2018 Fall Program

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APPLAUSE! September-November 2018 Official Program

QUEEN OF ALL MEDIA Singer, songwriter, actress, TV host, entrepreneur, volunteer – Kellie Pickler does it all

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CONTENTS WELCOME..........................................................................................................5 PERFORMANCE PROGRAMS

QUEEN EXTRAVAGANZA..............................................................................6

FEATURE: KELLIE PICKLER.............................................................................8

NITTY GRITTY DIRT BAND...........................................................................12 BUDDY GUY.................................................................................................14

MELISSA ETHERIDGE....................................................................................18

INDIGO GIRLS..............................................................................................19

PAT METHENY...............................................................................................21

JOSHUA BELL...............................................................................................22

SCOTT BRADLEE'S POSTMODERN JUKEBOX...............................................29

ENGELBERT HUMPERDINCK........................................................................30

PRESIDENT'S OWN UNITED STATES MARINE BAND....................................30

CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER.....................................32

KELLIE PICKLER.............................................................................................33

2018-19 SEASON LISTING..................................................................................16 ABOUT THE CENTER...........................................................................................35 PATRON SERVICES & AMENITIES........................................................................36-37 BOX OFFICE........................................................................................................38 CONTACT US......................................................................................................39 ABOUT THE SONGBOOK FOUNDATION..........................................................40 CENTER BOARD OF DIRECTORS & STAFF...........................................................43-44 CENTER ANNUAL PARTNERS..............................................................................45-49 SONGBOOK FOUNDATION BOARD & FRIENDS...............................................51-53 CENTER MAJOR PARTNERS.................................................................................55

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2018 CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS SPONSOR AND A PROUD EMPLOYER IN INDIANA.

PASSION!

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DEAR FRIENDS, As we begin a new performance season here at the Center for the Performing Arts, we want to thank patrons like you for making the past year so successful. Across the 2017-18 season at the Palladium, the Tarkington and the Studio Theater, we saw 106,450 people attend performances presented by the Center, our six Resident Companies and other arts groups. Those performances included 88 by Civic Theatre, 83 by Actors Theatre of Indiana, 7 by Carmel Symphony Orchestra and 16 by the Indiana Wind Symphony, Gregory Hancock Dance Theatre and Central Indiana Dance Ensemble. Other organizations and families rented our facilities for 37 more performances – as well as 39 corporate events, 9 weddings and/or receptions, 3 school commencement ceremonies, 5 city events and many other special occasions. Our own Center Presents series of 47 performances last season included 14 sellouts at the Palladium and average paid attendance of 920 per event. We’re especially pleased that first-time visitors accounted for 37 percent of our ticket sales. Another key segment of our work is providing education and enrichment opportunities for people of all ages. Last season, those efforts included scores of adult classes in vocal performance, dance, ukulele, standup comedy and public speaking; nearly 30 interactive music sessions for toddlers and preschoolers; 3 arts-based summer day camps for kids; and seven educational field trips for local students. More than 3,000 students and music lovers visited the Great American Songbook Foundation Exhibit Gallery at the Palladium, and the Songbook Foundation conducted 45 of its Perfect Harmony music sessions for older adults with dementia and other neurodegenerative diseases. It is truly gratifying to see how the Center has been embraced by the people we work to serve. We owe that success to our donors, patrons, volunteers, staff, sponsors and other partners who understand and appreciate our mission: to engage and inspire the Central Indiana community through enriching arts experiences. Thank you for engaging with us.

PRESIDENT/CEO

, Ca

Jeffrey C. McDermott

Michael Feinstein ARTISTIC DIRECTOR

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Katz, Sapper & Miller Series

QUEEN EXTRAVAGANZA

Thursday, September 20 at 7:30pm | The Palladium Few groups can top the U.K.’s Queen for musical virtuosity, operatic grandeur and sing-along pop appeal. Now you can catch the official tribute show, created by original band members Roger Taylor and Brian May and packed with hits like “Bohemian Rhapsody,” “Under Pressure,” “Killer Queen” and “Another One Bites the Dust.” Fronting the band is Brazilian-born singer and actor Alirio Netto, one of his nation’s best-known rock voices. He recently played the starring role of Galileo in the Brazilian production of the Queen-based musical We Will Rock You, and he was named Brazil’s Best Musical Actor for his portrayal of Judas Iscariot in a production of Jesus Christ Superstar.

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Kellie Pickler’s

country career covers a lot of ground – with a lot of heart By Scott Hall Kellie Pickler does so much stuff, you could call her the queen of all media. And she would respond with humble, folksy gratitude. “God bless ya,” is what she said to us, in a phone chat from her Nashville home. “I try to do different things, and if I feel passionate about it, I’m all in, sure.” Since her American Idol debut at age 19, Pickler has: • Released four acclaimed albums of radio-friendly but tradition-inspired 8


country music, with hit singles including “Red High Heels,” “I Wonder” and “Best Days of Your Life” • Performed on 11 USO tours, including trips to Iraq and Afghanistan • Starred for three seasons of CMT’s I Love Kellie Pickler with her husband, songwriter-producer Kyle Jacobs • Won the 18th season of Dancing with the Stars • Voiced the lead character in a Veggie Tales video • Launched a line of housewares. That’s just a partial list, all the more impressive for a North Carolina girl who, as told in her songs and interviews, was essentially abandoned by her parents and raised by her grandparents. It was her grandmother who instilled Pickler’s love of country legends like Tammy Wynette, Patsy Cline, Loretta Lynn and Dolly Parton, and presumably her plucky attitude, too. “I work hard, and I just try to surround myself with good people, and I’ve been blessed to have different opportunities come along,” says Pickler, now 32. “I’m all about jumping, and I hope my parachute opens. If it doesn’t, it’s a rocky landing, but I get back up and jump again.” Still jumping, Pickler spent the month of July at the most famous

residence in Memphis to shoot a Hallmark Channel holiday romance, Christmas at Graceland. She portrays a Chicago finance executive who reconsiders her values after returning to her hometown. “It’s a sweet Hallmark movie – you know, they all have happy endings,” says Pickler, who performs Nov. 3 at the Palladium. “It was nice to have a Hallmark Christmas for once.” While living at a guest house on the grounds, Pickler was able to roam the legendary former home of Elvis Presley, whom she enjoyed learning more about. “I got to kind of be Alice in (Continued on next Wonderland andpage) walk around the mansion and just kind of explore on my own,” she says. “My favorite part was getting to know about him and just learning about the person behind the icon, the human being, and learning about his military service.” Pickler has undertaken her own service through her work with the USO. Honoring military personnel and veterans is a cause close to her heart. “We can’t all hop on a plane and fly to Afghanistan to entertain the troops, but you can give in other ways,” she says. “If you see someone in the airport or at the grocery store and they’re in a uniform, or a gentleman wearing a Vietnam hat, just go up and say, ‘Thank you for (Continued...)

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your service.’ … just those simple words of kindness and gratitude, letting people know that you don’t take what they do for granted.” That same spirit of goodwill is reflected in Pickler’s current focus, Pickler & Ben, a nationally syndicated lifestyle-talk show that just began its second season. (It airs locally weekdays on WRTV-Channel 6.) Nominated for three Daytime Emmy Awards, the show often profiles everyday people serving their communities, along with the usual parade of celebrities and awardwinning chefs. “There is a lot of bad in the world, but there’s a whole lot of good too, and we get to show all that good stuff on the show,” she says.

