MOORES SCHOOL OF MUSIC
KATHRINE G. MCGOVERN COLLEGE OF THE ARTS presents A
KATHRINE G. MCGOVERN COLLEGE OF THE ARTS presents A
Moores School Ballet Orchestra
Franz Anton Krager, director of UH orchestras & conductor
Olena Blahulyak, pianist
Houston Ballet II, Houston Ballet Academy
Stanton Welch AM, Artistic Director, Houston Ballet
Claudio Muñoz, Ballet Master
SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 2023 | 7:30 p.m.
Moores Opera House
Moores School Ballet Orchestra
Franz Anton Krager, conductor
Olena Blahulyak, pianist
Piano Concerto No 3 in E-Flat Major, Op 75
Peter Ilitch Tchaikovsky (Allegro Brillante) (1840-1893)
Olena Blahulyak, pianist
Powerhouse (Rhumba) Perpetuum Mobile for Orchestra Graeme Koehne “Bruiser” (b. 1956)
Coppélia Ballet (Act III)
Marche de la cloche
Thème slave varié
Valse des heures
Mazurka
L’aurore
La prière
Danse de fête
La discorde et la guerre
La paix
Galop final
Leó Delibes (1836-1891)
with
Houston Ballet II, Houston Ballet Academy
Stanton Welch AM, Artistic Director, Houston Ballet
Claudio Muñoz, Ballet Master
Moores School Ballet Orchestra
Flutes
Candi Rohn, principal
Katherine Garcia
Taylor Silva
Piccolos
Katherine Garcia, co-principal
Taylor Silva, co-principal
Oboes
Matthew Harms, principal
Madeline Flake
Matthew Glattfelder
Clarinets
Zuly Cárdenas, co-principal
Jhoser Salazar, co-principal
Andrew Wang, co-principal
Bass Clarinet
Adam Jones, principal
Bassoons
Haley Houk, co-principal
Dima Savitski, co-principal
Madison Weaver
Horns
Katie Angielczyk, co-principal
David Holtgrewe, co-principal
Jordan Ellisor
Henry Hamre
Patrick Sanford
Nicolas Silva
Cornets à Piston
Mark Hughes, principal
Noah Adams
Trumpets
Mark Hughes, co-principal
Jhoan Garcia, co-principal
Noah Adams
Brian Mendez
Tenor Trombones
Steven Luong, principal
Alec Eads
Bass Trombone
Agustin Martinez, principal
Tubas
Joshua Gansle, co-principal
Jordan Simmons, co-principal
Harp
Susanna Wang, principal
Keyboards
Yilong Wang, principal
Timpani
Ashton Carter, principal
Mario Castro, co-principal
Michael Cheng, co-principal
Percussion
Ashton Carter, principal
Mario Castro
Michael Cheng
Anne Harris
Xochitl Vasquez
Ming-Wei Hsieh, concertmaster
Hanna Hrybkova, assistant concertmaster
Ricardo Jimenez Montoya, principal second
Daniela Yepes Dimate, assistant principal second
Jessika Albuquerque
Isabella Bengochea
Javier Castro
Bernini Chan
Dustin Cunningham
Jordan Efird
Alexander Garcia
Lizbeth Garcia
Emily Gladstone
Allen Li
Zuriel Longoria
Marcio Martinez
Madisyn Muñoz
Shayla Nguyen
Konrad Rudowicz, principal
Maggie Lytle, assistant principal
Haoqin Cheng
Melissa Escobar
Abraham Gonzalez
Madeline Gonzales
Mitchell Wright, principal
Ashley Wang, assistant principal
William Danheim
Ricardo Gabriel Flores
Gracie Martinez
Julian Montez
Benjamin Serur
Elizabeth Spencer
Emily Yeh
Contrabassi
Reid Ronsonette, principal
Bruce Manning, assistant principal
Maggie Bishop
Anthony Chavezplata
Martin Garcia Leon
Cutter Gonzalez
Carolina Rodriguez Russum
Ringel Sat
Nikita Baryshnikov
Rylan Doty
Eli Go
Alexandria Heath
