded by composer Bill Whelan; along with updated staging, lighting and costume designs—architected by producer Moya Doherty and director John McColgan. And nab tickets now for City Ballet of San Diego’s presentation of Romeo & Juliet, May 6-7 at California Center for the Arts, Escondido (cityballet.org; artcenter.org). Resident choreographer Elizabeth Wistrich stages Shakespeare’s famous tragedy about two lovestruck teenagers— channeling Renaissance Italy with lush scenery and costumes. Arrive 45 minutes early for a pre-performance lecture by Steven Wistrich, City Ballet’s artistic director.
COURTESY IMAGES IN THE WINGS
The Riverdance 25th Anniversary Show. Opposite: artwork by Celia Álvarez Muñoz.
DANCE 4 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
MUSEUMS
New MCASD Must-Sees
TWO STUNNING NEW exhibits are now on view at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (MCASD), La Jolla. Celia Álvarez Muñoz: Breaking the Binding comprises the first museum career retrospective of Celia Álvarez Muñoz. Known for her bilingual puns and witty, playful methodology, the Texas-born conceptual artist’s career spans 40 years, inspired by her experiences as a resident of the U.S.Mexico borderlands. The exhibit comprises 35 works, including a photographic series, book
projects and several large-scale, immersive installations. Griselda Rosas: Yo te cuido is the first solo museum exhibition by San Diego/ Tijuana-based artist Griselda Rosas. Honing her embroidery skills taught to her by her mother, grandmother and aunts, Rosas presents a collection of sculptural installations and intricate textile drawings centered on themes of culture, intergenerational connection and inheritance. Both exhibits are on view at MCASD through Aug. 13. 700 Prospect St., La Jolla, 858.454.3541, mcasd.org
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE 5
Drama, Comedy, Murder Mystery
IF YOU RECALL the 19th Olympic Games in Mexico City, 1968, you’ll likely remember the historic moment when two Black American sprinters, both medalists, raised their fists in protest during the National Anthem. The event inspired The Old Globe’s world-premiere play by Kemp Powers, The XIXth, through April 23 (theoldglobe.org). Based on the English actor and playwright himself, Noël Coward’s farce, Present Laughter, plays at Cygnet Theatre (cygnettheatre.com) through April 29. An adored London theater star’s life is thrown into chaos just as he is about to set out on an African tour. Keiko Green’s hilarious, timetraveling, world-premiere of Exotic Deadly: Or the MSG Play runs at The Old Globe, April 8-May 7. At North Coast Rep (northcoastrep.org) April 19-May 14, Steven Dietz’s world-premiere comic mystery, Murder on the Links, is based on the famous detective novel by Agatha Christie.
IN THE WINGS THEATER FROM TOP: © JOAN MARCUS; RICH SOUBLET II
Present Laughter starred Kevin Kline (far right) on Broadway in 2017. Below (L-R): Biko Eisen-Martin, Korey Jackson and Patrick Marron Ball in The XIXth
6 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
BY STEVEN DIETZ from
the novel by Agatha Christie
WORLD PREMIERE APRIL 19 – MAY 14
Acclaimed playwright Steven Dietz brings the famed Belgian detective to life to solve one of Agatha Christie’s most intricate whodunits. Of course, there are the host of usual — and — unusual suspects. A cast of six versatile actors embody a myriad of characters as they navigate the twists and turns of this lively and fun new adaptation. You won’t want to miss a thrilling moment of this comic mystery
I’m not a comedian...I’m lenny bruce
april 24 & 25 @ 7:30pm
starring ronnie marmo | Directed by Joe Mantegna
Ronnie Marmo’s crowd-shocking portrayal of the undisputed comic legend, Lenny Bruce, brings the notorious funnyman to life with all the electrifying, insightful and comedic brilliance as only Lenny Bruce could himself.
(Rated R. Explicit language, Mature Content & very brief Nudity.)
my life with will:
an evening with will shakespeare & james sutorius may 1 & 2 @ 7:30pm
North Coast Rep favorite, James Sutorius, chronicles his lifelong love a air with the Bard of Avon. In an acting career highlighted by roles on television and film, Sutorius always returns to Shakespeare for sustenance. So he will again, in the delightful My Life with Will.
tickets (858) 481-1055 | northcoastrep.org group sales (858) 481-2155, x202
THE WOW FACTOR
San Diego Symphony Hosts La Jolla Playhouse’s Without Walls
BY STEPHANIE SAAD THOMPSON
SINCE ITS LAUNCH 10 years ago, La Jolla Playhouse’s biennial, free Without Walls (WOW) Festival has fulfilled its promise to lead performing arts enthusiasts outside the traditional confines of theater walls to unusual or unexpected places. Locations for its eclectic and innovative programming have included the backseat of a car, a basketball court and a local beach. The most recent WOW Festival was a series of pop-ups that took place throughout the Arts District at Liberty Station. Audience members might find
themselves drawn into being part of the performance—at a dance party, for instance, or walking through a lush botanical garden.
So, you might wonder what’s untraditional about the 2023 WOW, which is being presented this year in and around San Diego’s most eyecatching new performance venue: the San Diego Symphony’s outdoor home—The Rady Shell at Jacobs Park—April 27–30. Well, what if you, the audience, were on stage under that signature curving white shell; while the performers were
out in the seating area? Or what if the artists were to incorporate San Diego Bay as part of their work?
“One of the things I love the most is artists finding inspiration in all kinds of spaces and places,” says Christopher Ashley, La Jolla Playhouse’s Rich Family Artistic Director. He spearheaded the creation of the WOW Festival in 2013. “We’ll see performers using the spaces in and around The Rady Shell in surprising ways, turning the space on its head. Nothing will be the way you’re used to seeing shows there.”
8 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE FEATURE SAM ZAUSCHER
WOW Festival production of Choreo & Fly, from Disco Riot
Festival at The Rady Shell
“Incredible hope & incredible spirit!” —Rita Cosby, Emmy award-winning TV news anchor “I encourage everyone to see and all of us to learn from.” —Donna Karen, creator of DKNY More than just beautiful dance It’s a Touch of the Divine More than just legends It’s the beautiful culture and wisdom of China before Communism More than just a performance It’s an experience that Awakens the Soul Find out why millions have called Shen Yun a “ life-changing experience”. See it at least once in your lifetime! See It At Least Once in Your Lifetime “It’s like being in heaven!” —Paul Behrends, consultant Your Last Chance to See Shen Yun 2023! Hurry for Tickets! 3 Days Only! Apr 21-23 (Fri-Sun) | San Diego Civic Theatre Get Tickets Today! ShenYun.com/SD | 1-888-973-7469 | Groups welcome All New Production With Live Orchestra
“When we began planning to open The Rady Shell, we always thought of it as a gift to San Diego, and part of our desire and mission is to activate The Rady Shell at Jacobs Park with free performances and programming open to the San Diego region,” says Martha Gilmer, San Diego Symphony CEO. “Working with the La Jolla Playhouse to host the WOW Festival at The Rady Shell offers a tremendous diversity of free cultural experiences for the city—in addition to our other San Diego Symphony programming. We are committed to innovation and creativity, and the WOW Festival symbolizes the embracing of the new. We could not be more excited to see what this year’s WOW Festival will
bring to the community.”
Ashley says he has been in talks with the Symphony for years about creating a collaboration. “The Shell is such an important, iconic space right on the water,” he says. “Its design and location can’t help but inspire artists in new ways. For example, one of the pieces, salty water, by Blindspot Collective, weaves music, movement, spoken testimony and poetry to explore our community’s history and connection to the sea.”
“Since The Rady Shell opened in the summer of 2021, both Christopher Ashley and [La Jolla Playhouse Managing Director]
Debby Buchholz have frequently attended concerts at the venue,” Gilmer adds. “They have both
shared their love for this new space and our organizations felt like a collaboration with La Jolla Playhouse and the San Diego Symphony was meant to happen at some point. WOW seemed like the perfect opportunity for a collaboration.”
Taking place over four days, WOW 2023 includes theater, dance, music, puppetry and more; along with family-friendly programming. One highlight is the world premiere of La Lucha, a new interactive experience by award-winning designer David Israel Reynoso and his immersive theatrical company, Optika Moderna. Presented in collaboration with the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (MCASD), it’s the WOW /CONTINUED ON PAGE 20
10 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE FEATURE COURTESY SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY
The 2023 WOW Festival unfolds at The Rady Shell.
EXTRASEASONEVENT EXTRASEASONEVENT
FROM THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
Dear friends,
One of the most important roles that art plays in our lives is to introduce us to what we do not know, to take us outside the confines of our own experiences, to see the world as wider, more diverse, more exciting, and more filled with imagination than we had believed possible. This is true not only of the many genres and styles of music, but of dance, painting, film, poetry, and theater.
Beethoven was outspoken about this. He suggested listening to music was a way of learning about the world. And that after listening and learning, we must also “act upon what we have learned.”
Orchestral music is an especially grand way of doing this. There are so many people in the audience and on stage, and each one of us brings our own life to the shared experience of a concert. I think of this especially as this month we return to our home at The Rady Shell at Jacobs Park™, an extraordinary venue in a beautiful place, where music can be performed and heard by so many people in such a spirit of openness.
The programs for this month’s concerts celebrate this call to listen, learn and act. We have two composers whose works make clear what Dvořák called out long ago: that American music should embrace and be influenced by the experience and expression found in the Black experience and that it should guide and shape the creation of American music. Coleridge-Taylor Perkinson, one of the jewels of 20th century American music, should be far better known and we are excited to include his Sinfonietta for Strings in our programming. In addition, on the same program we present Rounds for Piano and string orchestra by the wonderful young composer of our own time, Jessie Montgomery, whose energy, humor, political commitment and blazing curiosity about the rest of the world, embody perfectly Beethoven’s proposal, but in a language of now.
On the same program we have Prokofiev’s first symphony written 100 years ago in revolutionary Russia, trying to imagine what Haydn, from more than a century before that, might have made of the tumult of a violently changing time. And we have Haydn himself, born in an Eastern European village finding himself in the bustling and cacophonous city of London. In this Symphony No. 104 (the last of his “London” Symphonies) he interweaves the wild shouts of English street-traders with the beautiful Croatian folk-tunes of his childhood.
And, in our first concert back at The Rady Shell at Jacobs Park with our beloved music director Rafael Payare, we have Debussy, dreaming like a sleepy schoolboy of Ancient Greece; and one of Mahler’s most beautiful and accessible symphonies, a huge panorama of the composer’s life and native land, with scraps of Jewish music, Hungarian music, Romany music, Bohemian music, gorgeous Viennese waltzes and love-songs… and at the end we find one of the most beautiful depictions of childhood in the whole of classical music, where the singer dreams of an imaginary Heaven, with no more hunger, no more grief.
A whole tapestry of different human experiences and different kinds of musical beauty!
Martha A. Gilmer Chief Executive Officer
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P 1
Front cover photo credits: Rafael Payare – Gary Payne; Yaniv Dinur – Jiyang Chen; Jean-Yves Thibaudet – E. Caren
PHOTO CREDIT: LAUREN RADACK
PARTNER PLAYER WITH A
The San Diego Symphony Orchestra gratefully acknowledges the generous support of the following donors for their membership in the Partner with a Player program and their profound impact on the orchestra. Partner with a Player members enjoy the unique opportunity to personally connect with the orchestra and engage with the Symphony in meaningful ways.
The following listing reflects pledges and gifts entered as of February 15, 2023.
$100,000 AND ABOVE
Raffaella and John Belanich
Rafael Payare, Music Director
Phyllis and Daniel Epstein
Sheryl Renk, Principal Clarinet
$50,000 – $99,999
Terry Atkinson
Igor Pandurski, Violin
Anonymous
San Diego Symphony Musicians
Nikki A. and Ben G. Clay
Mary Szanto, Cello
Kevin and Jan Curtis
Nancy Lochner, Associate Principal Viola
Una Davis and Jack McGrory
Susan Wulff, Associate Principal Bass
Mr. and Mrs. Brian K. Devine
San Diego Symphony Musicians
Esther and Bud◊ Fischer
Ethan Pernela, Viola
Arlene Inch
San Diego Symphony Musicians
Karen and Warren Kessler
Chi-Yuan Chen, Principal Viola
KAREN AND WARREN KESSLER CHAIR
Dr. William and Evelyn Lamden
Andrea Overturf, Oboe
DR. WILLIAM AND EVELYN LAMDEN
ENGLISH HORN CHAIR
Carol and Richard Hertzberg
Nick Grant, Principal Associate Concertmaster Emeritus
Joan and Irwin Jacobs
Martha Gilmer, Chief Executive Officer
Judy McDonald
Gerard McBurney, Creative Consultant
Monica and Robert Oder
Erin Dowrey, Percussion
Linda and Shearn◊ Platt
Ryan J. DiLisi, Principal Timpani
Elena Romanowsky Edmund Stein, Violin
Penny and Louis Rosso
Andrew Watkins, Assistant Principal Timpani
Colette Carson Royston and Ivor Royston
Yeh Shen, Violin
Karen and Kit Sickels
Jeremy Kurtz-Harris, Principal Bass
SOPHIE AND ARTHUR BRODY FOUNDATION CHAIR
Karen and Jeff Silberman
Jisun Yang, Assistant Concertmaster
Gayle◊ and Donald Slate
Wesley Precourt, Associate Concertmaster
Dr. Bob and June Shillman and Maxwell Louis Shillman
Greg Cohen, Principal Percussion
Dave and Phyllis Snyder
Julia Pautz, Violin
Gloria and Rodney Stone
Paul ("P.J.") Cinque, Bass
Haeyoung Tang
San Diego Symphony Musicians
Sylvia Steding and Roger Thieme◊ Nicole Sauder, Violin
Jayne and Bill Turpin
San Diego Symphony Musicians
Cole and Judy Willoughby
Benjamin Jaber, Principal Horn
Mitchell Woodbury
Douglas Hall, Horn
Sarah and Marc Zeitlin
Cherry Choi Tung Yeung, Associate Principal Second Violin
For more information, or to join, please contact Vice President of Institutional Advancement, Sheri Broedlow at (805) 637-4948 or sbroedlow@sandiegosymphony.org.