Amid the rigorous shooting schedule, Pickler carves out little windows of time to work on her music. She has been writing songs, often with her husband, and she hopes to return to the studio soon to “make another Kellie country record.” As for the Palladium show, she and her band promise a broad survey of her career to date, along with a few special treats. “We do songs from all of the records that I’ve recorded, and I grew up on very traditional country music, so don’t be surprised if I throw in some cover songs and some of my favorite classics,” she says. “We hope everybody will come out and enjoy and have fun with us.”


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Country Series

NITTY GRITTY DIRT BAND WITH DANIEL DONATO

Friday, September 21 at 8pm | The Palladium Led by original members Jeff Hanna and Jimmie Fadden, these country-rock pioneers are known for such hits as “Mr. Bojangles,” “Fishin’ in the Dark” and “An American Dream.” Their influential 1972 release Will the Circle Be Unbroken, a triple LP recorded in collaboration with traditional country and bluegrass legends including Roy Acuff and Earl Scruggs, is considered a milestone of American roots music and has been inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame as well as the Library of Congress’ National Recording Registry. A second volume with a similar multigenerational approach, released in 1989, won three Grammy Awards and was named the Country Music Association’s Album of the Year. Opening the evening will be Nashville-based guitarist and vocalist Daniel Donato, a 2018 Americana Musician of the Year nominee who has won praise from the likes of John Mayer and Derek Trucks.

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Katz, Sapper & Miller Series

BUDDY GUY WITH SPECIAL GUEST QUINN SULLIVAN

Saturday, September 22 at 8pm | The Palladium Among the last of the great bluesmen who migrated from the Mississippi Delta to create the electric “Chicago blues” style, Buddy Guy was a session guitarist for Chess Records, supporting names like Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf, and he later partnered with harmonica master Junior Wells. Guy also established the famed Checkerboard Lounge nightclub and later Buddy Guy’s Legends on Chicago’s south side. The seven-time Grammy Award winner has inspired generations of bluesrock guitarists, including Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix, Stevie Ray Vaughan and John Mayer. His new album, The Blues Is Alive and Well, features guest appearances by Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Jeff Beck and James Bay.

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ENGELBERT HUMPERDINCK Fri Oct 26 at 8pm The Palladium

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NITTY GRITTY DIRT BAND Fri Sept 21 at 8pm The Palladium

BUDDY GUY

Sat Sept 22 at 8pm The Palladium

AN EVENING WITH MELISSA ETHERIDGE YES I AM 25th ANNIVERSARY TOUR Tues Sept 25 at 7:30pm The Palladium

INDIGO GIRLS WITH LUCY WAINWRIGHT ROCHE Fri Sept 28 at 8pm The Palladium

AN EVENING WITH PAT METHENY Thurs Oct 11 at 7:30pm The Palladium

JOSHUA BELL AND SAM HAYWOOD Fri Oct 12 at 8pm The Palladium

SCOTT BRADLEE’S POSTMODERN JUKEBOX Thurs Oct 18 at 7:30pm The Palladium 16

Sat Oct 27 at 8pm The Palladium

CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER Fri Nov 2 at 8pm The Palladium

KELLIE PICKLER Sat Nov 3 at 8pm The Palladium

AN EVENING WITH JOHN HIATT: ECLIPSE SESSIONS TOUR Fri Nov 9 at 8pm The Palladium

LIGHTWIRE THEATER: THE UGLY DUCKLING Sun Nov 11 at 1 & 4pm The Tarkington

BONEY JAMES

Fri Nov 16 at 8pm The Palladium

ROYAL WOOD

Fri Nov 16 at 8pm The Tarkington

BRIAN WILSON: GREATEST HITS LIVE Sat Nov 17 at 8pm The Palladium

SARA EVANS AT CHRISTMAS Thurs Nov 29 at 7:30pm The Palladium

DENNIS DEYOUNG: THE GRAND ILLUSION 40th ANNIVERSARY ALBUM TOUR Fri Nov 30 at 8pm The Palladium

JANE LYNCH: A SWINGIN’ LITTLE CHRISTMAS Sat Dec 1 at 8pm The Palladium

DAVE KOZ & FRIENDS CHRISTMAS Sun Dec 9 at 7pm The Palladium


ALL IS CALM: THE CHRISTMAS TRUCE OF 1914 Sat Dec 15 at 8pm The Palladium

NEW YEAR’S EVE EXTRAVAGANZA PRESENTED BY TAFT Mon Dec 31 at 9pm The Palladium

NEIL BERG’S 50 YEARS OF ROCK AND ROLL Sat Jan 12 at 8pm The Palladium

DREW PETERSEN Sun Jan 13 at 3pm The Palladium

HUDSON VAGABOND PUPPETS: CAPS FOR SALE & THREE BILLY GOATS GRUFF Sat Jan 26 at 10:30am & 1:30pm The Tarkington

DAVID SANBORN JAZZ QUINTET Fri Feb 8 at 8pm The Palladium

MEGAN HILTY

Fri Feb 15 at 8pm The Palladium

RUSSIAN NATIONAL ORCHESTRA Fri Feb 22 at 8pm The Palladium

A TRIBUTE TO BENNY GOODMAN: THE JULIAN BLISS SEPTET Sat Feb 23 at 8pm The Palladium

AN INTIMATE EVENING OF SONGS & STORIES WITH GRAHAM NASH Fri March 22 at 8pm The Palladium

JACK JONES

Sat March 23 at 8pm The Palladium

THE WORLD OF MAGIC: WHERE A DREAM COMES TRUE Sat March 23 at 2 & 7pm The Tarkington

MICHAEL FEINSTEIN Sat April 13 at 8pm The Palladium

AUSTRALIAN CHAMBER ORCHESTRA Sun April 14 at 7pm The Palladium

ZAKIR HUSSAIN & THE MASTERS OF PERCUSSION Thurs April 18 at 7:30pm The Palladium

ARRIVAL FROM SWEDEN: THE MUSIC OF ABBA Thurs May 2 at 7:30pm The Palladium

MARCUS ROBERTS AND THE MODERN JAZZ GENERATION Sat May 4 at 8pm The Palladium

SONGS OF IRELAND: A CELTIC CELEBRATION Thurs Feb 28 at 7:30pm The Palladium

KODO DRUMMERS ONE EARTH TOUR 2019: EVOLUTION Fri March 1 at 8pm The Palladium

VERONICA SWIFT FEATURING THE BENNY GREEN TRIO Fri March 8 at 8pm The Tarkington

Access 2019 performances NOW with a Create Your Own subscription and receive up to 20% off the ticket price! TheCenterPresents.org 317.843.3800 These activities made possible in part with support from the Indiana Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.

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Katz, Sapper & Miller Series

AN EVENING WITH MELISSA ETHERIDGE YES I AM 25TH ANNIVERSARY TOUR

Tuesday, September 25 at 7:30pm | The Palladium Known for her confessional lyrics and gritty, soulful vocals, this Grammy® and Academy Award winner has been one of rock’s most respected performers and songwriters for decades. Her many hits have included “Bring Me Some Water" and “I Want to Come Over.” Etheridge's current tour celebrates the 25th anniversary of her breakthrough fourth album, Yes I Am, which included the Top 10 single “I'm the Only One” and the Grammy-winning “Come to My Window.”