Hart Isaacoff
Isabella Long
Amelia McGravey
Layla Porter
Alyssa Pratt
Alejandro Prieto
Elliott Rogers
Natalia Scheinson
Renee Shubov
Samuel Stampleman
Allison Whitley
Giovanna Abbate Garcia
Julia Alvarez-Porras
Christian Arroyo
Katelyn Beaulieu
Hayden Babin
Iris Bech
Ashlyn Beggs
Sebastian Bondar
Quinton Brooks
Kieryn Brophy
Yu Chia Chang
Michael Dadlez
Shaiya Donohue
Nathaniel Geis
Remie Goins
Nicolas Gongora
Lauren Gordon
Sara Guo
Enya Hoxha
Millicent Huang
Ashton Kennedy
Isabella Kessler
Willow Kristich
Jaein Lee
Keaton Linzau
Jordan Long
Delfina Mamone
Justine Marcov
Kotone Matsuzaki
Olivia McBain
Zachary Mench
Cora Metzfield
Isabella Morales
Ashley Nguyen
Ava Oubre
Katherine Oubre
Macy Richter
Brett Rule
Mariana Sanhueza
Kanon Tanaka
Lexi Utz
Mackenzie Wandel
Owen Watson
Derek Wippel
William Wisneskey
Benjamin Workman
Garrett Yut
Houston Ballet Academy Staff
Jennifer Sommers, Director of the Academy
Yahudi D. Castañeda, Academy Associate Director of Artistic Operations
Katie Wesche, Academy Administrative Associate Director
Carla Cortez, Registrar
Bryana Bordelon, Student Life Manager
Dustin Shaw, Academy Programs Manager
Daisy Benedict, Academy Artistic Operations Coordinator
Tempest McLendon, Academy Administrative Coordinator
Production
Robert Eubanks, Lighting Designer
Morgan Brochu, Stage Manager
Wardrobe
Alexa Carlson, Academy Costume Shop Manager
The 1891–1892 sketches that eventually matured to create Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No. 3 might have originally been intended for a symphony. In 1893, the composer picked up the materials from that abandoned project, reworked them to create the concerto.
Tchaikovsky was prepared to destroy the work if it was not sufficiently well-received by the composer and musicologist, Sergey Taneyev. Taneyev was critical of the work’s lack of virtuosity, but the piece survived. Taneyev eventually premiered the piece in 1895, which was not finally prepared nor published until after Tchaikovsky’s death.
In the composer’s final reworking, he greatly reduced the length and scope of the piece from three movements to one. It was his last completed work before succumbing to cholera in the final months of 1893.
Koehne strives to deconstruct the boundary between popular music and classical music. While his compositional methods are essentially neoclassical, his style is rooted in musics typically found beyond the walls of the concert hall—cartoons, pop music, movie soundtracks. The result is an authentically accessible product from a unique musical personality.
Powerhouse’s title is an homage to Raymond Scott, whose humorous music was featured in the Bugs Bunny cartoons. The work does not cite Scott’s material explicitly, but it is of similar spirit: rapidly varying and brightly humorous.
Koehne has gained international prominence in recent years in addition to his many accolades from his native Australia, where he has earned academic awards and served public roles on the Australia Council and as South Australia’s Composer-in-Residence.
