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Die

Fledermaus

JOHANN STRAUSS JR.

THEATER 15/16

Two Hundred Ninety-Seventh Program of the 2015-16 Season _______________________ Indiana University Opera Theater presents as its 445th production

Die Fledermaus (The Bat)

Music by Johann Strauss II Libretto by Karl Haffner and Richard Genée Arthur fa*gen, Conductor Robin Guarino, Stage Director Allen Moyer, Set Designer Candice Donnelly, Costume Designer Allen Hahn, Lighting Designer Julia Lawson, German Diction Coach Walter Huff, Chorus Master Michael Vernon, Choreographer Supertitles provided by Robin Guarino _________________

Musical Arts Center Friday, November Thirteenth Saturday, November Fourteenth Thursday, November Nineteenth Friday, November Twentieth Seven-Thirty O’Clock music.indiana.edu

Cast of Characters

Friday, November 13 Thursday, November 19

Saturday, November 14 Friday, November 20

Rosalinda. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Marlen Nahhas

Ann Marie Theis

Eisenstein. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Andrew Maughan

Bille Bruley

Adele. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Natalie Weinberg

Rebekah Howell

Frank. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Zachary Coates

Ross Coughanour

Falke . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bruno Sandes

Edward Graves

Blind . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Max Zander

Tislam Swift

Alfred. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Michael Day

Andres Acosta

Orlofsky. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Amanda Perera

Kaitlyn McMonigle

Ida . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Synthia Steiman

Joelle Tucker

Bell Hops. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Robert Gerold Deiran Manning Heeseung Chae Bradley Bickhardt

Robert Gerold Deiran Manning Heeseung Chae Bradley Bickhardt

Dancers Alia Federico Scout Inghilterra Camille Kellems Abigail Kulwicki Lauren Lane

Ginabel Peterson Padilla Ali Willson Gillian Worek Sarah Young Cecilia Zanone

Opera Chorus Walter Huff, Chorus Master Women Sarah Aragon Yuji Bae Emily Baker Elizabeth Cohen Chelsea DeLorenz Monica Dewey Martha Eason Gabriela fa*gen Caroline Flett Bridget Goodwin Patricia Illera Camargo Lena Kornreich

Natalie Martell Abigail Mowery Kirstin Olson Stephanie Sprauer Jessica True Olivia Yokers Men Bradley Bickhardt Heeseung Chae Darian Clonts Noah Donahue Colin English

Robert Gerold Kole Howie Benjamin Jones Mitchell Jones Brian Joy Gabriel Ma Caleb Morgan Mark Phillips John Punt George Jacob Rhoad James C. Smith Stephen Walley Lucas Wassmer

Nutcracker The

PETER ILYICH TCHAIKOVSKY

DECEMBER

BALLET THEATER 15/16

6

2 PM

7:30 PM

2 PM

7:30 PM

7:30 PM

3 4 5

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Synopsis Vienna, 1920s Gabriel von Eisenstein has played a practical joke on his friend Dr. Falke. After a costume ball, Eisenstein left Dr. Falke drunk and asleep on a park bench wearing not much more than a bat mask. The next morning, Dr. Falke awoke to find himself being laughed at by a crowd of onlookers. He was soon to be known as Dr. Fledermaus (Dr. Bat). Now, the moment has come for die Rache der Fledermaus, the revenge of the bat.

Act I. Hotel Lobby Alfred is serenading Rosalinda in the lobby of the Imperial Hotel. Long before Rosalinda got married to Eisenstein, she and Alfred had an affair while attending music conservatory. Adele, chambermaid in Eisenstein’s house, receives a letter from her sister, Ida, who invites her to come to a party at Prince Orlovsky’s garden that night. To get out of work, she pretends her old aunt is sick. Rosalinda doesn’t believe her story and insists that she stay and work. Rosalinda is having a hard time resisting Alfred’s advances and his beautiful tenor voice. He suddenly needs to hide when Eisenstein comes home accompanied by his lawyer, Dr. Blind. Eisenstein has been sentenced to eight days in jail for insulting a police officer. After they blame each other for the unfortunate jail sentence, Eisenstein kicks Dr. Blind out. Dr. Falke arrives and encourages Eisenstein to postpone the start of his prison sentence in order to secretly come to Prince Orlovsky’s party. Falke convinces him to bring his “lady bait” (a charming little watch) to seduce the women and party like the good old days. Before Dr. Falke leaves, he secretly gives Rosalinda a letter telling her about Eisenstein’s plans and also invites her to attend Prince Orlovsky’s party disguised as a Hungarian countess. Rosalinda gives Adele the night off, and Eisenstein says goodbye to his wife. In a heart-wrenching farewell, all three have a hard time hiding their excitement for the upcoming events. After Eisenstein and Adele have left, Alfred comes back for a romantic tête-à-tête with Rosalinda. They are interrupted when the hotel manager and head concierge, Frank, comes to escort Mr. Eisenstein to jail. To uphold Rosalinda’s reputation, Alfred pretends to be her husband and is taken to prison in Eisenstein’s place.

Act II. Hotel Ballroom Dr. Falke is greeting guests at Prince Orlovsky’s party. He has been in charge of planning the event and of entertaining the notoriously bored Russian prince. Eisenstein arrives and is announced as “Marquis Renard.” Prince Orlovsky encourages him to partake in some Russian national customs. When Eisenstein begins to recognize Adele, she convincingly proves that she could never be a chambermaid.

Hotel manager and head concierge Frank arrives and is announced as “Chevalier Chagrin.” He is introduced to “Marquis Renard” and the two “Frenchmen” quickly become friends. Dr. Falke now asks the guests for their discretion, as a “Hungarian countess” will join the party but wishes to stay incognito. Eisenstein can’t wait to use his “lady bait” to seduce the mysterious stranger, who is none other than his own wife, Rosalinda. He not only fails to convince her to remove her mask but also loses his “lady bait” watch while trying. Adele and Eisenstein question if the “countess” is truly Hungarian. Rosalinda dissolves all doubts by singing “music from her homeland.” After a grand champagne toast, Dr. Falke suggests that all guests pledge eternal brotherhood. When the clock strikes six in the morning, Eisenstein must leave in order to start his jail sentence. Dancing out arm in arm, neither “Marquis Renard” (Eisenstein) nor “Chevalier Chagrin” (hotel manager and head concierge Frank) realizes they will soon meet again at the jailhouse.

Act III. Hotel Security Office Alfred has been locked up in Eisenstein’s jail cell all night. Frank arrives, still drunk from the party. Just as he begins to take a nap, Ida and Adele enter and confess to Frank that, although Adele is really Eisenstein’s chambermaid, she wishes to be an actress. Thinking that he is Chevalier Chagrin, they ask for his help in furthering Adele’s career. Eisenstein arrives and is delighted to learn that his friend Chevalier Chagrin is none other than Frank the hotel manager and head concierge. Frank is confused and doubtful that his friend Marquis Renard is actually Eisenstein, since “Eisenstein” was already arrested last night before the ball! Rosalinda arrives to try to get Alfred out of jail. When the lawyer that Alfred had summoned enters, they have no idea it is not Dr. Blind but Eisenstein in disguise, having snatched the legal robe and wig earlier. As Rosalinda and Alfred confide their flirtation, Eisenstein removes his disguise and angrily accuses his wife of infidelity. Rosalinda shows Eisenstein the “lady bait.” Shocked and humiliated, he realizes that the Hungarian countess he had been trying to seduce was in fact his own wife. Dr. Falke arrives with Prince Orlovsky and the party guests and reveals that this entire charade was all his idea. Eisenstein receives his wife’s forgiveness, and Dr. Falke enjoys “the revenge of the bat.”

Program Notes by Caitlin Brown (Musicology Ph.D. Student) When Johann Strauss II began composing operettas in the early 1870s, he had already earned a formidable reputation as the “Waltz King” for his sizeable body of ballroom music. Strauss’s equally famous father, Johann Strauss I, discouraged all three of his sons from pursuing music. Ultimately, all three did forge careers as musicians, creating considerable familial tension, and Johann the Younger surpassed his father as one of Vienna’s brightest musical stars. Like his father, he found his footing as a composer and conductor in the glittering ballrooms of nineteenth-century Austria. Upon his father’s death, he assumed direction of the family orchestra and earned an appointment as music director of the Royal Court Balls at the cosmopolitan Habsburg Court. A ball was not truly Viennese if Strauss’s music, especially a waltz, was not played. Music critic Eduard Hanslick wrote of Strauss in 1884: “His popularity is virtually immeasurable: in all parts of the world Strauss melodies resound, and in our part of the world, they come from almost every house.” Strauss composed nearly 500 works during his career, many of which are still played today. A significant factor in Strauss’s success as a composer of popular music was his musical environment. The nineteenth century saw an increasing stratification between popular and elite genres. A booming music publishing industry and a vibrant public concert scene encouraged a multiplicity of entertainments, all aimed at selling sheet music and tickets. This trend was evident throughout Europe by the second half of the nineteenth century, and Viennese theater was no exception. While the serious and lavish operas of the day could be sampled at select opera houses in Vienna, theaters in the suburbs staged the endlessly popular and lighter operettas. But because of the lack of Viennese operetta composers, these theaters relied on a steady influx of imported works from France by composers like Jacques Offenbach. As reactions against serious opera, these works had lighter plots, spoken dialogue, singable melodies, comedic characters, and entertaining dance sequences. While opera appealed to an exclusive audience, operetta was accessible to the masses. By the time Die Fledermaus premiered at the Theater an der Wien in 1874, Vienna was in the midst of an operetta “Golden Age” and had recently begun staging native Viennese works. Strauss was not the first Viennese composer to attempt writing operetta, but he was the most successful. By economic standards, alone, no other composer came close to rivaling him. Operettas were, after all, judged on their ability to sell tickets, leaving a piece’s success or failure to the whims of the paying public, not the critics. But Strauss managed to please both audiences and critics with Die Fledermaus. While he drew on Offenbach’s satiric, French example, he also chose a libretto with topical and singularly Viennese qualities and easily translated his musical style to the stage. Strauss enlisted German librettists Karl Haffner and Richard Genée and worked more closely with them than he had with previous librettists. Since the plot was based on a German play and a French vaudeville, the trio updated the content to make it

more Viennese. The operetta opens in a contemporary bourgeois Viennese home, and the plot revolves around the hijinks of an old pair of friends, illicit romance, and a spectacular masked ball at Prince Orlofsky’s country palace, where the characters might forget life’s troubles for one evening. While such a plot accurately depicted the spectacular, cosmopolitan life that the world had come to associate with Vienna, its presence on the stage was surprising to Viennese audiences by 1874. The excessive and champagne-soaked Viennese carousing at the center of the story carried a different social connotation than it would have a few decades before. Vienna had suffered a devastating stock market crash in May 1873, and the revelry of the 1860s gave way to a more austere manner of living. The chance to attend a masked ball satisfied an escapist desire and longing for the past that only seemed appropriate in the new social climate. For the Viennese, Die Fledermaus was laced with a nostalgic self-awareness and a willful forgetting of present difficulties. Regarding his musical strategy, Strauss wrote: “If an operetta is going to be popular, then everyone must find something in it to suit his tastes. . . . And the people in the gallery must also get something out of it that they can remember; for these people have no money to buy piano reductions, and even less money for a piano, therefore one must present it well so that as soon as they leave the performance something stays in their ear!” As a result, Strauss’s gift for melody and his preference for dance forms, particularly the waltz, translated easily from the ballroom to the theater. The latter is at its finest during Prince Orlofsky’s ball in Act II. New to Strauss’s style, though, was his use of instrumentation to enhance characterization. In the overture, bells interrupt the action near the beginning as a foreshadowing of later events. Strauss uses the full orchestra in scenes from the city to represent the sophisticated, urbane Vienna, while a smaller, more bucolic ensemble is used at Prince Orlofsky’s country palace. It is also hard to miss Strauss’s personal preference for the violin as it dominates most of the operetta’s instrumental melodies or complements the voices. Critics complained that theatergoers danced and sang along from their seats, distracting from performance. The music was so popular, in fact, that Strauss repackaged several of the numbers for concert performance and sheet music publication after the premiere. Orchestras today regularly perform Strauss’s concert arrangement of the operetta’s overture. Vienna’s “Golden Age” of operetta died away with its Waltz King and his peers by 1900. By then, Die Fledermaus had been performed over 300 times at the Theater an der Wien alone. The work is still performed in opera houses after almost 150 years. One major factor in the work’s continued success is certainly Strauss’s unique and pleasing Viennese musical style. But it is also the intensely relatable themes in the plot that continue to satisfy audiences. The impulse to escape the sobriety of economic crisis by indulging in a nostalgic revelry of the past is certainly one that even modern listeners can comprehend.

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Artistic Staff Conductor Arthur fa*gen has been professor of orchestral conducting at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music since 2008, where he is currently chair of the Orchestral Conducting Department. Additionally, he has been music director of the Atlanta Opera since 2010. fa*gen was born in New York, where he began his conducting studies with Laszlo Halasz. Further studies continued at the Curtis Institute, under the guidance of Max Rudolf, at the Salzburg Mozarteum, and with Hans Swarowsky. A former assistant of both Christoph von Dohnányi (Frankfurt Opera) and James Levine (Metropolitan Opera), fa*gen’s career has been marked by a string of notable appearances. He has conducted opera productions at the Lyric Opera of Chicago, Metropolitan Opera, Munich State Opera, Deutsche Oper Berlin, Staatsoper Berlin, New York City Opera, Theatre Capitole de Toulouse, Bordeaux Opera, Frankfurt Opera, Staatstheater Stuttgart, New Israeli Opera, Baltimore Opera, Edmonton Opera, Spoleto Festival, Teatro Colon Buenos Aires, Teatro Lirico di Cagliari, and Stadttheater Bozen. From 1998 to 2001, he was invited regularly as guest conductor at the Vienna State Opera. On the concert podium, fa*gen has appeared with internationally known orchestras including the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie, the Czech Philharmonic, Munich Radio Orchestra, Tokyo Philharmonic, RAI Orchestras (Torino, Naples, Milano, Roma), the Bergen Philharmonic, Prague Spring Festival, the Dutch Radio Orchestra, Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra, among others. fa*gen has an opera repertory of more than 75 works. He has served as principal conductor in Kassel and Brunswick, as chief conductor of the Flanders Opera of Antwerp and Ghent, as music director of the Queens Symphony Orchestra, and as a member of the conducting staff of the Chicago Lyric Opera. From 2002 to 2007, he was music director of the Dortmund Philharmonic Orchestra and the Dortmund Opera. Following his successful concerts with the Dortmund Philharmonic at the Grosse Festspielhaus in Salzburg, fa*gen and the Dortmund Philharmonic were invited to the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, the Palais de Beaux Arts in Brussels, and to Salzburg, Beijing, and Shanghai. He conducted in that period, among others, new opera productions of Siegfried, Götterdämmerung, and two Ring Cycles. fa*gen conducted a new production of Turandot at the Atlanta Opera in 2007, opening the season with enormous success and inaugurating the new opera house, the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Center. Soon afterward in Atlanta, he conducted the contemporary opera Cold Sassy Tree by Carlisle Floyd. He was first-prize winner of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra Conductors Competition, as well as a prize winner of the Gino Marinuzzi International Conductors’ Competition in Italy. fa*gen has recorded for BMG, Bayerischer Rundfunk, SFB, and WDR Cologne. He records regularly for Naxos, for which he has completed the six symphonies of Bohuslav Martinů. The recent Naxos recording of Martinů’s piano concertos has been awarded an Editor’s Choice award in the March 2010 issue of Gramophone magazine.

