2016 Spring Chautauquan - Chautauqua Institution
Transcription
2016 Spring Chautauquan - Chautauqua Institution
Chautauqua Institution P.O. Box 28 Chautauqua, New York 14722-0028 Chautauquan POSTMASTER PLEASE DELIVER BY JUNE 1, 2016 The Season: June 25–August 28, 2016 ciweb.org S prin g 2 0 1 6 E dition Board begins search for Becker’s successor Winner announcement The 2016 Chautauqua Prize winner was named too late for this edition of The Chautauquan. Please visit ciweb.org/prize to read the announcement. A nationwide search has begun to find Chautauqua Institution’s next president. James A. Pardo Jr., chair of the Institution’s board of trustees, in March announced the appointment of a six-person committee that will lead the process to identify and select the Institution’s 18th president. The Institution’s goal is to name a successor to retiring President Tom Becker this fall. “This is an extraordinary time for Chautauqua Institution, and an extraordinary opportunity for a creative, high-energy leader to take the Chautauqua experience to a new level,” Pardo said. “With a new Amphitheater coming on line in 2017, we are truly excited by the new programmatic opportunities before us, and we are eager to see how our new president’s vision for the future advances the Institution.” Becker announced in January his intention to retire effective December 31, 2016, following 13 years as president and nearly 32 years of service in total to Chautauqua. “The board and the search commit- tee recognize the tall order ahead of us in choosing Tom Becker’s successor,” Pardo said. “Because of Tom’s extraordinary efforts and successes over the years, our next president will find Chautauqua Institution in its best financial and operational position ever.” Executive search firm Russell Reynolds Associates has also been retained to guide the committee and the board through the search and hiring process. Please see Search, Page 4 Six finalists named for 2016 Prize Chautauqua Institution is pleased to announce six exceptional books as the 2016 finalists for The Chautauqua Prize, now in its fifth year: It’s What I Do: A Photographer’s Life of Love and War Lynsey Addario Penguin Press Off the Radar: A Father’s Secret, a Mother’s Heroism, and a Son’s Quest Cyrus Copeland Blue Rider Press King of the Gypsies: Stories Lenore Myka BkMk Press Granada: A Pomegranate in the Hand of God Steven Nightingale Counterpoint Press Nagasaki: Life After Nuclear War Susan Southard Viking Books No. 4 Imperial Lane Jonathan Weisman Twelve Books Awarded annually since 2012, The Chautauqua Prize draws upon Chautauqua Institution’s considerable literary legacy to celebrate a book that provides a richly rewarding reading experience and to honor the author for a significant contribution to the literary arts. The author of the winning book will receive $7,500 and all travel and expenses for a one-week summer residency at Chautauqua. Read more about each book, Page 12 Inside this issue Provided photos Wynton Marsalis and Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra Celebrating America’s music With Wynton Marsalis and Jazz at Lincoln Center, the performing arts take center stage during Week Nine of the 2016 Chautauqua season W hen the calendar reaches late August, as our resident performing arts companies wind down their seasons, Wynton Marsalis and Jazz at Lincoln Center will be there to keep the beat. The renowned trumpeter and music ambassador and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra will appear throughout Week Nine (Aug. 20–28) and on multiple platforms to bring the “America’s Music” theme to life. Marsalis will speak from the Amphitheater stage on two separate mornings (Aug. 22 and 26), and JLCO will perform in the evening with the CSO (Aug. 23) and their celebrated leader (Aug. 25). The CSO performance will feature a preview of a new work by Marsalis for symphony orchestra and JLCO, a piece commissioned by the New York Philharmonic for its 2017 season. This will be the second consecutive summer that Chautauqua audiences will have the opportunity to hear a special preview performance of a major new Marsalis work. Also appearing as Amphitheater Pre-season construction keeps Amp on track for 2017 opening · Page 2 lecturers are Geoffrey C. Ward, cowriter of the seminal PBS documentary “Jazz” (Aug. 23 and 26), and Grammy-winning jazz vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant (Aug. 25). The week will be capped on Friday, Aug. 26, by what may be the final live performance of Marsalis’ Abyssinian Mass, a piece he wrote to celebrate the bicentennial of Harlem’s Abyssinian Baptist Church in 2008. All the original players — Marsalis and JLCO, Chorale Le Chateau, conductor Damien Sneed and narrator the Rev. Calvin O. Butts — return for this one-of-a-kind gospel celebration at Chautauqua. Week Nine also features eight master classes led by Jazz at Lincoln Center staff and JLCO musicians. Register for these and all other Special Studies class offerings at chqtickets.com. Other evening during the week include “Boogie Stomp! The Get Up and Dance Musical Celebration” (Aug. 22) and Garth Fagan Dance (Aug. 24), and celebrated singer-songwriter Mary Chapin Carpenter returns to the Amp stage on Saturday, Aug. 27, to close out Chautauqua’s 2016 popular Board takes actions in response to Corporation motion · Page 4 Marsalis entertainment lineup. On the 2 p.m. Interfaith Lecture Series platform, guest speakers will offer takes on “America’s Spiritual Songbook.” The week’s guest chaplain, the Rev. Dwight D. Andrews, who is also an accomplished saxophonist and music educator, will lead off the week (Aug. 22) in conversation with Chautauqua organist Jared Jacobsen. Also presenting are Steven Darsey, author of The God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob: Music and Worship (Aug. 23); the Rev. James Evans, author of The Ambivalent Gospel of Motown (Aug. 24); Cantor Michael Weis of New York City’s Brotherhood Synagogue (Aug. 25); and Rabbi Kenneth Kanter, author of books, journals and articles on the Jewish contribution to American popular music (Aug. 26). Leadership endowments ensure program sustainability · Page 7 The Chautauquan Page 2 Spring 2016 news The Renewal of Our A mp Ciweb.org/amp Pre-season construction puts rebuilt Amp on track for 2017 grand opening ► Sign up for regular Amp construction updates at ciweb.org/e-newsletter ► View a livestream of the construction site at ciweb.org/amp-cam Spring 2016 construction Following an initial delay, construction on the Chautauqua Amphitheater began in mid-February and continues through the beginning of June. Some of the tasks within this preparatory construction phase included: Two views of the Amphitheater site as it appeared on May 13, 2016. The top photo shows the approach from Bestor Plaza, looking down the western end of the building, where the 1981 bleachers used to stand. The above photo shows the south side of the Amp, viewed from the corner of Palestine and Clark, looking toward the Athenaeum Hotel. (Another view, above the back-of-house area, is always available at ciweb.org/amp-cam.) As of May 13, caisson installation for the perimeter of the rebuilt front-of-house was complete and crews were beginning to prepare the site for the 2016 season. The dirt areas seen above will be temporarily paved with asphalt to maintain accessibility during the season. More details on the spring construction and what to expect this summer are available at right. B R I E FLY Turner Pool to reopen in early June The pool at Turner Community Center, closed for much of the spring to allow for resurfacing and overhead lighting upgrades, is scheduled to reopen in early June. We appreciate our patrons’ patience and look forward to providing a much-improved experience to swimmers this summer. Please feel welcome to contact Chautauqua Health & Fitness staff at 716-357-6430 with any questions or for more information. Volunteer ushers sought for Bratton and Norton Chautauqua is seeking volunteers to usher for theater performances at Bratton Theater and opera performances at Norton Hall. Volunteers must be able to stand for long periods of time, negotiate stairs and help with clean-up after the performance. Volunteers receive an available seat for the performance. If you are interested in volunteering and have not yet done so, please contact Jennifer Jansen in the Program Office at jjansen@ciweb.org by June 1. Babysitting list available through Youth Services The Department of Education and Youth Services maintains a babysitting list with names, contact information and availability of potential care givers. To place names on this list or to receive a copy of the list, contact Karen Schiavone at kschiavone@ciweb.org. This list is intended as a public service and will not rate or recommend any individual. Thomas M. Becker president George E. Murphy chief marketing officer ciweb.org Chautauqua Institution is a non-profit organization, dependent upon your gifts to fulfill its mission. Gate tickets and other revenue cover only a portion of the cost of your Chautauqua experience. Jordan Steves director of communications Printed by The Corry Journal, Corry, Pa. The Chautauquan is published by Chautauqua Institution, Chautauqua, NY 14722. To add or remove your name from the mailing list, please email ticketoffice@ciweb.org. • Establishment of a staging area and materials procurement, staging and storage • Asbestos and lead abatement in the back-of-house • Partial removal of 1981 back-ofhouse facility • Stabilization of exposed sides of the Massey Memorial Organ chamber, which will remain in place throughout all construction • Removal of Peters Bridge for possible reuse • Removal of permanent perimeter fencing and gate canopies • Removal of 1981 bleacher seats • Final surveys and monumentation • Complete installation of groundwater management system around the site • Utility relocation downhill from the back-of-house • Removal of trees on the site • Installation of more than 140 caissons for front-of-house perimeter and new back-of-house • Road work to allow construction traffic safe and unimpeded access, including: easing corners at Palestine and Center and at South Lake and Bowman; installing a temporary construction pathway at the sharp turns at South and South Lake (adjacent to the YAC); and widening South Lake Drive between Bryant and Hawthorne • Placement of vibration monitors along construction route • Removal of the bracing system installed last fall to protect the facility against winter wind and snow loads • Installation of temporary Artist Village in back-of-house area All of this work, from the minor items to the major milestones, helps to mitigate any risk presented by the major construction timeline, from September 2016 to June 2017. All construction-related activities at the Amp site will be halted before the 2016 season and the site will be prepped to allow for normal use this summer. Summer 2016 operations The Amphitheater will be fully operational, with some modifications, to welcome audiences and programs this summer. The site will be visibly different, but patrons should encounter little, if any, disruption to their experience. Importantly, the facility will maintain its existing accessibility via the same gates around the upper-level perimeter and on the floor level to the right and left of the stage. Attendees of Amp programs this summer should expect: • Temporary fencing around the perimeter of the facility. Gate-pass scanning will continue for most events through the same six entrance gates • A temporary asphalt surface on most pedestrian pathways around the facility and temporary metal bleachers at the western end of the front-of-house. Institution staff members are cognizant of the potential issues concerning heat these surface materials present and are considering a number of heatmitigation ideas • The existing restroom facilities on the upper and lower levels will remain fully operational • The Amphitheater Gazebo will continue normal operations • A portion of the Clark brick walk outside the western end of the facility will be a temporary asphalt pathway • A new pedestrian route from Bowman Avenue to the back-ofhouse area and Athenaeum Hotel loop drive, in lieu of Peters Bridge. Institution staffers are working with a wayfinding consultant to determine the best path • A temporary “back porch” for community meet-and-greets and at the base of the Massey Memorial Organ chamber • Artist Village, a series of temporary facilities designed to reclaim space lost with the removal of most of the back-of-house. These spaces include offices, storage, dressing rooms, green rooms and a large rehearsal space • The engraved bricks in the bleacher walls have been carefully removed and will be incorporated (or identical new ones, if the existing brick was damaged) into a new wall which will again mark the outer perimeter of the facility when the project is complete Building an Amphitheater endowment By helping build an endowment for the Amphitheater, the Chautauqua community solidifies a commitment to ensuring the facility will be a safe, functional and welcoming home for future speakers and performers, audiences and generations of Chautauquans to come. You, or your family, can be a part of this important moment in Chautauqua’s history. Anyone contributing $1,000 or more to the Amphitheater endowment or capital costs for the proj- ect will be recognized in the rebuilt Amphitheater. In addition, if you make a gift of $15,000+ to the Amphitheater endowment, your generosity will be recognized with a custom, engraved plaque to be installed on a bench in the new Amp. This gift may be paid over the course of up to three years. For more information, or to make a gift to the Amp endowment, please call 716-357-6404 or email foundation@ ciweb.org. The Chautauquan Spring 2016 Page 3 news From t h e president Chautauqua, an exercise in shared affection I t’s spring in Chautauqua. This is a season for vigorous activities. The grounds, both public and private spaces, are abuzz with activities that speak to the improvements to property, development of gardens and annual plantings, construction and renovation work, road repairs, preparation of program facilities. CUD is engaged in a major project in its multi-year program for the improvement and expansion of the water treatment plant at the south end of the grounds. The enabling phase of the Amphitheater project is now covering much of the caisson drilling and installation work and preparing for the 2016 season. The Athenaeum Hotel is incorporating a new sprinkler system and renovating more rooms. In short, the preparation for your arrival is apace. This issue of The Chautauquan is bursting with details of the many offerings of the 2016 season. One is tempted to see these elements as program pieces and to tally up the offerings produced during the time each of you will be at Chautauqua. But I ask that you think of these presentations as the latest in a long line of work at Chautauqua. This lineage has always been about exercising our capacities to understand who we are as human beings in general and as individuTHOMAS M. als. We talk about Chautauqua as BECKER an experience but it is also an exercise. In the course of a nine-week season we explore, seek, evaluate and critically engage. We also meditate, pray, imagine and abide. We enter into an unspoken contract with others who share the same space that while we will differ in our likes and dislikes, our beliefs and convictions, our tastes and preferences, we will do so in an atmosphere of shared affection. At Chautauqua we are not simply tolerant of those who hold these differences, we share affection for the earnestness of purpose that draws us to this remarkable and singular Institution. You can and should assume that state of shared affection to be part of your experience of Chautauqua. It is what is behind the belief that all who enter these grounds are Chautauquans. Here we can exercise these values and mode of conduct not because it is required of us but rather because it is offered. I think, in part, children are so immediately at home here precisely because of that characteristic of shared affection. They know they are safe. Their explorations on these grounds often lead to some of the best friendships of their lives. They are safe to be true to who they are and to reveal themselves to others also engaged in this expressive process. It is often harder for adults to recognize this opportunity and to fully engage these possibilities. That said, it does happen. And the gift of this atmosphere of affection is to demonstrate the possibilities for broadening the sphere of its influence to our family lives, our civic commitments, our workplaces … I recognize that language like “affection” is perceived as soft and gushy (maybe feminine?) and impractical in a time of such brutish conflict. I recog- nize that many see the toughening of our discourse and conduct as a proper response to the perception that we are losing stature, security, dominance, cultural clarity, etc. This year, before you arrive for the season, millions, many millions, will have been spent on media messages demonizing the differences between contestants for political leadership. We will be preoccupied by the labels in these messages such as red/blue, gay/ straight, and on and on. Yet the issues before us as a nation demand a critical engagement with their complexities and nuances. Our understanding is informed by that engagement and our faith, our experiences, our sense of family, our appreciation of our history — who we are and how we got here. If you take the nine weeks of the Chautauqua season as a full body of work you can see it as the exercise of this kind of exploration invested in creativity, critical thinking, consideration of faith and mystery, embrace of hope and transcendence. This is an investment in imaginative, compassionate living. And it can be great fun. A round t h e g rounds Major projects aim to improve safety, upgrade overall experience In addition to the major work at the Amphitheater, Chautauqua Institution this off-season has undertaken a number of other initiatives and capital projects. Tree canopy Recognizing the importance of Chautauqua’s signature tree canopy, four years ago the Institution began a process that will eventually feed into a Community Forest Management Plan (in the same vein as the existing Sustainable Shoreline Action Plan and Stormwater Management Plan). This plan will guide all efforts to maintain and/or create a sustainable tree canopy on the grounds, including diversity in tree species, genus and family, and in age and size. Following initial work to assess the South End Ravine tree population in 2013, Chautauqua Institution retained the locally based forestry management firm Forecon and its certified arborists to survey and assess every individual Institution-owned tree on the grounds (these include all trees in public spaces and adjacent to Institution facilities, plus most trees in the space between Institution streets and private homes). This work took place over the off-seasons of 2013, 2014 and 2015, beginning with Miller Park, followed by the rest of the center portion of the grounds, and ending this past year with the north and south ends. Forecon’s comprehensive evaluation included 3,954 trees and collected data on a number of factors, including tree identification, location, site width, utilities, diameter, height, crown width, condition (using U.S. Forest Service guidelines), presence of insect or disease, structural defects and human damage. Further inspections using a Resistograph were conducted on trees suspected of having internal decay. Forecon then profiled each tree determined to have potential risk factors. A copy of Forecon’s report is available at ciweb.org/downloads. Reports on individual trees included in Forecon’s risk assessments are available by contacting Chautauqua’s Operations office at 716-357-6245. An immediate and highly visible result of the comprehensive tree survey is the ongoing schedule of necessary tree removals for the safety of people, property and other trees. In total, the arborists recommended removal of about 17 percent of the trees evaluated — from a large number of one-inch-diameter saplings growing in clusters or a poor location (under power lines, obstructing traffic views, etc.), to young trees suffering from heavy squirrel damage, to rapidly declining massive mature trees several feet in diameter. Another major factor playing a role in this off-season’s tree maintenance is the recently discovered presence of the emerald ash borer on the grounds. EAB is an invasive species that infests and kills North American ash trees (Fraxinus genus), and Chautauqua’s ash population (about 6 percent of the overall tree population) has been severely affected, which has substantially increased the number of overall tree removals. Gardens and Landscapes crews this spring will inoculate the remaining 80 ash trees using a systemic product called Tree-Age, which gives three years’ protection against EAB and can be used on trees that are up to 40 percent infested. As a result of these removals, the Institution is undertaking an aggressive replanting schedule. Trees will be replaced not necessarily in kind, but rather in a deliberate manner designed toward creating the optimal level of diversity in age, mature height and species within a community forest. In a typical year, Chautauqua’s crews plant about 50 trees. This year, 125 replantings are planned, many in high-profile locations where recent removals took place. Some of these trees will be taller, more mature trees than normally planted, in an attempt to speed up the process of rebuilding or replacing the overall tree canopy. For much more information on Forecon’s report and what to expect in the years ahead, read April’s comprehensive communication regarding Chautauqua’s tree maintenance work at this link: bit.ly/chqtrees2016. Athenaeum Hotel The Athenaeum Hotel’s main entrance area underwent extensive work this off-season as part of a long-term project to shore up the building’s foundation (like the Amp, over time the hotel has drifted toward Chautauqua Lake). Patrons this season will find a repaved loop drive and newly installed sidewalk and railing leading to a completely reinforced entrance porch. Inside the hotel, crews are working to completely replace the building’s sprinkler system. These projects represent nearly $750,000 of capital investment this off-season alone to ensure the longterm viability of the 1881 structure. Miller Park Following last spring’s addition of a brick pathway and rain gardens to upper Miller Park, Chautauqua’s crews have focused this pre-season on the lower area. Work continues to upgrade and reroute away from Children’s Beach the access road connecting South Lake Drive to the Pier Building. When finished, the 16-foot-wide brick roadway will be pinned off during the season to serve primarily as a pedestrian pathway, with only occasional service- or emergency-vehicle access. These changes are designed to increase safety for children and families enjoying the recreational spaces around Fair Point. A new, small play area is also planned for the north side of the park. Wastewater Treatment Plant Following many months of delays, the Chautauqua Utility District has begun work on extensive upgrades to and an expansion of the facilities at its wastewater treatment plant on the southern tip of the grounds. This is not a Chautauqua Institution project, but one that received overwhelming approval in a 2014 vote. Crews contracted by CUD began major excavation work in early May, including removal of trees and the restroom facilities at the base of Bryant hill, in anticipation of this construc- tion. Access for construction vehicles is via Bryant Gate and Bryant Avenue. As with the Amphitheater construction, major work at the wastewater facility will pause for the 2016 season and resume in the fall. Questions on this work should be directed to CUD at 716-357-8137. Road work Chautauqua Institution in April began a schedule of spring road work that was scheduled to be finished by Memorial Day. Streets included in this plan are: •North Lake Drive, between Forest and Wiley; •Andrews, between Harris and Forest; •Hurst, between Andrews and North Lake; •Forest, between Pratt and North Lake; •Cookman, between Massey and Clark brick walk; and •Wythe, between Foster and South In coordination with the Institution’s street work, National Fuel worked to replace gas mains and upgrade services on Forest and Cookman. Perimeter fence Chautauqua crews this spring replaced two long sections of perimeter fencing along Route 394. A new fence is now installed along the School of Music campus, from the former Hurst Gate to the south end of Scott in the Garden District, and along the southwest end of the South Lot, from Royal Way to the South Gate. Native vines will be planted along the fence line to finish off the facelift. Sharpe Field Chautauqua’s community softball leagues will have a new surface to play on this coming season — in April a Chautauqua crew stripped the old grass and dirt infield at Sharpe Field and replaced it with a new clay mix. Page 4 The Chautauquan Spring 2016 news N ews From t h e B oard o f T rustees Board takes actions in response to Corporation motion on governance Following eight months of analysis, consultation and community engagement, Chautauqua Institution’s Board of Trustees at its May 7 meeting accepted recommendations from its Nominating and Governance Committee designed to improve and expand its practices of good governance and to increase opportunities for input from the Chautauqua community. These actions respond to a motion passed at the August 2015 annual meeting of the Chautauqua Corporation. In that motion, Corporation members asked Chautauqua Institution’s Board of Trustees to consider amending the Corporation’s bylaws to provide for open meetings of the Board of Trustees and to consider additional ways to provide the community with greater transparency about the work of the Board and its proceedings. At its August 2015 meeting, the Board referred the motion to the Nominating and Governance Committee for review and recommendation. “As Trustees of Chautauqua Institution, we take our fiduciary responsibilities very seriously. Philosophically, we are committed to being as inclusive and transparent as practical within the framework of best practices for not-forprofit governance,” wrote James A. Pardo, Jr., Chair of the Board, in a February letter to Corporation members. “We recognize that the Board must represent the interests of the Institution and everyone the Institution serves — Corporation members and all other stakeholders who benefit from and participate in its mission-driven program. This is in keeping with our Chautauqua values.” Analysis & Action on Open Meetings Beginning in September 2015, the Nominating and Governance Committee conducted an internal and external review, including a legal assessment and a detailed analysis of the transparency and engagement practices