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY
San Diego Foundation Rancho Santa Fe Foundation Jewish Community Foundation ◊ Deceased
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 P2 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
$25,000 – $49,999
Annette and Daniel Bradbury
Yao Zhao, Principal Cello
Karen and Donald Cohn
Hanah Stuart, Acting Associate Principal Second Violin
Karin and Gary Eastham
San Diego Symphony, Viola Chair
Anne L. Evans
San Diego Symphony Musicians
Lisette and Mick Farrell/ Farrell Family Foundation
Navroj ("Nuvi") Mehta, Concert Commentator
Pam and Hal Fuson
Courtney Cohen, Principal Librarian
$15,000 – $24,999
Anonymous
Hernan Constantino, Violin
Anonymous
Nathan Walhout, Cello
Warren and Eloise Batts
Alicia Engley, Violin
Michael Blasgen
Tricia Skye, Horn
Norman and Diane Blumenthal
Aaron Blick, Bass
Dr. Anthony Boganey
Logan Chopyk, Trombone
Julia R. Brown
Leyla Zamora, Bassoon and Contrabassoon
Pam and Jerry Cesak
Samuel Hager, Bass
Ann Davies
Xian Zhuno, Cello
Kathleen Seely Davis
Qing Liang, Viola
The Eleanor and Hank Family Trust
Kevin Gobetz, Bass
Janet and Wil Gorrie
Zou Yu, Violin
Jill Gormley and Laurie Lipman
Frank Renk, Bass Clarinet
Elaine Galinson and Herbert Solomon
Yumi Cho, Violin
Sandra and Arthur◊ Levinson
Kyle Covington, Principal Trombone
Eileen Mason
Julie Smith Phillips, Principal Harp
Deborah Pate and John Forrest
Jeff Thayer, Concertmaster
DEBORAH PATE AND JOHN FORREST CHAIR
Allison and Robert Price
San Diego Symphony Musicians
Raghu and Shamala Saripalli
Chia-Ling Chien, Associate Principal Cello
Judith Harris◊ and Dr. Robert Singer
John MacFerran Wilds, Trumpet
Marilyn James and Richard Phetteplace
John Stubbs, Violin
Jo Ann Kilty
Marcia Bookstein, Cello
Helen and Sig Kupka
Lily Josefsberg, Piccolo/Flute
Lisa and Gary Levine, Arthur J. Gallagher & Co.
San Diego Symphony Musicians
Carol Lazier and James Merritt
Sarah Tuck, Flute
Dr. Marshall J. Littman
John Lee, Cello
Anne and Andy McCammon
Richard Levine, Cello
Lynn and Sue Miller
Max Opferkuch, Clarinet
Riley◊ and Patricia Mixson
Xiaoxuan Shi, Violin
Michael Nissman and Paige Stone
San Diego Symphony Musicians
Val and Ron Ontell
Darby Hinshaw, Assistant Principal & Utility Horn
Jeanette Stevens
Kathryn Hatmaker, Violin
Sandra Timmons and Richard Sandstrom
Sarah Skuster, Principal Oboe
Leslie and Joe Waters
Rose Lombardo, Principal Flute
Sue and Bill Weber
Jing Yan Bowcott, Violin
Kathryn and James Whistler
Rachel Fields, Librarian
Sheryl and Harvey White
Alexander Palamidis, Principal Second Violin
Rich and Rena Paul, Paul Plevin Quarles
Ryan Simmons, Bassoon
Jane and Jon Pollock
Evan Pasternak, Section Violin
Pamela and Stephen Quinn
San Diego Symphony Musicians
Sally and Steve Rogers
Kyle Mendiguchia, Bass Trombone
Robert Caplan and Carol Randolph, Seltzer Caplan McMahon Vitek
Pei-Chun Tsai, Violin
Dr. Robert Rubenstein and Marie Raftery
San Diego Symphony Musicians
Jayne and Brigg Sherman
Rodion Belousov, Oboe
Stephen M. Silverman
Ai Nihira Awata, Violin
Elizabeth and Joseph◊ Taft
Wanda Law, Viola
Linda and Raymond◊ ThomasR.V. Thomas Family Fund
Ray Nowak, Trumpet
Isabelle and Mel◊ Wasserman
Andrew Hayhurst, Cello
Judy Gaze-Zygowicz and John Zygowicz
Johanna Nowik, Viola
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P 3
The Beethoven Society is designed to raise consistent, critical funding for artistic, educational and community programs. Members pledge multi-year support and commit to annual gifts of $50,000 and higher, designated for projects ranging from classical and jazz concerts to education and military programs.
The Symphony and its Board of Directors are pleased to thank the following for their leadership and to acknowledge them as Members of The Beethoven Society.
For information about supporting the San Diego Symphony Orchestra through membership in The Beethoven Society, please call Sheri Broedlow at (805) 637-4948.
$200,000 and
$5 MILLION and above
$1 MILLION and above
THE SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA PROUDLY PRESENTS
PHYLLIS AND DANIEL EPSTEIN
JOAN AND IRWIN JACOBS
DR. WILLIAM AND EVELYN LAMDEN
KAREN AND WARREN KESSLER
ANONYMOUS ( 2 )
JAYNE AND BILL TURPIN
SUE AND BILL WEBER
MITCHELL WOODBURY COLE AND JUDY WILLOUGHBY
SARAH AND MARC ZEITLIN
SYLVIA AND ROGER ◊ THIEME
JUDY M c DONALD
MONICA AND ROBERT ODER LINDA AND SHEARN ◊ PLATT
ELENA ROMANOWSKY
PAM AND HAL FUSON ARLENE INCH
UNA DAVIS AND JACK M c GRORY
ESTHER FISCHER
TERRY L. ATKINSON NIKKI A. AND BEN G. CLAY JAN AND KEVIN CURTIS
MR. AND MRS. BRIAN K. DEVINE
DAVE AND PHYLLIS SNYDER GAYLE ◊ AND DONALD SLATE GLORIA AND RODNEY STONE
PENNY AND LOUIS ROSSO KAREN AND KIT SICKELS
THE KONG TANG FAMILY
above
⋄deceased
KAREN AND JEFF SILBERMAN
2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 P4 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
DOCTOR BOB AND MAO SHILLMAN SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY BOARDS
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Harold W. Fuson Jr. Chair of the Board*
David R. Snyder, Esq. Immediate Past Chair*
Terry Atkinson Vice Chair*
Una Davis Vice Chair*
Colette Carson Royston Vice Chair*
J. William Weber Vice Chair*
Kathleen Davis Treasurer*
Linda Platt Secretary*
Tim Barelli
Lisa Behun
David Bialis*
Anthony C. Boganey, M.D., FACS
Julia R. Brown*
Pam Cesak*
Ben G. Clay
Phyllis Epstein*
Lisette Farrell
Janet Gorrie
Dr. Nancy Hong
Arlene Inch
Warren O. Kessler, M.D.*
Kris Kopensky
HONORARY LIFETIME DIRECTORS
Dr. Irwin M. Jacobs
Joan K. Jacobs
Warren O. Kessler, M.D.
FOUNDATION BOARD OF
Warren O. Kessler, M.D. Chair
David R. Snyder, Esq. Vice Chair
Sandra Levinson Secretary
Mitchell R. Woodbury Treasurer
PAST BOARD CHAIRS
Anne Francis Ratner (1911-2011)
Lawrence B. Robinson (d. 2021)
DIRECTORS
Robert Caplan, Esq.
Harold W. Fuson Jr.
Martha Gilmer
Joan K. Jacobs
Susan Mallory
Beth Sirull
Mark Stuart
Ellen Whelan, Esq.
Jeff Light
Deborah Pate
Alan Prohaska
Mary Casillas Salas
Sherron Schuster
Marivi Shivers
Christopher "Kit" Sickels
Donald Slate*
Gloria Stone
Frank Vizcarra
Mitchell R. Woodbury*
*EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEMBER
Herbert Solomon
Mitchell R. Woodbury
2018-21 David R. Snyder, Esq.
2015-18 Warren O. Kessler, M.D.
2014-15 Shearn H. Platt
2011-14 Evelyn Olson Lamden
2009-11 Mitchell R. Woodbury
2008-09 Theresa J. Drew
2007-08 Steven R. Penhall
2005-07 Mitchell R. Woodbury
2004-05 Craig A. Schloss, Esq.
2003-04 John R. Queen
2001-03 Harold B. Dokmo Jr.
2000-01 Ben G. Clay
1998-00 Sandra Pay
1995-96 Elsie V. Weston
1994-95 Thomas Morgan
1993-94 David Dorne, Esq.
1989-93 Warren O. Kessler, M.D.
1988-89 Elsie V. Weston
1986-88 Herbert J. Solomon
1984-86 M.B. “Det” Merryman
1982-84 Louis F. Cumming
1980-82 David E. Porter
1978-80 Paul L. Stevens
1976-78 Laurie H. Waddy
1974-76 William N. Jenkins, Esq.
1971-74 L. Thomas Halverstadt
1970-71 Simon Reznikoff
1969-70 Robert J. Sullivan
1968-69 Arthur S. Johnson
1966-68 Michael Ibs Gonzalez, Esq.
1964-66 Philip M. Klauber
1963-64 Oliver B. James Jr.
1961-63 J. Dallas Clark
1960-61 Fielder K. Lutes
1959-60 Dr. G. Burch Mehlin
1956-58 Admiral Wilder D. Baker
1953-56 Mrs. Fred G. Goss
1952-53 Donald A. Stewart
1940-42 Donald B. Smith
1938-39 Mrs. William H. Porterfield
1934-37 Mrs. Marshall O. Terry
1930-33 Mouney C. Pfefferkorn
1928-29 Willett S. Dorland
1927 Ed H. Clay
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P 5
RAFAEL PAYARE
MUSIC DIRECTOR
With his innate musicianship, charismatic energy, gift for communication and irresistibly joyous spirit, Rafael Payare is “electrifying in front of an orchestra” (Los Angeles Times). Now in his fourth season as Music Director of California’s San Diego Symphony, the Venezuelan conductor began his tenure as Music Director of Canada’s Montreal Symphony (OSM) in fall 2022. Appointed as Principal Conductor of Virginia’s Castleton Festival in 2015, he is also Conductor Laureate of Northern Ireland’s Ulster Orchestra, where he served from 2014 to 2019 as Principal Conductor and Music Director, making multiple appearances at London’s BBC Proms.
Payare embarks on a high-profile season in 2022-23. He inaugurates his new role as Music Director of the Montreal Symphony with 24 concerts in Quebec and two major international tours, highlighted by the orchestra’s debut at London’s Southbank Centre and its returns to the Vienna Konzerthaus, Brussels’s BOZAR, Washington, D.C.’s Kennedy Center and New York’s Carnegie Hall. The coming season also brings debuts with the New York Philharmonic and San Francisco Symphony, as well as at London’s Royal Opera House, Covent Garden; returns to the Cleveland Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic, London Symphony Orchestra and Munich Philharmonic; and eight weeks of concerts in the fourth season of his already transformative tenure as Music Director of the
San Diego Symphony, where his opening of The Rady Shell, the orchestra’s stunning new open-air venue, wowed the national press last season.
Since winning first prize at Denmark’s Malko collaborations include engagements with the Boston Symphony, Chicago Symphony, Cleveland Orchestra, Houston Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic and Philadelphia Orchestra, while his notable European appearances include dates with the Bavarian Radio Symphony, Chamber
Orchestra, London Symphony Orchestra, Munich Philharmonic, NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra, Orchestra dell’Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia, Philharmonia Orchestra, Royal Stockholm Philharmonic, Staatskapelle Dresden, Tonhalle
which he has led at the Vienna Konzerthaus and Musikverein, on a Baltic tour and at Paris’s Théâtre des Champs-Élysées. Payare has undertaken concerto collaborations with soloists including Piotr Anderszewski, Emanuel Ax, Yefim Bronfman, Elīna Garanča, Sergey Khachatryan, Gil Shaham, JeanYves Thibaudet, Daniil Trifonov, Alisa Weilerstein, Frank Peter Zimmermann and Nikolaj Znaider. Also a dedicated opera conductor, he made his celebrated Glyndebourne Festival debut with a 2019 production of Il barbiere di Siviglia, as well as leading Madama Butterfly and La bohème at Stockholm’s Royal Swedish Opera, Tosca at the Royal Danish Opera, Gounod’s Roméo et Juliette at the Castleton Festival, and a new production of La traviata in Malmö, Sweden.
Born in Barcelona, Venezuela, in 1980, Payare first discovered classical music at the age of 14, when he began playing French horn in the El Sistema program. After just three weeks he joined the Symphony Orchestra of Anzoátegui, before transferring to the National Children’s Orchestra of Venezuela, with which he toured Europe and the Americas. From 2001 to 2012 he served as Principal Horn of the Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra, taking part in prestigious tours and recordings with conductors including Claudio Abbado, Lorin Maazel, Sir Simon Rattle and Giuseppe Sinopoli, who first inspired Payare to conduct himself. Receiving conducting training from El Sistema founder José Antonio Abreu and from subsequent mentors Maazel and Krzysztof Penderecki, Payare went on to lead all Venezuela’s major orchestras. Today he is himself an inspiration to younger musicians, enjoying a close relationship with London’s Royal College of Music, where he conducts the symphony orchestra each season, and leading youth projects with the Chicago Civic Orchestra, Orchestra of the Americas, and Filarmónica Jóven de Colombia.
DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 P6 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
PHOTO: J. HENRY FAIR SAN
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
RAFAEL PAYARE
Music Director
EDO DE WAART
Principal Guest Conductor
JAHJA LING
Conductor Laureate
VIOLIN
Jeff Thayer
Concertmaster
DEBORAH PATE AND JOHN FORREST CHAIR
Wesley Precourt
Associate Concertmaster
Jisun Yang
Assistant Concertmaster
Alexander Palamidis
Principal Second Violin
Nick Grant
Principal Associate Concertmaster Emeritus
Cherry Yeung
Associate Principal Second Violin
Ai Nihira Awata
Jing Yan Bowcott
Yumi Cho
Hernan Constantino
Alicia Engley
Kathryn Hatmaker
Kenneth Liao
Igor Pandurski
Evan Pasternak
Julia Pautz
Yeh Shen
Xiaoxuan Shi
Edmund Stein
Hanah Stuart
John Stubbs
Pei-Chun Tsai
Zou Yu
Thomas Dougherty*
Benjamin Hoffman*
Margeaux Maloney*
Nicole Sauder*
Sarah Schwartz*
VIOLA
Chi-Yuan Chen
Principal KAREN AND WARREN KESSLER CHAIR
Nancy Lochner
Associate Principal
Jason Karlyn
Wanda Law
Qing Liang
Abraham Martín
Johanna Nowik
Ethan Pernela
Rachel Halvorson*
Michael Molnau*
CELLO
Yao Zhao Principal
Chia-Ling Chien
Associate Principal
Marcia Bookstein
Andrew Hayhurst
John Lee
Richard Levine
Mary Oda Szanto
Nathan Walhout
Xian Zhuo
Ben Solomonow*
BASS
Jeremy Kurtz-Harris Principal
SOPHIE AND ARTHUR BRODY FOUNDATION CHAIR
Susan Wulff Associate Principal
Aaron Blick
P.J. Cinque
Kaelan Decman
Kevin Gobetz
Samuel Hager
Michael Wais
Margaret Johnston+
FLUTE
Rose Lombardo Principal
Sarah Tuck
Lily Josefsberg
PICCOLO
Lily Josefsberg
OBOE
Sarah Skuster Principal
Rodion Belousov
Andrea Overturf
ENGLISH HORN
Andrea Overturf
DR. WILLIAM AND EVELYN LAMDEN ENGLISH HORN CHAIR
CLARINET
Sheryl Renk Principal
Max Opferkuch
Frank Renk
BASS CLARINET
Frank Renk
BASSOON
Valentin Martchev
Principal
Ryan Simmons
Leyla Zamora
CONTRABASSOON
Leyla Zamora
HORN
Benjamin Jaber Principal
Darby Hinshaw
Assistant Principal & Utility
Tricia Skye
Douglas Hall
Mike McCoy*
TRUMPET
Christopher Smith Principal
John MacFerran Wilds
Ray Nowak
Jonah Levy*
TROMBONE
Kyle R. Covington Principal
Logan Chopyk
Kyle Mendiguchia
BASS TROMBONE
Kyle Mendiguchia
TUBA
Aaron McCalla Principal
HARP
Julie Smith Phillips Principal
TIMPANI
Ryan J. DiLisi Principal
Andrew Watkins
Assistant Principal
PERCUSSION
Gregory Cohen Principal
Erin Douglas Dowrey
Andrew Watkins
PRINCIPAL LIBRARIAN
Courtney Secoy Cohen
LIBRARIAN
Rachel Fields
* Long Term Substitute Musician + Staff Opera Musician
The musicians of the San Diego Symphony are members of San Diego County, Local 325, American Federation of Musicians, AFL-CIO.
Financial support is provided by the City of San Diego Commission for Arts and Culture and the County of San Diego.
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P 7
THURSDAY, APR 13 7:30PM
FRIDAY, APR 14 7:30PM
The Conrad Prebys Performing Arts Center
SATURDAY, APR 15 7:30PM
The Village Church
DINUR, MONTGOMERY AND THE "CLASSICAL" SYMPHONY
Yaniv Dinur, conductor
Awadagin Pratt, piano
San Diego Symphony Orchestra
PROGRAM
COLERIDGE-TAYLOR PERKINSON
Sinfonietta No. 1 for Strings
Sonata Allegro Song Form
Rondo
SERGE PROKOFIEV
Symphony No. 1 in D Major, Op. 25, Classical Symphony
Allegro con brio
Larghetto
Gavotte: Non troppo allegro
Finale: Molto vivace
– INTERMISSION –
JESSIE MONTGOMERY
Rounds for Piano and String Orchestra
Awadagin Pratt, piano
FRANZ JOSEPH HAYDN
Symphony No. 104 in D Major, London
Adagion - Allegro Andante
Menuet: Allegro Spiritoso
Approximate program length: 1 hour, 35 minutes (includes one, 20-minute intermission)
The April 13 and 14 performances are made possible, in part, through the generosity of the Atkinson Family in memory of Rita Loyd Atkinson.
Scan this QR code with your smartphone or text SDS to 55741 to access the interactive version of the program
JACOBS MASTERWORKS
AWADAGIN PRATT YANIV DINUR
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 P8 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
JIYANG CHEN
ABOUT THE CONDUCTOR
Named the 2019 Sir Georg Solti Conducting Fellow (the largest award for conductors in the U.S.), YANIV DINUR is currently Resident Conductor of the Milwaukee Symphony and Music Director of the New Bedford Symphony Orchestra. The League of American Orchestras honored the New Bedford Symphony by selecting it to be one of the orchestras to perform at the 2021 League Conference. Mr. Dinur is lauded for his bold and beautiful programming, insightful interpretations, and unusual ability to connect with audiences.
Recent and upcoming highlights include subscription debuts with the symphonies of Detroit, Fort Worth, Houston, and Sarasota, as well as return engagements with the San Diego Symphony, and the Peninsula (Wisconsin) and Round Top (Texas) festivals. Among other U.S. guest conducting appearances are the Louisiana Philharmonic, New World Symphony and the San Antonio Symphony.
Dinur made his conducting debut at the age of 19 with the National Symphony Orchestra of Ireland, which led to multiple return engagements. Following his European debut, he was invited to perform with the Israel Camerata in Jerusalem, making him the youngest conductor ever to conduct a professional orchestra in Israel. Since then, he has conducted orchestras around the world, including the Israel Philharmonic, State Orchestra of St. Petersburg, Portugal Symphony Orchestra, Torino Philharmonic and the National Arts Centre Orchestra in Ottawa.
Dinur is also a professional level pianist and a passionate music educator, who is committed to exposing new audiences to classical music. He often gives preconcert talks and lectures in which he incorporates live demonstrations on the piano, aiming to reveal surprising connections between pieces, composers, and eras.
Dinur has worked closely with such world-class conductors as Lorin Maazel, Michael Tilson Thomas, Pinchas Zukerman, the late Kurt Masur and Jorma Panula. He holds a Doctorate in Orchestral Conducting from the University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre and Dance, where he was a student of Kenneth Kiesler.
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Pianist AWADAGIN PRATT is acclaimed for his musical insight and intensely involving performances in recital and with orchestras.
Pratt studied at the Peabody Conservatory of Music where he became the first student in the school's history to receive diplomas in piano, violin and conducting. He won the Naumburg International Piano Competition and was awarded an Avery Fisher Career Grant. Since then, he has appeared in recital and as concerto soloist in many of this country’s most prestigious venues and with many of the major American orchestras. An experienced conductor, his most recent conducting activities include play/ conducting the Chamber Orchestra of Pittsburgh and conducting performances of Porgy and Bess for the Greensboro Opera.
As Artistic Director of the Art of Piano Festival, through the Art of the Piano Foundation, Pratt commissioned seven composers—Jessie Montgomery, Alvin Singleton, Judd Greenstein, Tyshawn Sorey, Jonathan Bailey Holland, Paola Prestini and Peteris Vasks— to compose works for piano and string orchestra and a Roomful of Teeth. Montgomery’s concerto was premiered in the spring of 2022 with subsequent performances with the Boston, Chicago and St. Louis symphonies as well as The Minnesota Orchestra among many others. All seven works were recorded in summer 2022 for New Amsterdam Records.
Pratt is currently a Professor of Piano at the CollegeConservatory of Music, University of Cincinnati and in July 2023 joins the faculty of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music as Professor of Piano.
For more information, please visit www.awadagin.com.
PROGRAM NOTES | DINUR, MONTGOMERY AND THE "CLASSICAL" SYMPHONY SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P 9
ABOUT THE MUSIC
Sinfonietta No. 1 for Strings
COLERIDGE-TAYLOR PERKINSON
Born June 14, 1932, Manhattan
Died March 9, 2004, Chicago
APPROXIMATE PERFORMANCE TIME
15 minutes
Born into a musical family, Coleridge-Taylor Perkinson was named after the Afro-British composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (who in turn had been named after the English poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge). The young man showed unusual musical talent, and at age 13 he entered New York’s High School of Music and Art. After graduation, he attended New York University and eventually received his bachelors and masters degrees from the Manhattan School of Music. From there he went on to study conducting at the Berkshire Music Center and at the Salzburg Mozarteum—among his conducting teachers were Dean Dixon and Dmitri Mitropoulos. Perkinson had a long and successful career that ranged over many different kinds of music: he was a jazz pianist who performed for several years as a member of the Max Roach Jazz Quartet, he was an arranger for many of the leading vocalists of his era (including Henry Belafonte, Lou Rawls and Marvin Gaye), he composed scores for different dance troupes, and he composed music for films and for television.
But above all else, Perkinson wished to succeed as a composer of classical music. He was one of the cofounders of the Symphony of the New World, the first fully integrated orchestra in the United States, and he served as associate conductor of that orchestra from 1965-70. Among his many compositions are works for orchestra (including two Sinfoniettas for Strings), choral settings and works for small instrumental ensembles or solo performers.
Perkinson’s Sinfonietta No. 1 for Strings is the work of a very young composer: he wrote it in 1954, when he was only 22. The Sinfonietta is also a compact work—its three movements span only a quarter of an hour—and each of those movements is in a different classical form. Perkinson marks the opening movement Sonata Allegro. Shortest of the movements, it proceeds along vigorous counterpoint and driving energy to a firm conclusion. The second movement, which Perkinson titles Song Form, is dark, intense and expressive music. Many have heard echoes here of Barber’s Adagio for Strings: both are somber movements, both rise to a great climax, and both fade away to a quiet conclusion. The concluding movement is in rondo form, and Perkinson specifies that the performance should be Allegro furioso. This movement—full of slashing energy, shifting meters and dancing interludes—may be “furious” music, but it is so infectious that it is sometimes performed by itself. Matters relax slightly for a reflective interlude in the middle of the movement, but the bristling energy of
the opening soon returns, and Perkinson’s Sinfonietta No. 1 concludes with a strident flourish.
Symphony No. 1 in D Major, Op. 25, Classical Symphony
SERGE PROKOFIEV
Born April 23, 1891, Sontsovka
Died March 5, 1953, Moscow
APPROXIMATE PERFORMANCE TIME
15 minutes
In the summer of 1917, with the Russian Revolution beginning to explode around him, Serge Prokofiev set to work on an experiment: he wanted to write a symphony and to compose without being seated at the piano. He wished to think “orchestrally” rather than conceiving his ideas pianistically, and in fact this symphony was composed mostly during long walks in the woods outside St. Petersburg.
But what makes this symphony so remarkable—and so charming—is that this young firebrand chose as his model the classical symphony of the eighteenth century: “It seemed to me that had Haydn lived to our day he would have retained his own style while accepting something of the new at the same time. This was the kind of symphony I wanted to write: a symphony in the classical style.” The symphony he wrote during the summer of 1917—only fifteen minutes long—is a model of classical order and style, enlivened at some points by Prokofiev’s characteristically pungent harmonies. This symphony seems to exist outside time: there is not the faintest echo here of the political cataclysm about to bury Russia, nor is this music consciously a part of the neo-classical movement then beginning in music. (Ravel was composing Le Tombeau de Couperin and Debussy his Violin Sonata at just this same time.) Rather, the “Classical” Symphony seems a stylistic experiment: a fiery young composer, seeking greater clarity and a specifically orchestral sonority, consciously chose to turn to the distant past for his model.
Music this clear and pleasing needs little explanation or comment. The Allegro is built on the expected two theme-groups: the lively opening explosion, and a poised second theme for first violins that Prokofiev marks con eleganza, full of wide skips and grace-notes. It is a measure of Prokofiev’s attention to classical form that these two themes are in the “correct” keys: the first is in the home key of D Major, the second in the dominant of A Major. The form of this miniature movement is right out of Haydn: exposition, lively development, a big climax, a recapitulation of both theme-groups and an exciting close.
The gentle second movement is in ternary form. Over pulsing accompaniment from the lower strings, first violins have the very high main idea, which Prokofiev marks molto dolce. The center section features
PROGRAM NOTES | DINUR, MONTGOMERY AND THE "CLASSICAL" SYMPHONY SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 P10 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
pizzicato strings and the bubbling sound of the two bassoons, before an abbreviated return of the opening section. The third movement brings a slight deviation from the classical model: this is not the expected minuet but a gavotte, based on a main theme that dances by stomping (Prokofiev marks it pesante); a stately middle section gives way to a concise repeat of the gavotte tune by the two flutes before the music suddenly vanishes on two quiet pizzicato strokes. Out of this quiet, the finale bursts to life. In sonata form, complete with exposition repeat, this Molto vivace is full of the sound of chattering woodwinds; the bright energy of the opening never lets up as the symphony rushes to its shining close.
The “Classical” Symphony is scored for classical orchestra: pairs of woodwinds, trumpets and horns, plus timpani and strings. Prokofiev consciously chose to step outside time when he wrote this music. In the process, he wrote a symphony that may live for all time.
Rounds for Piano and String Orchestra
JESSIE MONTGOMERY
Born December 8, 1981, New York City
APPROXIMATE PERFORMANCE TIME
15 minutes
The daughter of theater and musical artists, Jessie Montgomery learned to play the violin as a child and earned her bachelors degree in violin performance from Juilliard and her masters in composition from New York University. She is currently a Graduate Fellow in composition at Princeton as well as a Professor of Violin and Composition at The New School in New York City. In May 2021 Montgomery began her tenure as composer-in-residence with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
The composer has provided a program note for Rounds for Piano and String Orchestra:
Rounds for solo piano and string orchestra is inspired by the imagery and themes from T.S. Eliot’s epic poem Four Quartets. Early in the first poem, Burnt Norton, we find these evocative lines:
At the still point of the turning world. Neither flesh nor fleshless;
Neither from nor towards; at the still point, there the dance is,
But neither arrest nor movement. And do not call it fixity,
Where past and future are gathered. Neither movement from nor towards,
Neither ascent nor decline. Except for the point, the still point,
There would be no dance, and there is only the dance.