Antigone

By JEAN ANOUILH

Directed by KATIE HORWITZ Adapted by Lewis Galantinere Movement Design by Elizabeth Shea

Stage Director & Supertitle Author In 2015, Robin Guarino made her critically received stage directing debut at San Francisco Opera during the summer, directing Le Nozze di Figaro in addition to directing productions of Così fan tutte and Hansel and Gretel at University of Cincinnati–College Conservatory of Music (CCM) Opera. She also directed two developmental workshops, focused on Fellow Travelers and Meet John Doe, with Opera Fusion: New Works, a program she co-artistic directs with Cincinnati Opera colleague Marcus Kuchle. She returned to the Metropolitan Opera to work with James Levine directing Mozart’s Così fan tutte for his return to the Met in a live-for-HD production and directed Der Rosenkavalier, also for HD. Additionally, she directed a new production of Orlando Palladino at Manhattan School of Music, Falstaff at Indiana University Opera Theater, and, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the world premiere of War Stories by composer Lembit Beecher with Gotham Chamber. She made her directing debut with Opera Theatre of Saint Louis in a critically received new production of Dialogues of the Carmelites. In 2016, Guarino makes her stage directing debut at Skylight Opera, directing a new production of Powder Her Face, and makes her debut with the Milwaukee Symphony, directing a new production of Le Nozze di Figaro with Edo De Waart. In 2017, she makes her debut at Philadelphia Opera, directing a new production of War Stories as well as returning to direct a new production at Opera Theatre of Saint Louis. In addition to directing for major opera companies across the United States, Lincoln Center has long been an artistic home for Guarino. She has directed numerous productions at the Metropolitan Opera in addition to directing for the American Symphony Orchestra at Avery Fisher and at Alice Tully Hall, and the EOS Orchestra at the Ethical Culture Society. A champion of new work, she has directed and premiered new works and operas by composers Ricky Ian Gordon, Douglas Cuomo, Jake Heggie, Mark Adamo, Ned Rorem, Deborah Drattell, Jonathan Sheffer, and Libby Larsen, and passionately continues that work with Opera Fusion: New Works. Dedicated to young singer development and training, Guarino is a returning guest artist on the faculty of the San Francisco Merola Program and of young artist programs and festivals across the country, including Glimmerglass Opera, Wolftrap Opera, and the Metropolitan Opera’s Lindemann Young Artist Development Program. She served as dramatic advisor of the Juilliard Opera from 2004 to 2008 before going to CCM to serve as J. Ralph Corbett Distinguished Chair in Opera.

Set Designer Allen Moyer’s recent set-design credits include Die Fledermaus (English National Opera), Curlew River (Tanglewood Festival), and the premieres of Dolores Claiborne (San Francisco Opera) and 27 and Champion (Opera Theatre of Saint Louis). Other credits include Orfeo ed Euridice for the Metropolitan Opera, directed by Mark Morris; La fille du regiment, The Last Savage (scenery and costumes), Dr. Sun Yat-sen, and The Tales of Hoffmann for Santa Fe Opera; Emmeline and The Elixir of Love for Opera

Theatre of Saint Louis; Virginia (scenery and costumes) and The Ghosts of Versailles for the Wexford Festival (Ireland); and Nixon in China for the Canadian Opera Company. He has also designed for many productions at San Francisco Opera, Houston Grand Opera, Scottish Opera, Washington National Opera, Glimmerglass Opera, Welsh National Opera, L’Accademia di Santa Cecilia (Rome), and Seattle Opera as well as several productions for New York City Opera, including Gertrude Stein and Virgil Thomson’s The Mother of Us All, Il Trittico, Il Viaggio A Reims, and La Bohème (also broadcast on Live from Lincoln Center). Moyer also designed the premiere of Ricky Ian Gordon and Michael Korie’s The Grapes of Wrath for the Minnesota Opera as well as the Delibes ballet Sylvia for San Francisco Ballet and Romeo and Juliet: On Motifs of Shakespeare for the Mark Morris Dance Group, the latter two choreographed by Morris. Moyer’s Broadway credits include The Lyons, Lysistrata Jones, the musical Grey Gardens (Tony/Drama Desk/Outer Critic’s Circle nominations and the 2006 Hewes Award from the American Theater Wing), After Miss Julie, Little Dog Laughed, Twelve Angry Men (including the National Tour), and The Constant Wife. Extensive theater credits include productions for Playwright’s Horizons, The Public Theater/New York Shakespeare Festival, Second Stage, The Roundabout Theatre, Signature Theatre Company, The Drama Dept., the Guthrie, Manhattan Theater Club, and Lincoln Center Theater Company. He is the recipient of a 2006 OBIE Award for sustained excellence.

DEC. 4 – 19 @ 7:30

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Costume Designer Candice Donnelly previously worked at American Conservatory Theater on Elektra, Endgame, Play, Race, ‘Tis a Pity She’s a whor*, The Circle, and Happy End. Other credits include La novicia rebelde (Buenos Aires), Autumn Sonata (Yale Repertory Theatre), Endgame (Brooklyn Academy of Music), Dolley Madison (PBS’s American Experience), The Wiz, The Importance of Being Earnest, and The Three Sisters (Center Stage in Baltimore), She Loves Me (Westport Country Playhouse), and Edgardo Mine (Guthrie Theater). She has worked on Broadway productions of Our Country’s Good, Fences, Hughie, Search and Destroy, and Mastergate. Off-Broadway credits include As You Like It and The Skin of Our Teeth (Shakespeare in the Park), Haroun and the Sea of Stories and La finta giardiniera (New York City Opera), Fires in the Mirror and The Skin of Our Teeth (The Public Theater), and No Strings (Encores!). She has also designed shows for Hong Kong Opera, Minnesota Opera, Flemish National Opera, Berkeley Repertory Theatre, Williamstown Theatre Festival, American Repertory Theater, and Huntington Theatre Company, among others.

Lighting Designer Allen Hahn is associate professor of lighting design at the Indiana University Department of Theatre, Drama, & Contemporary Dance. Internationally, his work includes Giulio Cesare and the world premiere of Kafka’s Trial for the Royal Danish Opera as well as numerous productions for companies and festivals in France, Germany, The Netherlands, Spain, and the U.K. In New York City, he designed Gotham Chamber Opera’s inaugural production of Il Sogno di Scipione as well as Les Malheurs d’Orphée and Dido and Aeneas, and Arianna in Creta and Rinaldo for City Opera. For Spoleto Festival USA, he designed the U.S. premiere of Emilie last season as well as productions of Il Trittico and Luisa Miller in previous seasons. Other U.S. opera highlights include Mitridate for Santa Fe Opera, Don Giovanni for Glimmerglass, Death in Venice for Chicago Opera Theater, and the world premiere of Miss Lonelyhearts for Juilliard. Several of his designs were selected for the 2007 Prague Quadrennial exhibition, and he served as lighting design curator for the U.S. exhibit at this year’s Quadrennial. He has worked with artist Tony Oursler on installations at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and ARoS Kunstmuseum in Denmark, and on numerous productions with the New York-based cross-media performance company The Builders Association since its inception in 1994.

Diction Coach Julia Hoffmann Lawson earned her B.A. in German from the University of Wisconsin and her M.A. and Ph.D. in German Literature from Indiana University, completing the latter in 1980. She has lived and studied in Germany and Switzerland. She taught German for many years at Indiana University, Northern Virginia Community College, and Georgetown University as well as for private language contractors in the Washington, D.C. metro area. She and her husband returned to Bloomington in 2002. From 2004 until her retirement this year, she worked as a part-time lecturer in the IU Department of Germanic Studies. In April 2010, she received Indiana University’s Distinguished Teaching Award for part-time faculty. She is delighted to have served as German diction coach for IU Opera Theater since Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor in 2008. Since then, she has coached Der Rosenkavalier, for which she also wrote the supertitles, Die lustige Witwe, Die Zauberflöte, and Die Fledermaus.

Enjoy a world-class meal or dessert at one of your favorite restaurants in Bloomington before or after attending a world-class performance at IU Opera and Ballet Theater. We’re pleased to announce our renewed partnership program that combines culinary artistry with the beauty of a performance on stage at the Musical Arts Center. By showing your ticket at one of the following restaurants and hotels on the day of performance, you can enjoy ...

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15/ 16 SEASON

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Chorus Master Along with his responsibilities as professor of choral conducting and faculty director of opera choruses at the Jacobs School of Music, Walter Huff continues his duties as Atlanta Opera chorus master. He has been chorus master for The Atlanta Opera since 1988, preparing the chorus in more than 120 productions and receiving critical acclaim in the United States and abroad. Huff received his Bachelor of Music degree from the Oberlin Conservatory and his Master of Music degree from Peabody Conservatory (Johns Hopkins). He studied piano with Sarah Martin, Peter Takács, and Lillian Freundlich, and voice with Flore Wend. After serving as a fellow at Tanglewood Music Center, he received Tanglewood’s C. D. Jackson Master Award for Excellence. Huff served as coach with the Peabody Opera Theatre and Washington Opera, and has been musical director for The Atlanta Opera Studio, Georgia State University Opera, and Actor’s Express (Atlanta, Ga.). He also has worked as chorus master with San Diego Opera. He served on the faculty at Georgia State University for four years as assistant professor, guest lecturer, and conductor for the Georgia State University Choral Society. Recently, he was one of four Atlanta artists chosen for the first Loridans Arts Awards, given to Atlanta artists who have made exceptional contributions to the arts life of Atlanta over a long period of time. While serving as chorus master for The Atlanta Opera, Huff has been the music director for The Atlanta Opera High School Opera Institute, a nine-month training program for talented, classically trained high school singers. He has served as chorus master for the IU Opera Theater productions of Don Giovanni, The Merry Widow, Akhnaten, Le Nozze di Figaro, Lady Thi Kính, H.M.S. Pinafore, La Traviata, The Italian Girl in Algiers, La Bohème, The Last Savage, South Pacific, Die Zauberflöte, Il Barbiere di Siviglia, and Dead Man Walking. This past June, Huff served as choral instructor and conductor for the Sacred Music Intensive, a workshop inaugurated by the Organ and Choral departments at the Jacobs School. In addition, he maintains a busy vocal coaching studio in Atlanta.

Choreographer Michael Vernon, artistic director and chair of the Ballet Department, started dancing at the Nesta Brooking School of Ballet in London before going on to study at the Royal Ballet School in London with such legendary teachers as Dame Ninette de Valois and Leonide Massine. He performed with the Royal Ballet, Royal Opera Ballet, and London Festival Ballet before coming to New York in 1976 to join the Eglevsky Ballet as ballet master and resident choreographer. He became artistic director of the Long Island-based company in 1989 and remained in that position until 1996. Vernon choreographed numerous ballets for the Eglevsky Ballet, in addition to ballets for many other professional companies in the United States and worldwide, such as BalletMet of Columbus, Ohio, and North Carolina Dance Theatre. Mikhail Baryshnikov commissioned him to choreograph the successful pas de deux In a Country Garden for American Ballet Theatre (ABT). His solo S’Wonderful was danced by ABT principal Cynthia Harvey in the presence of President and Mrs. Reagan and shown nationwide on CBS television. He served as the assistant choreographer on Ken Russell’s movie Valentino, starring Rudolph Nureyev and Leslie Caron.

Così fan tutte WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART

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OPERA THEATER 15/16

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Vernon taught at Steps on Broadway in New York City for many years, working with dancers from New York City Ballet, American Ballet Theatre, and many other high-profile companies. He is an integral part of the Manhattan Dance Project, which brings New York-style master classes to all regions of the United States. He has been involved with the Ballet Program of the Chautauqua Institution since 1996 and is the artistic advisor for the Ballet School of Stamford. He is permanent guest teacher at the Manhattan Youth Ballet and has a long association with Ballet Hawaii. Vernon has been a company teacher for American Ballet Theatre, Dance Theatre of Harlem, Metropolitan Opera Ballet, and Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. He has guest taught in companies all over the world, including West Australian Ballet, National Ballet of China, Hong Kong Ballet, Birmingham Royal Ballet, Berlin Ballet, Royal Swedish Ballet, and Norwegian National Ballet. He has been a guest teacher for The Juilliard School and taught for many years at The Ailey School. He recently joined the panel of judges for the Youth of America Grand Prix regional semi-finals. For the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music, where he is chair of the Ballet Department, Vernon has choreographed Endless Night, Jeux, Spectre de la Rose, and Cathedral, and has staged and provided additional choreography for the full-length classics Swan Lake and The Sleeping Beauty. He has choreographed for many IU Opera Theater productions, such as Faust and the world premiere of Vincent.

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Cast Rosalinda Marlen Nahhas is a soprano from Houston, Texas, currently pursuing her performance diploma at the Jacobs School of Music under the tutelage of Carol Vaness. She earned her master’s degree from Jacobs and her Bachelor of Music in both vocal performance and musical theatre from Oklahoma City University. This summer, Nahhas was awarded first place and crowd favorite in the Michael Ballam Concorsco Lirico International Opera Competition. She was also a winner of the Schloss Mirabell Voice Competition through the Frost School of Music Summer Program in Salzburg. Last summer, she was a festival artist at the Utah Festival Opera, where she covered the roles of Mimi in Puccini’s La Bohème and Smitty in Loesser’s How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. Past roles include VoMo in the world premiere of P. Q. Phan’s opera The Tale of Lady Thi Kính, Madame Lidoine (Poulenc’s Dialogues of the Carmelites), Suor Angelica (Puccini’s Suor Angelica), Antonia (Offenbach’s Les Contes d’Hoffmann), Violette (Verdi’s La Traviata) Sandman (Penhorwoods’ Too Many Sopranos), Mrs. Lovett (Sondheim’s Sweeney Todd), and Bloody Mary (Rodgers and Hammerstein’s South Pacific). A native of East Lansing, Mich., soprano Ann Marie Theis is making her Indiana University Opera Theater debut as Rosalinde. Theis is an associate instructor of voice pursuing a Master of Music in Voice Performance with Carol Vaness and is mentored by coaches Kevin Murphy and James Davis Hart. At IU, Theis has participated in Carol Vaness’s and Heidi Grant Murphy’s opera workshops. She holds bachelor degrees in music education and vocal performance from Michigan State University, where she studied under the tutelage of Richard Fracker. While at Michigan State, Theis performed in Beijing, China, in collaboration with the Beijing Conservatory. Her undergraduate opera credits include the roles of Ma Joad in Ricky Ian Gordon’s The Grapes of Wrath, Antonia in Offenbach’s Les Contes d’Hoffmann, First Lady in Mozart’s The Magic Flute, and Arminda in Mozart’s La finta giardiniera. She also has appeared as a soprano and mezzo-soprano soloist with the Great Lakes Symphony Orchestra, Michigan State Chorale, Michigan State Symphony Orchestra, Women’s Chamber Ensemble, and Lansing Symphony Orchestra. She was a young artist in the Washington National Opera Institute, where she was selected to perform at a gala concert at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.

Eisenstein Bille Bruley, tenor, is a second-year graduate student at the Jacobs School of Music studying with Carol Vaness. A Montgomery, Texas, native, he completed his undergraduate studies at Baylor University in 2014, where he studied with Robert Best. Most recently, Bruley was an apprentice artist with Central City Opera and performed the roles of The Tempter (Britten’s The Prodigal Son), Gastone (Verdi’s La Traviata), and Sancho (Darion and Leigh’s Man of La Mancha). He has been accepted to many programs, including the Glimmerglass Festival, Central City Opera, Opera Saratoga, and

Opera in the Ozarks. Awards include the Central City Opera Iris Henwood Richards Memorial Award, Thomas Stewart Award for Vocal Excellence from the Baylor University School of Music, winner in the 2015 Lois Alba Aria Competition, finalist in the 2014 Dallas Opera Guild Competition, and third-place winner in the Music Teachers National Association National Young Artist Competition. He was also the Houston District firstprize winner and a regional finalist in the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions in 2014. Bruley has performed with many orchestras, symphonies, and ensembles across the nation, including the Waco Symphony, Fort Worth Baroque Society, Texas Baroque Ensemble, and South Dakota Chorale. He will also appear as Ferrando in IU Opera Theater’s production of Mozart’s Così fan tutte in February. Andrew Marks Maughan, tenor, is from Salt Lake City, Utah. He recently made his Glimmerglass Festival debut singing the role of Cacambo and covering the title role in Francesca Zambello’s production of Candide. In the summers of 2011-14, he joined the Ohio Light Opera and performed the roles of Alfred in Johann Strauss’s Die Fledermaus, Freddy in Lerner and Loewe’s My Fair Lady, Frederic in Gilbert and Sullivan’s The Pirates of Penzance, Sándor Barinkay in Johann Strauss’s The Gypsy Baron, Fritz in Offenbach’s The Grand duch*ess of Gerolstein, and Camille in Lehar’s The Merry Widow, as well as several others. While attending The University of Utah for his master’s and bachelor’s degrees, Maughan had the great pleasure of singing many roles, including Fenton in Verdi’s Falstaff, Tamino in Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte, Sam Polk in Floyd’s Susannah, Don Ottavio in Mozart’s Don Giovanni, Nerone in Monteverdi’s L’incoronazione di Poppea, Ferrando in Mozart’s Così fan tutte, and Le Chevalier in Poulenc’s Dialogues des Carmélites. Die Fledermaus is Maughan’s third production with IU Opera Theater, having previously sung the roles of Rodolfo in Puccini’s La Bohème and Alfredo in Verdi’s La Traviata. He is currently studying voice performance at the Jacobs School of Music as a student of Costanza Cuccaro.

