2016 summer program

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Official Program

May – July 2016

PRESENTED BY


Oxford proudly supports The Center for the Performing Arts.

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CHICAGO F CINCINNATI F GRAND RAPIDS F INDIANAPOLIS F TWIN CITIES 317.843.5678 F WWW.OFGLTD.COM/PERFORMINGARTS


CONTENTS WELCOME.............................................................................................. 5 VENUE INFORMATION �������������������������������������������������������������������� 6–8 TICKETS.................................................................................................. 9 DISCOVER MORE AT THE CENTER ����������������������������������������������������� 10 CONTACT US ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 11 2016-2017 SEASON LISTING �������������������������������������������������������� 12–13 PERFORMANCE PROGRAMS.................................................................16–31 ABOUT THE CENTER & FOUNDATION ����������������������������������������� 32–33 TANIA CASTROVERDE MOSKALENKO & MICHAEL FEINSTEIN.........37 CENTER BOARD OF DIRECTORS & STAFF..........................................38–39 CENTER ANNUAL PARTNERS ������������������������������������������������������� 40–44 SONGBOOK FOUNDATION BOARD & FRIENDS............................46–48 CENTER MAJOR PARTNERS ��������������������������������������������������������������� 50

PHOTOS COURTESY OF:

Douglas Adams, Angela Talley, Alan Petersime, Sara Crawford, Bill Crawford, Mark Sheldon and Robyn Ferguson. 3


WE’RE PROUD TO SPONSOR THE ARTS IN A CITY ALREADY FILLED WITH GREAT PERFORMANCES.

SPONSOR OF THE CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS AND A PROUD EMPLOYER IN INDIANA. ALLIEDSOLUTIONS.NET


DEAR FRIENDS, We are delighted you have chosen to visit our campus for one of our many exciting events. This summer, we are proud to bring inspiring artists to our stages, including one of the top orchestras in the world, the Cleveland Orchestra; a group wellknown for their incredible male harmonies, the Gaither Vocal Band; and highenergy pop artists like Melissa Etheridge and Michael McDonald. This summer, the Center kicks off its 2016-17 Season, presented by Allied Solutions! Subscriptions are on sale now, so mark your calendars and reserve your tickets, as the Center has prepared a sensational lineup awaiting your discovery. The season begins with the Great American Songbook Academy Finals on July 23, where talented young vocalists from all over the country spend the week on the Center’s campus learning from world-class mentors and then compete for the title of Songbook Youth Ambassador, a yearlong opportunity with multiple performances, including a chance to perform with Michael Feinstein. On August 27, the Center celebrates the kickoff of the 2016-17 Season with a performance of the Official Blues Brothers Revue which combines comedy and Blues Brothers classics such as “Soul Man,” and “Gimme Some Lovin’.” The season continues with incredible artists like Jazz at Lincoln Center with Wynton Marsalis, Broadway’s favorite Alan Cumming, country music sweetheart Sara Evans, the lively Cuban beat of Havana Cuba All-Stars, and the exciting return of the inspirational pianist Lang Lang. Subscribing is the best way to experience what the Center has to offer. With six remarkable subscription series, an extraordinary collection of diverse performances and welcoming educational events, the Center for the Performing Arts continues to be Central Indiana’s leading destination for the widest range of music, dance, and cultural activities. What will you discover? We look forward to sharing our performances with you, your family, and friends, and are anxious to learn what you will discover. Enjoy the performance!

Don S. Gottwald CHAIRMAN, BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Tania Castroverde Moskalenko PRESIDENT/CEO

Michael Feinstein ARTISTIC DIRECTOR

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VENUE INFORMATION STAGE

WEST LOBBY

EAST ENTRANCE

3RD AVE.

PALLADIUM MAP

EAST LOBBY

MONON TRAIL

WEST ENTRANCE

BOX OFFICE THE PALLADIUM & WILL CALL

STAGE

EAST ENTRANCE

3RD AVE.

SOUTH LOBBY WEST LOBBY

EAST LOBBY

Take Elevator to Gallery Level

MONON TRAIL

WEST ENTRANCE

BOX OFFICE & WILL CALL

SOUTH ENTRANCE VALET PARKING TO PARKING GARAGE

TO PARKING GARAGE

MAP KEY

SOUTH LOBBY

Take Elevator to Gallery Level

Basile Café mon-fri: 11am–2pm 90 min. prior to performances

Beverage & Concessions located on orchestra & gallery levels

Elevator

Basile Gift Shop mon-fri: 11am–4pm 90 min. prior to performances

Restrooms

Handicap Accessible Drop-off

located on salon, gallery & box tier SOUTH levels ENTRANCE

VALET PARKING TO PARKING GARAGE

TO PARKING GARAGE

MAP KEY

TARKINGTON & STUDIO THEATER MAP Basile Café Beverage & Concessions THE TARKINGTON mon-fri: 11am–2pm/ STUDIO THEATER located on orchestra 90 min. prior to performances & gallery levels

SLOPE UP

Restrooms located on salon , gallery & LOBBY ENTRANCE box FROM tier levels CENTER GREEN

tarkington

SLOPE UP

lobby

Handicap Accessible Drop-off box office & will call

FUTURE OFFICE BLDG, N.I.C.

Basile Gift Shop mon-fri: 11am–4pm 90 min. prior to performances

Elevator

Studio Theater

studio

stage

RAMP DN.

THE TARKINGTON / STUDIO THEATER

MONON TRAIL

RAMP DN.

RAMP DN.

RAMP DN.

lobby

UP

3RD AVE.

RAMP DN.

RAMP DN.

UP

LOBBY ENTRANCE FROM CENTER GREEN

UP

UP

SLOPE UP

RAMP UP

The Tarkington EDGE OF FLOOR OPENING FOR STAGE TRAPS

lobby

studio

Studio Theater

R

RAMP DN.

stage

UP

6

3RD AVE.

RAMP DN.

RAMP DN.

UP

parking garage UP

GAR AGE PARKING TR ANCE OPEN TO ORCHESTRA PIT BELOW

UP

MONON TRAIL

RAMP DN.

box office & will call

lobby lobby entrance from parking garage

RAMP UP

RAMP DN.

stage

tarkington

RAMP DN.

SLOPE UP

FUTURE OFFICE BLDG, N.I.C.

OPEN TO ORCHESTRA PIT BELOW


ACCESSIBILITY

Accessible Parking: Accessible parking is available on the Center Green’s loop driveway, just south of the Palladium. Additional accessible valet parking is available at the west entrance on 3rd Avenue. Arrival: Street level and elevator access is available in the Palladium’s West Lobby located at the 3rd Avenue entrance and is also available in the East Lobby located near the Monon Greenway. Seating: Wheelchair accessible seating is located in various sections of the venues. Special seating arrangements may be made in advance by calling the box office at 317.843.3800. PARKING

Valet: Beginning 1 hour before the performance time, valet parking is available on the Center Green’s loop driveway, at the Palladium’s south entrance. The valet service is sponsored by Land Rover Indianapolis & Jaguar Indianapolis. The valet service is $15 or is complimentary for Jaguars and Land Rovers. Valet is only available for Center Presents performances at the Palladium. Self-Park: Secure, on-site garage parking is located south of the Palladium. Enter the Center’s parking garage off 3rd Avenue. RESTROOMS

Restrooms are located in the lower Salon level, Payne & Mencias Box Tier and Gallery level of the Palladium, and on the first floor in the lobby of the Studio Theater and the Tarkington (all restrooms are handicap accessible.) COAT CHECK

Coat check services are available on a seasonal basis at the west side of the lower Salon level near the restrooms at the Palladium. Coat room facilities are also available at the Tarkington and the Studio Theater. FOOD & BEVERAGE

Concessions are available before the performance through intermission. Food is not permitted in the theaters. Beverages purchased at the Center are allowed in the theaters. BASILE CAFÉ & BASILE GIFT SHOP

Basile Café and Gift Shop are located in the East Lobby (for more information and hours of operation see page 10.) THE GREAT AMERICAN SONGBOOK EXHIBIT GALLERY

Take elevators to Gallery level of the Palladium (for more information and hours of operation see page 10.)

