Retirement living in Highlands Ranch is now even better. Announcing 74 new apartment homes with open layouts and stunning views. They come in addition
to a new pub, café, and salon—plus a brand new clubhouse with a steakhouse, catering room, and
Arts and Enrichment Center coming soon.
Call 303-955-3225 to request a free brochure or schedule a
tour of the new model homes.
Wind Crest, Inc., a nonprofi t organization, is solely responsible for fulfi lling fi nancial responsibilities to residents under the contract. Wind Crest is within the network of communities developed and managed by Erickson Living.® 10
7095
17
NOWOPEN
at Wind Crest
Highlands Ranch
EricksonLiving.com
extending your living space into the garden...
Contact us to arrange your Free Initial Consultation with our design professionals
As a Design-Build Firm, weintegrate your landscape with your architecture - respecting proportion and your lifestyle.
4 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
FROM THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Welcome to Newman Center Presents, and thank you for coming! This season started early, given our collaboration with the Biennial of the Americas in presenting the Colorado premiere of Brazil’s Companhia Urbana de Dança in July. The rest of the season features our signature eclectic mix of musical and dance artists from around the world.
Contemporary dance finds a welcome home at the Newman Center. This season we host the legendary Twyla Tharp’s 50th Anniversary Tour with all new works. Together with the Mizel Arts & Culture Center at the JCC we present Vertigo Dance from Israel. The appearance of Kyle Abraham’s Abraham.In.Motion coincides with the annual conference of the International Association of Blacks in Dance, being hosted in Denver by Cleo Parker Robinson Dance. Finally, we have commissioned a new work from another American dance legend, Paul Taylor, and his company will present the world premiere here in February.
The Newman Center has been a regular presenter of new classical music and this season includes some of the best young composers and musicians working today. The string quartet Brooklyn Rider performs its “Almanac” project of works written for them by composers as diverse as Bill Frisell, Ethan Iverson, and Vijay Iyer. S -o Percussion, with us for the third time, plays Bryce Dessner’s “Music for Wood and Strings” on instruments invented for the piece, and then joins the multitalented Shara Worden, vocalist of the indie rock band My Brightest Diamond, for a series of songs written by her. Gabriel Kahane, back for the third time as well, pairs up with pianist Timo Andres for an intimate exploration of songs, old and new, in the Hamilton Family Recital Hall.
Other highlights of the season include the master of the American Songbook, Michael Feinstein, also in collaboration with the Mizel Arts and Culture Center, the beloved a cappella ensemble Anonymous 4 on their farewell tour in a program memorializing 150 years since the end of the Civil War, and four award-winning young stars from the Metropolitan Opera singing arias and ensembles from opera. We’ll celebrate the holidays with swing as the Boston Brass and the Brass All-Stars Big Band combine jazz and seasonal favorites.
The Colorado Symphony brings its new Associate and Assistant conductors to the Newman Center, once for an “inside the score” performance of Brahms’s 4th Symphony, and once with a program inspired by an exhibit at the University’s Vicki Myhren Gallery exploring color.
We are proud to be part of the premiere US tour of globalFEST On the Road. This mini-festival of three performers from Brazil, Haiti, and Jamaica creates a “Creole Carnival.” The season ends with two shows sure to burn up the stage. The thrilling young guitarists Julian Lage and Chris Eldridge will amaze you, and Billy Childs’ reimagination of the music of singer-songwriter Laura Nyro (performed by everyone from Barbara Streisand to the 5th Dimension, from Blood, Sweat and Tears to Peter, Paul and Mary), including three singers, Dianne Reeves, Becca Stevens, and Alicia Olatuja, will end the season in high style.
Welcome to your performing arts center at the University of Denver. Have a great time!
Stephen W. SeifertExecutive Director
NEWMAN CENTER STAFFEXECUTIVE Gregg Kvistad, Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor Stephen W. Seifert, Executive Director Richard Michel, Budget Officer Cathy Kaufman, Executive Assistant
EVENT SERVICES Diane L. Roth, Assistant Director Amanda Swartzbaugh, Event Manager Ramsey Walker, Event Coordinator
MARKETING Natalie Raborn, Marketing Director
PATRON SERVICES Dee Getchel, Assistant Director
PRODUCTION SERVICES Garret Glass, Assistant Director Shakeel Wahab, Stage Operations Coordinator/
Audio Engineer Zack Jovanovich, Stage Operations Coordinator/
Lighting Engineer
TICKETING SERVICES Richard Moraskie, Assistant Director Max Manoles, Assistant Manager of Ticketing
ADVERTISING INFORMATION
This program is produced for the Newman Center by The Publishing House,
Westminster, CO
Angie Flachman Johnson, PublisherTod Cavey, Director of Sales
Stacey Krull, Production ManagerMark Fessler, Press Manager
Michele Garner, Graphic DesignerWilbur E. Flachman, President
For advertising information, call 303-428-9529 or email [email protected]
coloradoartspubs.com
720.482.1988 agape-healthcare.com
We provide expert end-of-life care and support so patients can focus on what’s most important: friends, family, and the gifts of life.
• Skilled physicians board certified and fellowship trained in hospice and palliative medicine.
• Highly qualified nursing staff with CNA support up to seven days a week.
• Experienced counselors, chaplains and volunteers. We serve patients wherever they call home.
Here for our community
because every day counts.
6 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
NEWMAN CENTER’S VISION STATEMENT
At the Robert and Judi Newman Center for the Performing Arts, our responsibility, our purpose and our vision are to:
• Celebrate, entertain, inspire and feed the imagination
• Give voice to the innate human need for expression through performance
• Educate and prepare better citizens of our community
• Begin conversations of ideas
• Foster an eagerness for and habits of curiosity and learning
• Make the major sources of our own and other cultures accessible to our community
• Embrace our differences; celebrate diversity of forms, attitudes, traditions and populations
• Challenge assumptions and encourage creativity and new work, even at the risk of failure
• Help teach our cultural heritage through the performance of great works from the past and support creativity by contemporary artists whose new voices will be remembered in the future
• Demand excellence and integrity without avoiding controversy
• Remind our community that the performing arts have value to our society because they:
• Create self-esteem, which is earned by striving to achieve high standards
• Integrate with other disciplines such as language, history, math and science
• Foster communication and interpersonal skills
FROM THE CHANCELLOR
Welcome to another remarkable evening at the Robert and Judi Newman Center for the Performing Arts. With its beautiful concert halls and theaters designed specifically to showcase human creativity, the Newman Center is a crown jewel of Denver’s arts scene. There is no other complex like it anywhere in the state.
Over the years, Denver audiences have come to count on the Newman Center and its acclaimed performing arts series. Night after night, the curtain rises on cutting-edge dance troupes, avant-garde music ensembles, or theatrical companies with an experimental bent. By helping us explore our common humanity and look at life from differing perspectives, these productions foster thought, appreciation, delight and community. This is just one of the many ways in which the University of Denver lives its vision of serving the public good.
The Newman Center’s stages also enable our students to demonstrate their remarkable talent. This building helps us to attract some of the most promising and talented young people in the nation, and every production by students in our Lamont School of Music and Department of Theatre showcases their energy, enthusiasm and dedication. Here at the Newman Center, our students pursue their passions and discover their capacity to collaborate and create. To which the rest of us can only say, encore.
Enjoy tonight’s performance. May it be just one of many offerings you enjoy with us this season!
Rebecca ChoppChancellor, University of Denver
Oct 10: First Night: A Brass FantasiaNov 21-22: Brass & Organ: Pedal to the Medal
Dec 19-20: Feels Like Christmas
Feb 14: Brass on the Red CarpetMar 11-13: Celtic Tales of Love & WarMay 28: 2nd Annual “Colorado Remembers”
303-832-HORN(4676)DenverBrass.org
Buy your tickets online: www.newmantix.com
35th Emerald Anniversary 2015-2016 Season
Oct 10: First Night: A Brass FantasiaNov 21-22: Brass & Organ: Pedal to the Medal
Dec 19-20: Feels Like Christmas
Feb 14: Brass on the Red CarpetMar 11-13: Celtic Tales of Love & WarMay 28: 2nd Annual “Colorado Remembers”
303-832-HORN(4676)DenverBrass.org
Buy your tickets online: www.newmantix.com
35th Emerald Anniversary 2015-2016 Season
8 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
THANK YOUWe applaud the following partners for their support of the Robert and Judi Newman Center for the Performing Arts at the University of Denver. Because of their generosity, Newman Center Presents can introduce dancers, musicians, actors, singers, composers and storytellers to the university community and our fellow citizens throughout Denver and Colorado.
If you are interested in becoming a Newman Center Presents sponsor, please contact Natalie Raborn, Marketing Director, at [email protected] or 303.871.4154.
FOUNDING PARTNERS
PRESENTING SPONSORS
SUPPORTING SPONSORS
Come discover what life at Holly Creek is all about by stopping in during one of our weekly
Open House events.
Holly Creek Open HouseEvery Wednesday
10 am – 2 pmSnacks and Refreshments
Proud supporter of the Newman Center’s 2015–16
season of dance, theater, music and performance.
Call today for a private tour.720.266.5611
5500 E. Peakview Ave., Centennial, CO 80121HollyCreekRetirementCommunity.com
For every stage in life.
Colorful Colorado Living.
10 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
Companhia Urbana de DançaSun, Jul 19, 2015 / 2:00 p.m.In collaboration with the Biennial of the Americas, Newman Center Presents will bring this Rio de Janeiro-based dance company to Denver for a week of activities culminating in a full-length performance at the Newman Center. The dancers will also, together with the dancers of Denver’s Wonderbound, create a new dance work to premiere at the Biennial of the Americas Festival. Companhia Urbana de Dança will also lead free public dance workshops for people of all ages and experience and a master class for dancers. Sonia Destri Lie, the company’s choreographer, will participate in a panel discussion at the Biennial Pavilion about the intersection between art and social issues.
Sponsored by Newman Center Members
Twyla Tharp50th Anniversary TourThu, Sep 24, 2015 / 7:30 p.m.Fri, Sep 25, 2015 / 7:30 p.m.Fifty years ago, Twyla Tharp choreographed her first dance. This year, she celebrates her unique legacy in American modern dance with all new works. In the intervening years, she and her own company have toured the world performing original works set to classical, jazz, and popular music. Twyla Tharp Dance eventually merged with American Ballet Theatre, which continued to premiere new Tharp works. She has made dances for Paris Opera Ballet, The Royal Ballet, and New York City Ballet, as well as for her own
dance musical Movin’ Out and such other Broadway shows as Singin’ in the Rain and The Times They are a-Changin’! She has collaborated on films such as Hair, Amadeus, and White Nights, as well as PBS and BBC television programs. She has received two Emmy Awards, a Tony Award, 19 honorary doctorates, the National Medal of the Arts, a MacArthur Fellowship, among many other distinctions.
Sponsored by Founding Partner The Denver Post
This project also received support from the National Dance Project/New England Foundation for the Arts, with lead funding from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, with additional support from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA).
Colorado SymphonyInside the Score: Brahms’s 4th SymphonyTue, Oct 6, 2015 / 7:30 p.m.The evening begins with a performance of Mozart’s Horn Concerto No. 3, featuring Colorado Symphony Principal Horn player Michael Thornton as soloist. Then we will go “inside” Brahms’s 4th Symphony. This work astonished Brahms’s friends when they first heard it in a piano version. Some urged him not to release it to the public. But its premiere a few months later was positively received. It went on to become one of the pillars of the symphonic repertoire, even being seen as a summing up of western musical traditions to that point, and an introduction to the world of Ives, Stravinsky and Schoenberg. The Colorado Symphony’s
new Associate Conductor Christopher Dragon will lead an in-depth exploration of this last symphonic work of Brahms’s career, including musical illustrations, followed by a full performance.