in place at Chautauqua. As part of its work, the Committee consulted 22 individual experts and organizations — including various notfor-profit corporations, arts organizations, homeowners’ associations, colleges, not-for-profit administrators and other Chautauquas — to understand better the practice of open meetings in the not-for-profit sector. The Committee reported to the full Board at its November 2015 meeting and again in greater detail at its February 2016 meeting. Its findings included that: • Nearly all of the organizations contacted — not-forprofit 501(c)(3) corporations like Chautauqua Institution — do not hold open meetings, do not plan to do so, and do not recommend it; • The leadership of 501(c)(3) not-for-profit corporations believe (some based on experience) that open meetings would stifle discussion and creative problem-solving among trustees, limit the ability of the corporation to recruit qualified members to its board, and potentially politicize the governance process; and • Some who were contacted and interviewed cite as an example the current era of social media and how posts, e-newsletters and tweets — instant and sometimes out of context — can quickly negate the intent of open meetings. Experts and consultants to not-for-profit entities provided similar counsel. Combined with the legal opinion that Chautauqua’s Board is not required by law to hold open meetings, the results of the Committee’s due diligence led its members to recommend that the Board continue its current meeting policy. That conclusion was communicated to the Chautauqua community in a Feb. 23, 2016, letter from the Board’s Chair. Search from Page 1 “We anticipate that the process will be a robust one that will attract a number of highly qualified candidates from many different backgrounds,” said George T. Snyder, chair of the presidential search committee. “Over the next few months, we will screen prospective candidates, develop a shortlist of finalists and bring them to Chautauqua for on-site visits during the summer season. It’s our hope that our new president will start work on the first day of the New Year.” March’s announcements follow more than two months of research by board leadership, in addition to consultation with outside experts, Institution staff, and many members of the Chautauqua community. An important element of the search process is obtaining timely community input. The search committee is developing a series of mechanisms that will allow it to proactively gather community insight. The board and Institution staff will provide regular updates to Chautauquans as the search process unfolds. Presidential Search Committee Snyder, immediate past chair of the Chautauqua Institution Board of Trustees from 2007 to 2013, will chair the presidential search committee. Snyder is a Expanding Practices of Good Governance In response to the second part of the Corporation members’ motion, the Nominating and Governance Committee also recommended, and the Trustees at their February 2016 meeting agreed, to re-evaluate, expand, and re-imagine current community engagement practices and to look for additional ways to provide more transparency regarding the Board’s work at Chautauqua Institution. The Committee once again, this time joined by the four Corporation-elected Trustees, conducted dozens of interviews with community stakeholders — including property owners, one-week visitors, denominational house representatives, leaders of and participants in community volunteer groups, open meetings advocates and off-grounds Chautauquans — to understand their involvement in Chautauqua and their ideas and recommendations for enhanced transparency and engagement with the Board and its process. The group’s findings, presented at the May 7 Board of Trustees meeting, included: • A strong reiteration of the Trustees’ commitment to enhanced engagement with the community and best practices in not-for-profit governance, particularly around critical matters that from time to time come to the Board for consideration; • Noting that there currently exist a variety of opportunities for the community to engage with the Trustees in public and private settings, but that some times and places for events (such as the Trustee Open Forums and the weekly Hultquist porch chats) are inconveniently scheduled for some community members; • Recognizing that the community does not, in a broad sense, know who the Trustees are or how the Trustees arrive at the Board table; and • Some community stakeholders would like additional opportunities to gain insights into the governance process and have timely and regular opportunities for input into issues that come before the Board for discussion, consideration, or decision. Based on these findings, the Committee proposed to the Trustees a series of recommendations that ensure the community has access to current information about Trustees and the Trustee nominating processes and that give the community additional opportunities to have input into the work of the Board: Enhanced Transparency and Information Sharing • Board meeting agenda: Beginning with the August 2016 meetings, the Board will work with the Institution to post a preliminary, draft agenda or list of topics that likely will be covered at the upcoming Board meeting. This will occur as soon as the agenda is close to finalized and, ideally, not later than two weeks prior to the meeting. • Board meeting minutes: Beginning with the May 2016 meeting, the Board will work with the Institution to post a draft of the Board minutes approximately two weeks after the meeting, even though at that point in time the minutes will not yet have been approved by the Board (which in the ordinary course will not occur until the next regularly scheduled meeting). Where not otherwise contained in the actual minutes, a summary of key decisions also will be posted. • The Board will work with the Institution to introduce an enhanced Board of Trustees’ webpage prior to the 2016 season that will include: · Trustee biographies, photos and terms of service. lifelong Chautauquan and property owner. He currently serves as a director of the Chautauqua Foundation, chairing its Personnel Committee, and is co-chair of the Promise Campaign. A native of Pittsburgh, he is a partner with the Stonecipher Law Firm. The following Chautauquans also have been appointed to serve as members of the search committee: • Jim Brady, who is the Central Region managing partner for Grant Thornton LLP, one of the top six largest professional services firms in the U.S. A member of the Chautauqua community since 2003 and now a property owner, Brady serves on both the Institution’s board of trustees and the Chautauqua Foundation’s board of directors, chairing the Development Council. • Laura Currie, who is manager of the clinical trials program in the Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Division at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. A lifelong Chautauquan and property owner, Currie also serves as an Institution trustee and a Foundation director, and she chairs the Planned Giving Committee. • Bill James, who has worked in the consumer products industry his entire career with assignments in Europe and the U.S. James and his family have come to Chautauqua for 25 years; he is a property owner and joined the Foundation board as a director in 2014. • Candace Littell Maxwell, who is a retired · Relocation of the Trustee email address to a more visible location on the website to encourage community input directly to the trustees. · Information about the Class A Trustee nomination process, including how members of the Community might propose individuals to the Board’s Nominating and Governance Committee for consideration as future members of the Board of Trustees. · Information about the Class B Trustee nomination process. Additional Opportunities for Trustee Engagement • The Board will work with the Institution in an attempt (subject to the availability of suitable times and venues) to move the Trustee Open Forums to different dates and/or times to allow for greater community participation during the 2016 season · Trustees will host the first two porch chats this season in a different format — these will be trusteeled and focused on a strategic topic of importance to the community. Again, subject to the availability of suitable times and venues, these two initial porch chats will be moved from the traditional 9:30 a.m. Wednesday Hultquist Porch time and location to different dates, times and locations to allow for greater community participation. These will be more discussion-oriented sessions with the community and provide opportunities for input directly to the Trustees. Depending on community response, these sessions may be continued in future seasons or be tweaked with a goal of more direct Trustee and community engagement. · The remaining porch chats during the 2016 season will be continue to be held on the Hultquist porch as in prior years and will follow the traditional staff-driven format, but subject to the availability of suitable times and dates the porch chats will be shifted on the calendar to allow for more community member attendance. • The Trustees plan to attend more events this season including CPOA picnics and other similar community events. • Our Board Chair will hold weekly open office hours during the 2016 season (tentatively scheduled from 4 to 6 p.m. in the Film Room at the Welcome Center) that will be open to any Chautauquan to come and discuss with the Chair any topic. • Our Board Chair once again has offered this season to meet with any interested stakeholder groups and, subject to scheduling, to continue his informal, ad hoc “coffee in the morning or ice cream in the afternoon” meetings with individual Chautauquans. These recommendations were adopted by the Board of Trustees at its May meeting with the plan to implement them as proposed. Look for more information on dates, times and places in The Chautauquan Daily this season. “Throughout this comprehensive process, the Trustees were mindful of the programmatic mission of Chautauqua Institution, and the role of community in the expression of that mission,” Pardo said. “The Board believes that Chautauqua’s governance structure works well in supporting our mission, and, further, has set the stage for our continued success in sustaining and improving the Institution together — financially, operationally and physically. We welcome community engagement as we work together on the stewardship of this singular place.” consulting executive and corporate director for the life sciences industry. Maxwell has been coming to Chautauqua for 15 years and is currently in her sixth year of service as a trustee of the Institution. • Pardo, who is a retired partner at King & Spalding LLP. At Chautauqua, where he is a property owner and has come with his family since 1991, Pardo serves as chair of the Institution’s board of trustees, ex officio as a Foundation director, and vice-chair of the Chautauqua Hotel Corporation’s board. Executive Search Firm Russell Reynolds Associates is a global leader in assessment, recruitment and succession planning for boards and key leadership roles for organizations of all kinds. Its consultants have extensive experience identifying, assessing and recruiting board members, CEOs and senior leaders for nonprofit organizations around the world. The Chautauqua search will be led by the firm’s Washington and Boston offices. Process The goal of the search committee, Snyder said, “is to work closely with Russell Reynolds to identify and recommend to the Board of Trustees a candidate to succeed Tom Becker, thus enabling the new president to begin his or her work at the beginning of 2017.” The Chautauquan Spring 2016 Page 5 p o p u l a r e n t e r ta i n m e n t 2016 Amphitheater Entertainment The Temptations & The Four Tops** Saturday, June 25 · 8:15 p.m. Leann Rimes July 1 Mary Chapin Carpenter August 27 For more than five decades, the Detroit Motown sound and these two iconic groups have inspired, influenced and entertained countless millions. Wednesday, August 17 · 8:15 p.m. Raised in Tupelo, Mississippi, this roots-rock songwriter and performer creates feel-good evenings of song and storytelling with roots from the land of cotton, catfish and churches. Sunday, June 26 · 2:30 p.m. · Free! The Purple Xperience: A Concert Celebration of the Life & Inspiration of Prince Susquehanna Chorale* A recipient of Chorus America’s highest national award, the Margaret Hillis Achievement Award for Choral Excellence, the Susquehanna Chorale has emerged as one of the outstanding choral ensembles in the United States. Purchase your tickets: chqtickets.com 716-357-6250 Colvin & Earle July 15 Friday, August 19 · 8:15 p.m. The Purple Xperience, a five-piece tribute band, is led by Grammy Awardwinning Dr. Fink (former member of Prince and the Revolution) with the goal of giving audiences the most authentic re-creation in the world. Tiempo Libre Tuesday, June 28 · 8:15 p.m. Having introduced Cuban music to new audiences through appearances on shows such as “The Tonight Show” and “Dancing With the Stars,” this classically trained group is celebrated for its performances of timba music, an irresistible, dance-inducing mix of Latin jazz and Cuban son. An Evening with LeAnn Rimes** Friday, July 1 · 8:15 p.m. With 44 million albums sold, two Grammy Awards, three Academy of Country Music Awards and 12 Billboard Music Awards, singer-songwriter LeAnn Rimes has made her mark in the world of music. Buffalo Silver Band Sunday, July 3 · 2:30 p.m. · Free! The Capitol Steps: Mock the Vote Wednesday, July 6 · 8:15 p.m. With the race for the presidency heating up, now is the best time to see the Capitol Steps and their unique brand of political comedy! The Avett Brothers** Sold Out! Friday, July 8 · 8:15 p.m. The Avett Brothers combine bluegrass, folk, rock ‘n’ roll, honky-tonk, country and ragtime to produce a unique and current sound described by the San Francisco Chronicle as having the “heavy sadness of Townes Van Zandt, the light pop concision of Buddy Holly, the tuneful jangle of the Beatles, the raw energy of the Ramones.” Brass Band of the Western Reserve Sunday, July 10 · 2:30 p.m. · Free! Family Entertainment Series: Acrobats of Cirque-tacular* Wednesday, July 13 · 7:30 p.m. These stunning acrobats will elicit oohs and ahhs from audience members of all ages through aerial and ground acrobatic feats. Sunday, August 14 · 2:30 p.m. · Free! Paul Thorn U.S. Army Field Band & Soldiers’ Chorus Monday, June 27 · 8:15 p.m. Chautauqua School of Dance Student Gala Barbershop Harmony Parade Sunday, August 21, 2:30 p.m. · Free! Boogie Stomp! The Get Up and Dance Musical Celebration Britt Nicole July 29 Monday, August 22 · 8:15 p.m. Colvin & Earle** Sultans of String Grammy Award-winning singersongwriters Shawn Colvin and Steve Earle will celebrate their new album’s release with a worldwide tour, uniting for one-of-a-kind evenings of songswapping, duets and storytelling. Thrilling audiences with Celtic reels, flamenco, Gypsy-jazz, Arabic, Cuban and South Asian rhythms, Sultans of String celebrate musical fusion and human creativity with warmth and virtuosity. Friday, July 15 · 8:15 p.m. Chautauqua School of Dance Student Gala Sunday, July 17 · 2:30 p.m. · Free! An Evening Piano Recital with Alexander Gavrylyuk* Wednesday, July 20 · 8:15 p.m. Well-loved by Chautauqua, the extraordinary Alexander Gavrylyuk returns for his 11th season. Huey Lewis and The News** Friday, July 22 · 8:15 p.m. As they enter their 37th year together, their contagious brand of music has outlasted countless trends, and is as fresh today as ever. NYSSSA School of Choral Studies Sunday, July 24 · 2:30 p.m. Britt Nicole† Friday, July 29 · 8:15 p.m. In 2012, Britt received a Grammy nomination in the category of Best Contemporary Christian Music Album for her 2012 release, Gold. Having created an anthem by the same name, Britt is emerging as a pop phenom of uncommon substance and soul, with a focus on music that’s both genuine and empowering. American Legion Band of the Tonawandas Sunday, July 31 · 2:30 p.m. · Free! Purchase tickets at chqtickets.com or 716-357-6250 † Monday, August 1 · 8:15 p.m. Straight No Chaser** Friday, August 5 · 8:15 p.m. Straight No Chaser has built a reputation as an unforgettable live act, and The New Old Fashioned Tour comes to town on the heels of the release of their new album by the same name. Special Matinée Concert by the Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra Sunday, Aug. 7 · 2:30 p.m. · Free! Family Entertainment Series: Wild Kingdom featuring Peter Gros* Tuesday, August 9 · 7:30 p.m. As Mutual of Omaha’s special “Wild Kingdom” ambassador, Peter Gros shares his love of wildlife and wilderness with audiences of all ages. Canadian Brass* Thursday, August 11 · 8:15 p.m. Canadian Brass has truly earned the distinction of “the world’s most famous brass group.” The five virtuoso brass musicians have a uniquely engaging stage presence and rapport with audiences. Chris Botti & Joshua Bell** Saturday, August 13 · 8:15 p.m. It’s a double-billing of out-of-thisstratosphere musicianship as two renowned Grammy winners take the stage. This collaboration with the Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra will create lasting memories for all music lovers. *Community Appreciation Nights Garth Fagan Dance* Wednesday, August 24 · 8:15 p.m. Tony and Olivier Award-winning choreographer Garth Fagan’s dancers communicate with unbridled energy the depth, precision and grace of Fagan’s work. Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis: Birth of the American Orchestra** Thursday, August 25 · 8:15 p.m. The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, comprising 15 of the finest jazz soloists and ensemble players today, has been the Jazz at Lincoln Center resident orchestra since 1988. The Abyssinian Mass** Friday, August 26 · 8:15 p.m. Raise your voices and lift your hearts during this hand-clappin’, tambourine-slappin’ gospel celebration commissioned to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem. Mary Chapin Carpenter** Saturday, August 27 · 8:15 p.m. Still creating and singing after nearly 30 years, this five-time Grammy Award-winning and Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame artist will be sharing music from her newest album, The Things That We Are Made Of. East Winds Symphonic Band Sunday, August 28 · 2:30 p.m. · Free! **Preferred seating available Have a bite at Heirloom before or after the show See the entire menu at athenaeum-hotel.com Pianists Bob Baldori and Arthur Migliazza present a riveting concert of American music that explores blues, jazz, boogie-woogie, swing, stride, ragtime, R&B and rock ‘n’ roll. † Emerging Artist Series Tapas Dinner Beemster Fondue Duck Confit Flatbread Wild Game Sausage Trio Taco Trio Fried Green Tomatoes Grilled Salmon Salad Pork Milanese The Chautauquan Page 6 Spring 2016 Y o u t h / R e c r e at i o n Special Studies builds variety into curriculum for all ages From expanded youth offerings to a host of master classes led by National Geographic explorers and the world’s greatest jazz musicians, Chautauqua’s 2016 Special Studies program provides lifelong learning opportunities from dawn to dusk in a variety of disciplines this summer. Youth Classes Building upon last year’s curriculum, Chautauqua has added more courses in 2016 for youth of all ages. In addition to the Youth Scholar Camp for ages 10 to 14 and Youth Writing Camp for high school students, Special Studies offers one-day and weeklong youth culinary classes and art programs for youth beginning at age 5. Other highlights include short story discussion groups for teens in Weeks One and Four, a pinhole camera workshop in Week Four, and a course on sneaker art in Week Six. Families can learn together in several of multi-generational workshops, including Week Two’s “Family Touch Drawing Workshop,” Week Three’s “Building Family Connections by Making Classic Wooden Games,” and Week Six’s “Build a Bird Nest Box.” Chautauqua has also partnered with two local nonprofit organizations to offer specialized youth classes. Infinity Visual and Performing Arts of Jamestown will offer “Cartoon Art” in Week Four and “Cultural World Tour” in Week Six, both for ages 7 to 12. The Jamestown Audubon Nature Center will offer four classes for ages 5 to 12, including “Nature at Your Fingertips” in Week One and “Scales and ColdBlooded Tales” in Week Six. Many of the season’s adult classes are also available to high school students. On-theme Master Classes This summer, numerous one-day and weeklong classes from the week’s Amphitheater speakers and other renowned experts provide opportunities for deeper engagement with the week’s lecture theme. National Geographic photographers and journalists offer master classes throughout Week Five, and Jazz at Lincoln Center presents a series of classes in Week Nine led by members of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra. Faculty from the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics at Arizona State University return to the grounds to engage Chautauquans in ethical examinations of the week’s theme in Weeks Two, Three, Seven and Eight. Other 2016 master slass highlights include “Music to Get Elected By” in Week Two, “The Lewis and Clark Expedition” in Week Three, and classes on “The Social Impact of War,” “Veterans at War with Addicition” and “Writing About War in the Post-9/11 World,” all during Chautauqua’s Week Eight on “War and Its Warriors: Contemporary Voices.” To register for a Special Studies class or view the online catalog, visit chqtickets.com. Build a personalized catalog using improved search, subject filters, minimum age and printing capabilities. To propose a class for the 2017 season, please visit ciweb.org/classes. RECREATION AT CHAUTAUQUA INSTITUTION For more information, visit: ciweb.org/recreation GOLF BEACHES Chautauqua Golf Club features two 4-star, scenic 18-hole courses, a well-equipped pro shop, locker rooms, equipment for sale and rent, cart rentals and professional instruction. Seasonal and weekly memberships are available, as well as daily fee options. The Learning Center, a 25-acre practice and teaching facility, offers adult clinics and junior golf camps. 716.357.6211 • University Beach, located on North Lake Drive directly below the President’s Cottage, Noon–5 p.m. • Children’s Beach, by Miller Bell Tower, 11 a.m.–6 p.m., 716.357.5898 • Pier Beach, adjacent to Children’s Beach, 11 a.m.–6 p.m., 716.357.5898 • Heinz Beach, located on South Lake Drive in front of the Youth Activities Center, Noon–5 p.m. TENNIS SPORTS CLUB Eight state-of-the-art fast-dry courts (two illuminated for night play) are available at the Chautauqua Tennis Center, located adjacent to the Turner Community Center. Private lessons are available from teaching professionals. Clinics, roundrobins and tournaments are scheduled throughout the season. In addition to short- and long-term memberships, daily court fees are available. 716.357.6276 The Sports Club, located on the lakefront near the Athenaeum Hotel, provides facilities for shuffleboard, horseshoes, lawn bowling, bridge and other games and activities. Paddleboat, kayak and canoe rentals, softball leagues and the annual Old First Night Run/Walk/Swim are all part of the Sports Club program. 716.357.6281 SAILING The Chautauqua Sailing Department, located at the John R. Turney Sailing Center, offers a summer-long curriculum of one-week sailing courses designed to advance the sailing skills of all age groups and experience levels. Private lessons provided by certified instructors and sailboat rentals are also available. 