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...venue information continued. ASSISTED LISTENING DEVICES

Assisted listening devices are available free of charge. Please see an usher to request one. ELECTRONIC DEVICES

Use of cellular phones, pagers, cameras and recording devices are strictly prohibited in the theater. Please deactivate sounds on any electronic device so it will not disrupt the performance. LATE ARRIVAL POLICY

Latecomers will be seated at the discretion of house management. Video and audio simulcast of the performance is available in the lobbies for your convenience. EMERGENCY PROCEDURE

In the event of an emergency, you will be instructed by an announcement indicating the best method of exit. Please notice the multiple red exit signs. For your safety, please exit in a calm and orderly manner. POLICY ON CHILDREN

Children 4 and older are welcome to attend performances. All patrons must have a ticket and be able to sit quietly throughout the performance. Children of all ages are welcome at Family Shows with paid admission. NO SMOKING

The Center for the Performing Arts campus is smoke-free. WEATHER POLICY

The Center does not cancel performances due to inclement weather. TOURS

Group tours of the Palladium are offered twice a month. For more information, visit the Center’s website and click on The Center Tour. Or you may stop by the Box Office during normal business hours for a brief look, pending availability. FACILITY RENTAL

Individuals, businesses and performing groups may rent seven distinct spaces suitable for your special event as well as the Palladium (1,600 seats), the Tarkington (500 seats) or the Studio Theater (200 seats). Let our experts help you determine which space best suits your important event. Call 317.819.3521 for pricing and availability or e-mail: SpecialEvents@TheCenterPresents.org. 8


BUY TICKETS It’s easy to order tickets to any of the Center’s upcoming performances! ONLINE

Buy online at any time of the day at TheCenterPresents.org. For the best available seats, purchase a series package and enjoy great savings on single ticket prices. BOX OFFICE AT THE PALLADIUM

Monday – Friday: 10am-6pm or curtain Saturday: 12pm-4pm & 2 hours prior to performance Sunday: 2 hours prior to performance The Studio Theater and Tarkington box office is open 60 minutes prior to performance. PHONE

Order tickets by phone by calling 317.843.3800 or toll-free 877.909.2787. STUDENT DISCOUNTS

$15 Student tickets are available to select performances. Contact the Box Office or visit TheCenterPresents.org for more discount information. GROUP SALES

Book your next outing of 12 people or more and you may save up to 20% on tickets. Contact Group Sales at 317.819.3503 or e-mail Group@TheCenterPresents.org. THE CENTER GIFT CERTIFICATES

Gift certificates are available in any denomination and are redeemable in the box office or online for tickets to all Center Presents performances. CENTER PRESENTS MOBILE APP

The Center’s mobile app is available for download for Android and iPhone. The app allows you to browse upcoming shows, buy tickets, preview music and videos, and stay updated on the latest Center news. *Center Presents performances are those NOT presented by our resident companies or rental events. 9


DISCOVER MORE! THE BASILE CAFÉ & BASILE GIFT SHOP

Looking for a bite to eat or a hot cup of coffee before the show? We invite you to visit the Basile Café. Enjoy an appetizing menu featuring sandwiches, candy, soda, water, milk, and freshly brewed coffee. We also serve premium wine, specialty beer, and domestic beer. p 317.819.3523 The Basile Gift Shop boasts a wide selection of jewelry, art, books, cards, and many boutique items. Every purchase helps support the Center for the Performing Arts. New Item: Premium Palladium wine! p 317.819.3524 Basile Café & Gift Shop are open one hour prior to select Center Presents performances at the Palladium and during intermission. THE GREAT AMERICAN SONGBOOK EXHIBIT GALLERY

The new exhibit, "The Great Indiana Songbook: Two Centuries of Hoosier Music," celebrates the songs, people, and places that have helped Indiana carve out a distinct niche in America's musical landscape. The exhibit, in celebration of Indiana's 2016 bicentennial, is a tour of many of the state's important contributions to music. Highlighted artists include Cole Porter, Hoagy Carmichael, Florence Henderson, the Ink Spots, the Jackson Five, Joshua Bell, Crystal Gale, Sandi Patty, Bill & Gloria Gaither, Noble Sissle, Steve Wariner, Carrie Newcomer, Kenneth "Babyface" Edmonds, and many more! p 317.844.2251 w TheSongbook.org exhibit hours:

Monday – Friday, 10am - 4pm

performance hours: 10

Open one hour prior to Songbook and Jazz concerts.


CONTACT US If you have any questions please call us. GENERAL TICKET INFORMATION

The Box Office at the Palladium Monday–Friday: 10am to 6pm Saturday: 12pm to 4pm 317.843.3800 TheCenterPresents.org

INDIVIDUAL GIVING

317.819.3528 Donate@TheCenterPresents.org TheCenterPresents.org/Support YOUNG PROFESSIONALS GROUP

GROUP SALES

The Scene 317.819.3506 BeInTheScene.org

EVENTS & SPACE AVAILABILITY

317.819.3516 Outreach@TheCenterPresents.org TheCenterPresents.org/Virtual-tour

317.819.3503 Group@TheCenterPresents.org TheCenterPresents.org/Group 317.819.3521 SpecialEvents@TheCenterPresents.org TheCenterPresents.org/SpecialEvents SPONSORSHIPS & PROGRAM ADVERTISING

317.819.3519 Sponsorship@TheCenterPresents.org TheCenterPresents.org/Sponsorship

OUTREACH & TOURS

THE GREAT AMERICAN SONGBOOK FOUNDATION

317.844.2251 Info@TheSongbook.org TheSongbook.org

BECOME A VOLUNTEER

317.819.3524 Volunteers@TheCenterPresents.org

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2016–2017 Season at a Glance PRESENTED BY

subscription series

PRINTING PARTNERS CLASSICAL SERIES THE STRATFORD SONGBOOK SERIES JAZZ SERIES COUNTRY SERIES DANCE SERIES WORLD STAGE SERIES add-on performances

DREWRY SIMMONS VORNEHM POP/BLUES/FOLK UNIVERSITY OF INDIANAPOLIS SPOTLIGHT FAMILY HOLIDAY These activities made possible, in part, with support from Butler University, Indiana Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.

Subscribe Today & Save! Box Office: 317.843.3800 TheCenterPresents.org/ SubscribeNow

Cleveland Orchestra May 15 at 7pm | The Palladium An Evening with Paul Anka May 20 at 8pm | The Palladium United Fidelity Bank Summer Series Bruce Hornsby & The Noisemakers May 24 at 7:30pm | The Palladium CNO Financial Indiana Music Series The Gaither Vocal Band June 12 at 3pm | The Palladium United Fidelity Bank Summer Series Melissa Etheridge: M.E. SOLO June 21 at 7:30pm | The Palladium United Fidelity Bank Summer Series Michael McDonald July 6 at 8pm | The Palladium 2016 Songbook Academy Finals Sat., July 23 at 7pm | The Palladium The Official Blues Brothers Revue Sat., August 27 at 8pm | The Palladium Scotty McCreery Fri., September 9 at 8pm | The Palladium George Thorogood & The Destroyers Sat., September 17 at 8pm | The Palladium Hubbard Street Dance Chicago September 23 & 24 at 8pm | The Tarkington Up, Up, & Away: Marilyn McCoo & Billy Davis Jr. and The Next Dimension Fri., September 23 at 8pm | The Palladium CNO Financial Indiana Music Series Purdue Glee Club & Purduettes Sat., September 24 at 8pm | The Palladium Ballet Folklorico “Quetzalli” de Veracruz Sun., September 25 at 7pm | The Palladium Lang Lang Tue., September 27 at 7:30pm | The Palladium Arturo Sandoval Fri. September 30 at 8pm | The Palladium Reduced Shakespeare Co. The Complete History of America (abridged): Election Edition Fri., September 30 at 8pm | The Tarkington Leela – The Divine Play Sat., October 1 at 7pm | The Tarkington

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LeAnn Rimes Sun., October 2 at 7pm | The Palladium

Five Irish Tenors Sat., February 4 at 8pm | The Palladium

2016 Songbook Celebration Gala Sat., October 15 | The Palladium

“1964 the Tribute” Celebrating the Beatles Fri., February 17 at 8pm | The Palladium

An Evening with Joan Baez Thur., October 20 at 7:30pm | The Palladium Russian String Orchestra Sat., October 29 at 8pm | The Palladium Havana Cuba All-Stars Fri., November 4 at 8pm | The Palladium R.E.M.’s Mike Mills’ Concerto for Violin, Rock Band, and Orchestra Sat., November 5 at 8pm | The Palladium Jake Shimabukuro Mon., November 7 at 7:30pm | The Palladium Koresh Dance Company 25th Anniversary Celebration November 11 & 12 at 8pm | The Tarkington Dr. John “The Spirit of Satch” with Nicholas Payton Sat., November 19 at 8pm | The Palladium

Venice Baroque Orchestra with Nicola Benedetti, Violin Sat., February 18 at 8pm | The Palladium The Yellowjackets Fri., February 24 at 8pm | The Palladium Direct from Kiev, National Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine Fri., March 3 at 8pm | The Palladium Vienna Boys Choir Sat., March 4 at 8pm | The Palladium Danú: An Evening of Celtic Music Fri., March 10 at 8pm | The Tarkington Ballet Hispanico March 17 & 18 at 8pm | The Tarkington Shaolin Warriors Sat., March 18 at 8pm | The Palladium