Sponsored by Newman Center Members
Vertigo DanceCo-Presented with the Mizel Arts and Culture Center at the JCCSat, Oct 17, 2015 / 7:30 p.m.Vertigo Dance was founded in Israel in 1992 by Noa Wertheim and Adi Sha’al and is dedicated to bringing people together and touching them through the language of the body in motion. Wertheim, her three sisters, and their families founded the Vertigo Eco-Art Village, the home to Vertigo Dance and a School for Earth Building for the use of renewable, local materials and ancient building techniques, workshops and classes in art and practical ecology, a community recycling center offering workshops, an artists’ residence for local and foreign artists, and outreach performances for diverse communities including those with disabilities and special needs. Their goal is to create a family model based on ecological and social principles that can be passed from community to community, even country to country.
The major work on this Colorado premiere by Vertigo Dance is called Reshimo, a Kabbalistic idea suggesting the impression light makes—the afterimage—once one is in darkness. It is set to a hauntingly beautiful musical score by Israeli composer Ran Bagno.
Supported in part by a generous grant from MDC Holdings/Richmond American Homes Foundation.
2015-2016 SEASONAll performances take place in June Swaner Gates Concert Hall at 7:30 p.m., unless otherwise noted, and include a free Behind the Curtain discussion one hour before curtain with guest lecturers. Check www.newmancenterpresents.com for additional details. Artists and programs are subject to change.
112015-2016 Newman Center Presents
Luxury in all price points since 1971.
303.399.7777 perryandco.com
Greenwood Village
Cherry Creek North
Cherry Creek East
®
®
HONESTPERSONALCLASSIC
¿
%
We are 9 experts in OB/GYB, health & well-being working together to ensure comprehensive, intergrated care during every stage of your life.
www.AllAboutWomensCare.com 303-781-5299
All About Women’s Care
Main Location: 701 E Hampden Ave, Suite 120 • Englewood
Satellite Location: 6169 S Balsam Way, Suite 370 • Littleton
12 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
Michael FeinsteinThe Great American SongbookCo-Presented with the Mizel Arts and Culture Center at the JCCThu, Oct 22, 2015 / 7:30 p.m.Michael Feinstein’s suave vocalism, irresistible charm, and remarkable insights into popular song make his concerts wonderful celebrations of the genre. He has been dubbed “The Ambassador of the Great American Songbook,” has released multi-platinum-selling albums, and has been nominated twice for an Emmy and five times for a Grammy Award. His 200-plus shows a year have included performances at Carnegie Hall, Sydney Opera House, and the Hollywood Bowl, as well as the White House and Buckingham Palace.
More than simply a performer, Feinstein has received national recognition for his commitment to celebrating America’s popular song and preserving its legacy for the next generation. In 2007, he founded The Great American Songbook Foundation, dedicated to celebrating the art form and preserving it through educational programs, master classes, and the annual High School Vocal Academy and Competition, which awards scholarships and prizes to students across the country. Feinstein serves on the Library of Congress’ National Recording Preservation Board, an organization dedicated to ensuring the survival, conservation, and increased public availability of America’s sound recording heritage.
Sponsored by Newman Center Members
Anonymous 4Final Season Tour1865 – Songs of Hope and Home from the American Civil Warwith Bruce Molsky, fiddle, banjo, guitar, and vocalsSat, Nov 14, 2015 / 7:30 p.m.Anonymous 4’s third and last album of their American Trilogy recordings for harmonia mundi—and their final brand new touring program—commemorates the 150th anniversary of the end of the American Civil War. 1865 focuses on the personal experiences of men, women, and children from the north and the south toward the end of the Civil War and in its immediate aftermath. The songs may originally have been written for the stage or the parlor, or they may have emanated from the hills and back roads of America. Many of the songs in 1865 were published between 1861 and 1865; others first appeared in print earlier but were sung constantly during the War years, perhaps in an effort to bring to mind the familiar and the good. Yet other songs and instrumental tunes are not datable; by the year 1865, they had already been passed down from generation to generation without the aid of the printed page.
Joining Anonymous 4 for this project is Bruce Molsky, renowned old-time fiddler, master banjo and guitar player, and vocalist. Anonymous 4 and Bruce have put their own stamp on the songs in 1865, including five-part harmonies on the Stephen Foster gem “Hard Times, Come Again No More,” “Home, Sweet Home,” and “Listen to the Mocking Bird” accompanied by the minstrel banjo; the high lonesome sound on folk songs such as “Bright Sunny South”; Bruce’s fiddle and banjo playing on instrumental tunes “Rebel Raid”; “Polly Put the Kettle On”; and the four-part a cappella singing of Anonymous 4 on the hymn “Abide with Me.”
Sponsored by Newman Center Members
Boston Brass & the Brass All-Stars Big Band Christmas Bells are Swingin’!Wed, Dec 2, 2015 / 7:30 p.m.Boston Brass has expanded their trademark entertainment by teaming up with all-star brass players from Denver to produce an unmatched sound that will brighten your holiday season. The brass ensemble (trumpets, French horns, trombones and tubas) with jazz rhythm section features fiery big band arrangements of classics such as the Stan Kenton Christmas Carols, “Greensleeves,” and “Motown Jingle Bells” in a setting that will delight audiences of all ages. The concert also includes holiday favorites performed by the Boston Brass such as “Three Dances” from the Nutcracker, “Christmas Song,” and “White Christmas.” This ensemble of virtuoso musicians will light up the stage and warm every heart.
Sponsored by Founding Partner Cherry Creek Shopping Center
Brooklyn RiderAlmanacThu, Jan 14, 2016 / 7:30 p.m.The adventurous, genre-defying string quartet Brooklyn Rider makes its Denver premiere in a performance of new works that are all part of its inventive and entertaining Almanac project. Taking a cue from the Blue Rider artist collective (Der Blaue Reiter) of the pre-WWI era, the quartet invited an exciting group of composers—including Wilco’s Glenn Kotche, singer-songwriter Aoife O’Donovan, Deerhoof’s Greg Saunier, and a host of jazz luminaries including guitarist Bill Frisell, pianist Vijay Iyer, and Ethan Iverson of The Bad Plus—to create new music. Each composer chose a personal creative muse as inspiration, ranging from Igor Stravinsky
2015-2016 SEASON
interior landscapes that delight the senses
kitchensofcolorado.com
Aspen970.925.8579
Denver303.399.4564
Crested Butte970.349.5023
Steamboat Springs970.879.9222
Telluride970.728.3359
Vail970.949.5500
14 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
to Keith Haring, Chick Corea to John Steinbeck, David Byrne to James Brown, choreographer Mark Morris to Aboriginal Australian painter Albert Namatjira.
Allan Kozinn, music critic with The New York Times for many years, has said that “there is an incredible world taking shape, with young composers writing music that people want to hear, and hear about, and a style/era change as significant as the shift from Baroque to Classical or Classical to Romantic.” Brooklyn Rider is an integral part of that movement.
Sponsored by Newman Center Members
Kyle Abraham / Abraham.In.MotionWhen the Wolves Came InIn collaboration with Cleo Parker Robinson Dance and the International Association of Blacks in Dance ConferenceWed, Jan 20, 2016 / 7:30 p.m.This Colorado premiere by Abraham.In.Motion features works inspired by Max Roach’s iconic 1960 protest album We Insist! (Max Roach’s Freedom Now Suite), itself created in anticipation of the 100th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation as well as to shed a light on the growing African independence movements of the 1950s. The potent themes inherent in these historical milestones are evident in Abraham’s choreography, evocative scenery by visual artist Glenn Ligon, visceral power of Roach’s masterwork, and original compositions of Grammy Award-winning jazz musician Robert Glasper.
Born into hip-hop culture in the late 1970s and grounded in his artistic upbringing in classical cello, piano, and the visual arts, Kyle Abraham’s movement delves into identity and personal history. His work entwines a sensual and provocative movement vocabulary with a strong emphasis on sound, human behavior, and all things visual. Abraham founded his own
2015-2016 SEASON
Gallery of Jewelry and Art
...a distinctive new addition to the South Gaylord shopping experience...
J E W E L R YC E R A M I C S
O I L SA C R Y L I C S
M O N O P R I N T SJAPANESE BASKETRY
E NE N C A U S T I CM I X E D M E D I A
F I B E R A R TA R T T O W E A R
1061 South Gaylord StreetDenver, Colorado 80209
303 888 3849720 502 5459
hannahbydesign.com
Remarkable Communication!
My Cell Number Is 303-507-5455.Call me and I will answer
your call, or phone you right back.
Because if I was Buying or selling my home, that’s
what I would want.
CRS, Broker Associate Previews and 5 Star Agent
A Truly Remarkable Realtor!
303-507-5455
w w w . b a r b a r a a n d c o m p a n y . n e t
Featur ing the latest fashions from Europe, LA,
and New York.
Open Monday-Saturday, 10-6 • Sunday, 12-5BOULDER • 303.443.2565 • 1505 PEARL STREETDENVER • 303.751.2618 • 1067 SOUTH GAYLORD
T H E bes t col lect ion I S Y O U R S.
wishdenver.com
great new location!
gifts & accessories that get noticed
750 south university blvd303.722.2900
clothing & accessories that get noticed
1099 south gaylord street303.733.4848
16 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
company in 2006, and, in the comparatively short time since, has been selected as one of Dance Magazine’s 25 To Watch for 2009; won a 2010 Bessie Award for Outstanding Performance in Dance and a Princess Grace Award for Choreography; and was called the “best and brightest creative talent to emerge in New York City in the age of Obama” by OUT Magazine in 2011. In 2012, he received the Jacob’s Pillow Dance Award, a USA Ford Fellowship, and was named the New York Live Arts Resident Commissioned Artist for 2012–2014. In 2013, he was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship (the “genius grant”).
Presenting Sponsor – Creative Instinct, Inc.
This project also received support from WESTAF, the Western States Arts Federation; and the National Endowment for the Arts.
S-o Percussion with Shara Worden, vocalsSat, Feb 6, 2016 / 7:30 p.m.For over a decade, S -o Percussion has redefined the modern percussion ensemble as a flexible, omnivorous entity, pushing its voice to the forefront of American musical culture. S -o Percussion’s career now encompasses 16 albums, tours throughout the United States and around the world, a dizzying array of collaborative projects, several ambitious educational programs, and a steady output of its own music. S -o Percussion is heavily involved in mentoring young musicians and is the newly appointed Edward T. Cone Ensemble-in-Residence at Princeton University.
Not many people can front a rock band, sing Górecki’s Third Symphony, lead a marching band processional down the streets of the Sundance Film Festival, and perform in a baroque opera of their own composing all in a month’s time.
2015-2016 SEASON
Fresh Fish Daily O Slow Spit Roasted MeatsBeautiful Tree Covered Patio / Tiki Bar for Private Parties
DINNER Monday – SundayBRUNCH Saturday & Sunday
A-List “Best Seafood”
Choose from our extensive menu of seafood,pasta, salads and choice grilled meats. Enjoylive music as you sit back and sip on one ofWashington Park Grille’s lively libations.
Best of City Search ; Zagat Rated 9.2“City’s Best” AOL Guide
A-List “Best Brunch”
specialsCrab Tuesdays
Snow Crab $12.95/lbKing Crab $23.95/lb
$1 Taco Wednesdays
$19 Lobster Saturdays1lb Whole Maine Lobsters
Great for Date Night!
Bloody Mary Bar & Bottomless Mimosasat Saturday & Sunday Brunch – 10am to 2pm
immerse yourself.