716.357.6392 FITNESS CENTERS Chautauqua Health & Fitness is a full-service exercise and strength training facility with two sites: Turner Community Center, with indoor pool, and Heinz Beach. Short- and long-term memberships, daily passes and personal training are available. All fitness classes are run through the Special Studies office. Fitness Center: 716.357.6430 Classes: 716.357.6348 Youth programs welcome new coordinator This summer, Chautauqua’s Education and Youth Services department is launching two initiatives aimed at expanded programming opportunities and deeper community engagement for youth on the grounds. Chautauqua County teacher Robin Martin, who led weekly Family Orientation Sessions in Bestor Plaza last year, has been hired to serve as youth coordinator during the 2016 season. The former Club counselor and Children’s School teacher will work with staff in all youth program areas to ensure every child, particularly those new to Chautauqua, has the opportunity to explore and become familiar with the grounds, build lasting friendships and find the mix of programming that best fits their interests. Martin will build upon the Sunday orientation sessions to better inform families of the numerous youth activities throughout the week, including Children’s School and Club; Special Studies classes; the CLSC Young Readers program; recreational activities; community organization events; and more. She will also lead a number of special activities during the week, including bicycle tours of the grounds, game and movie nights, a “lecture and lunch” program, and other “pickup” activities organized by youth. Martin will also oversee a volunteer program for high school students to be launched this summer. With many students now needing community service hours to graduate, the Education and Youth Services office is working with Institution staff, program departments, community organizations and denominational houses to identify volunteer opportunities for youth ages 14 to 18. The pilot program is intended to educate and engage high school students as members of the larger Chautauqua community in such areas as environmental stewardship, support of Institution and community programming, and civic leadership. To learn more about the volunteer program, please email Matt Ewalt, associate director of education and youth services, at mewalt@ciweb.org. 2 016 Yo u t h pr o g r a m s Register your children at chqtickets.com Children’s School Themes Boys’ and Girls’ Club Event Dates Week One: America Celebrates Week Two: Big Art Everywhere Week Three: Outside the Box Week Four: Outer Space (w/ programs by Carnegie Science Center) Week Five: Bird, Tree & Garden Week Six: Construction Week Seven: Farm to Table Week Eight: Loose Parts Week Nine: Music in the Air July 1: Independence Day Parade (Children’s School and Group One) July 8: Water Olympics July 13: Club Carnival July 18–22: Carnegie Science Center programming July 21–22: SAC Canoe/Camping July 28: Airband August 2: Old First Night August 4: Track & Field Day You are a bad fairway bunker player — and it doesn’t matter By David Wedzik Director of Instruction, Chautauqua Golf Club Learning Center I hope the headline of this article got your attention, because in only the few minutes it takes to read it I am going to give you important information which will have you shooting lower scores this season. First, let me assure you that the title wasn’t meant to be a mean-spirited shot at your golf game but, rather, it was meant to make you aware of just how unimportant fairway bunker shots (as one example) are to your ability to shoot lower scores (and later I’ll tell you about some important skills that really matter). You see, fairway bunker shots have an extremely low Separation Value (SV: a measure of a skill’s potential to affect your score) and spending time attempting to improve your fairway bunker play is, for the most part, a waste of your time. You are likely asking, Why do fairway bunker shots matter so little and how can this knowledge help me shoot lower scores? The answer is based in a bit of golf “math” and the understanding of which skills really matter to your score. You see, even if you are so bad from fairway bunkers that you lose a full stroke every time you hit from one, you simply don’t have the opportunity to hit these shots very often. Consider how few times you hit fairway bunker shots in an entire summer at Chautauqua. Twice? Five times? Because you hit so few fairway bunker shots you might only be able to save a few shots in an entire summer by improving your fairway bunker play. In contrast, things like driving the ball, hitting approach shots or green reading (not all skills involve striking the ball) offer a much higher SV. Knowing which skills are most important and practicing them at a higher ratio will offer you a distinct advantage over other golfers and lead directly to shooting lower scores. Our book, Lowest Score Wins (my co-author Erik Barzeski is the Learning Center head instructor) introduced the aforementioned Separation Value and ranks every skill in golf from highest SV to lowest SV using a first-ofits-kind, math-based approach. Practice higher SV skills more often, don’t waste time on the lower SV skills and shooting lower scores is guaranteed. I am extremely excited about my upcoming second season at the Learning Center. Be sure to stop by and take an individual or group lesson to improve at one of these important skills, to get more information about the book, Lowest Score Wins (lowestscorewins.com) or to register for the brand new Lowest Score Wins class. We look forward to seeing you! David Wedzik is author of the 5 Simple Keys Learning System and the book/DVD set Lowest Score Wins. He is the 2013 and 2015 Western New York PGA Teacher of the Year. The Chautauquan Spring 2016 Page 7 news Leadership endowments ensure program sustainability Opportunities remain for additional investment From their cottage on the south end of the grounds, perched above the tennis courts and a stone’s throw from Club, Jack and Yvonne McCredie can observe the daily buzz of activity as children ride their bikes to and from the waterfront. Having participated at Club in his youth, Jack, and his wife, Yvonne, decided to make a significant contribution within the Promise Campaign to endow the director position at Boys’ and Girls’ Club, currently held by Greg “Coach” Prechtl. With their children and, now, grandchildren all enjoying the Club experience, the McCredies wanted to make a gift in support of youth and have generously given through their IRA to establish this endowment. The 2016 season will mark Prechtl’s 30th anniversary of service at Club. The McCredie Family Director of Boys’ and Girls’ Club is the most recent leadership endowment contributed inside of the Promise Campaign. These investments fund pivotal leadership positions, including artistic directors and faculty, principal music staff, and youth and recreation leadership. Greg “Coach” Prechtl Judy Sherra Barie Babcock Endowing these chairs will ensure the continuity of excellence and innovation across Chautauqua’s programs and Schools of Fine & Performing Arts. In 2015, Jack and Susie Turben demonstrated their love for Chautauqua and deep commitment to the visual arts by endowing a leadership position within the Visual Arts at Chautauqua Institution (VACI) galleries, a position currently held by Judy Barie. Their outright gift, in combination with a bequest intention, created the Susan and Jack Turben Director of VACI Galleries Endowment. “Now that we’ve become a nationally recognized program with top facilities, the Turbens’ gift is so critical,” said VACI Artistic Director Don Kimes. “There is no way any of us on the cur- rent staff can be replaced for the salaries we started with as young professionals.” “These resources will help free up other funds, which might go toward publicity or our shipping budget, which is critical to the more eclectic exhibitions we aspire to bring,” Barie said. “And from there, along with selling more art, we can also fund more scholarships for visual arts students. This gift will make a tremendous impact on the future growth of the galleries.” The first leadership position to be endowed during the Promise Campaign was the Richard and Emily Smucker Chair for Education, currently held by Sherra Babcock. “If the promise of Chautauqua is to be realized,” said Geof Follansbee, CEO of the Chautauqua Foundation, “we must assure that leadership is in place to exe- cute our vision. Our strategic plan’s call for innovation, engagement, sustainability, civility and inclusivity requires our director of education to bring extraordinary leadership capabilities with a keen sense of seizing opportunities for intergenerational, interdisciplinary and collaborative undertakings that further Chautauqua’s position as the pre-eminent provider of lifelong learning anywhere in the world. “Emily and Richard Smucker’s generosity enhances both the resources available to us and the stature of the position of vice president for education.” Those interested in learning more about opportunities and ways to endow leadership positions at Chautauqua are encouraged to contact Karen Blozie, senior major gifts officer, at 716357-6244 or kblozie@ciweb.org. Chautauqua welcomes Cleveland Foundation, The City Club of Cleveland as collaborators during Week Six, Aug. 1–5, themed ‘The Future of Cities’ Chautauqua Institution is pleased to welcome the Cleveland Foundation to our grounds this summer as the presenting sponsor of Week Six, “The Future of Cities” (Aug. 1–5). Connecting global discussions taking place in the Amphitheater with innovative work happening on the ground every day in Greater Cleveland, the Cleveland Foundation — in partnership with The City Club of Cleveland — will present a week of dialogue on initiatives designed to prepare Cleveland and the region to survive and thrive well into the 21st century and beyond. “We are delighted to welcome the Cleveland Foundation and the City Club to Chautauqua this summer and to strengthen the Institution’s longtime ties to Cleveland,” said Tom Becker, president of Chautauqua Institution. “The proud Northeast Ohioans who make up a large portion of our summer population will be highly engaged in the discussions of how to position great cities like Cleveland for sustainable futures.” Join the Cleveland Foundation and special guest speakers at 12:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday in the Athenaeum Hotel Parlor for thought-provoking conversations on how you can build your future city. Topics include “Connected Cities,” “Artistic Cities,” “Welcoming Cities” and “Green Cities.” These “Fred Talks” are moderated by Dan Moulthrop, CEO of the City Club. Boxed lunches will be available for purchase at the Athenaeum Hotel. “For decades now, community leaders have pursued strategies to revitalize downtown and many other parts of our city,” said Ronn Richard, president and CEO of the Cleveland Foundation. “At this moment, we’re finally seeing the kind of far-reaching economic opportunity we’ve been working toward taking root, and we want to share the Greater Cleveland model with the rest of the world.” As part of Chautauqua’s 2 p.m. Interfaith Lecture Series on “Religious The Future of Cities Presenting Sponsor A U G U S T 1 – 5 , 2 0 1 6 • C H A U TA U Q U A I N S T I T U T I O N * Boxed lunches available for purchase at the Athenaeum Hotel. For complete Week Six theme descriptions, additional information and details about the week visit CHQFUTUREOFCITIES.COM 10:45 a.m. 12:30 p.m. 2 p.m. 3:30 p.m. 8:15 p.m. David Simon, creator and writer, HBO's "The Wire" “Connected Cities” Fred Talk: Ronn Richard, president & CEO, Cleveland Foundation Diana Butler Bass, author, Grounded: Finding God in the World — A Spiritual Revolution Middle East Update: Geoffrey Kemp and Dennis Ross Sultans of Swing Amphitheater Athenaeum Hotel Parlor* Hall of Philosophy Hall of Philosophy Amphitheater T Sergio Fajardo, governor, Antioquia, Colombia; Carolina Barco, former Colombian ambassador to the U.S. “Artistic Cities” Fred Talk: Fred Bidwell, Raymond Bobgan, Lillian Kuri The Rev. Stephen Rowan, Rabbi Robert Nosanchuk, Ronn Richard Amphitheater Athenaeum Hotel Parlor* Hall of Philosophy W Michele Dunne, director, Middle East Program, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; Kareem Ibrahim, co-founder, Takween Integrated Community Development (Cairo) “Welcoming Cities” Fred Talk: Joe Cimperman, Fred Geis, India Pierce Lee The Rev. William Barber II, founder, Moral Mondays North Carolina Amphitheater Athenaeum Hotel Parlor* Th George W. “Mac” McCarthy, President and CEO, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy; Neema Kudva, Associate professor, Cornell University’s College of Architecture, Art, and Planning “Green Cities” Fred Talk: Lorry Wagner, Brian Zimmerman Amphitheater Athenaeum Hotel Parlor* Hall of Philosophy Hall of Philosophy M Monday 8/1 Tuesday 8/2 Wednesday 8/3 Thursday 8/4 F Friday 8/5 Old First Night (7:30 p.m.) Celebrating Chautauqua’s birthday Amphitheater Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards Author Presentation: Adrian Matejka, The Big Smoke Dance Innovations. Charlotte Ballet in Residence. Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux, director Hall of Philosophy Hall of Philosophy Amphitheater Timur Yuskaev, director, Imam and Muslim Community Leadership Program, Hartford Seminary CLSC Author Presentation: Chautauqua Symphony Brian Hart, Orchestra. JoAnn Falletta, The Bully of Order conductor; Marina Piccinini, flute Amphitheater Saskia Sassen, Robert S. Lynd Professor of sociology, Columbia University The Rev. John Philip “Building the Future City” Newell, scholar, Church of Interactive Conversation Scotland; Diana Butler Bass Straight No Chaser Amphitheater Hall of Philosophy Amphitheater Smith Wilkes C H A U TA U Q U A , N Y • C I W E B . O R G Voices in the City,” Richard will be in conversation on Tuesday with the Rev. Stephen Rowan, pastor of Bethany Baptist Church, and Rabbi Robert Nosanchuk, senior rabbi of Anshe Chesed Fairmount Temple. At 3:30 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 3, in the Hall of Philosophy, enjoy a special presentation by Adrian Matejka, author of The Big Smoke and winner of the 2014 Anisfield-Wolf Book Award for Fiction, presented in partnership with the Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle. For more than 80 years, the An- Schedule as of May 11, 2016. Venue subject to change. isfield-Wolf Book Awards, presented by the Cleveland Foundation, have recognized books that make important contributions to our understanding of racism and cultural diversity — it remains the only American juried book prize of its kind in the nation. At 3:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 5, in Smith Wilkes Hall, join the Cleveland Foundation, the Institution and the City Club for “Building the Future City,” an interactive reflection and dialogue session to help audience members take the learnings from throughout the se- ries back to their own cities. “There are so many compelling initiatives transforming cities around the world, and we are thrilled to collaborate with our friends at the Cleveland Foundation and in the Chautauqua community to connect those initiatives with the equally compelling work in Greater Cleveland,” Moulthrop said. For more information on “The Future of Cities” week at Chautauqua, visit chqfutureofcities.com. For more information about the Cleveland Foundation, visit clevelandfoundation.org. The Chautauquan Page 8 Spring 2016 LECTURES Jane Pauley Alan Alda DeRay Mckesson Joyce Banda Anna Maria Chávez Sara Seager Kareem Ibrahim Michael J. Sandel Newest lecturers add diverse voices to story of Week One Roger Rosenblatt & Friends: On Creative Expression Monday, June 27 Journalist and anchor Jane Pauley was one of the best-known morning television personalities during the 1970s and 1980s, and is author of Skywriting: A Life Out of the Blue. In 1976, she joined NBC’s “Today” show as a correspondent, and later co-anchored with Tom Brokaw and his replacement, Bryant Gumbel. Since 2014, Pauley has been contributing to “CBS Sunday Morning,” which she has also guest-hosted. The first comic strip artist to be awarded a Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning, Garry Trudeau is the creator of “Doonesbury,” which first appeared in 1970 and now runs in nearly 1,400 daily and Sunday newspapers around the world. In 2013 he created, produced and wrote “Alpha House,” a political sitcom for Amazon Studios. Note: Pauley and Trudeau replace previously announced presenter Joy Behar. Friday, July 1 Actor, director and writer Alan Alda has been nominated for an Oscar, 33 Emmy Awards and three Tony Awards, but is perhaps best known for his role as Hawkeye Pierce on the classic television series “M*A*S*H.” He is the author of Never Have Your Dog Stuffed, and Other Things I’ve Learned and Things I Overheard While Talking to Myself, both New York Times best-sellers. An award-winning photographer and author, Arlene Alda has written 19 books, the most recent of which is Just Kids From the Bronx Telling It Like It Is: An Oral History. Her photographs have appeared in The Saturday Evening Post, Vogue, Life and Today’s Health, for which she received a Chicago Graphics Communications Award for her photo essay “Allison’s Tonsillectomy.” Alda creates many of the photographs and illustrations for her children’s books. Note: Ann Patchett, previously announced for July 1, will now join Rosenblatt on Thursday, June 30. She replaces previously announced presenter Pete Hamill. Week Two Money and Power 2 016 Season T heme: What Does It Mean To Be Human? What does it mean to be human? In 2016, we comprehensively explore facets of the human experience, of the human project. When we say we’re dedicated to “the best in human values,” what do we mean? As human beings, we are capable of great good, and capable of being catalysts for destruction. We are stewards, explorers, healers, thinkers, feelers. We have a body, a brain, a fully-functioning computer of the highest caliber. But we are more than our machine. To be human is to love, to laugh, to hurt. It is to be self-aware if not self-actualized, and that grasping for something more, something higher, is perhaps the greatest expression of the human condition. Human beings are flawed, but we hold fierce potential. In this summer as we explore our history, our future, our hearts, bodies, minds and souls, we look at the state of being human today — offering an unflinching look at humanity at its worst, and celebrating what it means to be a people striving for its best. justice. A leading voice in the Black Lives Matter movement, he was a candidate for mayor of the City of Baltimore earlier this year. Mckesson has advocated for issues related to children, youth and families since he was a teen, including as chairman of Youth as Resources, a youth-led grant-making organization in Baltimore. Wednesday, July 13 The first female president of the Republic of Malawi, Joyce Banda was voted as Africa’s most powerful woman by Forbes for two years in a row. She is the founder of the Joyce Banda Foundation International, which guides projects that range from empowering women to providing for orphans’ education, and was instrumental in the formation of the African Federation of Women Entrepreneurs, the Council for the Economic Empowerment of Women in Africa, and the American & African Business Women’s Alliance. Thursday, July 14 Ellen J. Kullman served as the chief executive officer at E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company from 2009 to 2015 — the 19th executive, and first woman, to lead the company in its history. Kullman held numerous positions in the company, where she began working in 1998 as marketing manager in the medical imaging business. Prior to her appointment as DuPont president and CEO she served as executive vice president and a member of the company’s office of the chief executive. Friday, July 15 Mehrsa Baradaran is the J. Alton Hosch Associate Professor at the University of Georgia School of Law, where she teaches contracts and banking law. She is the author of How The Other Half Banks, which has been featured in The New York Times, The Atlantic, Slate and American Banker. Baradaran is also the author of a number of articles on consumers and banking for some of the country’s most prominent law journals and reviews. As a lifetime member of the Girl Scouts of the USA, Anna Maria Chávez began her career journey in the very same movement she now leads. Before she became CEO, Chávez held numerous posts in President Bill Clinton’s administration, including senior policy adviser to former U.S. Secretary of Transportation Rodney E. Slater. She also served as deputy chief of staff for urban relations and community development under Arizona’s then-Governor Janet Napolitano. In 2016, Chávez was named as one of the World’s 50 Greatest Leaders by Fortune. Week Three Moral Leadership in Action Week Four Our Search for Another Earth DeRay Mckesson is an organizer, activist, and educator focused primarily on issues of innovation, equity and Charles C. Mann is a journalist and author exploring the intersection of science, technology, history and com- Tuesday, July 5 Monday, July 11 Tuesday, July 19 merce. He is the author of 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus and 1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created. In 1491, Mann traces the history of exploration with new findings about the pre-Columbus Americas. The follow-up, 1493, published in 2011, presents another eyeopening scientific look and deeply engaging new history of the most momentous biological event since the death of the dinosaurs. Wednesday, July 20 A pioneer in the vast and unknown world of exoplanets (those that orbit stars other than the sun), Sara Seager is a planetary scientist and astrophysicist. Dubbed an “astronomical Indiana Jones,” Seager’s research ranges from the detection of exoplanet atmospheres to innovative theories about life on other worlds to development of novel space mission concepts. The Class of 1941 Professor of planetary science and physics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Seager also works in space instrumentation and space missions for exoplanets, including CubeSats, as a co-I on the MIT-led TESS, a NASA Explorer Mission to be launched in 2017. Friday, July 22 As chief technologist for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, David W. Miller serves as the agency’s principal adviser and advocate on NASA technology policy and programs. He concurrently serves as the Jerome C. Hunsaker Professor in the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics at MIT. Miller has worked with a broad range of NASA programs including the space shuttle, the International Space Station, the JWST Product Integrity Team, and the NASA CubeSat Launch Initiative. As NASA’s chief scientist, a role she has held since 2013, Ellen Stofan serves as principal adviser on the agency’s science programs and science-related strategic planning and investments. Prior to her appointment, Stofan was vice president of Proxemy Research and honorary professor in the Department of Earth Sciences at University College London in England. Stofan is an associate member of the Cassini Mission to Saturn Radar Team and a co-investigator on the Mars Express Mission’s MARSIS sounder. She also was principal investigator on the Titan Mare Explorer. Week Six The Future of Cities Tuesday, August 2 A Colombian-American diplomat, Carolina Barco has served as ambassador of Colombia to the United States from 2006 to 2010, and as minister of foreign affairs of Colombia from 2002 to 2007. Currently, Barco is coordinator of the Emerging and Sustainable Cities Platform at the Inter-American Development Bank, a role she has held since 2012. Note: Barco will join Sergio Fajardo, previously announced for Aug. 2, in conversation. Wednesday, August 3 Cairo-based architect and urban planner Kareem Ibrahim is co-founder of Takween Integrated Community Development, which works on issues including sustainable architecture, participatory planning, affordable housing, public infrastructure and urban revitalization throughout Egypt. In 1997, Ibrahim worked on the United Nations Development Programme’s Historic Cairo Rehabilitation Project. Ibrahim is one of the project leaders of TADAMUN, an initiative that supports and creates grassroots efforts for urban community engagement and rehabilitation. Note: Ibrahim will join Michele Dunne, previously announced for Aug. 3, in conversation. Thursday, August 4 George W. “Mac” McCarthy has been the fifth president and CEO of the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, a foundation and think tank with an international scope focusing on global urbanization, urban planning and tax policy, since 2014. Prior to that, McCarthy was an economist at the Ford Foundation. As director of Metropolitan Opportunity at the Ford Foundation, McCarthy supported collaborative regional efforts to overcome the social, economic and spatial isolation of disadvantaged populations living in and around metropolitan areas worldwide. As associate professor in the Department of City and Regional Planning at Cornell University’s College of Architecture, Art, and Planning, Neema Kudva focuses her research on international urbanization, particularly issues related to small cities and their regions, and on institutional structures for equitable planning and development at the local level. She is currently working on a monograph that focuses on a rapidly growing smaller cities and their region in southwestern India. Note: McCarthy and Kudva replace previously announced lecturer Shashi Tharoor. Week Seven Pushing Our Bodies’ Limits Wednesday, August 10 Nobel laureate Randy Schekman is an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and a Professor of Cell and Developmental Biology in the Department of Molecular and Cell Biology at the University of California, Berkeley. His research is focused The Chautauquan Spring 2016 Page 9 LECTURES 2 016 Lec t u r e T h e m e s Week One (June 27–July 1): Roger Rosenblatt & Friends: On Creative Expression David H. Petraeus Cécile McLorin Salvant each week on traffic inside cells, and how different cellular proteins “read” molecular signposts to find their way inside or outside of a cell. For his ground-breaking work on cell membrane vesicle trafficking, Schekman received the 2013 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine, a prize he shares with James Rothman and Thomas C. Südhof. Friday, August 12 Michael J. Sandel is the Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Professor of Government at Harvard University, where he has taught political philosophy since 1980. His courses include “Ethics, Biotechnology, and the Future of Human Nature,” “Ethics, Economics, and Law,” and “Globalization and Its Critics.” Sandel is a frequent Chautauqua lecturer, and the most recent of his many books, Justice: What’s the Right Thing to Do? and What Money Can’t Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets, are Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle selections. Week Eight War and Its Warriors: Contemporary Voices Thursday, August 18 One of the most prominent combat commanders in American history, General (Ret.) David H. Petraeus has led military campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan and served as the director of the Central Intelligence Agency from 2011 to 2012. Petraeus is a retired four-star general with a military career spanning 37 years, which culminated in six straight commands, five of which were in combat. Petraeus has received numerous honors and decorations, including four Defense Distinguished Service Medals, three Army Distinguished Service Medals, the Secretary of State Distinguished Service Medal, the Bronze Star Medal for Valor, the NATO Meritorious Service Medal, and the Combat Action Badge. He has also been decorated by 13 foreign countries. Note: Previously announced Week Eight lecturers Phil Klay, Kayla Williams and Wes Moore will now lecture on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, respectively. Moore will interview Petraeus on Thursday. Week Nine America’s Music with Wynton Marsalis and Jazz at Lincoln Center Wednesday, August Vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant first began classical piano studies at the age of 5, and started singing in the Miami Choral Society at 8. Upon moving to Aix-en-Provence, France, in 2007, to study at the Darius Milhaud Conservatory, she began learning about improvisation, instrumental and vocal repertoire ranging from the 1910s on, and sang with her first band. In 2009, after a series of concerts in Paris, she recorded her first album Cécile, with Jean-François Bonnel’s Paris Quintet. A year later, she won the Thelonious Monk competition in Washington, D.C. In collaboration with author Roger Rosenblatt, this week features a writer talking to writers about writing and the art of creative expression as a uniquely human quality. These conversations reveal much about the artistic process, the different demands dictated by the various genres, the influence of teachers and mentors, and the courage, discipline, imagination and originality necessary to a creative life. The week offers an abundance of both wit and wisdom and will touch upon fiction, memoir, poetry, editing, songwriting and more. Rosenblatt will first speak with Garry Trudeau, creator of “Doonesbury,” and Jane Pauley, author and television journalist, on Monday. A panel on literary publishing will follow Tuesday with Lorin Stein, editor-in-chief of The Paris Review, Pamela Paul, editor of The New York Times Book Review and David Lynn, editor of The Kenyon Review. Wednesday will feature a discussion on songwriting with Grammy-, Emmy- and Oscar-winning Alan and Marilyn Bergman. Thursday, Rosenblatt will welcome Bel Canto author Ann Patchett to the Amp stage. The week concludes Friday with a conversation between Rosenblatt, actor and author Alan Alda and author and photographer Arlene Alda. Week Two (July 4–8): Money and Power Money, it has been said, makes the world go ‘round. It plays a role in everything we do, from our groceries to our government. Money spent by our elected politicians reflects our values as a society. Are politicians held accountable to society’s values? Beyond government, we look at our economy and into the