Dance Theatre of Harlem
FEB 10 | BASS CONCERT HALL
FEB 11 | BASS CONCERT HALL
FEB 25 | MCCULLOUGH THEATRE
PRESENTING SPONSORS
“[Higher
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FEB 10 | BASS CONCERT HALL
FEB 11 | BASS CONCERT HALL
FEB 25 | MCCULLOUGH THEATRE
PRESENTING SPONSORS
“[Higher
—
Thank you for joining us! We’re thrilled to welcome you to experience the best in new performance from around the world as part of the Texas Performing Arts 2022–23 Season.
This season, we’ve made a bold return to presenting international artists, with nine countries represented in the season. We are also amplifying our longstanding commitment to large-scale dance works, with visits from four major companies. Alongside these visiting productions, we wanted to showcase artists who call Austin home. Through our artist-in-residence program, you can take a peek behind the curtain of creativity as interdisciplinary artist and creative director Kenyon Adams, playwright Virginia Grise, and choreographer Deborah Hay develop and present their latest projects. New this season, the youngest audiences can experience adventurous art through our new series of creative performance for families.
The 22/23 Texas Performing Arts Season complements our always-popular Broadway in Austin series and our Texas Welcomes lineup of concerts and comedy. Please sign up for our newsletter and see everything we offer at texasperformingarts.org. New shows are added all the time. We hope you can join us for another performance soon!
Bob Bursey Executive & Artistic DirectorAt Texas Performing Arts, we make sure engagement with the arts extends beyond the stage — a place where students, faculty, and the Central Texas community can connect, gather, and share ideas. Through workshops, discussions, masterclasses, and more, we strive for everyone to be able to feed their artistic spirit.
Our 22/23 Season kicked off in September with a full lineup of inspiring and adventurous performances, which will continue through April. Here are just few highlights of our campus and community activities from this fall. 1
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Dance Theatre of Harlem
FRI, FEB 10
Cécile McLorin Salvant
Leonardo! A Wonderful Show About A Terrible Monster
SAT, FEB 25
FRI, MAR 3
Aizuri Quartet
The Art of Translation SAT, MAR 4
AizuriKids SUN, MAR 5
Cion: Requiem of Ravel’s Boléro
APR 19
Dream House Quartet featuring Katia & Marielle Labèque, Bryce Dessner & David Chalmin
APR 25
GET
Farfalle
SAT, APR 29 – SUN, APR 30
• Short lines and personal service in the Members-Only Lounge
• Discounted drinks
• Private parking passes
• Artist Meet & Greets
• Exclusive Backstage Tours
JOIN TODAY!
Sign up now for 10% off drinks in the Texas Inner Circle Member Lounge! texasperformingarts.org/membership
Photo by Sandy CarsonTexas Performing Arts’ Hollywood Backdrop Collection has garnered international attention in the past few years, as interest has grown in this important art form. Thanks to generous support from donors, the collection will soon be available to view and explore online.
These assets make up the largest and most extensive educational collection of Hollywood motion picture backdrops in the world.
Assistant Professor of Practice Karen Maness and Professor Emeritus Richard Isackes lovingly documented the history of the film backdrops in their award-winning publication, The Art of the Hollywood Backdrop (Regan Arts 2016). A cache of 68 historic paintings was generously donated to Texas Performing Arts by J.C. Backings and the Art Directors Guild Archives’ Backdrop Recovery Project.
The collection includes backings from iconic and critically acclaimed films such as National Velvet (1944), The Sound of Music (1965), Ben Hur (1959) and North by Northwest (1958). Following national coverage of the project on CBS’ Sunday Morning with Jane Pauley in February 2020 and two subsequent exhibitions hosted on the stage of Bass Concert Hall the following year, the Boca Raton Museum of Art opened Art of the Hollywood Backdrop in April 2022. The exhibition has attracted international media coverage, from the Wall Street Journal to the Times of London.
With generous support from Susan & Robert Morse, Texas Performing Arts is now digitizing the collection to make it even more widely available. A new website will launch and will serve as both digital archive and interactive teaching tool.
“It’s an exciting next step.” says Texas Performing Arts’ Executive and Artistic Director
Bob Bursey. “Sharing the collection digitally will allow us to celebrate these masters of illusion and perspective while inspiring the next generation of artists with access to material never before available.”
The website will showcase the backdrops in high-resolution detail, amplifying and preserving the techniques of backdrop painting and restoration pioneered by Hollywood’s uncredited lead scenic artists. Texas Performing Arts has captured direct instruction from Hollywood’s top motion picture scenic artists Michael Denering, Joe Francuz, and Donald MacDonald for the website.
While student training in these lost techniques continues in Texas Performing Arts’ Fabrication Studios, the digital archive will share detailed instruction for future caretakers how to preserve, stabilize and restore these works as the project continues to expand. The digitization of the collection will also help contextualize the work by connecting the backdrops to the iconic films in which they were featured, reaching audiences around the world.
Feb 10, 2023
Bass Concert Hall
Arthur Mitchell
Karel Shook
ARTISTIC DIRECTOR
Virginia Johnson
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Anna Glass
Robert Garland
REHEARSAL DIRECTOR
Juan Carlos Peñuela
Lindsey Donnell
Yinet Fernandez
Alexandra Hutchinson
Daphne Lee
Kamala Saara
Ingrid Silva
Amanda Smith
Alexandra Terry
Delaney Washington
Stephanie Rae Williams
Derek Brockington
Micah Bullard
Lucas Castro
Kouadio Davis
Keenan English
Christopher Charles McDaniel
Sanford Placide
Dylan Santos
David Wright
Dance Theatre of Harlem is deeply grateful for the generous support of our individual and institutional donors. Their support helps to ensure that DTH can continue to bring the best of classical ballet to communities in Harlem and beyond.
Media Sponsors: Austin PBS & KAZI-FM
AllianceBernstein, Alphadyne Foundation, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, Arnhold Foundation, Inc., Art Attack Foundation, Bank of America, BET Networks, Bloomberg LP, Bloomberg Philanthropies, Con Edison, Cornell Family Foundation, Dance/NYC, Davis/Dauray Family Fund, The Jarvis and Constance Doctorow Family Foundation, Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, Ford Foundation, Fortitude Re, Google, Henry and Lucy Moses Fund, Inc., Hobson/Lucas Family Foundation, Howard Gilman foundation, Inc., The Harkness Foundation for Dance, The Dubose & Dorothy Heyward Memorial Fund, The Hyde and Watson Foundation, JP Morgan Chase, The Jockey Hollow Foundation, Inc./Jockey, The Klein Family Foundation, The Reginald F. Lewis Foundation Inc., MAC Cosmetics, Madison Square Garden, The Pierre and Tana Matisse Foundation, Margaret T. Morris Foundation, Masters Capital Management, LLC, Meta, Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation, Morgan Stanley & Co. Incorporated, National Endowment for the Arts, New England Foundation for the Arts, New York State Council on the Arts with support of the Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature, New York City Council District 7, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with City Council, Tatiana Piankova Foundation, Charles H. Revson Foundation, Jerome Robbins Foundation, The Shubert Foundation, William Talbot Hillman Foundation, The Thompson Family Foundation, Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone Development Corporation, Venable Foundation, Inc., Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP, Wells Fargo, Yumiko.
Not even a world-wide pandemic could dim our commitment to Dance Theatre of Harlem cofounder Arthur Mitchell’s belief in the power of art to transform lives and open minds. The 2022/23 season at Dance Theatre of Harlem is a demonstration of that legacy. The DTH Company, School, and arts education program, “Dancing Through Barriers,” look forward to the coming season with delight. Once again, our studios will be filled with young people training in ballet, our community will be engaged by the power of our artistry and the company will be on the road again, carrying forward the important message that the art form of classical ballet belongs to and is for all.
The disruptions of the past two years have been challenging and while we are grateful for the support that poured in from so many, the thing that held us
together was maintaining focus on what is meaningful to us as artists. The social impact of Dance Theatre of Harlem’s national and international touring over the past 53 years is often noted, but it is the art that we produce that is central to our survival.
DTH has always been about creating opportunities outside of the traditional—whether it is the dancers on our stage or the repertoire they perform, ballets by our resident choreographer Robert Garland, George Balanchine, Helen Pickett, Claudia Schreier, Annabelle Lopez Ochoa and William Forsythe reflect the richness of what is possible to express through the human body. The adventure continues. Ready, set, go!