1052 S. Gaylord Street Denver, Co 80209 maxgillandgrill.com 303.722.7456
One mile north of Newman Center Owned by DU Alumni
Live Music
Patio Seating
Lunch & Dinner Daily
Sunday Brunch Buffet & Menuwith Bottomless Mimosas
Happy Hour | Monday-Friday 3:00-6:30 PM
1096 s. gaylord street denver, co 80209 washparkgrille.com 303.777.0707One mile north of Newman Center Owned by DU Alumni
WASH PARK GRILLE
Call today for details on our fresh approach to your Real Estate needs!
Real Estate & Mortgage Expertise Under One Roof
Tolan Real [email protected] www.denversluxuryrealestate.com
Thoroughbred Financial303-888-0006
• For Listings - Luxury marketing and exemplary service without the luxury commission.
• For Buyers - We can find you
your “perfect, forever home” and finance your purchase, while discounting the bundled transaction.
Buying & selling luxury homes can be expensive & complex. Your experience doesn’t have to be!
• We are a 15-year-old full-service boutique lender providing refinance and purchase loans, known for our outstanding rates and service.
• Our lenders have the best rates,
plus we charge less. This combination saves our clients on every loan.
The Tolan Real Estate Companies
18 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
But Shara Worden can. Born in El Dorado, Arkansas and then raised all around the country, Worden came from a musical family of traveling evangelists. She went on to study operatic voice and then classical composition after a move to New York City. Worden is the lead singer for My Brightest Diamond and has worked with Laurie Anderson, Pulitzer Prize-winning composer David Lang, David Byrne, Music, Bon Iver, and The Blind Boys of Alabama.
For their third time with Newman Center Presents, S -o Percussion will perform “Music for Wood and Strings” by The National’s Bryce Dessner. S -o and Worden will perform Shara’s own “Timeline.”
Sponsored by Newman Center Members
Paul Taylor Dance Company featuring the world premiere of a new workCo-Commissioned by Newman Center PresentsSat, Feb 20, 2016 / 7:30 p.m.Sun, Feb 21, 2016 / 2:00 p.m.Dancemaker Paul Taylor, one of the seminal artists of the 20th and 21st centuries, continues to shape the homegrown American art of modern dance that he has helped define since he became a professional dancer and pioneering choreographer in 1954. Newman Center Presents has co-commissioned a new work by Taylor that will have its world premiere at these performances.
This project received support from WESTAF, the Western States Arts Federation; the National Endowment for the Arts; and The Antonia and Vladimer Kulaev Cultural Heritage Fund, Inc.
2015-2016 SEASON
303.777.33581734 E. Evans. Ave.
A World of Chocolate...Handcrafted Right in Your Neighborhood!
40+
Delicious Years
Please bring this ad to our chocolate shop and enjoy 10% off your next purchase!
dietrichschocolate.com
Consult the Experts
• Chemical Peels• Cosmetic Surgery• Fat Transfer• Injectables• Laser • Liposuction• Rejuvenation Surgery• Sensitive Skin• Skin Care Products & Advice
• Skin Typing • Vein
The Rocky Mountain Region’s only academic cosmetic practice.
www.cucosmetics.com
Denver Office (303) 724-7770
NEW! Colo. Springs Office
(719) 531-5400
Skin | Laser | Surgery
Wonderbound 2015-2016 Season
wonderbound.com
with Chimney Choir & Ian Cooke Band
with Tom Hagerman & the Colorado Symphony
February 13-21
October 9-18
April 15-30
Garrett Ammon creations to the music of David Bowie and Queen.
A provocative, wickedly humorous take on the cardinal sins
Rock Ballets
The Seven Deadly Sins
Dustwith Curious Theatre Company &
Jesse Manley and His BandExplore the dust bowl era through the lens
of directors Ammon, Walton and Covington
2015/2016 SeasonCantata Insights Series: Wachet auf, BWV 140 • Sunday, November 15, 5:00 pm at Bethany Lutheran Church
Christmas Oratorio, BWV 248 • Saturday, December 19, 7:00 pm at Bethany Lutheran Church • Sunday, December 20, 6:00 pm at Griffin Concert Hall
St. John Passion, BWV 245 • Friday, March 18, 7:30 pm at Saint John’s Cathedral • Saturday, March 19, 7:30 pm at Bethany Lutheran Church • Sunday, March 20, 4:00 pm at Redeemer Lutheran Church
Cantata Insights Series: Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen, BWV 12 • Sunday, April 17, 5:00 pm at Bethany Lutheran Church
Learn more and purchase tickets at our new Web site
ColoradoBach.org
James Kim, Founder and Artistic Director
20 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
Colorado SymphonyLearning to Hear ColorThu, Feb 25, 2016 / 7:30 p.m.Many composers and musicians experience sounds as colors– among the most famous are Liszt, Rimsky-Korsakov, Sibelius, Bernstein, Ellington, Messiaen, and Ligeti. American composer Michael Torke even composed a suite called Color Music including such sections as “Bright Blue Music” and “Ecstatic Orange.”
In conjunction with an exhibition at the University of Denver’s Vicki Myhren Gallery called Learning to See Color, this concert explores the musical aspects of color. The Colorado Symphony’s new Assistant Conductor, Andres Lopera, will lead you through a program demonstrating that art created to be experienced through one sense, such as music, can actually lead to perceptions and feelings experienced through other senses—colors can be heard.
Sponsored by Newman Center Members
Metropolitan Opera Rising Stars Concert SeriesSat, Mar 5, 2016 / 7:30 p.m.Rising Stars of the Metropolitan Opera offers fans across North America a rare opportunity to experience remarkable young artists on the cusp of extraordinary careers. Each concert features singers carefully selected from the MET’s Lindemann Young Artist Development program—winners of the MET’s National Council Auditions—accompanied by piano in popular arias, duets, and ensembles by opera’s greatest composers.
For more than 125 years, the Metropolitan Opera has been the artistic home of the greatest singers in the world. But the MET is
also the launching pad for the opera stars of the future. Some of today’s leading artists got their first big break by winning the company’s National Council Auditions, as members of the Lindemann Program, and by catching the attention of MET talent scouts. Stephanie Blythe, Renée Fleming, Ben Heppner, Deborah Voigt, Thomas Hampson, and Eric Owens are just a few of the major artists to have come through the MET ranks. Another generation of young singers is ready to be discovered.
Sponsored by Newman Center Members
globalFEST On the Road Creole CarnivalTue, Mar 29, 2016 / 7:30 p.m.Experience three exciting artists in this mini-festival format. Over the past decade, globalFEST has become one of the most dynamic global music platforms in North America. What started as an annual showcase in New York City has grown into an international brand, building audiences for world music with stages at SXSW, Bonnaroo, and beyond. Founded in 2003, globalFEST spotlights artists who represent diverse global styles, bringing down boundaries between countries and creating cultural opportunities for collaboration. More than 120 emerging and established artists have performed at globalFEST, including such celebrated voices as Mariza, Lila Downs, and Angelique Kidjo. Following the January 2016 festival in New York, globalFEST’s first tour will begin, bringing this phenomenon across North America.
The inaugural tour, Creole Carnival, features Emeline Michel, the reigning queen of Haitian song; Casuarina, Rio’s innovative samba masters; and Brushy One-String, Jamaica’s charismatic one-string guitarist and vocalist.
Sponsored by Newman Center Members
Gabriel Kahane and Timo AndresSat, Apr 2, 2016 / 7:30 p.m.Sun, Apr 3, 2016 / 2:00 p.m.Hamilton Recital HallFor this performance two friends draw on four centuries of music to create a call and response experience. Solo piano transcriptions of Bach chorale preludes are mixed with songs for piano and voice by composers such as Franz Schubert, Robert Schumann, Thomas Adès, and Jerome Kern. Benjamin Britten’s folk song settings and Charles Ives’ songs are mingled with new pieces written by Gabe and Timo for each other, resulting in a live mix-tape concert.
Kahane is a tireless collaborator. His recent credits include a track on this year’s Beck Song Reader, performances and recordings with Newman Center favorite Chris Thile, and several projects with Sufjan Stevens.
Andres’ debut album Shy and Mighty was released in 2010 to immediate critical acclaim. Alex Ross wrote in The New Yorker that it “achieves an unhurried grandeur that has rarely been felt in American music since John Adams came on the scene ... more mighty than shy, [Andres] sounds like himself.”
This project received support from The Antonia and Vladimer Kulaev Cultural Heritage Fund, Inc.
Julian Lage and Chris Eldridge AvalonThu, Apr 21, 2016 / 7:30 p.m.Avalon, from Julian Lage and Chris “Critter” Eldridge, is a love letter to the sound of the acoustic guitar. Their set list is a mix of originals and covers that illustrate the breadth
2015-2016 SEASON
“Colorado’s Family Law Team”(Divorce and Custody)
Protecting You, Your Kids, and Your Future.
Denver, Englewood, Evergreen, Fort Collins 303.515.5000
www.harrisfamilylaw.com
YOUR PERSONALPASTRY CHEF
BUSINESS MEETINGS
DINNER PARTIES • HOLIDAYS
BIRTHDAYS • WEDDINGS
ANNIVERSARIES
ALL OCCASIONS!
CAKES • PIES
CINNAMON ROLLS • SCONES
BROWNIES • COOKIES
GLUTEN FREE REQUESTS
ETCETERA!
WWW.SWEETASPIEDENVER.COM
303.284.2376 [email protected]
Programs for children 3-18!Friendly Auditions
fall, spring and summer
Membership information:www.youngvoices.org
303.797.SING
Come Sing With Us!
Concerts at the Newman CenterDecember 6, May 1 and July 2
Join us for another year of fantastic art
exhibitions!
Annabeth Rosenthe whole is equal...
October 8 - November 15, 2015
Visit du.edu/vmgallery for more information about
exhibitions, openings, and other gallery events.
Annabeth Rosen, Prolly, 2012. Photo courtesy of the artist.
Carmon Colangelo, Seven Days in O Land O, 2011. Gift of Ralph Nagel.
Learning to See ColorJanuary 14 - March 6, 2016
Your Physician’s Choice forHearing & Tinnitus Care
Advanced Audiology, Inc.Hearing & Tinnitus Center
• More than 100 Physicians & Healthcare workers refer their patients to us.
• 85% of our patients come from physician and patient referrals.
• BBB Gold Star Award and A+ rated.
303-649-2122 AdvancedAudiology.com
Centennial, Colorado 80112
We take Your Hearing Seriously
Dr. Barbara Jenkins AuD, BCABA Colorado’s First Board Certified
Doctor of Audiology
Dr. Fatima, AuD, BCABA Board Certified Doctor
of Audiology
232015-2016 Newman Center Presents
BOX OFFICE INFORMATIONM Allan Frank Family Box Office
2344 E. Iliff Ave., Denver, CO 80208
Hours: Mon–Fri, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Sat, 12 p.m.–4 p.m. (Sep–May)Phone: 303.871.7720Email: [email protected]: www.newmancenterpresents.com
Tickets can be purchased in person at the Newman Center Box Office or by phone at 303.871.7720 during the hours listed above or online anytime at www.NewmanTix.com. Service charges may apply for tickets purchased by phone or online.
Discounts are available for students, seniors, and DU faculty and staff. For more informa-tion, or to request accommodations for a dis-ability, call 303.871.7720.
Group discount tickets are available for groups of eight (8) or more to most events. For information, contact Molly Epstein at [email protected] or 303.619.6196.
To v iew a l ist ing of our previous twelve seasons, please v is i t www.newmancenterpresents.com and select Archive.