At the age of 33, Delibes was commissioned by the Paris Opera to write his two large scale ballets, Coppélia and Sylvia. Coppélia is based on a story by E. T. A. Hoffmann. Coppélia met with immediate success on its completion in 1870 and has been held a charming favorite by succeeding ballet lovers both young and old. This staging of Coppélia is directly descended from the 1933 Nicholas Sergeyev revival for the Camargo Society, danced by members of the Vic-Wells (later Sadler’s Wells and now Royal) Ballet at the Sadler’s Wells Theatre in London. Sergeyev’s staging, a two-act version in which Franklin danced the czardas, was based upon choreography by Lev Ivanov and Enrico Cecchetti after the original by Arthur Saint-Léon. Later, in 1938, Sergeyev mounted Coppélia on the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, this time including the restored third act. This complete version was premiered at the Drury Lane Theatre in London, and, for the next twenty years, Alexandra Danilova and Frederic Franklin became legendary as Swanilda and Franz wherever the Ballet Russe performed.
Adapted from American Ballet Theatre.
Franz Anton Krager
Since making his prize-winning European conducting debut in Copenhagen’s Tivoli Koncertsalen in 1978, Franz Anton Krager has led orchestras in Washington DC’s Kennedy Center, the Leipzig Gewandhaus, Town Hall and Adrian Boult Hall in Birmingham, Moscow’s State Kremlin Palace, Manchester’s Bridgewater Hall, Guangzhou China’s Xinghai Music Center, the Sydney Opera House, The Hague’s Congresgebouw, Zagreb’s Lisinski Concert Hall, Kazan’s State Philharmonic Hall in Russia, Guadalajara’s Degollado Theater, and Sarasota’s Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall. His affiliations with leading music festivals include the Dubrovnik Summer Festival in Croatia, Lancaster International Concert Series, Lichfield and Aberystwyth International Arts Festivals in the U.K., the Festival Internacional de Santa Lucía in Mexico, and the Texas Music Festival and Interlochen National Music Camp in the U.S. Maestro Krager has led the Houston, Russian State, Slovak National, Dubrovnik, Traverse City Michigan and Florida West Coast symphonies, Romanian and Kazan State philharmonics, and orchestras in Washington, Berlin, London, Chicago, Paris, Singapore, Leipzig, Zagreb, Monterrey, Grosseto, Pordenone, Ingolstadt, Chichester, Neuss, and Honolulu. Krager is Music Director and Chief Conductor of the Texas Music Festival and Founding Co-Artistic Director for the Virtuosi of Houston. Krager is also the Hourani Endowed Professor of Music, Director of Orchestras, and Chair of the Conducting Department at the University of Houston Moores School of Music, where he has brought the orchestra and orchestral conducting program into international prominence. The Moores School Symphony Orchestra has recorded on the Divine Art (Métier), Albany, MSR Classics, ArsPublica, Newport, and “Surround-Sound Blu-Ray Audio” HDTT record labels.
Olena Blahulyak is a pianist of Ukrainian origin, currently living in Houston and establishing an active performing and teaching career. Olena’s love for music was fostered by her mother and a guild of influential teachers and mentors. Her admission at the age of twelve into the Lysenko’s Special Music Boarding School in Kyiv, where she studied with renowned pedagogue Sergei Riabov became one of the earliest significant and decisive steps in her professional musical education. In 2001, she made her orchestral debut performing Saint-Saëns’ Piano Concerto No. 2 under the baton of Mykola Suk at the Vladimir Horowitz Summer Festival.
In 2009 she graduated as a gold medalist from the Tchaikovsky Conservatory in Kyiv, where she obtained her first Master’s degree in Piano Performance. She is a winner of multiple national and international piano competitions, including the 2003 International Chamber Music Competition in St. Petersburg, the 2004 II Zatin International Competition in Ukraine, and Ella Phillip Competition in Romania (2007), and the Sam Houston State University Concerto Competition in 2018, where she performed Prokofiev’s
Second Piano Concerto. Olena has also been a featured guest artist in several international music festivals, including the “Ciudad Jamilena” in 2008 and 2009 and “Málaga Classica” in Spain in 2016. Olena has performed in recitals across the United States, Europe, and South America, including joining a diplomatic mission organized by the Norwegian Embassy in Guatemala in 2016, where she gave a series of masterclasses and charity concerts.