Virginia Johnson Artistic DirectorWorld Premiere October 5th, 2018
Choreography: Annabelle Lopez Ochoa
Music: Les Yeux Noirs, Lisa Gerrard, René Aubry
Costume Design: Mark Zappone
Lighting Design: Les Dickert
February 10th, 7:30pm
Commissioned by New York City Center for the Fall For Dance Festival, the development of Balamouk was supported through 50th anniversary commissioning support provided by the Seattle Theater Group and by the Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation through Dance Theatre of Harlem’s Women Who Move Us Initiative. Support for new dance works at City Center is provided by the Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation and Doris Duke Charitable Foundation.
- Intermission -
(Premiere January 22, 2022, Detroit Opera House)
Choreography by Robert Garland
Costume Design by Pamela Allen-Cummings
Lighting Design by Roma Flowers
February 10, 7:30 pm
“Look Around”
LINDSEY DONNELL KAMALA SAARA INGRID SILVA
DEREK BROCKINGTON CHRISTOPHER CHARLES MCDANIEL DAVID WRIGHT
“You Haven’t Done Nothin’”
DAVID WRIGHT
Lindsey Donnell Kamala Saara Ingrid Silva Derek Brockington Christopher Charles McDaniel
“Heaven Is Ten Zillion Light Years Away”
KAMALA SAARA CHRISTOPHER CHARLES MCDANIEL
Lindsey Donnell Ingrid Silva Derek Brockington David Wright
“Village Ghetto Land”
LINDSEY DONNELL
Kamala Saara Ingrid Silva Derek Brockington Christopher Charles McDaniel David Wright
“Saturn”
INGRID SILVA DEREK BROCKINGTON
Lindsey Donnell Kamala Saara Christopher Charles McDaniel David Wright
“Higher Ground” Company
Music Credits: “Look Around” by Stevie Wonder and Syreeta Wright ©1970; “Heaven Is Ten Zillion Light Years Away” & “You Haven’t Done Nothin’” ©1974, by Stevie Wonder; “Higher Ground” ©1973, by Stevie Wonder; “Saturn” by Michael Sembello and Stevie Wonder ©1975; “Village Ghetto Land” by Gary Byrd and Stevie Wonder ©1976 © Jobete Music Co Inc and Black Bull Music. All rights administered by Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC, 424 Church Street, Suite 1200, Nashville, TN 37219. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
Commissioned by Northrop Auditorium, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN
Special thanks to Stevie Wonder and Tracey Rounds.
- Intermission -
World Premiere January 20, 2023, Dance Theatre of Harlem, Penn Live Arts/Annenberg Center, Philadelphia, PA
Choreography, Stage: William Forsythe
Music: James Blake***
Lighting Design: Brandon Stirling Baker
Costume Design: William Forsythe, Katy A Freeman
Staging & Choreographic Assistance: Jodie Gates, Noah Gelber, Benjamin Peralta.
February 10th, 7:30pm
DEREK BROCKINGTON MICAH BULLARD KOUADIO DAVIS LINDSEY DONNELL
YINET FERNANDEZ ALEXANDRA HUTCHINSON DAPHNE LEE
CHRISTOPHER CHARLES MCDANIEL SANFORD PLACIDE
KAMALA SAARA DYLAN SANTOS INGRID SILVA AMANDA SMITH
DELANEY WASHINGTON DAVID WRIGHT
Blake Works IV (The Barre Project) (2023), a commission for the Dance Theatre of Harlem, is the latest installment in William Forsythe’s continuously evolving work The Barre Project. The work derives its inspiration from the propulsive and rigorously structured songs of composer James Blake, whose work appears primarily in the popular music idiom.
The Barre series began in 2021 at the height of the pandemic as a filmed dance that was streamed to a global audience facing the restrictions on live performance at the time. The live stage version for Dance Theatre of Harlem features newly choreographed sections that highlight the diverse and formidable talents of the ensemble and is a version of the ballet that is unique to this company alone.
***All songs written by James Blake Litherland (PRS) and performed by James Blake
“Buzzard &Kestrel,” published by Universal Music Publishing Group (GMR) and Buzzard and Kestrel LTD (ASCAP). Courtesy of Hessle Audio.
“Lindisfarne I,” published by Universal Music Publishing Group (GMR).
Courtesy of Universal Music Operations Ltd.
“Lullaby for My Insomniac,” published by Sony Smash Hits Music Publishing (GMR). Courtesy of Universal Music Operations Ltd.
“200 Press“, published by Sony/ATV Music Publishing (UK) Limited (GMR). Courtesy of 1-800-Dinosaur.
Originating from The Barre Project (Blake Works II), created and filmed in 2020 for its first broadcast on March 25, 2021, on the CLI Studio Digital Platform www.clistudios.com
Blake Works IV (The Barre Project) for Dance Theatre of Harlem in the 2022/23 season is made possible with support provided by the Penn Live Arts Accelerator Program at the University of Pennsylvania
DEREK BROCKINGTON
Born: Chicago, IL and raised in Holland, MI. Training: Grand Rapids Ballet School, Interlochen Arts Academy, Ballet West and Pennsylvania Ballet Summer Intensives. Professional Experience: Dance Theatre of Harlem (fourth season), Cincinnati Ballet, Grand Rapids Ballet. Repertoire includes works by Claudia Schreier, Robert Garland, Stanton Welch, George Balanchine, Anabelle Lopez Ochoa, and Darrell Grand Moultrie.
MICAH BULLARD
Born: Houston, TX. Training: The Dance Center of Baytown, University of Oklahoma School of Dance (BFA 2019), Jacob’s Pillow
Contemporary Ballet Program, Dance Theatre of Harlem Summer
Intensive, Texas Ballet Theater
Summer Intensive. Professional
Experience: Oklahoma City Ballet, Hartel Dance Group, and Dance Theatre of Harlem (second season). Repertoire includes original works by Amy Hall Garner, Trey McIntyre, Colin Connor, as well as Alejandro Cerrudo’s “Lickety Split,” Merce Cunningham’s “How to Pass, Kick, Fall and Run” and Prince Siegfried in Swan Lake.
Born: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Training: Centro de Dança Rio, City Dance Conservatory, The Washington School of Ballet, Jacob’s Pillow. Professional
experience: Dance Theater of Harlem (first season), Utah Metropolitan Ballet (Principal Artist), The Washington Ballet
(Trainee) and Cia Jovem de Ballet
Dalal Achcar. Repertoire: Annabelle Lopez Ochoa, Jennifer Archibald, Jacqueline Colledge, Alan Hineline, Marius Petipa, Septime Webre, Mimmo Miccolis, Dalal Achcar, Eric Frederic and Andrea Sales.
KOUADIO DAVIS
Born: Oneonta, NY. Training: Holbrook-Wade School of Dance, Fokine Ballet, New York State Summer School of the Arts with Daniel Ulbricht, NYCB. Carolyn Adams. Alvin Ailey, Nutmeg Ballet, Charlotte Ballet, Alonzo King Lines, French Academie of Ballet, Pacific Northwest Ballet, and Springboard Danse Montreal. 2019 Graduate of Ellison Ballet. Awards: Youth America Grand Prix in 2017 and 2018, where he and his partner won second and then first place in the contemporary Pas de Deux category. Professional Experience: Dance Theatre of Harlem (third season).
Born: Midland, TX. Training: A Petite Dance Studio, Midland Festival Ballet under Susan Clark. Education: cum laude graduate of Butler University, degree in Dance Arts Administration and Journalism. Professional Experience: Dance Theatre of Harlem (tenth season), Nashville Ballet (trainee). Repertoire includes works by Robert Garland, Nacho Duato, Ulysses Dove, George Balanchine, Donald Byrd, Elena Kunikova and Dianne McIntyre.
Born: Randallstown, MD. Training: Baltimore School for the Arts, Boston Ballet, and School of
American Ballet. Professional
Experience: Boston Ballet, Cincinnati Ballet, Oregon Ballet Theatre, Carolina Ballet, and Dance Theatre of Harlem (second season). Repertoire includes ballets by Nacho Duato, George Balanchine, William Forsythe, Ulysses Dove, Helen Pickett, Robert Garland, Darrell Grand Moultrie, Val Caniparoli, Alvin Ailey, Septime Webre, Nicolo Fonte, Francesca Harper, Lynn Taylor Corbett.
Born: Mariano’ La Habana, Cuba.