COMMISSIONED WORKSThe Newman Center is committed to bringing new works of music and dance to life. We are excited to have commissioned or co-commissioned the following works:
Co-commissioner, “Kites Over Havana,” by Paquito D’Rivera, performed by the composer with Imani Winds
Commissioner, “WE MARCH,” Concerto for Guitar and String Orchestra, by Daniel Bernard Roumain, performed by Eliot Fisk, guitar, and the Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra
of the American songbook, incorporating bluegrass, country, gospel, old-time music, and jazz.
Julian Lage is an American guitarist, composer, and arranger. Hailed as a child prodigy, Lage was the subject of the Academy Award nominated documentary Jules at 8. His music is rooted in both traditional and acoustic forms, and he has had the opportunity to collaborate with renowned artists such as Jim Hall, Mark O’Connor, Béla Fleck, Gary Burton, David Grisman, and Joshua Bell. His debut recording, Sounding Point, was nominated for a 2010 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Jazz Album of the Year.
As a member of Punch Brothers, guitarist Chris Eldridge has been at the vanguard of acoustic music for much of the past decade. Eldridge developed a deep love for acoustic music thanks in part to his father, a banjo player and founding member of the seminal bluegrass group The Seldom Scene. Eldridge later gained in-depth exposure to a variety of different musical styles while studying at Oberlin Conservatory. In 2005, he founded the bluegrass band The Infamous Stringdusters.
Sponsored by Newman Center Members
Billy ChildsMap to the Treasure: Reimagining Laura Nyrofeaturing Dianne Reeves, Becca Stevens, and Alicia OlatujaThu, May 5, 2016 / 7:30 p.m.
Laura Nyro, who died in 1997 at the age of 49, was one of the most important singer-songwriters of the late 1960s and early 70s. Her work is known more through covers of her songs—such as “Stoney End,” “Black Patch,” “Blowing Away,” “Wedding Bell Blues,” “Stoned Soul Picnic,” “Save the Country,” “And When I Die”—performed by others (Barbara Streisand; Blood, Sweat and Tears; The 5th Dimension; Peter, Paul & Mary; Three Dog Night) than through her own performances. Her compositions blend soul, gospel, jazz, show tunes, and pop. Billy Childs’ arrangements with vocals by Becca Stevens, Alicia Olatuja, and Denver’s own Dianne Reeves are a loving and powerful tribute to this influential artist.
Childs is a pianist, composer, and arranger, a three-time Grammy winner, and an artist who can fluidly move among jazz and other musical worlds. Denver’s own Dianne Reeves is a five-time Grammy Award winner for Best Jazz Vocal Performance, the only artist to win that award for three consecutive albums.
Supported by The Porter Adventist Hospital Endowment for the Performing Arts and by Newman Center Presenting Sponsor VAL-U-ADS®
2015-2016 SEASON
Newman Center volunteers have given over 78,000 hours of service since the NCPA opened in 2003.
Our volunteer ushers come from as far away as Evergreen, Castle Rock, and Loveland for the pleasure of handing you a program and helping you locate your seat.
DID YOU KNOW?!
Anonymous 4 1
1865: Songs of Hope and Home from the American Civil War
There will be no intermission this evening.
No portion of this performance may be photographed, recorded, filmed, or videotaped.
Anonymous 4Final Season Tour
Saturday, November 14, 2015
with Bruce Molsky,fiddle, banjo, guitar, vocals
This performance received support from The Porter Adventist Hospital Endowment for the Performing Arts.
SponsorNewman Center Members
Anonymous 42
1865: Songs of Hope and Home from the American Civil War
Anonymous 4Ruth Cunningham, Marsha Genensky, Susan Hellauer,
Jacqueline Horner-Kwiatek
With special guest, Bruce Molsky (fiddle, banjo, guitar, vocals)
All songs on tonight’s program have been arranged by members of Anonymous 4 and Bruce Molsky.Songs you may hear tonight:
Popular songsHome, Sweet Home
Words: John Howard Payne ; Music: Sir Henry Bishop (1823)
Hard Times Come Again No MoreWords and Music: Stephen Foster (1854)
Darling Nelly GrayWords and Music: B.R. Hanby (1856)
The Faded Coat of Blue, or, The Nameless GraveWords and Music: J.H. McNaughton (1865)
Listen to the Mocking BirdWords and Music: Alice Hawthorne (aka Septimus Winner) (1856)
The Southern Soldier BoyWords: Captain C.W. Alexander (1863)
Air: The Boy with the Auburn Hair (ca 1859)
Sweet Evelina“Words by M ; Melody by T” (possibly T. Brigham Bishop) (1863)
Weeping, Sad and Lonely, or, When this Cruel War is OverWords: Charles Carroll Sawyer ; Music: Henry Tucker (1863)
The Picture on the WallWords and music: Henry Clay Work (1864)
Tenting on the Old Camp GroundWords and Music: Walter Kittredge (1864)
TONIGHT’S PROGRAM
1865
Joined by special guest Bruce Molsky, Anonymous 4 commemorates the 150th anniversary of the end of the American Civil War and the abolition of slavery with 1865.
1865 focuses on the personal experience of men, women, and children from the North and from the South, toward the end of the Civil War and in its immediate aftermath -- as told in songs originally written for the stage and for the parlor, and in songs and instrumental tunes from the hills and back roads of America.
Many of the songs in 1865 were published between 1861 and 1865; others first appeared in print earlier, but were sung constantly during the terrible war years, perhaps in an effort to bring to mind the familiar and the good. Yet other songs and instrumental tunes are not datable; by the year 1865, they had already been passed down from generation to generation without the aid of the printed page.
Whatever their origins or history or musical style, these songs are the stylized, versified “stories” preferred by so many who lived through “This Cruel War.” They describe the cause and the call to fight; the agony of separation of lovers or of mothers and sons; the hopes, fears, and sacrifices of those who remained at home during the long wait for news of loved ones; the experiences of the soldiers themselves -- especially their desperate longing for home and family; homecoming for those who survived; grief for those who did not; and the hope for reconciliation amidst a troubled peace.
!!Letters, diaries, and memoirs attest to the importance of music during the Civil War, whether performed on the battlefield by homesick soldiers or at home by those who waited for them. Responding to the demand for music (and in doing so, creating an even greater market for it), songwriters and composers jumped into action, producing several thousand songs during the war years -- about 700 released by Southern publishers, the rest by Northern publishers. Songs appeared in elegant sheet music with beautifully illustrated covers and in cheap single sheets referred to as song sheets or broadsides; and the lyrics of favorite songs both old and new were printed in pocket-sized collections called songsters, which were carried by both soldiers and civilians.!!Despite the frenzy of musical composition and publication, and the speed with which certain new songs became huge hits, the single most popular song in both the North and the South during the Civil War actually pre-dated the war’s first shot by almost four decades, originating in the 1823 opera, Clari, or the Maid of Milan. Account after account tells of the singing of this song to ward off despair, or describes Northern and Southern soldiers camped on opposite sides of a river or a battlefield, singing or playing Union and Southern tunes in alternation, and finally joining together on… Home, Sweet Home.
Anonymous 4 3
Hymns and Gospel songsAbide with Me
Words: Henry F. Lyte ; Music: William H. Monk (1861)
The Land of BeulahWords: Jefferson Hascall ; Music: William B. Bradbury (1862)
Shall We Gather at the River?Words and Music: Robert Lowry (1865)
Traditional songsBright Sunny South · Brother Green · The Maiden in the Garden · The True Lover’s Farewell
Traditional fiddle and banjo tunesCamp Chase · Polly Put the Kettle On · Rebel Raid
TONIGHT’S PROGRAM (continued)
Anonymous 44
Like Home, Sweet Home, many other songs on 1865 have nothing to do with side taking. Northerners preferred the love song Aura Lea; Southerners preferred the love song Sweet Evelina. Listen to the Mockingbird became The Mockingbird Quickstep, played by military and civilian brass bands everywhere during the war years.
But the lyrics of some of our songs (and many other Civil War songs as well), did promote either the Northern or the Southern cause. Even so, some of the best loved of them were sung with equal fervor in the North and the South. The Northern song Weeping, Sad and Lonely, or, When This Cruel War is Over was printed again and again by both Northern and Southern publishers with certain changes in text to indicate Union or Confederate allegiance. Despite the fact that the extreme sadness of its theme caused such bad morale that generals tried to forbid their troops from singing it, sales of Weeping, Sad and Lonely approached nearly a million copies, and songwriters on both sides of the Mason-Dixon Line churned out reply songs, parodies, and imitations. !!Although a few of the songs in 1865 fell into obscurity after the end of the Civil War, many others have lived on and become part of the American treasury of song. Certain songs have been sung and played in a surprising variety of settings. We particularly love
the facts that Aura Lea is the source of the melody for the Elvis Presley hit Love Me Tender, and (despite its extremely sad lyrics) Listen to the Mockingbird became a comic song, often featuring virtuosic whistling solos – and used as part of the theme song in the opening credits of the short films of The Three Stooges! Shall We Gather at the River has not only enjoyed a long and active life here in the US, but made its way to the British Isles and has flourished there, as well. !!Featured in tonight’s concert: five-part harmonies on Weeping, Sad and Lonely, the Stephen Foster gem Hard Times, Come Again No More, and Shall We Gather at the River; Bruce accompanying himself on banjo on Bright Sunny South, and his inimitable fiddle and banjo playing on instrumental tunes Rebel Raid, Camp Chase, and Polly Put the Kettle On; Darling Nelly Gray, Listen to the Mocking Bird, and Home, Sweet Home in something close to their original settings accompanied by the fretted banjo; the Southern favorite Sweet Evelina sung girl group style; Aura Lea in an arrangement for two voices and guitar; an homage to the Carter Family on The Faded Coat of Blue; the high lonesome sound on the folk song The True Lover’s Farewell; and the four-part a cappella singing of Anonymous 4 on the anti-war song Tenting on the Old Camp Ground and the hymn Abide with Me.
TONIGHT’S PROGRAM (continued)
5Anonymous 4
Anonymous 4: Ruth Cunningham, Marsha Genensky, Susan Hellauer, Jacqueline Horner-Kwiatek
ABOUT ANONYMOUS 4Four women got together for a music reading session one afternoon in the spring of 1986; they wanted to hear what medieval chant and polyphony would sound like when sung by female voices. Nearly 30 years later, Anonymous 4 has performed for sold-out audiences on major concert series and at festivals throughout North America, Europe, Asia, and the Middle East; and has made over 20 recordings for harmonia mundi usa, selling over two million copies.
Anonymous 4’s programs have included music from the year 1000; the ecstatic music and poetry of the 12th-century abbess and mystic, Hildegard of Bingen; 13th- and 14th-century chant and polyphony from England, France, and Spain; medieval and modern carols from the British Isles; American folksongs, shape note tunes, and gospel songs; and works newly written for the group. Their recordings have received France’s prestigious Diapason d’Or, Classic CD’s Disc of the Year, Classic FM’s Early Music Recording of the Year, several Gramophone Editor’s Choice awards, Italy’s Antonio Vivaldi Award, Le Monde de la Musique’s Choc award; the group has also twice been voted one of Billboard’s top classical artists.
