T UL S A PER FO R MIN G A R T S CENTER
FEB RUA RY 2 02 2
SPITFIRE • SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK LIVE! • VENDETTA
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contents FEBRUARY 2022
Jeremy Charles
Tulsa Ballet’s “Vendetta” finally hits the stage.
insider
calendar
5
Exposition
15
7
Marquee
Me, Myself and Shirley Unfinished
Schoolhouse Rock Live! Spitfire Jitney
Professor Wow’s FunBelievable Science Show
Vendetta
Heather McMahan
The late Stephen Sondheim
Laughing Wild Swan Lake
features
February 2 at 12:10 p.m.
Tootsie
Heroes of the Fourth Turning Catalyst Quartet
10 12
Spotlight
Brown Bag It
ATOS Trio
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March-April Events
A Tale of Humanity Love Is In the Air
On the cover: The Ten Tenors come to Tulsa! Photo by Dylan Evans
Join Tulsa Opera Chorusmaster Lyndon Meyer and members of the Tulsa Opera Chorus for the Tulsa Opera Big Sing, where you’ll be part of an opera chorus and experience the rehearsal process live!
Fe bruary 2022 INTER M I SSI ON
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FIRST OKLAHOMA BANK PRESENTS
Leaders with Heart
LOYAL. LOVING. LEARNED. Leeland Alexander has cultivated a life of learning, leadership and love of family and God.
He values education and has worked in a university setting his entire adult life. Leeland began working for the University of Oklahoma in 1974 and today is the Associate Vice President for Community Advancement at OU’s Schusterman Center Campus in Tulsa. His resume of achievements is long, but that alone does not define Leeland. Rather, it is his lifelong commitment to helping others and his focus on family. Together he and his wife Diana have been married 55 years. They have four adult sons and “daughters-in-love,” 13 grandchildren and one “grandson in love.” “Diana and I both love giving of our time and financial resources to different organizations that provide, care, food and help for people who are down on their luck,” Leeland says. Several life events have shaped his outlook: participation in 4-H programs as a youth, his seven years in the U.S. Army Reserves, his church involvement, and worldwide travels, among others. His years of military service, for instance, instilled a deep appreciation for the American flag, his state and country.
During his years of starting and working in OU’s School of Community Medicine in Tulsa, Leeland traveled to hospitals in countries such as India, Nepal, and Africa to search for sites where the college’s residents could do rotations in third-world medicine. “It was fascinating to visit all of these different hospitals and see how medicine is delivered,” he says. “I really discovered that people in any country have the same desire and wishes for their children to be educated and to find employment and have good health care.” “Leeland has invested his life in exercising leadership to accomplish adaptive change in the many organizations in which he is involved. He has earned the praise of ‘Well done, my good and faithful servant,’” says Tom Bennett Jr., Chairman of the Board of First Oklahoma Bank.
Leeland is a graduate of Leadership Tulsa, the inaugural classes of Leadership Oklahoma, Leadership USA, and Leadership for the 21st Century at Harvard University. Currently, he serves on boards for the Founders of Doctors’ Hospital Inc., Tulsa Community College Foundation, Oklahoma State University Foundation Board of Governors, and First Oklahoma Bank. “The people who work for First Oklahoma Bank do an outstanding job of taking care of customers – everyone from the tellers to the lenders to the Board of Directors… Everybody is committed to providing the best services they can to our customers,” Leeland says.
Midtown: 4110 S. Rockford Avenue | South: 100 S. Riverfront Drive, Jenks
www.FirstOklahomaBank.com
is the official magazine of the Tulsa Performing Arts Center.