Training: Provincial School of the Arts, National School of Ballet, Ballet Nacional de Cuba. Professional experience: Dance Theatre of Harlem (fifth season), Connecticut Ballet, Ballet Nacional de Cuba. Repertoire includes Sleeping Beauty, The Nutcracker, Swan Lake, Giselle, Coppélia, La Fille mal gardée, Don Quixote and works by George Balanchine, Robert Garland, Christopher Wheeldon, Darrell Grand Moultrie and Dianne McIntyre.
Born: Wilmington, DE. Training: The Washington School of Ballet, Wilmington Academy of Dance, and summer intensives with Alvin Ailey, Alonzo King, Carolina Ballet, Ballet
Chicago, and Nashville Ballet 2. Education: Bachelor of Science in Ballet, Indiana University, Jacobs School of Music. Professional
Experience: Dance Theatre of Harlem (fourth season), Nashville Ballet. Repertoire includes Orange by Stanton Welch; Return and New Bach by Robert Garland; Balamouk by Annabelle Lopez
Ochoa; Harlem on My Mind and
Vessels by Darrell Grand Moultrie; George Balanchine’s Valse Fantasie, Western Symphony, Swan Lake, Concerto Barocco, Divertimento No. 15, Emeralds, Rubies, and Giselle; Paul Vasterling’s Sleeping Beauty; Septime Webre’s and Michael Vernon’s The Nutcracker.
Alexandra is the recipient of The Pierians Foundation Incorporated 2018 Emerging Young Artist Award, Virginia Johnson Scholar, Washington School of Ballet Professional Training Program tuition stipend, 2010, 2011, and 2012.
Rahway, NJ. Training: Rahway Dance Theatre by her late mother
Jay Skeete-Lee, and the Dance Theatre of Harlem School.
Education: BFA in Dance, Ailey/ Fordham University, and MFA from Hollins University. Professional
Experience: Dance Theatre of Harlem (fourth season), Collage Dance Collective, Oakland Ballet, Alvin Ailey II, Black Iris Project. Repertoire includes works by Jessica Lang, Benoit Swan-Pouffer, Nicolo Fonte, Dwight Rhoden, Jennifer Archibald, George Balanchine, Amy Seiwart, Joyce Trisler, and Darrell Moultrie.
Born: East Harlem, NY. Training: Dance Theatre of Harlem School, LaGuardia School of Performing Arts, Ballet Academy East, Boston Ballet, Jacob’s Pillow. Professional Experience: Dance Theatre of Harlem (fifth season), Ballet San Antonio, Los Angeles Ballet. Repertoire includes works by Robert Garland, Ulysses Dove, Darryl Grand Moultrie, Colleen
Neary, Thordal Christensen, George Balanchine, Jiri Kylian, Gerald Arpino, Christopher Stowell and Kitty McNamee. Christopher is an accomplished ballet teacher and DTH Social Media Manager.
Born: Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
Training: Ballet Etudes of South Florida, Manhattan Youth Ballet, The French Académie of Ballet, Nadege Hottier, American Ballet Theatre, Dance Theatre of Harlem, Ballet Austin, Ballet Hispanico, Lines Ballet, and Miami City Ballet.
Professional Experience: Dance Theatre of Harlem (third season), Alberta Ballet in Canada, Ballet West, Charlotte Ballet (formerly NCDT), Ballet Etudes of South Florida, Vorhees Ballet Theatre, Ballet Des Amériques, Fjkdance, Collage Dance Collective, Black Iris Dance Project, Boca Ballet Theatre, Ballet Northwest, Traverse City Dance Project, and Accent Dance. Special Honors: In commemoration of Haitian Flag Day 2018, Sanford partnered with the Consulate General of Haiti in New York to produce UNI, an art collective where he premiered the ballet MAGA. In 2019, Sanford produced Sans-Souci, the second staging in the UNI series and was honored by the Consulate General of Haiti in New York for his work in preserving Haitian culture. Repertoire includes works by George Balanchine, Nacho Duato, Glenn Tetley, Desmond Richardson, Robert Garland, Mark Diamond, Yukicchi Hattori, Wen Wei Wang, Aszure
Born: Los Angeles, CA. Training: Yuri Grigoriev School of Ballet,
School of American Ballet. Professional Experience: Dance Theatre of Harlem (second season). Kamala is a recipient of the Grow Annenberg Fellowship and a full scholarship for the School of American Ballet. She received 1st place Award for Training and the Performance Scholarship at the 2018 Bolshoi Ballet Academy and placed 2nd in the Classical category at the 2016 Youth American Grand Prix Paris, France.
DYLAN SANTOS
Born: São Paulo, Brazil. Training: Centro de Artes Pavilhao D under Ricardo Scheir and Harid Conservatory. Professional experience: Dance Theatre of Harlem (eighth season), Houston Ballet trainee, Orlando Ballet, Joffrey Ballet, Ballet Chicago, and Paris Opera Ballet. Repertoire includes works by George Balanchine, Nacho Duato, Robert Garland, and Ulysses Dove, and Marius Petipa.
INGRID SILVA
Born: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Training: Projeto Dan-cando Para Nao Dancar, Escola de Danca Maria Olenewa, and Centro de Movimento Debora Colker. Education: Universidade da Cidade. Professional experience: Dance Theatre of Harlem (tenth season), Grupo Corpo (apprentice), Dance Theatre of Harlem Ensemble, Dançando Para Não Dançar, Armitage Gone! Dance, and the Francesca Harper Project. Repertoire includes works by Arthur Mitchell, Donald Byrd, George Balanchine, Dianne McIntyre, John Alleyne, Darrel Grand
Moultrie, Francesca Harper, Robert Garland, David Fernandez, Carol Armitage, Deborah Colker, Rodrigo Pederneiras ans Annabelle LopezOcha. In 2017 Silva was the first African Brazilian to be on the cover of Pointe Magazine and appeared on the cover of Vogue Brasil November 2020. She is the Founder of EmpowHerNY & Co Founder of Blacks in Ballet.
Born: Orange County, CA. Training: Charlotte Ballet, SUNY Purchase, Joffrey Ballet School, Anaheim Ballet, Pointe of Grace, Ballet Pacifica. Professional Experience: Dance Theatre of Harlem (fifth season), Charlotte Ballet, New York Theatre Ballet, Black Iris Project. Repertoire includes works by George Balanchine, Mark Diamond, Sasha James, Dwight Rhoden, Alonzo King, Jiri Killian, Dianne McIntyre, and Helen Pickett.
Born: New Canaan, CT. Training: New England Academy of Dance, Ellison Ballet, San Francisco School of Ballet, Jessica Saund, Elena Kunikova, Karin Averty, and Irina Dvorovenko. Professional experience: Ballet West II, Repertoire includes works by Sir Fredrick Aston, George Balanchine, Marius Petipa, and Annabelle Lopez-Ochoa, Alexandra was named one of Dance Spirit Magazine’s 2018 Up and Coming Black Ballerinas.
Born: San Francisco Bay area. Training: Lise la Cour’s LaCademy, The Ailey School/Fordham University, and Jacob’s Pillow
Summer Program 2021 under the direction of Helen Pickett and Milton Myers. Professional Experience: Palm Beach Dance Festival, Dance Theatre of Harlem (second season). Repertoire includes works by Dwight Rhoden, Helen Simoneau, Yusha MarieSorzano, Maurya Kerr, Pedro Ruiz, and Andre Zachery. Delaney is the recipient of the Alvin Ailey Artistic Scholarship.
Born: Salt Lake City, Utah. Training: Dallas Dance Academy with Lyndette Galen and Fiona Fairrie, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, Springboard Danse Montreal, The Juilliard School, Alonzo King’s LINES Ballet, and Houston Ballet Academy. Professional experience: Dance Theatre of Harlem (12th season), The Francesca Harper Project, ARC Dance Seattle, Complexions Contemporary Dance Company, Ballet Black, and Texas Ballet Theatre. Repertoire includes works by Pam Tanowitz, Nacho Duato, Jose Limon, Helen Pickett, Arthur Mitchell, Donald Byrd, George Balanchine, John Alleyne, Dianne McIntyre, Darrel Grand Moultrie, Francesca Harper, Liam Scarlett, Robert Garland, and David Fernandez. Stephanie is the recipient of The Dallas Dance Council’s 2017 Natalie Skelton Award, 2013 Dance Magazine
“On the Rise”, 2006 National Foundation for the Arts Award, 2006 Youth America Grand Prix finalist, Oprah Winfrey Fellowship recipient at the Ailey School, 2004 Texas Commission on the Arts Young Master.