Adele Rebekah Howell is in the first year of her master’s degree at Indiana University, studying with Carol Vaness. This is her IU Opera Theater debut, and she will also appear with IU Opera in 2016 as Ado Annie in Oklahoma! A native of Houston, Texas, she earned her undergraduate degree at Baylor University, where she studied privately with Robert Best. She has performed with SongFest, the studio program at Chautauqua Opera, and with the studio program at Opera in the Ozarks as well as appearing frequently with the Baylor Opera Theater. Recent opera credits include Queen of the Night (Mozart’s The Magic Flute), Samantha (Moore’s The Ballad of Baby Doe), Zerlina (Mozart’s Don Giovanni), Blondchen (Mozart’s Die Entführung aus dem Serail), Olympia (Wainwright’s Prima Donna), Flora (Britten’s The Turn of the Screw), Sister Constance de St. Denis (Poulenc’s Dialogues of the Carmelites), Belinda (Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas), and Barbarina (Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro). In 2015, Howell was the national winner of the Music Teacher’s National Association Young Artists Vocal Competition. She was a frequent finalist in the Texoma Regional National Association of Teachers of Singing Competitions, winning both the Edward Baird Singer of the Year Award in 2014 and the Grady Harlan

Award for Most Promising Professional Voice in 2013. In 2014, she was a finalist in the Dallas Opera Guild Competition, and in 2015, she received an Encouragement Award at the New Orleans District of the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions. Soprano Natalie Weinberg is in the second year of her master’s degree at Indiana University under the tutelage of Patricia Stiles. She earned her Bachelor of Music degree at Indiana University with a minor in Italian. Originally from New York, Weinberg has called Atlanta home for the past eight years. With IU Opera Theater, she has sung the role of Elvira in Rossini’s The Italian Girl in Algiers and was featured as a Friend of Thi Mao in the world premiere of P. Q. Phan’s The Tale of Lady Thi Kính. Other IU Opera Theater productions include Mozart’s The Magic Flute, Menotti’s The Last Savage, Verdi’s La Traviata, Glass’s Akhnaten, Puccini’s La Bohème, and Strauss’s Der Rosenkavalier. Weinberg sang the role of Mrs. Keeney in the world premiere of Ezra Donner’s Ile with New Voices Opera. At IU, she has appeared as a soloist in Mozart’s C Minor Mass and Rossini’s Petite Messe Solennelle. She has also sung in a master class with countertenor David Daniels. Additionally, she serves as the artistic director of New Voices Opera, a student-run opera company devoted to the creation and production of new operatic works written and performed by students for the community.

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Frank Baritone Zachary Coates earned his master’s degree from Indiana University and is currently in the second year of his doctoral studies here. He has appeared with IU Opera Theater as the Count in Le Nozze di Figaro, Don Giovanni in Don Giovanni, Sid in Albert Herring, and Guglielmo in Così fan tutte. Last year, he was a young artist with Michigan Opera Theater singing small roles in its productions of Elektra, Madama Butterfly, Frida, The Merry Widow, and Faust. As a concert soloist, he has performed in Handel’s Messiah with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra and the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra, Haydn’s Mass in Time of War with the American Classical Orchestra, and multiple works with ensembles at the Jacobs School of Music. This past summer, Coates won third place at the Meistersinger Competition in Graz, Austria. He is a student of Andreas Poulimenos. Ross Coughanour is a baritone from Santaquin, Utah. He graduated with a B.A. in Vocal Performance from Brigham Young University (BYU) in 2013. While at BYU, he performed such roles as Papageno in Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte, Ben in Menotti’s The Telephone, Guglielmo in Mozart’s Così fan tutte, Dr. Stone in Menotti’s Help, Help, The Globolinks!, Somarone and Leonato in Berlioz’s Beatrice et Benedict, and the Duke of Plazatoro in Gilbert and Sullivan’s The Gondoliers. Outside of school, Coughanour played the Marquiz in Verdi’s La Traviata with the Utah Lyric Opera, Uncle Bonze in Puccini’s Madama Butterfly with the Utah Lyric Opera, and Edwin in Gilbert and Sullivan’s Trial by Jury with Snow College Opera. Currently pursuing a master’s degree at the Jacobs School of Music, he has been featured as Mang Ong in the world premiere of P. Q. Phan’s The Tale of Lady Thi Kinh, Marcello in Puccini’s La Bohème, Melisso in Handel’s Alcina, and the Pirate King in Gilbert and Sullivan’s Pirates of Penzance. In 2016, he will perform Escamillo in Bizet’s Carmen.

Falke Edward E. Graves, a baritone from Oxon Hill, Md., is pursuing his Master of Music in Voice Performance at the Jacobs School of Music with Patricia Havranek. He earned his Bachelor of Music in Voice Performance from Towson University, where he studied with Aaron Sheehan. While at Towson, he performed the roles of Calandrino in Mozart’s The Goose of Cairo, Cinderella’s Father in Sondheim’s Into the Woods, Dudley in Davies’ Little Red’s Most Unusual Day, and Gabriel von Eisenstein in Die Fledermaus. Additionally, he sang in master classes for Theodora Hanslowe and François Loup and performed the role of Count Almaviva in a scene from Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro. He also participated in the Fairbanks Summer Arts Festival in 2011, where he performed scenes from Lehár’s The Merry Widow, Kern and Hammerstein’s Showboat, and Blitzstein’s Regina. Previous IU Opera Theater appearances include Haly in Rossini’s The Italian Girl in Algiers, The Doctor/ensemble in Menotti’s The Last Savage, ensemble in Verdi’s La Traviata, and Brühlmann in Massenet’s Werther. He has been the bass soloist in Mozart’s Missa Brevis in B-Flat, Schubert’s Mass in G, D.167, and Mozart’s Missa Brevis in D. Other performances at IU include singing in a François LeRoux master class, the title role Gianni Schicchi in Carol Vaness’s Opera Workshop, and baritone solos in Lourenço’s oratorio From the Ashes,

Raymond Wise’s Afro-American Suite: A Song of Freedom, and H. Leslie Adams’ Hymn to Freedom. Upcoming performances include Belcore in a scene from Donizetti’s L’Elisir d’Amore in Heidi Grant Murphy’s Opera Workshop. Brazilian baritone Bruno Sandes is pursuing a Bachelor of Music in Voice Performance as a former student of Robert Harrison and a current student of Carol Vaness. He is a recipient of the Barbara and David Jacobs Scholarship. Sandes earned a degree in interior design at the Federal Institute of Alagoas, Brazil, before relocating to Bloomington, Ind. His recent roles with IU Opera Theater include Emile de Becque in Rodgers and Hammerstein’s South Pacific, Taddeo in Rossini’s The Italian Girl in Algiers, Le Surintendant des Plaisirs in Massenet’s Cendrillon, and Sùng Ông in the world premiere of P. Q. Phan’s The Tale of Lady Thi Kính. Sandes also performed the roles of Steward in Ezra Donner’s Ile, Don Alfonso in Mozart’s Così fan tutte, and Joly in Schönberg’s Les Misérables. He has sung on tours through Austria, Italy, and Germany. He won first place in the XI Maracanto International Voice Competition and was one of the winners of the 2013 Indianapolis Matinee Musicale Competition. He was a semifinalist in the IX Maria Callas International Voice Competition and selected as one of six singers from around the world in the 42nd International Winter Festival of Campos do Jordão. In addition, he was chosen in 2010 as the best classical singer of northeast Brazil by the Art and Culture Critics Association and as a grand winner of the 2014 IU Latin American Music Center Recording Competition. Later this season, he will be singing the role of Ali Hakim in Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Oklahoma! with IU Opera Theater.

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Blind A native of Brooklyn, N.Y., Tislam Swift has performed in a wide array of theaters, opera houses, and other venues. In 2007, he was a background vocalist for Elton John’s sixtieth-birthday celebration at Madison Square Garden. A graduate of Morehouse College, Swift was a frequent soloist with the world-renowned Morehouse College Glee Club, with which he toured both nationally and internationally. He was also a member of the 2013-14 season of the Atlanta Opera chorus, under the direction of Walter Huff. In 2014, Swift participated in the Princeton Opera Festival’s production of Porgy and Bess. Currently, he is a second-year master’s student at the Jacobs School of Music, where he has made IU Opera Theater appearances in La Bohème, South Pacific, and The Barber of Seville. Last spring, he performed the tenor role in the New Voices Opera production of Thump. This summer, he covered the role of Coridon in Handel’s Acis and Galatea with the Indiana University Summer Chorus. Swift is a student of Brian Horne. Max Zander, tenor, is a second-year master’s student studying vocal performance at the Jacobs School of Music, where he also earned his Bachelor of Music degree with a minor in conducting. This performance marks his fourteenth production with IU Opera Theater, previously appearing as Basilio (Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro), Bardolfo (Verdi’s Falstaff), Njegus (Lehár’s The Merry Widow), Rabbi (Menotti’s The Last Savage), Modiste/Liveryman (Massenet’s Cendrillon), and various characters in Bernstein’s Candide. He performed in the choruses of IU Opera Theater’s productions of Rand’s Vincent, Mozart’s Così fan tutte, Puccini’s La Bohème, Gilbert and Sullivan’s H.M.S. Pinafore, Rossini’s The Italian Girl in Algiers, Rodgers and Hammerstein’s South Pacific, and Rossini’s The Barber of Seville. With IU’s Summer Opera Workshop, he has performed in scenes as Prunier (La Rondine), Candide (Candide), Basilio and Don Curzio (Le Nozze di Figaro), and Jaquino (Beethoven’s Fidelio). He has performed in IU’s Undergraduate Opera Workshop as Robert (Sondheim’s Company), Anthony (Sondheim’s Sweeney Todd), Henrik (Sondheim’s A Little Night Music), Ferrando (Così fan tutte), and Mylio (Lalo’s Le roi d’Ys). He was also seen as Tolloller in the University Gilbert & Sullivan Society’s inaugural production of Iolanthe. Other operatic credits include Nemorino in Donizetti’s L’Elisir d’Amore (Montefeltro Festival in Italy), Flute in Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and Monostatos in The Magic Flute (Halifax Summer Opera Festival), and Borsa in Rigoletto (North Shore Music Festival). He is a native of Great Neck, N.Y., and is currently a student of Patricia Stiles.

Alfred Andres Acosta, tenor, is a first-year master’s student at the Jacobs School of Music studying with Carlos Montane. The Miami, Fla., native earned his undergraduate degree from Florida State University as a member of David Okerlund’s studio. Most recently, Acosta was seen as Ferrando in the Janiec Opera Company’s production of Così fan tutte. He will appear again with IU Opera Theater this spring, as Le Dancaïre in Carmen. He was the recipient of the Judy George Junior Young Artist First Prize Award in the 2015 Young Patronesses of the Opera competition. He was nominated as 2014 Humanitarian of the Year at Florida State University and is recognized as a Brautlecht Estate Endowed and Music Guild Scholar.

Tenor Michael Day is a first-year graduate student at the Jacobs School of Music, where he earned undergraduate degrees in music education and voice. Die Fledermaus marks his third appearance on the IU Opera Theater stage, having sung the roles of Tamino in Mozart’s The Magic Flute and Schmidt in Massenet’s Werther. He has performed the roles of Ruggero (Puccini’s La Rondine) in Carol Vaness’s opera workshop and Padre (Darion and Leigh’s Man of La Mancha) with Utah Festival Opera and Musical Theatre, where he was a festival artist last summer. Day has performed as a concert soloist in works such as Mozart’s Requiem with St. Paul’s Episcopal Choir and Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis with the Bloomington Chamber Singers. He is a student of Andreas Poulimenos.

Orlofsky Kaitlyn McMonigle, mezzo-soprano, is a second-year master’s student in voice performance at the Jacobs School of Music, where she studies with Carol Vaness. She made her IU Opera Theater role debut last season as Bradamante in Handel’s Alcina. This past summer, she was a studio artist at Wolf Trap Opera, where she performed the role of La Madre in Puccini’s Madama Butterfly alongside the National Symphony Orchestra and appeared in the chorus of Corigliano’s The Ghosts of Versailles and Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro. In 2013, she participated in the Houston Grand Opera Young Artist Vocal Academy and the Chautauqua Music Festival Vocal Program, where she played Sister Mathilde in Poulenc’s Dialogues of the Carmelites and worked with American composer Ben Moore as a soloist in a concert of his works. Other roles she has performed include Kate Pinkerton in Madama Butterfly, Despina in Così fan tutte, Rosina in The Barber of Seville (Central Florida Lyric Opera), and the Sorceress in Dido and Aeneas (Hubbard Hall Opera Theatre in Cambridge, N.Y.). McMonigle grew up in Ocala, Fla., and earned her Bachelor of Music in Voice Performance at Florida State University in 2014. She is a two-time first-place winner of the National Association of Teachers of Singing Southeast Regional Auditions and an alumna of the Boston University Tanglewood Institute Voice Program. Amanda Perera, mezzo-soprano, is a first-year master’s student at the Jacobs School of Music studying with Timothy Noble. This spring, she earned a Bachelor of Music in Vocal Performance degree from Western University (UWO) in her hometown of London, Ontario. During her time at Western, she performed with UWOpera as Maman and La Chatte in Ravel’s L’enfant et les sortilèges, DoDo in Lehár’s The Merry Widow, and Tisbe in Rossini’s La Cenerentola. Other credits include Mercédès in Bizet’s Carmen (Opera NUOVA) and Countess Charlotte in Sondheim’s A Little Night Music (Halifax Summer Opera Workshop). In recent years, Perera was the recipient of the James A. Harris Memorial Award and winner of the Open Voice Competition at the Kiwanis Music Festival of London, silver medalist and provincial finalist in the Ontario Music Festival Association’s Open Voice Competition, second-award winner at the NATS Competition, and semi-finalist at the National Classical Singer Competition. In concert, she has appeared as a soloist with Kawartha Concerts, St. Andrews Arts Council, Opera NUOVA, Western University Singers, St. Paul’s Cathedral’s organ recital series, McGill University’s Cappella Antica and early music ensembles, Hubbard Hall Opera Theater, and the Boston University Tanglewood Institute. Her role as Prince Orlovsky in Die Fledermaus marks her IU Opera Theater debut.

Ida Synthia Steiman, soprano, is pursuing a master’s degree in voice performance at the Jacobs School of Music. Most recently, she was seen as Mabel in The Pirates of Penzance with the University Gilbert & Sullivan Society. Last summer, she attended the Miami Summer Music Festival and sang the Dew Fairy in Hansel and Gretel and covered La Fee in Cendrillon. Steiman is an active member of Reimagining Opera for Kids and NOTUS: Contemporary Vocal Ensemble. Later this season, she will perform Blöndchen from Die Entführung aus dem Serail with Heidi Grant Murphy’s Opera Workshop. Originally from Carmel, Ind., Steiman earned a Bachelor of Music in Voice Performance from IU last spring. She studied for two summers in Austria during her undergrad. She also performed the role of Jou-Jou in The Merry Widow with IU Opera Theater. Partial roles include Queen of the Night (The Magic Flute), Mlle Silberklang (Der Schauspieldirektor), Susanna (Le Nozze di Figaro), Norina (Don Pasquale), and Nannetta (Falstaff). Steiman is a student of Patricia Stiles. Soprano Joelle Tucker, a native of the Greater Cincinnati area, is in the first year of her master’s degree at the Jacobs School of Music, where she recently earned her bachelor’s degree in vocal performance with an outside field in arts administration. This is Tucker’s second role with IU Opera Theater, following her role as Third Spirit in the 2015 production of Mozart’s The Magic Flute. As a chorus member for IU Opera Theater, she has performed in Puccini’s La Bohème (2011 and 2014 productions), Bernstein’s Candide, Lehár’s The Merry Widow, and Verdi’s La Traviata. She has also performed scenes from Sondheim’s A Little Night Music (Anne Egerman), Company (Jenny), and Sweeney Todd (Mrs. Lovett) in Sylvia McNair’s Vocal Performance Workshop Class. Tucker is a student of Andreas Poulimenos.