While living in Spain in 2010-2016, Olena was an active performing artist, collaborating with notable violinists Jesus Reina and Anna Margrethe Haugland Nilsen and working as a collaborative pianist at the Ivan Galamian Academy in Málaga. In 2016-2018, Olena proceeded to study with distinguished Spanish pianist Josu de Solaun at Sam Houston State University and soon joined the piano faculty there as an instructor and collaborative pianist. She was also the musical director and pianist for Sam Houston State’s Opera projects “Leonard Bernstein” (2017) and “Hansel and Gretel” (2018).
In the Spring of 2022, Olena, together with the local violist Nina Knight established a duo with the purpose of creating a series of recitals that benefit causes they care about. For their first season, the duo focused on the international refugee crisis, with particular concern for Ukrainian refugees. The program
“No Way Home” featured music by composers who were torn away from their homes and found solace in writing music, including Paul Hindemith, Rebecca Clarke, George Enescu, and Valentyn Silvestrov.
Olena’s recent concert appearances took place at the Hobby Center and the Candlelight Concert Series in Houston, where she performed pieces by Sergei Rachmaninov and Ukrainian composers Valentyn Silvestrov, Mykola Skoryk, and Mykola Lysenko. She is currently completing her Doctoral degree in Piano Performance at the University of Houston under the guidance of Professor Timothy Hester. When not focusing on her musical endeavors, she enjoys traveling, yoga, and spending time with her beloved pug Daria.
George Balanchine, Choreographer, Allegro Brillante
Born in St. Petersburg, Russia, George Balanchine (1904-1983) is regarded as the foremost contemporary choreographer in the world of ballet. He came to the United States in late 1933, at the age of 29, accepting the invitation of the young American arts patron Lincoln Kirstein (1907-1996), whose great passions included the dream of creating a ballet company in America. At Balanchine’s behest, Kirstein was also prepared to support the formation of an American academy of ballet that would eventually rival the longestablished schools of Europe. This was the School of American Ballet, founded in 1934, the first product of the Balanchine-Kirstein collaboration. Several ballet companies directed by the two were created and dissolved in the years that followed, while Balanchine found other outlets for his choreography. Eventually, with a performance on October 11, 1948, the New York City Ballet was born. Balanchine served as its ballet master and principal choreographer from 1948 until his death in 1983. Balanchine’s more than 400 dance works include Serenade (1934), Concerto Barocco (1941), Le Palais de Cristal, later renamed Symphony in C (1947), Orpheus (1948), The Nutcracker (1954), Agon (1957), Symphony in Three Movements (1972), Stravinsky Violin Concerto
(1972), Vienna Waltzes (1977), Ballo della Regina (1978), and Mozartiana (1981). His final ballet, a new version of Stravinsky’s Variations for Orchestra, was created in 1982. He also choreographed for films, operas, revues, and musicals. Among his best known dances for the stage is Slaughter on Tenth Avenue, originally created for Broadway’s On Your Toes (1936). The musical was later made into a movie. A major artistic figure of the twentieth century, Balanchine revolutionized the look of classical ballet. Taking classicism as his base, he heightened, quickened, expanded, streamlined, and even inverted the fundamentals of the 400-year-old language of academic dance. This had an inestimable influence on the growth of dance in America. Although at first his style seemed particularly suited to the energy and speed of American dancers, especially those he trained, his ballets are now performed by all the major classical ballet companies throughout the world.
Copyright © 2002 The George Balanchine Foundation. Reprinted by permission.
Leslie Peck, Stager, Allegro Brillante
Leslie Peck is an Associate Professor at Southern Methodist University’s Meadows School of the Arts. She was trained by the legendary dancer Andre Eglevsky and the School of American Ballet. At the age of 17, Peck joined the New York City Ballet under the direction of George Balanchine. She went on to dance soloist roles with the Pennsylvania Ballet and later became a principal dancer with Houston Ballet, Pacific Northwest Ballet, Richmond Ballet and Ballet International in London. She is a recognized authority on Balanchine ballets and one of the few dancers authorized to stage Balanchine ballets by the Balanchine Trust.