Born: Ft. Polk, Louisiana. Training: Infiniti Performing Arts Center, Indiana Ballet Conservatory, Orlando Ballet School. Professional Experience: Orlando Ballet, Dance Theatre of Harlem (second season).
Repertoire: Jorden Morris’ Moulin Rouge, Val Caniparolis’ Lamberna, Orlando Ballet’s Nutcracker, and Carmina Burana. David was Finalist at Beijing International Ballet and Choreography Competition 2019.
were recorded for broadcast on PBS, network television and cable. Her choreographic credits include the television film Ancient Voices of Children, and works for Goucher College, Dancers Responding to AIDS, the Second Annual Harlem Festival of the Arts, Thelma Hill Performing Arts Center, and Marymount Manhattan College, where she was an adjunct professor.
Virginia Johnson, Artistic Director of Dance Theatre of Harlem, was a founding member and principal dancer with the company for twenty-seven years. Born in Washington, DC, she graduated from the Academy of the Washington School of Ballet and briefly attended the School of the Arts at New York University as a University Scholar before joining DTH in 1969.
Universally recognized as one of the great ballerinas of her generation she is perhaps best known for her performances in the ballets Giselle, A Streetcar Named Desire, and Fall River Legend. During her years with the company, she performed most of the repertoire, with principal roles in Concerto Barocco, Allegro Brillante, Agon, A Streetcar Named Desire, Fall River Legend, Swan Lake, Giselle, Voluntaries, and Les Biches, among others, several of which
While still performing, her interest in journalism led her to Fordham University. After retiring from performing, she received an Independent Artist Grant from The Field that opened doors to arts producing. She attended the School of Visual Arts where she studied drawing, film making and television production before the opportunity to create Pointe Magazine presented itself. She was founding editor-in-chief from 2000-2009. Her honors include a Young Achiever Award from the National Council of Women, Outstanding Young Woman of America, the Dance Magazine Award, a Pen and Brush Achievement Award, the Washington Performing Arts Society’s 2008-2009 Pola Nirenska Lifetime Achievement Award, the 2009 Martha Hill Fund Mid-Career Award and honorary doctorates from Cornish College of the Arts and Juilliard. She is an honorary member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority and The Society, Inc. In February 2016 she was honored by First Lady Michelle Obama at the White house for her contribution to the field of dance. In 2018 she held the Brackett Visiting Artist Chair at the University of Oklahoma and is the recipient of the Mary Day Award from the Washington Ballet and the
2019 CORPS de Ballet International Lifetime Achievement Award. In 2020 she was presented with a medal of honor from the Actor’s Fund. She serves on the Advisory Board of The Center for Ballet and the Arts at NYU, and Dance NYC and serves on the Board of Works & Process.
performances in a broad spectrum of roles. Upon learning of the death of Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and with financial assistance from Mrs. Alva B. Gimbel, the Ford Foundation and his own savings, Mr. Mitchell founded Dance Theatre of Harlem with his mentor and ballet instructor Karel Shook.
Arthur Mitchell is known around the world for creating and sustaining the Dance Theatre of Harlem, the internationally acclaimed ballet company he co-founded with Karel Shook in 1969. Following a brilliant career as a principal artist with the New York City Ballet, Mr. Mitchell dedicated his life to changing perceptions and advancing the art form of ballet through the first permanently established African American and racially diverse ballet company.
Born in New York City in 1934, Mr. Mitchell began his dance training at New York City’s High School of the Performing Arts, where he won the coveted annual dance award and subsequently a full scholarship to the School of American Ballet. In 1955, he became the first male African American to become a permanent member of a major ballet company when he joined New York City Ballet. Mr. Mitchell rose quickly to the rank of Principal Dancer during his fifteen-year career with New York City Ballet and electrified audiences with his
With an illustrious career that spanned over fifty years, Mr. Mitchell was the recipient of the Kennedy Center Honors, a National Medal of the Arts, a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship, the New York Living Landmark Award, the Handel Medallion, the NAACP Image Award, and more than a dozen honorary degrees.
Karel Shook played a key role as teacher and mentor to African American dance artists in New York in the 1950s. In addition to cofounding Dance Theatre of Harlem with Arthur Mitchell in 1969, he also was a ballet master, choreographer, and author. Born in 1920, Mr. Shook was a native of Renton, Washington. Encouraged to study ballet, at age 13 he was a protégé of Nellie Cornish and received a scholarship to the Cornish School of Allied Arts in Seattle. While his performance career was brief, he appeared on Broadway and danced with the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo and New York City Ballet. Mr. Shook’s brief performance career led to teaching and choreographing, mainly in Europe but also in New York. In the early 50s he opened Studio Arts, one of the few dance studios in the city where African Americans could study ballet.
Among his students were Carmen de Lavallade, Pearl Primus, Geoffrey Holder, Louis Johnson, Alvin Ailey, and Arthur Mitchell, who first came to him at age 17. Mr. Shook left New York in 1959 to become the ballet master of the Dutch National Ballet, where he was when his former student, Arthur Mitchell, asked him to return to New York to help create the Dance Theatre of Harlem. Mr. Shook was an advocate of the universality of classical ballet. His book, Elements of Classical Ballet explores the development of classical ballet in such countries across the globe as China, Turkey, Iran, Japan, Cuba, and Mexico. In 1980 he was awarded the United States Presidential Award for “Excellence and Dedication in Education.”
His commercial work has included music videos, commercials, and short films, including the children’s television show Sesame Street, a Nike commercial featuring New York Yankee Derek Jeter, the NAACP Image Awards, a short film for designer Donna Karan, and the “Charmin Cha-Cha” for Proctor and Gamble. Mr. Garland holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree from the Juilliard School in New York City.
“Robert Garland was a member of the Dance Theatre of Harlem Company achieving the rank of principal dancer. After creating a work for the DTH School Ensemble, Arthur Mitchell invited Robert Garland to create a work for The Dance Theatre of Harlem Company and appointed him the organization’s first Resident Choreographer. He is Director of the DTH school.
In addition to choreographing several ballets for DTH, Mr. Garland has also created works for New York City Ballet, Britain’s Royal Ballet, Oakland Ballet, and many others.
A native of Cali, Colombia, Juan Carlos Peñuela began dancing at the age of 12 with Incolballet, a ballet-centered secondary school. After graduation, Mr. Peñuela was invited by Artistic Director, Gloria Castro to join Ballet de Cali, Colombia’s National Company as a soloist, where he performed in a variety of leading roles in contemporary works as well as classical pieces. Mr. Peñuela has danced with Ballet Arizona, Dance Theater of Harlem, Pennsylvania Ballet, Maximum Dance Ballet Gamonet, Chamber Dance Project and Ballet NY.
Juan Carlos has served as guest Ballet Master and Repetitur with Compania Colombiana de BalletIncolballet in Colombia, Chamber Dance Project, Lexington Ballet, The Ajkun Ballet Theatre in New York City, Alvin Ailey’s American Dance Theatre, Ena Ballet Company in Japan & Earl Mosley’s Institute
of the Arts International Summer Intensive in Kent, CT. In 2011, he was invited to Malaysia where he taught at their international festival, restaged Don Quixote, and coached artists from all over the world for their International Gala of the Stars.
From 2014 to 2018 Juan Carlos held the position of Ballet Master with Ballet Hispanico company in New York City as well Senior Ballet Teacher for the School of Dance. He has served as a faculty member at Joffrey Ballet School, Marymount Manhattan Collage, Ballet Academy East in New York city, Alvin Ailey, a guest teacher at The Juilliard School and Dance Theatre of Harlem’s professional company.
Mr. Penuela holds a Romana’s Pilates certification and teaches Pilates designed for dancers. In 2011 he became certified in The American Ballet Theatre National Training Curriculum. During the summer of 2013 he was invited to teach in Italy as a faculty member of Alvin Ailey School. Since 2017 has been teaching at Central Pennsylvania Youth Ballet summer program. In 2014 and 2017 he attended the CPYB teacher’s workshop and 2017 was featured in the August edition of Dance Teacher Magazine. For the last 7 years he has been invited to Panama City as guest teacher and as adjudicator to Danza Activa Competition and Ecuador Danza Ciad competition.
Anna has been involved in the performing arts as both an artist and arts administrator for over twenty years. She produced Carmen de Lavallade’s solo show, As I Remember It, an intimate portrait of this legendary artist. Anna previously served as the Managing Director of 651 ARTS, a presenting/ producing arts organization dedicated to celebrating contemporary performing arts of the African Diaspora. While at 651 ARTS, she co-produced numerous projects, including the highly regarded national tour of FLY: Five First Ladies of Dance.