(Text © T.S. Eliot. Reproduced by courtesy of Faber and Faber Ltd)
In addition to this inspiration, while working on the piece, I became fascinated by fractals (infinite patterns found in nature that are self-similar across different scales) and also delved into the work of contemporary biologist and philosopher Andreas Weber who writes about the interdependency of all beings. Weber explores how every living organism has a rhythm that interacts and impacts with all of the living things around it and results in a multitude of outcomes.
Like Eliot in Four Quartets, beginning to understand this interconnectedness requires that we slow down, listen, and observe both the effect and the opposite effect caused by every single action and moment. I’ve found this is an exercise that lends itself very naturally towards musical gestural possibilities that I explore in the work—action and reaction, dark and light, stagnant and swift.
Structurally, with these concepts in mind, I set the form of the work as a rondo, within a rondo, within a rondo. The five major sections are a rondo; section “A” is also a rondo in itself; and the cadenza—which is partially improvised by the soloist—breaks the pattern, yet, contains within it, the overall form of the work.
To help share some of this with the performers, I’ve included the following poetic performance note at the start of the score:
Inspired by the constancy, the rhythms, and duality of life, in order of relevance to form:
Rondine – AKA Swifts (like a sparrow) flying in circles patterns
Playing with opposites – dark/light; stagnant/swift
Fractals – infinite design
I am grateful to my friend Awadagin Pratt for his collaborative spirit and ingenuity in helping to usher my first work for solo piano into the world.
-Jessie Montgomery, February 2022
Symphony No. 104 in D Major, London
FRANZ JOSEPH HAYDN
Born March 31, 1732, Rohrau
Died May 31, 1809, Vienna
APPROXIMATE PERFORMANCE TIME
30 minutes
CONTINUED ON PAGE 16
PROGRAM NOTES | DINUR, MONTGOMERY AND THE "CLASSICAL" SYMPHONY SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P 11
FRIDAY, APR 21 7:30PM
SATURDAY, APR 22 7:30PM
The Rady Shell at Jacobs Park™
JEAN-YVES THIBAUDET PLAYS DEBUSSY
Rafael Payare, conductor
Jean-Yves Thibaudet, piano
Hera Hyesang Park, soprano
San Diego Symphony Orchestra
PROGRAM
CLAUDE DEBUSSY
Prélude à “L’après midi d’un faune” (Prelude to “Afternoon of a Faun”)
CLAUDE DEBUSSY
Fantaisie for Piano and Orchestra
Andante; Allegro Lento e molto espressivo Allegro molto
Jean-Yves Thibaudet, piano
– INTERMISSION –
GUSTAV MAHLER
Symphony No. 4 in G Major
Bedächtig; nicht eilen Im gemächlicher Bewegung; ohne Hast Ruhevoll
Sehr behaglich
Hera Hyesang Park, soprano
Approximate program length: 1 hour, 50 minutes (includes one 20-minute intermission)
The April 21 performance is made possible, in part, through the generosity of the Atkinson Family in memory of Rita Loyd Atkinson.
Scan this QR code with your smartphone or text SDS to 55741 to access the interactive version of the program
JACOBS MASTERWORKS
JEAN-YVES THIBAUDET
HERA HYESANG PARK RAFAEL PAYARE
E.
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 P12 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
GARY PAYNE
CAREN
ABOUT THE CONDUCTOR
RAFAEL PAYARE Please turn to page 6.
ABOUT THE ARTISTS
For more than three decades, JEAN-YVES THIBAUDET has performed world-wide, recorded more than 50 albums, and built a reputation as one of today's finest pianists. From the start of his career, he delighted in music beyond the standard repertoire, from jazz to opera, which he transcribed himself to play on the piano. His profound professional friendships crisscross the globe and have led to spontaneous and fruitful collaborations in film, fashion, and visual art.
Thibaudet has a lifelong passion for education and fostering young musical talent. He is the first-ever Artistin-Residence at the Colburn School in Los Angeles, where he makes his home. In 2017, the school announced the Jean-Yves Thibaudet Scholarships, funded by members of Colburn’s donor community, to provide aid for Music Academy students, whom Thibaudet will select for the merit-based awards, regardless of their instrument choice.
Thibaudet's recording catalogue has received two Grammy® nominations, the Preis der Deutschen Schallplattenkritik, the Diapason d'Or, the Choc du Monde de la Musique, the Edison Prize and Gramophone awards. His most recent solo album, 2021’s Carte Blanche, features a collection of deeply personal solo piano pieces never before recorded by the pianist. He is the soloist on Wes Anderson’s 2021 film The French Dispatch; his playing can also be heard in Pride and Prejudice, Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, Wakefield, and the Oscar-winning and critically acclaimed film Atonement. His concert wardrobe is designed by Dame Vivienne Westwood.
In 2010 the Hollywood Bowl honored Thibaudet for his musical achievements by inducting him into its Hall of Fame. Previously a Chevalier of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, Thibaudet was awarded the title Officier by the French Ministry of Culture in 2012. In 2020, he was named Special Representative for the promotion of French Creative and Cultural Industries in Romania. He is co-Artistic Advisor, with Gautier Capuçon, of the Festival Musique & Vin au Clos Vougeot.
Thibaudet's worldwide representation: HarrisonParrott. Thibaudet records exclusively for Decca Classics.
Hailed by The New York Times for her “bright, clear voice and impressive coloratura technique,” Korean soprano HERA HYESANG PARK is attracting the attention of opera houses and concert houses worldwide.
In the 2022-23 season, Park returns to the Staatsoper Berlin for Adina L’elisir d’amore; makes her role debut as Nannetta in Falstaff at The Metropolitan Opera and makes her operatic house debut as Pamina in Die Zauberflöte at the Teatro Colón Buenos Aires. In concert, she sings Mahler’s Symphony No. 4 with San Diego Symphony and Naples Philharmonic; Handel’s Messiah with St. Paul’s Chamber Orchestra and appears with Baltimore Symphony as soloist in their Lunar New Year celebration concert. Park will also give recital and concert performances on tour in Mexico, South America and South Korea and makes her solo recital debut in New York’s Carnegie Hall.
The 2021-22 season saw Hyesang triumph in three role debuts: Pamina in The Magic Flute at the Metropolitan Opera; Susanna in Le Nozze di Figaro at Glyndebourne Festival and Adina at Staatsoper Berlin. She also made her Opéra national de Paris debut in Marina Abramovic’s Seven Deaths of Maria Callas. Concert highlights included gala concerts with the New York Philharmonic and Prague Philharmonia as well as a multi-city tour of South Korea.
Her honors and awards include first prize in the April 2016 Gerda Lissner Foundation International Competition, second prize and the Audience Choice Award at the 2015 Montreal International Musical Competition, winning second place overall in the women’s division in Placido Domingo’s 2015 International Operalia competition, as well as taking First Prize in the women’s Zarzuela.
Park records exclusively for Deutsche Grammophon. Her debut album I am Hera was released in November 2020.
PROGRAM NOTES | JEAN-YVES THIBAUDET PLAYS DEBUSSY SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P 13
ABOUT THE MUSIC
Prélude à “L’après midi d’un faune”
(Prelude to “Afternoon of a Faun”)
CLAUDE DEBUSSY
Born August 22, 1862, Saint-Germain-en-Laye
Died March 25, 1918, Paris
APPROXIMATE PERFORMANCE TIME
10 minutes
This shimmering, endlessly beautiful music is so familiar to us—and so loved—that it is difficult to comprehend how assaultive it was to audiences in the years after its premiere in December 1894. Saint-Saëns was outraged: “[It] is pretty sound, but it contains not the slightest musical idea in the real sense of the word. It’s as much a piece of music as the palette a painter has worked from is a painting.” Later his outrage took a more emphatic direction: “the doors of the Institute must at all costs be barred against a man capable of such atrocities.”
We smile, but Saint-Saëns had a point. Though it lacks the savagery of The Rite of Spring, the Prélude à “L’après midi d’un faune” may be an even more revolutionary piece of music, for it does away with musical form altogether—this is not music to be grasped intellectually, but simply to be heard and felt. Pierre Boulez has said that “just as modern poetry surely took root in certain of Baudelaire’s poems, so one is justified in saying that modern music was awakened by ‘L’après-midi d’un faune.’”
Debussy based this music on the poem “L’après-midi d’un faune” by his close friend, the Symbolist poet Stephane Mallarmé. The poem itself is dreamlike, a series of impressions and sensations rather than a narrative. It tells of the languorous memories of a faun on a sleepy afternoon as he recalls an amorous encounter the previous day with two passing forest nymphs. This encounter may or may not have taken place, and the faun’s memories—subject to drowsiness, warm sunlight, forgetting and drink— grow vague and finally blur into sleep.
Like the faun’s dream, Debussy’s music is directionless, and Saint-Saëns was right to feel assaulted. In the words of Italian pianist-composer Ferruccio Busoni, this music “is like a beautiful sunset; it fades as one looks at it.” The famous opening flute solo (the sound of the faun’s pipe?) draws us into this soft and sensual world, and while the key signature may say E Major, Debussy’s music obliterates any sense of a stable tonality from the start. The middle section, introduced by woodwinds in octaves, may be a subtle variation of the opening flute melody—it is a measure of this dreamy music that we cannot be sure. The opening section returns to lead the music to its glowing close, finally in uncomplicated E Major. Debussy uses a small orchestra (without trombones,
trumpets, tuba or any percussion but antique cymbals) and keeps the emphasis not on musical incident but on color, harmony and beauty of sound. Audiences have come to love this music precisely for its sunlit mists and glowing sound, but it is easy to understand why it troubled early listeners. Beneath its shimmering and gentle beauties lies an entirely new conception of what music might be.
Fantaisie for Piano and Orchestra
CLAUDE DEBUSSY
APPROXIMATE PERFORMANCE TIME
25 minutes
Debussy never wrote a concerto. Like Schubert, he was not interested in large-scale compositions designed to show off the virtuosity of an individual performer. He did write for soloists, but these rhapsodies for clarinet and saxophone and a set of dances for harp were conceived primarily to show off those instruments, not their performers. However, as a young man struggling to find his way as a composer, Debussy did write a concerto-like piece for piano and orchestra. He chose to title it “fantaisie” rather than “concerto,” and that distinction was important to him.
The Fantaisie for Piano and Orchestra had a very rough start. At age 21 Debussy won the Prix de Rome, which involved two years of study in Rome. It was the highest honor possible for a young French composer, but Debussy hated Rome and everything about it; he left that city early, and he did everything he could to circumvent the requirements of the prize, which included writing a series of pieces to demonstrate his progress. Eventually he had to present his works, and between October 1889 and April 1890 Debussy composed the Fantaisie, which was to be performed at a concert of the Société Nationale under the direction of Vincent d’Indy. At the end of the first rehearsal, d’Indy announced that due to time restrictions on rehearsals, he would present only the first movement of the Fantaisie at the concert. Debussy promptly climbed onto the stage, collected the parts off the orchestra’s music stands, and walked out the door. He never heard the Fantaisie, and it was not premiered until November 20, 1919, when Alfred Cortôt played it in London with the Royal Philharmonic. Debussy had been dead for over a year at that point.
Debussy’s choice of the title Fantaisie was a good one. The nineteenth-century concerto was based on a general form: sonata-form first movement, lyric slow movement, and a rondo or dance finale. Debussy wanted to write something completely different— a work for soloist and orchestra based not on the contrast of themes of sonata-form but instead on the continuous evolution of just one theme—and his Fantaisie is based almost entirely on this cyclical evolution of themes.
PROGRAM NOTES | JEAN-YVES THIBAUDET PLAYS DEBUSSY SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 P14 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
The Fantaisie is in three movements, and the second and third are joined. In the opening movement, the germinal theme is heard immediately in the woodwinds, and this theme will then reappear in a number of guises throughout. The opening may feel restrained, but the music soon pushes ahead at the Allegro giusto. This change in tempo does not bring a change in the gentle character of this music, however: throughout the score Debussy continually reminds the players that their performance should be très doux (“very gentle”) and espressivo. This opening movement may not be based on conflict and resolution, but it does drive to a surprisingly dramatic conclusion.
Debussy mutes the strings at the beginning of the Lento e molto espressivo, and there is a dreamy, almost diaphanous quality to this movement, which proceeds directly into the finale. That movement, marked Allegro molto, might be thought of as a variation movement—it is structured on continuous evolutions of the main theme.
Audiences hearing this music without knowing its composer might never guess that it is the work of Claude Debussy. When he wrote this music, he was still searching for an authentic voice, and the works that would begin to define that voice—the String Quartet and Prélude à l’après midi d’un faune—were still several years in the future. The Fantaisie may represent an unexpected side of Debussy, but this music remained important to him: as late as 1909 he spoke of going back to revise it, but he never got around to doing that.
Symphony No. 4 in G Major GUSTAV MAHLER
Born July 7, 1860, Kalischt, Bohemia
Died May 18, 1911, Vienna
APPROXIMATE PERFORMANCE TIME
55 minutes
In April 1897 Mahler was named director of the Vienna Court Opera, the most prestigious post in the world of music. But the fierce demands of that position brought his composing to a standstill, and from the summer of 1896 until the summer of 1899 he composed no new music. Finally established in Vienna, he could return to creative work, and during the summer of 1899 he retreated to the resort town of Alt-Aussee in the Styrian Alps and composed the first two movements of his Fourth Symphony. He completed the symphony the following year at his new summer home on the shores of the Wörthersee and led the premiere in Munich on November 25, 1901.
The Fourth is Mahler’s friendliest symphony—even people who claim not to like Mahler take this music to their hearts. At just under an hour in length, it is also the shortest of Mahler’s ten symphonies, and it is scored for an orchestra that is—by his standards—relatively
modest: it lacks trombones and tuba. Mahler’s claim that the Fourth never rises to a fortissimo is not literally true, but it is figuratively true, for even at its loudest this symphony is Mahler’s most approachable work. Much of its charm comes from the text sung by the soprano in the last movement, with its wide-eyed child’s vision of heaven. In fact, several recordings use a boy soprano in place of a woman in the finale, because the sound of a child’s voice is exactly right in this music. This sense of a child’s vision—full of wonder, innocence and radiance— touches the entire Fourth Symphony.