sectors of business, nonprofits and education. How much is something worth? We look at how we can buy power, and what that means for those who can’t afford it. Former Federal Election Commission Chairman and founding president of the Campaign Legal Center Trevor Potter opens the week Monday with a discussion of money in politics. On Tuesday, Merhsa Baradaran, author of How the Other Half Banks, will examine the history of imbedded inequality in the American banking system. Chairman and editor-in-chief of Forbes Steve Forbes will talk Wednesday about the economy and Wall Street. For Thursday, Fordham University’s Zephyr Teachout will share her work in anti-trust and anti-corruption advocacy. Former U.S. ambassador to India and senior strategic adviser for Issue One’s ReFormer’s Caucus Timothy J. Roemer will close the week Friday with a discussion of the power money can buy in elections. Week Three (July 11–15): Moral Leadership in Action Is it time to demand that all of our leaders are moral leaders? We look to the public and private sector, from technology to business, from government to education to explore what it means to have leaders dedicated to the public good. We hear from five moral leaders — some well known and some flying under the radar — to learn of their own daily practices, their personal disciplines. We focus on ways to make those precepts come alive in actual context, as this is more than a philosophical examination; this week is a call to moral action in all ways large and small. Black Lives Matter activist DeRay Mckesson will open the week Monday with a look at the modern civil rights movement. Tuesday, American Enterprise Institute President Arthur C. Brooks will discuss AEI’s work with political, intellectual and business leaders. Former president of Malawi Joyce Banda discusses her political and nonprofit work Wednesday. For Thursday, former DuPont CEO Ellen J. Kullman will talk about moral leadership in the business community. Finally, Girl Scouts of the USA CEO Anna Maria Chávez will close the week Friday with a look to the future and the next generation of moral leaders. Week Four (July 18–22): Our Search for Another Earth What would it mean to find “another earth,” another habitable or inhabited planet in the far reaches of space? What would it mean to transfer humanity from its birthplace? Are there other humans — and what would that mean for our own sense of humanness? Looking into the near and far future, what are the economic and political hurdles to space exploration? Space exploration has long captivated the human imagination. Is there something out there that we cannot imagine? To open the week Monday, Slate’s Phil Plait, known as “The Bad Astronomer,” will explore the promise such a search means for our humanity. Author of 1491: Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus Charles C. Mann on Tuesday will examine the history of finding new worlds. On Wednesday, Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Sara Seager takes audiences along on her search for exoplanets. Jill Tarter, the Bernard M. Oliver Chair at the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence Institute, will talk Thursday about SETI’s decades-long work to find intelligent life in the cosmos. NASA’s chief technologist David W. Miller and chief scientist Ellen Stofan will close the week Friday with a look at how their organization is navigating outer space. Week Five (July 25–29): People and Environment · In partnership with National Geographic How do we survive in a natural world we are increasingly out of touch with? How has our sense of our surroundings changed? How has the role of government in preservation changed? In this week we examine our surroundings and the ways we can preserve and save our home land and seas. Fifty years into the environmental movement, and 100 years after the National Parks were founded, we look to learn from our past, explore our environments and prepare for the future. Photographer Joel Sartore will open the week with a discussion of his project to document endangered biodiversity, The Photo Ark, on Monday. On Tuesday, Nalini Nadkarni, professor of biology at the University of Utah, will take audiences to the rainforest in an exploration of the ecosystem of the trees. Expedition photographer Cory Richards on Wednesday will share photos and stories from mountaintops around the world. On Thursday, underwater photographer David Doubilet will dive into the issues surrounding ocean conservation. National Geographic’s Special Investigations Unit chief correspondent Bryan Christy closes the week Friday with a look at curtailing wildlife trafficking. Week Six (August 1–5): The Future of Cities The realities of where we live are changing. We are a concentrated society, and by 2050, more than two-thirds of the world’s population will live in cities. Can urban centers keep up? Will the cities of the future be prosperous and equitable, or will they be impoverished slums? There are the basic needs of a city — housing, infrastructure, transportation — but what of the less tangible “needs” for a prosperous society? How can our future cities nourish and support the human condition? Journalist and creator of TV shows “The Wire” and “Treme” David Simon opens the week Monday with an examination of life in American cities. On Tuesday, Sergio Fajardo, the former governor of Antioquia, Colombia, will share the success story of Medellin’s turnaround in discussion with former Colombian ambassador to the United States Carolina Barco. On Wednesday, Michele Dunne, director of the Middle East Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, will focus the conversation on the future of Egypt’s cities with Cairo urban planner Kareem Ibrahim. Lincoln Institute of Land Policy CEO George W. “Mac” McCarthy will join Cornell scholar Neema Kudva for a Thursday discussion on Indian cities. On Friday, Saskia Sassen, the Robert S. Lynd Professor of Sociology at Columbia University, will conclude the week’s programming with a look at global cities. Week Seven (August 8–12): Pushing Our Bodies’ Limits In this week, we look at the limits of our humanness — our brain and our body — and how we are able to alter, push, or even defeat those limits. We have constantly pushed against our natural state, even our natural lifespan. We modify and enhance, overcome and transcend. Our natural states — our assigned gender, our disabilities, our aging — are up for debate. How do we, and how can we, push our boundaries and transcend our humanity? Nina Jablonski, Evan Pugh University Professor of anthropology at Penn State University, will open the week Monday with a look at her research on human evolution. CNN’s Fareed Zakaria will give an overview of all the ways human beings are using technology to push physical limitations on Tuesday. Wednesday, Nobel laureate Randy Schekman will present on ways genetic modification is changing our definition of human limitations. On Thursday, author of Redefining Realness Janet Mock will discuss her advocacy work and her experiences as a transgender woman. Harvard bioethicist Michael Sandel will close the week Friday with a recap of the week through an ethical lens. Week Eight (August 15–19): War and Its Warriors: Contemporary Voices Is war a condition of humanity? Throughout this week, we explore the anthropology of aggression, how war changes human beings and shapes the human story — all through the voices of contemporary warriors. As Americans, what are our justifications for war? What are our responsibilities to our veterans? Wars may end, but not necessarily for the men and women who fought. This is a week to honor those who have served, explore ways we can better serve them, and examine our consciences. On Monday, author of the National Book Award-winning Redeployment Phil Klay will discuss his experiences as a Marine veteran of the Iraq War. For Tuesday, Kayla Williams, the new director of the Center for Women Veterans at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, will talk about her experience as a woman in the service and as a military wife. Decorated Army veteran Wes Moore will discuss his work as a veterans’ advocate Wednesday. Moore will again take the stage Thursday for an interview with retired four-star general David H. Petraeus. Theater of War founder Bryan Doerries will close the week looking at his work with veterans and the arts. Week Nine (August 22–26): America’s Music with Wynton Marsalis and Jazz at Lincoln Center Musical and artistic expression is a key characteristic of being human. When it comes to our cultural identity, few things are distinctly American as our music, and jazz is America’s singular contribution to the arts. No music tells us more about ourselves as Americans — or as human beings. Wynton Marsalis, artistic director of Jazz at Lincoln Center, opens the week Monday, and Geoffrey C. Ward, co-author of Moving to Higher Ground: How Jazz Can Change Your Life, will speak Tuesday. Grammy-nominated jazz vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant will speak and sing Thursday on her experiences as a female jazz artist. Marsalis and Ward will close the week and the season Friday with a conversation on the week’s programming and the importance of jazz in American life and culture. The Chautauquan Page 10 Spring 2016 religion Rabbi Arthur Waskow Ralph Reed Sr. Joan Chittister Fr. José Gabriel Funes Karenna Gore The Rev. William Butler II Sr. Ilia Delio Shareda Hosein Interfaith Lecturers to offer worldly perspectives Week Two Money and Power Through a Spiritual and Ethical Lens Tuesday, July 5 Rabbi Arthur Waskow founded and directs The Shalom Center. In 2014 he received the Lifetime Achievement Award as a Human Rights Hero from T’ruah: The Rabbinic Call for Human Rights, and in 2015 The Forward named him one of the “most inspiring” rabbis. The most recent of the 22 books he has written are Freedom Journeys: The Tale of Exodus & Wilderness across Millennia, co-authored with Rabbi Phyllis Berman, and Down-to-Earth Judaism: Food, Money, Sex & the Rest of Life. Thursday, July 7 The Rev. John M. Buchanan, pastor emeritus of the Fourth Presbyterian Church of Chicago, where he was pastor for 26 years, is the distinguished former editor and publisher of The Christian Century magazine. He served as moderator of the 208th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (USA) in 1996–97 and has represented the Presbyterian Church as a member of the governing board of the National Council of Churches. Buchanan has received numerous doctorates and honors, has held several board memberships, and has written three books. Week Three Moral Leadership in Action Wednesday, July 13 Jim Wallis is president and founder of Sojourners, a non-profit faith-based organization, network and movement whose mission statement calls for “putting faith into action for social justice.” He is also editor-in-chief of Sojourners magazine and website. Wallis is a best-selling author, public theologian, national preacher, social activist, and international commentator on ethics and public life. His latest book, America’s Original Sin: Racism, White Privilege, and the Bridge to a New America, was released in January. Thursday, July 14 Ralph Reed is founder and chairman of the Faith & Freedom Coalition, a grassroots public policy organization with 1 million members and supporters with state affiliates in 32 states. He is also chairman and CEO of Century Strategies, a public relations and public affairs firm that has advised some of the world’s leading corporations. Reed served as a senior adviser to George W. Bush’s 2000 and 2004 presidential campaigns and chaired the Southeast Region for Bush-Cheney in 2004. The Wall Street Journal called him “perhaps the finest political operative of his generation.” Friday, July 15 Joan Chittister, OSB, is one of the most articulate social analysts and influential religious leaders of our age. For over 35 years she has been advocating for the critical questions impacting the global community. A Benedictine sister of Erie, Pennsylvania, Chittister is the author of more than 50 books. Currently she serves as co-chair of the Global Peace Initiative of Women, a partner organization of the U.N., facilitating a worldwide network of women peace builders. She has been a regular speaker at Chautauqua Institution since 1984. Daisy Khan is founder and executive director of the Women’s Islamic Initiative in Spirituality and Equality (WISE), a women-led organization committed to peacebuilding, equality and justice for Muslims around the globe. Khan has dedicated her life to promoting an expression of Islam based on cultural and religious harmony. She is currently spearheading a 200-page community-led guide, aimed at mobilizing Muslims to take a stand against violent extremism and develop narratives of peace. Week Four Searching for an Interstellar Spirituality? Tuesday, July 19 Joshua Ambrosius is an urbanist social scientist, policy and political analyst, and Red Letter Christian. He is an assistant professor of political science and core faculty member in the Master of Public Administration program at the University of Dayton. Ambrosius’ recent study of religious publics’ perspectives on space exploration has received a great deal of attention. His paper “Separation of Church and Space: Religious Influences on Public Support for U.S. Space Exploration Policy” appeared in the May 2015 issue of the journal Space Policy. Note: David Weintraub, previously announced for July 19, will now lecture on Monday, July 18. Wednesday, July 20 José Gabriel Funes, SJ, who grew up and now resides in Cordoba, Argentina, is the former director of the Vatican Observatory. He joined the Vatican Observatory Research Group as staff astronomer in March 2000 and was appointed director of the Vatican Observatory in August 2006 by Pope Benedict XVI. Funes specializes in extragalactic astronomy. His field of research includes the kinematics and dynamics of disk galaxies, the star formation in the local universe and the relationship between gravitational interaction and galactic activity. Thursday, July 21 Michael Waltemathe is senior lecturer in the Department of Protestant Theology at Ruhr-University Bochum in Germany. He also serves as an officer of the Astrosociology Research Institute, a non-profit educational organization dedicated to the development of astrosociology as a multidisciplinary academic field. Waltemathe is also a founding member of IASGAR, the International Academy for the Study of Gaming and Religion. He is co-editor of the anthology Touching the Face of the Cosmos: On the Intersection of Space Travel and Religion. Week Five A Theology of Ecology Week Six Religious Voices in the City Karenna Gore is director of the Center for Earth Ethics at Union Theological Seminary. Having previously worked as a lawyer for Simpson Thacher & Bartlett and for Sanctuary for Families, she also served as director of Community Affairs for Association to Benefit Children, where she now serves on the board. Gore has also worked as a writer, and is the author of Lighting the Way: Nine Women Who Changed Modern America. Ronn Richard is president and CEO of the Cleveland Foundation, which he has led since 2003. Within the last 30 years, he has held senior management positions in government, private enterprise and the nonprofit sector. He has served in various capacities at the American consulate general in Osaka/ Kobe, Japan; Matsushita Electric (Panasonic; and In-Q-Tel, the CIA’s venture capital fund. The Rev. Stephen Rowan is pastor of Bethany Baptist Church, located in Cleveland’s Glenville Community. A former assistant director of development and program officer for Faith Based/Digital Divide Programs at the Cleveland Foundation, he now serves as the chair of its board of directors. In addition, Rowan has served as chief deputy administrator for Cuyahoga County, and has served on local, regional, and national boards, committees and task forces that seek to build and sustain healthy communities. Rabbi Robert Nosanchuk is senior rabbi of Anshe Chesed Fairmount Temple in Beachwood, Ohio. Previous to his arrival at Anshe Chesed in 2009, Nosanchuk was honored together with Imam Mohammed Magid as one of the 2009 Washingtonians of the Year in the Washingtonian magazine, and he received a much-coveted Best of Reston award from the relief-organization Reston Interfaith for his work in creating understanding and dialogue between the Jewish and Muslim communities. Monday, July 25 Tuesday, July 26 Rabbi Ellen Bernstein founded Shomrei Adamah, Keepers of the Earth, the first national Jewish environmental organization, in 1988 after finding her way back to Judaism through her interests in wilderness and ecology. Dubbed the “birthmother of the Jewish environmental movement” and “a pioneering thinker who helped define modern Jewish environmentalism,” she is author or editor of three books on Judaism and ecology: Let the Earth Teach You Torah, Ecology & the Jewish Spirit and The Splendor of Creation: A Biblical Ecology. Wednesday, July 27 Imam Abdulaziz Eddebbarh is retired from Los Alamos National Laboratory, where he worked on projects dealing with nuclear waste disposal, nuclear contamination cleanup, and international nuclear diplomacy for nuclear non-proliferation. Since his arrival to the U.S. in 1979, he has being working on promoting cultural understanding and interfaith harmony, and Islamic appreciation and perspectives regarding the environment and the natural world. Thursday, July 28 Susan M. Darlington is professor of anthropology and Asian studies at Hampshire College. Her research focuses on socially engaged Buddhism, with particular attention to environmentalism and Buddhism in Thailand. Based on over 20 years of research, her book, The Ordination of a Tree: The Thai Buddhist Environmental Movement, critically examines the ways in which Buddhist monks use their interpretations of the Buddha’s teachings to promote ecological awareness and environmental actions. Friday, July 29 The Rev. Gerald L. Durley is pastor emeritus of Providence Missionary Baptist Church and a renowned speaker on civil and human rights issues, as well as for global warming and climate change discussions across the country. Durley argues that the ecological movement is similar to the civil rights movement, and that everyone must be involved, knowledgeable, and aware. He appears in the film “The Great Warming,” has participated in the Climate Leadership Retreat at the Garrison and has testified before the Environmental Protection Agency. Tuesday, August 2 Wednesday, August 3 The Rev. William Barber II is the architect of the Forward Together Moral Fusion movement that gained national acclaim with its Moral Monday protests at the North Carolina General Assembly in 2013. These weekly actions drew tens of thousands of North Carolinians and other moral witnesses to the state legislature. A highly sought-after speaker, he has been invited to speak to hundreds of national and state conferences. Barber was elected president of the North Carolina Conference of NAACP Branches in 2005. His latest book is The Third Reconstruction. Thursday, August 4 Timur R. Yuskaev is associate professor of contemporary Islam, co-editor of The Muslim World journal, and co-director of the Islamic Chaplaincy Program and director of the Imam and Muslim Community Leadership program at Hartford Seminary. His forthcoming book, Speaking Qur’an: an American Scripture, examines contemporary written and oral interpretations of the Qur’an. This project highlights his academic interest in religion as lived reality, past and current, which he approaches through the lens of Qur’anic hermeneutics, American religious history, and memory studies. The Chautauquan Spring 2016 Page 11 r e l i g i o n / E d u c at i o n 2 016 Se a so n Chaplains-in-residence Week One June 26–July 1 Week Two July 3–8 The chaplains invited for the 2016 Season represent intended theological, denominational, gender, racial and ethnic diversity, as well as ministerial context. The philosophy of the Department of Religion, from the beginning, has embraced and manifested the belief that an expression of these diversities is key to Chautauqua’s future. Fr. Greg Boyle Founder and executive director, Homeboy Industries The Rev. Barbara Brown Taylor Week Three July 10–15 Week Four July 17–22 Week Five July 24–29 Week Six July 31–August 5 The Rev. Raphael Warnock The Rev. Tony Campolo The Rev. Otis Moss III Senior pastor, The Historic Ebenezer Baptist Church, Atlanta Fdr. and president, Evangelical Assoc. for the Promotion of Education Senior pastor, Trinity UCC, Chicago The Rev. John Philip Newell Week Seven August 7–12 Week Eight August 14–19 Week Nine August 21–26 Final Sunday Aug. 28 The Rev. Thomas Long The Rev. Amy K. Butler The Rev. Calvin O. Butts Bandy Professor of preaching emeritus, Emory University Senior minister, The Riverside Church, New York City The Rev. Dwight D. Andrews Week Seven The Limits and Transcendence of Our Humanity Tuesday, August 9 James “J.” Hughes is a bioethicist and sociologist who serves as the associate provost for Institutional Research, Assessment and Planning for the University of Massachusetts Boston, and as the executive director of the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies, which he co-founded with Oxford philosopher Nick Bostrom. Hughes is author of Citizen Cyborg: Why Democratic Societies Must Respond to the Redesigned Human of the Future, editor of the Journal of Posthuman Studies and associate editor of the Journal of Evolution and Technology. Wednesday, August 10 Robert M. Geraci is professor of religious studies at Manhattan College. His research and teaching engage religion, science and technology, including transhumanism. Geraci is the author of Apocalyptic AI: Visions of Heaven in Robotics, Artificial Intelligence, and Virtual Reality and Virtually Sacred: Myth and Meaning in World of Warcraft and Second Life. He is currently writing his third book, an exploration of religion, science, and technology in contemporary India. Thursday, August 11 Hava Tirosh-Samuelson is Irving and Miriam Lowe Professor of modern Judaism, director of Jewish studies, and professor of history at Arizona State University. Tirosh-Samuelson’s research focuses on Jewish intellectual history, science, religion and technology, and religion and ecology. She is editor of Judaism and Ecology: Created World and Revealed World; Women and Gender in Jewish Philosophy; Judaism and the Phenomenon of Life: The Legacy of Hans Jonas; and Building Better Humans? Refocusing the Debate on Transhumanism. Friday, August 12 Professor of religion, Piedmont College Ilia Delio, OSF, holds the Josephine C. Connelly Endowed Chair in Theology at Villanova University. Delio lectures nationally and internationally on areas of science and religion, including evolution and artificial intelligence. Her work includes “Humanity on the Threshold: Religious Essays on Transhumanism,” and her most recent book, Personal Transformation and A New Creation: The Spiritual Revolution of Beatrice Bruteau, will be published this year. Week Eight The Ethical Realities of War Thursday, August 18 A proponent of peace and interfaith relations, retired lieutenant colonel Shareda Hosein served in the U.S. Army Reserves for 35 years. In her former post as the cultural engagement officer, Hosein provided military colleagues a more insightful understanding of Muslims and the diverse Islamic cultures that our missions overseas have affected. Currently serving as the Muslim chaplain to the Greater Boston area, in association with the Islamic Society of Boston Cultural Center, Hosein is co-founder of the national Association of Muslim Chaplains. Friday, August 19 Paul K. Chappell graduated from West Point in 2002, was deployed to Iraq, and left active duty in November 2009 as a captain. He is the author of the Road to Peace series, a seven-book series about waging peace, ending war, the art of living and what it means to be human. Chappell serves as the Peace Leadership Director for the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. Speaking across the country and internationally, he also teaches courses and workshops on Peace Leadership. Week Nine America’s Spiritual Songbook Monday, August 22 The Rev. Dwight Andrews, Week Nine’s guest chaplain, is senior pastor of First Congregational Church UCC in Atlanta and an associate professor of music theory and African American music at Emory University. He has appeared on more than 25 jazz and “new music” recordings. Jared Jacobsen is Chautauqua’s organist and coordinator of worship and sacred music. He serves in the offseason as director of music at First Lutheran Church of San Diego. Thursday, August 25 Michael Weis joined Brotherhood Synagogue in Manhattan after having served as cantor for the Highland Park Conservative Temple-Congregation Anshe Emet in Highland Park, New Jersey, as well as ritual director and Bar/ Bat Mitzvah coordinator at The Jewish Center in Princeton, New Jersey. Brotherhood Synagogue is a kehillah kedoshah (holy community) in which inclusiveness and diversity are living ideals that are woven into its mission. Senior minister, First Congregational Church UCC, Atlanta Minister and scholar, Church of Scotland Pastor, The Abyssinian Baptist Church, New York City 2 016 Sacr e d So n g Se rv i ce s June 26 “I Sing Because I’m Happy” July 3 Favorite Hymns of Our Presidents July 10 Special guests: The Historic Ebenezer Baptist Choir, Atlanta July 17Transformations July 24 Special Guests: Voices of Trinity from Trinity UCC, Chicago July 31 We Are the Family of Abraham! Aug. 7 In Remembrance: Chautauqua Sings the Fauré Requiem Aug. 14 “I hate war!”: An Evening Inspired by FDR Aug. 21 An Evening with Alice Parker, America’s Song Leader Aug. 28 “Within this Tent”: Final Chautauqua Thoughts D E partment o f E ducation 2 016 S peci a l Pr o g r a m s Monday, June 27 · 3:30 p.m. · Hall of Philosophy Special presentation. Roger Rosenblatt, author, Thomas Murphy Monday, July 4 · 4 p.m. · Hall of Philosophy Lincoln Applied Ethics Series. Mary Feeney, associate professor and Lincoln Professor of Ethics in Public Affairs, Arizona State University Thursday, July 7 · 12:15 p.m. · Hall of Christ Former Congressional leaders program. Stan Lundine, former U.S. congressman, New York; former Lieutenant Governor of New York. Bill Clinger, former U.S. congressman, Pennsylvania. Timothy J. Roemer, former U.S. congressman, Indiana. Amory Houghton Jr., former U.S. congressman, New York Monday, July 11 · 12:15 p.m. · Hall of Philosophy Lincoln Applied Ethics Series. Jason Robert, director of Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, Arizona State University Monday, July 11 · 4 p.m. · Hall of Philosophy The 12th Annual Robert H. Jackson Center Lecture on the Supreme Court. Tracy L. Meares, Walton Hale Hamilton Professor of Law at Yale University Friday, July 22 · 4 p.m. · Hall of Philosophy Special lecture. “National Nominating Convention 2016.” David Kozak, distinguished professor of public policy, Gannon University