Composers who have written for Anonymous 4 include David Lang (love fail, a full-evening-length work premiered in June 2012), Richard Einhorn (Voices of Light, an oratorio with silent film; and A Carnival of Miracles, for vocal quartet and two cellos), John Tavener (The Bridegroom, for Anonymous 4 and the Chilingirian String Quartet), Peter Maxwell Davies (A Carnival of Kings), and Steve Reich (Know What is Above You). Anonymous 4 has recorded and toured with the Chilingirian String Quartet, fabled harpist Andrew Lawrence King; newgrass stars Darol Anger (violin) and Mike Marshall (mandolin, guitar), and has collaborated with John Darnielle’s indie rock band, the Mountain Goats. The group’s newest project, the final installment of the American Trilogy entitled 1865, featuring songs of hope and home from the American Civil War, pairs the ensemble with renowned singer and old-time fiddler, master banjo and guitar player, Bruce Molsky. The recording of 1865 was released by harmonia mundi early in 2015 and has returned Anonymous 4 to the top of the Billboard classical charts.
After a journey its members could never have imagined possible on that spring day in 1986, Anonymous 4’s adventures are coming to an end: the group will be closing up shop after the end of 2015. Ruth, Marsha, Susan, and Jacqueline extend special thanks to you for being here tonight.
BIOGRAPHIES
!!
Anonymous 46
RUTH CUNNINGHAMRuth does the social media and informal tour photography for Anonymous 4. Ruth received a B. Mus. in Performance of Early Music from the New England Conservatory of Music and is certified as a cross-cultural music and healing practitioner. She specializes in singing early music and improvisational music in both liturgical and concert settings. Ruth
looks forward to expanding her work in improvisatory performance as well as continuing to teach workshops and individual sessions in sound healing and improvisation. She has two solo cds: Light and Shadow: Chants, Prayers and Improvisations and Harpmodes: Journey for Voice and Harp. Ruth’s other releases include two recordings of multi-faith chants with colleague Ana Hernandez: Blessed by Light and HARC: Inside Chants. Her website is www.ruthcunningham.com.
MARSHA GENENSKYMarsha handles Anonymous 4’s American music research, and has acted as music director for A4’s American projects, American Angels, Gloryland, and 1865. She also does the historical language pronunciation research for A4’s medieval music projects, acts as tour manager, and generally “makes things go” for the group. Since moving to
the Bay Area in 2004, she has been teaching performance courses and workshops on medieval music and on Anglo-American sacred and secular song, and has become a SF Giants fan(atic). Marsha looks forward to creating (and performing in) more American music projects; she also plans to seek a new role in the Bay Area, helping to support and fund performing artists and ensembles.
SUSAN HELLAUER Susan is a native of the beautiful Bronx, New York, where she grew up rooting for the Yankees. While earning a B.A. in music as a trumpet player from Queens College (City University of New York), an increasing fascination with medieval and Renaissance vocal music led her to convert to singing, and to pursue advanced degrees in
musicology from Queens College and Columbia University. Susan handles Anonymous 4’s medieval music research, and is an adjunct Assistant Professor of Music at Queens College, CUNY, where she directs the Collegium Musicum. She has appeared as
a vocal soloist with the Harp Consort, Parthenia, and the 2006 U.S. Fes Festival of World Sacred Music. Susan leads Chant Camp workshops throughout the U.S., and is proud to be a volunteer EMT and ambulance driver with the Nyack Community Ambulance Corps.
JACQUELINE HORNER-KWIATEKJacqueline Horner-Kwiatek is Anonymous 4’s new music liaison, helping to facilitate commissions and collaborations with composers and artists such as David Lang and John Darnielle. She is a soloist outside of her work with Anonymous 4, performing music from Bach to Babbitt with many ensembles in the U.S. and Europe, including
Ensemble Intercontemporain Paris, Ensemble Modern Frankfurt, Washington Bach Consort, Carmel Bach Festival, Parthenia, Locrian and American Opera Projects. She is currently part of an opera in development about Nicolai Tesla, being created by the dream team of Phil Kline, Jim Jarmusch and Robert Wilson. She is also a voice teacher with a thriving studio in New York City and gives master classes and ensemble technique workshops in New York City, DC and throughout the U.S. She is currently a Doctoral candidate at The Juilliard School. Her website is Jacquelinehorner.com.
BRUCE MOLSKYBruce Molsky is “one of America’s premier fiddling talents” (Mother Jones) and a twice-GRAMMY nominated artist. On the road over 200 days a year, Bruce tours the world solo, with Andy Irvine and Dònal Lunny’s Mozaik, as a trio with Aly Bain and Ale Möller, with The Old-Time Kozmik Trio (Darol Anger and Rushad Eggleston), and in a new trio with Tony
Trischka and Michael Daves. With seven solo CDs behind him, No Depression called Bruce’s latest solo CD If It Ain’t Here When I Get Back “an album from an absolute master.” Bruce is also Berklee College of Music’s first permanent visiting professor in their American Roots Music Program, and is the go-to guy for the next generation of fiddlers.
Anonymous 4 is represented by Alliance Artist Management & records exclusively for harmonia mundi usaU.S. booking and management for Bruce Molsky: Tree Frog Music5030 Broadway Suite 812 New York, NY TEL (212) 304-3538 FAX (212) 304-3530www.allianceartistmanagement.com
BIOGRAPHIES
Anonymous 4 7
The Newman Center would like to thank Jena Dickey from Young Voices of Colorado for leading the Behind the Curtain lecture before tonight’s performance.
THANK YOU!
Join us before each Newman Center Presents performance for an opportunity to learn more about anything from the evening’s program to the history and influences of the genre to key moments to watch and listen for during the performance. Tickets are not required for these FREE Behind the Curtain talks, and no RSVP is necessary. Talks take place one hour before curtain in June Swaner Gates Concert Hall, entering on Orchestra Level East for seating.
Remember:COMPLIMENTARY parking is available for all Newman Center Presents shows in the Newman Center garage.
See complete event descriptions on pages 10-23 of the Newman Center Presents program.
Boston Brass and the Brass All Stars Big BandChristmas Bells Are Swingin’!Wed, Dec 2, 2015 / 7:30 p.m.
Whiffenpoofs and Baker’s Dozen from YaleFri, Jan 8, 2016 / 7:30 p.m.Sat, Jan 9, 2016 / 1:30 p.m.
Brooklyn RiderThu, Jan 14, 2016 / 7:30 p.m.
BEHIND THE CURTAIN UP NEXT
The Newman Center for the Performing Arts is taking part in Colorado Gives Day on December 8—an annual statewide movement to celebrate and increase philanthropy through online giving. You can increase the power of your gift to NCP by making it through ColoradoGives.org. Presented by Community First Foundation and FirstBank, the Newman Center can benefit by taking part in the daylong event: we participate in the Colorado Gives $1 Million Incentive Fund for every gift we receive as part of Colorado Gives Day.
It’s easy to do—and you can do it any time. Simply schedule your gift for December 8 through the Colorado Gives Day safe and secure website (www.ColoradoGives.org).Thanks for your support!
COLORADO GIVES DAY
8 Anonymous 4
Before each Newman Center Presents performance, starting at 6 p.m., DU Catering Services offers a selection of tasty snacks for purchase in Joy Burns Plaza. So whether you come before the Behind the Curtain lecture or head into the Plaza afterward, you can get a quick bite before showtime!
Gift certificates in any amount are available at the Newman Center Box Office and are redeemable for the purchase of tickets for any performance of the Newman Center Presents 2015–16 Season. They are perfect for birthdays, anniversaries, and special gifts year round! The Box Office is open 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Mon–Fri, 12 p.m.–4 p.m. Sat (Sep–May), and one hour before performances.
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
GIVE THE GIFT OF THE ARTS—GIFT CERTIFICATES!
For information about becoming a Newman Center Member and donor opportunities, please see pages 30–36 of the Newman Center Presents program.
Memberships and Donations received July 1, 2014–June 30, 2015 are listed on pages 44-46 of the program.
Newman Center Memberships since July 1, 2015
BENEFACTOR
PARTNERStephen Seifert
SPONSORWilliam Rauschert and Carolyn A. Agosta
SUPPORTERWilliam A. Stolfus and Andrea G. Richardson
CONTRIBUTORDavid Rosentrater
FRIENDJoan B. and Richard L. McGeeAndrea Elizabeth Faley Ann Marie Kaplan Marriott W. and John Smart
NEWMAN CENTER MEMBERS & DONORS
Newman Center Donors since July 1, 2015Meredith Black and L. Roger HutsonBonfils-Stanton FoundationAntonia & Vladimer Kulaev Cultural heritage FundMDC/Richmond American Homes FoundationBettina Kurowski
252015-2016 Newman Center Presents
9Health Fair Ballet Nouveau Colorado Capitol Hill People’s Fair Central City Opera Cherry Creek Arts Festival Cinco
de Mayo Colorado Ballet Colorado State Fair Denver Art Museum Denver Black Arts Festival Denver Botanic
Gardens Denver Center A� ractions Denver Center Theatre Company Denver Film Society Denver Museum of Nature
& Science Denver Polo Classic Denver Public Library Dining Out for Life Dumb Friends League Foothills Art Center
Golden Fine Arts Festival Hike for Youth Hudson Gardens Jazz Aspen Snowmass Lakewood Cultural Center Mizel
Museum National Multiple Sclerosis Society National Sports Center for the Disabled National Western Stock
Show and Rodeo Opera Colorado Parade of Lights Race for the Cure Special Olympics Colorado Stories on Stage
Newman Center for the Performing Arts Taste of Colorado The Wildlife Experience Vail Valley Foundation
9Health Fair Ballet Nouveau Colorado Capitol Hill People’s Fair Central City Opera Cherry Creek Arts Festival Cinco
de Mayo Colorado Ballet Colorado State Fair Denver Art Museum Denver Black Arts Festival Denver Botanic
Gardens Denver Center A� ractions Denver Center Theatre Company Denver Film Society Denver Museum of Nature
& Science Denver Polo Classic Denver Public Library Dining Out for Life Dumb Friends League Foothills Art Center
Golden Fine Arts Festival Hike for Youth Hudson Gardens Jazz Aspen Snowmass Lakewood Cultural Center Mizel
Museum National Multiple Sclerosis Society National Sports Center for the Disabled National Western Stock Show
and Rodeo Opera Colorado Parade of Lights Race for the Cure Special Olympics Colorado Stories on Stage Taste
of Colorado The Wildlife Experience Vail Valley Foundation 9Health Fair Ballet Nouveau Colorado Capitol Hill People’s
Fair Central City Opera Cherry Creek Arts Festival Cinco de Mayo Colorado Ballet Colorado State Fair Denver Art
Museum Denver Black Arts Festival Denver Botanic Gardens Denver Center A� ractions Denver Center Theatre
Company Denver Film Society Denver Museum of Nature & Science Denver Polo Classic Denver Public Library Dining
Out for Life Dumb Friends League Foothills Art Center Golden Fine Arts Festival Hike for Youth Hudson Gardens Jazz
Aspen Snowmass Lakewood Cultural Center Mizel Museum National Multiple Sclerosis Society National Sports
Center for the Disabled National Western Stock Show and Rodeo Opera Colorado Parade of Lights Race for the
Cure Special Olympics Colorado Stories on Stage Taste of Colorado The Wildlife Experience Vail Valley Foundation
9Health Fair Ballet Nouveau Colorado Capitol Hill People’s Fair Central City Opera Cherry Creek Arts Festival
Cinco de Mayo Colorado Ballet Colorado State Fair Denver Art Museum Denver Black Arts Festival Denver
Botanic Gardens Denver Center A� ractions Denver Center Theatre Company Denver Film Society Denver
Museum of Nature & Science Denver Polo Classic Denver Public Library Dining Out for Life Dumb Friends
Improving and enriching
the lives of those in our community.