Sandi Patty Christmas Fri., December 2 at 8pm | The Palladium

Anoushka Shankar Fri., March 24 at 8pm | The Tarkington

Alan Cumming Sat., December 3 at 8pm | The Palladium

Joey Alexander Trio Sat., March 25 at 8pm | The Tarkington

Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis Mon., December 5 at 7:30pm | The Palladium

Keith Lockhart and the Boston Pops Esplanade Orchestra: By George! The Pops Play Gershwin Sun., April 2 at 7pm | The Palladium

Dave Koz & Friends Holiday Thur., December 8 at 7:30pm | The Palladium Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center Fri., December 9 at 8pm | The Palladium

Simon Shaheen Sat., April 8 at 8pm | The Tarkington

Home Free Holiday Thur., December 15 at 7:30pm | The Palladium

Charles Lloyd & The Marvels Featuring Bill Frisell with Reuben Rogers, Eric Harland & Greg Leisz Thur., April 20 at 7:30pm | The Palladium

New Year's Eve Extravaganza Sat., December 31 at 8pm | The Palladium

Erth’s Dinosaur Zoo LIVE! Sun., April 23 at 1pm & 4pm | The Palladium

Russian National Ballet Theatre January 13 & 14 at 8pm | The Tarkington

The Time Jumpers featuring Vince Gill, Kenny Sears, “Ranger Doug” Green, and Paul Franklin Fri., April 28 at 8pm | The Palladium

Prague Philharmonia Orchestra Fri., January 20 at 8pm | The Palladium Neil Berg’s “101 Years of Broadway” Sat., January 21 at 8pm | The Palladium

Michael Feinstein with Special Guest Sat., April 29 at 8pm | The Palladium

Sara Evans Fri., February 3 at 8pm | The Palladium 13


PERFORMANCE PROGRAMS Cleveland Orchestra May 15 ....................................................................................................16 An Evening with Paul Anka May 20 ....................................................................................................25 Bruce Hornsby & The Noisemakers May 24 .......................................................................................................26 Gaither Vocal Band Featuring Bill Gaither June 12 .....................................................................................................28 Melissa Etheridge: M.E. SOLO June 21 .....................................................................................................30 Michael McDonald July 6 ........................................................................................................31

SEASON PRESENTED BY

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WITH REMARKABLE PERFORMANCE, ALL THE WORLD’S A S TA G E .

Proud Supporter of the Center for the Performing Arts

4620 E 96th St, Indianapolis, IN 46240 888.698.5430 | JaguarIndianapolis.com 15


Printing Partners Classical Series

THE CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA Sunday, May 15 at 7pm | The Palladium Franz Welser-Möst, conductor BÉLA BARTÓK (1881-1945)

Music for Strings, Percussion, and Celesta I. Andante tranquillo II. Allegro III. Adagio IV. Allegro molto

intermission

PYOTR TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893)

Symphony No. 1 (“Winter Dreams”) in G minor, Opus 13

I. Reveries of a Winter Journey: Allegro tranquillo II. Land of Desolation, Land of Mists: Adagio cantabile III. Scherzo: Allegro scherzando giocoso IV. Finale: Andante lugubre — Allegro maestoso

series sponsor

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Program Notes Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta Béla Bartòk (1881–1945) Bartók, one of the 20th century’s most distinctive composers, devoted much energy to collecting and studying the peasant music of his native Hungary and to separating it from the gypsy music with which it was so long confused. In his compositions, Bartók made extensive use of the folk music he assembled, much of it gathered in collaboration with his fellow Hungarian composer, Zoltán Kodály. Bartók used folk melodies in such a way that it is sometimes difficult to ascertain where the folk music ends and the music of Bartók begins. Bartòk’s Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta is a work that, despite its unorthodoxies, is a masterpiece in the great symphonic tradition. It is a melancholy, even bitter piece, conceived as the composer shrank from the horror of Nazi aggression. Completed in Budapest on September 7, 1936, it was commissioned by the Swiss conductor Paul Sacher for the 10th anniversary of his Basel Chamber Orchestra; on January 21, 1937, it was premiered. The music often sounds as though a large number of instruments are playing, because Bartòk invented ways to enrich the texture and expand the sound scale of the small orchestra for which he was writing. He divided the strings into two separate little string orchestras, flanking each side of the stage. Bartòk does not restrict the percussion instruments to their historic roles of underlining rhythm and adding color, but writes for them melodically. The percussion instruments are timpani, bass drum, cymbals, small drum (with and without snares), tam tam and xylophone, to which Bartòk added harp and piano (sometimes played by two pianists), because he thought of them as “strings and percussion.” Four contrasting movements alternate, slow and fast. They are cast in idiosyncratic forms, variants of familiar classical structures: fugue, sonata, scherzo, and rondo. In the first movement, Andante tranquillo, the two string orchestras, in unison, both play sad, slow music in fugal style, beginning quietly in the muted violas, mounting to a single climax and then subsiding, ending as softly as it began. The uneven beats of the measures may pass almost unnoticed at the slow tempo, but they add greatly to the sense of uneasy sadness and complicate the writing of the intricate counter¬point. In a way, the fugue subject is the entire work’s main theme, since it reappears, plainly or in disguise, in all of the movements. (Continued on next page.) 17


The second movement, Allegro, takes the form of a classical sonata and the spirit of a scherzo. The strings divide clearly into two orchestras; each presents principal material. The third movement, Adagio, a mysterious, moving nocturne, opens and closes with a simple but gripping, tensionbuilding xylophone solo. The final Allegro molto is exhilarating and exuberant, based principally on two dancing, folk-like themes. Before it ends, the first movement fugue theme is recalled yet again. Symphony No. 1, in G minor, Op. 13 (“Winter Reverie”) Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840–1893) Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 1 is a work with some historical significance. At the time Tchaikovsky was beginning this work, Russian musical culture was trying to define itself as something distinctive; until then, a truly Russian symphony had not been written. Tchaikovsky’s symphony counts as the first major symphony written by a Russian composer. His creation of a symphony was far from an easy task for the young composer. He aimed to create a work that adhered to Classical principles while at the same time had a distinctive Russian character. In 1866, only twenty-six years old and having just completed studies at the St. Petersburg Conservatory, Tchaikovsky prepared to move to Moscow where he was to teach harmony at the new conservatory. He had begun work on his Symphony No. 1 that spring, but after the summer months, he was not satisfied with his progress with it. His frustration and anxiety over the symphony, his brother wrote, “was the cause of nervous disorders and many sleepless nights. These difficulties were caused partly by his lack of experience in composition, and partly by his habit of working night and day. At the end of June, he had a terrible nervous breakdown; the doctor who was called in to see him declared that he had narrowly escaped madness and that his condition was very serious. The most alarming symptoms of the illness were his hallucinations and constant feeling of dread.” By the end of the summer, Tchaikovsky’s health had returned, and when he arrived in Moscow in November, he had completed the symphony. He sent the score to his former teachers in St. Petersburg with a request for their opinion of its value and with hopes that they would schedule a performance. Instead, they returned the manuscript as “unworthy.” Tchaikovsky’s superiors in Moscow thought more of the score, but by the time it had been returned to the composer from St. Petersburg, Tchaikovsky felt he had seen many of its flaws and had already revised it extensively. 18


As was the practice then of sometimes performing isolated movements of a work, the Scherzo from the symphony was performed in December 1866, and the slow movement and Scherzo were featured in St. Petersburg the following February, but neither performance was a great success. On February 15, 1868, the entire work was performed at a concert of the Moscow Musical Society. A member of the audience of that concert reported that after the applause, Tchaikovsky “came on stage in rather untidy clothes, hat in hand, and bowed awkwardly.” He was by then pleased with his work, which he dedicated to his friend and benefactor Nikolai Rubinstein, but he continued to revise it until 1874, when he finally felt it was ready for publication. Seventeen years later, Tchaikovsky wrote affectionately about it to his generous patroness, Nadezhda von Meck, “Despite its obvious deficiencies, I have a soft spot for it, since it is a sweet sin of my youth. Although it is very immature in many ways, yet it is basically better and has more substance and is richer than many more mature works.” Indeed, in this symphony he had managed to find his own melodic and structural confidence, as well as his own distinctive orchestration, and he had bonded those with the creation of music that was definitively Russian. In the Guardian, Tom Service recently declared that this work “ is one of the most important markers in the symphonic story in the 19th century, the piece in which a new type of symphony – absolutely Tchaikovsky’s own and Russia’s too – is not just glimpsed, but claimed.” Tchaikovsky gave the symphony the name “Winter Reverie” and named the first two movements as well: Träume einer Winterreise, (“Dreams of a Winter Journey,”) Allegro tranquillo, and Land der Öde, (“Land of Desolation, Land of Mists”) Adagio cantabile ma non tanto. These movements with their dreamy moods are set in the bleak landscape of the Russian winter. The first movement, Tchaikovsky explained, was inspired by one of Madame van Meck’s paintings, which could be an “illustration of the first movement.” The movement has an atmospheric opening, but its title should not be interpreted in a literal programmatic way. The first theme, heard in the flute and bassoon, with melancholic beauty, is the focus for much of the movement; the clarinet takes on the second theme. The recapitulation, coming after the central section with its stormy drama, necessitates a pause for the whole orchestra. The coda takes the movement back to the quiet reverie with which it began. In this movement, the composer’s distinctive orchestration is already evident in his use of the woodwinds and in his brilliant string writing.