Anna has served as a consultant providing strategic planning and fundraising guidance to various non-profit arts organizations, including Urban Bush Women and the Weeksville Heritage Center. She currently serves on the board of the Association of Performing Arts Presenters. She has served as a Hub Site for the New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project grant program. After receiving her Juris Doctor from the University of Dayton School of Law, Anna became the Artist Representative for the Dayton Contemporary Dance Company, a company she performed with for three years (DCDC2). She is a licensed attorney in the State of New York and lives in Harlem with her husband and daughter.
Board of Directors
Ackneil M. Muldrow III, Chairman
Leslie Wims Morris, Vice-Chairman
Martino R. Moore, Secretary
Nancy Pforzheimer Aronson
Kevin M. Cofsky
Richard E. Constable III
Molly Hall
Isabel Kallman
Sharon Madison
Erika Munro Kennerly
Tangela Richter
Scott Simpson
Bonita Stewart
Peter Sung
China White
Administrative Staff
Virginia Johnson, Artistic Director
Anna Glass, Executive Director
Dance Theatre of Harlem National Advisory Board
Dr. Ruby Herd
Leontyne Price
Alex Radin
Morleen Rouse
Jackie Rush
Kerry E. Schaeffner
Edward I. Tishelman, Esq.
Ben Vereen
Lena Horne *
Jessye Norman*
Judith Peabody
Cicely Tyson*
Reverend Dr. Calvin O. Butts III*
*In Memorium
Jordan Oldham, Events & Venues Operations Manager
Ebonie C. Pittman, Sr. Director of Development
Sharon Duncan, Director of Individual Giving
Kristine Liwag, Director of Institutional Giving
Seth Bauer, Manager of Individual Giving
Jessica Frazier, Development Associate
Keyana K. Patterson, Marketing Manager
Destiny Rosa, Marketing Assistant
Billy Zavelson, General Press Representative
Alexandra Hutchinson, Dereck Brockington, Social Media Coordinators
Marc Martin, Sr. Director of Finance & Administration
Stephen Foster, Manager of Finance and Administration
Hero Doucas, Human Resources Manager
Andrea Lujan, Kenneth Thomas, Building Operations
Alberto Recinos, Marco Recinos, Maintenance
Dance Theatre of Harlem, Inc. Everett Center for the Performing Arts 466 West 152nd Street | New York, NY 10031-1814 (212) 690-2800 | (212) 690-8736 fax www.dancetheatreofharlem.org
.
Company Staff
Resident Choreographer
Rehearsal Director
Interim General & Company Manager
Production Stage Manager
Lighting Supervisor
Wardrobe Supervisor
Assistant Stage Manager
Manager of Booking & Touring Productions
Physical Therapy & Wellness
Dance Theatre of Harlem School & Community Programs
Director
Associate Director Lower/Upper School
Associate Director, Tendu Program
Student Affairs Officer
Accountant
Dancing Through Barriers Liaison
Robert Garland
Juan Carlos Peñuela
Melinda Bloom
Alexandra Tenenbaum
Andrea Sala
Katy Freeman
Alicia Thompson
Derrick McBride
Alison Deleget, Joshua Honrado, Molly McEvoy
Harkness Center for Dance Injuries
Robert Garland
Augustus van Heerden
Rachel Sekyi
Karen Farnum-Williams
Najeree Wallace
Rachael Davidson
Ingrid Silva, Dylan Santos and Choong Hoon Lee in Return Photo by Rachel Neville.Feb 11, 2023
Bass Concert Hall
Cécile McLorin Salvant – Voice
Sullivan Fortner – Piano
Marvin Sewell – Guitars
Alexa Tarantino – Flutes
Yasushi Nakamura – Bass
Keita Ogawa - Percussion
Media Sponsors: Austin PBS & KUTX-FM
Cécile McLorin Salvant, is a composer, singer, and visual artist. The late Jessye Norman described Salvant as “a unique voice supported by an intelligence and full-fledged musicality, which light up every note she sings.” Salvant has developed a passion for storytelling and finding the connections between vaudeville, blues, theater, jazz, baroque and folkloric music. Salvant is an eclectic curator, unearthing rarely recorded, forgotten songs with strong narratives, interesting power dynamics, unexpected twists, and humor.
Salvant won the Thelonious Monk competition in 2010. She has received three consecutive Grammy Awards for Best Jazz Vocal Album for The Window, Dreams and Daggers, and For One To Love, and was nominated for the award in 2014 for her album WomanChild. In 2020, Salvant received the MacArthur fellowship and the Doris Duke Artist Award. Nonesuch Records released Ghost Song in March 2022.
Born and raised in Miami, Florida, of a French mother and Haitian father, she started classical piano studies at 5, sang in a children’s choir at 8, and started classical voice lessons as a teenager.
Salvant received a bachelor’s in French law from the Université Pierre-Mendes France in Grenoble while also studying baroque music and jazz at the Darius Milhaud Music Conservatory in Aix-enProvence, France.
Salvant’s latest work, Ogresse, is a musical fable in the form of a cantata that blends genres (folk, baroque, jazz, country). Salvant wrote the story, lyrics, and music. It is arranged by Darcy James Argue for a thirteen-piece orchestra of multi-instrumentalists. Ogresse, both a biomythography and an homage to the Erzulie (as painted by Gerard Fortune) and Sara Baartman, explores fetishism, hunger, diaspora, cycles of appropriation, lies, othering, and ecology. It is in development to become an animated feature-length film, which Salvant will direct.
Salvant makes large-scale textile drawings. Her visual art can now be found at Picture Room in Brooklyn, New York.
Feb 25, 2023
McCullough Theatre
Texas Performing Arts
Smart Art for Kids presents
A Wonderful Show
A Terrible Monster — Inspired by the books of Mo Willems
CAST
Lily Emerson Narrator, Character Voices, Vocals
Lindsey Noel Whiting Leonardo, Voice and Puppeteer
Julia Miller Sam Puppeteer
Shay Turnage Kerry Puppeteer
Texas Performing Arts’ Smart Art for Kids is generously supported by the Carolyn Bartlett Charitable Foundation.
Commissioned by The Kennedy Center for Performing Arts with additional commissioning support from Utah Presents
Special Thanks to David Kilpatrick, Chicago Childrens Theater and Laura Colby
Media Sponsor: Do512 Family
Sarah Fornace
Director
Manual Cinema Adaptation
Ben Kauffman and Kyle Vegter
Music, Lyrics & Sound Design
Drew Dir
2D Puppet Design
Lizi Breit
Hand & Rod Puppet Design
Mieka Van der Ploeg
Costume & Wig Design
Trey Brazeal with Nick Chamernik
Lighting Design
Megan Alrutz
Dramaturg
Maydi Díaz
Stage Manager
Video Mixing
Live Sound Effects
Leonardo is a terrible monster. He tries so hard to be scary, but he just... isn’t. Then Leonardo finds Sam, the most scaredy-cat kid in the world. Will Leonardo finally get to scare the tuna salad out of someone? Or will it be the start of an unlikely friendship? The plot thickens when this pair meets Kerry and Frankenthaler, an even scaredier-cat and her monster friend. Kerry and Sam need to make a big decision: will they just be scaredy cats or can they become friends?
Leonardo! A Wonderful Show About a Terrible Monster is inspired by two books by author Mo Willems: Leonardo, the Terrible Monster and Sam, the Most Scaredy-Cat Kid in the Whole World. The production was created by Manual Cinema, a Chicago-based performance collective specializing in cinematic shadow puppetry and original music. Leonardo! was originally commissioned by the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts through the Education Artist-inResidency of Mo Willems. Originally slated to open in early 2021, the world premiere production was canceled due to the pandemic; instead, Manual Cinema and the Kennedy Center pivoted to create Leo & Sam, an online paper-puppet movie inspired by Mo’s books, which was streamed on demand to families and schools through the Kennedy Center’s Digital Stage. Last year—thanks to the support
of author Mo Willems and the original Kennedy Center team—the live production received its longawaited debut in Chicago at the Chicago Children’s Theatre before moving to the New Victory Theater for its New York premiere.
Leonardo! A Wonderful Show About a Terrible Monster uses hundreds of illustrated paper puppets, book pages, twodimensional props, furry monster puppets and songs to bring Mo’s books to life. Manual Cinema wanted to recreate the experience of holding one of Mo’s book pages, which are big, bold, colorful, and full of visual rhythm, with a playful use of scale. Like all Manual Cinema productions, you’re invited to watch the big screen like a traditional movie, or to watch the artists below as they create the story in real time. (There is no wrong way to watch the show!)