PUBLISHER Jim Langdon WRITER AND EDITOR Amanda Nichols COVER DESIGN Lexi Sugiyama CREATIVE DIRECTOR Madeline Crawford ADVERTISING SALES Rita Kirk
exposition D I R EC TO R O F CO M M U N I T Y E N G AG E M E N T
Happy February! I am incredibly
Mark Frie
excited about several things happening in the TPAC throughout the month. Tulsa Opera will kick off the month, inviting audiences to their “Big Sing” for our Brown Bag It concert series. Tulsa Ballet Nathan Harmon
110 E. Second St., Tulsa, OK 74103 918-596-7122 • TulsaPAC.com
is back with the long-awaited “Vendetta,” which was originally
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Mark Frie CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER Jen Alden VP OF OPERATIONS Bryan Clemons VP OF DEVELOPMENT AND ENGAGEMENT Sara Phoenix DIRECTOR OF PROGRAMMING Terri McGilbra DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC RELATIONS Amanda Nichols TECHNICAL DIRECTOR Scott McLarty DIRECTOR OF TICKETING SERVICES Jeff Newsome DIRECTOR OF PATRON SERVICES Tosha Hollis DIRECTOR OF COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT Jeremy Stevens
TULSA PERFORMING ARTS CENTER TRUST CEO Mark Frie CHAIR Billie Barnett VICE-CHAIR David Holden TREASURER Jen Alden SECRETARY Laura Creekmur TRUSTEES Billie Barnett, Ken Busby, Mayor G.T. Bynum, Stanton Doyle, Linda Frazier, Glenda Silvey, Peggy Simmons, Julie Smith EMERITUS TRUSTEE Robert J. LaFortune
INTERMISSION is published monthly by
postponed due to the pandemic. Our friends at Theatre North will present August Wilson’s “Jitney,” an absolute jewel from the August Wilson catalogue. World Stage Theatre is set to wow crowds with the Tonynominated play “The Song of Jacob Zulu,” which includes incredible music composed by Ladysmith Black Mambazo. We close out the month of February and start March off with a bang thanks to a great concert presented by the TPAC Trust. On March 1, we welcome the Australian group The Ten Tenors to Chapman Music Hall. Over the past several years, I have loved working with these guys and presenting them in several different venues. You won’t be able to leave without a smile on your face and a song in your heart. As we continue to navigate through the latest variants of COVID-19, the staff at the TPAC will continue to do our best to keep audiences as safe as possible. We appreciate your cooperation in helping us keep performing arts alive for the Tulsa metro area.
Publisher of TulsaPeople Magazine 1603 S. Boulder, Tulsa, OK 74119 For advertising information, Tel. 918-585-9924, ext. 240, Fax 918-585-9926. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written permission of the Tulsa Performing Arts Center: 918-596-2366, anichols@tulsapac.com. Current and past issues of Intermission can be viewed at issuu.com/tulsapac/docs
Enjoy the show!
Mark Frie
CEO, Tulsa Performing Arts Center Fe bruary 2022 INTER M I SSI ON
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EXPLORE our Six age-appropriate playgrounds 162 acres
Daily art and PE classes
Come tour our PreK and Primary School spaces. Now enrolling students as young as 3. For more information call 918-879-4755 or visit hollandhall.org.
marquee T H I S M O N T H AT T H E T PAC
TPAC IMAGINATION SERIES
SCHOOL HOUSE ROCK LIVE! Academic subjects will never seem boring again when presented through mega-hits like “Conjunction Junction” and “Just a Bill.” Schoolhouse Rock Live! explodes onto the stage, updated for a whole new generation with imaginative image projections and a rock ’n’ roll feel.
February 4 at 7 p.m. JOHN. H WILLIAMS THEATRE
TULSA BALLET TULSA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
SPITFIRE
VENDETTA 1950s Chicago. Rosalia Carbone’s wedding day is
Principal Guest Conductor Daniel Hege leads the TSO
marred by a violent murder, sparking a long-standing
in this exciting program featuring Walton’s Spitfire:
grudge between infamous rival mob families. When the
Prelude and Fugue, Barber’s Knoxville: Summer of
Godfather, the feared patriarch of the family, is killed in a
1915 – featuring vocalist Janinah Burnett, Khachaturian’s
shootout, an enraged Rosalia takes his place.
Masquerade Suite, and Shostakovich’s Powerful Symphony No. 9.
February 11–12 at 7:30 p.m. February 13 at 2:30 p.m.