(Continued on next page.) 19


The second movement is based on an exquisite theme, announced by the oboe over muted strings. The movement sounds overall melancholic and wistful rather than bleak with its endless melodic invention that brilliantly makes this a new kind of slow movement, something distinctively Tchaikovsky’s own, written with confidence. The movement builds to a very expressive climax for the full orchestra. The swift, delicate, untitled Scherzo, Allegro scherzando giocoso, provides a brilliant contrast. It was originally written a year earlier for a piano sonata that was never published until after the composer’s death. It moves forward in a positive, rustic and spirited manner. The orchestral waltz in the trio section gives a hint of the ballet music that Tchaikovsky would write in the future. The Finale opens with a slow introduction, Andante lugubre, based on a Russian folk song that reappears as the second subject of the movement’s main section, Allegro maestoso. This movement contains the darkest and most ominous music in the symphony, but it also gives voice to joyous sounds; structurally it embraces both counterpoint and a march. When the dark music of the Andante lugubre returns near the end, it modifies its despondency in order to allow the quick coda to conclude the symphony in grandeur and majesty. The symphony is scored for piccolo and two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones and tuba, timpani, bass drum, cymbals and strings. The program notes are copyright Susan Halpern 2016. Franz Welser-Möst Franz Welser-Möst is one of today’s most distinguished conductors. He has served as music director of The Cleveland Orchestra since 2002, with his tenure now extended to 2022. He holds the Orchestra’s Kelvin Smith Family Endowed Chair. The Cleveland Orchestra has reached new heights under Mr. WelserMöst’s direction. The New York Times recently declared The Cleveland Orchestra the “best American orchestra“ for its virtuosity, elegance of sound, variety of color, and chamber-like musical cohesion. The Cleveland Orchestra has been repeatedly praised for its innovative programming, support for new musical works, and for its success in semi-staged and staged opera productions — including 2014’s 20


critically-acclaimed performances of Janácek’s The Cunning Little Vixen ˘ combining computer-animated stage design with live action. In addition to recurring residencies in the USA and Europe, Franz Welser-Möst and The Cleveland Orchestra are frequent guests at many prestigious concert halls and festivals, including the Salzburg Festival and the Lucerne Festival. The Cleveland Orchestra has been hugely successful in building up a new and, notably, a young audience through groundbreaking programs involving students and by working closely with universities. Franz Welser-Möst served as music director of the London Philharmonic Orchestra, 1990-96, and of the Zurich Opera, 1995-2008. From 2010 to 2014, he held the position of general music director of the Vienna State Opera, one of the world’s most important repertoire houses. In addition to cultivating the traditional German, Italian, and Slavonic repertoire, including a significant spotlight on the works of Janáček, Mr. Welser-Möst placed a strong focus on 20th-century works, including the operas of Richard Strauss. He has an annual presence on the operatic stage at the Salzburg Festival, and after triumphant successes with Rusalka, Der Rosenkavalier, and his seventy-second opera premiere, of Fidelio this past summer. He leads a new production of Strauss’s Die Liebe der Danae at Salzburg in 2016. As a guest conductor, Franz Welser-Möst has developed a particularly close and productive relationship with the Vienna Philharmonic. He has twice appeared on the podium at the Philharmonic’s New Year’s Concert and conducts the orchestra regularly in subscription concerts at the Musikverein, as well as in Lucerne, at the BBC Proms, and on tour in the United States, Scandinavia, and Japan. His close association with the Vienna Philharmonic was honored in spring 2014 when he was presented with the orchestra’s Ring of Honor. Franz Welser-Möst has received many other honors and awards, while his numerous CDs and DVDs have been awarded many international prizes — the Salzburg Festival production of Der Rosenkavalier was recently awarded the Echo Klassik 2015 for “best opera recording.“ In December 2015, Franz Welser-Möst conducted the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra for the year’s Nobel Prize concert in Stockholm and led the annual televised Christmas concert of the Filarmonica della Scala, Milan. Recent and upcoming engagements in 2016 include concerts with Amsterdam’s Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Staatskapelle Dresden, Tonhalle-Orchester Zurich, and the Bavarian Radio Symphony. (Continued on next page.) 21


The Cleveland Orchestra Under the leadership of Music Director Franz Welser-Möst, The Cleveland Orchestra has become one of the most sought after performing ensembles in the world, setting standards of extraordinary artistic excellence, creative programming, and community engagement. The New York Times has declared it “... the best in America.” Strong and ongoing financial support of the ensemble’s home region is driving the Orchestra forward with renewed energy and focus, increasing the number of young people attending concerts, and bringing fresh attention to the Orchestra’s legendary sound and committed programming. Plans are now underway to celebrate the ensemble’s 100th anniversary in 2018 as a prelude to a second century of extraordinary music making. The partnership with Franz Welser-Möst, begun in 2002 and currently in its 14th year with the 2015-16 season, has earned The Cleveland Orchestra unprecedented residencies in the U.S. and around the world, including one at the Musikverein in Vienna, the first of its kind by an American orchestra. The Orchestra’s annual residency in Miami, Florida, presented under the name Cleveland Orchestra Miami, is entering its tenth year in 2015-16, and involves four weeks of full programming in South Florida, including concerts, community presentations, education programs, and collaborative partnerships. The Cleveland Orchestra has a long and distinguished recording and broadcast history. A series of DVD and CD recordings under the direction of Mr. Welser-Möst continues to add to an extensive and widely praised catalog of audio recordings made during the tenures of the ensemble’s earlier music directors. In addition, Cleveland Orchestra concerts are heard in syndication each season on radio stations throughout North America and Europe. Seven music directors — Nikolai Sokoloff, Artur Rodzinski, Erich Leinsdorf, George Szell, Lorin Maazel, Christoph von Dohnányi, and Franz Welser-Möst — have guided and shaped the ensemble’s growth and sound since its founding in 1918. Through tours, residencies, radio broadcasts, and recordings, The Cleveland Orchestra is heard today by a broad and loyal constituency around the world. For more information visit, clevelandorchestra.com.

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T H E C L E V E L A N D O R C H E S T R A FRANZ WELSER-MÖST MUSIC DIREC TOR Kelvin Smith Family Chair

FIRST VIOLINS William Preucil CONCERTMASTER

Blossom-Lee Chair

Yoko Moore

ASSISTANT CONCERTMASTER

Clara G. and George P. Bickford Chair

Peter Otto

FIRST ASSOCIATE CONCERTMASTER

Jung-Min Amy Lee

VIOLAS Robert Vernon*

OBOES Frank Rosenwein*

BASS TROMBONE Thomas Klaber

Lynne Ramsey1

Corbin Stair Jeffrey Rathbun 2

EUPHONIUM AND BASS TRUMPET Richard Stout

Stanley Konopka 2 Mark Jackobs

Robert Walters

TUBA Yasuhito Sugiyama*

Chaillé H. and Richard B. Tullis Chair Charles M. and Janet G. Kimball Chair

Jean Wall Bennett Chair

Kim Gomez

Arthur Klima Richard Waugh Lisa Boyko Lembi Veskimets Eliesha Nelson Joanna Patterson Zakany Patrick Connolly

Chul-In Park

CELLOS Mark Kosower*

ASSOCIATE CONCERTMASTER

Gretchen D. and Ward Smith Chair

Takako Masame

Paul and Lucille Jones Chair

Wei-Fang Gu

Drs. Paul M. and Renate H. Duchesneau Chair Elizabeth and Leslie Kondorossy Chair Harriet T. and David L. Simon Chair

Miho Hashizume

Theodore Rautenberg Chair

Jeanne Preucil Rose

Dr. Larry J.B. and Barbara S. Robinson Chair

Alicia Koelz

Oswald and Phyllis Lerner Gilroy Chair

Yu Yuan

Patty and John Collinson Chair

Isabel Trautwein

Trevor and Jennie Jones Chair

Mark Dumm

Gladys B. Goetz Chair

Alexandra Preucil Katherine Bormann Analisé Denise Kukelhan SECOND VIOLINS Stephen Rose*

Alfred M. and Clara T. Rankin Chair

Emilio Llinas 2

James and Donna Reid Chair 1

Eli Matthews

Patricia M. Kozerefski and Richard J. Bogomolny Chair

Sonja Braaten Molloy Carolyn Gadiel Warner Elayna Duitman Ioana Missits Jeffrey Zehngut Vladimir Deninzon Sae Shiragami Scott Weber Kathleen Collins Beth Woodside Emma Shook Yun-Ting Lee