The symphony opens with the sound of sleighbells, and violins quickly sing the graceful main subject. Mahler marks this movement Bedächtig (“Deliberately”), and it is remarkable for the profusion of its melodic material: a jaunty tune for clarinets, a broad and noble melody for cellos, a lyric melody for cellos, a poised little duet for oboes and bassoons. We arrive at what seems to be the development, and scarcely has this begun when an entirely new theme—a radiant call for four unison flutes—looks ahead to the celestial glories of the final movement. This movement proceeds melodically rather than dramatically – there are no battles fought and won here—and at the end the opening violin theme drives the movement to its ringing close on great G-Major chords.
The second movement—In gemächlicher Bewegung (“Moving leisurely”)—is in a rather free form: it might be described as a scherzo with two trios. Mahler requires here that the concertmaster play two violins, one of them tuned up a whole step to give it a whining, piercing sound—Mahler asks that it sound Wie eine Fiedel: “like a fiddle.” Mahler said that this movement was inspired by a self-portrait by the German painter Arnold Böcklin in which the devil—in this case a skeleton—plays a violin (with only one string!) in the painter’s ear. Despite all Mahler’s suggestions of demonic influence, this music remains genial rather than nightmarish—in Donald Francis Tovey’s wonderful phrase, the shadows cast here “are those of the nursery candlelight.”
However attractive the second movement may be, it finds its match in the third, marked Ruhevoll (“Peaceful”), which begins with some of the most beautiful music ever written: a long, glowing melody for cellos and its countertheme in the violins. This movement is in variation form, with the variations based on this opening theme and on a more somber second subject, sung first by the oboe. Near the close, violins suddenly leap up and the gates of heaven swing open: brilliant brass fanfares and smashing timpani offer a glimpse of paradise, but that finale must wait for this movement to reach its utterly peaceful close.
Out of the silence, solo clarinet sings the main theme of the finale, marked Sehr behaglich (“Very comfortable”), and soon the soprano takes up her gentle song. Mahler had originally composed this song, titled Das himmlische Leben (“The Heavenly Life”), in 1892 when he was conductor of the Hamburg Opera. Its text, drawn from Das Knaben Wunderhorn, offers a child’s vision of
PROGRAM NOTES | JEAN-YVES THIBAUDET PLAYS DEBUSSY CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P 15
CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE
heaven. Mahler said that he wished to create a portrait of heaven as “clear blue sky,” and this vision of heaven glows with a child’s sense of wonder. It is a place full of apples, pears and grapes, a place where Saint Martha does the cooking, Saint Peter the fishing, where there is music and dancing and joy. The sleighbells from the symphony’s opening now return to separate the four stanzas, and at the end the soprano sings the key line: “Kein Musik ist ja nicht auf Erden” (“There is no such music on earth”). For this truly is heavenly music, music of such innocence that it feels as if it must have come from another world, and at the end of this most peaceful of Mahler symphonies the harp and contrabasses draw the music to a barely-audible close.
-Program notes by Eric Bromberger
PROGRAM NOTES | DINUR, MONTGOMERY AND THE "CLASSICAL" SYMPHONY
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11
On September 28, 1790, Prince Nikolaus Esterházy died, and his successor Prince Anton did not share the family passion for music. Anton disbanded the Esterházys’ professional orchestra, and Haydn—who had been music director to the Esterházy family for thirty years— suddenly found himself without a job. He was given a generous pension, and at age 58 he looked forward to a quiet retirement. But suddenly his life changed. The impresario Johann Peter Salomon appeared in Vienna and invited the composer to come to London to put on a series of concerts of his own music. Haydn set off for new territory—and triumphed. His first visit, during the years 1791-92, was so successful that he returned for a second in 1794-95. For each visit he composed six symphonies, and the Symphony No. 104 was the last of the twelve. In fact, it would be his final symphony, for he would turn his attention to vocal music over the remaining years of his life. There is no particular reason to call No. 104 the “London”—that name might apply with equal accuracy to all twelve of the symphonies Haydn wrote for his visits to that city.
The first performance took place on May 4, 1795, at the King’s Theatre at Haymarket in London. Haydn was delighted by the quality of the orchestra, by the enthusiasm of the large audience and by the profits: “The room was full of select company...The whole audience was very pleased and so was I. I made four thousand gulden on this evening. Such a thing is possible only in England!”
Some have suggested that Haydn, released from his service to a refined aristocratic family and now faced with writing to please a middle-class audience, simplified his musical language to give it more immediate appeal, but this is not to suggest that there is anything condescending or compromised about this music. Quite the opposite. All of Haydn’s English symphonies show him at the height of his powers as a symphonist, and these twelve symphonies demonstrate a technical mastery, grand sonority and breadth of scope that would represent the furthest development of the symphony until Beethoven took up the form five years later.
From the moment of that festive premiere, Haydn’s Symphony No. 104 has been an audience favorite, and it is not hard to understand why. This is music not just of enormous technical accomplishment but full of energy and high spirits. That energy is evident from the first instant, when the symphony explodes to life on a ringing tutti fanfare. This noble call to order will return twice during the course of the long introduction before the music leaps ahead at the Allegro on a theme that seems simplicity itself. But this simple little tune will yield unexpected riches. Haydn had long been interested in building sonata-form movements on just one theme, and now he re-uses his principal theme in place of the expected second subject and proceeds to build much of the development on a string of repeated notes taken from that seminal idea.
The Andante gets off to a poised, almost innocent beginning, but soon this is interrupted by tumultuous outbursts from full orchestra, punctuated by timpani and brass. These in turn are set off by striking silences and passages for woodwinds alone. The Menuetto catches us by surprise rhythmically, for Haydn places the accent on the third beat here; the wistful, yearning trio section makes its way back to the minuet via an unexpected bridge passage.
The buoyant finale has set scholars searching for the source of its principal theme, first heard over a bagpipelike drone at the opening. Some have argued that this theme is based on a street-vendor’s cry that Haydn had heard in London: “Hot cross buns! Hot cross buns!” More recent research has shown that the theme is based on the Croatian folksong “Oj jelena,” which Haydn had heard while in the service of the Esterházy family. Whatever its source, the theme is developed with all the skill Haydn had acquired and refined in over forty years as a symphonist, and his final symphony rushes to its conclusion in a blaze of energy.
-Program notes by Eric Bromberger
PROGRAM NOTES | JEAN-YVES THIBAUDET PLAYS DEBUSSY
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 P16 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
The San Diego Symphony is proud to announce that we have met our goal of $125 million for “The Future is Hear” Campaign! This extraordinary campaign supports construction of The Rady Shell at Jacobs Park, improvements to Jacobs Music Center, and wide-ranging artistic initiatives for San Diego’s communities.
If you are interested in supporting The Rady Shell at Jacobs Park please email campaign@sandiegosymphony.org for giving and recognition opportunities.
RAFFAELLA AND JOHN BELANICH ALAN
BENAROYA
DAVID BIALIS
San Diego Symphony is pleased to have Sycuan as the Lead Sponsor of Music Connects, the Symphony’s community engagement series!
* DECEASED
DR. BOB AND JUNE SHILLMAN VAIL MEMORIAL FUND, MEREDITH BROWN, TTEE
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P 17
CORPORATE HONOR ROLL
THESE PARTNERS CURRENTLY MAINTAIN AN ANNUAL SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA SPONSORSHIP:
SAN DIEGO BAYFRONT
$200,000+ $100,000+ $50,000+ $25,000+ $15,000+ $10,000+
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 P18 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
THE LEGACY SOCIETY
The Legacy Society honors the following outstanding individuals who have committed a gift from their estate to the San Diego Symphony Foundation and/or to the San Diego Symphony Orchestra's Annual Fund to ensure the success of the San Diego Symphony Orchestra Association for generations to come. The following listing reflects pledges entered as of February 15, 2023.
Anonymous (2)
Leonard Abrahms*
Alfred F. Antonicelli*
Pat Baker and Laurence Norquist*
William Beamish
Stephen and Michele* Beck-von-Peccoz
Alan Benaroya
Rosanne B. and W. Gregory Berton
Dr. James L. Bowers*
Lt. Margaret L Boyce USN*
Dennis and Lisa Bradley
Gordon Brodfuehrer
Sophie & Arthur Brody Foundation
Joseph H. Brooks and Douglas Walker
Julia Brown
Margaret and David* Brown
Donna Bullock
Roberta and Malin Burnham
Robert Caplan and Carol Randolph
The Carton Charitable Trust
Barbara and Paul Chacon
Melanie and Russ Chapman
Nikki A. and Ben G. Clay
Catherine Cleary
Warrine and Ted Cranston*
Elisabeth and Robert* Crouch
Bob and Kathy Cueva
Peter V. Czipott and Marisa SorBello
Caroline S. DeMar
Penny* and Harold Dokmo, Jr.
Arthur S. Ecker*
Elizabeth and Newell A. Eddy*
Daniel J. and Phyllis Epstein
Jeanne and Morey Feldman*
David M. Finkelstein*
Esther and Bud* Fischer
Teresa and Merle Fishlowitz
Margaret A. Flickinger
John Forrest and Deborah Pate
Norman Forrester and Bill Griffin
Pauline Foster*
Judith and Dr. William Friedel
Pam and Hal Fuson
Carol J. Gable*
Edward B. Gill
Joyce Glazer
Nancy and Fred Gloyna
Muriel Gluck*
Helene Grant*
Dorothy and Waldo* Greiner
David and Claire Guggenheim
Alice Dyer*
Susan and Paul Hering
Lulu Hsu
Joan and Irwin Jacobs
Marjory Kaplan
Barbara M. Katz
Patricia A. Keller
Karen and Warren Kessler
Anne and Takashi Kiyoizumi
Evelyn and William Lamden
Carol Lazier and James Merritt
Inge Lehman*
Sandra and Arthur* Levinson
Beatrice P. and Charles W. Lynds*
Gladys Madoff
Pamela Mallory
Richard Manion
James Marshall
Patricia and Peter Matthews
Elizabeth R. Mayer*
Vance M. McBurney*
Antoinette Chaix McCabe*
Una Davis and Jack McGrory
Sandra Miner
Riley Mixson*
Judith A. Moore
Ermen and Fred Moradi*
Mona and Sam Morebello
Joani Nelson
Helen and Joseph R. Nelson*
Mariellen Oliver*
Elizabeth and Dene Oliver
Val and Ron Ontell
Steven Penhall
Margaret F. Peninger*
Pauline Peternella *
Marilyn James and Richard Phetteplace
Shona Pierce*
Linda and Shearn* Platt
Robert Plimpton
Elizabeth Poltere
Sheila Potiker*
Jim Price and Joan Sieber
Anne Ratner*
Sarah Marsh-Rebelo and John Rebelo
Debra Thomas Richter and Mark Richter
Colette Carson Royston and Ivor Royston
Dr. Arno Safier*
Joan and Jack* Salb
Craig Schloss
Todd Schultz
Melynnique and Edward Seabrook
Pat Shank
Kathleen and Lewis* Shuster
Karen and Kit Sickels
Drs. Bella and Alexander* Silverman
Stephen M. Silverman
Judith Harris* and Dr. Robert Singer
Gayle* and Donald Slate
Lyn Small and Miguel Ikeda
Linda and Bob Snider
Dave and Phyllis Snyder
Elaine Galinson and Herbert Solomon
Suellen and James Sorenson
Valerie Stallings
Pat Stein*
Richard Stern*
Marjorie A. Stettbacher
Susan B. Stillings*
Joyce and Ted Strauss
Gene Summ
Miriam Summ
Sheryl Sutton
James L.* and June A. Swartz
Elizabeth and Joseph* Taft
Joyce and Joseph Timmons
Harriet and Maneck Wadia
Pauline* and Ralph* Wagner
Betty and Phillip Ward PIF Fund*
Leslie and Joe Waters
Sue and Bill Weber
Mike & Janet Westling
James* R. Williams and Nancy* S. Williams
Martha Jean Winslow*
Marga Winston*
Edward Witt
Carolyn and Eric Witt
David A. Wood
Mitchell R. Woodbury
Zarbock 1990 Trust*
LeAnna S. Zevely
Dr. and Mrs. Philip Ziring If you are interested in more information about joining The Legacy Society, please contact Director of Advancement, Major Gifts and Planned Giving, Jodie Graber at (619)
Madeline and Milton Goldberg*
*DECEASED SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P 19
236-5409 or jgraber@sandiegosymphony.org.
THE FUTURE IS HEAR CAMPAIGN
The San Diego Symphony Orchestra acknowledges the following donors who have made a gift of $10,000 or more toward The Future is HEAR campaign, our current $125 million campaign supporting the San Diego Symphony’s construction of The Rady Shell at Jacobs Park and its wide-ranging artistic and community programs. We are extremely grateful! To make a gift, please call (619) 237-1969. The following listing reflects pledges or gifts entered as of February 15, 2023.