Stanton Welch AM, The Harris Masterson III Artistic Director
In July 2003, Australian Stanton Welch AM assumed leadership of Houston Ballet, America’s fifth-largest classical ballet company. Since he took the helm of the company, Mr. Welch has revitalized Houston Ballet, bringing in new dancers, commissioning new works, and attracting a top-flight artistic staff. Mr. Welch has created works for such prestigious international companies as Houston Ballet, San Francisco Ballet, America Ballet Theatre, The Australian Ballet, Birmingham Royal Ballet, and the Royal Danish Ballet. Mr. Welch was born in Melbourne to Marilyn Jones OBE and Garth Welch AM, two of Australia’s most gifted dancers of the 1960s and 1970s. In 1989, he was engaged as a dancer with The Australian Ballet, where he rose to the rank of leading soloist, performing various principal roles. He has also worked with internationally acclaimed choreographers such as Jirí Kylián,
Nacho Duato, and Maurice Béjart. In 1995, Mr. Welch was named resident choreographer of The Australian Ballet. For his contributions to the world of dance, he was awarded the Order of Australia (AM) in June 2015. For Houston Ballet, he has choreographed more than 20 works, including a new full-length narrative ballet Marie (2009), inspired by the life of the legendary Marie Antoinette, and spectacular staging’s of Swan Lake (2006), La Bayadère (2010), Romeo and Juliet (2015), Giselle (2016), The Nutcracker (2016), and Sylvia (2019).
Claudio Muñoz, Ballet Master, Houston Ballet II/ Houston Ballet Teacher and Coach
Claudio Muñoz joined Houston Ballet’s Academy in 1999. Mr. Muñoz trained with a variety of choreographers, including John Cranko, George Balanchine, Ben Stevenson, and Ronald Hynd. During his career as a dancer, he filled principal roles in Peru, Uruguay, Argentina, and New York. In 1989 he founded the Chamber Ballet of Santiago. Mr. Muñoz has taught classes and seminars in Paraguay, Bolivia, Peru, and the United States. He has worked as an instructor for the Ballet Nacional de Chile, Ballet de Santiago, and Ballet Nacional de Peru. The dancers Mr. Muñoz has coached have won the silver medal at the International Ballet Competition in Jackson (1990), third place in the Shanghai International Ballet Competition (1995) and first place at the Prix de Lausanne (2010). In 1996, Mr. Muñoz was awarded “Best Teacher” at the Interdance Competition in Asuncion, Paraguay. Mr. Muñoz has staged a ballet for Ben Stevenson at Florida Ballet, and also staged Stanton Welch’s work at Cincinnati Ballet and Tulsa Ballet. Mr. Muñoz also coaches Houston Ballet II students for the Prix de Lausanne and Beijing International Ballet Competition. In 2007 and 2011, he served as a judge for the Youth America Grand Prix competition in Mexico. In 2016 he was awarded the Dance Teacher Award by Dance Teacher Magazine.
Cheryne Busch, Upper School Principal
Cheryne Busch received her extensive training in South Africa in both the Royal Academy and Cecchetti methods of ballet. She also studied character dance, classical Greek dance, and Spanish dance. As a performing arts graduate she was the recipient of the Dancers Guild Scholarship which she used to further enhance her choreographic and performing career. Ms. Busch was awarded International Certification from the Royal Academy of Dance in London. She choreographed a number of works for Concours de Ballet in South Africa, many of which were included in their repertoire and are still performed today. She is also an accredited Dance Examiner on the Board of the National Society of Dance
Teachers in South Africa. Ms. Busch owned and operated two dance schools in South Africa for 20 years before immigrating with her family to the United States and joining Houston Ballet in 1998 where she taught in the pre-school, main school and education and community engagement program. Ms. Busch received her Floor Barre Certification in New York in 2006 and teaches this technique in the Academy.