Louis D. Beaumont Chair

Richard Weiss1

The GAR Foundation Chair

Charles Bernard 2

Helen Weil Ross Chair

Bryan Dumm

Muriel and Noah Butkin Chair

Tanya Ell

Thomas J. and Judith Fay Gruber Chair

Ralph Curry Brian Thornton

William P. Blair III Chair

David Alan Harrell Martha Baldwin Dane Johansen Paul Kushious BASSES Maximilian Dimoff*

Clarence T. Reinberger Chair

Kevin Switalski 2 Scott Haigh1

Mary E. and F. Joseph Callahan Chair

Mark Atherton Thomas Sperl Henry Peyrebrune

Charles Barr Memorial Chair

Charles Carleton Scott Dixon Derek Zadinsky HARP Trina Struble*

Alice Chalifoux Chair

FLUTES Joshua Smith*

Elizabeth M. and William C. Treuhaft Chair

Saeran St. Christopher Marisela Sager 2 Austin B. and Ellen W. Chinn Chair

Mary Kay Fink PICCOLO Mary Kay Fink

Edith S. Taplin Chair

Everett D. and Eugenia S. McCurdy Chair

ENGLISH HORN Robert Walters

Nathalie C. Spence and Nathalie S. Boswell Chair

Samuel C. and Bernette K. Jaffe Chair

CLARINETS Robert Woolfrey Daniel McKelway 2 Robert R. and Vilma L. Kohn Chair

Linnea Nereim E-FLAT CLARINET Daniel McKelway

Stanley L. and Eloise M. Morgan Chair

BASS CLARINET Linnea Nereim

TIMPANI Paul Yancich*

Otto G. and Corinne T. Voss Chair

Tom Freer 2

Mr. and Mrs. Richard K. Smucker Chair

PERCUSSION Marc Damoulakis*

Margaret Allen Ireland Chair

Donald Miller Tom Freer Thomas Sherwood

BASSOONS John Clouser*

KEYBOARD INSTRUMENTS Joela Jones*

Gareth Thomas Barrick Stees 2 S

Carolyn Gadiel Warner

Louise Harkness Ingalls Chair

Sandra L. Haslinger Chair

Jonathan Sherwin CONTRABASSOON Jonathan Sherwin HORNS Michael Mayhew §

Knight Foundation Chair

Jesse McCormick

Robert B. Benyo Chair

Hans Clebsch Richard King Alan DeMattia TRUMPETS Michael Sachs*

Robert and Eunice Podis Weiskopf Chair

Jack Sutte Lyle Steelman 2

James P. and Dolores D. Storer Chair

Michael Miller CORNETS Michael Sachs*

Mary Elizabeth and G. Robert Klein Chair

Rudolf Serkin Chair Marjory and Marc L. Swartzbaugh Chair

LIBRARIANS Robert O’Brien

Joe and Marlene Toot Chair

Donald Miller ENDOWED CHAIRS CURRENTLY UNOCCUPIED Sidney and Doris Dworkin Chair Dr. Jeanette Grasselli Brown and Dr. Glenn R. Brown Chair Sunshine Chair Robert Marcellus Chair George Szell Memorial Chair

* Principal §

1 2 S

Associate Principal First Assistant Principal Assistant Principal on sabbatical

This roster lists the fulltime members of The Cleveland Orchestra. The number and seating of musicians onstage varies depending on the piece being performed.

Michael Miller TROMBONES Massimo La Rosa*

Gilbert W. and Louise I. Humphrey Chair

Richard Stout

Alexander and Marianna C. McAfee Chair

Shachar Israel

2

CONDUCTING STAFF Brett Mitchell ASSOCIATE CONDUCTOR

Elizabeth Ring and William Gwinn Mather Chair

Robert Porco

DIRECTOR OF CHORUSES

Frances P. and Chester C. Bolton Chair

Anne M. and M. Roger Clapp Chair

23


WHERE STUDENT

SUCCESS TAKES CENTER STAGE

At UIndy, you’ll find a top-tier Midwest university that features:

11:1 student-to-faculty ratio.

An Professors know you personally, offering individual attention and experiential learning opportunities.

Fulbright scholar

Outstanding graduates such as Zak Mitiche, Class of ’16, who will pursue a study project in Morocco.

5 highly respected doctoral programs in health sciences, nursing, occupational therapy, physical therapy, and psychology.

Indiana’s only neonatal nurse practitioner program. 23 NCAA Division II team sports with 9 teams currently in the nation’s top 20, including Indiana’s only Division II lacrosse teams.

Learn more at uindy.edu


University of Indianapolis Spotlight Show

AN EVENING WITH PAUL ANKA

Friday, May 20 at 8pm | The Palladium Performance Sponsor: Huntington Bank

Paul Anka has remained a vital recording artist for an astonishing seven consecutive decades across a range of styles. The Canadian-born singer and songwriter has been minting musical hits since 1957’s “Diana,” and his catalog includes some of the most memorable songs in modern entertainment. Among his notable works, he penned one of Tom Jones’ marquee songs, “She’s a Lady,” as well as the English lyrics to Frank Sinatra’s signature belter, “My Way.” He’s recorded with musical greats like Barry Gibb and Kenny G., R.E.M., Oasis, Van Halen and Nirvana. He’s even covered “Mr. Brightside” by Las Vegas hometown heroes, the Killers. Very few performing artists have made as great an impact on popular culture as Paul Anka.

SERIES sponsor

PERFORMANCE sponsor

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United Fidelity Bank Summer Series

BRUCE HORNSBY & THE NOISEMAKERS Tuesday, May 24 at 7:30pm | The Palladium Performance Sponsor: Marquis Commercial Solutions Bruce Hornsby’s work displays a creative iconoclasm that’s been a constant in the artist’s two-and-a-half decade recording career. His commercial stock soared early on, when “The Way It Is”(1986)– became one of the most popular songs on American radio. Despite his early mainstream successes, Hornsby has pursued a more personal, idiosyncratic musical path, focusing on projects that sparked his creative interest, including collaborations with the Grateful Dead, Spike Lee, Ricky Skaggs, Don Henley, Ornette Coleman, Bob Dylan, Bela Fleck, Bonnie Raitt, Pat Metheny, and Robbie Robertson. The Noisemakers are bassist J.V. Collier, a twenty-year veteran of the band, as well as keyboardist/organist John “JT” Thomas and drummer Sonny Emory, who have played with Hornsby twenty-four and twelve years respectively. Summer 2014 marks the arrival of two new Noisemakers -- fiddle/mandolin player Ross Holmes and guitarist Gibb Droll -- as well as the departures of longtime members Bobby Read and Doug Derryberry. Holmes currently fiddles for Mumford and Sons, has played with hosts of Nashville titans as diverse as Ricky Skaggs and the Dixie Chicks, and has performed with symphonies in the United States and Europe. Droll has played guitar on various projects involving Keller Williams, Kevin Kinney, and Brandi Carlile; he is also a composer, and painter. series sponsor

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PERFORMANCE sponsor


In a world of change, our focus is steadfast.

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CNO Financial Indiana Music Series

GAITHER VOCAL BAND FEATURING BILL GAITHER

Sunday, June 12 at 3pm | The Palladium For more than a quarter century, the Gaither Vocal Band has created a legacy of award-winning excellence that has forever raised the bar for male harmony. The list of men who have comprised the Gaither Vocal Band over the years reads like a “Who’s Who” among the gospel music industry’s best-loved voices. And, always at the helm, has been Bill Gaither, who has led the group out of his personal passion for great harmony and his genuine desire to bring meaningful music to a hurting world. The Grammy-winning, chart-busting success of the Gaither Vocal Band has far exceeded his wildest expectations. Today, the Gaither Vocal Band roster is comprised of Bill Gaither, Wes Hampton, David Phelps, Adam Crabb, and Todd Suttles. Individually, these men are gifted artists and men of authentic faith. Together, they are the incomparable Gaither Vocal Band, known around the world for their powerhouse vocals, innovative harmonies and life-altering message… a message of grace, hope and redemption.

series sponsor

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United Fidelity Bank Summer Series

MELISSA ETHERIDGE: M.E. SOLO Tuesday, June 21 at 7:30pm | The Palladium Melissa Etheridge stormed onto the American rock scene in 1988 with the release of her critically acclaimed self-titled debut album, her popularity grew around such memorable originals as "Bring Me Some Water," "No Souvenirs" and "Ain't It Heavy," for which she won a Grammy in 1992. Etheridge hit her commercial and artistic stride with her fourth album, Yes I Am (1993). The collection featured the massive hits, "I'm the Only One" and "Come to My Window," and brought Etheridge her second Grammy Award for Best Female Rock Performance. In 1995, Etheridge issued her highest charting album, Your Little Secret. Her astounding success that year led to Etheridge receiving the Songwriter of the Year honor at the ASCAP Pop Awards in 1996. Most recently, Etheridge released her latest album This Is M.E. in September 2014, which features singles "Take My Number," "A Little Bit of Me," and "Monster."