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Katz, Sapper & Miller Series

INDIGO GIRLS WITH SPECIAL GUEST LUCY WAINWRIGHT ROCHE

Friday, September 28 at 8pm | The Palladium Amy Ray and Emily Saliers started performing together in high school and scored a Grammy Award with their platinum-selling self-titled debut release. More than 15 albums later, the Indigo Girls keep a busy recording and touring schedule on the strength of their distinctive but complimentary singing and writing styles and a catalog of tunes that have become contemporary classics: “Galileo,” “Closer To Fine,” “Hammer and Nail” and “Least Complicated,” to name a few. Their new album is Indigo Girls Live With the University of Colorado Symphony Orchestra, a 22-song set of fan favorites, deep cuts and tracks from their 2015 album, One Lost Day.

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Drewry Simmons Vornehm Jazz Series

AN EVENING WITH PAT METHENY

WITH ANTONIO SANCHEZ, LINDA MAY HAN OH AND GWILYM SIMOCK

Thursday, October 11 at 7:30pm | The Palladium Groundbreaking musician-composer Pat Metheny has won 20 Grammy Awards and countless "Best Jazz Guitarist" polls during his four-decade career. He has composed for small ensembles, large orchestras, ballet pieces and electric and acoustic instruments, and has collaborated with artists as diverse as Steve Reich, Ornette Coleman, Herbie Hancock and David Bowie. Metheny’s current tour presents a range of music from throughout his career, with a quartet featuring Antonio Sanchez on drums, Linda May Han Oh on bass and Gwilym Simcock on piano. Metheny was recently honored as an NEA Jazz Master and inducted into the Downbeat Hall of Fame as its youngest member and only the fourth guitarist. series sponsor

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Printing Partners Classical Series

JOSHUA BELL IN RECITAL WITH PIANIST SAM HAYWOOD

Friday, October 12 at 8pm | The Palladium

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Joshua Bell, violin With a career spanning over 30 years as a soloist, chamber musician, recording artist, conductor and director, Joshua Bell is one of the most celebrated violinists of his era. Since 2011, he has served as Music Director of the Academy of St Martin in the Fields, succeeding Sir Neville Marriner, who formed the orchestra in 1958. Bell’s interests range from repertoire hallmarks to commissioned works, including Nicholas Maw’s Violin Concerto, for which Bell received a Grammy® Award. Committed to expanding music’s cultural impact, Bell has collaborated with peers including Chick Corea, Wynton Marsalis, Chris Botti, Frankie Moreno, and Josh Groban. An exclusive Sony Classical artist, Bell has recorded over 40 albums garnering Grammy, Mercury, Gramophone and ECHO Klassik awards. In June, Sony Classical released Bruch: Scottish Fantasy and G minor Violin Concerto performed by Bell and the Academy. In 2007, a Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post story on Bell performing incognito in a Washington, D.C., metro station sparked a conversation regarding art and context and inspired Kathy Stinson’s 2013 children’s book, The Man with the Violin. In 2017, Bell debuted Man with the Violin family concert, including a newly commissioned animated film, with the National Symphony Orchestra at the Kennedy Center. Born in Bloomington, Indiana, Bell began violin at age 4, and at age 12 began studies with Josef Gingold. At 14, Bell debuted with Riccardo Muti and the Philadelphia Orchestra, and at 17 debuted at Carnegie Hall with the St. Louis Symphony. Bell received the 2007 Avery Fisher Prize and has been named Musical America’s 2010 Instrumentalist of the Year and an Indiana Living Legend. Bell performs on the 1713 Huberman Stradivarius violin with a François Tourte 18th century bow. Joshua Bell records exclusively for Sony Classical – a MASTERWORKS Label www.joshuabell.com Mr. Bell appears by arrangement with Park Avenue Artists and Primo Artists. www.parkavenueartists.com www.primoartists.com

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Sam Haywood, piano Sam Haywood has performed to critical acclaim in many of the world’s major concert halls. The Washington Post hailed his “dazzling, evocative playing” and “lyrical sensitivity,” and the New York Times his “passionate flair and sparkling clarity.” He embraces a wide spectrum of the piano repertoire and is equally at home as a soloist, chamber musician or with accompanying Lieder. He has had a regular duo partnership with Joshua Bell since 2010 and often performs with cellist Steven Isserlis. Haywood has recorded two solo albums for Hyperion, one featuring the piano music of Julius Isserlis (grandfather of Steven Isserlis) and the other featuring Charles Villiers Stanford’s preludes. His enthusiasm for period instruments led to a recording on Chopin’s own Pleyel piano. In 2013, Haywood co-founded Solent Music Festival in Lymington, UK. The annual festival features highly varied programs by internationally renowned artists with projects in the local community. Artists have included the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Alina Ibragimova, Mark Padmore and the Endellion Quartet. Haywood was mentored by David Hartigan, Paul Badura-Skoda and Maria Curcio. Following his early success in the BBC Young Musician of the Year competition, the Royal Philharmonic Society awarded him the Julius Isserlis Scholarship. He studied both at the Universität für Musik und darstellende Kunst in Vienna and at the Royal Academy of Music in London, of which he is an Associate (ARAM). Haywood has written a children’s opera and is regularly involved in family concerts, workshops and masterclasses. He is on the roster of Musical Orbit, the online teaching website, and his invention Memorystars® can significantly reduce the time needed to memorize a music score. His other passions include literature, physics, natural history, technology, magic, fountain pens and table tennis. For more information on Sam Haywood, visit www.samhaywood.com. 24


PROGRAM JOHANNES BRAHMS (1833-1897)

Violin Sonata No. 2 in A Major, Op. 100

EDVARD GRIEG (1843-1907)

Violin Sonata No. 2 in G Major, Op. 13

I. Allegro amabile II. Andante tranquillo-Vivace III. Allegretto grazioso

I. Lento-Allegro vivace II. Allegretto tranquillo III. Allegro animato

INTERMISSION SERGEI PROKOFIEV Violin Sonata No. 2 in D Major, Op. 94a (1891-1953) I. Moderato II. Scherzo-Presto III. Andante IV. Allegro con brio

Additional works to be announced from the stage. PROGRAM NOTES Sonata No. 2 for Violin and Piano in A Major, Op. 100 (“Thun” or “Meistersinger”) Johannes Brahms The musical manner that Brahms adopted as a young man and the skill that he showed when he was only 20 led Robert Schumann in 1853 to proclaim (in an article he entitled New Paths) his discovery of Brahms’ musical style and extraordinary skills: “A young man has appeared over whose cradle Graces and Heroes have stood watch, a musician to give ideal expression to his times. At the piano, he played sonatas that were symphonies in disguise. He bore the marks that proclaimed, ‘This is a chosen one.’” From the very beginning, he was the Brahms of noble melody, of rich texture, of rhythmic freedom, of large statements in big forms beautifully written for the instruments. This distinctive signature of Brahms does not mean, however, that he did not develop as a composer and that the music he wrote at 20 and at 55 are not substantially different. He matured and grew as a composer, saying musically different things at different times, yet when he was young, he had already found his own eloquent language, which he would use consistently and well until the end of his life. Schumann’s pronouncement also mentioned that Brahms at age 20 had already written some violin sonatas, and years later, a Brahms pupil reported that the composer had discarded five of them before composing the first one in 1879 that he thought good enough to preserve and present to the world. In the fruitful summer of 1886, on the shores of Lake Thun in Switzerland, Brahms 25


wrote his Second Violin Sonata, the Cello Sonata, Op. 99, the Piano Trio, Op. 101, another Violin Sonata, Op. 108, and 15 lieder. It was the time of full and rich maturity in his creative life that followed the completion of his Fourth Symphony. The huge amount of work he completed that season did not require hermit-like retirement from everything but composition. He read, studied and performed with other musicians in the neighborhood and led a busy social life with friends he invited to Thun from Vienna, among them a talented young singer with whom he was in love. The Violin Sonata, Op. 100, the shortest of his three violin sonatas, is a sweet and lyrical work, given an almost Schubertian flavor by Brahms’ use of two melodies from his new songs as the second themes of the first and last movements. The sensitive first movement, Allegro amabile, is a tight musical structure whose tenderness may have been inspired by the song text, “Like melodies running lightly through my mind, like the scent of spring flowers in bloom … .” Second is a slow movement, Andante tranquillo, into which Brahms twice inserts a scherzolike variation on the principal theme. The last movement, Allegro grazioso (quasi andante), is a rondo, unusual for its calm and repose. The composer and the violinist Joseph Hellmesberger first performed the sonata in public on December 2, 1886.