Dancers Alia Federico was born in Boynton Beach, Fla., and moved to Swarthmore, Pa., where she started her ballet training at the age of three. She studied at the Swarthmore Ballet Theatre with Lori Ardis and Amber Flynn until she was 16. During that time, she attended the Kirov Academy of Ballet Summer Intensive and the Harid Conservatory Summer Program. In January 2014, she began dancing at the School of Pennsylvania Ballet under the direction of William DeGregory and Arantxa Ochoa. She attended the Miami City Ballet Summer Intensive in the summer of 2014. In the fall of 2015, Federico became a student at the Jacobs School of Music, pursuing a Bachelor of Science in Ballet Performance with an undetermined outside field. Scout Inghilterra is currently a sophom*ore at the Jacobs School of Music. She began her ballet training at age 10 in New York City, where she trained at Ballet Hispanico for two years. She continued her training at Studio Maestro, which was recently renamed Manhattan Youth Ballet, for six years with Deborah Wingert, Marina Stavitskaya, Brian Reeder, and Daniel Ulbricht. With Manhattan Youth Ballet, she performed numerous roles, including Russian Girl in Balanchine’s Serenade, Balanchine’s

Emeralds Pas De Trois, “Embraceable You” in Balanchine’s Who Cares?, original work choreographed by Brian Reeder, and Clara, Butterfly, and Museum in Nutcracker: The Knickerbocker Suite, along with other repertoire. She has attended Boston Ballet’s summer intensive, Vail International Dance Festival summer intensive, and Pennsylvania Ballet’s summer program. During her first year at Jacobs, she performed roles in Balanchine’s Emeralds and Michael Vernon’s The Nutcracker, and in Balanchine’s Swan Lake (Act II). She is a Hutton Honors Scholar and a recipient of a Young Artist Award. Camille Kellems was born and raised in Newport Beach, Calif. She started ballet at age three, studying at various studios in Orange County. She trained under Charles Maple at the Maple Conservatory of Dance from the day the studio opened in 2011 until her senior year in high school. She has attended summer programs including San Francisco Ballet, Pacific Northwest Ballet, School of American Ballet, and Boston Ballet. Abigail Kulwicki grew up in Hudson, Ohio, and began her ballet training under the instruction of Mia Klinger in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio. As a member of the Cuyahoga Valley Youth Ballet, she performed lead and featured roles in original ballets choreographed by Francis Patrelle, Tom Gold, Laszlo Berdo, and other well-known choreographers. At 15, she moved to Winston-Salem, N.C., to continue her training and complete her high school studies at the University of North Carolina School of the Arts (UNCSA). At UNCSA, Kulwicki was featured in Polovtsian Dances, an original piece choreographed by Susan Jaffe. She has attended summer intensives since the age of nine, including Boston Ballet, Carolina Ballet, Central Pennsylvania Youth Ballet, Gelsey Kirkland Academy, and Washington Ballet. During her freshman year at the Jacobs School of Music, she performed in Emeralds, The Nutcracker, and Swan Lake (Act II). She is a sophom*ore pursing a Bachelor of Science in Ballet Performance with an Outside Field in Elementary Education. Lauren Lane is a sophom*ore ballet major at the Jacobs School of Music pursuing an outside field in kinesiology and a pre-physical therapy track. She grew up in Columbus, Ohio, where she trained with New Albany Ballet Company under the direction of Christine Mangia and Amy Tremante. While there, she performed many roles, including Sugar Plum Fairy, Arabian Pas de Deux, and Dream Clara in The Nutcracker. Last year, she performed in George Balanchine’s Swan Lake (Act II) and Michael Vernon’s The Nutcracker. She has attended summer intensive programs with Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre (three years), American Ballet Theatre, Jacobs School of Music, Ballet West, and Ballet Chicago. Ginabel Peterson Padilla grew up in Philadelphia, Pa. She began her ballet training at age six at Wissahickon Dance Academy, a local studio. She later attended The Kirov Academy of Ballet of Washington, D.C., and Miami City Ballet School. She has also attended summer intensives at the aforementioned schools and at San Francisco Ballet School. She has performed in La Bayadere, The Sleeping Beauty, Giselle, La Sylphide, Luna del Mar, and Western Symphony.

Ali Willson was born and raised in Newport Beach, Calif. She trained at the Maple Conservatory of Dance for seven years under the instruction of Charles Maple, Tong Wang, Kristin Hakala, Patrick Franz, and Steven Inskeep. She also spent time training with Tanya Durbin. Willson has attended summer courses at the School of American Ballet and Boston Ballet. She played leading roles at the Maple Conservatory, including Snow White in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Snow Queen and Sugar Plum Fairy in The Nutcracker, and the Queen of Hearts in Alice in Wonderland. Gillian Worek is currently a sophom*ore at the Jacobs School of Music pursuing a degree in ballet performance. She most recently performed in Indiana University Ballet Theater’s The Nutcracker and George Balanchine’s Swan Lake Act (II). She has taken ballet lessons for 15 years and has trained under Julie Caprio of Hamilton Ballet Theater. She has attended New York City’s Joffrey Ballet, The Rock School for Dance Education, Koltun Ballet Academy, and Chicago Ballet’s summer intensives. Sarah Young was born in Bloomington, Ind., where she studied ballet with the IU Pre-College ballet program until she was a senior in high school. She moved to Seattle, Wash., for her senior year of high school, where she was a part of the professional division with Pacific Northwest Ballet for two years. Young has attended numerous summer intensives, including American Ballet Theatre, School of American Ballet, Houston Ballet, Pacific Northwest Ballet, and Central Pennsylvania Youth Ballet. Cecilia Zanone is a freshman from Kansas City, where she trained with the Kansas City Ballet School and was a member of the Kansas City Youth Ballet. She has attended summer intensives at the Boston Ballet School, The Rock School for Dance Education, and Ballet Austin. She has performed as Cupid in Don Quixote and Woodland Glade Fairy in The Sleeping Beauty, and in Flower Festival. She is pursuing a Bachelor of Science in Ballet Performance with an Outside Field in Business at the Jacobs School of Music.

Philharmonic Orchestra Violin I Erica Hudson Hua Zhang Haeni Lee Jonathan Yi Jonathan Chern Michael Su Sukyung Ahn Max Ramage Bonnie Lee Janani Sivakumar Jason Chen Felix Chen Sofia Kim Violin II William Ronning Pedro Rodríguez Kathryn Chamberlain Clara Scholtes Christopher Leonard Jihye Choi Jeong Won Kim Jieun Park Christine Lau Skye Kinlaw Viola Jinrok Kim Yonsung Lee Patrick Miller Michael Sinni Benjamin Wagner Jasper Zientek

Viola (cont.) Mason Spencer Ke Zhang Cello Hyeok Kwon Justin Goldsmith Lindy Tsai David Dietz Marta Guðmundsdóttir Adrian Golay Kelly Knox Bass Kaelan Decman Mathew Burri Nicholas Scholefield Nicholas Blackburn Flute Kayla Faurie Elspeth Hayden, Piccolo Oboe Mayu Isom Mylie Payne Clarinet Rajesh Soodeen Luke Norton Bassoon Conor Bell Virginia Rice

Horn Ian Petruzzi Eleni Georgiadis Cameron Wray Elizabeth Cooksey Trumpet Ethan Bartley Jacob Hook Trombone Kenneth Johnson Paulo Ramos Austin Pancner, Bass Timpani Alana Wiesing Percussion James Cromer Alexander Skov Harp Jihyun Wu Orchestra Set-Up Lindsay Bobyak Christine Lau Skye Kinlaw William Ronning Michael Su Librarian Sara Fruehe

Student Production Staff Assistant Conductor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Danko Drusko Assistant Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hallie Stebbins Assistant Lighting Designer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tony Stoeri Associate Chorus Master . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Steve Berlanga Assistant Chorus Master . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .James Maverick Coach Accompanist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Travis Bloom, Louis Lohraseb Electrics Supervisors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Alexis Jarson, Betsy Wray Electrics Crew . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Glen Axthelm, Esprit Canada Corwin Deckard, Megan Headlee, Lucy Morrell Lucas Raud, Louisa Steup, June Tomastic Sasha Wiesenhahn, Shelby Wyatt Props Master . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Olivia Dagley Assistant Scenic Artist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Christy Wiesenhahn Props Crew . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sam Young Paint Supervisors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Amber McKoy, Marcus Simmons Paint Crew . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Olivia Dagley, Steven Garza, Lynn Glick Nathanael Hein, Kayla Listenberger, Jóhann Reed Andrew Richardson, Michael Schuler Claire Stebbins, Audrey Stephens Macey White, Christy Wiesenhahn Wig, Hair, and Makeup Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Eileen Jennings Costume Crew . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mackenzie Allen, Tori Champion Tyler Dowdy, Emily Dyer, Claire Ellis Colin Ellis, Leah Gaston, Kaity Jellison Hangyul Kim, Grace Koury, Lily Overmyer Imani Sailers, Amanda Sesler, Nell Vandeveld Supertitle Operator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Travis Bloom Audio/Video Production Crew . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Walter Everton, Isaac Fink Graeme Martin, Megan Searl Music Programs Editorial Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Amanda Jensen

Jacobs School of Music Honor Roll Fiscal Year 2014-15

Individual, Corporate, and Foundation Supporters The Jacobs School of Music wishes to recognize those individuals, corporations, and foundations who have made contributions to the school between July 1, 2014, and June 30, 2015 . Those listed here are among the Jacobs School’s most dedicated and involved benefactors, and it is their outstanding generosity that enables the IU Jacobs School of Music to continue to be the finest institution of its kind in the nation .

$1,000,000 and Up The Estate of Barbara M . Jacobs Louise Addicott-Joshi and Yatish Joshi

$100,000 - $999,999 Mildred J . Brannon* Richard E . Ford*

Monroe A . Gilbert* David H . Jacobs

Jamey and Sara Aebersold Janette Amboise-Chaumont* Gary and Kathy Anderson Carol V . Brown Jack and Pam Burks Luba Edlina-Dubinsky James and Elizabeth Ericksen Mary Kratz Gasser

Frank C . Graves and Christine Dugan Rusty and Ann Harrison Ruth E . Johnson Monika and Peter Kroener Robert and Sara LeBien Lou and Sybil Mervis William F . Milligan* Regina Momgaudas

S . Sue Aramian Theodore W . Batterman Richard and Mary Bradford J . Peter Burkholder and P . Douglas McKinney R . Park and Louise Carmon Susan Cartland-Bode and Henry J . Bode

Stephany A . Dunfee Ethel and William Gofen Jay and Karen Goodgold Christian F . Gourley and Melinda Roy Katherine C . Lazerwitz Gary and Carol Matula Jon A . Olson

Charlene and Donald Allen Ann C . Anderson Nicholas Barbaro and Sue Ellen Scheppke Robert Barker and Patsy Fell-Barker Franklin and Linda Bengtson Norma B . Beversdorf-Rezits and Joseph M . Rezits David and Gina Boonshoft Saz Burton and Shane Claridge J . P . and Barbara Carver William and Anita Cast Marcella and Scott Caulfield Jerald and Megan Chester Katy and Mark Cobb Carol and John Cornwell William and Marion Crawford Gary and Sandra Dowty Jane and D . Kim Dunnick Lois and Nile Dusdieker Stephen A . Ehrlich Edward and Mary Fox Ramona R . Fox Jane M . Fricke and Jeff Steele Al and Lynn Reichle Jack and Linda Gill Alan and Margaret Golston

John and Susan Graham Roberta and Jim Graham Souheil and Alejandra Haddad Darlene and Rajih Haddawi Elizabeth Hainen and David DePeters Lenore S . Hatfield Dale C . Hedding Bernhard C . Heiden* Jerome and Lucinda Hey L . Scott and Donna J . Horrall Patricia C . Jones Louis and Lynda Jordan Linda and Kenneth Kaczmarek Thomas and Gail Kasdorf Robert and Stephanie Keys John C . Kincaid and Mary E . Soper Thomas and Vicki King George and Cathy Korinek John and Nancy Korzec James W . and Evelyn LaFollette P . A . Mack Beverly A . McGahey Clarence and Nancy Miller Geraldine and John Miller Lawrence Myers, Jr . Gary and Susan Noonan

Susann H . McDonald

$10,000 - $99,999 Del and Letty Newkirk John and Lislott Richardson Virginia Schmucker* Shalin C . Liu Charles and Lisa Surack Eric C . Trefelner Mimi Zweig

$5,000 - $9,999 Jeannette and Harold Segel Leonard Phillips* and Mary Wennerstrom Nancy and Allen White Theodore S . Widlanski Michael J . Williamson and Kathy Weston

$1,000 - $4,999 Eugene O’Brien Elinor T . Okada Joan C . Olcott George and Wendy Powell Nancy P . Rayfield Joy and Robert Renshaw Gwyn and Barbara Richards Andrew and Mary Saltzman Scharmal K . Schrock Richard Searles Christine J . Shamborsky Martha and Jeffrey Sherman Jefferson Shreve Curt and Judy Simic Robert and Carolyn Sims Regiana and George Sistevaris W . Craig Spence Ellen Strommen Linda Strommen Mark A . Sudeith Robert M . VanBesien Charles H . Webb Alan and Elizabeth Whaley David L . Wicker Beth Stoner Wiegand and Bruce Wiegand Laura Youens-Wexler and Richard Wexler

$500 - $999 Niel and Donna Armstrong Kenneth and Georgina Aronoff Mary R . Babbitt Margaret K . Bachman C . Matthew Balensuela Olimpia F . Barbera Brett and Amy Battjer W . Michael Brittenback and William Meezan Roberta Brokaw Alan and Tonya Brown Mary and Schuyler Buck Jonathan D . Chu James and Carol Clauser J . Neal Cox Christopher P . Craig Ed and Jane Daum Dominic* and Susan Devito Marian and Thomas Drake David B . Edgeworth Donald and Sandra Freund Jann and Jon Fujimoto Suzanne and Frank Gault Steven and Anne Gaylord Mary I . Goetze and Robert P . Althauser Norman R . Gregory

Carolyn and Richard Haile Jeffrey and Jeanette Hathaway Allan Hershfield and Alexandra Young Jolaine L . Hill Ruth and Lowell Hoffman Rona Hokanson Jim Holland William and Karol Hope Robert W . Hubel Jeffrey and Lesa Huber Nancy O . Hublar Robert J . Hublar Seiko Igarashi and Masanori Igarashi Harold R . Janitz* Marilyn J . Keiser Marilyn Bone Kloss Joan D . Knollenberg Virginia A . Krauss Scott R . Latzky Judith and Dennis Leatherman Jon and Susan Lewis Nancy Liley Emilia Martins and Michael Lynch Cullen and Rachel McCarty Kathleen and Emanuel Mickel

Joseph and Barbara Alpert Paula J . Amrod Roy and Janice Applegate James F . Ault, Jr . Linda A . Baker Sandra C . Balmer Brian Barnicle Charles and Gladys Bartholomew Susan D . Bartlett Robert W . Bastian Paula and John Bates Myron and Susan Bloom Ruth and Christopher Borman Karen and Arthur Bortolini Elizabeth M . Brannon Craig M . Brown Mary and Montgomery Brown Brayton W . Brunkhurst Jean A . Burkholder Betsy L . Burleigh John N . Burrows Philip and Elizabeth Capasso Joseph R . Car Gail and Verne Chapman Gayle and Robert Chesebro Eric Christ Nelda M . Christ* Cynthia and Alfred Cirome Karen-Cherie Cogane and Stephen Orel R . Kent Cook Katherine R . Covington Gretchen E . Craig Cheryl and Bradley Cunningham Diane L . Davis-Deckard and Donald Deckard Melissa and Eric Dickson Clarence H . and Judith Doninger Sharon and John Downey Beth and John Drewes Frank and Vickie Edmondson

Anne-Marie and John Egan Charles and Anna Ellis Mark and Jennifer Famous Mary and Terrell Faulkenberry Harriet and William Fierman Hollis and Robert Gaston Liliana and Dan Gehring Inge C . Gerber and Michael Gerber Alan R . Goldhammer Ross A . Gombiner Mary A . Gray Linda J . Greaf David E . Greiwe Pamela C . Griffel Steven and Leona Handelman John and Teresa Harbaugh Debra and John Hatmaker Harvey B . Holly Chris Holmes and David Burkhart Kenneth and Elyse Joseph Myrna M . Killey Jillian L . Kinzie and Joseph Throckmorton Taka and Karen Kling Howard and Linda Klug Luther T . Lemley William Lesesne Amy L . Letson Joseph J . Lewis Barbara and John Lombardo John E . Lopatka and Marie Reilly Doris Magee Richard M . Shiffrin and Judith A . Mahy-Shiffrin Mary C . Majerus Brian D . Marcus Carolyn Marlow and William Teltser Sallie and Jim Matthews Jerry W . and Phyllis McCullough Steven A . McNeil Ben F . Miller

Terry and Sara Miller Thomas and Suzanne Miller Linda L . Moot and Andrew P . Levin John and Barbara Morris Mara E . Parker and Andrew J . Cogbill Sujal H . Patel P . Q . Phan Joann Richardson Clyde R . Rose Randy Schekman and Nancy Walls David and Barbara Sheldon Odette F . Shepherd W . Richard Shindle Janet S . Smith Robert L . Smith and Janice L . Lesniak James and Susan Stamper Rozella and M . Dee Stewart Karen M . Taylor Susan C . Thrasher James and Cheryl Topolgus Richard E . Walker Rebecca and Wayne Weaver Carolyn A . White E . G . and Sharon White