series sponsor

30


United Fidelity Bank Summer Series

MICHAEL MCDONALD Wednesday, July 6 at 7:30pm | The Palladium Two notes. That’s all it takes to recognize the voice of Michael McDonald. Distinctive and soulful, it is one of the most yearningly emotive instruments of our times. To this add formidable songwriting and keyboard skills, and you have an artist who has been a singular musical presence for four decades. From ‘70s-era Doobie Brothers classics such as “What A Fool Believes” and solo hits like “I Keep Forgettin’” through two highly-acclaimed Motown albums, genre-busting guest spots and innovative concept shows, the five-time Grammy Award winning McDonald is both timeless and ever-evolving. Beyond his music, McDonald has long been an active humanitarian. He has lent his talents and energies to many causes and benefits, including MusiCares, the National Council of Alcoholism and Drug Abuse, the 7UP Grammy Signature Schools Program and was part of a starstudded lineup at Kokua For Japan, a concert that raised $1.6 million for tsunami relief.

series sponsor

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ABOUT THE CENTER The mission of the Center for the Performing Arts is to welcome, engage, inspire, and transform through compelling performing arts experiences in a world-class environment. A home for world-class entertainment, the Center for the Performing Arts is a non-profit educational, arts and cultural organization that operates a 3-venue performing arts campus. Comprised of the Palladium, an acoustically magnificent 1,600-seat concert hall, the Tarkington, a 500-seat proscenium theater, and the Studio Theater, an intimate 200-seat black box, the Center’s campus hosts more than 400 events each year. Events include performances by community groups, public lectures and forums, business meetings, fundraisers, graduations, receptions, and weddings. The Center for the Performing Arts has become the place where artists want to perform, people want to work, and the entire community is welcome to gather and celebrate. Not only is the Center for the Performing Arts home to the Great American Songbook Foundation, but it is also home to six resident companies. The Center’s resident companies include Actors Theatre of Indiana, Booth Tarkington Civic Theatre, Carmel Symphony Orchestra, Central Indiana Dance Ensemble, Gregory Hancock Dance Theatre, and the Indiana Wind Symphony. The Center offers a wide variety of education and outreach experiences for children and adults of all ages, and is an entertainment destination having ticket buyers from all 92 Indiana counties, 50 states, and 23 countries. /TheCenterForThePerformingArts 32

@CarmelPalladium

/CarmelPalladium


ABOUT THE GREAT AMERICAN SONGBOOK FOUNDATION The mission of the Great American Songbook Foundation is to inspire and educate by celebrating the Great American Songbook. The beautiful melodies and thoughtful lyrics created by the musical geniuses of Tin Pan Alley, Broadway, and Hollywood during the first half of the twentieth century represent the Golden Age of American Popular Music. The Songbook Foundation carries out its unique mission to preserve America’s rich musical legacy through its extensive library and archives, which houses physical artifacts such as sheet music, personal papers, musical arrangements, and books available to students, educators, and researchers. The Exhibit Gallery displays rotating public exhibits that share the history, music, and culture of the Songbook. The Songbook Academy™ is a national program for high school singers and is the only competition dedicated solely to the music of the Songbook. To learn more visit TheSongbook.org. Visitors welcome! Located in the Palladium — Gallery level Open Monday–Friday, 10am to 4pm. The Exhibit Gallery is also open prior to performances in the Songbook and Jazz Series.

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D

ECISIONS MADE LIVE AND IN PERSON.

261-9000

©2016 The National Bank of Indianapolis

www.nbofi.com

Member FDIC


TANIA CASTROVERDE MOSKALENKO President/CEO The Center for the Performing Arts & Great American Songbook Foundation

Tania Castroverde Moskalenko is a dynamic leader who possesses an 18-year history of leading strong, financially viable arts centers. As President/CEO of the Center for the Performing Arts she provides the artistic vision and the strategic direction of the Center, leads the staff, recruits the board, and works with community leaders and elected officials. During her tenure, she has streamlined operations, created a 3-year strategic plan, increased board membership, created new programs, and engaged new partners to strengthen the fabric of the community. Under her leadership, individual donations have increased 95%, corporate support increased 66%, and the Center launched the World Stage Series designed to celebrate the many cultures residing in Central Indiana. She holds a BFA from the University of Memphis. In October 2013, she was honored with a Women of Influence award by the Indianapolis Business Journal.

MICHAEL FEINSTEIN Artistic Director The Center for the Performing Arts

Michael Feinstein, the multi-platinum selling, five-time Grammy-nominated entertainer dubbed “The Ambassador of the Great American Songbook,� is considered one of the premier interpreters of American Popular Song. More than a mere performer, he is nationally recognized for his commitment to the American Popular Song, both celebrating its art and preserving its legacy for the next generation. In addition to serving as Artistic Director, Mr. Feinstein performs frequently at the Center for the Performing Arts and assists with programming.

37


Board of Directors Donald S. Gottwald Chairman

EXECUTIVE

Eric S. Payne

Tania Castroverde Moskalenko

Vice Chairman

Traci Dossett Treasurer

Anne Hensley Poindexter Secretary

James (Andy) Anderson, Jr., MD, FFPM, FACE Melissa Stapleton Barnes

President/CEO

Michael Feinstein Artistic Director

ADMINISTRATIVE Grace Crowell

Assistant to the President/CEO

Frank Basile

PROGRAMMING

Henry Camferdam

Douglas Tatum

Bruce Cordingley

Vice President of Programming

Rollin M. Dick

Julia Shildmyer-Heighway

Michael Drewry Melissa L. Eldredge Stephanie C. Fuhrmann William Hammer Douglas C. Haney, Esq. John C. Hart, Jr. Nancy S. Heck

Community Engagement Manager

DEVELOPMENT Diane Syrcle, MM, MBA

Vice President of Development

Emily Meaux Lovison, MPA Director of Development

Leslie M. Hoggatt

Robert J. Hicks

Individual Gifts Officer

Stan C. Hurt

Stephanie Decker

Zak Khan

Donor Relations Manager

Jeffrey C. McDermott, Esq.

Sheila Morone

Diana Hartley Mutz Ersal Ozdemir Michael C. Rechin David Stirsman

38

Staff

Donor Information Specialist

FINANCE Susan Meyer

Ashley M. Ulbricht, Esq.

Vice President of Finance & Administration

W. Michael Wells

Cynthia Ille

Pamela Campbell Williams, Esq.

Controller

Lebbeus Woods, CFPR

Nancy Hamilton

Payroll & Payables Manager


MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS Mary Landreth

Jared McGowan Master Electrician

Interim Vice President of Marketing & Communications

Lisa Posson

Robyn Ferguson

Devin Schonsheck

Graphic Design Coordinator

Becky Lee Macy

Marketing Manager

John Kroetz

Audience Development Coordinator

Patron Services Brian Seitz

Production Assistant Lead Audio Engineer

Joe Wisner

Lighting & Sound Technician

Venue Management Lisa Hillard

Beverage & Concessions Manager

Sharon Holyoak

Patron Services Manager

Gift Shop Manager & Volunteer Coordinator

John A. Moskal II

Laura Varnau

Patron Services Supervisor Patron Services Representatives:

Robin Briskey Bill Eckert Larry Goens Sheryl Mullins Diane Schussel Lindy Siefker

OPERATIONS Nick Tigue

Vice President of Operations

Ed Penman

Facility Manager

Ryan Gray

Maintenance Engineer

Events Manager

Nicole Silvernell

Events Coordinator House Managers:

Katherine Jones Jackie Londino Michelle McCarel Marilyn Melangton Cindy Teeters Lisa Thornberry THE GREAT AMERICAN SONGBOOK FOUNDATION Karen Kelsey

Vice President of Songbook Foundation

Christopher Lewis

Production

Director of Programs

Jeff Steeg

Lisa Lobdell

Director of Production

Archivist

Melissa Bishop

Christopher Brush

Operations Coordinator

Program Coordinator

Ellen Kingston

Artist Concierge 39


Annual Partners

Silver Palladium Society ($15,000-$24,999)

Thank you to the following individuals and organizations that have contributed to the Center for the Performing Arts during the past year. This list reflects gifts received through April 28, 2016. For more information, please contact the Development Office at 317.819.3520.