Follow us: Facebook.com/dpcommunity Twitter:@dpcommunity
Golden Fine Arts Festival Hike for Youth Hudson Gardens Jazz Aspen Snowmass Lakewood Cultural Center Mizel
Museum National Multiple Sclerosis Society National Sports Center for the Disabled National Western Stock Show
Museum National Multiple Sclerosis Society National Sports Center for the Disabled National Western Stock Show
and Rodeo Opera Colorado Parade of Lights Race for the Cure Special Olympics Colorado Stories on Stage Taste
Facebook.com/dpcommunity Twitter:@dpcommunity
Museum National Multiple Sclerosis Society National Sports Center for the Disabled National Western Stock Show
Facebook.com/dpcommunity Twitter:@dpcommunity
Museum National Multiple Sclerosis Society National Sports Center for the Disabled National Western Stock Show
and Rodeo Opera Colorado Parade of Lights Race for the Cure Special Olympics Colorado Stories on Stage Taste
Facebook.com/dpcommunity Twitter:@dpcommunity
and Rodeo Opera Colorado Parade of Lights Race for the Cure Special Olympics Colorado Stories on Stage Taste
of Colorado The Wildlife Experience Vail Valley Foundation 9Health Fair Ballet Nouveau Colorado Capitol Hill People’s
Fair Central City Opera Cherry Creek Arts Festival Cinco de Mayo Colorado Ballet Colorado State Fair
Museum Denver Black Arts Festival Denver Botanic Gardens Denver Center A� ractions Denver Center Theatre
Facebook.com/dpcommunity Twitter:@dpcommunity
of Colorado The Wildlife Experience Vail Valley Foundation 9Health Fair Ballet Nouveau Colorado Capitol Hill People’s
Facebook.com/dpcommunity Twitter:@dpcommunity
of Colorado The Wildlife Experience Vail Valley Foundation 9Health Fair Ballet Nouveau Colorado Capitol Hill People’s
Fair Central City Opera Cherry Creek Arts Festival Cinco de Mayo Colorado Ballet Colorado State Fair
Facebook.com/dpcommunity Twitter:@dpcommunity
Fair Central City Opera Cherry Creek Arts Festival Cinco de Mayo Colorado Ballet Colorado State Fairdenverpostcommunity.com
Together
we can
make a
difference
Founding Partner
26 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
IrresIstIble
InspIred
IconIc
MAcY’s • neIMAn MArcUs • nordstroM
160 AMAZInG stores 3000 eAst F Irst AVenUe • denVer, co • sHopcHerrYcreeK.coM
Apple • brooKs brotHers • bUrberrY • elwAY’s • JoHn AtencIo
KIeHl’s sInce 1851 • lAcoste • loUIs VUItton • MontblAnc • oMeGA
rAlpH lAUren • restorAtIon HArdwAre • tIFFAnY & co. • tUMI
MAcY’s • neIMAn MArcUs • nordstroM
160 AMAZInG stores, oVer 40 eXclUsIVe to denVer
3000 eAst FIrst AVenUe • denVer, co • sHopcHerrYcreeK.coM
Apple • brooKs brotHers • bUrberrY • dAVId YUrMAn • elwAY’s • lAcoste • loUIs VUItton
MontblAnc • oMeGA • rAlpH lAUren • tIFFAnY & co. • torY bUrcH • tUMI
Founding Partner
272015-2016 Newman Center Presents
Endowment Recognition
porterhosptial.org | 2525 S. Downing St., Denver, CO 80210 | 303-778-1955
Porter Adventist Hospital is proud to support the Newman Center for the Performing Arts and all those who pursue excellence in our community.
Porter Adventist Hospital is a member of Centura Health, Colorado’s largest hospital and healthcare network.Centura Health complies with the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and no person shall be excluded from participation in, be denied benefits of, or otherwise be subjected to discrimination in the provision of any care or service on the grounds of race, religion, color, sex, national origin, sexual preference, ancestry, age, familial status, disability or handicap. Copyright © Centura Health, 2013
TRADING CARDSCustomCustom FERMENTING KNOWLEDGE
CHIRIDION
AN INTERACTIVE & PRINTDESIGN STUDIO
visit our websites: creativeinstinct.com custom-tradingcards.com winetastingcards.com
303.623.1880
28 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
Presenting Sponsor
American higher education institutions play a critical role in the nation’s performing arts ecology. Of the approximately 4,000 colleges and universities in the United States, about 2,300 of them have a professional
“presented series” in the performing arts. The roots of some university presenting programs, such as the University Musical Society in Ann Arbor, reach back over 125 years. Often such programs were, at the beginning, simply a labor of love for an individual faculty member. Over the second half of the 20th century, such programs grew and became more organized and professional. Today, universities are among the most important patrons of the performing arts in the country. They commission artists to create new work, offer important residencies for artists to develop their work, share their knowledge and skills with students and communities, and present performances in their cities and towns that might not otherwise occur there.
DID YOU KNOW?!
Since 1990
Colorado Owned & Operated
DINING ■ ENTERTAINMENT ■ HOME ■ RETAIL
SERVICES ■ AND MORE!
valuads.com
For Advertising Information
303.460.7600
CreateA Local Job!
Shop Colorado Owned
Businesses
VAL-U-ADS® is Proud to Support The Newman Center
25YEARS25YEARS
SERVING
COLORADO
Presenting Sponsor
Supporting Sponsor
30 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
Bring this ad to receive a FREE mat on
your next order
3065 S. Broadway,Englewood, Colorado
80113(Broadway & Dartmouth less than 3
miles from old location)
www.framedeartonline.com
Creative, Custom & Sports Framing
Celebrate cherished moments with your loved ones in the Skyline Ballroom with breath-taking views of DU and Downtown Denver.
The event of a lifetime is a phone call away.
1475 S Colorado BlvdDenver, CO 80222303-757-8797courtyardcherrycreek.com
Supporting Sponsor Supporting Sponsor
The Embassy Suites Denver Southeast is a proud supporter of the University of Denver and Newman Center Presents.
The Embassy Suites Denver Southeast features true, two-room guest suites, a complimentary cooked-to-order breakfast and a complimentary manager’s cocktail reception.
ENJOY THE SUITE LIFE IN DENVER!
For fantastic group deals call us at (303) 696-6644 or visit
DenverSoutheast.EmbassySuites.com today!
BOO! *October 23 & 24, 2015
This Shining Night*December 11 & 12, 2015
The Celtic Festival Goes to Wales*March 11 & 12, 2016
March 13, 2016St. Andrew United Methodist Church9203 S University Blvd, Highlands Ranch
The Mozart Requiem & God in Disguise
*May 20 & 21, 2016*Bethany Lutheran Church
4500 East Hampden Ave, Cherry Hills Village
For tickets and information:
CHERRYCREEKCHORALE.ORG303-789-5920
2 0 1 5 - 2 0 1 6
32 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
Co-commissioner, “Foreign Bodies,” by Diavolo Dance Theater, commissioned by the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, Esa Pekka Salonen, Music Director, and co-commissioned by the Carpenter Performing Arts Center, Cal State Long Beach
Co-commissioner, “Reign Forest,” by Robert Moses, co-commissioned by EcoArts Connections and Lincoln Center Fort Collins, performed by Robert Moses’ Kin Dance Company
Co-commissioner, “Provenance,” by Maya Beiser with composers from Israel, Palestine, Algeria, Morocco, Iran and the US, co-commissioned by The Carnegie Hall Corporation, The International Festival of Arts and Ideas, The Jerome Foundation, The Kathy Abelson Foundation, Ronald P. Stanton, NYFA, and NYSCA. Performed by Maya Beiser, cello, Jamey Haddad, percussion, Shane Shanahan, percussion, Bassam Saba, oud, and Shahrokh Yadegari, live electronics
Co-commissioner, “Bolero Colorado,” by Larry Keigwin, co-commissioned by EcoArts Connections and the Denver School of the Arts, performed by Keigwin + Company and Denver community performers
Co-commissioner, “Imaginary City,” by So Percussion, co-commissioned by Myrna Loy Center/Helena Presents, Flynn Center for the Performing Arts, The Cleveland Museum of Art, DiverseWorks, and National Performance Network
Commissioner, “NO one To kNOW one,” by Andy Akiho, performed by the composer and The Playground (Lamont School of Music Artists-In-Residence) during the Newman Center Presents’ Mile High Voltage Festival
Co-commissioner, “the wood & the vine,” by David Lang, co-commissioned by University of California, Riverside and Santa Fe Concert Association
COMMISSIONED WORKS(Continued)
930 Lincoln St 303.839.5100 dazzlejazz.com
P R E S E N T S
BRIAN BLADE
DEC 7-10& THE FELLOWSHIP BAND
phot
o: ©
Dan
Naw
rock
iCollaborate with one of our artisans
to create a one of a kind treasure for any occasion.
9886 W. Belleview Ave. • Littleton, CO
303.973.9102
If you can imagine it, we can create your custom jewelry.
www.intriguejewelers.net
• Custom • Bridal • Repairs
15% off repairs with this adRepairs in one week or less
PilatesDenverStudio.com303.779.0164
6380 S. Fiddler’s Green Circle, Suite 108CGreenwood Village, Colorado
1st Visit Special for Newman Center Audience!D
enve
r’s P
rem
ier P
ilate
s St
udio
Pi
late
s •
Yog
a •
Bar
re •
Mas
sage
34 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
Commissioner, “Lifeboat No. 6,” by Payton MacDonald, performed by the composer, JACK Quartet and Young Voices of Colorado during Newman Center Presents’ Voltage 2012
Co-commissioner, “From Darkness to Light,” music by Ofer Ben-Amots, choreography by Garrett Ammon, co-commissioned by Ballet Nouveau Colorado, Central City Opera, Colorado Symphony Orchestra, Robert E. Loup Jewish Community Center, Mizel Arts and Culture Center, and performed as part of A Journey of the Human Spirit
Commissioner, solo, acoustical guitar version of Derek Bermel original work “Ritornello” performed by guitarist Mak Grgić
Co-commissioner, Dance yet to be named, choreography by Paul Taylor, and performed in its world premiere by Paul Taylor Dance Company
Co-commissioner, Musical work for voice and piano yet to be named, by Timo Andres, co-commissioned by Carnegie Hall, The Schubert Club, and Van Cliburn Foundation, performed by the composer and Gabriel Kahane
Co-commissioner, Musical work for voice and piano yet to be named, by Gabriel Kahane, co-commissioned by Carnegie Hall, The Schubert Club, and Van Cliburn Foundation, performed by the composer and Timo Andres.
BEHIND THE CURTAINThe Newman Center hand-selects each and every Presents performance, bringing to Denver entertaining, intriguing, and thought-provoking dancers, actors, and musicians. We invite you to join us for free Behind the Curtain discussions where artists, members of the ensembles, or experts in the field discuss anything from that evening’s program to the history and influences of the genre to key moments to watch and listen for during the performance.
COMMISSIONED WORKS(Continued)
SaraBellaFishing.com
303-908-1933
made in Colorado
especially for WOMEN & GIRLS
Smart Beautiful
fly rods
artistically
36 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
Talks are free, take place in June Swaner Gates Concert Hall, are open to the public, and start one hour before curtain. Tickets are not required for these pre-performance talks and no RSVP is necessary.
Please check the Newman Center event calendar for updates to Behind the Curtain and upcoming speaker announcements. (Speakers are subject to change.)
THE LAMONT SCHOOL OF MUSIC AND DEPARTMENT OF THEATRE
The University of Denver’s Lamont School of Music presents more than 300 concerts a year. Complimentary performances include concerts by the symphony orchestra, choirs, wind ensemble, soloists, jazz ensembles, and steel drum ensemble. Some of these concerts require free tickets. Complimentary tickets are available in person at the Newman Center Box Office or may be reserved online or by phone for a small service charge at www.newmantix.com or 303.871.7720.