$250 - $499 Matthew and Maryann Mindrum G . Scott and Rosalind Mitchell Dana R . Navarro Anne C . Newman Donna and Timothy Noble Gloria G . Noone Jennifer and Philip Nubel Margaret and Edward Olson Dennis and Lynette Organ James and Carol Orr Ruth and Robert Palmer Herbert E . Parks Robert and Pamela Phillips Jerry and Cynthia Robinson Roger Roe Bruce Ronkin and Janet Zipes Linda J . Rosenthal Jon and Bambi Saxe Cecile and Kenneth Schubert Christopher and Janet Schwabe Andrew and Natalie Scott Sue A . Shepard and Donald Helgeson Wayne and Lois Shipe Laurelyn and Michael Simons Edwin L . Simpson James B . Sinclair Kenneth Smith John and Laura Snyder William and Anna Stewart Michael Stump and Mabel Martinez Gregory Vansuch John and Tamyra Verheul Mark and Karen Westerhausen Tony J . Wiederhold Teresa A . Wolf and Peter Wolf Christopher Young and Brenda Brenner Giovanni Zanovello Joyce R . Zastrow

$100 - $249 Neal and Elizabeth Abdullah Paul Abrinko and Monika Eckfield Mary Adams and Richard L . Sengpiehl Lois C . Adams Miller Vipin Adhlakha Ann H . Adinamis Impicciche Peggy L . Albertson James A . Allison George C . Alter and Elyce J . Rotella Joseph and Sharon Amlung Joan B . Anderson Stella N . Anderson William and Jean Appel Lloyd D . Archer Kimi W . Atchason Judith A . Auer and George M . Lawrence Mary K . Aylsworth James and Mary Babb Robert A . Babbs Elizabeth Baker and Richard Pugh Wesley A . Ballenger Daniel Balog Pamela Pfeifer Banks Allison and Mark Barno Robert R . Bartalot David Bates Barbara S . Baum Mark K . Bear Sue A . Beaty James and Lynda Beckel Judy and Martin Becker John C . Beckman Sharon and William Beecroft David and Ingrid Beery Frederick and Beth Behning Marc C . Bellassai Audrone M . Bentham David N . Bergin Michelle Bergonzi Olesia O . Bihun Cheryl A . Bintz David and Judy Blackwell Ronald and Regina Blais Gayle and Heinz Blankenburg Lanelle B . Blanton John and Mary Blutenthal Michael and Pamela Bobb Aric and Keisha Boger Thom and Diane Bondus Sidney C . Bosley Gilles Bouyer and Patricia Reese Bennet and Cynthia Brabson Helen and William Brattain Peter W . Brengel Edward P . Bruenjes Margaret and Philip Brummit William R . Buck Sarah Bullen and Dyan Peterson Aaron M . Burkhart Doris J . Burton Robin and Sherri Buscha V . Barbara Bush Rebecca C . Butler Margaret R . Buttermore P . Robert Caito and Dena Rae Hanco*ck Mary and Stephen Carter Linda L . Case Susan and Robert Cave Harriet R . Chase Helene M . Chaufty Janice O . Childress William B . Clay Elizabeth B . Clemens Lynda Clendenning and Robert Fuller Lawrence M . Clopper

Richard and Lynn Cohee Robert and Marcia Coleman James D . Collier Timothy and Sandra Connery Frances and Joseph Conrad Mark R . Conrad Richard K . Cook Sheryl and Montgomery Cordell Diane Courtre Ray E . and Molly Cramer Janet S . Crossen Proctor Crow J . Daniel and Mary Cunningham Michael G . Cunningham Donna and David Dalton John T . Dalton Janice E . Daniels Gerald and Mary Danielson John D . Danielson John and Carol Dare Walter H . De Armitt Julia DeHon Conrad J . Dejong Imelda Delgado Patrick and Karen Dessent Deborah J . Deyo-Howe Kim and Dianne Diefenderfer Louise A . Dixon and Michael Henoch Barbara and Richard Domek Paul T . Dove David A . Drinkwater Margaret J . Duffin Gregory S . Dugan Kevin J . Duggins Alan and Juliet Duncanson Richard L . Dwyer Moira and Timothy Dyczko Silsby S . Eastman Robert and Robin Eatman Annalise Eberhart Patricia Eckstein Terrence and Barbara Edgeworth Anne C . Eisfeller Joseph E . Elliott Michael J . Ellis Steven K . Emery Stanley and Pamela Engle Lucille I . Erb Dean A . Everett Suzanne and John Farbstein Jean E . Felix Salvatore and Carol Ferrantelli Joseph P . Fiacable, M .D . Mary E . Fine Donald and Myra Fisher Constance C . Ford Philip and Helen Ford Bruce and Betty Fowler Linda A . Frauenhoff Michael and Teresa Frye Melva F . Gage Karen A . Gahagan Brent M . Gault Thomas E . Gerber Susann Gilbert Viola and Ezekiel Gilliam Elizabeth and Robert Glassey Lorraine Glass-Harris James S . Godowns Frances E . Goldberg Walter A . Goldreich Sylvia S . Gormley Arlene Goter Susan E . Grathwohl Gretchen M . Green

Bertram and Susan Greenspan Roberta M . Gumbel Nola and John Gustafson Christine Haack and Mark Hood Robert and Janet Hamilton Eleanor and David Hammer Charlene A . Harb Terry D . Hardy Christopher and Roxanne Hare Andrew and Mary Harper Martha and Stephen Harris Steven and Karen Hartjes Theodore R . Harvey Clayton and Ellen Heath Gene and Judy Hedrick W . Harvey and Connie Hegarty Lynn E . Helding and Blake M . Wilson Helen and Kimball Henderson Sharon and Frederick Hepler Robert A . Hernandez Florence E . Hiatt Leslie W . Hicken J . William and Karen Hicks Linda G . Higginbotham and Bradley R . Leftwich Ford D . Hill William N . Hillyard and Carrie Bruner Joe and Marianne Hinds Nicholas and Katherine Holzmer Lynn M . Hooker and David A . Reingold Harlow and Harriet Hopkins Judith and Dennis Hopkinson Ray and Phyllis Horton Emily L . Hostetter Patricia and Thomas Howenstine John and Cindy Hughes Ivan and Anne Hughes Marcia A . Hughes James S . Humphrey Marshall L . Hutchinson Stefanie H . Jacob and Scott K . Tisdel Peter P . Jacobi Carole L . James Warren W . Jaworski Kathryn and Robert Jessup Amy L . Jevitt Martin D . Joachim Michele and Robert Johns Edith E . Johnson Hollis R . Johnson Kathleen L . Johnson Thomas and Marilyn Johnson Kristin and Wayne Jones Lynn A . Kane David L . Kaplan* Kevin and LaTrecia Kasting Lise E . Keiter Carol R . Kelly Janet Kelsay Natalie J . Kemerer Linda and James Kern Martin W . Kettelhut Melissa Kevorkian and Jack Fields John and Julianne King Meredith K . Kirkpatrick Charles C . Knox Lee A . Kohlmeier Rose Krakovitz Joseph C . Kraus Joel S . Krueger Kaz Kruszewski Chih Kwok and Chih-Yi Chen Charles and Beverly Kyriakos Eric C . Lai and Grace Lok Aaron D . Lan

Thomas and Nancy Lancaster Beverly E . Landis and Alan R . Billingsley Nicholas R . Lang J . Bruce and Patricia A . Leavitt Randy L . Leazenby Debra and Robert Lee Kristin M . Lensch Gregory Largent and Anna Leppert-Largent Mary and Timothy Lerzak Jerry and Jane Lewis Ann and Scott Liberman Carolyn R . Lickerman Thomas Loewenheim Marie T . Lutz Alma Brooks Lyle Joan I . Lynch Alvin and Susan Lyons Bryan L . Mack Michael and Valerie MacLean Robert W . Magnuson David and Barbara Malson Mayer and Ellen Mandelbaum Leslie and Joseph Manfredo Brian and Erika Manternach Rudy T . Marcozzi Lynne and Richard Marks Rose M . Martin Lisa K . Marum Judith A . Mason Thomas O . Mastroianni* Joel and Sandra Mathias Barbara E . Mayhew Lawrence and Jennifer McBride Philip and Elizabeth McClintock Thomas and Norma McComb Scott and Kelly McCray Cynthia and Jeffrey McCreary David McDonald Winnifred and Francis McGinnis Ellen L . McGlothin Jerry and Jane McIntosh James L . McLay Nelia and James McLuckie Mary Jo McMillan Michael and Marcia McNelley Sean M . McNelley Mary K . and Gerald Mehner Ralph and Shirley Melton Lynn A . Meyer Judith E . Miller Mary A . Miller Ronald and Joyce Miller Thomas J . Miller Edward J . Mitro Ty A . Miyahara Richard J . Mlynarski Paul and Laura Monachino Patricia and Philip Moreau Bonnie and Peter Motel Patricia and John Mulholland Dwight R . Mumper Ronald L . Munson Ann E . Murray and Michael Hurtubise Ray and Wendy Muston Joyce D . Myers Dean and Carol Myshrall George and Diane Nadaf Bud E . Nelson Lynn S . Nestler Kathleen C . Nicely Kenneth H . Nichols Julia and Omar Nielsen Jeffrey and Jane Nierman Ann E . Norz Martha H . Noyes Harold and Denise Ogren Melinda P . O’Neal

George D . Osborne Mary A . Owings Nancy A . Paddleford Hyung-Sun Paik C . Lynn Pampalone Sandra B . Parker Peggy W . Paschall Marilyn J . Patton George and Elsie Peffley Ronald A . Pennington Kathie I . Perrett John Peterson Edward Petsonk Jeffrey L . Plonski Belinda M . Potoma and Michael R . Fish Darlene and Stephen Pratt Richard and Mary Pretat Edward and Lois Rath Edward Rath John A . Rathgeb Diana and Alan Rawizza Helen P . Reich James L . Reifinger John L . Reitz Phyllis and Jack Relyea Kathleen S . Rezac Jean and Donald Rhoads Carolyn J . Rice Susan M . Rider Timothy J . Riffle and Sarah M . McConnell William and Nancy Riggert Paul and Barbara Ristau Donald E . Ritter Samuel and Valerie Roberts David and Orli Robertson Murray and Sue Robinson Helmut J . Roehrig Kenneth and Eleanor Rogers Anthony S . Ross and Beth O . Rapier Daniel Rothmuller Robin S . Rothrock Peter L . Rubin Gerald J . Rudman Irving L . Sablosky Mary-Lynn Sachse* Ann and David Samuelson Roy and Mary Samuelsen Michael W . Sanders Randa K . Sanders Linda and Alan Sandlin V . Gayle Sarber John and Donna Sasse Mark and Anne Sauter Richard K . Schall Lynn L . Schenck Susan and Stephen Schlegel Arthur and Carole Schreiber Matthew R . Schuler Daniel E . Schulz Beverly C . Scott and Sylvia Patterson-Scott Perry and Lisa Scott Laurie and William Sears Richard and Ilene Sears John A . Seest Edward S . Selby Gillian and Uri Sella Maria and Peter Selzer John and Lorna Seward Dennis and Leeandra Sewell Jeffrey R . Sexton Frank and Carrie Shahbahrami Nancy and Stephen Shane Nadine E . Shank Merry and John Shapiro Richard and Margaret Shelly Richard and Karen Shepherd Larry and Debra Sherer

Ikuko sh*tamichi Thomas and Donna Shriner W . Robert and Jill Siddall John and Juel Smith Linda K . Smith Steve and Mary Snider James and Carolyn Sowinski Paul V . Spade Ronald L . Sparks Tom and Linda Sperling Stanley and Cynthia Springer Darell and Susan Stachelski Christel and Robert Stoll James L . Strause Barbara B . Strickland Eric and Etsuko Strohecker Rhonda and Gregory Swanson Fanfen Tai and Charles Lin Kitty Tavel Joyce A . Taylor Kathleen Taylor Artemisia and Theodore Thevaos Elaine and Philip Thrasher Diana and Joseph Tompa Aaron and Mary Lee Tosky Jonathan N . Towne and Rebecca J . Noreen Cheryl A . Tschanz and William L . Newkirk Linda J . Tucker Mary E . Ulrey Dianne Vars Matthew and Therese Veldman Venu Vemuri Lisa Ventura Elaine and Larry Wagner Sharon P . Wagner Harvey and Melissa Walfish George Walker and Carolyn Lipson-Walker Cynthia and Jay Wallin Kathy Ward Sally and Mark Watson Jerry and Bonnie Weakley Thomas J . Weakley Daniel Weiss Phyllis C . Wertime Roger and Barbara Wesby Steven and Kelly Wetle John and Mary Whalin Allen and Cheryl White James T . White Lloyd and Barbara White Patricia L . Williams Dolores Wilson James F . Winfield Richard and Donna Wolf George W . Wolfe Blue B . Woman Karen and Danny Wright G . Eugene Yates Jamie and Rick Yemm Mark A . Yother Mimi H . Youkeles Jeffery P . Zaring Joan and David Zaun Joan Zegree and Spider Kedelsky Joyce and Larry Zimmerman Conrad and Debora Zimmermann Timothy and Sara Zwickl

Corporations and Foundations $100,000 and Up Dorothy Richard Starling Foundation

$25,000 - $99,999 Barbro Osher Pro Suecia Foundation

Summer Star Foundation for Nature, Art and Humanity, Inc.

Harry Kraus Survivor Trust International Tuba Euphonium Association

Old National Wealth Management Presser Foundation

Abbott Laboratories Fund American Choral Directors Association Avedis Zildjian Company Bank of America Corp. Foundation Bloomingfoods Market & Deli Bloomington Classical Guitar Society, Inc. Bloomington Community Band, Inc. Bloomington Surgical Associates C. E. and S. Foundation, Inc.

Camerata, Inc. Eli Lilly & Company First United Church, Inc. Greater Kansas City Community Foundation The Harvey Phillips Foundation, Inc. Indiana University Alumni Association Kalamazoo Community Foundation Myers Revocable Trust

The Seven Kids Foundation, Inc.

$10,000 - $24,999 Sweetwater Sound, Inc.

$1,000 - $9,999 National Christian Foundation Greater Chicago Opera Illinois League Paulsen Family Foundation Queensland Show Choir, Inc. Renaissance Charitable Foundation Robert Carwithen Music Foundation Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program

Annual Giving Circles The Indiana University Jacobs School of Music Annual Giving Circles include individuals dedicated to making a difference in the cultural life of the university . These unrestricted gifts of opportunity capital support the areas of greatest need, including financial aid, faculty research, academic opportunities, and visiting artists .

Dean’s Circle

Visionary Members $10,000 and Up Janette Amboise-Chaumont* Gary and Kathy Anderson

Jack and Pam Burks David H. Jacobs

Charles and Lisa Surack

Strategic Members $5,000 - $9,999 S. Sue Aramian Theodore W. Batterman

Stephany A. Dunfee Jay and Karen Goodgold

Monika and Peter Kroener Jeannette and Harold Segel

Supporting Members $2,500 - $4,999 David and Gina Boonshoft William and Marion Crawford Jack and Linda Gill

Del and Letty Newkirk Eugene O’Brien Al and Lynn Reichle

Gwyn and Barbara Richards Mark A. Sudeith Beth Stoner Wiegand and Bruce Wiegand

Contributing Members $1,000 - $2,499 Ann C. Anderson Nicholas Barbaro and Sue Ellen Scheppke Robert Barker and Patsy Fell-Barker Franklin and Linda Bengtson J. P. and Barbara Carver William and Anita Cast Jerald and Megan Chester

Katy and Mark Cobb Carol and John Cornwell Jane and D. Kim Dunnick Lois and Nile Dusdieker John and Susan Graham Roberta and Jim Graham Darlene and Rajih Haddawi

Dale C. Hedding Louis and Lynda Jordan Linda and Kenneth Kaczmarek Thomas and Gail Kasdorf Thomas and Vicki King George and Cathy Korinek John and Nancy Korzec

James W. and Evelyn Whaley LaFollette P. A. Mack Geraldine and John Miller Lawrence Myers, Jr. Joan C. Olcott Joy and Robert Renshaw

Scharmal K. Schrock Richard Searles Christine J. Shamborsky Jefferson Shreve Curt and Judy Simic W. Craig Spence

Ellen Strommen Robert M. VanBesien Charles H. Webb David L. Wicker

Artist’s Circle $500 - $999

Niel and Donna Armstrong Margaret K. Bachman James and Carol Clauser Norman R. Gregory Carolyn and Richard Haile Jeffrey and Jeanette Hathaway Jolaine L. Hill Ruth and Lowell Hoffman William and Karol Hope Jeffrey and Lesa Huber Seiko and Masanori Igarashi Harold R. Janitz*

Marilyn J. Keiser Marilyn Bone Kloss Joan D. Knollenberg Virginia A. Krauss Scott R. Latzky Jon and Susan Lewis Emilia Martins and Michael Lynch Cullen and Rachel McCarty W. Michael Brittenback and William Meezan Kathleen and Emanuel Mickel Terry and Sara Miller Linda and Andrew Levin