Rollie & Cheri Dick Michael Feinstein & Terrence Flannery Eric & Leah Payne

ANNUAL FUND

Diamond Palladium Society ($100,000+) Allied Solutions, LLC City of Carmel Jean Yorke Memorial Fund, a fund of Central Indiana Community Foundation Zak Khan Krieg DeVault LLP Pedcor Companies

Platinum Palladium Society ($50,000-$99,999) United Fidelity Bank

Gold Palladium Society ($25,000-$49,999)

Bridgestone Americas Trust Fund Drewry Simmons Vornehm, LLP First Merchants Bank Indiana Arts Commission Katz, Sapper & Miller, LLP Printing Partners St.Vincent The Stratford Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP Anonymous (1)

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Franklin College Land Rover Indianapolis and Jaguar Indianapolis

Bronze Palladium Society ($10,000-$14,999)

Lorene Burkhart John C. & Marianne S. Hart Bob Hicks & Thalia Hammond Hicks Suzanne & Ron Mencias Dr. and Mrs. Charles Simons Jayne Ann & Doug Wilson James B. & Joyce Winner Betz + Blevins CNO Financial Group Hamilton County Tourism, Inc. Market District National Endowment for the Arts Palmer Kelley Designs Renaissance Indianapolis North Hotel The Voice Clinic of Indiana

President's Circle ($5,000-$9,999)

Susan & James Anderson Frank & Katrina Basile Randi & Lori Bellner Eloise L. Bowers Jim & Angie Burkhart Jason & Traci Dossett Lisa & Michael Drewry Melissa Eldredge Don & Pam Gottwald Stan & Sandy Hurt Britt & Jeff McDermott Tania & Alexei Moskalenko Diana H. Mutz and Howard L. Schrott Izabela & Ersal Ozdemir Karen & Donald Perez Hon. Brian G. & Anne Poindexter Michael & Debra Rechin Judy Roudebush Soomin Park & Lei Shen


David & Micki Stirsman Susan Leo & Diane Syrcle W. Michael & Sue Wells Pam & Bill Williams Jennifer & Leb Woods Shari & Jeff Worrell Carte Blanche Limousine CLB Restaurants DCG: Digital Color Graphics, LLC Huntington Bank Marquis Commercial Solutions The National Bank of Indianapolis Salon 01 & Aquage

Directors’s Circle ($2,500-$4,999)

Melissa & Bradon Barnes Patricia & Rafik Bishara Elizabeth Chamberlin Jimmy & Tamara Dulin Philip & Patricia Gibson Sandra & Steve Hageman William & Barbara Hammer Douglas & Tammy Haney Diane & Bruce Houtman Diane & Jack Houtman Sally & James Hubbard Carol & J. Richard Kiefer Donald & Jennifer Knebel Jim Leslie Jayme & Rod McComas Carol & James Phillips Thomas and Karen Poyser Mo Merhoff & Paul Reis Bruce & Jan Reynolds Pat Scahill & Gary Larreategui Cheryl & Kiros Sistevaris Dr. Pamela A. Steed Thorne Family Trust Anonymous (2) Arts Midwest Touring Fund J. C. Hart Company MBP Distinctive Catering Meridian Music New England Foundation for the Arts Office Installation Services Inc. Oxford Financial Group Software Engineering Professionals, Inc.

Southern Wine and Spirits of Indiana Sun King Brewing Co. SYM Financial Advisors

Founders Circle ($1,000-$2,499)

Kathleen & John Ackerman Jack & Ila Badger Cindy & Kevin Beauchamp Joachim & Marjorie Becker Hank Wong & Dr. Christine Bishop Ed & Peggy Bonach Ron & Ann Thompson Brock Randy & Libby Brown Debora & Mike Bush Joan & Larry Cimino Drs. Jeff & Molly Cooke Don & Lynda Dumoulin Waneta Dunkerly The Ericson Family John Fox & Susie Veverka Lynn & Robert Fritsche Tom & Elizabeth Fuller The Glick Family Foundation Nancy S. Heck Dawn & Andy Hein Sara & Christopher Hengel James G. Jenkins Judy & Bart Kaufman Steven & Jacque Kirsh Renee La Forest Toni & Terry Lovison Tina & Gary Malone Dr. Greg & Rose-Ann Mazanek Sheila & Mike Morone Rick Moyer & Cathy Rooney Dr. Anca Pop Dr. Newell Pugh Greg B. Reynolds John & Jennifer Robbins Humberto E. Rojas Patricia & John Schuler Mr. Ronald B. Schwier & Ms. Marti Starkey Armen & Marie-Claude Shanafelt Dr. Stephen J. Shideler Robert Shortle/George & Catherine Shortle Foundation Randy & Kimberly Sorrell Betty & Paul Swartz Nick Tigue & Renei Suarez List continued on next page.

41


John & Judy Tomke Glenn & Cheryl Troyer Ashley Ulbricht Ann & Mark Varnau Anonymous (1) A Cut Above Catering Kahn's Catering

Advocate ($500 - $999)

Diane Abrams Jeri Ballantine Susan & David Blish Denise & Robert Boehnlein Jill & Mark Bonnett Tom & Vicki Brandenburg Milo & Mary Lou Chelovitz Bob & Mary Christianson Susie & Richard* Clement Dr. & Mrs. Charles P. Conrad Coverdale/Tidd Family Grace & Steve Crowell Randall & Joelyn Craig Carol L. Dennis Marge & Bill Dorsch Christopher Drewry Craig R. & Marsha Dunkin D. L. Falcone Drs. Will & Julie Fecht Beverly & Tom Feller John & Donna Findling Shannon & Steve Hawkins Bill & Nancy Heath Jim & Kathy Henderson John Henne Marie Jett Doug & Marty Kaderabek Sherrie & Tom Kegley Karen & Doug Kelsey Kraabel Charitable Foundation, Inc. Claire Magna Corrie Meyer Mary Ann & Jim Meyer Rita Jo & James R. Miller Susan R. Meyer Laura & Dan Moriarity Keith Passwater Dr. Kenneth Pennington Capi Scheidler Scott S. Semester 42

Dave & Judy Sholly John L. Sibley Sandra & Lawrence Speer Dr. Robert & Dr. Susan Stephens Margaret & Tip Tollison Brian & Carol Urbanski David & Donna Vignes Carolyn & Doug Willard Lisa & Lew Willis Blu Moon Café Indiana Brick Corporation Jonathan Byrd's Woody’s Library Restaurant & divvy Restaurant

Supporter ($250-$499)

Paco Argiz & Jamie Gibbs Melissa & Eric Averitt Karen & John Bailey James Barber Joseph Barrett Bartley Family Charitable Trust Jill & Clark Bassett Ann Bates John R. Bear Dorian Beasley Celeste Berry David A. Betz Kristen Blackford Gary & Pam Bollier Stan Boultinghouse Dr. Nancy Branyas & Mr. Vern Petri Dave & Cheryl Brentlinger Mimi & Terry Brookie Jim & Joyce Burrell Robert Cain Enid Callaghan Betty & Tom Cavanagh Dorothy & Ron Conley Carla Cook John & Judy Cooke Mr. & Mrs. William E. Corley Mr. & Mrs. Donald G. Crane Karen & Jack Crane Lisa Dager Joseph B. DeFano Luanne and Lawrence Dewey Brian Dickey James & Sarah Dicks


John & Janet Dissauer Wanda Dodd Diana & Cam Edwards Paula & Steve Engelking Judy & Tom Ertl George Faulstich Keith Fehn Bronwen & Marvin Ferguson Alexander A. Fondak, MD and Professor Sherry Kloss George & Sheri Foster Gail L. Gentry Genee & Norm Godden Gordon Graham & Sue Ellen Greenlee David & Annette Greene Barbara & Robert Gregory James & Berta Griffith Molly B. Hale Dennis Haworth Jeremy Hendricks Arnell Hill Ken Hoffman Leslie M. Hoggatt Maureen & Ron Hubbard Judy & Robert Huber Alan Hughes Susan & Thomas Hurd James Jackson Marc Jaffe Jerry & Jean Jansen Brian & Maggie Kelly Nick & Katy Kestner Family Fund Cindy & Raymond Ketring Mr. & Mrs. Bob Kleymeyer Amanda Kolb Mary Dawn & John Krege Nancy & Otto Krohn Eugene Krylov Lowell Gene LaBaw Jan & Jeff Lefton Dr. & Mrs. R. Stephen Lehman Saul Lemke Caroline Abeleda & John Leonard Helen & Randall Lewis Vera Long Jay & Christie Love Emily Meaux Lovison, MPA Ron & Linda Maus Sandy McAloon Mary & David McCorkle

Fidel Mercado Fred Meyer Connie & Penn Moody John Norton Anne & Dan O'Brien Raman & Julie Ohri Ted & Cathy Osborn Kecia Page Dr. Vanessa Parris Nadine & Ed Penman Steve Perrine and Family Charles Phillips R. Bruce Pickens Scott & Kristin Pike Jay Pippen Brian Pleva Carol Pocevice Roger & Sharon Prasuhn Susan Pyburn Clare & Jeff Quinn Dana Randall Tim Renner Karen & Darrell Richey Kevin Robbins Harrison Royce Lenora Rychlak Nancy Schrader Kay & Charles Scott Brian & Christine Seitz JoAnne Shepler Jon Simala Daniel Simon James Sims Todd Skaggs Kurt & Vickie Spoerle Mary Ann Hart & Doug Tatum Cindy & Brian Teeters Jim & Vickie Theis Thornberry Family Dr. William & Mrs. Mary Tierney Kellie & Mark Timberlake Carolyn & Richard Towner Mr. & Mrs. John Valentine Laura & Jerry Varnau Kenneth Walter William Warren Rosie Weber Andrew Wolf Hugh & Valera Wolf Robert W. Wolf Carolyn & Larry Woodling Steve & Judy Young List continued on next page.