February 5 at 7:30 p.m. | CHAPMAN MUSIC HALL
CHAPMAN MUSIC HALL
Fe bruary 2022 INTER M I SSI ON
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marquee T H I S M O N T H AT T H E T PAC
THEATRE NORTH
THEATRE TULSA
Anyone who has witnessed ‘brothers’ telling tales in the
HEROES OF THE FOURTH TURNING
neighborhood barbershop or the local Mickey D’s will
Four young Catholic conservatives have gathered at a
JITNEY be familiar with the shared camaraderie, ego, fear and
backyard after-party to toast their college mentor. But
ambition depicted in August Wilson’s very funny, as well
as their reunion spirals into spiritual chaos and clashing
as very touching, play “Jitney.”
politics, it becomes less a celebration than a vicious fight to be understood.
February 12, 19 at 8 p.m. February 13 at 2 p.m.
February 25–26, March 4–5 at 8 p.m.
February 20 at 3 p.m.
February 27, March 6 at 2 p.m.
LIDDY DOENGES THEATRE
LIDDY DOENGES THEATRE
CHAMBER MUSIC TULSA
CATALYST QUARTET Hailed by The New York Times at its Carnegie Hall debut as “invariably energetic and finely burnished … playing with earthy vigor,” the Grammy Award-winning Catalyst Quartet believes in the unity that can be achieved through music and imagines their programs and projects with this in mind. February 27 at 3 p.m. JOHN H. WILLIAMS THEATRE
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F ebr ua r y 2022 I N T E R M IS SION
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Fe bruary 2022 INTER M I SSI ON
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Started in the early ‘70s, Theatre North
Now, Theatre North brings another
story about himself and a white soldier
was organized in order to give African
of Wilson’s classics to Tulsa: “Jitney.” Set
fighting in Vietnam. Suddenly the two
American actors a chance at the valuable
in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1977, it
were fired on by the enemy and had to
roles that they had been denied in the
tells the story of a jitney cab company
work together despite their differences.
past. In 1977, Maybelle Wallace got
trying to survive. Jitneys were unofficial,
That, he says, changed him.
involved by accident, taking her daughter
unlicensed taxi services operating out
to rehearsals and eventually becoming
of Black communities because licensed
America was trying to find themselves in
the executive director.
taxi services would not serve Black
the ‘70s and a new Black consciousness
communities.
was forming. “’Jitney’ explores that,” says
According to Wallace, Theatre North “for many, many years, and possibly
As gentrification finds its way to the
According to Minor, everyone in
Minor. “We are all people, regardless of
even now, is the only Black community
Black community, the jitney company
race, creed or color. We all come from the
theatre in Tulsa, Oklahoma. And we
owners find themselves trying to hold
same cloth and want the same things,” he
have raised the consciousness in Tulsa,
onto their building and their community.
says. He adds, “There is no difference. We
Oklahoma, concerning the Black
It is, according to Wallace, a problem
are all human, and the sooner we realize
experience in America.”
that still persists to this day.
that, the better.” “Jitney” helps to tell that
As part of that journey toward raising
The play will be directed by Willie
story — a human story about survival in
the collective consciousness, Theatre
Minor Jr., who has made quite a name
North has often used the works of
for himself nationally as an actor,
August Wilson, whom the New York
director and more. Originally brought
Times called the “theatre’s poet of Black
to Tulsa to direct another Theatre North
Presented by Theatre North
America.” Wilson’s works have meant a
production, “Greenwood: An American
February 12, 19 at 8 p.m.
great deal of success for Theatre North,
Dream Destroyed,” he returns to direct
February 13 at 2 p.m.
including their Tate Award win for
this important piece.
February 20 at 3 p.m.
“Seven Guitars.”
10
F ebr u a r y 2022 I N T E R M IS SION
A Vietnam veteran, Minor recalls a
difficult times.
Jitney
LIDDY DOENGES THEATRE
Broadway’s funniest new musical!”
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Sue Ann Blair 918.813.3477
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sueann@mcgrawok.com
AVAILABLE ANYTIME, ANYWHERE.