Sonata for Violin and Piano No. 2, Op. 13 Edvard Grieg Edvard Grieg, Norway’s greatest composer, had highly progressive interests for his time, in particular an enthusiasm for the nationalistic idea of writing music specifically Norwegian in character. Although the prosperous Scandinavian middle class insisted that Germany was the only source of music of any value, Grieg held to his ideals, and eventually succeeded in creating a new style, both personal and national. Grieg married his cousin, Nina Hagerup, in 1867 and composed the sonata in Oslo during his honeymoon. Commentators contend it displays a vital optimism traceable to his marriage. The sonata debuted in Oslo in 1867 soon after it was completed, with Gudbrand Bøhn, violinist, and Grieg, pianist. While his first violin sonata explored harmonic and rhythmic frontiers, Sonata No. 2 is characterized by its thematic unity. One motif, in various forms, could be said to underpin the whole sonata, whose most distinguishing quality is the incorporation of folk music. Much instrumental Norwegian folk music is constructed from small melodic themes, or motives, repeated with small variations, and then connected into a large thematic unit. The motive Grieg uses here, often referred to as a Grieg-motif, can be traced to this source. The first movement, Lento dolorosa-Allegro vivace, in sonata form, begins with an improvisational and rather sad, slow opening, but then becomes a spirited and optimistic Norwegian rondo. Both it and the last movement are characterized by 26


the elements of the springar, a Norwegian rhythmic dance with a rolling and even flow. The second movement, Allegretto tranquillo, follows a three-part form. The last movement, Allegro animato, a somewhat free sonata-rondo, begins with the violin creating a sense of nationalistic folk material. This movement, although in a ternary rhythm like the first, has a different feel and a much faster tempo, yet it shares a similar combination of sonata-form and rondo.

Sonata for Violin and Piano No. 2 in D Major, Op. 94a Sergei Prokofiev Sergei Prokofiev, a Russian composer of the first half of the 20th century, worked and lived both in Europe and America as well as in his own homeland. He was born in a remote Ukrainian village where his agronomist father managed a large estate. His mother gave him his first music lessons, and later he studied at the Conservatory in St. Petersburg, where he became a brilliant pianist. After the Russian Revolution, Prokofiev came to America and then settled in Paris, where he was an influential figure until his return to Russia in 1933. Due to the beginning of World War II in 1941, Prokofiev was evacuated from Moscow, which was endangered by the advancing German army, to the city of Alma Ata in the foothills of the Altai Mountains of Central Asia. In September he began to write his Sonata for Flute and Piano there, and in June 1943, he finished it in the Ural city of Perm, at that time called Molotov. Despite the difficulties and displacements of wartime life, this sonata has a sunny and serene disposition. The renowned violinist David Oistrakh heard the sonata in December 1943 and suggested to Prokofiev that he adapt it for violin. Prokofiev complied, and on June 17, 1944, Oistrakh gave the premiere performance of the violin version of the sonata. Prokofiev had made no changes in the piano part and very few when he transcribed the flute part for violin. He altered the work only enough to make it idiomatic for the violin. The playwright George Bernard Shaw, who in his early career had also been a music critic, described this work as a “humorous masterpiece of authentic violin music.” Most musicians and critics would not agree with him: Humor is not the predominating quality of this work, and although it became a violin sonata, no one doubts its genesis as a flute sonata. This sonata has lyrical content, classical structure, transparent texture and tender feeling. The Moderato begins with a protracted flowing melody evident throughout the movement. There are actually two contrasting themes in the first movement, briefly developed in turn and then recapitulated. The piano has a particularly important part in this movement, with many solos in the episodes that link the themes. A light, capricious Scherzo-Presto of brilliant yet carefree and witty quality, follows. It has a quieter, relaxed middle section for contrast. In the ingenious third movement, Andante, Prokofiev combines the ideas of the pensive opening section and the intricately figured second section in the third part. Eighth notes in the framing outer parts contrast with the triplets in the central section to emphasize the shape of the movement. This movement has both grace and delicacy. The finale, Allegro con brio, playfully combines the classic sonata and rondo forms in an exuberant movement that recalls moments of Prokofiev’s Classical Symphony. ©2018 Susan Halpern


Katz, Sapper & Miller Series

SCOTT BRADLEE'S POSTMODERN JUKEBOX

Thursday, October 18 at 7:30pm | The Palladium After raising the roof with its Palladium debut last season, Postmodern Jukebox is returning with a new revue dubbed the Back in Black & White Tour. This rotating collective of singers and musicians has clocked nearly a billion YouTube views with viral videos that reimagine contemporary pop, rock and R&B hits in vintage styles from swing to doo-wop, ragtime to Motown. (Recent outings have included a ’20s jazz version of ’80s rock band Europe’s “The Final Countdown” and a ’50s-prom-style take on “Perfect Duet” by Ed Sheeran and Beyonce.) The group’s live performances are rollicking, highenergy celebrations, and no two shows are ever the same!

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Songbook Series

ENGELBERT HUMPERDINCK

Friday, October 26 at 8pm | The Palladium At the height of the psychedelic ’60s, this British crooner scored an unlikely No. 1 hit in 11 countries with his romantic ballad “Release Me,” which spent a record-setting 56 weeks on the charts. He has since sold over 140 million records with such hits as “After the Lovin’” and “This Moment in Time,” earning kudos that have included 64 gold and 35 platinum albums, four Grammy nominations, a Golden Globe, and stars on the Hollywood and Las Vegas Walks of Fame. His latest studio album is 2017’s The Man I Want to Be, which includes a reworking of Bruno Mars’ “Just the Way You Are.”

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Free Event!

"THE PRESIDENT'S OWN" UNITED STATES MARINE BAND

Saturday, October 27 at 8pm | The Palladium Dubbed “The President’s Own” when it debuted for Thomas Jefferson in 1801, the Marine Band is America’s longest-running professional musical organization. It plays more than 500 public and official performances annually, and its musicians appear at the White House more than 300 times each year, performing for State arrival ceremonies, dinners and receptions and accompanying famous entertainers. The national tours began in 1891 under then-Director John Philip Sousa, who led the band for 12 years before launching his famous civilian band. A baton presented to Sousa at his final Marine Band concert was later returned by his family and is passed down to each new director. Tickets will be available starting Oct. 1.