Joseph and Barbara Alpert Paula J. Amrod Roy and Janice Applegate Linda A. Baker Brian Barnicle Charles and Gladys Bartholomew Robert W. Bastian Ruth and Christopher Borman Karen and Arthur Bortolini Elizabeth M. Brannon Mary and Montgomery Brown Brayton W. Brunkhurst Betsy L. Burleigh John N. Burrows Joseph R. Car Gayle and Robert Chesebro R. Kent Cook Katherine R. Covington Cheryl and Bradley Cunningham Melissa and Eric Dickson Clarence H. and Judith Doninger Sharon and John Downey Frank and Vickie Edmondson Anne-Marie and John Egan

Mark and Jennifer Famous Mary and Terrell Faulkenberry Harriet and William Fierman Liliana and Dan Gehring Ross A. Gombiner Linda J. Greaf David E. Greiwe Pamela C. Griffel Steven and Leona Handelman Harvey B. Holly Myrna M. Killey Jillian Kinzie and Joseph Throckmorton Howard and Linda Klug Amy L. Letson Joseph J. Lewis Barbara and John Lombardo John Lopatka and Marie Reilly Mary C. Majerus Brian D. Marcus Carolyn and William Teltser Sallie and Jim Matthews Jerry W. and Phyllis McCullough Matthew and Maryann Mindrum Dana R. Navarro

Paul Abrinko and Monika Eckfield Lois C. Adams Miller Vipin Adhlakha Peggy L. Albertson James A. Allison Joseph and Sharon Amlung Joan B. Anderson Stella N. Anderson Lloyd D. Archer Kimi W. Atchason Judith Auer and George Lawrence Mary K. Aylsworth James and Mary Babb Elizabeth Baker and Richard Pugh Pamela Pfeifer Banks Robert R. Bartalot Mark K. Bear Sue A. Beaty James and Lynda Beckel Judy and Martin Becker Sharon and William Beecroft David and Ingrid Beery

Audrone M. Bentham David N. Bergin Olesia O. Bihun Cheryl A. Bintz David and Judy Blackwell Ronald and Regina Blais Gayle and Heinz Blankenburg Lanelle B. Blanton Michael and Pamela Bobb Thom and Diane Bondus Peter W. Brengel Roberta Brokaw Margaret and Philip Brummit William R. Buck Doris J. Burton V. Barbara Bush Rebecca C. Butler Margaret R. Buttermore Mary and Stephen Carter Susan and Robert Cave Harriet R. Chase Janice O. Childress

John and Barbara Morris Mara Parker and Andrew Cogbill Sujal H. Patel Clyde R. Rose Randy Schekman and Nancy Walls David and Barbara Sheldon Robert L. Smith and Janice L. Lesniak James and Cheryl Topolgus Richard E. Walker Rebecca and Wayne Weaver E. G. and Sharon White

$250 - $499 Gloria G. Noone Jennifer and Philip Nubel Margaret and Edward Olson Dennis and Lynette Organ James and Carol Orr Ruth and Robert Palmer Herbert E. Parks Jerry and Cynthia Robinson Roger Roe Bruce Ronkin and Janet Zipes Linda J. Rosenthal Christopher and Janet Schwabe Sue Shepard and Donald Helgeson Wayne and Lois Shipe Edwin L. Simpson James B. Sinclair Kenneth Smith William and Anna Stewart John and Tamyra Verheul Alan and Elizabeth Whaley Teresa and Peter Wolf Joyce R. Zastrow

$100 - $249 Cynthia and Alfred Cirome Elizabeth B. Clemens Lynda Clendenning and Robert Fuller Richard and Lynn Cohee Robert and Marcia Coleman Timothy and Sandra Connery Frances and Joseph Conrad Mark R. Conrad Sheryl and Montgomery Cordell Diane Courtre Janet S. Crossen Michael G. Cunningham John T. Dalton Janice E. Daniels Gerald and Mary Danielson John D. Danielson John and Carol Dare Conrad J. Dejong Imelda Delgado Patrick and Karen Dessent Dominic* and Susan Devito Deborah J. Deyo-Howe

Kim and Dianne Diefenderfer Louise Dixon and Michael Henoch Barbara and Richard Domek Paul T. Dove Dr. Joseph P. Fiacable, M.D. David A. Drinkwater Margaret J. Duffin Kevin J. Duggins Alan and Juliet Duncanson Silsby S. Eastman Robert and Robin Eatman Annalise Eberhart Patricia Eckstein Anne C. Eisfeller Joseph E. Elliott Michael J. Ellis Stanley and Pamela Engle Lucille I. Erb Suzanne and John Farbstein Jean E. Felix Salvatore and Carol Ferrantelli Mary E. Fine Constance C. Ford Bruce and Betty Fowler Melva F. Gage Karen A. Gahagan Thomas E. Gerber Susann Gilbert Viola and Ezekiel Gilliam James S. Godowns Frances E. Goldberg Walter A. Goldreich Sylvia S. Gormley Arlene Goter Bertram and Susan Greenspan Roberta M. Gumbel Nola and John Gustafson Robert and Janet Hamilton Eleanor and David Hammer Charlene A. Harb Terry D. Hardy Andrew and Mary Harper Martha and Stephen Harris Theodore R. Harvey Debra and John Hatmaker Clayton and Ellen Heath W. Harvey and Connie Hegarty Lynn Helding and Blake Wilson Helen and Kimball Henderson Florence E. Hiatt William Hillyard and Carrie Bruner Joe and Marianne Hinds Nicholas and Katherine Holzmer Harlow and Harriet Hopkins Judith and Dennis Hopkinson Ray and Phyllis Horton Emily L. Hostetter Ivan and Anne Hughes James S. Humphrey Marshall L. Hutchinson Stefanie Jacob and Scott Tisdel Carole L. James Warren W. Jaworski Kathryn and Robert Jessup Amy L. Jevitt Martin D. Joachim Edith E. Johnson Kathleen L. Johnson Lynn A. Kane

David L. Kaplan* Lise E. Keiter Carol R. Kelly Janet Kelsay Martin W. Kettelhut John and Julianne King Charles C. Knox Lee A. Kohlmeier Joseph C. Kraus Kaz Kruszewski Thomas and Nancy Lancaster Nicholas R. Lang Debra and Robert Lee Mary and Timothy Lerzak Nancy Liley Thomas Loewenheim Marie T. Lutz Joan I. Lynch Michael and Valerie MacLean Mayer and Ellen Mandelbaum Brian and Erika Manternach Rudy T. Marcozzi Lynne and Richard Marks Rose M. Martin Lisa K. Marum Thomas O. Mastroianni* Joel and Sandra Mathias Philip and Elizabeth McClintock Cynthia and Jeffrey McCreary Ellen L. McGlothin Nelia and James McLuckie Mary Jo McMillan Ralph and Shirley Melton Lynn A. Meyer Judith E. Miller Mary A. Miller Ronald and Joyce Miller Ty A. Miyahara Paul and Laura Monachino Patricia and Philip Moreau Dwight R. Mumper Ann Murray and Michael Hurtubise George and Diane Nadaf Bud E. Nelson Lynn S. Nestler Kathleen C. Nicely Kenneth H. Nichols Julia and Omar Nielsen Ann E. Norz Martha H. Noyes Harold and Denise Ogren George D. Osborne Mary A. Owings Hyung-Sun Paik C. Lynn Pampalone Peggy W. Paschall Kathie I. Perrett Edward Petsonk Jeffrey L. Plonski Edward and Lois Rath Diana and Alan Rawizza Helen P. Reich James L. Reifinger, Jr. John L. Reitz Phyllis and Jack Relyea Jean and Donald Rhoads Carolyn J. Rice Susan M. Rider William and Nancy Riggert

Paul and Barbara Ristau Donald E. Ritter Helmut J. Roehrig Anthony Ross and Beth Rapier Daniel Rothmuller Robin S. Rothrock Mary-Lynn Sachse* Ann and David Samuelson Michael W. Sanders Randa K. Sanders V. Gayle Sarber Mark and Anne Sauter Richard K. Schall Susan and Stephen Schlegel Arthur and Carole Schreiber Matthew R. Schuler Beverly Scott and Sylvia Patterson-Scott Perry and Lisa Scott Laurie and William Sears Richard and Ilene Sears Edward S. Selby Dennis and Leeandra Sewell Jeffrey R. Sexton Nancy and Stephen Shane Nadine E. Shank Merry and John Shapiro Richard and Karen Shepherd Thomas and Donna Shriner W. Robert and Jill Siddall John and Juel Smith Linda K. Smith Steve and Mary Snider John and Laura Snyder Ronald L. Sparks Tom and Linda Sperling Stanley and Cynthia Springer Darell and Susan Stachelski James L. Strause Rhonda and Gregory Swanson Joyce A. Taylor Kathleen Taylor Diana and Joseph Tompa Jonathan Towne and Rebecca Noreen Cheryl Tschanz and William Newkirk Linda J. Tucker Dianne Vars Venu Vemuri Lisa Ventura Elaine and Larry Wagner Sharon P. Wagner Melissa and Harvey Walfish George Walker and Carolyn Lipson-Walker Kathy Ward Sally and Mark Watson Jerry and Bonnie Weakley Daniel Weiss Steven and Kelly Wetle John and Mary Whalin Lloyd and Barbara White Dolores Wilson James F. Winfield Donna and Richard Wolf Blue B. Woman Karen and Danny Wright Mark A. Yother Mimi H. Youkeles Joyce and Larry Zimmerman Timothy and Sara Zwickl

Leadership Circle Members of the Leadership Circle have contributed lifetime gifts of $100,000 or more to the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music . We gratefully acknowledge the following donors, whose generosity helps the school reach new heights and build a sound financial framework for the future .

Over $10,000,000 The Estate of Barbara M. Jacobs Lilly Endowment, Inc.

Over $1,000,000 Louise Addicott-Joshi and Yatish Joshi Gary and Kathy Anderson The Estate of Ione B. Auer Cook, Inc. Dorothy Richard Starling Foundation The Estate of Juanita M. Evans Georgina Joshi Foundation, Inc.

Jack and Linda Gill Jack* and Dora Hamlin Julian L. Hook David H. Jacobs Krannert Charitable Trust Herbert Kuebler and Phil Evans The Estate of Clara L. Nothhacksberger

Arthur R. Metz Foundation Alexander S. Bernstein Jamie Bernstein Nina Bernstein Simmons The Estate of George A. Bilque, Jr. Richard and Mary Bradford Jack and Pam Burks The Estate of Marvin Carmack

Carl and Marcy Cook Gayle T. Cook The DBJ Foundation Debra Ford The Estate of Frederick G.and Mary M. Freeburne Wilbert W. Gasser* and Mary Kratz Gasser Ann and Gordon Getty

Jamey and Sara Aebersold John and Adelia Anderson The Estate of Wilfred C. Bain Olimpia F. Barbera The Estate of Angeline M. Battista W. Michael Brittenback and William Meezan The Estate of Sylvia F. Budd Sarah Clevenger Christel DeHaan Family Foundation Christel DeHaan The Estate of Alvin M. Ehret, Jr. The Estate of Lucille de Espinosa The Estate of Richard E. Ford

Jonathan L. Gripe The Estate of Emma B. Horn Irwin-Sweeney-Miller Foundation The Estate of David H. Jacobs The Estate of Harold R. Janitz The Estate of Eugene and Eleanor Knapik Monika and Peter Kroener Shalin C. Liu Jeanette Calkins Marchant* Sonna Ehrlich Merk and Don Merk Presser Foundation The Estate of Naomi Ritter The Estate of John W. Ryan

The Estate of Ursula Apel Artur Balsam Foundation The Estate of Robert D. Aungst Robert Barker and Patsy Fell-Barker Bennet and Cynthia Brabson Brabson Library and Education Foundation The Estate of Jean R. Branch The Estate of Mildred J. Brannon The Estate of Frances A. Brockman Carol V. Brown The Estate of Louise Caldwell Susan Cartland-Bode and Henry J. Bode Cole & Kate Porter Memorial Graduate Fellowship in Music Trust Jean and Doris Creek The Estate of Mavis M. Crow Jack and Claire Cruse Susie J. Dewey The Estate of M. Patricia Doyle The Estate of William H. Earles The Estate of Robert A. Edwards Marianne V. Felton Ford Meter Box Foundation, Inc.

The Estate of Thomas L. Gentry Georgia Wash Holbeck Living Trust Paul and Ellen Gignilliat The Estate of Monroe A. Gilbert The Estate of Theodore C. Grams The Estate of Marjorie Gravit The Estate of David C. Hall The Estate of Margaret H. Hamlin Robert and Sandra Harrison Rusty and Ann Harrison Harrison Steel Castings Company The Estate of Helen I. Havens The Estate of Jascha Heifetz IBM Global Services Joan & Marvin Carmack Foundation Ruth E. Johnson Robert and Sara LeBien George William Little, Jr. and B. Bailey Little P. A. Mack David and Neill Marriott Susann H. McDonald The Estate of Margaret E. Miller The Estate of Elisabeth P. Myers

Leonard Phillips* and Mary Wennerstrom The Estate of Paul and Anne Plummer Nancy Gray Puckett Al and Lynn Reichle George P. Smith, II Robert D. Sullivan Robert J. Waller and Linda Bow

$500,000 - $999,999 The Estate of Eva M. Heinitz Nancy Liley Sandy Littlefield The Estate of Nina Neal Murray and Sue Robinson Richard and Barbara Schilling The Estate of Eva Sebok The Estate of Ruth E. Thompson

$250,000 - $499,999 The Estate of Maidee H. Seward Bren Simon David and Jacqueline Simon Deborah J. Simon The Estate of Melvin Simon Cynthia L. & William E. Simon The Cynthia L. & William E. Simon, Jr. Foundation The Estate of Samuel and Martha Siurua Paul and Cynthia Simon Skjodt Summer Star Foundation for Nature, Art and Humanity, Inc. The Estate of John D. Winters

$100,000 - $249,999 The Estate of Jean P. Nay Cyndi Dewees Nelson & Dale Nelson Delano L. Newkirk and Luzetta A. Newkirk The Estate of Richard J. Osborn Penn Asset Equity LLC Stanley E. Ransom Rudolph* and Joy Rasin The Estate of Charlotte Reeves The Estate of Dagmar K. Riley Stephen Russell and Mag Cole Russell The Estate of Virginia Schmucker The Estate of Lee E. Schroeder Scott and Kay Schurz Odette F. Shepherd Fred and Arline Simon Herbert Simon Smithville Telephone Company, Inc. The Estate of Maxine M. Talbot Technicolor USA, Inc. The Estate of Alice C. Thompson The Estate of Mary C. Tilton The Estate of Kenda M. Webb

The Legacy Society The Legacy Society at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music honors the following individuals who have included the Jacobs School as a beneficiary under their wills, trusts, life insurance policies, retirement plans, and other estate-planning arrangements . David* and Ruth Albright Richard and Ann Alden Gary and Kathy Anderson John and Adelia Anderson Peggy K. Bachman Dennis and Virginia Bamber Mark and Ann* Bear Christa-Maria Beardsley Michael E. Bent Richard and Mary Bradford Mildred J. Brannon* W. Michael Brittenback and William Meezan Pamela S. Buell Gerald and Elizabeth Calkins Marvin Carmack* Sarah Clevenger Eileen T. Cline Jack and Claire Cruse John* and Doris* Curran D. Michael Donathan Luba Dubinsky Sandra Elkins H C. Engles Eleanor R. Fell* Michael J. Finton Sara Finton Philip* and Debra Ford Frederick* and Mary* Freeburne Marcella I. Gercken Monroe A. Gilbert* Glen G. Graber Ruth Grey Ransom* and Mary Jo Griffin Jonathan L. Gripe Kathy Gripe Jack* and Dora Hamlin

Charles Handelman James R. Hasler Helen I. Havens* David M. Holcenberg Julian L. Hook William T. and Kathryn* Hopkins David E. Huggins Harriet M. Ivey Douglas and Virginia* Jewell Ted W. Jones Walter and Bernice* Jones Myrna M. Killey Martha R. Klemm Herbert Kuebler and Phil Evans C. Ray and Lynn Lewis Harlan L. Lewis and Doris F. Wittenburg Nancy Liley Ann B. Lilly George and Brenda Little Marian L. Mack* P. A. Mack Jeanette Calkins Marchant* Charles J. Marlatt Susan G. McCray Douglas McLain Donald and Sonna Merk Robert A. Mix Cyndi Dewees Nelson & Dale Nelson Del and Letty Newkirk Lee Opie and Melanie Spewock Richard* and Eleanor Osborn Arthur Panousis Gilbert* and Marie* Peart Jean R. and Charles F.* Peters Leonard Phillips* and Mary Wennerstrom Paul* and Anne S. D.* Plummer

Jack W. Porter Nancy Gray Puckett Stanley E. Ransom Robert and Carlene Reed Al and Lynn Reichle Gwyn and Barbara Richards Ilona Richey Murray and Sue Robinson D. Patricia and John W.* Ryan Barbara R. Sable Roy and Mary Samuelsen George P. Sappenfield* Vicki J. Schaeffer John and Lorna Seward Odette F. Shepherd Curt and Judy Simic Donald G. Sisler* Catherine A. Smith George P. Smith, II Mary L. Snider William and Elizabeth Strauss Douglas* and Margaret Strong Robert D. Sullivan Hans* and Alice M. Tischler Jeffrey S. Tunis Henry and Celicia Upper Nicoletta Valletti Robert J. Waller Patrice M. Ward-Steinman Charles H. Webb Michael D. Weiss Michael J. Williamson and Kathy Weston Robert E.* and Patricia L. Williams * Deceased

Friends of Music Honor Roll Fiscal Year 2014-15

The mission of the Society of the Friends of Music is to raise scholarship funds for deserving, talented students at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music . The society was established in 1964 by a small group led by Herman B Wells and Wilfred C . Bain . We are pleased to acknowledge outright gifts made between July 1, 2014, and June 30, 2015 .