MARCH 8-13 TULSA PAC
918.596.7111 • CELEBRITYATTRACTIONS.COM GROUPS OF 10+ $AVE! CALL 918.796.0220 /BwayTulsa
TulsaPeople.com/ digitaledition
Fe bruary 2022 INTER M I SSI ON
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All You Need Is Love
12
F ebr u a r y 2022 I N T E R MISSION
Years,” “Unchained Melody,” “Shallow,” “Somebody to Love” and “Love Is in the Air.” The concert was first dreamed up when one of the Tenors, Paul Gelsumini, was planning his wedding. He decided to use “Perfect” as the first dance song and had his fellow Tenors join in. It turned out to be one of the most memorable moments of the couple’s lives. “Love Is in the Air” has a lot to offer its audiences: a source of joy and hope, a chance to reminisce, and enjoy some laughs as The Ten Tenors use their voices and senses of humor to navigate love and its many forms.
Dylan Evans
Looking for the perfect Valentine’s Day gift? The Tulsa Performing Arts Center is about to be awash in love as the TPAC Trust presents The Ten Tenors. They have a show prepared that is jampacked with everyone’s favorite love songs, aptly named “Love Is in the Air,” so get ready to swoon. The Ten Tenors is an Australian ensemble that has toured all over the world and released more than 20 albums. First formed in 1995, their unique brand of music, featuring awe-inspiring 10-part harmonies, has been enjoyed by more than 90 million people. The group has headlined over 2,000 concerts around the world, sold more than 3.5 million concert tickets and is renowned for their dynamic, choreographed performances, transitioning seamlessly from inspiring arias to soulful ballads to your favorite pop and rock songs. “Love Is in the Air” is the newest show from the group and embraces love in all its forms, including some of the most popular feel-good love songs and wedding first dance songs of all time. They’ll cover many favorite romantic tunes, putting their own twist on pop songs, classic love songs and some of the most famous and touching arias in existence. If you’ve got a soft spot for a tender tune, this concert is not to be missed. Some of the songs audiences will get to enjoy include “Anything for Love,” “Perfect,” “All of Me,” “That’s Amore,” “Valerie,” “Fall on Me,” “A Thousand
For more information on this phenomenal group or to get a taste of the incredible performance in store, you can visit the group’s website at www. thetentenors.com. Whether you’re looking for an incredible night with that special someone, a fun group outing or just want to hear some of the best songs ever written sang by 10 of the best harmonizers out there, we hope you’ll join us!
The Ten Tenors Presented by TPAC Trust March 1 at 7:30 p.m. CHAPMAN MUSIC HALL
Kenneth Tan Fotografie
Fe bruary 2022 INTER MI SSI ON
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spotlight
O N U P CO M I N G E V E N T S
DUGGAN & ZUCKER ENTERTAINMENT
ME, MYSELF AND SHIRLEY Cindy Williams, the legendary star of the iconic comedy series “Laverne and Shirley,” will share memories of her career and hilarious backstage tales from her lifetime in entertainment. March 3–4 at 7:30 p.m.
TULSA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
UNFINISHED
This unique program features Borodin’s Prince Igor Overture, Bartok’s Piano Concerto No. 3, and Schubert – Symphony No. 8 “Unfinished.”
March 5 at 2 and 7:30 p.m.
March 5 at 7:30 p.m.
JOHN H. WILLIAMS THEATRE
CHAPMAN MUSIC HALL
CELEBRITY ATTRACTIONS
TOOTSIE
TOOTSIE is a laugh-out-loud love letter to the theatre, based on the Oscar®-nominated film. Featuring a Tony®winning book by Robert Horn and score by 2018 Tony® winner David Yazbek. March 8–9 at 7:30 p.m., March 10 at 1 and 7:30 p.m. March 11 at 8 p.m., March 12 at 2 and 8 p.m.
TPAC IMAGINATION SERIES
PROFESSOR WOW’S FUN-BELIEVABLE SCIENCE SHOW When students see Professor Wow’s zany, high-energy FUN-Believable Science Show, they learn that nothing is impossible — as long as it obeys the laws of science!
March 13 at 1 p.m.
March 11 at 7 p.m.