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MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES Bank of America Charitable Foundation Duke Reality Eli Lilly and Company Foundation GE Foundation Katz, Sapper & Miller, LLP The Lumina Foundation for Education

David & Carol Yount Jennifer & Michael Zinn Anonymous (5) Hurco, Inc. Investigative Clinical Research of Indiana, LLC O.W. Krohn & Associates, LLP Top Candidate Recruiting The RMR Group LLC

ENDOWMENT DIRECTED GIFTS Indianapolis Colts

MEMORIAL & HONOR GIFTS In memory of Thomas W. Bowers Eloise Bowers In honor of Jan & Bruce Reynolds' Birthdays Greg B. Reynolds In honor of Jan & Bruce Reynolds' Wedding Anniversary Greg B. Reynolds

PALLADIO SOCIETY Jim Ackerman Family Katrina & Frank Basile Beck's Hybrids The Carruthers Family Rollie & Cheri Dick Pedcor Companies Shiel Sexton Co. Inc. St.Vincent *Deceased

In honor of Greg Reynolds Jan & Bruce Reynolds In honor of Yo-Yo Ma Fred Meyer

DISCOVER THE POWER OF THE ARTS The Renaissance Indianapolis North Hotel is proud to partner with the Center for the Performing Arts to deliver artist hospitality. Stay with us and experience a hotel inspired by the neighboring Carmel Arts & Design District. Each of our 263 thoughtfully appointed, design-centric guest rooms exemplify our belief in the importance of the arts in our community. WHEN MAKING YOUR RESERVATIONS, ASK FOR THE CENTER FOR THE

© 2015 Renaissance Hotel Holdings, Inc.

PERFORMING ARTS PREFERRED RATE. LIVE LIFE TO DISCOVER ®

11925 North Meridian Street, Carmel, IN 46032 317.816.0777

RenaissanceIndianapolis.com


Proud sponsor of the Center for the Performing Arts. 5709 Park Plaza Court Indianapolis, In 46220 Telephone: 317-288-5047 OfficeInstallServices.com

19


Board of Directors

Friends

Jeffrey C. McDermott

Thank you to the following individuals and organizations that have contributed to the Foundation during the past year. This list reflects gifts received through April 28, 2016. For more information, please contact the Development Office at 317.819.3520.

Chairman

Pamela Campbell Williams Vice Chairman Robert Pullen Secretary

Terrence Flannery Treasurer

Carolyn Anker Brook Babcock Melissa S. Barnes Sara Carruthers Marc Cherry Rollin M. Dick

The Carruthers Family Michael Feinstein & Terrence Flannery Ira & Leonore S. Gershwin Philanthropic Fund

Luke Frazier

Songbook Society Platinum ($50,000 - $99,999)

William Hammer

Efroymson Family Fund

Mary Lane Haskell Kate Edelman Johnson Paul Lowden Maria Ferrer Murdock Eric S. Payne Troy D. Payner, MD Tom Postilio Roger Schmelzer Dr. Charles Simons Mike Strunsky Michael Feinstein (Founder, Ex officio) Irwin Helford (Member Emeritus) Ronald G. Shaw (Member Emeritus)

46

ANNUAL FUND

Diamond Songbook Legacy ($100,000+)

Gold Songbook Legacy ($25,000 - $49,999) Dr. & Mrs. Charles M. Simons

Bronze Songbook Legacy ($10,000 - $14,999) Carolyn & Terry Anker Marc Cherry Cheri & Rollin Dick Luke S. Frazier Marc George Gershwin Mary Lane Haskell Betty & Irwin Helford Britt & Jeff McDermott Maria Ferrer Murdock Troy Payner & Cara Peggs Tom Postilio & Mickey Conlon Robert C. Pullen


GRAMMY Foundation The Ted Snowdon Foundation Van Heusen Music Corp.

Sheila M. Stone James B. & Joyce Winner Barbara Wulfe

Hollywood Musical ($5,000 - $9,999)

Current Publishing Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation Palmer Kelley Designs Terwilliker, Ltd.

Lisa & Paul Andre Adrienne Arsht Melissa & Bradon Barnes Ray and Bernice Charles Trust William & Barbara Hammer Karen & Doug Kelsey Tania & Alexei Moskalenko Leah & Eric Payne Richard B. Shapiro Pam & Bill Williams Salon 01 & Aquage

Broadway Show ($2,500 - $4,999) Margaret Cole Russell & Steve Russell Grayson Publishing Hamilton County Tourism, Inc. The Voice Clinic of Indiana

Cabaret ($1,000 - $2,499)

Michael & Honeya Barth Frank & Katrina Basile Jack Bethards Jill & Mark Bonnett Sydney Jeanne Book Libby & Randy Brown Perry M. Di Loreto Virginia M. Friend Pam & Don Gottwald The Nicola J. and Nanci J. Lanni Fund Ray & Jim Luther-Pfeil Ginny Mancini Anthony Markel and Betsy Aikaterinidis Michael Meldman Dr. Fred Rosenberg Judy Roudebush Dr. Pamela A. Steed

Big Band ($500 - $999) Scott Anthony Ables Diane & John Abrams William Brattain and Matthew Charles Crosland Kenyon Brown Brent & Linda Hartman The Tom and Ellen Hoberman Charitable Trust Ron & Linda Maus Christopher D. Morris Sheryl & Steve Mullins Michael & Sharon O'Hair Michael & Kathryn Rains Bruce & Jan Reynolds Dr. & Mrs. Steven & Candice Rosen John & Pat Schuler Carol & Dick Schwartz Laurence E. Weber Charles Weilman & Sylvie Del Giudice Margaret Zimmerman Carte Blanche Limousine

Tin Pan Alley ($250 - $499) Karen & John Bailey Julia Bonnett Christopher Brush Steven Bush Laura & Hector DesMoine Helen M. Eby Florence Henderson Tom & Priscilla Johnson Jan & Jeff Lefton List continued on next page.

47


Mr. & Mrs. Jerry McDermott Gloria Lee Monsey Dr. Anca Pop The Sierra Family Jack & Joy Stafford Patricia Wilson Miriam & Dr. Daniel Wizman Anonymous (1) DCG: Digital Color Graphics, LLC MEMORIAL & HONOR GIFTS In memory of Van Alexander Joyce Harris In

honor of Pat Carruthers’ 85th Birthday Susan & Ronald Cribbs Margot & Todd Halcomb The Nicola J. & Nanci J. Lanni Fund Toby Luster Sarah & Joe Marcum Joel & Marilyn Schmidt

In memory of Ray Charles of the Ray Charles Singers Ron & Val Friedman Joyce Harris Tom Hatten Florence Henderson Vic & Connie Kaplan Rhea & Alan Kohan Lipovt Kotono Pete Menefee Cookie & Lee Miller Samira & Ari Miller Edith Neuman Shira Zur In honor of Michael Feinstein Grayson Publishing In memory of Miss Ella Fitzgerald, the beloved First Lady of Song Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation In honor of Julia Goodwin Adrienne Arsht

48

In

honor of Mary Lane Haskell Grant Tani Barash & Altman, LLC Sam Haskell The Tom and Ellen Hoberman Charitable Trust Kathy Ireland Worldwide Marilyn McCoo Davis Thomas Meharey MMP (USA), Inc. John Moretz PPI Apparel Group Steven Rosenblum Sterling Winters Company Miriam & Dr. Daniel Wizman

In memory of John Muldowny Sheila M. Stone MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES Eli Lilly and Company Foundation ENDOWMENT DIRECTED GIFTS Michael Feinstein & Terrence Flannery



THANK YOU The Center thanks the following major partners.

BUILDING PRODUCTS

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS

These activities made possible, in part, with support from Butler University, Indiana Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.

50


Great art

elevates all of us.

At Katz, Sapper & Miller, we believe the arts can lift up the spirit of an entire community. We also believe in the importance of rising to the occasion to support institutions that are committed to enhancing our quality of life. That is why we are proud to support the Center for the Performing Arts.

Certified Public Accountants

ksmcpa.com


· Customized checking solutions for every need · Competitive Interest Rates · Electronic Banking with New Mobile Banking App* · Full Line of Business Banking Products

Carmel City Center (near Hubbard & Cravens)

715 Hanover Place·317.993.3644

*Text/SMS message & data rates may apply

www.unitedfidelity.com


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