Susan Bryant began her dancing career studying with Muriel Evans and Lisa Shaw in Hampton, Virginia. She continued her training at North Carolina School of the Arts and after graduation joined Houston Ballet Academy. One year later Ms. Bryant was invited to join the company as a member of the Corps de Ballet. She attained the rank of Soloist and enjoyed a 20 year career dancing with Houston Ballet under the direction of both Ben Stevenson and current Artistic Director Stanton Welch. Ms. Bryant enjoyed featured roles in Ben Stevenson’s Swan Lake, The Sleeping Beauty, Don Quixote, Dracula, Coppélia, Peer Gynt, Romeo and Juliet, Snow Maiden, Four Last Songs and Five Poems. She had featured roles in Sir Fredrick Ashton’s Les Patineurs, Sir Kenneth MacMillian’s Elite Syncopations and Manon Her contemporary roles included dancing in the world premiere of Paul Taylor’s Company B at the Kennedy Center, Christopher Bruce’s Cruel Garden, Glen Tetley’s Daphnis and Chloe, The Rite of Spring, and Lux in Tenebris, Jirí Kylián’s Sinfonietta and Symphony in D. Ms. Bryant also enjoyed roles in George Balanchine’s La Valse, The Four Temperments, Agon, Serenade, and Symphony in C and Stanton Welch’s Bruiser, Madame Butterfly, and Bolero.
Upon her retirement in 2005, Ms. Bryant was invited by Artistic Director Stanton Welch to portray the role of the Queen in the world premiere of his new Swan Lake. She was also invited to teach in the Houston Ballet Academy where she continues to teach in the Upper School and in the Professional Program.
Orlando Molina was born in Pinar del Rio, Cuba and began his ballet training at ten years old at the Vocational School of Art. In 1987 he joined the National School of Ballet in Havana. Mr. Molina received his diploma as Dancer/Teacher from the Ministry of Culture and the Cuban School of the Arts. In 1997 Mr. Molina joined the Ballet Municipal de Lima as a principal dancer. After competing at the USA International Ballet Competition in Jackson, Mississippi in 1998, he was offered a contract join the Cleveland San Jose Ballet. Mr. Molina later joined Orlando Ballet (formerly Southern Ballet Theatre) and
during his tenure as Ballet Master he restaged several classical ballets including Don Quixote, The Nutcracker, Coppélia, Giselle, Swan Lake and Spartacus. After 14 years as a professional ballet dancer, Mr. Molina became a full-time ballet teacher and coach. He is an ABT Certified Ballet Teacher and was awarded the Outstanding Teacher Award at the 2009 Youth America Grand Prix regional semifinals. Mr. Molina previously worked with Atlanta Ballet School and The School of The Georgia Ballet. He also directed the Orlando Molina Ballet Training Center in Atlanta, GA where he focused on coaching and guiding of young students with the desire and vision to pursue a professional ballet career. Mr. Molina joined Houston Ballet Academy as Boys Program Coordinator in June of 2020.
Kelly Myernick received her early ballet training at The Susquehanna School of Ballet in Oneonta, New York and later Springs City Ballet in Colorado Springs, Colorado. In 1996, she became a student at Houston Ballet Academy, receiving the Michael Wasmund Memorial Award upon graduation. She enjoyed a 13-year career with Houston Ballet, retiring as a First Soloist in 2014. Through her career she danced a wide variety of classical and contemporary roles, originating the roles of “Gamzatti” in La Bayadère and “Myrtha” in Giselle in Houston Ballet productions. Her broad experience in contemporary repertoire led her to her current position with Houston Ballet Academy, teaching contemporary repertoire, choreography, and ballet technique. Her teaching education includes an intensive with Netherlands Dans Theatre and workshops in Countertechnique, Gaga technique, and Anatomy for Dancers. Ms. Myernick is a frequent guest speaker and teacher in the community for organizations such as Hope Stone, Inc. and Houston Ballet’s Education and Community Engagement department.