Wednesday, July 27 · 3:30 p.m. · Hall of Philosophy Middle East Update. Geoffrey Kemp, director of Regional Strategic Programs, Center for the National Interest Monday, August 1 · 3:30 p.m. · Hall of Philosophy Middle East Update. Geoffrey Kemp and Dennis Ross, William Davidson Distinguished Fellow, The Washington Institute Wednesday, Aug. 3 · 3:30 p.m. · Hall of Philosophy Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards Author Presentation. In partnership with the Cleveland Foundation. Adrian Matejka, author, The Big Smoke Friday, Aug. 5 · 3:30 p.m. · Smith Wilkes Hall Interactive conversation. “Building the Future City.” Presented in partnership with the Cleveland Foundation and The City Club of Cleveland Monday, Aug. 8, & Monday, Aug 15 · 4 p.m. · Hall of Philosophy Lincoln Applied Ethics Series. Brad Allenby, Lincoln Professor of Engineering and Ethics, Arizona State University Friday, Aug. 19 · 12:30 p.m. · Smith Wilkes Hall Veterans Forum. Featuring Amphitheater speakers and special guests The Chautauquan Page 12 Spring 2016 literary arts T h e C h a u t a u q u a P r i z e 2 0 1 6 Finalists · See the winner announcement at ciweb.org/prize It’s What I Do: A Photographer’s Life of Love and War Off the Radar: King of the A Father’s Secret, Gypsies: Stories a Mother’s Heroism, Lenore Myka and a Son’s Quest BkMk Press Lynsey Addario Cyrus Copeland Penguin Press Blue Rider Press War photographer Lynsey Addario’s memoir It’s What I Do is the story of how the relentless pursuit of truth, in virtually every major theater of war in the 21st century, has shaped her life. Chautauqua readers called it “inspirational and horrifying,” “one of the best books I have read in a long time,” and “well written from the first word to the last. … It is of both a high-quality literary value while being a book that is hard to put down.” Cyrus Copeland’s father was an American executive arrested in Iran for spying at the time of the 1979 hostage crisis, then put on trial for his life in a Revolutionary Court. Off the Radar is a memoir and mystery, a spy story and a tale of the relationship between father and son. The book is “an intriguing story well told,” readers said, lauding it as being an “outstanding” work of “timeless and timely material.” In the short story collection King of the Gypsies, Lenore Myka takes the reader through numerous facets of Romanian life, namely the struggles of everyday individuals to overcome the ghosts inherited from the country’s communist past. The characters “inhabiting the pages linger in the mind long after the reader has closed the book,” one reviewer said. From teachers to prostitutes, the book contains “such multifaceted portrayals that I was always surprised the by the uniqueness of each story.” C h au tau q ua L i t e r a r y a n d Sc i e n t i f i c C i r c l e 2 0 1 6 S elections Granada: A Pomegranate in the Hand of God Nagasaki: Life After Nuclear War No. 4 Imperial Lane Susan Southard Jonathan Weisman Steven Nightingale Viking Books Twelve Books Counterpoint Press Susan Southard has spent years interviewing hibakusha (“bomb-affected people”) in Japan, and in Nagasaki, she ushers readers from the morning the atomic bomb was dropped on the city to life in Nagasaki today. In researching the physical, emotional and social challenges of post-atomic life, Southard created “a cleareyed, honest, impeccably researched and beautifully written book.” It’s a book, one reader said, “that has the potential to change minds and hearts.” From post-punk Brighton to revolutionary Angola, Jonathan Weisman’s No. 4 Imperial Lane travels time and the globe, exploring the effects of colonialism through the eyes of an unexpected American stranger. At the intersection of the damaged lives in a waning aristocracy, Weisman has created a fictional story in a historical world, filled with “details, nuances, facts and feelings that are thoughtful and spot-on,” one reader said. Granada resident Steven Nightingale, in his nonfiction work bearing the name of his adopted home, excavates the rich past of the Spanish city and of Al-Andalus, finding a story of utopian ecstasy, political and religious intrigue and exaltation, and scorching anguish. Readers lauded Granada as a “spectacular showcase” of Nightingale’s talents, and called Nightingale “a rare combination of careful researcher, thorough reporter, gifted storyteller and poet.” These three selections complete the 2016 Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle reading list. Unless otherwise noted, CLSC author presentations take place at 3:30 p.m. Thursdays at the Hall of Philosophy. See the full list at ciweb.org/clsc. Week Two Thursday, July 7 Week Three Thursday, July 14 Week Seven Thursday, August 11 Strangers Drowning Killing a King When Breath Becomes Air Larissa McFarquhar Dan Ephron What does it mean to devote yourself wholly to helping others? In Strangers Drowning, Larissa MacFarquhar seeks out people living lives of extreme ethical commitment and tells their deeply intimate stories. A couple adopts two children in distress. But then they think: If they can change two lives, why not more? They adopt 20. In another example, a woman believes that if she spends money on herself, rather than donate it to buy life-saving medicine, then she’s responsible for the deaths that result. She lives on a fraction of her income, but wonders: when is compromise self-indulgence and when is it essential? We honor such generosity and high ideals; but when we call people do-gooders there is skepticism in it, even hostility. Why do moral people make us uneasy? Through its sympathetic and beautifully vivid storytelling, Strangers Drowning confronts us with fundamental questions about what it means to be human. Moving and provocative, the book challenges us to think about what we value most, and why. A riveting story about the murder that changed a nation, Killing a King: The Assassination of Yitzhak Rabin and the Remaking of Israel tells the parallel stories of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and his stalker, Yigal Amir, as one of them planned political deals he hoped would lead to peace, and the other plotted murder. Rabin’s assassination remains the single most consequential event in Israel’s recent history, and one that fundamentally altered the trajectory for both Israel and the Palestinians. Dan Ephron covered both the rally where Rabin was killed and the subsequent murder trial. Through the prism of the assassination, much about Israel today comes into focus, from the paralysis in peacemaking to the fraught relationship between current Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Barack Obama. Based on Israeli police reports, interviews, confessions, and the cooperation of both Rabin’s and Amir’s families, Killing a King is a tightly coiled narrative that reaches an inevitable, shattering conclusion. Paul Kalanithi Presented by Lucy Kalanithi At the age of 36, on the verge of completing a decade’s worth of training as a neurosurgeon, Paul Kalanithi was diagnosed with stage IV lung cancer. One day he was a doctor treating the dying, and the next he was a patient struggling to live. The New York Times best-seller When Breath Becomes Air chronicles Kalanithi’s transformation from a naïve medical student “possessed,” as he wrote, “by the question of what, given that all organisms die, makes a virtuous and meaningful life” into a neurosurgeon at Stanford working in the brain, the most critical place for human identity, and finally into a patient and new father confronting his own mortality. Paul Kalanithi died in March 2015, but his book is a life-affirming reflection on the challenge of facing death and on the relationship between doctor and patient, from a man who became both. Lucy Kalanithi, his wife, will present When Breath Becomes Air for the CLSC audience. C LS C Y o u n g R e a d e r s 2 0 1 6 selections Week One: Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson Week Two: Brilliant by Roddy Doyle Week Three: March: Book One and March: Book Two by John Lewis Week Four: The Thing About Jellyfish by Ali Benjamin Week Five: Navigating Early by Clare Vanderpool Week Seven: Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt Week Eight: Pax by Sara Pennypacker Week Nine: Echo by Pam Muñoz Ryan Spring 2016 The Chautauquan Page 13 Literary Arts Writers’ Center offers inspiration for writers of all kinds, at all levels By Clara Silverstein Program Director, Chautauqua Writers’ Center Using pens and notebooks, writers try to capture their impressions of Chautauqua each summer as painstakingly as artists with easels. The Chautauqua Writers’ Center, now in its 28th year, helps guide anyone who wants to use language as an art form. Throughout the nine-week Chautauqua season, the Writers’ Center offers workshops in many genres of creative writing, including poetry, memoir, fiction, children’s literature and playwriting. Whether you’re just starting to write after a long career in another field or finishing a booklength manuscript, you can find inspiration as well as guidance in our programs. Published writers, many of whom have won top national literary awards, lead all of our workshops. The Writers’ Center also welcomes Chautauquans to the porch of the Literary Arts Center each week for our readings and literary lectures. Every Sunday at 3:30 p.m., our writers-in-residence read from their work; it’s a good sample of contemporary literature being published today. The writers share their insights about literature and writing in our lunchtime lecture series on Tuesdays and Fridays at 12:15 p.m. This summer, we introduce poet Molly Peacock, author of six volumes of poetry and co-creator of Poetry-in- Motion on New York’s subways, to Chautauqua for a master class on the sonnet during Week Seven. Other writers who this summer teach for the first time at the Chautauqua Writers’ Center include poet Charles Coe, memoirist and essayist Emily Fox Gordon, novelist Leslie Daniels and nonfiction writer Linda K. Wertheimer. Novelist Rachel DeWoskin teaches a one-session fiction workshop during Week Four. Returning to the Writers’ Center during Week One this year is Philip Gerard, co-editor of Chautauqua, who teaches a series of individual nonfiction workshops and also performs a special concert from his newly released CD, American Anthem. Zayd Dohrn returns for a second year in collaboration with the Chautauqua Theater Company to teach playwriting during Week Four. Our returning poets include Phil Terman, co-director of the Chautauqua Writers’ Festival, as well as Aimee Nezhukumatathil, Gregory Donovan, Jim Daniels, Nicole Cooley, Kent Gramm and Neil Shepard. Prose writers Kim T. Griswell, Ann Hood, Tom Noyes, Nancy McCabe and Ron MacLean round out our roster of returning faculty members. We welcome your visit to the Literary Arts Center to take a workshop, to hear our authors read from their work, and to listen to our literary lectures. For a full listing of our programs, see the Special Studies catalog or visit our web site, writers.ciweb.org. 2 016 W r i te r s’ Ce n te r Wo r k s h o p s All workshops meet on the second floor of the Literary Arts Center at Alumni Hall. Register through Special Studies, call the Ticket Office at 716-357-6250 or visit chqtickets.com. Writer biographies and course descriptions are available online at writers.ciweb.org. Week One · 6/27–7/1 Prose: Philip Gerard, “Turning Fact into Story” Poetry: Philip Terman, “Writing Where We Are at Chautauqua” Week Two · 7/4–7/8 Prose: Kim T. Griswell, “Finding Your Voice” Poetry: Aimee Nezhukumatathil, “Bringing the Outside In: Poetry and Wonder” Week Three · 7/11–7/15 Prose: Ann Hood, “Writing the Personal Essay” Poetry: Charles Coe, “Writing about the People in Your Life” Week Four · 7/18–7/22 Prose: Emily Fox Gordon, “Retrieving Lost Worlds” Prose (7/20): Rachel DeWoskin, “Making Your Story Move: Characters in Conflict” Poetry: Gregory Donovan, “Writing out of Your Mind: Using Science, History, and Imagination” Playwriting Workshop: Zayd Dohrn, “The Great American Drama: Writing Plays that Matter” Week Five · 7/25–7/29 Prose: Tom Noyes, “Writing in Place” Poetry: Jim Daniels, “Advanced Poetry Workshop” Week Six · 8/1–8/5 Prose: Leslie Daniels, “Get Your Characters in Trouble!” Poetry: Nicole Cooley, “Let’s Get Lost While Writing Poems” Week Seven · 8/8–8/12 Prose: Linda K. Wertheimer, “Writing Provocative Stories about Religion” Poetry (8/8): Molly Peacock, “Sonnet Sublime: Fourteen Lines Transcend Their Limits” (Master Class) Week Eight · 8/15–8/19 Prose: Nancy McCabe, “Fun with Story Structure” Poetry: Kent Gramm, “Writing from the Bible” Week Nine · 8/22–8/26 Prose: Ron MacLean, “Raising the Stakes in Stories” Poetry: Neil Shepard, “Getting Inside the Music of Poetry and All That Jazz” CLAF continues support for Chautauqua’s bustling literary arts community By Fred Zirm Chautauqua Literary Arts Friends In the past I’ve written about the relationship between the Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle and the Chautauqua Literary Arts Friends, about how the former helped give birth to the latter and how they are two sides to the same coin: one emphasizing the reading part of the literary process and the other stressing the writing end. This time I’d like to give a very brief history of the Writers’ Center and its support organization. In the beginning they were one and the same; Mary Jean Irion, with the kind support of the CLSC, established the Writers’ Center and a group of volunteers helped her administer its courses and publish the literary journal Chautauqua. When the Institution and the Writ- ers’ Center agreed that the Institution should take over the program and the journal, the support organization briefly changed its name to Chautauqua Readers and Writers. This name, however accurate it may have been in describing its members, proved to be confusing since Chautauqua already had a group promoting reading in the CLSC. At that point, the organization chose Chautauqua Literary Arts Friends as its new name, but one other strong candidate was Friends of the Writers’ Center, or some variant of that. This name made some sense since many of the Friends’ activities revolve around the Writers’ Center’s programs. In this case, though, the Writers’ Center and the Chautauqua Literary Arts Friends are more a Venn diagram than two sides of the same coin. The Friends do directly support or build on many parts of the Writers’ Center’s program. With the Writers’ Center, we co-sponsor the Sunday readings by each week’s writers-in-residence and provide the refreshments for the reception that follows. We also co-sponsor the annual Authors Among Us Book Fair on Bestor Plaza (Sunday, July 10). In addition, we provide assistants for the Writers’ Center workshop courses. These assistants take care of the nuts and bolts of making announcements, compiling a contact sheet, and answering questions that teachers and participants may have. Besides these overlapping activities, however, the Friends also oversee or co-sponsor many others. Independent of the Writers’ Center, we run the Authors’ Hour on Thursday evenings at the Brick Walk Cafe, the Open Mic session every Sunday evening in the Prose Room of the Literary Arts Center at Alumni Hall, the yearly Dinner with Friends gathering of those interested in the literary arts (June 26), and the annual writing contest (deadline Aug. 15). In conjunction with the Institution’s Department of Education, we also sponsor the Robert Pinsky Favorite Poem Project at the Hall of Philosophy (Aug. 2). Since “Friends of the Writers’ Center and Sponsor of Lots of Other Writing Activities” was too unwieldy, we stuck with Chautauqua Literary Arts Friends. It may be a little general, but it is who we are. If you want to learn more about us and our activities, just check out ciweb. org/literary-arts/literary-arts-friends, email any questions to CHQLIT@aol.com, or attend the informative Dinner with Friends on June 26. CLSC Alumni Association keeps connection to past while looking to future By Dick Karslake CLSC Alumni Association The CLSC Alumni Association is looking forward to a successful, traditional summer season in 2016. The various pieces are falling into place to move ahead measurably with most of our stated objectives. First, the historic banner collection will be moved from its winter locale to its summer viewing arrangement within the Literary Arts Center at Alumni Hall. The busy, responsible Banner Committee, under the chairmanship of Charlotte Crittenden ’67 will complete this task during the week before the season starts. Docent Tours of the Alumni Hall banners (and Pioneer Hall) will be conducted every Monday and Wednesday. Each of our docents is unique and conducts his or her own tour. All of them are fascinating. Alumni Hall is in the best shape ever to maintain this priceless collection in a constant-temperature, low-humidity environment. This summer will be our third year hosting high school seniors from Chautauqua County for a weeklong Chautauqua experience. This scholarship program continues to expand and we expect four to six students this year. They receive their gate pass and have tuition paid for some writing and/or other courses while enjoying the hospitality of a Chautauqua family for the week. So far, this has been a wonderfully satisfying program for all involved. Progress is also being made in our effort to connect more closely with CLSC chapters around the world; our effort to jointly support the greater CLSC continues to expand. The oldest continuous reading circle, the Abby A. Hatch CLSC Circle of Griggsville, Illinois, now has a commemorative brick in the front walk leading to Alumni Hall as well as graduates currently receiving awards for post-graduate reading levels. It is predicted that others will follow shortly. The Great American Picnic on Sunday, July 17, will again be a major community event this year. And, of course, Recognition Day week remains the most traditional week in the Chautauqua schedule with the CLSC Baccalaureate and Vigil on Sunday, July 31, Old First Night on Tuesday, Aug. 2, and the CLSC graduation services with all its hoopla and traditional ceremonial excitement on Wednesday, Aug. 3. It’s a glorious week! And if you really want to know and understand the CLSC, watch for the CLSC history, newly penned by Mary Lee Talbot ’74, that is currently going through its final editing process. It will most likely be available in 2017. Stop in at Alumni Hall this summer. If you are an alumnus or an alumnae, sign the old registration book, update your information and pay class, association and/or Guild of Seven Seal dues. Also, do not miss out on the various events — like the GAP, the Vigil, Recognition Day, or Bryant Day. Or simply take a close look at the bricks on the front walk. See who has bricks and check at the front desk inside Alumni Hall as to how to get your own. See you this summer. The Chautauquan Page 14 Spring 2016 t h e at e r CTC prepares a Shrew’d program for 2016 theatergoers Vivienne Benesch, Andrew Borba and Sarah Clare Corporandy have just returned from their audition and interview tour, criss-crossing the country in search of the next generation of theater artists to bring to the arduous idyll of Chautauqua’s 2016 season. A new play has been commissioned and written, the plays for the New Play Workshops have been chosen, casts are complete, designers are designing and the seeds of the 2016 CTC season are beginning to sprout. “This is always one of the most energized and exciting times for us, as we see the conservatory, company members, play selection, and design teams come into sharper focus,” Benesch, coartistic director. “In the rhythm of our seasons, we plan during the winter and those plans begin to bloom in the spring.” In the Next Room (or the vibrator play) Opening the mainstage season is Sarah Ruhl’s humorous and insightful look at the beginning of electricity and the end of women being kept in the dark. “Sarah is one of America’s greatest living writers,” said director Larissa Kokernot, a CTC newcomer, “and this risqué play investigates women’s issues, parenting, race relations, artistic freedom and electricity in a new and delightfully ‘hysterical’ way.” A month of new work Anchoring the middle of the season, Zayd Dohrn’s The Profane, our third play commissioned by CTC and the Chautauqua Writers’ Center, will receive a full workshop production in the Bratton Theater before moving onto an official world premiere in New York City at Playwright’s Horizons next winter. The play, about a firstgeneration immigrant whose liberal, seemingly tolerant worldview is tested when his daughter falls in love with the son of a conservative Muslim family, will be directed by Benesch. “I’m so proud to be directing this intelligent, topical and challenging play as part of my last season as artistic director,” she said. “The growth of new-play development has been one of the most significant successes of my tenure here and to have Dohrn’s com- the Amphitheater on July 28. Underscored by Gorecki’s beautifully haunting Third Symphony, this piece will explore, through voice, poetry and the projected image, the relationships of children and their mothers during wartime. “Working with Rossen and the CSO last year was such a rewarding experience, we jumped at the chance to create a new inter-arts piece with them and continue a collaboration that I hope is only in its infancy,” Borba said. The Taming of the Shrew CTC will finish their season with a new look at Shakespeare’s old story. “The play is intended to be a comedy, but the positive changes in the roles of women in society have made it hard to produce this play today and find it anything but misogynist,” says director Borba, “By inverting the genders — women will play the men’s roles and the men will play the women’s roles — we hope to observe and poke fun at gender roles today, and rediscover the comedy and romance underlying this funny play. Besides, after all these years, it’s just fair that the men have to wear the corsets and high heels for once.” Friends of Theater volunteers ready packed schedule of CTC support, community events 2016 Season By Linda Nelson Friends of Chautauqua Theater In the Next Room (or the vibrator play) At the end-of-season meeting of Friends of Chautauqua Theater on August 18, 2015, several new officers were elected for two-year terms. They will join with previously elected officers who continue to serve in overlapping terms. The full board and appointed committee chairs for 2016 will include: by Sarah Ruhl July 1–July 10 The Profane by Zayd Dohrn July 22–July 31 The Taming of the Shrew by William Shakespeare August 12–19 The New Play Workshop Tiny Houses • July 14–16 by Chelsea Marcatel The Glow Overhead • August 3–5 by Nick Gandiello mission already headed to one of the best off-Broadway companies in the country solidifies CTC’s commitment to fostering great new work at Chautauqua that makes its way well beyond the gates.” Bookending The Profane in Weeks Three and Six will be two New Play Workshop Signature Staged Readings. The plays chosen for the 2016 Signature Staged Readings are Chelsea Marcatel’s Tiny Houses, a comedy that follows a couple’s attempt to build a relationship as they build a small house, and Nick Gandiello’s The Blameless, a heartfelt drama of tragedy and forgiveness after a high school shooting. “Through their vastly different plays, these two playwrights explore and reflect many of the diverse challenges facing us today, and we are privileged to be able to present these stories in their formative stages to our Chautauqua audience,” said Corporandy, the company’s managing director. And then there is “Symphony or Sorrowful Songs.” After the Ellis Island success of last season, co-Artistic Director Andrew Borba is re-teaming with Rossen Milanov and the CSO for a one-night-only performance in Photo: Zach Cleland Watch the Daily for information about more CTC events: • Brown Bags: Thursdays, 12:15 p.m. • Bratton Theater • ‘fore-Play: July 3, July 24, Aug. 14, 7 p.m. • Elizabeth S. Lenna Hall • Behind-the-Scenes Tours: July 5, July 26, Aug. 15, 1 p.m. • Bratton Theater • Pax Materna: July 28, 8:15 p.m. • Amphitheater • Chau-talk-One: Aug. 16, 7 p.m. • Bratton Theater • Bratton Late Night Cabaret: Aug. 19, 10:30 p.m. • Bratton Theater For tickets or more information: www.CTCompany.org C H AU TAU Q UA I N S T I T U T I O N • C I W E B .O R G • President: Marsha Butler • Vice President of Company: Carole Collins • Vice President of Community: Sandy Miller • Vice President of Communications: Linda Nelson • Secretary: Carole Laubscher • Treasurer: Gwen Tigner • Member at Large and Producers Circle Coordinator: Irene Tabish Along with these officers, Irene Cramer will serve as tech rehearsal dinners chair, Scott Brasted as chair of pre-season company assistance, Judith Doebke as “Be A Buddy” coordinator and “Meet the Company” chair, and Edris Weis as chair for the company opening night party. Enid Shames will continue to serve as membership chair, Cheryl Gorelick as benefit event coordinator, Mark Altschuler as play discussion chair, and Sylvia Weiss and Joe Sterman as set-change buffet coordinators. FCT wishes to thank all of these volunteers who work so hard to organize a full schedule of summer events and CTC support. FCT events will begin even before opening day. Tech support interns and staff are welcomed with the annual “Be a Buddy” picnic organized by Judith Doebke. Another “early bird” treat is the Young Playwrights event. Over the winter, this project involved Chautauqua Institution, Chautauqua Theater Company, Florida Studio Theatre, Chautauquan Georgia Court and three local Chautauqua County elementary schools with participation from our local FCT Play Readers. These tiny plays written from the perspective of thoughtful third graders will delight you. Mark your calendar for Monday, June 20, of Week Zero to see 10 selected plays presented in a CTC conservatory production at Elizabeth S. Lenna Hall. The performances will be repeated on Tuesday, June 28, of Week One in Smith Wilkes Hall for the Family Entertainment Series. The season-opening “Meet the Company” celebration on Sunday, June 26, gives FCT members a chance to greet and meet our CTC conservatory actors and instructors. After the introductions and ice cream social, volunteer families will be matched with conservatory members for our FCT Adopt program. Theater Educational Opportunities are numerous throughout the 2016 season. “Sneak Peeks,” Play Discussion Forums, Brown Bags and Producers Circle Events all offer a variety of opportunities to fully participate in the theater scene at Chautauqua. FCT theater support activities are designed to provide help to the company throughout their hectic summer schedule. Join us in supporting our Chautauqua Theater Company by helping with tech rehearsal dinners, set-change buffets and Adopt and Buddy activities for CTC staff and conservatory members. Volunteers for Friends events are always welcomed. Friends of Chautauqua Theater is open to all Chautauquans who love the theater. Dues are only $10, and