$1,000,000 AND ABOVE
Terry L. Atkinson
Bank of America
Dianne Bashor
Malin and Roberta Burnham
Harry and Judy Collins Foundation
Daniel J. and Phyllis Epstein
Ted and Audrey Geisel◊
The George Gildred Family and The Philip Gildred Family
Joan and Irwin Jacobs
Sheri Lynne Jamieson
The Kong Tang Family
Dick◊ and Dorothea Laub
Jack McGrory
The Alexander and Eva Nemeth Foundation
The Conrad Prebys Foundation
Allison and Robert Price
Evelyn and Ernest Rady
Lou and Penny Rosso and the Rosso Family
Colette Carson Royston and Ivor Royston
Sahm Family Foundation
T. Denny Sanford
Karen and Christopher “Kit” Sickels
Karen and Jeff Silberman
Donald and Gayle◊ Slate
The State of California
Gloria and Rodney Stone
Sycuan Casino Resort
Roger Thieme◊ and Sylvia Steding
Sue and Bill Weber
$250,000 AND ABOVE
Anonymous
Raffaella and John Belanich
Alan Benaroya
Susan and Jim Blair
The James Silberrad Brown Foundation
Julia Brown Family
David C. Copley Foundation
Sam B. Ersan
Esther Fischer
Pam and Hal Fuson
Karen and Warren Kessler
Carol Ann and George Lattimer
The Payne Family Foundation
M&I Pfister Foundation
Linda and Shearn◊ Platt
Robert Glenn Rapp Foundation
Dave and Phyllis Snyder
Elaine Galinson and Herbert Solomon
Elizabeth and Joseph◊ Taft
Jayne and Bill Turpin
Kathryn A. and James E. Whistler
$100,000 AND ABOVE
American Specialty Health
Jules and Michele Arthur
David Bialis
Nikki and Ben Clay
Stephanie and Richard Coutts
Diane and Charles Culp
Diane and Elliot Feuerstein
Walt Fidler
Anne and Steve Furgal
Lisa Braun Glazer and Jeff Glazer
In memory of Jim Lester
The Hering Family
Carol and Richard Hertzberg
Arlene Inch
A gift to honor my grandchildren
Aiden and Gaia
Brooke and Dan◊ Koehler
Bill and Evelyn Lamden
Sandra and Arthur◊ Levinson
Catherine and Phil Blair
The Alex C. McDonald Family
Lori Moore, Cushman Foundation
The Parker Foundation (Gerald T. and Inez Grant Parker)
Bill and Clarice Perkins
Marilyn James and Richard Phetteplace
Jeannie and Arthur◊ Rivkin
Sage Foundation
Tucker Sadler Architects
U.S. Bank
Jo and Howard Weiner
Cole and Judy Willoughby
Richard◊ and Joanie Zecher
$50,000 AND ABOVE
Carol Rolf and Steven Adler
Bonnie and Krishna Arora and Family
David A. and Jill Wien Badger
Carolyn and Paul Barber
Cindy and Larry Bloch
Lisa and David Casey
The John D. and Janice W. Cone Family Trust
Kathleen Seely Davis
The den Uijl Family
In Loving Memory of LV
Gary and Karin Eastham
In loving memory of Kenrick "Ken" Wirtz
Jose Fimbres Moreno◊
Karen Wahler and Michael Gay
William and Martha Gilmer
The Jaime Family Trust
Roy, Peggy, Dean and Denise Lago
The Peggy and Robert Matthews Foundation
Admiral Riley D. Mixson◊
Gerry and Jeannie Ranglas
Marilyn and Michael Rosen, Juniper and Ivy Restaurant
Richard Sandstrom and Sandra Timmons
Congresswoman Lynn Schenk
Kris and Chris Seeger
Deborah Heitz and Shaw Wagener
Emma and Leo Zuckerman
$25,000 AND ABOVE
Anonymous
Lisa and Dennis Bradley
Gordon Brodfuehrer
Pamela and Jerry Cesak
County of San Diego
The Druck/Silvia Family
Susan E. Dubé
Lisette and Mick Farrell
Dr. John and Susan Fratamico
Janet and Wil Gorrie
Virginia and Peter Jensen
Jeff Light and Teri Sforza
Sig Mickelson◊
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 P20 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
Sandy and Greg Rechtsteiner
The Segur Family
In honor of Robert (Bud) Emile, SDS Concertmaster 1960-1975
Bill and Diane Stumph
Gayle and Philip Tauber
In memory of my husband
Raymond V. Thomas, Lover of the Symphony
The Bartzis-Villalobos Family
RANAS
Leslie and Joe Waters
John J. Zygowicz and Judy Gaze-Zygowicz
$10,000 AND ABOVE
Anonymous
Erina Angelucci
Aptis Global, a subsidiary of The Kimball Group
DeAnne Steele, Carlo Barbara and Cole Barbara
Eloise and Warren Batts
Lauren Lee Beaudry
Karl and Christina Becker
Edgar and Julie Berner
Diane and Norm Blumenthal
The Boros Family
Sarah◊ and John Boyer
Annette and Daniel Bradbury
Lori and Richard Brenckman
Beth Callender and Pete Garcia
Carol Randolph and Robert Caplan
The Casdorph Family
Angela Chilcott
Kurt and Elizabeth Chilcott
Dr. Samuel M. Ciccati and Kristine J. Ciccati
Thomas Jordan and Meredith M. Clancy
P. Kay Coleman and Janice E. Montle
Dr. William Coleman
Peter V. Czipott and Marisa SorBello
Ann Davies
Caroline S. DeMar
Drs. Edward A. and Martha G. Dennis
George and Jan DeVries
Robert and Nina Doede
In loving memory of Karen Cooper Ferm
Michael and Susan Finnane
Gertrude B. Fletcher
K. Forbes
Deborah Pate and John Forrest
4040 Agency–
Mary, Bill and John
Judith and William Friedel
Barbara and Doug Fuller
Cheryl J. Hintzen-Gaines and Ira J. Gaines
Vicki Garcia-Golden and Tim Jeffries
Gardiner & Theobald, Inc.
Joyce M. Gattas, PhD
Lynn and Charlie Gaylord
In memory of Royce G. Darby
Kimberly and Jeffrey Goldman
In memory of Samuel Lipman, Clarinetist
The Granada Fund
Robert and Carole Greenes
Carrie and Jim Greenstein
Lulu Hadaya
Jeff and Tina Hauser
In memory of Lucille Bandel
In Memory of Dick Hess
Richard A. Heyman and Anne E. Daigle Family Foundation
Let the music play on, Drew!
Mary Ann and John Hurley
Cynthia Thornton and Michael Keenan
Keith and Cheryl Kim
Katherine Kimball
Helen and Sig Kupka
Linda and Tom Lang
Alexis and Steven Larky
Tom and Terry Lewis Foundation
The Li Family
Larry Low and Mikayla Lay
Josephine and Alex Lupinetti◊ Daniel and Chris Mahai
Sally and Luis Maizel
Susan and Peter Mallory in honor of Martha Gilmer
David Marchesani Family
Anne and Andy McCammon
The McComb Family
Katy McDonald
Larry McDonald and Clare White-McDonald
Mark, Amy, Auguste and Paris Melden
In Memory of James C. Moore
Judith and Neil Morgan
Clara and Donald Murphy
Patricia R. Nelson
The Lorna and Adrian Nemcek Family
The Ning Family
Frank O'Dea, O'Dea Hospitality
Val and Ron Ontell
Carol and Vann Parker
The Hong-Patapoutian Family
The Pollock Family
The Quintilone and Cooper Families
Phillip Rand, M.D. Dedicated Ob-Gyn, kind and gentle soul, humanitarian
In loving memory of Long “Chris” Truong
Ruth Reznikoff
Dr. Vivian Reznik and Dr. Andrew Ries
Burton X and Sheli Rosenberg
Marie G. Raftery and Dr. Bob Rubenstein
The Ryde Family Memorial Foundation
Shari and Frederick Schenk
Colin Seid and Dr. Nancy Gold
Susan and Michael Shaffer
Brigg and Jayne Sherman
Shinnick Family
Ruey and Marivi Shivers
Stephen M. Silverman
Janet Simkins
Hon. Stephanie Sontag and Hon. David B. Oberholtzer
Jeanette Stevens
Sudberry Properties
Beatriz and Matthew Thome
Katherine “Kaylan” Thornhill
Michael and Eunicar Twyman
Susan and Richard Ulevitch
Sheri Broedlow and Kyle Van Dyke
Patricia and Joe Waldron
Lori and Bill Walton
The Warner Family
The K. Nikki Waters Trust
Shirli, Damien and Justin Weiss
Mike and Susan Williams
Jeffrey P. Winter and Barbara Cox-Winter
The Witz Family
In loving memory of Ching H. Yang
Howard and Christy Zatkin
San Diego Foundation
Rancho Santa Fe Foundation
Jewish Community Foundation
◊ Deceased
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P 21
The Musicians, members of the Board of Directors and the Administrative Staff wish to gratefully acknowledge the growing list of friends who give so generously to support the San Diego Symphony. To make a gift, please call (619) 615-3901. The following listing reflects pledges entered as of February 15, 2023.
San Diego Foundation
STRADIVARIUS CIRCLE: $100,000 AND ABOVE
American Specialty Health
Rita◊ and Richard Atkinson
Raffaella and John Belanich
City of San Diego Commission for Arts and Culture
Daniel J. and Phyllis Epstein
Dr. Seuss Fund
Joan and Irwin Jacobs
The Conrad Prebys Foundation
Dr. Bob and June Shillman
The State of California
MAESTRO CIRCLE:
$50,000-$99,999
Anonymous (2)
Terry L. Atkinson
Alan Benaroya
Cohn Restaurant Group/ David Cohn
Kevin and Jan Curtis
Una Davis and Jack McGrory
Mr. and Mrs. Brian K. Devine
The Fish Market
Pam and Hal Fuson
Karen and Warren Kessler
Jerry and Terri Kohl
The Kong Tang Family
Dr. William and Evelyn Lamden
Judy McDonald
Monica and Robert Oder
Linda and Shearn◊ Platt
Price Philanthropies
Elena Romanowsky
Jack and Sherron Schuster
Karen and Kit Sickels
Karen and Jeff Silberman, Silberman Family Fund
Gayle◊ and Donald Slate
Dave and Phyllis Snyder
Gloria and Rodney Stone
Sylvia Steding and Roger◊ Thieme
Jayne and Bill Turpin
Vail Memorial Fund
Sue and Bill Weber
Mitchell Woodbury
Sarah and Marc Zeitlin
GUEST ARTIST CIRCLE:
$25,000-$49,999
Anonymous
Annette and Daniel Bradbury
Nikki A. and Ben G. Clay
Karen and Donald Cohn
Karin and Gary Eastham
Anne L. Evans
Lisette and Mick Farrell, Farrell Family Foundation
Norman Forrester and Bill Griffin
Goldman Sachs Philanthropy Fund
Rancho Santa Fe Foundation
Sandra and Arthur◊ Levinson
Eileen Mason
Deborah Pate and John Forrest
Allison and Robert Price
Colette Carson Royston and Ivor Royston
Scripps Research Institute
Elaine Galinson and Herbert Solomon
Jeanette Stevens
Sandra Timmons and Richard Sandstrom
Leslie and Joe Waters
Kathryn and James Whistler
Sheryl and Harvey White
CONCERTMASTER CIRCLE: $15,000-$24,999
Anonymous
Warren and Eloise Batts
David Bialis
Michael Blasgen
Diane and Norman Blumenthal
Dr. Anthony Boganey
Julia Richardson Brown Foundation
Pam and Jerry Cesak
Ann Davies
Kathleen Seely Davis
Jill Gormley and Laurie Lipman
Judith Harris◊ and Dr. Robert Singer
Laurie Sefton Henson
Marilyn James and Richard Phetteplace
One Paseo
Jo Ann Kilty
Helen and Sig Kupka
Carol Ann and George Lattimer
Carol Lazier and James Merritt
Dr. Marshall J. Littman
Anne and Andy McCammon
Lynn and Sue Miller
Rich Paul and Rena Minisi/ Paul Plevin, Sullivan and Connaughton, LLP
Riley◊ and Patricia Mixson
James and Josie Myers
Michael Nissman and Paige Stone
Val and Ron Ontell
Pinnacle Advertising
Jane and Jon Pollock
Pamela and Stephen Quinn
Sally and Steve Rogers
Ellen Browning Scripps Foundation
Seltzer Caplan McMahon Vitek
Jayne and Brigg Sherman
Stephen M. Silverman
The Eleanor and Hank Family Trust
Elizabeth and Joseph◊ Taft
R.V. Thomas Family Fund
University of San Diego
Isabelle and Mel◊ Wasserman
Jewish Community Foundation ◊ Deceased
Judy Gaze-Zygowicz and John Zygowicz
VIRTUOSO CIRCLE:
$10,000-$14,999
The Bjorg Family
The Boros Family
Ercil Brown and Linda Silverman
California Bank & Trust
David C. Copley Foundation
Sally Cuff
Ana de Vedia
Scott and Tracy Frudden
Lynn and Charles Gaylord
Joyce Glazer
Vicki Garcia-Golden and Tim Jeffries
Beverley Haynes
Marla Hess
Richard A. Heyman and Anne E. Daigle Family Foundation
Nancy and Ross Stephen Howard
Keith and Cheryl Kim
Robert Leone
Donald and Clara Murphy
National Endowment for the Arts
The Kenneth T. and Eileen L. Norris Foundation
ResMed Foundation
Harold and Evelyn Schauer
Susan Sharin and Laurina Young
Shinnick Family
Hon. Stephanie Sontag and Hon. David Oberholtzer
Katherine "Kaylan" Thornhill
Stephen L. Tierney
Dixie Unruh
K. Nikki Waters
Drs. Larry and Mara Ybarrondo
ORCHESTRA CIRCLE:
$5,000-$9,999
Anonymous (2)
Carol Rolf and Steven Adler
Cheryl and Rand Alexander
Arthur J. Gallagher Insurance
Edgar and Julie Berner
Denise Bevers
Joyce Biffar
BioMed Realty
Evelyn Truitt and Dr. Paul Black
Benjamin Brand
Sophie Bryan and Matthew Lueders
Wendy Burk and Harold Frysh Household
Vickie Camper
The Chicago Community Foundation
Melvin Cohn
Cooley LLC
Robert and Nina Doede
Karen Dow
Susan Dubé
Berit and Tom Durler
Erika and Kyle Fetter
Gertrude B. Fletcher
Karen Forbes
Calvin Frantz
Joan and Gary Gand
Genesco Sports Enterprises, Inc.