As of January 20, 2023
The Moores Society is the philanthropic volunteer organization for the Moores School of Music. Moores Society members and donors promote community awareness and provide funding for scholarships and special projects. Moores Society members receive invitations to concerts and special events held throughout the year.
Darlene Clark, President
Jackie & Malcolm Mazow, Immediate Past Presidents
Donna Shen, Vice President Membership
Nancy Willerson, Corresponding Secretary
Ann Tornyos, Recording Secretary
Meg Boulware, Opera Production Council Chair
Rita Aron
Ann Ayre
Meg Boulware
Terry Ann Brown
Carla Burns
Cheryl Byington
Julie Cogan
Timothy Doyle
Warren Ellsworth
Sheila Aron
Christopher Bacon
Philamena Baird
Chris Becker
Tom Becker
Susan Binney
Ann Boss
Nancy Bowden
Zarine Boyce
Robert Chanon
Anna Dean
Vicky Dominguez
Ann Faget
Kelli Fein
Debbie Feuer
Cathy Coers Frank
Joyce Frassanito
Mary Fusillo
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Frank Geider, MS DDS
Marita Glodt
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Maureen Higdon
Gary Hollingsworth & Ken Hyde
Mady Kades
Linda Katz
Michelle & Jack Matzer
Gary Patterson
Shirley Rose
2022-2023
Diane & Harry Gendel
Mariglyn & Stephen Glenn
Beatrice & Gregory Graham
Deb Happ
Ellen & Alan Holzberg
Gladys Hooker
Janis Landry
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Karinne McCullough
Mary Ann McKeithan
Cathy McNamara
Jennifer Meyer
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Jo & Joseph Nogee
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Carroll R. Ray
Jan Rhodes
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Satoko & Anthony Shou
Nancy Strohmer
Susan Thompson
Virginia & Gage Van Horn
Barbara Van Postman
Carol & Carl Vartian
Nancy Willerson
Phyllis Williams
Cyvia Wolff
Jo Dee Wright
Gay Yellen
As of January 20, 2023
Robin Angly
Christopher Bacon
Meg Boulware, Chair
Gwyneth Campbell
Anna Dean
Tim Doyle
Warren Ellsworth
Jose Alvarado
Robin Angly & Miles Smith
Rita & Jeffrey Aron
Alan Austin & David A. White
Ann & Jonathan Ayre
Christopher Bacon & Craig Miller
Pamela & Stephen Bertone
Olga & Gerardo Balboa
Susan & Michael Bloome
Meg Boulware & Hartley Hampton
Carla Burns
Keith Butcher
Cheryl & Carl Carlucci
Robert Chanon
Lydia & James Chao
Darlene Clark & Edwin Friedrichs
Cynthia & Geroge Mitchell Foundation
Victoria Dominguez
Timothy Doyle & Robert Royall, II
Richard Drapeau
Ursula & Saul Balagura
Matthew Dirst
Kelli Fein
Geraldine Gill
Kathryn & Brendan Godfrey
Ellen Gritz & Milton Rosenau, Jr.