CHAPMAN MUSIC HALL
JOHN H. WILLIAMS THEATRE
TULSA PERFORMING ARTS CENTER • TULSAPAC.COM • 918-596-7111 Fe bruary 2022 INTER MI SSI ON
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spotlight
O N U P CO M I N G E V E N T S
OUTBACK PRESENTS
HEATHER MCMAHAN
Put the phones down! Your favorite high-functioning, hot mess comedian Heather McMahan is coming to a city near you. She’s live, liberated and lubed up. Doing the most and the least at the same time.
AMERICAN THEATRE COMPANY
LAUGHING WILD
Laughing Wild, by Christopher Durang, is a provocative, inventive, and very funny study of the perils of modern life in urban America. March 18–19, 24–26 at 8 p.m.
March 18 at 8 p.m.
March 20 at 2 p.m.
CHAPMAN MUSIC HALL
LIDDY DOENGES THEATRE
TULSA BALLET
CHAMBER MUSIC TULSA
SWAN LAKE
ATOS TRIO
Odette, a young maiden trapped in the form of a swan due to an evil curse, must find eternal love to break the spell.
Founded in 2003 by violinist Annette von Hehn, cellist Stefan Heinemeyer and pianist Thomas Hoppe, the prizewinning ATOS Trio comes to Tulsa.
March 25–26 at 7:30 p.m.
March 26 at 7:30 p.m.
March 27 at 2:30 p.m.
March 27 at 3 p.m.
CHAPMAN MUSIC HALL
JOHN H. WILLIAMS THEATRE
TULSA PERFORMING ARTS CENTER • TULSAPAC.COM • 918-596-7111 16
F ebr u a r y 2022 I N T E R MISSION
We’ve made things look very different at the corner of 28th and Harvard!
New Dog Dish! We invite you to come see and enjoy our new store at 2803 South Harvard. Bring your dog with you!
2803 SOUTH HARVARD | 918-624-2600 | OPEN MON.–SAT.
The store your pet deserves!
calendar MARCH DUGGAN & ZUCKER ENTERTAINMENT
ME, MYSELF AND SHIRLEY March 3–4 at 7:30 p.m. March 5 at 2 and 7:30 p.m. John H. Williams Theatre TULSA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
UNFINISHED March 5 at 7:30 p.m. Chapman Music Hall CELEBRITY ATTRACTIONS
TOOTSIE March 8–9 at 7:30 p.m. March 10 at 1 and 7:30 p.m. March 11 at 8 p.m. March 12 at 2 and 8 p.m. March 13 at 1 p.m. Chapman Music Hall TPAC IMAGINATION SERIES
PROFESSOR WOW’S FUNBELIEVABLE SCIENCE SHOW March 11 at 7 p.m. John H. Williams Theatre CHAMBER MUSIC TULSA
IMANI WINDS March 13 at 3 p.m. John H. Williams Theatre OUTBACK PRESENTS
HEATHER MCMAHAN March 18 at 8 p.m. Chapman Music Hall
HOUSE NOTES
THE TULSA PERFORMING ARTS CENTER was dedicated in 1977, the fulfillment of many Tulsans’ long-held dream. Built with a combination of public and private funds, the facility is operated by the Tulsa Performing Arts Center Trust through a management agreement with the City of Tulsa. The TPAC Trust is a nonprofit organization of mayor-appointed citizens who lend expertise and guidance in promoting Performing Arts Center goals. Local arts organizations and entertainment promoters are the Center’s main clients. ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICES are located at 110 E. Second Street, Tulsa, OK., 74103-3212. Office hours: Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Telephone 918596-7122. Fax 918-596-7144. Please subscribe to our monthly TPAC email newsletter online at TulsaPac.com. LOCATION. Downtown Tulsa at Third Street and Cincinnati Avenue, accessible from the Broken Arrow Expressway, Interstate 244, Hwy. 75 and Riverside Drive.