Again this season, $5 reserved seats in the Parterre section may be purchased for Lamont Symphony Orchestra concerts. In addition to free concerts, faculty recitals and guest artist performances are presented with a $10 ticket price. DU students, Pioneer Card holders, and other students with valid ID are complimentary.
Fall and Spring Lamont Operas and Musicals, Guys and Dolls and Cosí fan tutte, are reserved seating ranging from $11 to $30.
Summer and holiday carillon concerts are presented on the Ritchie Center lawn by artists from around the nation.For information, visit www.du.edu/lamont or call the concert line at 303.871.6412. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube.
BEHIND THE CURTAIN(Continued)
phot
o by
mar
k an
d kr
iste
n si
nk.
tickets $30/$20 students | Save 20% with the code: NEWMANCentralCityopera.org/amahl | 303.292.6700
Beloved holiday opera by Gian Carlo Menottithe story of a magic star, a shepherd boy, and how unselfish love and good deeds can work miracles.
December 11 at 7:00 pmDecember 12 & 13 at 2:00 pm
Trinity United Methodist Church, Denver
Amahl and theNight Visitors
Helping our patients affected by all types
of eating disorders find the rhythm between
mind, body, & spirit through treatment.
EATING DISORDER ASSESSMENT & TREATMENT
Call Today: 1-866-771-0861www.edcdenver.com
372014-2015 Newman Center Presents
WHERE THE WHOLE
FAMILY CAN COME OUT AND
PLAY!
Yale • Lowry • The Highlands • 303.777.1003
concerts
classes
community
Educating Minds, Enriching Hearts & Expanding Horizons
2701 S. York Street • denver, cO 80210 • 303.756.9481
Visit St. anne’s Episcopal School to see state-of-the-art classrooms nestled among magnificent gardens.
Call today to schedule a tour of our campus, including our new dining hall and performing arts spaces.
• rigorous academics• arts, athletics, technology, Languages• Sports and Extra-curricular activities• Extended day care• daily hot Lunch program• need-Based tuition assistance available
grades: preschool (age 3)-grade 8 Enrollment: 424 Student/Faculty: 8:1
www.st-annes.org
BCOCOLORADO.ORG
lourishes10TH ANNIVERSARY SEASON 2015/16
Encore! Audience Favorites OCT 16,17,18
Mystery and Joy DEC 4 & 6
Bach Times Three FEB 26,27,28
Fanfares and Flourishes MAY 20,21,22
38 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
DU’s Department of Theatre offers students the ability to take part in numerous productions throughout the academic year, including a full slate of student-created productions, all of which are open to the public.
For the 2015-16 season, The Department of Theatre will present:• A staged reading of Columbinus by Stephen
Karam and PJ Paparelli (Sep 2015, Byron Theatre)
• Fall Quarter’s main stage productions of Bad Jews by Joshua Harmon (Oct 2015, White Box Theatre at J-MAC) and Two Rooms by Lee Blessing (Oct and Nov 2015, Byron Theatre)
• A staged reading of Hir by Taylor Mac (Jan 2016, Byron Theatre)
• Winter Quarter’s main stage productions of Eurydice by Sarah Ruhl (Feb 2016, Byron Studio in the Newman Center) and Little Shop of Horrors; book and lyrics by Howard Ashman, music by Alan Menken (Feb & Mar 2016, Byron Theatre)
• A stage reading of In the Next Room (or The Vibrator Play) by Sarah Ruhl (Apr 2016, Byron Theatre)
• Spring Capstone Cycle—Cycles 1 and 2: Senior Capstone Productions (Apr & May 2016, J-MAC Studios)
• Independent student productions throughout the year
• Call 303.871.2518 or visit www.du.edu/theatre for information about all Department of Theatre events.
Tickets for Lamont and Theatre productions can be purchased at the Newman Center Box Office, Monday-Friday, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. and Saturday, 12 p.m. – 4 p.m. (Sep-May), by phone at 303.871.7720, or online at www.newmantix.com. (Phone and online orders are subject to service fees.)
THE LAMONT SCHOOL OF MUSIC AND DEPARTMENT OF THEATRE
(Continued)
For Local Service Call
888.541.2648
For the Fine Art on Your Floors
WORLD’S MOST EXPERIENCED CLEANERS OF AIR DUCTS, CARPET, UPHOLSTERY, DRAPERY, AREA RUGS, NATURAL STONE AND TILE & GROUT
y Hand Cleaning by Coit’s Experts
y Repair, Reweave, Restore
y Pickup and Delivery
y Guaranteed Cleaningy Free Estimates
For Local Service Call
888.541.2648
7-CONCERT CHAMBER SERIES HIGHLIGHTS
JERUSALEM QUARTETOCT 7, 2015
BRENTANO QUARTETJAN 13, 2016
KALICHSTEIN-LAREDO-ROBINSON TRIOMAY 11, 2016
3-CONCERT PIANO SERIES HIGHLIGHTS
JEAN-EFFLAM BAVOUZETAPR 19, 2016
303-388-9839 | friendsofchambermusic.com
D E N V E R
191 University Blvd., #974 Denver, CO 80206-4613
FriendsofChamberMusic.com
AFFIXPOSTAGE
HERE
Don’t miss our 62nd season.
NEWMAN CENTER BOX OFFICE
303-871-7720 www.newmantix.com
LEILA JOSEFOWICZ – NOV 15
BRINGING THE WORLD’S FINEST CHAMBER MUSIC TO DENVER SINCE 1954
STUDENTTICKETS
ONLY $10!
Morgan’sLiquorsSouth Denver’s
Largest Beer Selection
Your Neighborhood
Stop for Craft Beers,Fine Wines& Spirits
1200 E. Evans Ave.Denver 80210
SE Corner of Evans & Downing
303.777.6223
Serving the DU CommunityOver 75 Years.
40 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
DU ENRICHMENT PROGRAM ADULT COURSES FOR
THE INTELLECTUALLY AND CULTURALLY CURIOUS
The Enrichment Program of University College, DU’s college of professional and continuing studies, connects the intellectually and culturally curious adult to DU’s outstanding faculty, facilities, and programming, and Denver’s rich cultural community through non-credit classes. Hand-picked scholars, classes that often include a special experience or event, discerning participants engaged in serious discussions, no grades, exams, or admission requirements—these are the ingredients that make the Enrichment Program so popular. The Newman Center proudly partners with the Enrichment Program to bring you innovative courses like you’ve never experienced before. Meet with DU’s expert faculty, gather with like-minded adults to embark on a unique and meaningful journey, and connect with Denver’s rich cultural community. Check program inserts for upcoming Newman Center-related classes. Fall 2015 registration is available now for classes held September through early-December, and Winter/Spring 2016 offerings, held mid-January through mid-May, will be announced in early December. To view and register for courses across a wide range of subjects, please call 303.871.2291 or visit www.universitycollege.du.edu/enrichment.
behavioral
quantitative
fundamental
Providing professional investment advisory services for institutional and
high-net-worth clients since 2005 Greenwood Village, COwww.brcinvest.com
LaBelle
Espresso & Wine Bar
RosetteALSO SERVING PANINIS 8 TAPAS 8 BEERS 8 COCKTAILS 8 DESSERTS
p4pM S University 8 One Blk South of Newman Center 8 LaBelleRosette6com 8 7pH65H864469 HAPPY HOUR 4 8 7pm 8 MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
MEET ROBERT AND JUDI NEWMANThese avid philanthropists, and winners of the 2014 Colorado Business Committee for the Arts’ John Madden Jr. Leadership Award, smile when they remember becoming involved in the campaign to create an
outstanding center for the performing arts at the University of Denver. Daniel L. Ritchie, then chancellor, invited Judi to head the effort when the Center was only a dream. Later, the Center was named in the couple’s honor. The couple’s passion for performing arts and education harmoniously intersected with the Newman Center, which is home to exceptional performance venues and DU’s Lamont School of Music and Department of Theatre. “Dan Ritchie has often said that love is the principal ingredient in any successful building,” says Judi. “The Newman Center, as well as the University’s many other new buildings, show just how true that is.” The Newmans appreciate the masterful collaboration between Ritchie and DU Architect Emeritus Cabell Childress, and the expertise of Joseph Docksey, then director of the Lamont School, and William Temple Davis, then chairman of DU’s Department of Theatre. They delight in the superb array of Newman Center Presents’ programs presented by Executive Director Stephen Seifert. Prominent in Denver’s cultural community, the Newmans serve on many boards. Among those, Bob is a Trustee of the Denver Center for the Performing Arts and the Denver Art Museum. He is a former member of DU’s Board of Trustees and currently serves on the Daniels School Executive Advisory Council. Judi sits on the Visiting Committee for the Frost School of Music, the Academic Affairs Committee, and the Board of Trustees of the University of Miami. “Each year brings more recognition to this venue and its world-class programs,” says Bob. “Judi and I are delighted to be part of the University of Denver community.”
THE POWER OF MEMBERSHIP = MAKING A DIFFERENCE
Our mission is to make the best performing arts programming available to our community. To do this, our ticket prices are held at a level that covers less than half of the true costs of our programming, operations, and maintenance. The difference is made up by your generous membership support.
Your membership to the Newman Center makes it possible for us to present the best in performing arts from around the world, provide student discounts and master classes for both university and K-12 students, and sustain a landmark facility recognized worldwide for its excellence. Please join the community of members with a fully tax-deductible membership that makes everything we do possible.
BECOME A NEWMAN CENTER MEMBER
Annual Membership starts for as little as $50, but the more you choose to give, the greater the difference you will make. (See below about the matching grant opportunity to double the value of your gift.) A portion of your Membership may be tax deductible. To become a Newman Center Member or for more information about our Membership program, please contact the Newman Center Box Office, Mon – Fri, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m.; Saturday , 12 p.m. – 4 p.m. (Sept – May), or at 303.871.7720.
Newman Center Membership Levels*
BENEFACTOR- $5,000All Partner Membership benefits, plus:• Exclusive post-performance “meet the
artist” and drinks with one visiting artist during the 2015-16 season (pending artist availability
• Two (2) complimentary Pick-Your-Own 3 guest subscriptions (3 shows total) to Newman Center Presents 2015-16 season shows
PARTNER - $1,000All Sponsor Membership benefits, plus:• Two (2) additional complimentary guest
passes to a Newman Center Presents performance of your choice in the 2015-16 season
• Invitation to pre-performance and intermission receptions for each Newman Center Presents performance (hosted bar and hors d’oeuvres)
SPONSOR - $500All Supporter Membership benefits, plus:• Invitation to a backstage tour• Two (2) complimentary guest passes to a
Newman Center Presents performance of your choice in the 2015-16 season
SUPPORTER - $200All Contributor Membership benefits, plus:• Four (4) additional complimentary drink
vouchers for any Newman Center Presents performance in the 2015-16 season
• Two (2) Orchestra seats to a Lamont School of Music Opera production (excludes annual musical) or a Theatre Department production of your choice (dates subject to availability)
CONTRIBUTOR - $100All Friend Membership benefits, plus:• Two (2) complimentary drink vouchers for
any Newman Center Presents performance in the 2015-16 season
FRIEND - $50• Priority notification of subscription
renewal dates• Priority notification of single ticket sale dates• Recognition in each performance program
for Newman Center Presents performances• Subscription to Curtain Call
*The amount paid for your Membership is tax deductible minus the fair market value of benefits received. If you decline all benefits, the entire amount of your Membership is tax deductible. Deductible amounts with benefits are: Friend - $50; Contributor - $94; Supporter - $142; Sponsor - $366; Partner - $690; Benefactor - $4,474.