Guarantor Scholarship Circle Cole Porter $5,000 - $9,999

Nelda M. Christ* Susie J. Dewey

Jeanette Calkins Marchant*

Friends of Music

$10,000 and Above Rita A. Bramkamp Eleanor F. Byrnes

M. Patricia Doyle* Scott C. and Kay Schurz

Robert Barker and Patsy Fell-Barker Joshua D. Bell

Susie J. Dewey Steve and Jo Ellen Ham

$5,000 - $9,999 Jeanette Calkins Marchant* Karen Shaw

Herman B Wells Circle Gold $2,500 - $4,999

Nelda M. Christ* John H. Heiney* Herbert Kuebler and Phil Evans

Charles and Julia McClary President Michael A. McRobbie and First Lady Laurie Burns McRobbie

Murray and Sue Robinson

Silver $1,000 - $2,499 Ruth Albright Diana and Rodger Alexander James and Susan Alling John and Teresa Ayres W. Leland and Helen M. Butler Jim and Laura Byrnes William and Anita Cast Gayle T. Cook Frank Eberle and Cathy Cooper Harvey and Phyllis Feigenbaum Anne T. Fraker Jim and Joyce Grandorf Elizabeth J. Hewitt and Richard H. Small Lawrence and Celeste Hurst

Peter P. Jacobi Jennifer A. Johnson Kenneth and Linda Kaczmarek Susan M. Klein and Robert Agranoff George and Cathy Korinek Monika and Peter Kroener Jhani Laupus and Michael M. Sample Robert and Sara LeBien Harlan L. Lewis and Doris F. Wittenburg Ronald and Linda Maus Cyndi Dewees Nelson & Dale Nelson Lenny and Lou Newman Ora H. Pescovitz Gwyn and Barbara Richards

Gunther and Doris Rodatz Judith L. Schroeder and Edward Mongoven Phyllis C. Schwitzer Curt and Judy Simic L. Robert Stohler and Sylvia A. Stohler Gregg and Judy Summerville Eric Weisstein Miki C. Weisstein J. William Whitaker, M.D. and Joan M. Whitaker Barbara L. Wolf and Robert J. Goulet, Jr. John and Linda Zimmermann *Deceased

Dean Wilfred C. Bain Circle Patrons $500 - $999

James and Ruth Allen Gary and Kathy Anderson Richard E. Bishop Donald and Debbie Breiter Jack and Pam Burks Cathleen and John* Cameron Edward S. Clark Vivian L. Counts Dr. and Mrs. Fred W. Dahling Carol J. Dilks James V. and Jacqueline C. Faris Donald and Sandra Freund Robert and Martha Gutmann

Robert and Ann Harman Lenore S. Hatfield Carter and Kathleen Henrich Richard and Lois Holl Dr. and Mrs. Frank N. Hrisomalos Martin and Linda Kaplan Howard and Linda Klug Mary M. Kroll Thomas and Theresa Kulb Perry J. Maull Susann H. McDonald Herb and Judy Miller Eugene O’Brien

Edward and Patricia O’Day Vera M. O’Lessker David A.* and Virginia* Rogers Edward Ryan, Jr. and Janet M. Ryan L. David Sabbagh Randy Schekman and Nancy Walls James Shackelford Anthony and Jan Shipps Fred* and Roberta Somach Bruce and Shannon Storm Ellen Strommen Sheldon Stryker Henry and Celicia Upper

Sustainers $300 - $499 S. Christian and Mary Albright Mark K. Bear Shirley Bell Paul W. Borg Del and Carolyn Brinkman Derek and Marilyn Burleson Elizabeth and Gerald Calkins James and Carol Campbell Sarah Clevenger Karen-Cherie Cogane and Stephen Orel Mary A. Cox and James M. Koch Bart and Cinda S. Culver Lee and Eleanore Dodge Sterling E. and Melinda B. Doster Stephen A. Ehrlich Marianne V. Felton

Dr. Joseph P. Fiacable, M.D. Jorja Fleezanis Ralph E. Hamon, Jr. R. Victor Harnack Steven L. Hendricks Ernest N. Hite and Joan E. Pauls Keith and Doris Johnson Margaret and Donald Jones Yvonne Y. Lai and Kenneth P. Mackie Ayelet E. Lindenstrauss and Michael J. Larsen Darby Earles McCarty Geraldine and John Miller Dawn E. Morley Frank and Nancy Nagler Roger and Ruth Newton Edward and Soili Ochsner

Joan C. Olcott Stephen R. Pock and David Blumberg John and Lislott Richardson Kathleen C. Ruesink Jerry and Nancy Ruff Hugh and Cynthia St Leger Richard C. Schutte Richard M. Shiffrin and Judith A. Mahy-Shiffrin Lewis H. Strouse Kenneth and Marcia VanderLinden Martha F. Wailes Donovan R. Walling and Samuel B. Troxal Philip and Shandon Whistler Judith and Steven Young

Donors $100 - $299 Bernard and Tama Abrams Marcia A. Alles John and Dianna Auld Donna M. Baiocchi Elizabeth Baker and Richard R. Pugh Mark J. Baker Olimpia F. Barbera Patricia and Robert Bayer Thomas and Anna Beczkiewicz David and Ingrid Beery Franklin and Linda Bengtson Eva and Ernest Bernhardt-Kabisch Norma B. Beversdorf-Rezits and Joseph M. Rezits Charles F. Bonser Ellen R. Boruff Jaclyn and Bill Brizzard Susan E. Burk Beatrice H. Cahn George and Lynda Carlson Gerald and Beatrice Carlyss Charles and Helen Coghlan Michael and Pamela Colwell Marcella M. Cooper William and Marion Crawford J. Robert Cutter Jefrey L. Davidson and Pamela Jones Davidson Julia DeHon Dominic* and Susan Devito Deborah Black Divan

David and Jennie Drasin Beth and John Drewes J. Michael and Sarah Dunn John R. Edgeworth Mark and Karin Edwards Arlene Effron Peter and Pearl Ekstrom David R. Elliott Joe and Gloria Emerson Mary K. Emison David and Carolyn Emmert James and Joan Ferguson Richard and Susan Ferguson George and Jo Fielding Sharon and Norman Funk Draeleen Gabalac Annette Gevarter-Keefe Bernardino and Caterina Ghetti Jeffrey and Toby Gill Elizabeth and Robert Glassey Michael and Patricia Gleeson Constance and James Glen Vincent M. Golik, III Henry H. Gray Jerry and Linda Gregory Kenneth R. Gros Louis, Ph.D. Samuel and Phyllis Guskin Hendrik and Jacobina Haitjema Kenneth and Judy Hamilton Stanley and Hilary Hamilton

Andrew J. Hanson and Patricia L. Foster Kenneth and Janet Harker Pierrette Harris Robert and Emily Harrison John B. Hartley James Richard Hasler Carol L. Hayes Barbara J. Henn Sandra L. Hertling David and Rachel Hertz Allison T. Hewell John D. Hobson Rona Hokanson Ruth D. Houdeshel* Roger and Carol Isaacs Margaret T. Jenny and John T. Fearnsides Martin D. Joachim, Jr. Lora D. Johnson Burton and Eleanor Jones Gwen J. Kaag Patricia C. Kellar Marilyn J. Kelsey Thomas and Mary Kendrick Thomas and Vicki King Maryann Kopelov Ronald and Carolyn Kovener Rose Krakovitz Eric C. Lai and Grace Lok David and Suzanne Larsen Joan B. Lauer

John and Julia Lawson Katherine C. Lazerwitz Edoardo A. Lebano Louis and Myrna Lemberger Ann W. Lemke Leslie and Kathleen Lenkowsky Marie E. Libal-Smith and David K. Smith Carolyn R. Lickerman Virginia K. Long-Cecil and Carroll B. Cecil Peter and Carol Lorenzen P. A. Mack Bill and Ellie Mallory Mayer and Ellen Mandelbaum Nancy G. Martin James L. McLay Howard D. Mehlinger Susan E. Middlestadt Ruth and Joseph Miller G. Scott and Rosalind Mitchell Steve and Sandra Schultz Moberly Patricia and John Mulholland Marcia M. Nagao Heather and Daniel Narducci Evelyn M. Niemeyer David and Barbara Nordloh Marilyn F. Norris Wesley and Patricia Oglesby Dennis W. Organ Dan F. Osen Charles and Susan Ott

Harlan and Joanna Peithman Dorothy L. Peterson Harriet S. Pfister Fred A. Place Lois S. Pless Raymond A. Polstra Gary and Christine Potter Frona and Ron Powell Raymond and Eileen Prose Earl and Dorothy Prout Carl B. Rexroad and Carol Pierce Betty Posson Rieger Roger and Tiiu Robison Mary and John Rucker Ruth L. Rusie James and Helen Sauer Lynn L. Schenck Norma and Arthur* Schenck Nancy and Fredric Schroeder Lisa M. Scrivani-Tidd and Roderick Tidd Richard Searles Mary and Christian Seitz Herbert A. Seltz John and Lorna Seward Rebecca and John Shockley Richard and Denise Shockley Janet A. Shupe Michael A. Simkowitz Ruth Skernick* Eliot and Pamela Smith

Janet S. Smith John and Laura Snyder Kathryn and Alan Somers Stephen T. Sparks David and Alice Starkey Janet C. Stavropoulos and Michael H. Molenda Vera S. Stegmann Malcolm and Ellen Stern William and Anna Stewart Robert and Virginia Stockton Linda Strommen Bill and Gayle Stuebe Saundra B. Taylor Charlotte H. Templin Donald L. Thiele Linda J. Tucker Jeffrey S. Tunis Judith Walcoff Mary A. Watt and William C. Strieder Frances and Eugene Weinberg Ewing and Kay Werlein Mark Wiedenmayer G. Cleveland and Frances Wilhoit Patricia L. Williams Sara and Thomas Wood Margaret and John Woodco*ck Robert and Judy Woodley Virginia A. Woodward

Corporations and Foundations Bloomington Thrift Shop Cook Polymer Technology Culver Family Foundation Deloitte Foundation

Five Star Quality Care, Inc. Fred A. Place Accounting LLC, PA Jeffrey Lim MD INC Joshua Bell Inc

Meadowood Retirement Community OneAmerica Financial Partners, Inc.

Companies Providing Matching Gifts Eli Lilly & Company IBM Corp Foundation

Planned Gifts We are grateful to those individuals who have expressed their interest in ensuring scholarship support for tomorrow’s students today by making a planned gift through a testamentary gift in their estate planning by a will or trust, charitable gift annuity, or retirement plan . We are pleased to acknowledge those individuals who have provided gift documentation . David* and Ruth Albright Margaret K. Bachman Mark and Ann* Bear Douglas and Virginia* Jewell

Jeannette Calkins Marchant*, in memory of Emerson R. and Velma R. Calkins Cyndi Dewees Nelson & Dale Nelson Charles F.* and Jean R. Peters

Judith E. Simic Jeffrey S. Tunis *Deceased

Memorials and Tributes Each year, we receive gifts in honor or in memory of individuals whose leadership and good works have enriched the lives of so many . We are pleased to recognize those special individuals and the donors whose gifts they have inspired . Ruth Albright, in memory of Marian K. Bates Elizabeth Baker and Richard R. Pugh, in memory of Virginia Baker Bonnie A. Beckett and Rolfe Larson, in memory of Ulrich W. Weisstein, Ph.D. Beatrice H. Cahn, in memory of Ruth Skernick Karen-Cherie Cogane and Stephen Orel, in memory of Dorothea Cogane and in memory of Nelson Cogane Gayle K. Cook, in memory of Ross Jennings Stephen A. Ehrlich, in memory of Harold Ehrlich Anne T. Fraker, in memory of her husband, Rupert A. Wentworth Sandra and Donald Freund, in memory of Kenda M. Webb James and Constance Glen, in memory of Kenda M. Webb Joyce and Paul Grant, in honor of Steve and Jo Ellen Ham Steve and Jo Ellen Ham, in memory of Marian K. Bates and in memory of Ross Jennings Carolyn and Ronald Kovener, in memory of Elisabeth P. Myers Ann W. Lemke, in memory of Ulrich W. Weisstein, Ph.D. Virginia and Jerrold Myerson, in memory of Prof. Albert Lazan

Dorothy M. and Earl D. Prout, in memory of Lowell Stump Janice L. Rickert and Carolyn VandeWiele, in memory of Ulrich W. Weisstein, Ph.D. Deborah G. Robinson, in honor of Miki, Cecily, Eric & Tony and in memory of Ulrich W. Weisstein, Ph.D. Herbert A. Seltz, in memory of Ruth Skernick James Shackelford, in memory of Mary P. Shackelford Jean and Doris Creek, in memory of Ross Jennings Vera S. Stegmann, in memory of Ulrich W. Weisstein, Ph.D. Ellen and Linda Strommen, in memory of Carol A. Trexler and in memory of Ruth Skernick Lewis H. Strouse, in memory of Cora H. Strouse Eric Weisstein, in memory of Ulrich W. Weisstein, Ph.D. Miki C. Weisstein, in memory of Ulrich W. Weisstein, Ph.D. Ewing and Kay Werlein, in memory of Kenda M. Webb and in honor of Charles H. Webb Steve and Judy Young, in honor of Richard L. Saucedo *Deceased

Endowments and Scholarships The IU Jacobs School of Music gratefully acknowledges those individuals, corporations and foundations who provide support through endowments and scholarships . The generosity and goodwill of those listed below puts a Jacobs School of Music education within the reach of many . To learn more about investing in our talented students, please contact Melissa Dickson, director of development, via email at dickson9@indiana .edu or by phone at (812) 855-4656 .