membership information can be obtained from Marsha Butler, president at PO Box 1083, Chautauqua, NY 14722, or marsha.ann.butler@gmail.com. The Chautauquan Spring 2016 Page 15 Visual Arts VACI rolls full steam ahead with exciting exhibitions, events By Don Kimes Artistic Director, VACI Lois Jubeck, Judy Barie and I have been working steadily on the 2016 Visual Arts at Chautauqua Institution season since the day after the 2015 season ended. The three of us are thrilled with how it has all finally come together. Whether you are a professional artist or someone who just likes to enjoy art, an aspiring art student in residence or a child who loves making art, we are looking forward to providing you with a wonderful summer in our school programs, our galleries, and our VACI lecture series. The season opens with a bang on Sunday, June 26, from 3 to 5 p.m., with several public receptions in the Strohl Art Center. These include the 59th Chautauqua Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Art, co-selected this year by prominent New York gallerists and husband-wife team Steven Harvey and Jennifer Samet (Samet is also author of the popular “Beer with a Painter” column in Hyperallergic, the world’s largest art blogazine). Opening at the same time as the Chautauqua Annual is an exhibition curated by Lois Jubeck and me, titled “The Next Chapter,” a show that explores the work of five School of Art alumni who went on to successful careers after their introduction and first summer at Chautauqua. Additionally, a third exhibition, curated by Judy Barie and titled “The Shape of Things to Come,” will open in the Bellowe Family Gallery, along with new works in the Melvin Johnson Sculpture Garden will open on the same day. If you are at Chautauqua on that first Sunday of the season, don’t miss this wonderful kickoff to a fabulous summer. The VACI Lecture Series on art will commence at 7 p.m. Tuesday, June 28, in our Hultquist Center venue. Harvey and Samet, the co-jurors of the 59th Chautauqua Annual, are the featured opening speakers. This series will continue every Tuesday and Friday at the Hultquist Center through Aug. 9. This year it includes a number of other new speakers, including ceramist David East, New York painter Clintel Steed, Rhode Island School of Design faculty member Dawn Clements, School of Art faculty member Andrea Belag, painter and frequent Art In America contributor Stephen Westfall, and many others. Also for those of you who are members of our VACI Partners friends 2 0 1 6 E X HI B ITION s ciweb.org/vaci 59th Chautauqua Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Art June 26–July 18 · Strohl Art Center Main Gallery · Reception 3 p.m. June 26 The Next Chapter: Work by Five Chautauqua School of Art Alumni June 26–Aug. 22 · Strohl Art Center Gallo Family Gallery · Reception 3 p.m. June 26 The Shape of Things to Come June 26–July 24 · Fowler-Kellogg Art Center Bellowe Family Gallery · Reception 3 p.m. June 22 Nature Redefined June 26–July 21 · Fowler-Kellogg Art Center First Floor · Reception 3 p.m. June 29 The Art of Making Collages June 26–July 21 · Fowler-Kellogg Art Center Second Floor · Reception 3 p.m. June 29 Gradations: A Sense of Gradual Successive Stages or Degrees July 20–Aug. 23 · Strohl Art Center Main Gallery · Reception 3 p.m. July 20 Chautauqua School of Art Annual Student Exhibition July 24–Aug. 4 · Fowler-Kellogg Art Center · Reception 3 p.m. July 24 The Path to Heaven Passes Through a Teapot July 26–Aug. 22 · Strohl Art Center Bellowe Family Gallery · Reception 3 p.m. July 26 VACI Open Members Exhibition Aug. 8–24 · Fowler-Kellogg Art Center · Reception 3 p.m. Aug. 4 Melvin Johnson Sculpture Garden June 28–Aug. 27 group, our annual “Friends of an Art Student” picnic dinner, takes place at 4:45 p.m. Thursday, June 30, at the School of Art. Please contact Anne Fox at anmcardle@comcast.net for more information about “friending” an art student or two for the summer. Other exhibitions VACI will present throughout the summer include “Gradations: A Sense of Gradual Successive Stages or Degrees,” curated by Judy Barie, the Susan and Jack Turben Director of VACI Galleries; the annual VACI Open Members Exhibition; “Nature Redefined”; “The Art of Making Collages”; the annual Chautauqua School of Art Student Exhibition; and “The Path to Heaven Passes Through a Teapot.” More information about each of these shows is available on our website. Additionally, this summer from noon to 4:30 p.m. Sunday, July 3, and again on Sunday, Aug. 7, the VACI Partners annual Art in the Park event will take place once again in Miller Park, rain or shine. We’ll also be presenting an art movie night at the Hall of Christ es- pecially for members of VACI Partners on Thursday, July 14 at 7 pm. We’ll be showing “Pollock,” a film about the life of groundbreaking 20th-century American artist Jackson Pollock. Having known Pollock’s wife Lee Krasner, critic Clement Greenberg and several others characters in the film, I will present a brief historical overview and also lead a Q-and-A discussion afterwards. From 1 to 3 p.m. Sunday, July 17, we’ll be presenting a public “Steamroller Print Event” in front of the Colonnade on Bestor Plaza. We will be making “Steamroller Prints” for our VACI Partners friends group to auction off on Saturday, July 30, at our fabulous annual Stroll Through the Arts gala and fundraiser for art scholarships. Selected artists will carve into a 36” × 24” linoleum block, which will be inked, set on a piece of plywood, covered with a high-quality paper and then run over by the Chautauqua Institution steamroller, which will transfer the image on the linoleum block to the paper. Master printer and CSA faculty member Tom Raneses will lead the public demonstration of this unusual process. This will be a wonderful family art event and many of us from VACI will be assisting Tom and answering everyone’s questions. We hope you and your family and friends can join us! Our final public event at the School of Art will take place from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 8, when students welcome everyone to their “Open Studios Night” in the Arts Quadrangle. Always a popular event drawing hundreds of Chautauquans, resident students will be putting their fever-pitch work schedule on hold, cleaning out their studios, and displaying the work that they have accomplished in the two weeks following their public annual Student Exhibition in the Fowler-Kellogg Art Center. Often much of the strongest work done during the summer appears at this event, which is a precursor to their final critique week at the school. If you, your friends and/or family are interested in Special Studies art classes, outstanding gallery exhibitions, our internationally recognized School of Art program for full-time resident students, a wonderful, a twice weekly lecture series on art, special events such at “Art in the Park” and the annual “Strohl Through the Arts” gala celebration, we hope to see you this summer at VACI — the Visual Arts at Chautauqua Institution. It’s going to be a very visual summer. VACI Partners work to reward School of Art students’ courage By Betsy Vance VACI Partners It might seem improbable, but the artists enrolled in the Chautauqua School of Art have something in common with astronauts, mountain climbers and arctic explorers. They’re all risk takers! While the dangers may not be as evident on the Arts Quad as they are on the North Pole or Mars, the process of doing something that may have a negative outcome in order to achieve a goal is the same. Two students from last summer’s program are great examples. Sarah, not afraid to speak up about what she believes in, created paintings that gave voice to her convictions. She produced bold, colorful work that was both complex and accessible while unrelenting in its psychological depth. Brent spent hours crafting a ceramic chain to represent the weight he’d lost in the previous year. He could have left the finished piece stacked safely on the floor of his studio but instead chose to wrap it around himself and walk the grounds probing the juxtaposition of art and the human condition. The unique community surrounding the Chautauqua School of Art is what makes the student program so successful. Creative ideas develop and risks are taken as art is made. The program is one of the best in the country and support from teachers and fellow Chautauquans gives these students the courage and confidence to go further with their creative ideas and push beyond the boundary where risks, rewards, success and sometimes failure all reside. Join us as a member of VACI Part- ners and support students like Sarah and Brent. Your membership will make a difference to future visual arts students enrolled in the Chautauqua School of Art. To receive one of our membership invitations, please email vacipartners@gmail.com. VACI Partners has many exciting events planned this summer that will engage the whole family while supporting our mission to promote education and provide scholarship opportunities for our students. New and notable is the Steamroller Print Art Event happening Sunday, July 17. A select group of student artists will create large-scale relief printing in the street using an industrial steamroller. The prints created will be auctioned at the Stroll Through the Arts Gala on Saturday, July 30. This is our biggest fundraiser of the summer! It promises to be a lively evening with delicious food, great wine, music and a live auction of the steamroller prints. All proceeds from this event will directly benefit the visual art student’s scholarship program at Chautauqua. Tickets will be available at the Strohl Art Center. With the summer season fast approaching and the colors, textures and vibrancy you see in your garden soon to be reflected in the galleries and on the Arts Quad we hope you will consider supporting VACI Partners either by becoming a member or by attending one or more of our exciting events. Why not engage in a little risk taking yourself and explore what the Visual Arts at Chautauqua Institution has to offer this summer. The Chautauquan Page 16 Spring 2016 Opera Exciting new programs await opera audiences in Osgood’s first season By Steven Osgood General and Artistic Director, Chautauqua Opera Company The arrival of spring tells me that Chautauqua Opera Company’s 88th season, my first as general and artistic director, is almost upon us! In this summer’s three mainstage productions — La Traviata, The Mikado and Song From the Uproar — you will hear the thrilling singing of our world-renowned guest artists, see the visionary work of our guest directors, and be immersed in the work of three of America’s finest young creators. Verdi’s La Traviata opens our season on July 9, and Keturah Stickann makes her Chautauqua Opera debut directing and choreographing this new production, designed especially for the Chautauqua Amphitheater. Keturah’s work has been seen from Los Angeles to Atlanta this season alone, and I am delighted to introduce her to Chautauqua Institution. Our three guest artists for La Traviata are a wonderful mix of familiar and new faces. The luminous soprano Caitlin Lynch makes her company debut as Violetta, after a successful and busy season that has brought her from Seattle Opera to the Metropolitan Opera. Tenor Dominic Armstrong also makes his Chautauqua Opera debut singing Alfredo, having previously appeared with Marlena Malas’ Voice Program. Baritone Todd Thomas, a former Young Artist who has gone on to build a thriving career, was a ferocious Scarpia in the first production I ever conducted as a guest at Chautauqua. I am delighted that he returns to sing Germont, Alfredo’s domineering father, in the first production of my inaugural season! Moving from the sublime to the spectacularly ridiculous, Gilbert and Sullivan’s The Mikado will light up Norton Hall on July 29 and Aug. 1. Ned Canty comes to Chautauqua for the first time to direct his modern Japanese manga-infused production which was first seen at Opera Theater of St. Louis. We steal him away from Opera Memphis, where he is General Director, and Santa Fe Opera, with whom he has been enjoying a string of successful new productions. Kevin Burdette (Ko-Ko) and Daniel Belcher (Pooh-Bah) both make their Chautauqua Opera debuts in The Mikado and you are in for a treat watching these two comedic powerhouses tear up the stage. This summer will be the first time Kevin, Daniel and Ned will be sharing a production, and Chautauqua will be lucky to witness this nexus of hilarious men! The Mikado also offers many opportunities for our 2016 Young Artists to take center stage, featuring Quinn Bernegger (Nanki-Poo), Chelsea Miller (Yum-Yum), Deanna Pauletto (Kati- sha), Hans Tashjian (Mikado), Rachael Braunstein (Pitti-Sing) and Brian James Myer (Pish-Tush). Bring the entire family to see this zany opera, and be sure to take advantage of the $10 youth tickets we are introducing this season. American opera is enjoying an extraordinary explosion of activity and is at the beginning of what I believe will one day be seen as a new Golden Age. Composer Missy Mazzoli and librettist Royce Vavrek are two of the most prolific creators on the scene today. It is very exciting to be closing our 2016 season on August 8 in Norton Hall with their Song From the Uproar, in collaboration with the Logan Chamber Music Series. Mezzo-soprano Abigail Fischer (another familiar face from Marlena Malas’ program) and the NOW Ensemble join the Chautauqua Opera for this concert performance that also features original film by Stephen Taylor projected over the Norton stage. Scored for NOW Ensemble’s unusual combination of flute, clarinet, bass, piano and electric guitar, this 75-minute score is a poetic exploration of the life of 19th century Swiss adventuress and writer Isabelle Eberhardt who died at the age of 27 in a flash flood. Don’t miss this truly unique theatrical experience! There will be another new face at Chautauqua Opera this summer — our very first composer-in-residence, Jeremy Gill. While he will be busy as a member of our music staff and my assistant conductor, highlights of Jeremy’s season will be the world premieres of three new pieces he is composing for Chautauqua Opera. Recital programs on June 30 and Aug. 4 will each include the first performance of a new song for voice and piano, and our July 16 Opera Highlights concert with the CSO will feature a new work for soprano and orchestra. I hope that you will join us as we bring these brand new works to life for the first time! Opera Invasion is our newest program, and will bring opera to some surprising new locations throughout the Institution. Each week of our season will include a different Opera Invasion event — always interactive whether serious or playful. You can watch the Boys’ and Girls’ Club compete with our Studio Artists in “So You Think You’re Louder Than An Opera Singer?” or personally choose what arias will be sung in “Opera Open Book.” Keep an eye on the entire Opera Invasion schedule so that you will not miss any of these uniquely Chautauqua events! This is only a fraction of the almost three-dozen performances that make up Chautauqua Opera’s 2016 season. I look forward to seeing you at the Institution, and to sharing our unbridled love of opera. Come and be part of the adventure! Keturah Caitlin Stickann Dominic Lynch Ned Kevin Canty Missy Mazzoli Armstrong Burdette Royce Vavrek Daniel Belcher Abigail Jeremy Fischer Gill CHAUTAUQUA 2016 OPERA COMPANY Steven Osgood, General & Artistic Director Giuseppe Verdi La Traviata July 9, 2016 Directed by Keturah Stickann Featuring Caitlin Lynch, Dominic Armstrong, and Todd Thomas Gilbert & Sullivan The Mikado July 29 & August 1, 2016 Directed by Ned Canty Featuring Daniel Belcher and Kevin Burdette Missy Mazzoli & Royce Vavrek Song From the Uproar August 8, 2016 With film by Stephen Taylor Featuring Abigail Fischer and NOW Ensemble Young Artist Week August 1–8 Concerts with the Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra Opera Highlights Concert Chautauqua Opera Young Artists Steven Osgood, conductor Saturday, July 16 See the menu at athenaeum-hotel.com Todd Thomas Opera Pops Concert Chautauqua Opera Young Artists Stuart Chafetz, conductor Saturday, August 6 2016 Young Artists Quinn Bernegger Rachael Braunstein Chelsea Miller Brian James Myer Deanna Pauletto Abigail Rethwisch Dennis Shuman Hans Tashjian Margaret Bridge Anthony Ciaramitaro Kelly Clarke Allison Deady Vincent Festa Lorenzo Miguel Garcia Megan Grey Addie Hamilton Emily Michiko Jensen Tesia Kwarteng Heath Martin Frank Rosamond Jake Skipworth Laura Soto-Bayomi Ryan Stoll Patrick Terry Composer-inResidence Jeremy Gill Premieres of new works on June 30, July 16 and August 4 Visit us online for more information: ciweb.org/opera CHAUTAUQUA INSTITUTION • CHAUTAUQUA, NY Spring 2016 The Chautauquan Page 17 dance Charlotte Ballet names Muir as artistic director to succeed Bonnefoux Charlotte Ballet’s board of trustees has selected Hope Muir, currently the assistant artistic director of Scottish Ballet, as Charlotte Ballet’s new artistic director. Muir’s appointment is effective July 2017. Over the next year, she will work closely with the board of trustees and staff in preparation for the company’s 2017–18 season, her first as artistic director. Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux, longtime president and artistic director of Charlotte Ballet, announced in September that he will transition to the role of artistic director emeritus in June 2017. At Chautauqua, as communicated earlier this off-season, the 2016 Chautauqua Dance season will proceed with current staff. Charlotte Ballet will continue as the company in residence and Bonnefoux and Patricia McBride will continue as director of the School of Dance and master teacher, respectively. Born in Toronto, Muir has worked for the past 27 years throughout Europe, Canada and the United States in both classical and contemporary dance companies. Her uniquely diverse career has seen her create and perform roles for some of the world’s most prolific choreographers including Christopher Bruce, Twyla Tharp, Jiri Kylian, William Forsythe, George Balanchine, Paul Taylor, Merce Cunningham, Robert Cohan, Javier De Frutos and Mats Ek. As artistic director, Muir will serve as the chief architect of Charlotte Ballet’s aesthetic vision and artistic profile. She’ll be responsible for the dancers of Charlotte Ballet; supervising artistic and production staff; playing an active role in the development of education and outreach programs and the Charlotte Ballet Academy; cultivating relationships with donors; and serving as a public representative. “I am thrilled and honored to have been invited to be the new artistic director of Charlotte Ballet at such an exciting time in the company’s development,” Muir said. “Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux and Patricia McBride have built a family of artists, produced exciting and varied work, and grown a loyal audience. I relish the opportunity to build on the company’s tradition of excellence and lead it forward for the next generation.” Dance Circle celebrates 10 years of service to students, community By Karen Dakin Chautauqua Dance Circle On June 22, 2006, the Chautauqua Dance Circle, CDC, held its first formal organizational meeting, on the same date it was incorporated. And so the CDC journey began! The CDC is the youngest of the organizations supporting the arts at Chautauqua. The founding co-presidents, Bonnie Crosby and Mimi Eddleman, worked tirelessly alongside their husbands, Steve Crosby, treasurer, and David Eddleman, communications director, over a number of years to develop the CDC into the successful organization it is today. A big “Thank You” to the Crosbys and Eddlemans! The CDC would not exist today without their efforts! This summer, the CDC celebrates its 10th anniversary. The initial focus of the CDC was to raise scholarship money to support dance students. This has been a hugely successful endeavor and, to date, the CDC has donated $137,000 directly to Chautauqua Institution for dance scholarships. The 2015 recipients of CDC dance scholarships are so grateful: “I would not have been able to spend my summer dancing in this absolutely wonderful place.” “Your generosity makes scholarships possible for students such as myself to spend a beautiful summer at Chautauqua, where we can actualize our dreams by studying with the very best ballet faculty.” “The scholarship I received from you has been the biggest blessing my family has experienced in a long time.” “From the amazing training, teachers and performance opportunities, to the lifelong friends, I wouldn’t trade my experiences at Chautauqua for anything.” “Thank you for helping me come one step closer to my dream of being a professional dancer.” Needless to say, the CDC is thrilled Dance at Chautauqua 2016 Amphitheater Programs Dance Salon 8:15 p.m. Wednesday, June 29 Charlotte Ballet in Residence An Evening of Pas de Deux 8:15 p.m. Wednesday, July 27 Dance Innovations 8:15 p.m. Tuesday, July 12 8:15 p.m. Wednesday, August 3 School of Dance Student Gala School of Dance Student Gala II 2:30 p.m. Sunday, July 17 2:30 p.m. Sunday, August 14 Chautauqua Festival Dancers with the MSFO 8:15 p.m. Monday, July 25 C H A U TA U Q U A I N S T I T U T I O N • C I W E B . O R G to have made these scholarships available to these promising young dancers! A second part of CDC’s mission is educational programming for the Chautauqua community. Don’t miss the very special July Fourth Views on Pointe program this summer. Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux and Patricia McBride will present “Remembering Violette Verdy,” who passed away suddenly this winter at the age of 82. Jean-Pierre asked Violette to be his very first dance instructor when he took over as artistic director of Chautauqua Dance in 1983. Violette was an internationally renowned ballerina, choreographer, writer, distinguished professor, artistic director of the Paris Opera Ballet and the Boston Ballet, and a beloved dance instructor at Chautauqua. Jean-Pierre and Patricia will show a video of Violette teaching dance students at Chautauqua. This will take place at 3:30 p.m. Monday, July 4, in the Hall of Christ, after which we will celebrate CDC’s 10th anniversary. Other Monday afternoon Views on Pointe programs include Mark Diamond sharing his thoughts on the Choreographic Workshop, which encourages dance students to choreograph their own ballets and then have them performed for the public. Dancers David Morse and Sarah Hayes Harkins will present the ins and outs of partnering. We will again host pre-performance lectures before all dance performances. All in all, this will be one very special CDC season! We hope you join us! Opera Guild offers opportunities to partake in exciting new chapter By Sue Martin Chautauqua Opera Guild We are so looking forward to celebrating our 2016 opera season! This summer will be remarkable to newcomers, as well as long time opera lovers. Yes, there will be major operas at the Amphitheater (La Traviata) and at Norton Hall (The Mikado) as expected, but there will be so much more. The Guild board members have been working during the entire off-season to make the 2016 summer an extra special one for you. Planning has extended from the new landscaping around Norton Hall to a casual-dress benefit party, The Social Setting, for the young and not-so-young. Our new general and artistic director, Steven Osgood, is creating amaz- ingly new programming this year which will delight you. Wait until you witness Opera Invasions! They’ll entice everyone at parks all over the grounds. This season the Guild will be hosting several new events, as well as our annual Guild Picnic on July 21 and Soiree on July 31. Get ready to mark your calendars! First you’ll want to attend the Welcome Reception for Osgood on Sunday, July 3, at Norton Hall. Please come and introduce yourselves and your families. Also, be sure to make reservations, with your friends, for our pre-opera dinner at the Women’s Club on July 9, following the Operalogue at Smith Wilkes Hall! And from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday, July 17, we invite all adults to our benefit The Social Setting, to enjoy hors d’oeuvres at the new La Familia restaurant at the St. Elmo. Numerous events will whet your opera appetite this season, including the dazzling Opera Highlights and Pops concerts with the Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra and fascinating master classes led by Osgood, Marlena Malas, Craig Rutenberg and John Fisher. In addition, there will be two new Musical Theater Revues. This year, you will be able to enjoy a refreshment as you experience the Artsongs in the Afternoon recitals, Thursday afternoons during Weeks One through Six, newly returned to the Athenaeum Hotel Parlor. Make an afternoon of it and stay for tapas following the recitals! The Opera Guild continues its commitment to bringing opera to the youngest members of the Chautauqua community, through our educational programming at the Children’s School and Club throughout the season. Keep an eye out for the “Opera on Wheels” cart and join us for a new Family Friendly Opera Revue, on July 19 and Aug. 2. (“Bravo! Bravo!” was standingroom-only last season!) The Opera Guild this season also continues its exclusive Adopt-an-Artist program, which is open only to Guild members. To get the real “inside scoop” on the opera from Chautauqua’s extremely talented Young Artists, we invite all of you to consider joining. lease learn more about the Opera Guild and consider joining by visiting ciweb.org/opera-guild. Join us in being a part of this new chapter in the history of the Chautauqua Opera Company! The Chautauquan Page 18 Spring 2016 Music L ocal t e am att e nds K e nn e dy C e nt e r Pa r tn e r s in Ed u cation I nstit u t e At left, Deborah Sunya Moore (vice president and director of programming, Chautauqua Institution), Jennifer Davis (music teacher, Chautauqua Lake Central School) and Tim Mains (superintendent, Jamestown Public Schools) pose in front of a sculpture of the 35th U.S. president at the John F. Kennedy Center Partners in Education Institute in April. Chautauqua Institution, Chautauqua Lake Central School and Jamestown Public Schools are members of the Partners in Education program of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, D.C. Selected because of their demonstrated commitment to improvement of education in and through the arts, the Partnership Team participates in collaborative efforts to make the arts integral to education. Chautauqua’s participation in the program is part of a larger arts education initiative spearheaded by Moore to more deeply engage with and serve Chautauqua County students and teachers through year-round programs. Logan Chamber Music Series 2 0 1 6 S e ason 4 p.m. Mondays at Elizabeth S. Lenna Hall unless otherwise noted Subject to change • All chamber music concerts are open-seating June 27 New York Brass Arts Trio July 4 Harlem Quartet & Aldo López-Gavilán July 11 Sixth Floor Project July 18 