Eric Gnand
Carrie and James Greenstein
David and Claire Guggenheim
Kay and Bill Gurtin
Art and Pam Handman
Beau Haugh
The Hong-Patapoutian Family
Maryka and George◊ Hoover
Arlene Quaccia and Robin Hughes
James B. Idell and Deborah C. Streett-Idell
Angela and Matthew Kilman
Ken and Kim Krug
Krumholz Family Trust
Gary and Lisa Levine Fund
Oliver McGonigle
Edward and Elizabeth McIntyre
Menard Family Foundation
The Cynthia and George Mitchell Foundation
Morrison & Foerster
Trupti and Pratik Multani
David and Judith Nielsen
Northern Trust Charitable Giving Program
Dave and Jean Perry
Mary Ann and David Petree
Gail Lee Powell
Peggy and Peter Preuss
Marie Raftery and Dr. Robert Rubenstein
Sandy and Greg Reichsteiner
RiverVest
Ryan Family Charitable Foundation
Mr. Les Silver
Silicon Valley Community Foundation
Alan and Louarn Sorkin
The Stainrook Foundation
Richard and Susan Ulevitch
Ingrid M. Van Moppes
Patricia and Joe Waldron
Jo and Howard Weiner
Shirli Weiss
Margarita and Philip Wilkinson
Edward and Anna Yeung
Joan Zecher
SYMPHONY CIRCLE: $2,500-$4,999
Anonymous Kevin Aufmann
ANNUAL GIVING HONOR ROLL SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 P22 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
Allen Azar
Lauren Lee Beaudry
Dr. Thomas Beers
Mr. Mark Bramson and Ms. Ellen Bramson
Loyce Bruce
Ken Bullock
Joseph Caso
Marilyn Colby
Caroline S. DeMar
Morey A. Feldman and Jeanne D. Feldman Family
Endowment Fund
Linda Fortier
Carol and William Githens
Sharon and Garry Hays
Leon and Sofia Kassel
Marge Katleman and Richard Perlman
Judy Leftwich
Sylvia and Jamie Liwerant
Blake Machado
Barbara and Harry Markowitz
Mark C. Mead
Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP
Jeff and Clare Quinn
Dr. Marilyn Friesen and Dr. Michael Rensink
Dr. Nancy Gold and Colin Seid
Lari Sheehan
Ruey and Marivi Shivers
Linda J. and Jeffrey M. Shohet
Mitch and Lindsay Surowitz
Two Bear Capital
Diana and Roger Van Duzer
Norton S. and Barbara Walbridge Fund
Ronald and Diane Walker
Thomas P. Ward and Rosemary T. Ward
Ellen and Bill Whelan
Carolyn and Eric Witt
Luann and Brian E. Wright
Carmen Young
Robert Young
CONCERTO CIRCLE:
$1,000-$2,499
Anonymous (2)
K. Andrew Achterkirchen
David Akers
Dede and Michael Alpert
Laura and Fred Applegate
Patricia and Brian Armstrong
Sondra Berk
Mary Ann Beyster
Virginia and Robert Black
Ralph Britton
Joseph H. Brooks and Douglas Walker
Joyce Burns
Barbara and Salvatore Capizzi
Rew P. Carne
Kathleen Carroll
Angela Chilcott
Stan Clayton
John Cochran and Sue Lasbury
Household
Colwell Family Fund
Community Service Association, San Diego Unified School District
Jeanette and Hal Coons
Mid Deng
Anne and Charles Dick
John E. Don Carlos
Pamela and Craig Eisenberg
Tina Evans
Max Fenstermacher
Walt Fidler
Marilyn Field
Douglas Flaker
Elena I. Foronda
The Samuel I. and John Henry Fox Foundation
Judith Fullerton
Richard and Sharon Gabriel
Kenneth F. Gibsen Memorial Fund
Marilyn Friesen and John Greenbush
Fred Hafer and W. Haskins-Hafer Household
Dr. and Mrs. William P. Haney
Stephanie and John Hanson
Donna Hendrix
Jill Herbold
Suzanne and Lawrence Hess
Mert and Joanne Hill
Barbara and Paul Hirshman
Peggy and John Holl
Kate Hong
Thomas Houlihan
Thao Hughes
Kenneth Hunt
John Hurley
Jay William Jeffcoat
Zella Kahn-Jetter and Gary Jetter
Gina Kakos
Maurice Kawashima
Bob Kelly
Rhea and Armin Kuhlman
Robert and Laura Kyle
Dr. Mary Lawlor
Joseph K. Drag and Karen L. Lee
Greg Lemke
Stephen Lending
Gayle M. Lennard
Robin and Charles◊ Luby
Daniel and Chris Mahai
Madonna Christine Maxwell
David McCall and Bill Cross
Susan and Douglas McLeod
Mr. Paul J. McMahon
Dr. Grant Miller
Dr. Sandra E. Miner
Martha and Chuck Moffett
Bibhu P. Mohanty
Patricia Moises
Dr. Thomas Moore
Kathryn Murphy
Tom and Anne Nagel
Patricia R. Nelson
Lawrence and
Rebecca Newman
Patricia and Kent Newmark
Dr. Jon Nowak
Sandra and David Polster
Pratt Memorial Fund
Jim Price and Joan Sieber
Qualcomm Matching Grant Program
Barbara Rabiner
Robert Glenn Rapp Foundation
Janet and Bill Raschke
Renaissance Charitable Foundation
Christa and Gerald Reynolds
Lois Richmond
Darci Roger-Tracy
The Ryde Family Memorial Foundation
Gloria and Dean Saiki
Sanderson Family Donor
Advised Fund
Bonnie and Josef Sedivec
Donna Sher
Holland M. Smith II
Valerie Stallings
Larry and Pamela Stambaugh
Steve and Carmen Steinke
Emily Renee Stroebel
John E. Sturla II
Harry V. Summer
Deborah Klatskin and Burton Sutker
Swinton Family Fund
Mary and Jonathan Szanto
Jacqueline Thousand and Richard Villa
Col. and Mrs. Joseph C. Timmons
Jennifer Toth
William Townsend
Jean and Mark Trotter
Janet Anderson and Victor Van Lint
Janis Vanderford
Mary Walshok
Lori and Bill Walton
Carol and Thomas Warschauer
Dr. Jeffrey and Barbara Wasserstrom
Margaret Weigand
Irene, David◊ and Diana Weinrieb
Judy and Bob Weisman
Fernanda Whitworth
Andrea and Victor Wild
Martha Wingfield
Joseph and Mary Witztum
Olga and Oscar Worm
Maria and Randy Zack
Britt Zeller
Dr. and Mrs. Philip Ziring
SONATA CIRCLE: $500-$999
Anonymous
Alana and Roger Albertson
June and Daniel Allen
Elizabeth Anderson
Andrade Family Trust
Hector and Jennifer Anguiano
Arleene Antin and Leonard Ozerkis
Colleen Bechtel
Patricia and Bruce Becker
David Belanich
Barry and Emily Berkov
Elena Bernardi
Rosanne B. and W. Gregory Berton
Terri Bignell
Jerry and Karen Blakely
Stephen and Priscilla Bothwell
Greg Bowcott
Elizabeth E. Bruton
Jolie and Glenn Buberl
John M. Burns
Shirley Cantu
William Carrick
Lynne Champagne
Geoff and Shem Clow
Dan Collins and Nancy Shimamoto Household
Lee Connor
Ann Craig
Bob and Kathy Cueva
Roberta Culbreath
Georgia and Emery Cummins
Kathryn K. Dabbs
Karen Dalton-Koch
Julie and Don De Ment
Heather Dietsch
Ann Green Diggdon*
Dr. Greg Dixon
Gail Donahue
Elizabeth and Richard Dreisbach
Pamela Dunlap
Florence Nemkov and Dr. Bernard Eggertsen
John Eldon
Jeane Erley
Chris Eshelman
Karin and Alfred Esser
Joel Ewan and Carol Spielman-Ewan
Linda Lyons Firestein
Chris and LeAnne Floom
John Foltz
Marcia and Leonard Fram
Holli and Ronald Franzese
Rob Gilmore
Brenda and Michael Goldbaum
Donna Gordon
Laurie M. Gore
Dennis Grady
Stephen Gray
Stephanie and H. Griswold
Douglas Gross
Charles Gyselbrecht
Gerald Hansen and Marilyn Southcott
Thomas Hawkins
Dr. Robert and Diane Haynes
Brian Hays
Helmut W. Schumann Foundation
Ray Henderson
James Herman
The Herr Family
Dr. Avi Hettena
Deborah Hirsch
Janet and Clive Holborow
Robert Holmes
Gurdon Hornor
Lulu Hsu
Nancy Hylbert
Justin Jackson
Faith and Steve Jennings
Robert Jentner
Dimitri and Elaine Jeon
Benjamin Johnson
Thesa Lorna Jolly
Dr. Divya Kakaiya
CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
ANNUAL GIVING HONOR ROLL
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE P 23
Carol Kearney
Dwight A. Kellogg
Maureen C. Kendrick
Maureen Kilfoyle
John and Sue Kim
Ken Kobayashi
Stephen Korniczky
John Lally
Mayra Curiel and Carlos Larios
Dr. James and Lois Lasry
Elizabeth Leech
Lewis Leicher
Stacey LeVasseur Vasquez
Ann and Joseph Lipschitz
David Louie
Claudia Lowenstein
Daniel Lysne
Kiyoe MacDonald
Anne Macek
Kyong Macek
Michael Mahaffey
Amy and John Malone
Deborah and Fred Mandabach
Sue Marberry
Nikolay and Tatyana Matusov
Patrick McArron and Glenn Stokes
Mac McKay
Narriman McNair
Joseph Milchen and Aleica Ayers
Theresa Morley
Mary Neilan
Frank O'Dea
James and Jean O'Grady
Larry and Linda Okmin
Household
Madonna Omens
Brent Orlesky and Ronald T. Oliver
Julian Parra
Edward Phelan
Dorothy Kay Phillips
Sheila and Ken Poggenburg
Dean Popp
Joseph and Sara Reisman
Patrick Ritto
Theodore E. Roberts
Nancy Robertson
Steve and Cheryl Rockwood
Esther Rodriguez
Bill and Janet Rogers
Bill and Melanie Roper
Sheryl Rowling
Rose Marie and Allan Royster
Norman and Barbara Rozansky
Sanderson Family Fund
Julie and Jay Sarno
Henry Sauls
Mary Margaret Saxton
Mr. Daniel H. Schumann
Thomas Schwartz
Dr. Sharron Seal
Selati Family Fund
Lu and Georgina Sham
Ben and Julia Shiller
Professor Susan Shirk
Martha Shively
Hano and Charlotte Seigel
David Skinner
Mary Slatten
Marilyn and Brian Smith
Daniel Soto
John L. Stover
Derek Stults
Dr. David E. and Susan F. Summers
Suzanne and William Sutton
Kay and Cliff Sweet
Phoebe and Eugene◊ Telser
Thomas Templeton and Mary Erlenborn
Robert and Tamara Thibodeau
Paul and Mary Anne Trause
Steven Traut
VOSA Student Symphony
Ticket Fund
John Walsh
Joyce Walters
Rex and Kathy Warburton
Don and Sharon Watkins
J. Susan Watson
Janet and Joel Weber
Criseida Werdenberg
Mike and Janet Westling
Noel Wheeler
Joyce Williams
Symphorosa Williams
David A. Wood
Karen and Rod Wood
Steven Yagyagan
Naima and Mike Yelda
Herb and Margaret Zoehrer
MEMORIAL GIFTS
In memory of Jim Bashor
Dianne Bashor and Cal West Apartments
In memory of Nomi Feldman
Elaine Galinson and Herb Solomon
In memory of Dick Hess
Marla Hess
In memory of Wolfgang Horn
Kathleen Seely Davis
In memory of my mother
Charlene Kenny, who was a professional violinist and violist for many decades.
Cathleen Kenny
In memory of Cherri Klueck
Jonathan Kendrick
In memory of Bob Kyle
Robert and Laura Kyle
In memory of Carl Maggio
Linda and Shearn◊ Platt
In memory of Lawrence McCleary
John Ferrara
Darrell and Patricia Marsh
Tyler Pitman
In memory of
RADM Riley Mixson
Colonel and Mrs. W.R. Jones
In loving memory of Karen Pernela, mother of violist Ethan Pernela
Ann Morrison
In loving memory of Ed Reed. May his memory be a blessing.
Marlee Jones
In memory of Carlyn Rosse
Eileen Wingard
In memory of Florence ShillerGoldman, who loved classical music and was a loyal fan of the San Diego Symphony
Mid Deng
In memory of my Oma (grandmother) Ursula Stroebel who enjoyed the San Diego Symphony throughout her life. She passed in early 2021.
Emily Renee Stroebel
In memory of Jospeh Taft
Elizabeth Taft
In memory of Carleton and Andree Vail
William F. Burns and
Meredith Brown
In memory of Nellora J. Walker
Northern Trust
In memory of David and Ilene Weinreb
Diana Weinreb
HONORARIA GIFTS
In honor of Victoria AndÚjar
Vance and Gloria Baker
In honor of Maria Atkins, and James & Theresa Grant, in lieu of Christmas presents this year
Mrs. Thao Nguyen Hughes
In honor of Robert Caplan
Dr. Robert and Fran Preisman
In honor of Hal Fuson
Jay and Julie Sarno Fund
In honor of Martha Gilmer
Edward and Martha Dennis
In honor of our son Benjamin Jaber, principal horn
Thomas Jaber
In honor of Joan and Irwin Jacobs' Wedding
Anniversary
Seltzer Caplan McMahon Vitek
Hal and Debby Jacobs
Paul Jacobs Household
Jeffrey Jacobs
In honor of Joan Jacobs' 90th birthday
Lawrence and Rebecca Newman
In honor of Dr. Irwin Jacobs' birthday
Paul Jacobs Household
In honor of Irwin and Joan Jacobs as this year's JFS Gala Honorees
Robert Rubenstein and Marie Raftery
In honor of Dr. Warren O. Kessler
Dr. Walter and Barbara Doren
Gayle M. Lennard
Bill and Ellen Whelan
In honor of Rebecca Littman, Sietse Jonkman & Nora Littman Jonkman
Dr. Marshall J. Littman
In honor of two moms on Mother's Day who support the Symphony strongly!
Judith Wenker
To welcome Bob Morris and Jodie Graber to the Development Staff of the San Diego Symphony
Robert Rubenstein and Marie Raftery
In honor of Ray Nowak
Linda Thomas
In honor of Sherron Schuster's birthday
Mrs. Marilyn Colby
In honor of Herbert J. Solomon's 90th birthday
Seltzer Caplan McMahon Vitek
In honor of Sarah Tuck
Maryana Bhak
In honor of Isabelle Wasserman's 90th birthday
Nancy Goldberg
ANNUAL GIVING HONOR ROLL SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY 2022-23 SEASON APRIL 2023 P24 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
ESSENTIAL APRIL EATS
Where to Dine, Imbibe and Be Merry This Month by
Three Michelin stars for a fine-dining superstar, a casual sushi spot at Liberty Public Market, SoHostyle pizzas by the square-shaped slice, a seaworthy speakeasy and more … San Diego dining (and drinking) in April is as diverse as it is delicious.