Jacobs School of Music William Adam Trumpet Scholarship Valerie Adams Memorial Scholarship Jamey Aebersold Jazz Combo Fund Jamey and Sara Aebersold Jazz Fellowship Gary J. and Kathy Z. Anderson Scholarship in Music Excellence Kathy Ziliak Anderson Chair in Ballet Willi Apel Early Music Scholarship Fund Aronoff Percussion Scholarship Martha and Fred Arto Music Scholarship Aungst Scholarship Stephen A. Backer Memorial Scholarship Dr. Wilfred C. Bain Music Alumni Association Scholarship Wilfred C. Bain Opera Scholarship Endowment David N. Baker Jazz Scholarship David N. Baker Visiting Artist Series David Baker, Jr. Jazz Scholarship Artur Balsam Chamber Music Project Band Centennial Fund Anthony and Olimpia Barbera Latin American Music Scholarship Olimpia Barbera Recording Fund for the Latin American Music Center Earl O. Bates Memorial Scholarship Eric D. Batterman Memorial Scholarship Joseph Battista Memorial Fund “Because You Want To Be Here” Scholarship Achasa Beechler Music Scholarship Fund William Bell Memorial Fund Colleen Benninghoff Music Scholarship Leonard Bernstein Scholarship John E. Best Scholarship Thomas Beversdorf Memorial Scholarship The Harriett Block Operatic Scholarship Mary R. Book Music Scholarship Fund Ruth Boshkoff Scholarship

Julia Beth Brabson Memorial Fellowship Julia Brabson Scholarship Brass Instrument Scholarship Frances A. Brockman Scholarship A. Peter and Carol V. Brown Research Travel Fund Kenneth V. & Audrey N. Brown Memorial Scholarship Alonzo and Mary Louise Brummett Scholarship in Music Sylvia Feibelman Budd and Clarence Budd Scholarship Marjorie J. Buell Music Scholarship Vivian N. Humphreys Bundy Memorial Scholarship Fund Peter Burkholder and Doug McKinney Musicology Fund Pam and Jack Burks Professorship Elizabeth Burnham Music Instrument Maintenance Fund Dorothy Knowles Bush and Russell Jennings Bush Piano Scholarship The Camerata Scholarship John and June Canfield Bloomington Pops Scholarship Joan and Marvin Carmack Scholarship Robert L. Carpenter Fund Charles Diven Campbell Piano Scholarship Susan Cartland-Bode Performance Excellence Scholarship Susan Cartland-Bode Scholarship Walter Cassel Memorial Scholarship Austin B. Caswell Award Center for the History of Music Theory and Literature Endowment Fund Alan Chepregi Memorial Scholarship Emma H. Claus Scholarship Fund Choral Conducting Department Enhancement Fund Lucy and Samuel Chu Piano Scholarship Cook Band Building Fund Patricia Sorenson Cox Memorial Scholarship Ray E. Cramer Graduate Scholarship Ray Cramer Scholarship

Jean and Doris Creek Scholarship in Trumpet Donna and Jean Creek Scholarship Donna and Jean Creek Scholarship in Voice Mavis McRae Crow Music Scholarship Fund T.F. Culver and Emma A. Culver Scholarship Fund Jeanette Davis Fund Pete Delone Memorial Scholarship Alfonso D’Emilia Scholarship Fund Department of Musicology Fund Gayl W. Doster Scholarship in Music Rostislav Dubinsky Music Scholarship Fred Ebbs Memorial Scholarship David Eissler Memorial Scholarship Fund Ruth L. Elias Scholarship Fund Guillermo Espinosa Endowment Fund Merle Evans Scholarship Fairview Elementary School String Project Fairview Elementary School String Project II Philip Farkas Horn Scholarship Eleanor Fell Scholarship Rose and Irving Fell Violin Scholarship Five Friends Master Class Series Ford-Crawford Recital Hall Maintenance Fund Frederick A. Fox Composition Scholarship William and Marcia Fox Scholarship in Music Dr. Frederick and Mary Moffatt Freeburne Teaching Fellowship Janie Fricke Scholarship Fund for Aspiring Musicians The Friday Musicale Scholarship J.N. Garton Memorial Scholarship Glenn Gass Scholarship Bill and Mary Gasser Scholarship/Fellowship Endowment Lynn E. Gassoway-Reichle Chair in Piano Robert Gatewood Opera Fund Cary M. Gerber Scholarship Fund Marcella Schahfer Gercken Band Scholarship Richard C. Gigax Memorial Scholarship Fund Gignilliat Music Scholarship Fund Ellen Cash Gignilliat Fellowship Linda C. and Jack M. Gill Chair in Violin Linda Challis Gill and Jack M. Gill Music Scholarship Gladys Gingold Memorial Scholarship Josef Gingold Violin Scholarship Fund Charles Gorham Trumpet Scholarship St. Luke’s UMC/Goulding and Wood Organ Scholarship Martin Eliot Grey Scholarship Montana L. Grinstead Fund Arthur and Ena Grist Scholarship Fund Murray Grodner Double Bass Scholarship Wayne Hackett Memorial Harp Scholarship Fund Jack I. & Dora B. Hamlin Endowed Chair in Piano Margaret H. Hamlin Scholarship Judith Hansen-Schwab Singing Hoosiers Scholarship Margaret Harshaw Scholarship Russell A. Havens Music Scholarship Bernhard Heiden Scholarship Jascha Heifetz Scholarship Eva Heinitz Cello Scholarship Fund William Gammon Henry, Jr. Scholarship Julius and Hanna Herford Fund for Visiting Scholars and Conductors in Choral Music Dorothy L. Herriman Scholarship Fund Mark H. Hindsley Award for Symphonic Band Mark H. Hindsley Endowed Fund for Symphonic Band Historical Performance Institute Fund Ernest Hoffzimmer Scholarship Leonard Hokanson Chamber Music Scholarship Georgia Wash Holbeck Fellowship Julian Hook Music Fund Julian Hook Music Theory Fund William S. and Emma S. Horn Scholarship Fund Harry and Ruth Houdeshel Memorial Flute Scholarship Bruce Hubbard Memorial Scholarship Dwan Hublar Music Education Scholarship Lawrence P. Hurst Medal in Double Bass IU Children’s Choir Fund International Harp Competition Barbara and David Jacobs Fellowship

Barbara and David Jacobs Scholarship Barbara and David Jacobs School of Music Enhancement Fund David H. Jacobs Chair in Music David Henry Jacobs International Overseas Study Scholarship David Henry Jacobs Music Scholarship Jacobs Endowment in Music Jacobs School of Music International Overseas Study Scholarship Eva Janzer Memorial Fund Jazz Double Bass Studio Fund Wilma Jensen Organ Scholarship Ted Jones and Marcia Busch-Jones Musical Arts Center Fund Georgina Joshi Composition Commission Award Georgina Joshi Fellowship Georgina Joshi Fund Georgina Joshi Handelian Performance Fund Georgina Joshi International Fellowship Georgina Joshi Recording Arts Studio Fund Walter and Freda Kaufmann Prize in Musicology Fund Mack H. Kay Scholarship for Excellence in Jazz Composition Fund Marilyn Keiser Organ Scholarship Martin Luther King, Jr. Scholarship Klinefelter Scholarship Fund Eugene J. and Eleanor J. Knapik Fund Lucie M. Kohlmeier Music Scholarship in Voice Robert Kraus Memorial Scholarship Peter and Monika Kroener Dean’s International Fellowship in Music George and Elizabeth Krueger Scholarship Herbert O. Kuebler Music Fellowship Michael Kuttner Musical Education Fund Robert LaMarchina Music Scholarship Latin American Music Center Fund James and Kathie Lazerwitz Visiting Artists Fund Sara and Robert LeBien Jacobs School of Music Scholarship Sara J. and Robert F. Lebien Scholarship Lewis Family Scholarship in Music Martha Lipton Scholarship Jay Lovins Memorial Scholarship Fund Ethel Louise Lyman Memorial Fund P. E. MacAllister Scholarship in Voice John Mack Memorial Scholarship in Oboe Virginia MacWatters Abee Scholarship Marching Hundred Hall Fund Wilda Gene Marcus Piano Scholarship Jay Mark Scholarship in Music Georgia Marriott Scholarship Arthur W. Mason Musical Scholarship Fund Mary Justine McClain Opera Theater Fund Susan Sukman McCray Scholarship Susann McDonald Fund Susann McDonald Harp Study Fund Katherine V. McFall Scholarship Bernardo and Johanna Mendel Graduate Scholarship for the School of Music Menke/Webb/Sturgeon, Inc. Fund B. Winfred Merrill Scholarship Fund Lou and Sybil Mervis String Quartet Fund Arthur R. Metz Carillonneur Fund Arthur R. Metz Organ Department Fund Otto Miessner Memorial Music Scholarship Fund Nathan A. and Margaret Culver Miller Memorial Scholarship Fund Dorothy Hoff Mitchell Scholarship Peter Steed Moench Scholarship Jack and Marilyn Moore Graduate Flute Fellowship Marcel Mule Scholarship Fund Music Dean’s Dissertation Prize Endowment Fund Music Library Fund Music Theory Fund Nellie Woods Myers Scholarship Ben Nathanson Scholarship Nina Neal Scholarship Fund Robert Erland Neal Music Scholarship Otto Nothhacksberger Endowed Chair Otto Nothhacksberger Memorial Fund On Your Toes Fund Opera Illinois League Scholarship Bernard Opperman Memorial Fund

Organ Department Fund Juan Orrego-Salas Scholarship Namita Pal Commemorative Award Jason Paras Memorial Fund Marie Alice and Gilbert Peart Scholarship James & Helen Pellerite Flute Scholarship Jackie Pemberton Memorial Scholarship Fund Doris Klausing Perry Scholarship Harvey Phillips Memorial Scholarship Harvey Phillips Tuba-Euphonium Quartet Composition Contest Walter and Rosalee Pierce Scholarship in Organ ILdebrando Pizzetti Memorial Scholarship Fund Cole and Kate Porter Memorial Scholarship George E. Powell, III Scholarship Pre-College Ballet Scholarship The Presser Foundation Scholarship and the Presser Music Award Project Jumpstart Fund Garry Lee and Nancy Gray Puckett Scholarship Mary and Oswald G. Ragatz Organ Scholarship Stanley Ransom Scholarship in Voice Robert C. Rayfield Memorial Scholarship RedStepper Fund RedStepper Scholarship Charlotte Reeves Chamber Music Endowment Fund Albert L. and Lynn E. Reichle Scholarship in Music Albert L. Reichle Chair in Trumpet Dorothy Rey Scholarship The Sally W. Rhodes Scholarship Gwyn Richards Scholarship Agnes Davis Richardson Memorial Scholarship Fund John P. Richardson Jr. Violin Scholarship The Naomi Ritter Scholarship Walter and Dorothy Robert Scholarship Fund Louise Roth Scholarship Leonard & Maxine Ryan Memorial Fund Rosetta Samarotto Memorial Scholarship Roy and Mary Samuelsen Scholarship Elizabeth Schaefer Memorial Scholarship Lee Edward Schroeder Endowed Scholarship Michael L. Schwartzkopf Singing Hoosiers Fund Gyorgy Sebok Scholarship in Piano Ruth Parr Septer Scholarship Fund Maidee H. and Jackson A. Seward Organ Fund Terry C. Shirk Memorial Scholarship Fund Shulz Memorial Fund Singing Hoosiers Endowment Singing Hoosiers Travel Fund Jean Sinor Memorial Lecture Series Jerry E. Sirucek Memorial Scholarship Samuel and Martha Siurua Scholarship Fund Susan Slaughter Trumpet Scholarship

Janos Starker Cello Scholarship Dorothy Richard Starling Chair in Violin Studies Charlotte Steinwedel Scholarship Evelyn P. Stier Memorial Scholarship Fund Edward M. Stochowicz Memorial Scholarship Douglas and Margaret Strong Scholarship Harry Sukman Memorial Scholarship Fund Robert D. Sullivan Music Scholarship Elsie I. Sweeney Memorial Scholarship The Maxine Rinne Talbot Music Scholarship Donald L. Tavel Memorial Scholarship Elizabeth Schaefer Tenreiro Scholarship Fund Marcie Tichenor Scholarship Mary Coffman Tilton Harpsichord Fellowship Hans and Alice B. Tischler Endowment Giorgio Tozzi Scholarship Trombone Artistic Activity Fund Sarah Joan Tuccelli-Gilbert Memorial Fellowship in Voice Henry A. Upper Chair in Music Andy Upper Scholarship Roe Van Boskirk Memorial Scholarship in Piano Fund Carl G. and Mazelle Van Buskirk Memorial Scholarship Fund Jon Vickers Film Scoring Award Vocal Jazz Ensemble Fund William J. and Betty J. Wampler Scholarship Dean Charles H. Webb Chair in Music Charles and Kenda Webb Music Excellence Fund Charles H. Webb Music Scholarship Anna Weber Endowment Fund Wennerstrom Music Theory Associate Instructor Fellowship Mary Wennerstrom Phillips and Leonard M. Phillips Endowment Wennerstrom-Phillips Music Library Directorship Endowment Wennerstrom-Phillips Piano Scholarship Allen R. & Nancy A. White Music Scholarship Lawrence R. & Vera I. White Music Scholarship Kenneth C. Whitener Fund for Ballet Excellence Fred Wilkins and Richard W. Bosse Flute Scholarship Camilla Williams Voice Scholarship Robert E. Williams Singing Hoosiers Scholarship Bill and Lenis Williamson Music Scholarship Madge Wilson Music Scholarship Fund Carol A. Wingler Memorial Fellowship Marjorie Schlamp Winters Scholarship Fund Janet Corday Won Memorial Scholarship Woodwind and the Brasswind Scholarship Fund Mildred F. Yoder Scholarship Steve Zegree Vocal Jazz Scholarship Avedis Zildjian Percussion Scholarship Asher G. Zlotnik Scholarship Lennart A. von Zweygberg Cello Scholarship

The Society of the Friends of Music Friends of Music David Albright Memorial Scholarship Friends of Music Robert M. Barker Scholarship in honor of Patsy Fell-Barker Friends of Music Patsy Fell-Barker Scholarship in honor of my family Thomas J. Beddow & Joseph W. Nordloh Memorial Friends of Music Scholarship Alan P. Bell Memorial Friends of Music Scholarship George A. Blique, Jr. Friends of Music Scholarship Eleanor Jewell Byrnes Friends of Music Piano Scholarship Marvin Carmack Friends of Music Scholarship Joan and Marvin Carmack Friends of Music Scholarship Anita Hursh Cast Friends of Music Scholarship Esther Ritz Collyer Piano Scholarship Cristini Friends of Music Scholarship The Patsy Earles Friends of Music Scholarship Robert A. Edwards Friends of Music Scholarship Marianne V. Felton Friends of Music Scholarship in Voice Richard S. and Jeanne Hardy Forkner Friends of Music Scholarship Marjorie F. Gravit Friends of Music Scholarship Marjorie F. Gravit Piano Scholarship The Rajih and Darlene Haddawi and Kathryn and Scott C. Schurz Scholarship

The Rajih and Darlene Haddawi Scholarship The Alice V. Jewell and David B. Mills Friends of Music Scholarship The Karl and Vera O’Lessker Friends of Music Scholarship Mary Jane Reilly Friends of Music Scholarship Dagmar K. Riley Friends of Music Scholarship Samuel E. Ross Friends of Music Scholarship Dr. Richard Schilling-Ruth Tourner Friend of Music Voice Scholarship Scott C. and Kathryn Schurz Friends of Music Scholarship The Scott C. and Kathryn Schurz Latin American Friends of Music Scholarship Mr. and Mrs. Jake Shainberg and Mr. and Mrs. David Newman Friends of Music Scholarship Society of the Friends of Music Fund Society of the Friends of Music of Indiana University Scholarship Ruth E. Thompson Friends of Music Scholarship Kenda Webb Friends of Music Scholarship Ulrich Weisstein Friends of Music Scholarship in Voice Herman B Wells Memorial Friends of Music Scholarship

IU Opera Theater Production Staff General Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Dean Gwyn Richards Ted Jones Executive Director of Production . . . . . . . . . . . . . Timothy Stebbins Director of Coaching and Music Administration . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kevin Murphy Director of Opera Choruses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Walter Huff Executive Administrator of Instrumental Ensembles . . . . . . . . . . Thomas Wieligman Coordinating Opera Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kimberly Carballo Coach Accompanists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mark Phelps, Piotr Wisniewski Production Stage Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Trevor Regars Assistant Stage Managers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kate Hershberger, Alex Seidel Technical Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Robert Brown Assistant Technical Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Christian Schmitt Director of Paint and Props . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mark F. Smith Properties Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gwen Law Associate Costume Designer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Glenna Ryer Costume Shop Supervisor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dana Tzvetkova Costume Shop Projects Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Soraya Noorzad Wardrobe Supervisor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jenna Kelly Wigs and Makeup Designer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gary Arave Head of Lighting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Patrick Mero House Electrician . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Fritz Busch Stage Carpenters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ken D’Eliso, Andrew Hastings Administrative Production Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Brenda Stern Director of Recording Arts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Konrad Strauss Audio Technician . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Fallon Stillman Director of Marketing and Publicity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dana Navarro Publicity and Media Relations Specialist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Linda Cajigas Director of Digital Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Patrick Eddy Music Programs Editorial Specialist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jonathan Shull Marketing and Publicity Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sarah Slover Administrative Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Martha B. Eason Box Office and House Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Benjamin Harris Assistant First Hands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wendy Langdon, Noriko Zulkowski Stitchers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sarah Travis, Jacqueline Westbrook Lead Costume Shop Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Claire Stebbins Deck Crew . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tim Lerzak, Mat Wood

15/ 16 SEASON

The Barber of Seville

Così fan tutte

SEP 18, 19, 25, 26 at 7:30pm

FEB 5, 6, 12, 13 at 7:30pm

Fall Ballet

Carmen

OCT 2, 3 at 7:30pm

FEB 26, 27 MAR 4, 5 at 7:30pm

Dead Man Walking

Spring Ballet

OCT 16, 17, 23, 24 at 7:30pm

MAR 25, 26 at 7:30pm

Die Fledermaus

Oklahoma!

NOV 13, 14, 19, 20 at 7:30pm

April 8, 9, 15, 16 at 7:30pm;

Rossini

Balanchine, Taylor, Tharp

Heggie & McNally

Strauss Jr.

Mozart

Bizet

Four Faces of Balanchine

Rodgers & Hammerstein II 10 at 2pm

The Nutcracker Tchaikovsky

DEC 3, 4, 5 at 7:30pm, 5 & 6 at 2 pm

TICKETS

Musical Arts Center Box Office Monday-Friday, 11:30-5:30 (812) 855-7433

music.indiana.edu/operaballet

[PDF] Die. Fledermaus JOHANN STRAUSS JR. THEATER 15/16 - Free Download PDF (2024)

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