Printing Partners Classical Series

CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER

Friday, November 2 at 8pm | The Palladium Orion Weiss, piano; Paul Huang, violin; Paul Neubauer, viola Keith Robinson, cello; Xavier Foley, bass Five consummate musicians perform diverse gems from the 19th century. Duos and trios fill the first half with enchantment and surprise, with Beethoven's variations on Mozart's melody, Schubert's creation for the arpeggione (an instrument that no longer exists) and Bottesini's virtuoso showpiece for violin and double bass. The artists join forces after intermission to perform Schubert's ”Trout Quintet,” which has garnered a reputation as one of the most popular works in the chamber repertory. The Chamber Music Society’s annual schedule includes a full performance season in New York, a full season of national and international touring, nationally televised broadcasts on PBS’ Live From Lincoln Center and regular broadcasts on SiriusXM and American Public Media’s Performance Today. PROGRAM LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN Variations on “Bei Männern, welche Liebe fühlen” (1770-1827) from The Magic Flute for Cello and Piano, WoO 46 FRANZ SCHUBERT “Arpeggione” (1797-1828)

Sonata in A minor for Viola and Piano, D. 821,

GIOVANNI BOTTESINI (1821-1889)

Gran duo concertante for Violin, Bass, and Piano

FRANZ SCHUBERT

Quintet in A major for Piano, Violin, Viola, Cello, and Bass, D. 667, Op. 114, “Trout”

series sponsor

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Country Series

KELLIE PICKLER

Saturday, November 3 at 8pm | The Palladium This North Carolina native grew up immersed in the classic country music of Tammy Wynette, Patsy Cline and Loretta Lynn before gaining fame at age 19 as a contestant on American Idol. She has since released four critically acclaimed albums, including 100 Proof, one of Rolling Stone’s Best Country Albums of 2012. Pickler’s hits include “Best Days of Your Life,” “Red High Heels,” “I Wonder” and “Didn’t You Know How Much I Loved You.” She also starred for three seasons on the CMT docu-comedy series I Love Kellie Pickler, and she now co-hosts the syndicated daytime talk show Pickler & Ben with journalist Ben Aaron.


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ABOUT THE CENTER The mission of the Center for the Performing Arts is to engage and inspire the Central Indiana community through enriching arts experiences. The Center for the Performing Arts is a nonprofit arts and education organization responsible for the operation and programming of a three-venue campus at Carmel’s City Center. Together, the Palladium, the Tarkington and the Studio Theater create a welcoming place for the community to engage with all forms of the performing arts. The campus also provides a home for the affiliated Great American Songbook Foundation and hosts six Resident Companies, along with other organizations that utilize the facilities for their events. Since opening in 2011, the Center’s campus has hosted over 1,800 performances and welcomed more than 840,000 patrons representing all 92 counties in Indiana, all 50 states, and 24 nations. Each year the Center provides access to the arts for thousands of people of all ages – building community, enriching lives, and inspiring minds young and old. Our education and outreach initiatives include performing arts classes for adults and special programs for upcoming generations, such as the interactive Peanut Butter & Jam concert series for preschoolers, the Palladium PALS reading club, educational videoconferences for students around the state, and our Student Discount Ticket program, through which students can attend performances for just $15.

@CPApresents

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PATRON SERVICES & AMENITIES ACCESSIBILITY

Accessible Parking: Accessible parking is available in the small surface lot on the west side of 3rd Avenue, directly across the street from the West Lobby entrance of the Palladium. Accessible valet parking is available at the west entrance. 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 one hour prior to each performance, valet parking is available at the West Lobby 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. Free 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. 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. 36


BASILE GIFT SHOP & BASILE CAFÉ

The Basile Gift Shop, now located in West lobby across from the Box Office, boasts a wide selection of jewelry, art, books, cards, and many boutique items. Every purchase helps support the Center for the Performing Arts. The Basile Café is located in the East lobby. SONGBOOK EXHIBIT GALLERY

Take elevators to Gallery level of the Palladium. Exhibit Gallery Hours: Monday - Friday, 10am - 4pm Performance Hours: One hour prior to Songbook Series and Drewry Simmons Vornehm Jazz Series performances and select additional events. 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 Old Town Family Series 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 to sign up. 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.


BOX OFFICE 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 until 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 performances. PHONE

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

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 10 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 for Center Presents events are available in any denomination and may be purchased online, by phone or at the Box Office. They are redeemable over the phone or in person. Certificates are not valid for events presented by our Resident Companies or external organizations. RESIDENT COMPANIES

Actors Theatre Of Indiana Booth Tarkington Civic Theatre Carmel Symphony Orchestra

Central Indiana Dance Ensemble Gregory Hancock Dance Theatre Indiana Wind Symphony


CONTACT US GROUP SALES

OUTREACH & TOURS

317.819.3503 Group@TheCenterPresents.org TheCenterPresents.org/Group

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

EVENTS & SPACE AVAILABILITY

THE GREAT AMERICAN SONGBOOK FOUNDATION

317.819.3521 SpecialEvents@TheCenterPresents.org TheCenterPresents.org/SpecialEvents PARTNERSHIP & PROGRAM ADVERTISING

317.819.3519 Sponsorship@TheCenterPresents.org TheCenterPresents.org/Sponsorship

317.844.2251 Info@TheSongbook.org TheSongbook.org BECOME A VOLUNTEER

317.819.3524 Volunteers@TheCenterPresents.org

INDIVIDUAL GIVING

317.819.3528 Donate@TheCenterPresents.org TheCenterPresents.org/Support

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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 masterminds of Tin Pan Alley, Broadway, and Hollywood during the first half of the 20th century represent the golden age of American popular music. Based at the Palladium, the Great American Songbook Foundation is permanently affiliated with the Center for the Performing Arts and is one of only five worldwide Cultural Affiliates of the Los Angeles-based GRAMMY Museum®. The Foundation carries out its unique mission to preserve America’s rich musical legacy in numerous ways: • The Songbook Hall of Fame recognizes individuals who have made significant contributions to the Great American Songbook, with a new class inducted each year. A permanent exhibit honoring the people who created and popularized this extraordinary music is located in the Shiel Sexton Songbook Lounge on the Palladium’s Gallery level. • The Songbook Archives houses sheet music, recordings, and other artifacts from the careers of artists such as songwriters Meredith Willson (The Music Man), Johnny Burke (“Swinging on a Star”), Gus Kahn (“It Had to Be You”), and Hy Zaret (“Unchained Melody”). • The Songbook Exhibit Gallery presents rotating interactive exhibits that share the music, history, and culture of the Songbook. • The Songbook Academy ® Summer Intensive is a national performing arts program for high school vocalists and the only one of its kind dedicated to the music of the Songbook. • Perfect Harmony provides therapeutic music programming for individuals with Alzheimer’s, dementia, and other neurodegenerative conditions. Visit the Songbook Exhibit Gallery! Located on the Gallery level of the Palladium Hours: Monday – Friday, 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM The Gallery is also open prior to performances in the Songbook and Drewry Simmons Vornehm Jazz Series and select additional @SongbookFoundation

@SongbookFdn

@SongbookFoundation



Your Support provides performing arts education for all ages! Alongside the world-class arts and entertainment events we present at our three venues, a vital part of the Center’s mission is our robust menu of educational and outreach programming for patrons of all ages. Examples include: • The Saturday morning Peanut Butter & Jam sessions, which introduce preschoolers to the joy of live music and the performing arts. • The KAR Front Seat program, which provides free tickets, sound check access, dinner and artist Q&A sessions for high school and college music students. • Educational videoconferences for schools around the state. • The Palladium Bookies, an engaging book club and discussion group for readers interested in arts-related issues • And budget-friendly experiential opportunities such as our popular ukulele and Dance Discovery classes. During the 2017-18 Season, the Center presented education and outreach activities for more than 4,600 youth and 1,500 adults in Bartholomew, Boone, Cass, Clinton, Decatur, Delaware, Fulton, Hamilton, Hancock, Hendricks, Howard, Johnson, Madison, Marion, Monroe, Shelby, Tippecanoe, Tipton counties as well as the states of Dearborn, Michigan, Washington, and Maryland.