How do we adore Addison? Let us count the ways. A fine-dining institution helmed by executive chef William Bradley since 2006, Addison recently earned three Michelin stars by the esteemed Michelin Guide. It’s the first SoCal restaurant and one of just 14 in the U.S. to receive three stars. Addison is also the first and only San Diego restaurant to be honored in the prestigious La Liste guide and international ranking system. Spotlighting local, seasonal ingredients, Bradley and his team craft exquisite, SoCal-influenced French dishes—serving a
SARAH DAOUST
nine-course menu paired with wines from an exceptional, 10,000-bottle cellar. The restaurant overlooks the Fairmont Grand Del Mar Golf Course—with views of the 18th hole and waterfall. Make reservations soon; Addison is booked solid for months. 5200 Grand Del Mar Way, Del Mar, 858.314.1900
Ahoy! Hospitality group SDCM brings us Captain’s Quarters—the new sister to the Grass Skirt located next door. Modeled after a 17th-century sailing ship, the nautical-themed, speakeasy-esque bar serves a mix of “refreshing” and “direct” cocktails, including an array of gin-based libations; plus a “From the Galley” light bites menu crafted by SDCM executive chef Brian Redzikowski, featuring grilled prawns and caviar bumps. The cozy-chic, low-lit decor features nautical portholes lit by video projections of ocean sunsets and stormy
ERIC WOLFINGER
Alfonsino at Addison
DINING
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE 13
seas. 910 Grand Ave., Pacific Beach, 858.412.5237
Tracy Borkum and chef/partner Tim Kolanko bring us The Kitchen @ MCASD, now open on the La Jolla campus of the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (MCASD). The full-service alfresco cafe feels akin to a European garden, outfitted with large umbrellas that shade a quaint dining courtyard. Serving breakfast and lunch, the Mediterranean-inspired menu offers Spanish-style French toast, a lobster and mushroom omelet, a swordfish kebab plate, salads, sandwiches, house-made pastries and more; plus wine, cocktails, Paru teas and Dark Horse coffee. 700 Prospect St., La Jolla, 619.880.8719
An ode to oysters and refined sea fare, Salt & Fin is the fifth full-service restaurant to open at Harrah’s Resort. The elegant outpost offers chilled seafood and spe-
cialties like wild-caught, whole-grilled orate fish, poached Pacific halibut, and the signature Salt & Fin Shrimp ‘n’ Grits; plus pasture-raised chicken, flat-iron prime steak, and cornbread with spiced honey, chili butter and smoked sea salt; and bourbon-caramel budino for dessert. The seainspired decor features warm lighting supplied by hanging sphere-shaped lanterns; along with whimsical accents, including mermaid artwork dotting the walls and octopus candleholders. Start your evening with a classic cocktail at the bar, such as the Oaxaca Old Fashioned or Bugatti Margarita; and end the night trying your luck on the Harrah’s casino floor. 777 S. Resort Drive, Valley Center, 760.751.3100
First opened in 2012 in NYC (then expanding to Los Angeles and Miami), the Morano family’s Prince Street Pizza
“EXHILARATING IN
IMMACULATE.” — Los Angeles Times FEATURING PRINCIPAL PLAYERS FROM ...AND DOZENS MORE. MAINLYMOZART.ORG | (619) 239-0100 JUNE 15-24 | DEL MAR & LA JOLLA COURTESY SALT & FIN
EVERY WAY.
The Crab Louie Salad at Salt & Fin
DINING
14 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
DINING
is known for its SoHo squares and Neapolitanstyle round pies—incorporating Sicilian recipes and handcrafted sauces. Now pizza lovers can enjoy its famous fare at its new location in the Gaslamp. Expect the same menu offerings named after landmark SoHo streets; such as the Mercer Margherita pie, the Prince Perfection and the trademarked Spicy Spring; plus 10-inch pizzettas, salads and mozzarella balls. 415 Market St., Gaslamp Quarter, 619.501.4261
The owners of Le Parfait Paris have opened Liberty Public Market’s first and only sushi restaurant. Welcome to The Sushi Stand, a fast-casual concept where patrons can grab fresh, locally sourced sushi to-go—served in custom recyclable (and adorable) boxes—for lunch and dinner. Try the Maria Maria roll, with spicy Kanikama, cucumber, avocado, Hamachi, pineapple and jalapeño; and the vegan Blue in Green roll with radish sprouts, cucumber, tempura asparagus, avocado, roasted mushrooms and chili garlic. 2820 Historic Decatur Road, Liberty Station, 858.789.6557
Gaslamp hotspot
Lionfish debuts a revamped dinner menu by executive chef JoJo Ruiz.
16 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
Presented by La Jolla Playhouse since 2013, Without Walls Festival (WOW) is an annual multi-day, family-friendly event that bursts outside traditional theatre spaces, turning unexpected locations into an interactive stage. Discover innovative American and international artists, and experience a dizzying array of “bold and extreme” new works (Time).
New offerings include Korean hot chicken with mochi waffles, truffle butter, house-made hot sauce and smoked maple; Lamb Lollipop Anticucho; and King Crab Dynamite. Feast on new specialty sushi rolls like the Bonecrusha made with king crab, tuna toro, caviar, crispy shoestrings, white truffle shoyu and bone-marrow butter; and the Geisha with kampachi, spicy tuna and avocado. Or indulge in the 180-ounce, prime striploin “Oscar” crusted with blue crab. 435 Fifth Ave., Gaslamp Quarter, 619.738.7200
San Diego’s largest urban winery, Carruth Cellars, introduces some delicious offerings. Cheese lovers will adore the new “crostini flights” at Carruth’s Liberty Station Wine Garden cheese shop. Made with Prager Brothers Artisan Bread baguette slices, the flights feature toppings like fennel-fig gouda and honey-brie chili flakes. Or try one of several new sandwiches, such as the Cold Cut Trio and Bistro Sandwich. And enjoy “Mimosa Sundays” at the Liberty Station, Carlsbad and Solana Beach tasting rooms—featuring Blanc de Blanc sparkling chardonnay mimosas and pastries. See website for addresses. carruthcellars.com
DINING 2022 / 2023 SEASON TICKETS START AT $25! Visit sdopera.org or call Patron Services 619-533-7000 Horror has many faces and many voices. The world premiere of three horrorinspired one-act operas by local composer Nicolas Reveles. Sung in English with English and Spanish text projected above the stage. PERFORMANCES APRIL 14 - 16
18 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
Our Culinary, Baking, and Hospitality Apprenticeship programs give individuals who are facing barriers to employment the opportunities and support they need to embark on meaningful careers!
Following 10 weeks of intensive technical and career readiness training, our Apprentices move into paid onthe-job training with one of our wonderful Employer Partners like C-Level, Continental Catering, Holiday Inn Bayside, Hotel Del Coronado, Humphrey's Half Moon Inn, Island Palms, Island Prime, La Valencia, Maya's Cookies, Omni La Costa, Park Social, Petco Park, The Dana, Town & Country Resort, and Cucina Urbana.
Please support these transformational programs today! www.kitchensforgood.org
RACHMANINOFF: ALL-NIGHT VIGIL
One Night Only — April 29, 2023
Rachmanino counted his a cappella choral work, All-Night Vigil, among his two favorite compositions. The San Diego Master Chorale presents Rachmanino ’s soul-stirring All-Night Vigil for one night only.
For tickets and information, visit sdmasterchorale.org.
The San Diego Master Chorale is auditioning for new singers this summer for the 2023-24 Season. We are auditioning for all sections, and looking especially for tenor and bass voices. Do you have a singer in your life who might like to join us? Apply by May 5. For more information, visit sdmasterchorale.org/auditions.
SING WITH US!
Audition Deadline — May 5, 2023
Sergei
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE 19
Obsession, Overacting and Ladies Losing Their Latchkeys
CONT’D. FROM PAGE 10
Festival’s only ticketed event. It takes place at MCASD’s downtown location—a short shuttle ride from The Rady Shell. Inspired by lucha libre— the Mexican wrestling performance in which professional wrestlers use masks and high-flying maneuvers to entertain audiences—La Lucha will take visitors on a voyage to experience ringside thrills and backstage secrets. After the festival, La Lucha will open to the public in May.
Directed by Rosina Reynolds
PRESENT LAUGHTER PRESENT LAUGHTER PRESENT LAUGHTER PRESENT LAUGHTER PRESENT LAUGHTER
Not all is as it seems in this hilarious and Hitchcockian story that makes you question… well, everything.
By Keiko Green
SHARON SHARON SHARON SHARON
Ashley and Gilmer are both excited about A Shared Space, a program by Ryan Carter in which the San Diego Symphony will perform. Carter will transform cell phones into instruments, as the audience joins Symphony musicians as players in a communal performance— aiming to enhance a sense of togetherness that develops by being in the audience of a live musical performance.
“Of course, we are looking forward to many of the events at this year’s WOW Festival,” says Gilmer, “But we’re particularly proud of the program that our Symphony musicians will perform; and the collaboration between our two organizations to put this incredible event together.”
20 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
7 - July 2, 2023
June
WORLD PREMIERE Who the F**K is Sharon?
Sean MurrayJames NewcombAmanda SittonShana WrideLindsey Young
Tickets: 619.337.1525 www.cygnettheatre.org
29 - Apr. 19, 2023
Drew BradfordTrevor CruseMelissa FernandesAnnie HintonSteven Lone
Mar.
FEATURE
Other highlights of the 2023 Wow Festival:
Birdmen, from the Close-Act Theatre Company, The Netherlands, features huge, illuminated creatures that are operated by mysterious men. Their movement and colors are synchronized—as if programmed for a mission. Their glowing bodies react to their environment, and they seem to communicate in colors.
Choreo & Fly, from San Diego’s Disco Riot, combines performance with an activity that allows audience members to engage in something physical between short dance performances (by local movement artists) in a unique combination of dance and kite-flying. Spectators will have the opportunity to move their bodies, enjoy physical expression and build community through movement.
Circular Dimensions, from Cristopher Cichocki, who is based in the Coachella Valley, harnesses elements of the natural world as well as industrial mutation as primary
PATRICK
AL Lic# 374600619 MC Lic# 374600619 SNF Lic# 080000367 COME BY AND LET US SHOW YOU AROUND. COME BY AND LET US SHOW YOU AROUND. seacrestvillage.org | (760) 632-0081 211 Saxony Road Encinitas, CA 92024
SRT IS A 501(c)(3) NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION LOST in Yonkers May 19 - June 11 Fri & Sat 8pm • Sun 2pm Matinee June 10 2pm no show June 4 presents
WOW production The End (Control Group Productions)
MUELLER
by Neil Simon | Directed by Jacquelyn Ritz
BCSD 20 SOMETHING :
SCORCHERS!
May 5-6, 2023
Celebrating our 20th season with favorite hits by Rameau, Handel, Purcell, Bach, Haydn, and others
www.bachcollegiumsd.org
FEATURE
mediums; alongside original compositions fused into Cichocki’s DJ sets that embrace sonic ambience and experimental dance genres. Circular Dimensions will map the surrounding environment with monumental video projections experienced in chroma-depth 3D.
Diversionary Theatre’s Drive—an immersive theater experience based on Broadway veteran Sharon Wheatley’s book Drive—chronicles her real-life, pandemic-necessitated cross-country RV trip with her wife and family. Unfolding around a 30-foot RV, this warm and funny play follows the two women as they struggle to set up a campsite; all the while tackling discussions of family, the loss of working in live theater, and how to manage the great outdoors.
The End, from Control Group Productions in Denver, hijacks a traditional civic bus tour to take audiences on a ride through a city transformed by escalating climate catastrophe— rolling toward the brink of collapse. Exploring our city’s present and futures, The End seeks refuge from the rising storm in an interactive expedition visiting multiple sites in a custom-renovated, apocalyptic school bus.
22 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
“ ” –
YESTERDAY’S SOUND TODAY BACH COLLEGIUM SAN DIEGO
TWENTIETH SEASON Ruben Valenzuela, Artistic Director
Petra and Nati’s Las Cuatro Milpas restaurant in Barrio Logan is a local landmark and a longtime favorite among San Diego food enthusiasts. In Las Cuatro Milpas, San Diego’s TuYo Theatre creates an immersive journey through a corn maze inspired by the restaurant that bridges ancient Aztec mythology with the American dream. Audiences enter a maze modeled on Aztec codices and covered in murals that tell the journey of the Estudillo family—from Mexico to California.
Aimed at families with children, The NEST, from St. Paul’s Megan Flød Johnson, is an immersive playscape for young people and their communities to explore the identity and home of an elusive and migrating “Creature.” Children can explore ideas through unstructured play and hands-on making guided by a cohort of NEST facilitators.
WOW Festival 2023 takes place April 27-30. For more info, visit wowfestival.org and theshell.org.
PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE 23
JESSICA CRAY MARTIN PHOTO (WALKER ARTS CENTER)
5790
museumofmakingmusic.org • 760.438.5996 Open Tuesday - Sunday, 10am - 5pm. Closed Mondays. Explore connections between people, instruments, and the music we make.
Armada Dr, Carlsbad •
858-272-8663 • www.cityballet.org Romeo & Juliet with the City Ballet Orchestra 30th Anniversary Season 2022-23 THE GREATEST LOVE STORY California Center for the Arts, Escondido • May 6 & 7
$29 - $99
for Students, Seniors & Military
Photo by Chelsea Penyak
Tickets:
Discounts
WOW production The NEST, from Megan Flød Johnson
ERIK LATTWEIN PARTING SHOT
24 PERFORMANCES MAGAZINE
Artist Niki de Saint Phalle’s Coming Together sculpture at the San Diego Convention Center is 30 feet tall and weighs 10 tons.
Helping you reach your goals is our top
Helping you reach your goals is our top priority.
priority.
Experience the benefits of investments, banking and wealth planning – all expertly coordinated to bring you the capabilities you need with the service you expect.
Experience the benefits of investments, banking and wealth planning – all expertly coordinated to bring you the capabilities you need with the service you expect.
Investment and insurance products and services including annuities are: Not FDIC-insured · Not Bank Guaranteed · May Lose Value Member FDIC.
Investment and insurance products and services including annuities are: Not FDIC-insured · Not Bank Guaranteed · May Lose Value Member FDIC.
S:7.375" T:8.375"