Chautauqua Quartet July 25 Calmus August 1 Sō Percussion August 8 • 5 p.m. Song From the Uproar This performance takes place in Norton Hall Steven Osgood, conductor Abigail Fischer, soprano NOW Ensemble Chautauqua Opera Young Artists Music: Missy Mazzoli Video: Stephen Taylor In English with English supertitles August 15 Lysander Piano Trio August 22 • 5 p.m. Jazz at Lincoln Center G I F T P L A N N I N G and T H E E L E A N O R B . D A U G H E R T Y S O C I E T Y The following individuals have included Chautauqua in their will, as beneficiary of a retirement plan, IRA, trust, or through a gift of real estate. These Chautauquans are members of the Eleanor B. Daugherty Society, named for a retired music school teacher from Buffalo, NY, who left a significant bequest to Chautauqua. Chautauqua Foundation recognizes these thoughtful individuals for their generosity and foresight in helping to ensure the Institution’s future. For more information on how you can become a member of the Daugherty Society, please call Dusty Nelson, director of gift planning, at 716-357-6409 or email dnelson@ciweb.org New members are highlighted with the symbol ( Anonymous (16) W. Andrew Achenbaum Joan B. Alexander Dr. Robert K. Alico Caroline Thompson & Steve Allen Joanne and Henry Altland John E. Anderson John and Diane Arch Sherra and Jim Babcock James M. Bailey Drs. Arthur and Barbara Banner Robert and Mary Bargar Constance Barton William E. and LaDonna G. Bates Bob and Joan Battaglin Robert W. and Janet W. Baum Nancy Bechtolt Ann C. Beebe Mary and Charles Beggerow Jill and Arnie Bellowe Christina Bemus Alice Benedict Stephen and Edith Benson Bobbi and Donald Bernstein Caroline Van Kirk Bissell Mary Blair Robert and Jean Boell Cathy Bonner June Bonyor Diana and David Bower Loretta Bower Ted Arnn and Mary Boyle P. James and Barbara Brady Kathy and James Braham Barbara and Twig Branch Sharon and David Britton Margaret and William Brockman Steven and Cynthia Brown Audre Bunis Frederic J. and Susan Franks Buse Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Buxbaum Gloria A. Caldwell Andrew L. and Gayle Shaw Camden Mr. and Mrs. David H. Carnahan Susan Cartney Christine and Ken Caro Jean Cheney Carol and Jim Chimento Molly Rinehart and Charles Christian Geoff and Kathy Church Marilyn and Sebastian Ciancio Hon. and Mrs. Bill Clinger Joan R. Clouse John and Bette Cochran Helen B. Cochrane Wendell and Ruth Gerrard Cole Richard and Dorothy Comfort Jack Connolly Ira B. Cooperman Dr. and Mrs. R. William Cornell John and Emily Corry Dr. Ellis and Bettsy Cowling Virginia H. Cox Martin A. Coyle John and Linda Creech Christopher and Susan Cribbs Joseph and Nancy Cruickshank Barbara and John Cummings Lindy McKnight and Erin Cunningham Courtney Curatolo ). Laura and Brad Currie James and Karen Dakin Dan and Carrie Dauner Dave and Mary Davenport David Delancey Jennifer DeLancey John P. DeVillars June and Barry Dietrich John and Virginia DiPucci Judith and Roger Doebke Rev. Linda L. Dominik Lee and Barbara Dudley Carol McCarthy Duhme Cynthia Norton and Eagle Eagle David and Miriam Eddleman Rivona Ehrenreich Stuart and Jan Eisler Mr. and Mrs. Hal A. Fausnaugh Sylvia M. Faust Norma Ferguson Rita Van Wie Finger Jennifer and Rich Flanagan Lucille and Michael Flint Shirley A. Flynn George L. Follansbee, Jr. Caryn and Henry Foltz Charlotte and Chuck Fowler Barbara Fox Zetta Fradin Joanne Fuller Lois T. Galloway Louise Farnsley Gardner vic and Joan Gelb Marc Geller Barbara and Peter Georgescu William and Nancy Gerdes Christopher and Helena Gibbs Lauren Rich Fine and Gary Giller Sherry Stanley and John Giusti Carole E. Gladstone Joseph and Toni L. Goldfarb Karen and Tim Goodell Ellen and Bob Gottfried Dr. Cheryl O. Gorelick Carolyn Graffam Suzanne Gray Rodney Schlaffman Greenberg Elizabeth Greene Don and Kathy Greenhouse Fred and Judy Gregory Susan Grelick Kent I. and Fredrika S. Groff Elisabeth and Jim Groninger Carl Grunfeld Travis and Betty Halford Pegi Hamner Mr. James Pryor Hancock Kathleen E. Hancock Judith L. Hanson Walter and Joan Harf Terrie Vaile Hauck Paula and Ray Hecker William and Anne Mischakoff Heiles George Herchenroether Dorothy and Bill Hill Patricia and Robert Hirt Sally L. Holder Anita and Sidney Holec Bob Hopper Kathleen Howard Cheryl S. and Carl W. Huber, Jr. Pat and Jay Hudson Gale T. Hurst Don and Mary Hustead Mr. and Mrs. Wilmot W. Irish Mary Ellen and Robert Ivers Bob and Gretchen Jahrling Catherine Jarjisian Bob Jeffrey Karin A. Johnson Barbara and Walter Jones Lucille Jordan John F. and Mary Giegengack Jureller Jeannette Kahlenberg Norman and Nancy Karp Bill and Martha Karslake Judy and Leonard Katz Naomi and Charles Kaufman Joan Keogh Jane and Chaz Kerschner Patricia L. King William M. Kinley Bob and Priscilla Kirkpatrick Joan G. Kissner Hans and Ann Gosnell Knaak Audrey and Kenny Koblitz Donna and Stewart Kohl Chuck and Peg Korte Robert S. Kravitz, DDS Judy and Jim Kullberg Robert and Nancy Kyler Robert D. Lang Joseph and Judy Langmead Robert E. and Susan Laubach Barbara Widrig Lee CiCi and Owen Lee Eileen and Marty Leinwand Ronald and Barbara Leirvik Clare Levin Kathryn Lincoln Mr. and Mrs. Herbert W. Lind Natalie Kahn Lipsett Fred and Pearl Livingstone Kay H. Logan Paul and Anne Luchsinger Jeannette Ludwig and Claude Welch Linda and Saul Ludwig James H. Lynch, Jr. Betty and Sid Lyons Ross Mackenzie Barbara Mackey Robert L. and Jean A. Major Dorothea and Gerald Maloney Jane and Deac Manross Alison and Craig Marthinsen Salvatore and Mary Martoche Mrs. Patricia L. Maue Jack and Yvonne McCredie Pat and Griff McDonald Geraldine McElree Susan McKee and Hal Simmons Robert J. and Carol G. McKiernan Amy and Pat Mead Mary Lu Mertz Don and Alyce Milks Cynthia B. Miller Greg and Bijou Miller Miriam S. Reading and Richard H. Miller Kurt Miller and Karen Williams Miller Sylvia Lucas Miller KeeKee Minor Dr. Steve and Mary Gibbs Mitchell James and Judith Moffitt Richard and Quack Moore Sally Moore Mary Anne Morefield Wayne and Marilyn Morris Mary and Thomas Mulroy Donna B. Mummery Cynthia and Robert Murray Dusty Nelson Linda and Alan Nelson Jay and Joyce Nesbit Karen Paul Newhall Dr. Lillian Ney Susan Nusbaum Anne and Stephen Odland Monica Ondrusko Melissa and George Orlov Barbara Brandwein Painkin Anne and Jack Palomaki Mary Lou Cady Parlato Joseph D. and Susan O. Patton Edward Paul Pete and Sarah Pedersen Rosalie H. Pembridge Katherine and James R. Pender Steve and Polly Percy Ginny and Bob Perkins Tim and Pat Peters Mary and Bob Pickens Mr. and Mrs. W. Stephen Piper John and Eleanor Pless Gloria Plevin Av and Janet Posner Edna Posner Jeff and Judy Posner Sam Price Barbara Rait Lois Raynow Harold Reed Kirk and Susan Reed Sherry S. Reid Thurston and Suzanne Reid Leslie and Tim Renjilian Ellen J. Reynolds Les Reynolds and Diane Payne Reynolds Neal and Linda Rhoads Charles and Trudy Rhodes Mrs. Jack Rice Kathleen Riley Patricia Rittman Jerrie Hawkins Roba Philip and Rachel Rogers Sarah and David Rosen Annette Ross Joyce and Richard Ross Dr. James and Sharon Roth Marcia and Jerry Rothschild Dale and Howard Sanders William and Jone Schlackman Edward C. Schmidt Barbara F. Schmitt J. Jason Phillips and Sheila Schroeder John and Barbara Schubert Susan B. Scott Sheldon and Phyllis Seligsohn Becky Sharp Mary Ellen Sheridan Elaine and Allen Short Suzanne Shull Elizabeth Wade Siegel Harriet Simons Edie and Dan Sklar Penny and Tom Small Darwin and Myra Smith Ted Smith George and Maggie Snyder Benjamin S. and Anna Fornias Sorensen Merritt H. and David S. Spier Rabbi Samuel and Lynn Stahl Sherry Stanley Dorothy B. Stevenson Carole Stevens Lowell and Rebecca Strohl Lydia Strohl and Eric Riddleberger Shirley and Donald Struchen Ann H. and Daniel F. Sullivan Mrs. W. Wendle Taggart Joyce Tate Margery B. Tate Martha Teich Stephen and Patricia Telkins Janet Templeton Linda Thomas Allison O. Titgemeier Beatrice C. Treat Susan and Jack Turben Karen S. Turcotte Mary Tymeson Rev. George E. Tutwiler Mrs. Spencer Van Kirk Tara Van Derveer Judith Claire and Robert W. VanEvery Dr. Carol Voaden Edward and Melanie Voboril Arlene and Irving Vogel Nancy Waasdorp Linda Wadsworth Laurence and Maria Wagner Carolyn and Bill Ward Jo-an M. Webb Herbert R. and Lorraine H. Weier Linda Steckley and Pete Weitzel Cynthia C. and Terry R. White Lee White Heather L. Whitestone and Caroline M. K. Le Vasseur Dr. Jeanne Wiebenga Mark Williams Dent and Joan Williamson Jane Foster and Arthur Willson Mrs. Jean Wilson Lou B. Wineman Subagh Kaur and Subagh Khalsa Winkelstern Sally L. Wissel Susan O. Wood Caroline Young Robert and Donna Zellers Patricia Feighan and Stephen Zenczak Barbara Zuegel Spring 2016 The Chautauquan Page 19 Community / Music Connections offers support, link to broader Chautauqua community for students By now you’ve probably ordered your gate tickets and parking pass and made a list of the ministers, lectures, operas, plays and concerts you don’t want to miss. But are you aware of a program that can enrich your time at Chautauqua and carry into the off-season for many years to come? That program is called Chautauqua Connections, and it costs nothing to join. Connections is the largest and most diverse of “adoption” programs at Chautauqua (the community support groups for the visual arts, opera and theater operate similar programs in their areas). At its core, it’s simply a commitment to extend friendship to a budding talent. The Connections program, spearheaded by Susan Helm and a few volunteers, links community members with students in the School of Music (Music School Festival Orchestra, voice and piano), dancers, Chautauquan Daily interns and APYA (Abrahamic Program for Young Adults) coordinators. Connections offers the students and interns a link to the greater Chautauqua community, and to Chautauquans who are interested in and supportive of their endeavors. What’s involved in being a Connection? Connections “parents” have many options to interact with their students during the summer: attending their performances and cheering them on, inviting them for a meal or meeting for dessert and coffee, offering the use of a washer and dryer or just a quiet place to hang out. Friendships developed during the summer often extend into the off-season and for many years thereafter. As you attend performances this summer, you’re sure to meet Chautauquans wearing a bright button saying “Ask me about my Connection!” Or you’ll hear friends talking enthusiastically about their “Piano son” or “my Voice daughter.” How did they find these student Connections? It’s easy for anyone to do — you, for instance! First, ask yourself what your main interests are. Do you have a favorite orchestral instrument? Are you enamored of dance? Are you thrilled by the unamplified sound of the human voice? Are you a closet journalist who writes an occasional letter to the editor? Then contact Susan Helm at smhelm@ clockwinders.net, ask to join the Connections program, tell her what discipline you’re interested in, and she’ll find just the right student or intern to be your very own Connection. Yes, you get a free Connections button, too! Community Band continues 26-year traditions, welcomes new members Last summer the Chautauqua Community Band celebrated its 25th anniversary. 2016 marks the beginning of our second quarter-century. As always the Community Band will appear on the Fourth of July and Old First Night (Aug. 2) on Bestor Plaza. Both concerts begin at 12:15 p.m. Tradition, patriotism, community spirit and the Chautauqua Community Band are almost synonymous. The July Fourth concert will feature American music with marches, show tunes, and the usual audience participation with children marching and conducting, face painting, the audience sing-along and the traditional red, white and blue patriotic attire of our fans. At 12:15 p.m. on Old First Night, the band will present a variety of band music from around the world. This is the perfect way for the community to kick off the OFN celebration with block parties and porch parties to follow before the evening festivities in the Amp. The Community Band is a true melting pot of the Chautauqua community, with all segments represented — students from the MSFO, members of the CSO and Chautauquans from on the grounds and from nearby communities, all coming together to make music for the pleasure and entertainment of all Chautauquans. Any Chautauquan who can play an instrument is invited to be a Community Band member. Members are provided a T-shirt, lunch on the performance dates and lots of great vibes. There is one rehearsal for each concert: at 4:45 p.m. Friday, July 1, and at 4:30 p.m. Thursday, July 28, both in Elizabeth S. Lenna Hall. Contact conductor Jason Weintraub by email at jason_ weintraub@yahoo.com, call 716-357-6217 after June 1, or simply show up. Mark those dates, get out your blankets and lawn chairs, and come share in the community spirit with Chautauqua’s own Community Band. CSO League grows Whitaker Fund through special musician-hosted dinner The Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra musicians will be hosting a very special dinner on Monday, July 11, at the Chautauqua Golf Club. Orchestra musicians will be cooking their specialties and sharing a meal with CSO League members. The cost for the dinner is $30, and all proceeds will go directly to the Mary Whitaker Endowment Fund for the CSO. In addition to contributing through the dinner ticket cost, attendees will be tempted by Si- lent Auction Experiences. Items up for bid include private in-home concerts by CSO members, dinners cooked by musicians, a round of golf with CSO musicians, an informal language lesson with a musician, boating with a CSO member and many more. This promises to be a wonderful evening, so please be sure to become a member of the CSO League and to be on the lookout for more information about reserving your spot for the dinner. C H A U T A U Q U A S Y M P H O N Y O R C HE S T R A 2 0 1 6 C ond u cto r s & soloists Thursday, June 30 · 8:15 p.m.* Rossen Milanov, conductor Augustin Hadelich, violin Saturday, July 2 · 8:15 p.m. Rossen Milanov, conductor Jennifer Koh, violin Monday, July 4 · 8 p.m. · Pops Concert: Independence Day Celebration Stuart Chafetz, conductor Nicole Parker, vocalist Aldo López-Gavilán, piano Ilmar Gavilán, violin Thursday, July 7 · 8:15 p.m.* Rossen Milanov, conductor Alexander Korsantia, piano Tuesday, July 12 · 8:15 p.m. Charlotte Ballet in Residence Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux, director Grant Cooper, conductor Thursday, July 14 · 8:15 p.m.* Teddy Abrams, conductor Edgar Meyer, bass Saturday, July 16 · 8:15 p.m. · Opera Highlights Concert Chautauqua Opera Apprentice and Studio Artists Steven Osgood, conductor Kathleen Smith Belcher, stage director Tuesday, July 19 · 8:15 p.m. · Into the Music No. 1: “Bernstein on Broadway”* Rossen Milanov, conductor Thursday, July 21 · 8:15 p.m. Rossen Milanov, conductor Felix Fan, cello Composer Annie Gosfield is the Music Alive: New Partnerships Composer-in-Residence with Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra. Music Alive: New Partnerships is a national residency program of New Music USA and the League of American Orchestras. Saturday, July 23 · 8:15 p.m. Rossen Milanov, conductor Alexander Gavrylyuk, piano Tuesday, July 26 · 8:15 p.m. · Into the Music No. 2: “Total Tchaikovsky” Rossen Milanov, conductor Jon Nakamatsu, piano Abigail Rethwisch, soprano Collaboration with Chautauqua Dance Thursday, July 28 · 8:15 p.m.* Rossen Milanov, conductor Charles Berginc, trumpet Kathryn Henry, soprano Chautauqua Theater Company Andrew Borba, director Saturday, July 30 · 8:15 p.m. · CSO with the Music School Festival Orchestra Rossen Milanov, conductor Thursday, August 4 · 8:15 p.m. JoAnn Falletta, conductor Marina Piccinini, flute Saturday, August 6 · 8:15 p.m. · Opera Pops Concert Chautauqua Opera Apprentice and Studio Artists Stuart Chafetz, conductor Kathleen Smith Belcher, stage director Sunday, August 7 · 2:30 p.m. · Special Matinée Rossen Milanov, conductor Friday, August 12 · 8:15 p.m. Charlotte Ballet in Residence Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux, director Grant Cooper, conductor Brian Reagin, violin Nataliya Pinelis, piano Saturday, August 13 · 8:15 p.m. Chris Botti & Joshua Bell with the Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra Maxim Eshkenazy, conductor Tuesday, August 16 · 8:15 p.m. · Into the Music No. 3: “An Evening in Spain” Rossen Milanov, conductor Jason Vieaux, guitar Thursday, August 18 · 8:15 p.m. Ankush Kumar Bahl, conductor Nicolas Dautricourt, violin Saturday, August 20 · 8:15 p.m. · “Night at the Movies” Rossen Milanov, conductor Tuesday, August 23 · 8:15 p.m.* Cristian Macelaru, conductor Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra Preview performance of new work by Wynton Marsalis *Community Appreciation Night Page 20 The Chautauquan Spring 2016 religion Hurlbut Church prepares for another summer of service Hurlbut Memorial Community Church is a United Methodist Church with an ecumenical outlook. Worship occurs at 10:45 a.m. Sundays through June 19 and is preceded by church school at 9:30 a.m. Beginning June 26, Hurlbut worships at 8:30 a.m. Sundays during the summer. The early Sunday morning worship service offers a brief message, scriptures, music and communion. Please join us for these faith-filled experiences. At Hurlbut everyone is invited to join us for Christian worship, education, fellowship and service. Our doors are always open! Hurlbut Church also serves lunches, dinners, hamburgers and hot dogs during the nine weeks of the Chautauqua season. All proceeds the church receives from these meals support our missions and ministries of this church. Come by and enjoy lunches, dinners, and the Sunday lemonade stand with us! Hurlbut’s lunches are served Monday to Friday; they allow the families at Chautauqua, visitors, employees and anyone who is hungry to enjoy a reasonably priced, nutritious lunch. Lunch is served from 11:45 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. weekdays; a turkey dinner on Thursday begins at 5 p.m. The Hurlbut Lemonade Stand will be open on Sundays during the summer starting at 9:30 a.m.! Please come by for coffee, rolls, hot dogs or hamburgers. If you would like to volunteer to help with the lemonade stand, lunch or the turkey dinner, please contact us at 716-357-4045. Hurlbut Church considers this ministry a way of being of service in our summer community. We look forward to welcoming you and serving you. Good friends! Good food! Serving with a smile! The church is handicapped-accessible on all levels, since having a limited use/limited access (LULA) elevator installed a few years ago. In an older building, repairs are constantly needed, so Hurlbut Church always has a new building project going on. Last year, the dining room at Hurlbut was upgraded by having new windows, flooring, lights and the walls redone. This year, the major project was replacing several cracked beams and ceiling tiles in the Marion Lawrance room. We are still looking to replace all the non-stained glass windows in the building. Replacing the current single pane windows will improve energy efficiency, comfort and safety, as they will open for easier egress from the building in an emergency. Gifts earmarked for completion of the building project are most appreciated. We are encouraged that Hurlbut and the Chautauqua communities continue to show support, generosity and faithful stewardship. DENOMINATIONAL HOUSES AND RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS In addition to Department of Religion programs, denominational houses and religious organizations at Chautauqua Institution offer religious services, lectures and low-cost housing options during the nine-week Chautauqua Season. Please use the contact information below for more information about programming and accommodations. Emails and phone numbers are provided for houses and organizations without a website. Baha’i Faith Linda Gillette, chair • lgillette@netsync.net, 716.673.1634 Rick Snyder • RSnyder18@verizon.net, 716.372.3663 Baptist House Katie White, host • revkatie@verizon.net, 716.357.3671 (Season) Catholic House Website: www.chautauquacatholics.org • E-mail: CatholicHouse@stny.rr.com Chabad Lubavitch of Chautauqua Website: www.cocweb.org Chautauqua Assoc. Disciples of Christ (CADC) “Disciples Houses” David Lollis, CADC administrator • Chautauqua.doc@msn.com, 716.581.3212 Chautauqua Christian Fellowship Francie Pickens Oliver, chair • ccfchautauqua@yahoo.com, 512.587.8120, 716.357.2711 (S) Christian Science House and Chapel E-mail: chautauquahouse@windstream.net, Phone: 716.357.2334 (S) Ecumenical Community of Chautauqua Website: www.ecoc-chautauqua.org Gluck to serve as Mystic Heart Week Nine teacher-in-residence In its 17th year, the Mystic Heart Program will expand to offer an even greater variety of meditation instruction and practice. Maureen Rovegno, associate director of the Department of Religion, along with Subagh Singh, co-director of the Mystic Heart, have announced that David Gluck, a lifelong Chautauquan, will be teacher-in-residence during Week Nine. “We are especially pleased that David will be joining us,” said Singh. “He is a highly qualified teacher of Hindu and Yoga philosophy and practice, and his addition as teacher will beautifully round out our offerings.” Besides Hindu-based meditation, the Mystic Heart also shares meditation techniques and wisdom drawn from Sikh, Christian, Jewish, Buddhist and Sufi traditions. As the name implies, the Mystic Heart Meditation Program seeks to reveal the mystic experience at the heart of all faiths and wisdom traditions. Each week a different tradition is represented by the teacher-in-residence, who leads morning meditation and afternoon seminars. There is also a weekly Centering Prayer meditation on Thursday evenings. The mission of the Mystic Heart is to provide Chautauquans with opportunities to join with others to learn about and to experience meditation. All sessions are open to anyone, from any background and with any level of prior experience. “It is a gift to our community that people of different faiths or no faith, with years of experience or no experience, can sit together and get in touch with their own most peaceful, loving, compassionate self,” Rovegno said. A full schedule of Mystic Heart programs and teacher profiles can be found at themysticheart.org. Unity announces 2016 ministers Unity of Chautauqua guest ministers have been selected for the 2016 season. Ministers in weekly order will be: the Rev. Ann Marie Acacio, Swoyersville, Pennsylvania; the Rev. Robin Volker, Delaware, Ohio; the Rev. Marilyn Jackson, Uniondale, New York; the Rev. Lori Hisson, London, Ontario, Canada; the Rev. Anna Shouse, Austin, Texas; the Rev. James Stacey, Sunrise Beach, Missouri; the Revs. Patricia Gulino and Don Laskey, Barboursville, Virginia; the Rev. Linda Taylor, Roanoke, Virginia; and the Rev. Terry Dearmore, Manassas, Virginia. In addition to serving as guest minister for the Sunday morning service at 9:30 a.m. in the Hall of Missions, they will offer meditation each weekday morning from 8 to 8:20 a.m., also in the Hall of Missions. From 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays the guest minister for the week will present a lecture on Unity’s Positive Path for Spiritual Living, to be held in the meeting room of the Chautauqua Institution Welcome Center. The Rev. Ron Neff is minister of Unity of Chautauqua and Jo-An Webb, Chautauqua, is president of the board of directors. Other board members are Kelly Mareri and Virginia Richardson of Jamestown, New York, Valerie DiCarlo, Westlake, New York, and Licensed Unity Teacher Amy Neff of Stuart, Florida. Episcopal Cottage Website: www.episcopalcottage.com (also for reservations) Everett Jewish Life Center at Chautauqua (EJLCC) Marcia and Jerry Pops, hosts • gpops@wvu.edu, 716.357.2077 (S) Hebrew Congregation of Chautauqua Website: www.hebrewcongregationchautauqua.org Hurlbut Memorial Community United Methodist Church The Rev. Carmen Perry, pastor • carmenperry10@yahoo.com, 716.357.4045 International Order of the King’s Daughters and Sons (IOKDS) Phone: 716.357.4951 (year-round) Vickie Carter, scholarship program director • chqscholars@gmail.com Lutheran House Website: www.lutheranhouse.org Metropolitan Community Church Fellowship (Sponsor of Lesbian and Gay Group and PFLAG of Chautauqua Institution) Monte Thompson, leader • selke.thompson@gmail.com Presbyterian House Merrilee Harrington, manager • merrilee1223@gmail.com Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) Eleanor Doud • edoud@windstream.net, 716.782.3570 Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Website: www.uufchautauqua.org • E-mail: uudhchaut@gmail.com Chautauqua UCC Society (United Church of Christ) • Mayflower House, Reformed Church House, Headquarters Building Website: www.cuccs.org United Methodist House Website: www.umhouse.com United Methodist Missionary Vacation Home The Rev. Paul Womack and Natalie Hanson, hosts • revjpw@epbfi.com, 716.807.1728 Fenton Memorial Deaconess Home Scott Vickery, svickery@unitedmethodistwomen.org Unity of Chautauqua Website: www.unitycha.org Spring 2016 The Chautauquan Page 21 religion Everett Center releases film series listing, lecture topics 2016 will mark the Everett Jewish Life Center at Chautauqua’s (EJLCC) eighth year. It is Chautauqua’s Jewish denominational house, and it welcomes the Jewish and larger Chautauqua community to share in the joy of learning and life. The EJLCC offers a bed and breakfast with five rooms and provides diverse programs, including a film series, a speaker series, book signings and Yiddish conversations (Thursdays, Weeks Two to Seven). Complete information about the EJLCC can be found on its website, jewishcenterchautauqua.org. In addition to a staff of a host couple and a program intern, the EJLCC is administered by a 12-person volunteer board, including Edith Everett as the founding chair. The board provides a vision for the center and sets very high standards for managing ELJCC’s finances, maintaining the building, creating a superb bed and breakfast experience and program planning. Beyond the staff and board, EJLCC’s success is highly dependent on a core of volunteers who provide hospitality, serve as ushers, act as coordinators for the speakers, curate the Center’s film series and facilitate the Yiddish language conversations. The EJLCC is always interested in new ideas and new volunteers. If you are interested in giving some time to support the Center, please email info@ jewishcenterchautauqua.org. Your help is needed and would be so appreciated. The film series takes place at 3:30 p.m. Sundays and Wednesdays and will feature “The Farewell Party” (Week One), “Deli Man” (Week Two), “Belle and Sebastian” (Week Three), “The Last Mensch” (Week Four), “The Green Prince” (Week Six), “Dough” (Week Seven), “Run Boy Run” (Week Eight) and “The Outrageous Sophie Tucker” (Week Nine). On Aug. 7, the EJLCC will host “Movie With a Nosh” featuring “Dough,” a comic British film about a London Jewish baker who is desperate to keep his business going in a