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RESOURCE CENTER

317-844-0033

7330 East 86th Street, Indianapolis, IN 46256


Staff EXECUTIVE Jeffrey C. McDermott President/CEO

Board of Directors Melissa Stapleton Barnes Chairperson Zak Kahn Vice Chair Cheryl A. Harmon Treasurer

Michael Feinstein Artistic Director ADMINISTRATIVE Lisa Stanke Administrative Coordinator & Office Manager PROGRAMMING

Anne Hensley Poindexter Secretary

Douglas Tatum Vice President of Programming

James (Andy) Anderson, Jr., MD, FFPM, FACE Frank Basile Barbara Branic David A. Burnett Rebecca Byrnes Melissa L. Eldredge Stephanie C. Fuhrmann William Hammer Douglas C. Haney, Esq. John C. Hart, Jr. Nancy S. Heck Kathleen (Kathy) Krusie Lawrence (Larry) E. Lawhead Justin Moffett Samuel (Sam) Muse Jane E. Niederberger Eric S. Payne James Purvis Michael C. Rechin Paul G. Reis Anthony (Tony) Robertson Quinn Shepherd Laurie Siler David Stirsman David A. Temple Pamela Campbell Williams, Esq. W. Michael Wells Lebbeus Woods, CFP®

Julia Shildmyer-Heighway Director of Education & Community Engagement DEVELOPMENT Michael Pettry Vice President of Development Braden Hurley Director of Corporate Development Kendra Latta Director of Individual Development Sheila Morone Development Strategy & Research Manager Robin Briskey Annual Fund & Corporate Relations Manager Tara Eubanks Individual Giving Associate FINANCE & ADMINISTRATION Susan Springirth Chief Financial Officer Cynthia Ille Controller Nancy Hamilton Accounting & Human Resources Manager Holly Reay Accounts Payable & Payroll Coordinator

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MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS Mark Truett Vice President of Marketing & Communications Becky Lee Meacham Director of Marketing Scott Hall Director of Communications Corey Glenton Graphic Design Coordinator John A. Moskal II Business Intelligence Administrator PATRON SERVICES Brian Seitz Patron Services Manager Chandler Appleby Steve Moore Patron Services Supervisors Amanda Boldt Bill Eckert Larry Goens Sheryl Mullins Lindy Siefker Patron Services Representatives OPERATIONS Jeff Steeg Vice President of Operations Laura Varnau Director of Event Sales Nicole Silvernell Events Coordinator Sharon Holyoak Gift Shop Manager; Volunteer Coordinator Sandra Clark Gift Shop Associate Lisa Hillard Beverage & Concessions Manager Cindy Teeters Lead House Manager 44

Kelly Johnson Katherine Jones Marilyn Melangton Kim Moe Lisa Thornberry House Managers FACILITIES Ed Penman Facility Manager Ryan Gray Maintenance Engineer PRODUCTION Tim Todd Director of Production Lisa Posson Production Manager Jared McGowan Lighting Director Devin Schonsheck Lead Audio Engineer Joe Wisner Technical Director, The Studio Theater Joshua Hasty Technical Director, The Tarkington Ben Dobler AVL Technician Ellen Kingston Concierge Service Manager THE GREAT AMERICAN SONGBOOK FOUNDATION Chris Lewis Executive Director Cathy Burton Director of Museum Planning & Audience Enrichment Lisa Lobdell Archivist RenĂŠe La Schiazza Manager of Programs & Communications


Annual Partners 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 August 31, 2018. For more information, please contact the Development Office at 317.819.3520.

ANNUAL FUND

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

Gold Palladium Society ($25,000-$49,999) Michael Feinstein & Terrence Flannery Current Publishing First Merchants Bank Katz, Sapper & Miller, LLP Pedcor Companies Printing Partners Shepherd Insurance St. Vincent

Silver Palladium Society ($15,000-$24,999) Collina Foundation, a fund of Legacy Fund Leah & Eric Payne Jim & Ginny Purvis Drewry Simmons Vornehm, LLP Engledow Group Indiana Arts Commission KAR Auction Services Land Rover Indianapolis and Jaguar Indianapolis Old Town Companies

Bronze Palladium Society ($10,000-$14,999) Frank & Katrina Basile Rollie & Cheri Dick Melissa Eldredge Don & Pam Gottwald John C. & Marianne S. Hart Suzanne & Ron Mencias Karen & Donald Perez Dr. Stephen J. Shideler James B. & Joyce Winner

Fanfare Tickets Hamilton County Tourism, Inc. Pedcor Companies Renaissance Indianapolis North Hotel Taft Law United Fidelity Bank The Voice Clinic of Indiana

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

The Ackerman Foundation Melissa & Bradon Barnes Eloise L. Bowers Barbara & Michael Branic Lisa & Michael Drewry Stephanie C. Fuhrmann Sandra & Steve Hageman Cheryl A. Harmon Stan & Sandy Hurt Kathleen & Steven Krusie Vivian & Lawrence Lawhead Rod & Jayme McComas Justin & Jennifer Moffett Jane & Mark Niederberger Brian G. & Anne Hensley Poindexter Michael & Debra Rechin Mo Merhoff & Paul Reis Bruce & Jan Reynolds Mr. & Mrs. Tony Robertson Judith Roudebush Charitable Fund, a fund of the Indianapolis Foundation Armen & Marie-Claude Shanafelt Lei Shen & Soomin Park Quinn & Ali Shepherd Giving Fund Laura Siler Karol K. Sparks Larry & Sandra Speer Micki & David Stirsman Susan Tobin Rosemary & Paxton Waters Pam & Bill Williams Deborah & Willie Wood Jennifer & Lebbeus Woods List continued on next page.

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Shari & Jeff Worrell Carte Blanche Limousine DCG: Digital Color Graphics, LLC Huntington Bank Marquis Commercial Solutions The National Bank of Indianapolis Salon 01 & Aquage Sharp Business Systems

Director's Circle ($2,500-$4,999)

Patricia & Rafik Bishara Randy & Libby Brown Elizabeth Chamberlin Eric Daugherty & Delia Rivas-Daugherty Lynn & Robert Fritsche Philip & Patricia Gibson William M. Goodwin Judy Gripp Mr. & Mrs. William Hammer Douglas & Tammy Haney The Janet C. Hewett Giving Fund Diane & Bruce Houtman Sally & James Hubbard Millie & Greg Mitchell Sally & Russell Mobley

Thomas & Karen Poyser Pat Scahill & Gary Larreategui Cheryl & Kiros Sistevaris Dr. Pamela A. Steed Thorne Family Trust W. Michael & Sue Wells Jayne Ann & Doug Wilson Anonymous (2) A Cut Above Catering Gastroenterology of Indianapolis PC Kahn’s Catering Keller Macaluso, LLC Salin Bank Wealth Management Republic National Distributing Company Sun King Brewing Co.