Lucila & Bill Haase
Deborah Happ & Richard Rost
Ann Faget
Gerri Gill
Ellen and Alan Holzberg
Lee Huber
Shannon Langman
Helen Mann
Jackie and Malcolm Mazow
1000+
Ann Faget
Sylvia Farb
Debbie Feuer
Elaine & Marvy Finger
Toni & Walter Finger
Linda Fulton
Elia Gabbanelli
Mariglyn & Stephen Glenn
Manuel Gonzales
Aaron Gonzales
Susan & Sean Gorman
Konnie Gregg
David Rowan
Rhonda Sweeney
Irena Witt
Johanna Wolfe
Jo Dee Wright
Floyd Robinson
Shirley E. Rose
Rosamund & David Rowan
Victoria Scelba
Jane & Richard Schmitt
Helen & James Shaffer
Donna & Tim Shen
Melanie Sonnenberg
Rhonda & Donald Sweeney
Vita Taksa
Ann Tomatz
Ann Tornyos
Gary
Hollingsworth & Ken Hyde
Ellen & Alan Holzberg
Monzer Hourani
Lee Huber
Sharon & Robert Lietzow
Jack & Michelle Matzer
Jackie & Malcolm Mazow
Paula & Robert Mendoza
Annie Pati
Luis Ramirez
Charles Riesen
Lillie Roberrtson
500+
Maureen Higdon
Linda Katz
Connie Kwan-Wong
Vanessa Lopez
Kathleen Moore & Steven Homer
Gary Patterson
Janet & Charles Rinehart
Betty & Jesse Tutor, Jr.
David Voll
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Nancy Willerson
Andrea & Carl Wilson
Irena Witt
Johanna & Richard Wolfe
Beth Wolff
Jo Dee & Cliff Wright
Allyn & Jill Risley
River Oaks Chamber Orchestra
Joseph Thayer
Susan Thompson
Ann Tomatz
Virginia & Gage Van Horn
Robert Zinn
As of January 20, 2023
Thomas Blocher
Terry Ann Brown
Carla Burns
Mathilda Cochran
Dru & Richard Davis
Kenneth Euler
Cathy Coers Frank
Joyce & John Frassanito
Mary & Robert Fusillo
Beatrice & Gregory Graham
Elad Ben-Menashe
Fredy Bonilla
Cynthia Clayton-Vasquez & Hector Vasquez
Julie Fischer
Sandra Harris
250+
Claire Liu Greenberg & Joseph Greenberg
Michelle Greenberg
Deborah Happ
Deborah Hirsch
Gladys Hooker
Russell Kneupper
Therese Kosten
Helen Mann
Karinne & William McCullough
120+
Clara Kukes
Richard Kummins
Lynn Lamkin
Michael Taksa
Katherine Turner
Jenny Meyer
Joel Oppenheim
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Dalia Pineda
Lisa Powell & Philip Berquist
Nancy & Hans Strohmer
Andrea Turner
Carol Vartian
Cyvia & Melvyn Wolff
Gay Yellen & Don Reiser
Yone & Shelton Vaughan
Debra Witter & Scott Chase
Lorraine Wulfe
The University of Houston’s Moores School of Music (MSM) is one of the leading comprehensive music schools in the nation. Its remarkable faculty — of internationally recognized performers, composers, and scholars — outstanding student body, modern facilities, and broad range of programs make MSM the natural choice for nearly 600 students annually. The school’s commitment to academic excellence and the highest performance standards has ensured its role as a vital resource in the educational and cultural life of Houston and beyond.
The Moores Society is the philanthropic volunteer organization for the Moores School of Music. Moores Society members and donors promote community awareness and provide funding for scholarships and special projects. Moores Society members receive invitations to concerts and special events held throughout the year. Please visit uh.edu/kgmca/music/moores-society.
For more information, please contact Emily Wolfe, Patrons Relations and Communications Coordinator, at mooressociety@uh.edu or 713.743.8036
The Kathrine G. McGovern College of the Arts at the University of Houston is a dynamic home of creativity and collaboration in one of America’s most artistically vibrant and culturally diverse cities. Bringing together the performing and visual arts entities at the University of Houston, the college has the ability to harness the power of the arts to ultimately impact our world. Our award-winning, internationally distinguished faculty provides top-quality instruction to the talented, emerging student artists from more than 30 programs of study. The Kathrine G. McGovern College of the Arts seeks to positively impact the community and to empower our students to use their talents to change the world.
Please support emerging artists at the University of Houston's Kathrine G. McGovern College of the Arts. Your gift enables KGMCA students and educators to create, collaborate, and transform Houston’s cultural landscape. Your gift makes a difference.
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