Manual Cinema is an Emmy Award winning performance collective, design studio, and film/video production company founded in 2010 by Drew Dir, Sarah Fornace, Ben Kauffman, Julia Miller, and Kyle Vegter. Manual Cinema combines handmade shadow puppetry, cinematic techniques, and innovative sound and music to create immersive stories for stage and screen.
Using vintage overhead projectors, multiple screens, puppets, actors, live feed cameras, multi-channel sound design, and a live music ensemble, Manual Cinema transforms the experience
of attending the cinema and imbues it with liveness, ingenuity, and theatricality. The company was awarded an Emmy in 2017 for The Forger, a video created for The New York Times and named Chicago Artists of the Year in 2018 by the Chicago Tribune. In 2020 they were included in 50 of Chicago theater Rising Stars and Storefront Stalwarts (Newcity). Their shadow puppet animations were featured in the 2021 film remake of Candyman, directed by Nia DaCosta and produced by Jordan Peele’s Monkeypaw Productions. In 2022 they premiered their newest live work, Leonardo! A Wonderful Show About A Terrible Monster, an adaptation of two books by celebrated children’s author Mo Willems. Leonardo is now touring the globe and had its Edinburgh Fringe Festival debut in August, 2022.
Maydi Díaz (Stage Manager, Video Mixing & Live Sound Effects) is a Chicago based stage manager. Since completing a BA in Arts Management from Columbia College Chicago and a MA in Theatre Production from the National University of Ireland Galway, Maydi has worked on multiple areas of technical theater. Her stage management credits include Caucasian Chalk Circle (Mick Lally Theatre), Back In The Day (UrbanTheater Company), The Delicate Tears of the Waning Moon and La Peor de Todas (Water People Theater), Kiev (Aguijón Theater Co), and various shows with PlayMaker’s
Laboratory. When she’s not at the theater, you can find Maydi folk dancing or doing calligraphy.
Lily Emerson (Narrator, Musician) is a multifaceted performer, producer, collaborator, and all-around creative weirdo. Lily is the co-creator of Adventure Sandwich, a Chicago-based group that produces family-friendly video, music, live performances and events. She served as the Artistic Director of Opera-Matic, an interdisciplinary arts organization that produces participatory art experiences in the parks, from 2018-2020. She is also the founder of Lucid Street Theatre, a performance collective that created original works from 2007-2011. Lily has performed throughout the US, Belarus, the Czech Republic, and France, and has been recognized with various awards and residencies, including the Lisa Dershin LinkUP Residency, the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum’s Artist in Residence, and the Chicago Digital Media Production Fund. More information about Lily can be found at creative-weirdo.com.
Julia Miller (Co-Artistic Director, Sam) is a director, puppeteer, and puppet designer. With Manual Cinema she has directed Mementos Mori and The End of TV as well as created original roles in Frankenstein (The Creature/ Elizabeth), Ada/Ava (Ada), Lula del Ray (Lula’s Mother), The Magic City (Helen), and Hansel und Gretel (Hansel). In Chicago, she has worked as a performer and puppeteer with Redmoon Theatre
and Blair Thomas and Co. She spent several years training in devised theatre, clown and mask with Double Edge Theatre, Carlos García Estevez and at the Accademia dell’Arte in Arezzo, Italy.
Sharina Latrice Turnage (Kerry) is from the sensational Southside of Chicago. Recent credits include: Mementos Mori, The End of TV, and No Blue Memories (Manual Cinema), The Silence in Harrow House (Rough House Theater) The American Revolution (Theater Unspeakable), and Los Milagros (Free Street Theater). Sharaina has researched and performed theater historical done by slaves called “Du” theater in Suriname, South America and was amongst one of the first actors to perform “Du” theater in the United States. Sharaina received her B.A. at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville where past credits include: Mayme (Intimate Apparel), LaWanda/Topsy Washington/ Normal Jean (The Colored Museum), and Bernice (Servy N Bernice 4ever). Sharaina thanks her family and close friends for the constant support. “The greatest pleasure in life is DOING what people say you CANNOT do.”
Lindsey Noel Whiting is a Chicagobased performer and teaching artist. Her theatrical credits include Lookingglass Alice, Mr. & Mrs. Pennyworth, and The Great Fire at Lookingglass Theatre, Christmas Carol and Dracula at Actors Theatre of Louisville, The Snow Queen at Victory Gardens, and The Year I Didn’t Go to School with Chicago
Children’s Theatre. She has also appeared in numerous shows with Redmoon Theatre, including the world premier of The Cabinet and Once Upon a Time. Additionally, Lindsey is an Associate Artist with The Actor’s Gymnasiums where she has performed in over ten original circus productions.
Mo Willems is an author, illustrator, animator, playwright, and the inaugural Kennedy Center Education Artist-in-Residence, where he collaborates in creating fun new stuff involving classical music, opera, comedy concerts, dance, painting, and digital works with the National Symphony Orchestra, Ben Folds, Yo-Yo Ma, and others.
Willems is best known for his #1 New York Times bestselling picture books, which have been awarded three Caldecott Honors (Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus!, Knuffle Bunny, Knuffle Bunny Too), two Theodor Geisel Medals, and five Geisel Honors (The Elephant & Piggie series).
Mo’s art has been exhibited around the world, including major solo retrospectives at the High Museum (Atlanta) and the New-York Historical Society (NYC). Over the last decade, Willems has become the most produced playwright of Theater for Young Audiences in America, having written or cowritten four musicals based on his books.
He began his career as a writer and animator on PBS’ Sesame Street, where he garnered six Emmy Awards (writing). Other television work includes two series
on Cartoon Network: Sheep in the Big City (creator + head writer) and Codename: Kids Next Door (head writer). Mo is creating new TV projects for HBOMax, where his live action comedy special Don’t Let the Pigeon Do Storytime! currently streams.
His papers reside at Yale University’s Beinecke Library.
Bob Bursey
Executive and Artistic Director
Bianca Hooi
Assistant to the Executive and Artistic Director
B USINESS OFFICE
Robert Cross General Manager
Kristi Lampi
Associate Director, Business Operations
Leigh Remeny
Business Operations Manager
DEVELOPMENT
Anna Langdell Director of Development
Amy Burgar
Associate Director, Development
Miguel Robles Development Associate
EDUCATION & ENGAGEMENT
Tim Rogers Director of Education and Engagement
Brenda Simms
Program Coordinator, Education & Curriculum Development
FABRICATION & ACADEMIC PRODUCTION
Jeff Grapko
Director of Fabrication and Academic Production
Scott Bussey
Facility Manager and Senior Technical Director
J. E. Johnson
Associate Director, Fabrication
Karen Maness
Associate Director, Fabrication
Jason Huerta
Operations Manager, Fabrication
David Tolin
Project Manager, Fabrication
Carolyn Hardin
Properties Manager
Hank Schwemmer Lead Fabricator
Ashton Bennett Murphy Project Specialist, Fabrication
MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS
Phil Rosenthal Director of Marketing and Communications
Brady Dyer
Associate Director, Communications
Lizzie Choffel Cantu
Senior Graphic Designer
Erica De Leon
Marketing Specialist, Digital Media
Romina Jara
Marketing Manager
PRODUCTION
Jim Larkin
Director of Production
Blake Addyson
Production Supervisor
Kat Carson
Production Supervisor
Travis Perrin
Staging and Rigging Supervisor
Sarah Cantu
Master Electrician
Michael Shanks
Assistant Lighting Supervisor
Drew Millay
Audio Video Supervisor
Chris Braudt
Assistant Audio Video Supervisor
PROGRAMS & EVENTS
Eleanor Stefano
Associate Director, Booking and Sales
Amber Goodspeed
Associate Director, Event Management
Ellie Holm
Event Manager
TICKETING & GUEST EXPERIENCE
Tara Vela
Director of Ticketing and Guest Services
Amanda Adams
Associate Director, Guest Services
Shade Oyegbola
Associate Director, Ticketing
Meredith Delay
Patron Services Manager
Dianne Whitehair
Ticketing Systems Manager
Basil Montemayor
Ticketing Manager
Texas Performing Arts is also proud to acknowledge the hundreds of part-time and volunteer staff who play a critical role in presenting our annual season of world-class performing arts events to the Austin community.