Founders Circle ($1,000-$2,499) Cindy & Kevin Beauchamp David & Susan Blish Ron & Ann Thompson Brock Deb & Mike Bush

EXPERIENCE SHEPHERD’S HIGH NET WORTH PRIVATE CLIENT SERVICES.

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Joan & Larry Cimino Rick and Penny Conner Family Foundation K. Douglas & Becky Cook Drs. Molly & Jeff Cooke Randy & Joelyn Craig Julie & Cary Curry Deborah Daniels & Lyle Mannweiler Gina Davidson Ann & Kenneth Dee Waneta Dunkerly Craig & Marsha Dunkin Helen M. Eby Diann & Jim Eggleston John A. Ericson Drs. Will & Julie Fecht Tom & Liz Fuller Bradley & Teresa Fuson Dr. Thomas & Elaine Green Dr. Jeff & Nancy Greenberg Megan & Martin Gregor Nancy S. Heck Dawn & Andy Hein Diane & Jack Houtman Susan G. Johnson Doug & Marty Kaderabek Jim Leslie Claire Magna Tina & Gary Malone Dr. & Mrs. Ronald T. Maus Dr. Greg & Rose-Ann Mazanek Mary Ann & Jim Meyer Steve Perrine and Family Michael Pettry & John Mainella Jeff & Clare Quinn April & Curtis Rector Mr. & Mrs. Keith Reissaus Cathleen Rooney & Rick Moyer Mark & Roxann Ryan Pat & John Schuler Mr. Ronald B. Schwier & Ms. Marti T. Starkey Scott S. Semester Quinn & Ali Shepherd Giving Fund Dave & Judy Sholly Neal & Sandra Smith Randy & Kimberly Sorrell Susan Springirth Betty & James Streeter John & Judy Tomke Saundra & Mark Truett Ashley M. Ulbricht Brian & Carol Urbanski Ann & Mark Varnau Wendy & Karl Volkmar Mr. & Mrs. Dennis Whitaker Hank Wong & Dr. Christine Bishop

Dan & Diana Yates Dr. & Mrs. Robert Yee Jonathan Byrd's MBP Distinctive Catering Oberer's Flowers

Advocate ($500 - $999)

Donna & Rick Adams Elaine & Mike Akermann Becky & Gary Aletto Nellie Beam Tom & Vicki Brandenburg Milo & Mary Chelovitz Mr. John Chlapik Bob & Mary Christianson Charles & Ann Conrad Peter & Carol Czajkowski Luanne & Lawrence Dewey Jason & Traci Dossett Dr. Harold Eigen Paula & Steve Engelking Thomas & Judith Ertl Beverly & Tom Feller Phil & Cherie Flannagan Gary and Peggy Ford Charitable Fund Joe & Valerie Gravitt Nancy A. Hague Steve & Shannon Hawkins Mary Ann Hart & Doug Tatum Steve & Shannon Hawkins Bill & Nancy Heath Marie Jett Kevin Keating William & Ruth Kirkman John R. Koven Michael & Paula Lazaroff Drs. Robin & Thomas Ledyard Toni & Terry Lovison Andrea Moore John Nichols & Janet Roe Ted & Cathy Osborn Kenneth & Karen Pennington Scott & Kristin Pike Patrick Poyser Greg B. Reynolds Karen & Darrell Richey Capi Scheidler Michael & Lesley Semo Cathy & Harry Siderys Dr. Jon Simala Jim & Vickie Theis Tip & Margaret Tollison Mitch & Julie Tull John Walthall List continued on next page.

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Sharon & Chris Wardrip Scott & Susan Webber Sara Wessel Cindy Whitaker Carolyn & Doug Willard Lisa & Lew Willis Bob & Barb Wolf Robina M. Zink Family Charitable Fund F.C. Tucker Office Installation Services Inc.

Supporter ($250-$499)

Margaret & Adam Arceneaux Julie Bacome Charlene M. Beaver Joe Bentivoglio David A. Betz Bill & Renee Bilgram Gary & Pam Bollier Sydney Jeanne Book Paula & Greg Bosler Abdel & Kristine Bouaichi Mimi & Terry Brookie Ruth & Robert Brown Jim & Joyce Burrell Robert & Dorothy Butcher David & Jeanne Butterfield Rebecca & Rodney Byrnes Diane & Bill Byron Mr. James Calkins David & Judith Chadwick Sam & Megan Clark Janet & Mervyn Cohen Thomas Collins Ron & Dorothy Conley Carla Cook Timothy & Elaine Cooney Matthew & Courtney Corley Mr. & Mrs. William E. Corley Jack & Karen Crane Kelley & Thomas Creveling Lynn & Milton Cuppy David Daigh Mark DeCarlo James & Sarah Dicks Josh Drew Judith & Robert Evard D. L. Falcone George Faulstich Bronwen & Marvin Ferguson Joan & Alex Fraser Frank & Nancy Fults Gordon Graham & Sue Greenlee John & Margaret Graham 48

David & Annette Greene Barbara & Robert Gregory Pat & Steve Gross Bruce & Mary Hakes Dr. & Mrs. Tim Hannon Dennis & Amy Haworth Ronald Held Susan Henson Ken Hoffman Leslie M. Hoggatt Janet & Richard Howse Maureen & Ron Hubbard Judy & Robert Huber Cynthia Ille & Mark Potter David & Leanne Jackson James Jackson Jerry & Jean Jansen Darren Keller Michael & Kimberly Keller Nick & Katy Kestner Family Fund Mary Jane Keys Marjorie Kimes Bob & Sandee Kleymeyer Cham & Jami Kong John & Mary Dawn Krege Nancy & Otto Krohn Jan & Jeff Lefton Dr. & Mrs. R. Stephen Lehman Ron & Teri Lenz Vera Long Emily Meaux Lovison, MPA Dale & Sharon Mansberger Kelly & Stephan Masoncup Susan Massela Joe McCann Dr. William K. McGarvey Jerry & Wendy Meredith Terry & Joyce Metzger Corrie & Nate Meyer Marvin Miller & Jeanette Jefferies Laura & Dan Moriarity Sheila Morone John & Catherine Mulvihill Rita & Patrick Murphy Brian Myers Paul Orzeske Charles Phillips James & Carol Phillips Paula Presnoples Bob & Leslie Prusha Jerri & John Ramsey Dana Randall John Reaves Linda Reisner Tim & Dee Renner Leslie & James Riley Jennifer & John Robbins


John & Madelaine Schiering Bruce & Pamela Schilt Roger Schmelzer & Lucinda Phillips Kay & Charles Scott Julia Shildmyer-Heighway & Rob Heighway Jerry & DeAnn Shrewsbury Don & Candace Shuck Brian & Christine Seitz Dr. & Mrs. Lee & Melinda Sredzinski Dennis Stewart & Linda Williams Sue Stonebraker Tracy & Jim Storts Jim & Jill Stutzman Robert & Suellen Swaney William Swigart Steven Tames Cindy Teeters Kathleen Thomas Richard & Jacqueline Thompson Bill & Mary Tierney Tim & Phyllis Todd Glenn & Cheryl Troyer Mike Turley William & Laurie Uebele Allen & Jonna Valenti Gregory Volovic Alexander Volyk Stephanie & Nolan Vowels Nan & Robert Webber Drs. Rick & Annelle Weymuth Michael & Patricia Wilson Neal & Donna Wixson Larry & Carolyn Woodling Steve & Judy Young David & Carol Yount Richard & Sandra Zeckel Anonymous (3) AlphaGraphics Dodd Technologies Inc Thurston Springer Miller Herd & Titak MEMORIAL & HONOR GIFTS In memory of Thomas W. Bowers Eloise Bowers In honor of Cathy Bergstrom The Capital Group Companies Charitable Foundation In celebration of Jan & Bruce Reynolds’ birthdays Greg B. Reynolds In celebration of Jan & Bruce Reynolds’ Wedding Anniversary