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F ebr u a r y 2022 I N T E R M IS SION
AMERICAN THEATRE COMPANY
LAUGHING WILD March 18–19, 24–26 at 8 p.m. March 20 at 2 p.m. Liddy Doenges Theatre TULSA BALLET
SWAN LAKE March 25–26 at 7:30 p.m. March 27 at 2:30 p.m. Chapman Music Hall CHAMBER MUSIC TULSA
ATOS TRIO March 26 at 7:30 p.m. March 27 at 3 p.m. John H. Williams Theatre RED TAIL ENTERTAINMENT
ALTON BROWN: BEYOND THE EATS March 29 at 7 p.m. Chapman Music Hall
APRIL TULSA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
THE TITAN April 2 at 7:30 p.m. Chapman Music Hall
TULSA TOWN HALL
FALUN DAFA ASSOCIATION OKLAHOMA
HENRY LOUIS GATES April 8 at 10:30 a.m. Chapman Music Hall
SHEN YUN April 12–13 at 7:30 p.m. Chapman Music Hall
TULSA PROJECT THEATRE
WORLD STAGE THEATRE COMPANY
CLUE ONSTAGE! April 8, 14-16 at 7:30 p.m. April 9 at 2 and 7:30 p.m. John H. Williams Theatre
THE REVOLUTIONISTS April 21–22, 29 at 8 p.m. April 23, 30 at 2 and 8 p.m. April 24, May 1 at 2 p.m.
CHAMBER MUSIC TULSA
TULSA OPERA
VERONA QUARTET April 10 at 3 p.m. John H. Williams Theatre
SALOME April 29 at 8 p.m. May 1 at 2:30 p.m. Chapman Music Hall
TPAC BROWN BAG IT
CYNTHIA SIMMONS TRIO April 6 at 12:10 p.m. Westby Pavillion
PARKING. Convenient underground parking is located west of the building, accessed from Second Street. Event parking also is available in several lots across the street to the east and south of the TPAC. ADMISSION AND LATE SEATING. Lobby doors open two hours prior to an event. Chapman Music Hall doors normally open 30 minutes prior to curtain. The remaining theaters open 30 minutes before curtain. Late seating is at the discretion of each sponsoring organization. Latecomers may be temporarily held out of the theater or asked to take seats at the back if available. TICKET OFFICE HOURS are Monday through Friday 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. In addition to regular hours, it opens two hours prior to curtain for events scheduled in Chapman Music Hall. The Second Street ticket office,110 E. Second Street on the north side of the building, opens two hours prior to each curtain for tickets to events scheduled that day in John H. Williams Theatre, Liddy Doenges Theatre or Charles E. Norman Theatre.
PHONE ORDERS. Call the TPAC ticket office, 918-596-7111. Outside Tulsa call 1-800-3647111. Nominal service charges are added to all phone and Internet orders. The TPAC ticket office accepts DISCOVER, MasterCard and VISA . Subscriber hotline: 918-596-7109. BUYING TICKETS ONLINE. Buy tickets at tulsapac.com using VISA , DISCOVER or MasterCard. Print your tickets at home or pull them up on your mobile device using the Tickets@Home option. Tickets will be scanned by ushers at the door. EXCHANGES. The ticket office gladly exchanges tickets to events with more than one performance, subject to certain guidelines. Otherwise, all sales are final. GROUP SALES AND BUILDING TOURS. Group discounts are available. Please call 918-5967109 for group sales assistance. Tours of the TPAC are offered free of charge and last approximately 45-60 minutes. Arrangements may be made by calling 918-596-7122.
SERVICES FOR PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES. All Performing Arts Center facilities are accessible to persons with disabilities. Please ask about wheelchair-accessible seating when purchasing your ticket. Parking is located on the street level of the parking garage near the TPAC elevators. Use the south elevator to reach Chapman Music Hall. Restroom facilities are located in the Third Street Lobby for Chapman Music Hall events, and adjacent to the John H. Williams Theatre Lobby for events in the TPAC’s other theaters. The TPAC has a Listen Technologies RF system to assist the deaf and hard of hearing. It is available at coat check for Chapman Music Hall events. Ask the house manager on duty for equipment for the Williams, Doenges and Norman Theatres. Devices are provided at no cost. PLEASE NOTE: The TPAC is a tobacco-free facility. Smoking and vaping are not allowed, nor is the use of chewing tobacco. Also, as a courtesy to the performers and audience, please turn off all audible message systems and cellular phones.
Ticket prices are subject to change.
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