Dina Black
Virginia Bosman
Margaret Byron
Nancy Carrales
Sheri Dildy
Janine Dos Remedios
Tony C Garcia
Sam Hallam
Leslie Hawkins
Carlos Hernandez-Heine
Olga Kasma-Carnes
Charlotte Klein
Tamara Klindt
Sharon Kojzarek
Eric Lee
Lara Miller
Mad Poarch
Kimberly Reaves
Jessica Reed
Lee Rodgers
Mary Ruiz
Micah Sall
Alina Almaraz
Leah Austin
Nahla Beltran
Sarah Bhalla
Zoe Bihan
Cassiy Bivens
Ezra-Rose Bolender
Mathaly Carranza
Ciara Casarez
Benjamin Cervantes
Demian Chavez
Shivani Chidambaram
Kathyrn Clark
Audrey Clay
Bridgette Clifford
Maria Dalton
Kaila Delafance
Vio Dorantes
Melissa Elkins
Sarah Elliot
Laine Farber
Carla Garcia
Indigo Giles
Isabelle Gilmore
Gabriel Gomez-Reyes
Trinity Gordon
Alisse Guerra
Joshua Hale
Samuel Hallam
Catherine Heeman
Faith Hilchey
Isabella Hollis
Ari Jamison
Victoria Jefferson
Nereida Jimenez
Haley Johnson
Bindi Kaplan
Lucy Kulzick
Abigail Lantis
Austin Luchak
Gilbert Martinez
Angela Mata
Jonah Maughan
Elias Merlo
Eliza Moldawer
Samantha Moles
Genevieve MonterrosoSyevens
Aria Morgan
Lauren Mural
Hannah Nelson
Gracie Sanders
Hasina Shah
Andrea R Stanfill Castro
Debra Thomas
Kristine Tydlacka
Leah Waheed
Marty Watson
Tonya Woods
Sally Zukonik
Braden Newlun
Lanna Nguyen
Benjamin Nunn
Samuel Oladejo
Humberto Ortega
Leila Rabah
Morgan Randall
Zackary Reed
Bryce Riggle
Natalia Rodenzo
Hayley “Lee” Rodgers
Sabrie Rodriguez
Daniel Ruiz Bustos
Victoria Salazar
Simon Salinas
Hasina Shah
Lance, Shook
Matthew Smith
Nguyen Tang
Jeffrey Tran
Michelle Upham
Isabel Velasquez
Sydney Villaruel
Rylee Vines
Julia Yelvington
Jacob Zamarripa
The Texas Performing Arts Leadership Board is a group of volunteer leaders in the arts, business, and philanthropy. The Board is dedicated to expanding Texas Performing Arts’ world-class programming, positioning the organization as an international leader in the performing arts, and strengthening the bond between the performing arts and the communities we serve.
Board Members
Brian Haley, Chair
Carly Christopher
Jaime Davila
Tamara Dorrance
Dennis Eakin
Deborah Green
Michael Herman
Steve Kahng
Nancy & Angus Littlejohn
Chris Mattsson
Lauren Reid
Marc Seriff
Lisa B. Thompson
Texas Performing Arts is a nonprofit supported by generous patrons and donors. We extend a special thank you to the following major supporters:*
$100,000+ Anonymous
Carly & Clayton Christopher
William & Anita Cochran
Dennis Eakin
Deborah Green and Clayton Aynesworth
Caroline & Brian Haley H-E-B Tournament of Champions
Abbey & Mike Herman
Steve Kahng
Angus & Nancy Littlejohn
Julia Marsden
Chris Mattsson
Susan & Robert Morse
Marc & Carolyn Seriff
St. David's Healthcare Texas Capital Bank Tocker Foundation
$50,000–99,999
Carolyn Rice Bartlett Charitable Foundation
Special gratitude to donors who have established endowments at Texas Performing Arts to provide long-term funding for mission-driven projects and programs:
Alex and Dee Massad Endowment Fund Arts Education Endowment
Joann and Gaylord Jentz Endowment for Student Engagement
Kathy Panoff Texas Performing Arts Student Engagement Endowment
Nancy Lee and Perry R. Bass Concert Hall Endowment
William & Anita Cochran Endowment for Performing Arts Access & Education
Phillip Auth Endowed Dance Fund for Texas Performing Arts
Performing Arts Center Endowment for Performing Excellence
Robert L. Tocker Endowed Excellence Fund for Student Volunteerism
Topfer Endowment for Performing Arts Production
Z. T. Scott Family Endowment for the Performing Arts
*Gifts pledged or received Sep 1, 2021 through Dec 1, 2022
Texas Performing Arts gratefully acknowledges the financial support of our members. Each year, members help fund robust education and engagement initiatives, affordable student tickets, and critical student employment opportunities that make Texas Performing Arts so much more than what you see on our stages.
BENEFACTOR’S CIRCLE
$10,000+ ChemCentric *
Julie and Steve Avery
Joe Batson
Jeff and Katie Berkaw
Dianne and Robert Brode
Virginia and Gilbert Burciaga
Dennis Eakin Kia *
Joanne Guariglia
Gretchen and Lance Kroesch
Julia Marsden
Mary G. Yancy
PRODUCER’S CIRCLE
$3,000–9,999
Anonymous
Drs. Lynn Azuma and Brian Hall
Deepika and Somdipta Basu Roy
Debra Bawcom
Renee Butler and Kay Stowell
Lee Carnes
Edwina P. Carrington
Suzanne and Bill Childs
Colleen Clark
John Coers
Ronda & John Cullen
Legacy Deo
Aubrey and Bobby Epstein
Jim Ferguson and Art Sansone
Frost Bank *
Jorge Garcia
Phil and Lisa Gilbert
Brian Gleason
Brian Hampton
Lisa Harris
Gladys M. Heavilin
Mary Ann and Andrew Heller
Frank N Ikard Jr
Kerry Keller
Kyongmee Kim
Chris and Melissa Knox
Kelley Knutson and Carol Walsh-Knutson
Cathy and James Kratz
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Loftus
Sue and Gary Lowe
Mary and Lynn Moak
Dec 1, 2022
We regret that limited space does not allow us to list every member. For information on ways to give, please visit texasperformingarts.org/ membership, call the membership office at 512.232.8567, or email us at support@texasperformingarts.org.
*Corporate Circle members
Kari Nations and Michael Gibertini
Jacqueline and Shawn O’Farrell
Wayne Orchid
Janis and Joe Pinnelli
Alicia Pounds
Javier Prado and Family
Debbie and Jim Ramsey
Gina and Don Reese
Chuck Ross and Brian Hencey
Michael Regester
Kenneth Sandoval
Syd Sharples
Robyn and Bret Siers
Laura and David Starks
Shari and Eric Stein
Carole Tower and Matthew St. Louis
Louann and Larry Temple
Claudia and Bill Wilson
Annie Zucker and Michael Regester
$1,500–2,999
Mandy and Heather Andress
Bonnie L. Bain
Addison, Sydney, Kori, and David Baker
Carolyn R. Bartlett
Becky Beaver
Carolyn and Andrew Birge
Grizelda and Tim Black
Casey Blass and Lee Manford
Tahra and Michael Boatright
Kara and Shelby Brown
Peggy and Gary Brown
Kimberly Brown
Shellie and Martin Campos
Barbara Cappa
Kelli and John Carlton
Martha Carr
Carol and Shannon Casey
Sue and Kevin Cloud
Anita and William Cochran
Niccolo and Natasha De Masi
Margaret Denena and Cliff Knowles
Ken Dockser
Susan and David Donaldson
Lyzz Donelson
Barbara Ellis and Alex McAlmon
Kevin Espenlaub and John Hampton
Laura L. Estes and Joyce A. Lauck
Carol and Clint Fletcher
Pamela and David Frager
Sandra Freed
Kelli Furrer
Susan Gammill
Nancy Gary and Ruth Cude
Cheryl and
R. James George, Jr.
Susan and Barry Goodman
Melissa and Rick Gorskie
Karen and Rowland
Greenwade
Sven Griffin
Cheri Gross
Juan M. Guerrero, M.D.