Greg B. Reynolds

In honor of Greg Reynolds Jan & Bruce Reynolds In memory of Elisabeth Koons Kroetz, John's grandmother, who loved the Arts and the Palladium Karol K. Sparks In memory of Hugo & Ann Strubel and James Wall Anonymous MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES Bank of America Charitable Foundation Duke Realty Inc. Eli Lilly and Company Foundation Gartner, Inc. GE Foundation RMR Group ENDOWMENT DIRECTED GIFTS Indianapolis Colts 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


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Friends

Board of Directors Michael Feinstein Founder Carolyn E. Anker Chair Melissa Stapleton Barnes Immediate Past Chair Roger Schmelzer Vice Chair Rollin Dick Treasurer William Hammer Secretary Brook Babcock Libby Brown Gary Carnow Sara Carruthers Marc Cherry Del Demaree Terrence Flannery Don Gottwald Stan Hurt Kate Edelman Johnson Karen Kelsey Paul Lowden Maria Ferrer Murdock Izabela Ozdemir Troy Payner, M.D. Charles Simons, D.D.S., M.S.D. Pamela Campbell Williams Michael Feinstein (Member Emeritus) Irwin Helford (Member Emeritus) Ronald G. Shaw (Member Emeritus) Michael Strunsky (Member Emeritus)

Thank you to the following individuals and organizations that have contributed to the Foundation during the past year. This list reflects gifts received through August 31, 2018. For more information, please contact the Development Office at 317.819.3520. ANNUAL FUND

Diamond Songbook Legacy ($100,000+)

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

Songbook Society Platinum ($50,000 - $99,999 Efroymson Family Fund

Gold Songbook Legacy ($25,000 - $49,999) The Stephen & Tomisue Hilbert Family Dr. & Mrs. Charles M. Simons Marti Stevens

Silver Songbook Legacy ($15,000 - $24,999) The Music Man Foundation Paramount Theatre Music Library Fund Ruth's Chris Steak House The Ted Snowdon Foundation

Bronze Songbook Legacy ($10,000 - $14,999) Lisa & Paul Andre Carolyn & Terry Anker Gary Carnow Marc Cherry Del Demaree Rollie & Cheri Dick Betty & Irwin Helford Stan & Sandy Hurt Doug & Karen Kelsey Sue & Paul Lowden Maria Ferrer Murdock

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Troy Payner & Cara Peggs Roger Schmelzer & Lucinda Phillips Christel DeHaan Foundation Hamilton County Tourism, Inc. Ray and Bernice Charles Trust Van Heusen Music Corp.

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

Melissa & Bradon Barnes Hal Brody & Don Smith Randy & Libby Brown Mr. & Mrs. Jay Michael Cook Michael & Margie Draper The Don and Abby Funk Charitable Trust William M. Goodwin William & Barb Hammer Jeffrey C. McDermott Leah & Eric Payne Pam & Bill Williams Applegate Elder Law The Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation The Harold Wetterberg Foundation Salon 01 & Aquage

Broadway Show ($2,500 - $4,999)

Don & Pam Gottwald Daniel & Josephine Lisowski Jim & Ray Luther-Pfeil Jim & Ginny Purvis City of Carmel The Edward and Helen Oppenheimer Foundation Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation The Voice Clinic of Indiana

Cabaret ($1,000 - $2,499) Jack Bethards Sydney Jeanne Book Kimber Cross Leslee & Wayne Feinstein Gary and Peggy Ford Charitable Fund Carla Gordon Nancy & Dean Hoke Rick & Cindy Leffler Chris & Kelli Lewis Dr. & Mrs. Ronald T. Maus Michael Pettry & John Mainella Bruce & Jan Reynolds

Dr. & Mrs. Steven & Candice Rosen David & McNally Sagal Pat & John Schuler Maryanne Siek Jon & Cleo Sonneborn Susan Springirth Drs. Pamela Steed & Peter Furno Sheila M. Stone Saundra & Mark Truett Mitch & Julie Tull Jim & Joyce Winner Barrie & Margaret Zimmerman HistoryIT Republic National Distributing Company

Big Band ($500 - $999)

Diane & John Abrams Cathy A. Burton Helen M. Eby Ken and Caryl Field Fund of the Princeton Area Community Foundation Peggy Lee Associates, LLC Nancy A. Hague Tom & Priscilla Johnson Marjorie Kimes Thomas Kinney Corey Moran Michael & Sharon O'Hair Carol & Al Pope The Rains Family, Michael, Kathryn & Logan Greg B. Reynolds Carol & Dick Schwartz Jerry & DeAnn Shrewsbury Victoria & David Temple Larry Weber Anonymous (1) Carte Blanche Limousine Jonathan Byrd’s Peggy Lee Associates, LLC

Tin Pan Alley ($250 - $499) Jeri Ballantine Cindy & Kevin Beauchamp Jane & Jerry Bintz Christopher Brush Steven J. Bush Melissa Cox & Shannon Saksewski Leslee & Wayne Feinstein Brian Fick & Mary Yeager


Roger & Susan Frick Kathleen Hacker Brent & Linda Hartman Howard & Sarah Knight Karen E. Kennedy Lisa Lobdell Dr. Greg & Rose-Ann Mazanek Jerry & Harriet McDermott Patrick Poyser Jill & Jason Reese Carol Schutt The Sierra-Wysong Family Robert & Suellen Swaney Elayne Techentin Kathy & Hal Thurston Barbara Wulfe Anonymous DCG: Digital Color Graphics, LLC Sun King Brewing Co.

MEMORIAL & HONOR GIFTS In honor of Michael Feinstein & Terrence Flannery Leslee & Wayne Feinstein In memory of Miss Ella Fitzgerald, the beloved First Lady of Song Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation In honor of Bruce Reynolds Greg B. Reynolds In memory of John Muldowny Sheila M. Stone MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES Eli Lilly and Company Foundation ENDOWMENT DIRECTED GIFTS The Family of Louis F. Edelman

Be Our Guest! Host your next meeting, special event or wedding at the Center. Host an exquisite private event that your guests will never forget! With its unsurpassed acoustics and majestic interiors, the Center is the perfect setting for your next special event. • • • • •

Holiday parties Sophisticated weddings/receptions Corporate events Board meetings Anniversary parties

Schedule a tour today! SpecialEvents@TheCenterPresents.org 317.819.3521


LOVE AT FIRST LIGHT This holiday season, trust your office décor to the experts. 54

E N G L E D OW.CO M/H O L I DAY

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317.575.1100


THANK YOU The Center thanks the following major partners.

m a k i n g t h e a rts h a p p e n

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


Dave Shepherd Founder, CEO

Quinn Shepherd Managing General Partner

SHEPHERD PROUDLY SUPPORTS THE CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS.

317.846.5554 vip@shepherdins.com shepherdins.com

With appreciation to our community partner


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