412014-2015 Newman Center Presents
42 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
MATCHING SUPPORT FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
DU has committed $5 million to match every new gift of $10,000 or more in the Campaign for the Performing Arts. Your gift can be personalized and designated for a wide range of purposes, including endowment of Newman Center Presents programming and educational residency activities. During this campaign, the university is also matching any binding and future gifts from your estate.
We urge you to take advantage of this exceptional opportunity. Your contribution makes it possible to support the work of artists as they develop and present eclectic, inspirational, and thought-provoking performances.
To discuss DU’s Campaign for the Performing Arts, please contact Kellyn Smith, Senior Director of Development, [email protected] or call 303.871.4472.
WHAT GIFT DOLLARS CAN REALLY DOThank you to the generous donors who have created permanent endowments to support Newman Center Presents: Beverlee Henry and the Honorable Robert Fullerton (Newman Center Endowed Fund for Experiential and Cultural Learning), Celeste Grynberg (The Grynberg Family Endowment for Dance Programming), The Gay and Lesbian Fund for Colorado (The Gay and Lesbian Fund for Colorado Endowment for Diverse and Innovative Music), and Porter Adventist Hospital (The Porter Adventist Hospital Endowment for the Performing Arts).
During the 2015-16 season, these funds and other specific gifts and grants noted will help make the following programming a reality:
• Educational residency work and master classes with Twyla Tharp, Vertigo Dance, Brooklyn Rider, Kyle Abraham, S -o Percussion, Paul Taylor Dance, Metropolitan Opera Rising Stars, globalFEST On the Road, Gabriel Kahane
303.987.7845Lakewood.org/LCCPresents
Pre or Post Performance, Stop By
For The Freshest Mexican Food! (We’re right next to the Newman Center)
Two Awesome Happy Hours Everyday 7 days a week
3pm to 7pm10pm to Midnight
720-536-4802www.thepioneerbar.com
2401 S. University Blvd.Soutwest Corner of University & WesleyDenver 80210
To Book a Private Party, Email:[email protected]
44 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
and Timo Andres, Julian Lage and Chris Eldridge, and Billy Childs are supported in part by The Newman Center Endowed Fund for Cultural and Experiential Learning and grants from WESTAF.
• Twyla Tharp, Vertigo Dance, Kyle Abraham/Abraham.In.Motion, and Paul Taylor Dance are supported in part by The Grynberg Family Endowment for Dance Programming, a gift from Roger and Meredith Hutson, a grant from MDC Holdings/Richmond American Homes Foundation, and a grant from the National Dance Project of the New England Foundation for the Arts
• Brooklyn Rider, S -o Percussion with Shara Worden, and Gabriel Kahane with Timo Andres are supported in part by The Gay and Lesbian Fund for Colorado Endowment for Diverse and Innovative Music.
• All Newman Center Presents programming is supported in part by The Porter Adventist Hospital Endowment for the Performing Arts.
• Paul Taylor Dance and Gabriel Kahane with Timo Andres are supported in part by grants from The Antonia and Vladimer Kulaev Cultural Heritage Fund.
If you are interested in supporting Newman Center Presents, please contact Kellyn Smith, Senior Director of Development – Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, [email protected] or call 303.871.4472.
If you work with a local organization or Denver-area K-12 school and would like to learn more about how Newman Center Presents artists might provide educational activities for your school or group, please contact Amanda Swartzbaugh, Event Manager, at [email protected] or call 303.871.2862. Please include the following: your name and position, name of organization or school, types of activities you may be interested in (e.g. jazz, dance, world music, vocal…), email address, and phone number.
THE LASTING DIFFERENCE MADE BY ENDOWMENT GIFTS
The construction of the Newman Center and all its public and backstage spaces was only possible because of generous donors, many of whose gifts have been recognized through the naming of spaces. Moreover, continued gifts to and income from the Newman Center Building Endowment help ensure constant care and upkeep of our world-class venues and state-of-the-art systems.
To maintain this excellence, the Newman Center Building Endowment needs to grow, and many naming opportunities remain for your gift to the Endowment.
Your gift to name a space in the Newman Center offers lasting recognition of your support of the Newman Center’s programming, operations, and facilities. Both current and testamentary gifts to the Newman Center Building Endowment are welcome. If you have already included the Newman Center in your estate, please let us know so that we may appropriately thank you.
If you would like more information about how to make a lasting difference to the Newman Center Building Endowment, to Newman Center Presents, or to help the Newman Center continue to make a lasting contribution to the performing arts in our community, please contact Kellyn Smith, Senior Director of Development – Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, [email protected] or call 303.871.4472.
DONOR ACKNOWLEDGEMENTSThe Newman Center for the Performing Arts would like to express its gratitude to the following individuals and organizations who have given generously in 2014–15 (July 2014–June 2015) to support the Newman Center’s Scholarship, Maintenance, Operations and Programming, and Marketing Funds, the Newman Center Endowments discussed earlier, and Newman Center Memberships initiated during this time period:
Newman Center DonorsBonfils-Stanton FoundationCharmatz FamilyCommunity First FoundationHerschel and Barbara CravitzMax E. DonaldsonGeoffrey GordonBarbara Jean HamiltonAndrew HornbrookMeredith Black and L. Roger HutsonMDC/Richmond American Homes FoundationMontjoy C. and Frank A. KugelerAntonia & Vladimer Kulaev Cultural Heritage Fund, Inc.Susan Harriet MartinYolanda McAllisterDouglas G. and Laura B. MoranBarbara Neal and Ed EllisTracy PaigeForest O. PenetonKathy A. and Donald D. RosenkransRuth SchoeningStephen W. SeifertCarolyn StrandJ. Alton and Dorothy J. TemplinJoan B. WohlgenantJanalynn Sau Wong
In memory of Fran Seifert Karin Bond
In honor of Dee Getchel Frances H. and James W. Cosby
In honor of Beverlee Henry and the Honorable Robert Fullerton In honor of Robert and Judi Newman M Allan and Margot Gilbert Frank
In honor of Susanne W. Hamilton, Edith Berliner, and Max Wilmersdoerffer Barbara Hamilton and Paul Primus
Newman Endowment for Experiential & Cultural Learning In honor of Margot and Allan Frank In honor of Sue Anschutz Rodgers Beverlee Henry
In honor of Robert and Judi Newman Jennifer Newman
In honor of Jane Quinette Stephen W. Seifert and Davol G. Tedder
In honor of Cynthia Secor Adrian Tinsley
Olinger Chapel hillMortuary & Cemetery
Centennial303-771-3960 OlingerChapelHill.com
Olinger MOunt lindOcemetery
Morrison303-771-3960 OlingerMountLindoCemetery.com
an UnForGettaBle MeMorial takes planning. From catering to calla lilies, your Dignity Memorial® professionals can help you coordinate every detail of a personal, meaningful tribute. It’s what we’re known for.
The celebration of a lifetime begins here.
46 2015-2016 Newman Center Presents
PATRON INFORMATION
• The Newman Center for the Performing Arts is fully accessible to patrons in wheelchairs and to those with other special needs. Patrons needing accommodations for a disability should call the Box Office as early as possible at 303.871.7720.
• Parking is available in the Newman Center parking garage (complimentary for all Newman Center Presents events). Patrons are advised not to park in the neighborhood, as most side streets have one-hour parking only.
• Food and beverages are prohibited in the seating areas of all theatres.
• No audio, photographic, or video equipment of any kind is allowed in the performance venues.
• Artists and programs are subject to change without notice.
• All sales are final. No refunds or exchanges.• Patrons are encouraged to call the Newman
Center for information on the suitability of events for children.
• The University of Denver is a smoke-free campus. Smoking is permitted only in the designated smoking area on S. York Street, south of the loading dock.
2014-2015 MEMBERS
BENEFACTORSBeverlee Henry
PARTNERSMargot Gilbert and M Allan FrankStephen W. SeifertDavol G. Tedder
SPONSORSGordon Appell Family Charitable FundDiana W. and Mike KinseyDavid R. and Florence Lynn LinkePaula J. MeadowsSean and Natalie Raborn – PowerQuip
SUPPORTERSCarolyn A. Agosta and William RauschertLeslie Smith BeltramiMary Jo CraigeKathryn HeetMarian D. LauterbachMichael E. Leighton – Sage Family FundDavid R. LinkeW. Peterson Nelson – Nelson Family FoundationJean and Ed OnderkoRichard K. Replin and Elissa Rae SteinGene E. and Nancy M. RichardsKathryn SpuhlerWilliam A. Stolfus and Andrea G. RichardsonAdrian Tinsley
CONTRIBUTORSRobert M. and Carole Cantor AdelsteinLisa AllenMary BrothersCharlene S. ByersJoel S. Cohen and Kathryn L. OberdorferGeoffrey G. GordonJames P. HayesRoger L. and Suzanne O. KinneySusan Harriett MartinWilliam MohrmanMike MooreJennifer NewmanDonovan and Phyllis RiegerPaula RoneyDavid RosentraterRuth Elaine SchoeningSusan Deese TracyCarol A. WilsonJeffrey Zax
FRIENDSKenneth A. and A. Louise BeardKarin BondThomas N. ButlerHilary CarsonMatt ChalekFrances H. CosbyRussel R. DeWittKatherine A. Dines and David Hunter MillerMiriam FarringtonPamela Herring and Martin EisenbergRobyn JacobsRoss and Vicki KazerJim LeNoirSarah LincolnIsabelle MarquesMark PallerSally G. PlummerKaren J. ShawJenene C. and James J. StookesberryKalli Van Maaren
(Gifts and memberships received on and after July 1, 2015 are acknowledged in the show insert in the middle of the program.)
NEWMAN CENTER PRESENTS GRATEFULLY ACKNOWLEDGES THE FOLLOWING GENEROUS MULTI-YEAR SUPPORT:
THE GRYNBERG FAMILY ENDOWMENT FOR DANCE PROGRAMMING
THE NEWMAN CENTER FUND FOR EXPERIENTIAL AND CULTURAL LEARNINGestablished by Beverlee Henry and Hon. Robert Fullerton
THE PORTER ADVENTIST HOSPITAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
THE GAY & LESBIAN FUND FOR COLORADO ENDOWMENT FOR DIVERSE AND INNOVATIVE MUSIC
THE NEWMAN CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS ENDOWMENTwith lead funding from the Lewis D. & John J. Gilbert Foundation, the John J. and Margaret R. Gilbert Foundation, the Clinton Family Fund, and Margot Gilbert Frank – for support of special programs and major projects
L. ROGER AND MEREDITH HUTSONgift for the expansion and support of Newman Center Presents dance programming
DONOR ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS(continued)
ASPEN | DENVER | 303 . 321 . 8188
As one of the region’s largest independent investment firms, Obermeyer Wood is dedicated to
helping our clients achieve their financial goals. We believe our value-oriented philosophy and
independent approach help us protect our clients’ capital while delivering attractive returns.
An independent perspective. A disciplined process. A commitment to putting clients first.
Learn more about our team and process at www.obermeyerwood.com.
ASPEN | DENVER | 303 . 321 . 8188
As one of the region’s largest independent investment firms, Obermeyer Wood is dedicated to
helping our clients achieve their financial goals. We believe our value-oriented philosophy and
independent approach help us protect our clients’ capital while delivering attractive returns.
An independent perspective. A disciplined process. A commitment to putting clients first.
Learn more about our team and process at www.obermeyerwood.com.
Someday the sophisticated Eccentricity style will fit us perfectly!
290 FillmoreCherry Creek North303.388.8877 eccentricity.comfree adjacent parking
Women’s clothing • jewelry • accessories