Jeffery Hammerberg
Jennifer and Randall Harris
Gunnar Hellekson
Anne and Thomas Hilbert
David Honeycutt
Amy and Jeffrey Hubert
Jeanine Hudson
Rob Ignatowski and Daniel Pacheco
Admiral and Mrs. B. R. Inman
Victoria Johnson
Gary C. Johnson
Kristie Johnston
Helen Johnston
Maxx Judd and Donn Gauger
K Friese & Associates*
Heather King
Betsy and Matt Kirksey
Sheila Kothmann
Loree and Burney LaChance
Calvin and Donna Lee
Sue and Larry Lewellyn
Mr. and Mrs. George F. Littlejohn
Dracos Locario
Jennifer and Christian Loew
Yadira and Delfino Lorenzo
Peggy Manning
Art Markman
Leslie and Charles Martinez
Richard McCathron
Alexandra and Tom McKeone
Ford McTee
Christine Messina
Jennifer and Jim Misko
Melissa Moloney and Chris Walk
Brenda and John Mosher
Miriam and Jim Mulva
Nall Family
Meri and Don Nelson
Marcia Nelson
Cathy Oliver
OroSolutions *
Terri Pascoe
Connie and Samuel Pate
Michele and Roy Peck
Shari and John Pflueger
Machelle Pharr
Liz and Jon Phelan
Leslie Powell
Sara and Dick Rathgeber
Elinor and Edwin Reese
Richie & Gueringer P.C. *
Alec Rhodes
Alyssa Russell
Susan Schaffer
Steve Schaffer
Nina and Frank Seely
Vijay Sitaram
Aurigo Software Technologies *
Balaji Sreenivasan
Sid Steadman
Lorri Stevenson
Robert Stiles
Bruce Stuckman
Peter and Joan Swartz
Caroline Tang
Caroline, Olivia, and John Taylor
John E. Thompson
Heather and Jeffrey Tramonte
Jonathan Tyner
Erin Vander Leest and Tom Pyle
Sara-Jane and Daniel Watson
Susan and Chris Wilson with Bonita Grumme
Dr. Lucas Wong and Dr. Lisa Go
$600–1,499
Anonymous (8)
Cynthia Abel
Amy Adame
Dwain Aidala
Mark Aitala
Emily Allen and Ron Altizer
Terry Amacher
Page and Neal Amador
Brian Amato
Joann Anderson
Joe Annis
Sandy and Richard Apperley
Christopher Arboleda and Jared Ellis
Cecelia Arvallo
Tony Aventa
Donna and Manuel Ayala
The Ballon Family
Billy Bambrey
Jana and Barry Bandera
Naomi Banks Miller
Elisa Barnes
Joshua Becker
Dr. Steven A. Beebe
James Benson
April Berman
Jay Bhattacharyya
Carolyn and Jon Bible
Denis Blake
Stephanie and Michael Blanck
Amy Bodin
Dave and Nancy Bourell
Robert Bracewell
Steve and Jen Braud
Brook and Gerald Broesche
Janice and Charlie Brown
Scott Brown and Cheri Lafrinea
Christy and William K. Browning
Robert Bush
Robert Butchofsky
Josie and Jim Caballero
Sam Caire
Kelly Canavan
Ms. Susie Capozza
Min Choe
Joann Cocoros
Sharon and Eric Cohan
Barbara Colley
Sarah Compton
Jeanette Cortinas
Mary Crouch
Jennifer and James Cuddeback
Justin D’Abadie
Elaine Daigle
Wilma Dankovich
Lorraine and John Davis
Nhu and Randall DeBastiani
Courtney and Adam Debower
Lisa and Paul Delacruz
Brad Diemer
Kathleen Dignan
Tracy DiLeo
Lucy Ditmore
Jennifer Dixon
Glenn and Britta Dukes
Maria Dwyer
Susan and David Eckelkamp
Michael L. Edwards
James Elacqua
Sheila Ellwood
Reva Enzminger
Jane W. Fountain
Drs. Donald and April Fox
Vivian and James Froncek
Katina and Matthew Gase
Jon and Joanna Geld
Breanna Giannoules
Sharon and Richard Gibbons
Glenn and Nancy Gilkey
Laura and John Gill
Danny and Harriet Gleason
Craig and Becky Griffin
Jana and John Grimes
Martin Grygar and Travis Maese
Dr. Suchitra Gururaj and Joe Carey
Maria Gutierrez and Peter Nutson
Tizzle Bizzle Hallock
Cindy and John Hanly
Amy and Peter Hannan
Darcy and Rick Hardy Family
Laura Harvey
Jane Hatter
Lynda Haynes
John Hernandez
James Hester
Marjorie and David Hunter
Victoria Husband
Jennifer Ice
Kathleen and Jim Jardine
Robert Johnson
Anita and Ralph Jones
Susanna and Michael Khazhinsky
Hugh King
Susan and Richard Klusmann
Jan and Orion Knox
Aileen Krassner Kiehl and Michael Kiehl
John Kump
Dr. Jeffrey Lazar
Karen Leiker
Donn and Jeanette LeVie
Stacy Libby
Luis Lidsky
Jessie Lorenty and Erika Esquivel
Simon Lorne
Richard Maier
Salman Manzur
Dick Marshall
Joyce Martin
Roxanne and Steve Martin
Olivia Martinez
Drs. Victor Martinez and Christopher Rose
Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence Masullo
Stephanie Mayes
Jim and Katie McClarty
Chris McClung
Denise McCullough
Frances Ellen and Paul Metzger
Lynn Meyer and Rick Clemens
Pauline and Alfred Meyerson
James W. Moritz
Nicole and Kent Morrison
Denise Margo Moy
Michelle and Eric Natinsky
Rachel Naugle
Marina Navarrete
Philip Neff
Brian Neidig
Margaret and Brian Nilson
Wynnell Noelke
Lori Nunan Shaw
Dan and Deborah O’Neil
Eric and Allison Olson
Augustine Park
Paulina Pastrana
Kelly Payne
Robert Pender
Karen and Wes Peoples
Cindy Perez
Brian and Adele Peterman
Terra and RJ Peters
Lisa and Kyra Peterson
Nancy and Frank Petrone
Tami Pharr
Allen and Tonya Place
Bonnie and James Pohl
Carla and Steve Portnoy
Wanda Potts
Kate and Scott Powers
Eric Rabbanian
Luis Ramirez
Tracy Rawl
Marquette Maresh Reddam
Dawn and Thomas Rich
Martin Ritchey
Jeanine and Dan Roadhouse
Alan Robinson and Susan Frentz
Laura Robinson
Cesar and Susan Rodriguez
Summer Rydel
Susan E. Salch
Al Sandoval
Julie and Richard Schechter
Diane Selkin
Christine and Anthony Sementelli
Lori Nunan Shaw
Amy Shipherd
Linda Simonson
Dustin Slack
Raymond Smith
Debbie Smolik
Kimberly and David Soloman
Toni and Ted Spalding
Karen Speier
Logan Spence
Richard Stanford
Paul Stone
Geeta and David Suggs
Suresh Sundarababu
Dona and Ali Tabrizi
Matthew Tanzer
Bri Thatcher and Andy
Modrovich
Mackenzie and Burwell
Thompson
Stacy and Michael Toomey
Alice Toungate
Michael Tracy
Gregory Tran
Claudia and Luis Trejo
Brooke Turner and Brian Johnson
Keith Uhls and Dan Hutchison
Saradee and Melvin Waxler
Kenneth R. Webb
Chrissie Welty
Marie and Phil Wendell
Leslie and Dana West
Leslie and Bryan Weston
Nancy Whitworth Spong
Michael Wilen
Mr. and Mrs. Mark J. Williams
Carolyn Williams
Mike Wilson
Tanya Winch
Amy Wong Mok
Kevin Wood
Marian Yeager
Lena Yoo and Gerry P. Cardinal III
Mitch and Jeannette Young
Susan Zane
Texas Performing Arts offers free tickets and related educational materials to area schools and educators designed to inspire the next generation of arts lovers including:
• Youth Performances - free daytime performances for K–12
• Students Experiencing the Arts with their Teachers
• Broadway Experience for Youth
• Teacher Tix @ TPA
The Perfect night in Austin starts with Upscale American bites at Acre 41, or classics from Burger Bar. After the final curtain, escape to Otopia Rooftop, the only rooftop lounge in the Campus District, for lite bites and sunthemed cocktails. Looking for a nightcap? Make your way to Bar AC, a Spanish tapas and wine bar with an outdoor terrace. Finally, enjoy restful sleep in comfortable luxury at The Otis Hotel or AC Hotel.
Texas Performing Arts offers discounted tickets to ensure that any student from any school can enjoy world-class performances. This is only possible through generous support from donors like you. You can give a student the chance to experience the power of the performing arts for just $10. Please donate today!
texasperformingarts.org/support