changing neighborhood. A dessert and sundae buffet will follow. E J L C C 2 0 1 6 L e ct u r e r s and T opics Monday afternoons, Tuesdays at noon and some Wednesdays Week One: Steven Katz, Alvin J. and Shirley Slater Chair in Jewish Holocaust studies at Boston University. “Rethinking Jewish Resistance during the Holocaust” and “Saving Jews during the Holocaust” Week Two: Sarah Bunin Benor, associate professor of contemporary Jewish studies at the Los Angeles campus of Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion. “Chutzpah to Chidush: A Century of Yiddish-Influenced English in America” and “Becoming Frum: How Newcomers Learn the Language and Culture of Orthodox Judaism.” Steven Windmueller, professor emeritus at the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion. “Are Jews Becoming Republicans: The 2016 Presidential Campaign and the Jewish Vote” WEEK THREE: Irvin Ungar, CEO, Historicana. “Justice Illuminated: The Art of Arthur Szyk” and “Freedom Illuminated: Understanding The Szyk Haggadah” WEEK FOUR: Yossi Praeger, executive director for North America, The Avi Chai Foundation. “What Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address Teaches Us About Lincoln’s Religious Worldview – and Our Own” and “Applied Jewish Wisdom: Jewish Values in Charitable Giving” WEEK FIVE: Anne Lapidus Lerner, assistant professor emerita of Jewish literature, Jewish Theological Seminary. “Eve Exposed” and “Are We Bound by the Binding of Isaac?” WEEK SIX: Jeremy Ben-Ami, president, J Street. “Choices Ahead: Defining the Future of Israel and Its Relationship with the American Jewish Community” and “What Can be Done to Save the TwoState Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict?” Robert Goldberg, CEO and executive director of the Jewish Federation of Greater Buffalo. “The New Jewish Community” WEEK SEVEN: Shai Feldman, Judith and Sidney Swartz Director, Crown Center for Middle East Studies, Brandeis University. “The Chaotic Middle East: Impact on Israel’s National Security” and “Israel, the U.S. and the New Middle East: Challenges and Opportunities” WEEK EIGHT: Tamara Cofman-Wittes, director, Saban Center for Middle East Policy, Brookings Institution. “American Intervention in the Middle East: What Have We Learned?” and “Slouching Toward Bethlehem: What Future for the Middle East” WEEK NINE: Shalom Sabar, professor of Jewish art and folklore, Hebrew University of Jerusalem. “Rembrandt and the Jews: Between Myth and Reality” and “Religious Ideology and Visual Culture: The Sacrifice of Isaac in Jewish, Christian and Islamic Art Hebrew Congregation plans Chabad Lubavitch readies full welcoming activities all season summer of educational events In 2016, the Chautauqua Hebrew Congregation will celebrate 56 years of service to the Chautauqua community, including religious services, social events, educational talks and a music scholarship program. We coordinate our efforts with the Chautauqua Department of Religion in an effort to ensure that our events are welcoming to all Chautauquans. Friday night Kabbalat Shabbat services at the lake, from 5 to 6 p.m., take place in a beautiful setting near Miller Bell Tower. On Saturday mornings, from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m., we have inspiring services led by a rabbi and cantorial song leader in the Hurlbut Church sanctuary, followed by delicious kiddush lunches. We welcome back this year Rabbis Frank Muller (Youngstown, Ohio), Samuel Stahl (San Antonio, Texas), Ron Symons (Pittsburgh), and Elyse Goldstein (Toronto) to conduct services. Also this year, Rabbis Sid Schwarz (Bethesda, Maryland), Joshua Caruso (Beachwood, Ohio) and Emily Losben-Ostrov (Erie, Pennsylvania) will join our roster of distinguished rabbis. Many of our favorite song leaders will also be returning this year. We will sponsor two Friday night Shabbat dinners at the Everett Jewish Life Center (July 16 and July 30). In addition, there will be two Havdalah services (July 9 and Aug. 6), in the garden behind Smith Wilkes Hall and a Tisha B’Av service on Aug. 13–14. This year the Shirley Lazarus Speakers Series, held on Sunday nights from 8 to 9 p.m. in the Hurlbut sanctuary, will feature many familiar Chautauquans, including Patricia McBride and Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux of Chautauqua Dance; the Rev. Carmen Perry, Hurlbut Church pastor; and Rossen Milanov, music director of the Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra. In addition, we look forward to the following presentations: Shel Seligsohn on “Louis Brandeis, A Man for all Seasons”; the Rev. Frank Sherman on “Building a New Relationship: Christian-Jewish Relations in the 21st Century”; and Jerry Pops on “William Friedman: Breaking the Japanese Purple Cypher.” The presentations are always followed by refreshments. After the program, transportation is provided throughout the grounds of Chautauqua. The Tuesday afternoon social hour and refreshments program, held in the Everett Jewish Life Center, encourages social interactions and group discussions, always including refreshments. This program is a great way to introduce new Chautauquans to our congregation. A special feature of the social hour is our annual student musical recital, featuring fine young musicians who have received scholarships from our congregation. The board of directors for the Hebrew Congregation consists of Renee Andrews (president), Gloria Gould, (vice-president programming), Larry Cohen (recording secretary), Joan Harf (corresponding secretary), Burt Zucker (treasurer), Joan Spirtas (publicity chair) and at-large members Bob Gottfried, Patty Lemer, Carole Reeder and Eleanor Pless. We extend special thanks to our social committee: Judy Farber, Marilyn Neuman, Sandi Zucker, Betty Salz, Carole Wolsh and Judy Katz. Our egalitarian nature and welcoming atmosphere, which extends to all Chautauquans, are hallmarks of the Hebrew Congregation. Updated information can be found on our website hebrewcongregationchautauqua.org. Please join us during this year to celebrate all that the Hebrew Congregation has to offer at Chautauqua! S tay u p t o d at e Sign up to receive off-season updates from Chautauqua at ciweb.org/e-newsletter Chabad Lubavitch of Chautauqua welcomes all Chautauquans to participate in their many programs this upcoming season. Chabad’s events include daily classes, weekly services, special lectures, Kosher BBQs and Community Shabbat Dinners, amonth many others. At 9:15 a.m. most weekdays, Chabad presents classes at the Zigdon Chabad Jewish House at 23 Vincent (note the change in location for this season). Class topics include “Everyday Ethics” on Mondays (July 4 to Aug. 22, excluding July 11); “Maimonides” on Tuesdays (July 5 to Aug. 23); “Kabalah ‘n’ Psychology on Wednesdays (June 29, July 6, July 13 and Aug. 17); “Talmudic Ethics on Thursdays (June 30 to Aug. 18, excluding Aug. 4); and “Prayer Re-Examined” on Fridays (July 1 to Aug. 19). Fridays will also feature Challa Baking at 12:15 p.m., also at Zigdon Chabad Jewish House. Chabad hosts a Shabbat service and kiddush from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Saturdays (June 25 to Aug. 20). Men’s Tefilin Club meets on five Sundays (June 26, July 17, July 24, Aug. 7 and Aug. 21) at 9:30 a.m. There will also be the Tisha B’Av service at 9:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 13, followed by a service and lamentations from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 14. All these services take place at the Zigdon Chabad Jewish House. Rabbi Zalman Vilenkin, leader of Chabad Lubavitch of Chautauqua, will present three 9:15 a.m. Hall of Philosophy special lectures throughout the season, co-sponsored by Chautauqua’s Department of Religion. Topics and dates include “Laughter is the Best Medicine” on Wednesday, July 20; “Medical Ethics” on Wednesday, July 27; and “Anti-Semitism Then and Now” on Wednesday, Aug. 10. Chabad’s two annual Kosher BBQs will again be held from 12 to 2 p.m. (if rain, 5 to 7 p.m.) on Sunday, July 3, and Sunday, July 31, at Miller Park. The entire Chautauqua community is invited, and there is a small fee. The Balloon Man and Happy the Clown will entertain the children. Chabad also invites all Chautauquan to attend two Community Shabbat Dinners, at 7 p.m. Friday, July 15, and Friday, Aug. 19, at the Zigdon Chabad Jewish House. A traditional four-course kosher Shabbat dinner will be served along with sharing of stories, Torah thoughts and Shabbat songs. Advanced reservations are necessary as space is limited. There is a fee for this event. Finally, the Zigdon Chabad Jewish House will host several special events throughout the summer. A special lecture will be presented from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. on Tuesday, July 12, by Joseph Bensmihen, the former CEO and owner of Boca Home Care Services and President of Private Care Association of Florida. Diagnosed with spastic cerebral palsy as a child, he became instrumental in having the Canadian law for mainstreaming children with disabilities changed. Bensmihen graduated from Yeshiva University with a bachelor’s degree in political science and earned a master’s degree from the Wurtzweiler School of Social Work. He then spent two years working at the Bank of Montreal teaching employers how to mainstream talented people with disabilities into the financial sector. An Open House “Meet and Greet” will be held from 12 to 2 p.m. on three Sundays: July 17, Aug. 3 and Aug. 21. There will be a screening of the film “Shadows from My Past” from 4:30 to 6 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 16, and Chabad is also planning to host “Game Nights for Kids” during the season. Details to follow. The Vilenkins will continue to serve as a religious and scholarly resources on the Chautauqua grounds for questions of Jewish law and other Judaic needs. They can be reached at 917-364-1013, rabbi@cocweb.org or during the summer at the Zigdon Chabad Jewish house (716-357-3467). Page 22 The Chautauquan Spring 2016 community CWC in 2016 House tour, Kiblin park dedication, events monarch initiative highlight BTG’s 2016 offers you won’t By Nancy Wolfe Bird, Tree & Garden Club The Bird, Tree & Garden Club begins its 103rd year at Chautauqua with plans to offer 100 free programs throughout the season. The headliner event that supports these BTG programs is “Little Journeys to Homes in Chautauqua” a house tour scheduled for July 12. The house tour, a biennial event, has been a Chautauqua tradition for 60 years. Ticketholders are welcomed into a dozen homes including charming cottages and expansive lakefront houses. A preview event with architect Bob Jeffrey is scheduled on July 7. House Tour tickets, at $30, are available on line and allow admission to the grounds from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. that day, attendance at the Amphitheater morning programs, shopping discounts at Chautauqua stores and light refreshments in historic Norton Hall. The Arboretum, a serene parklike space at the south end of the grounds, last received refurbishing 10 years ago. This year will see a joint effort with BTG offering support as the Institution’s Gardens and Landscapes staff begins needed updating. “Bring Back Monarchs” is the new BTG initiative. The use of herbicides and insecticides has decimated the habitats of many species, including that of the amazing monarch butterfly. By educating Chautauquans to use butterfly-friendly native plants, which incidentally do not require garden chemicals and irrigation, BTG seeks to establish butterfly waystations. Sev- want to miss Provided photo by Angela James The Park Cottage at 45 North Lake are one of the private Chautauqua homes included in the 2016 Bird, Tree & Garden Club House Tour. eral Monarch Moments programs on Mondays and a native-plant sale will support the initiative. Widespread cooperation of Chautauqua property owners in this project will also reduce polluting runoff into the lake. The dedication of the Ryan Kiblin Memorial Stormwater Park this summer culminates efforts to honor the Institution’s late supervisor of grounds, gardens and landscapes. BTG and its members led the way and have contributed $30,000 toward the memorial garden. Endangered species, bird songs, Beatrix Potter’s garden and the alarming impact of microplastics on our ecosystems are among the varied topics included in BTG’s Tuesday Brown Bag programs at Smith Wilkes Hall. Throughout this summer’s season, Lake Walks, Bird Talks and Walks, Bat Chats, Garden Walks, Purple Mar- tin Chats, Ravine Programs and Nature Walks are scheduled, and many of these programs are appropriate for children. Also Chris Flanders, a Master Gardener, will present a new series of garden workshops for adults. Recent additions to BTG’s summer programs just for children are the library story hour, featuring nature and wildlife with the Institution’s Betsy Burgeson, and the Children’s School garden programs. Bird, Tree & Garden Club is deeply appreciative of its collaborators: Chautauqua Institution, Smith Memorial Library, Chautauqua Watershed Conversancy, the Chautauqua Lake Association, the Roger Tory Peterson Institution and Jamestown Audubon. House Tour tickets, and the dates and locations for Bird, Tree & Garden Club programs are available on the BTG website, chautauquabtg.org. CPOA continues work to improve lighting, safety By Bill Neches Chautauqua Property Owners Association Your Chautauqua Property Owners Association (CPOA) is dedicated to maintain and enhance quality of life on the grounds during and beyond the season. Your dues and donations are used to sponsor events and to support the Institution in its parallel mission. CPOA Officers and Board of Directors: • President: Bill Neches •Vice President: Barbara Brady •Secretary: Debra Dinnocenzo •Treasurer: Chip Gamble •Area Representatives: Karen Conover (Area 1) Dianne Hess (Area 2) Jim Vance (Area 3) Helen Habenicht (Area 4) John Dilley (Area 5) Suzanne Shull (Area 6) Fred Rice (Area 7) Phil Carl (Area 8) Chris Anderson (Area 9) Carrie Zachry (Area 10) Darlene Johnston (member at large) •Class B Chautauqua Trustees: Greg Miller, Bob Jeffrey, Hugh Butler, Jim Klingensmith •Affiliates: Laura Damon (North Lake Informed Citizens) Richard Parlato (POWR) Jim Lampl (Safety and Transportation Chair) The CPOA Outdoor Lighting Committee, chaired by John Dilley, facili- tated the installation of new LED street lighting on North Lake Drive. After lengthy discussions with National Grid for a number of years, we are close to an agreement which will have great impact on the future of street lighting in Chautauqua. A long-range plan has been developed to replace our street lighting with new, energy efficient LED lights. We hope to be able to begin the installation of the Chautauqua Gateway Demonstration Project in conjunction with the U.S. Department of Energy (new LED street lighting on Pratt Avenue, between Ramble and Hurst) before the 2016 season. The CPOA Safety and Transportation Committee, chaired by Jim Lampl, will continue to focus on the Shared Space initiative to enhance the safety of all Chautauquans, especially pedestrians. Bicycle safety-related activities will include four bike “rodeos” and bicycle safety marketing, safety posters, safe bicycle route maps, Daily articles and safety promotions in the Chautauqua Cinema; pedestrian safety activities will include awareness marketing and reduction of walkway hazards. This summer the POWR group (Property Owners Who Rent) will focus on using the Web safely and marketing properties with a variety of resources. The Institution will be working with POWR to publish the advance 2017 summer schedule and to facilitate marketing the availability of accommodations for the 2017 season. Your CPOA board of directors will continue to meet four times each season with President Tom Becker and the senior staff where we advocate for property owners by addressing resident issues, asking questions about matters related to property owners and also by distributing important news from the Institution back to property owners. Tom told us he prizes the time that he spends with us at our board meetings. 2016 CPOA summer schedule: •Week Zero: The annual CPOA potluck dinner will be held this year at Heirloom Restaurant at the Athenaeum Hotel on Wednesday, June 22, 2016. •Week Four: Area Picnics •July 16: CPOA General Meeting and Trustees Open Forum •Aug. 13: CPOA Annual Business Meeting Your CPOA is a member- and volunteer-supported non-profit that raises funds through dues and donations to pursue our mission of quality improvement. Our membership year is from January to December. In addition to joining by mailing the membership application card, you may now join the CPOA, or make a donation, with a credit or debit card using our secure online payment system. Please visit our website at www.cpoa.ws and click the “Join Us” link on the homepage and then click on the “Pay Membership Dues” button. Please pay your 2016 dues promptly. Volunteers are needed. Donations and queries may be sent to PO Box 12, Chautauqua, NY 14722. Please visit our website at www.cpoa.ws for project updates and reports. Contact the CPOA by email at cpoarepresentative@gmail.com. 4 p.m. Monday, July 25: Love, Loss and What I Wore As the Bratton Stage spotlights women in 2016, the CWC will add to the theme by presenting a Chautauqua rendition of the award-winning play Love, Loss and What I Wore. Writers Nora and Delia Ephron use clothing and accessories and the memories they trigger to tell an intimate collection of stories that all women can relate to. Vivienne Benesch, co-artistic director of Chautauqua Theater Company, will star in the play along with CWC cast members Ann Fletcher, Susan Laubach, Tiffany Clementi Hammes, and Gwen Tigner. Chorus members will be Lee Heinz, Lisa Wallace and Michele Keane. Visit chautauquawomensclub.org for ticket information. July 30 & 31: Classic to Current: A CWC Furniture and Jewelry Event Do you need that special something for your home or for you? Chautauqua-themed items and small furniture pieces will be available for purchase at this Sunday noon event, along with handpicked refurbished antiques and custom upholstered pieces. Held at the CWC House property, jewelry will also be featured, with high-end costume pieces designed by Joan Rivers, Heidi Dais and others, plus copies of jewelry owned by Jackie Kennedy. A Saturday afternoon preview party will give shoppers an early look at items available. Please contact Nancy Langston at nancyclangston@ gmail.com for additional information. Summer gatherings throughout the season Please visit our website, chautauquawomensclub.org, for our complete list of summer gatherings and directions for sign up to attend. CWC members and friends will be hosts for specified events throughout the season at private homes and the CWC House. Attend a variety of events, dinners and themed activitieswhile gathering with friends and meeting new Chautauquans. 3 p.m. Saturdays: Contemporary Issues Forum CWC offers this series of outstanding speakers each season at the Hall of Philosophy with the goal of enrichment and stimulating thought while covering contemporary issues. Some of our 2016 offerings: July 2: Mary Beth Rogers, author of Barbara Jordan: American Hero, will discuss the subject of her book, the first African-American woman elected to Congress from Texas. July 23: The second annual Barbara Vackar Lecturer is Mary Mapes, author of Who Has the Privilege of Power Now? and former researcher and producer of “60 Minutes.” Her story is told in the recent movie “The Truth.” July 30: Stephen Kurkjian, who has served 37 years as an editor and investigative journalist for The Boston Globe, will speak on Master Thieves, his book about the largest art theft in history at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in 1990. The Chautauquan Spring 2016 Page 23 community Fund co-chairs announce Bell Tower Society, matching gift By Cathy Nowosielski & Jeff Lutz Co-Chairs, Chautauqua Fund Having co-chaired the Chautauqua Fund for the first time last year, we are looking forward to returning for another exciting season! We are incredibly grateful for the dedicated volunteers who advocate on behalf of Chautauqua’s rich mix of programs. We also wish to extend our gratitude to members of this community who generously give what they can, each year, to provide the vital resources necessary to deliver an exceptional experience for all. We are also warmed by the Chautauqua Foundation Board of Directors having dedicated this year’s annual fund in honor of Tom and Jane Becker’s devoted service to Chautauqua. Year after year, the collective generosity of individuals, families, sponsors and foundations makes possible the Chautauqua experience — subsidizing the annual cost to deliver the depth Cathy Nowosielski and Jeff Lutz and quality of programming that every resident, visitor, student and patron enjoys from the moment they enter these grounds. The 2016 Chautauqua Fund goal is $3.85 million dollars, providing the main source of philanthropy toward the Institution’s operating budget. Every gift helps toward reaching this significant level of support, increasing the quality of programs while keep- ing ticket prices affordable for families and visitors. Please consider how you can participate, and join us in making your gift or pledge today. It’s now easier than ever to make a gift — visit the mobile-friendly, secure website at giving.ciweb.org; pay with a credit card or checking account; or, choose a convenient monthly giving option. We are proud to announce the Bell Tower Society has been established to recognize monthly recurring gifts to the annual Chautauqua Fund. Providing consistent and sustainable support, monthly giving saves time and resources, and is a testament of your enduring commitment to Chautauqua. This summer, Bell Tower Society members will be invited to special events hosted by program leadership. For a limited time only, a matching gift opportunity is being offered for those who join the Bell Tower Society. For each new membership in this society (eligible commitments must be at least $10/month for 12 months or greater than your total giving to the 2015 Chautauqua Fund, whichever is more), the Edward L. Anderson, Jr. Foundation is generously contributing an additional $500 to the annual fund. You can select whether your gift goes to the General Fund (to support whatever is most needed) or to a specific program of your choice. While unrestricted donations are among the most valuable gifts the Institution can receive, you may direct your gift towards the arts, religion, education, youth, recreation or any other area of your greatest passion and interest. All gifts are deeply appreciated, and we encourage you to explore how you can make a difference at Chautauqua. To learn more about the Chautauqua’s annual fund or how to join the Bell Tower Society, please contact the Chautauqua Fund team at foundation@ ciweb.org or 716-357-6404. New volunteers are always welcome — please let us know if you are interested in serving! Local students visit grounds to engage with arts Stay connected: Join the NOW Generation · Inviting Chautauquans ages 21-40 to stay connected year-round. · Offering social, professional networking, family-focused and volunteer opportunities. · Preparing and empowering young adults for leadership roles. NOW Gen events are held both on the grounds during the summer and throughout the year in a growing number of cities around the country. Are you interested in meeting fellow young Chautauquans or families in a city near you? Sav e t h e Dat e* Annual NOW Generation President’s Reception Sunday, July 3 5:30–7 p.m. Girls’ Club “Summerfest” Saturday, July 30 10–11:30 a.m. Youth Activities Center (YAC) NOW Gen Reception with special guest Steven Osgood Monday, August 8 7:30–8:30 pm Miller Cottage *To sign up for the NOW Generation e-newsletter and receive invitations to these events and others, please email foundation@ciweb.org For information on additional programs, volunteer opportunities and more, please contact Megan Sorenson, staff liaison, at msorenson@ciweb.org / 716.357.6243. Please “like” the NOW Generation! facebook.com/NOWGenCHQ Chautauquans who arrive early for the 2016 season may catch glimpses of children with lunches or bright yellow school buses arriving at the Turner Gate for an Institution field trip. These students will be on their way to take part in pre-season presentations by Chautauqua’s arts programs — it’s all part of a growing initiative to build the Institution’s presence in local schools. “These efforts are intended to serve as an active invitation for youth, teachers, and families in the surrounding community to engage with the Institution through the arts,” said Deborah Sunya Moore, vice president and director of programming. “We want every child in our community to know that this is their Institution.” The Young Playwrights Project, a collaboration between the Chautauqua Theater Company and the Florida Studio Theatre, is now in its second year. Third- and fourth-grade students from Chautauqua Lake, Panama and Fletcher elementary schools have already had FST and CTC teaching artists in their classrooms over the winter. These students have also gathered in Bellinger Hall with more than 30 Chautauqua community volunteers to hear their plays read out loud. Eleven winning plays were selected to be produced by CTC on Monday, June 20, for third- and fourth-grade playwrights, as well as second-grade future play- Submitted photo Arnie and Jill Bellowe (left) pose with students visiting Fowler-Kellogg Art Center in 2015. wrights. Chautauquans will be able to see these same plays on June 28 in Smith Wilkes Hall as CTC will present the opening performance of the 2016 Family Entertainment Series. The Young Playwrights Project is generously underwritten by Chautauqua community member and FST board member Georgia Court. June 20 is a busy day on the grounds as it is also the first day of weeklong field trips with the Visual Arts at Chautauqua Institution (VACI). Students from surrounding schools are invited to come tour the galleries and sculpture garden. “It is a wonderful opportunity for the students to tour the galleries and engage with our staff as they view our contemporary exhibitions,” said Judy Barie, the Susan and Jack Turben Director of VACI Galleries. Noting how the students will participate in a hands-on activity on the porch of Fowler-Kellogg Art Center, Barie said that “students will be creating their own collages to take home after they view ‘The Art of Making Collages.’ ” This is the third year for VACI field trips. The 2016 VACI field trips are generously underwritten by Jill and Arnie Bellowe, Gloria Plevin, and Scott and Patti Fine. K a r ps p r ovid e f u nding fo r f u r nit u r e at ‘ t h e smit h ’ At left, Nancy and Norman Karp sit on the new furniture made possible through their generous donation to The Smith Memorial Library. Alongside them is Library Director Scott Ekstrom. “After spending so many years (and many chilly off-season months) in the warmth of ‘The Smith,’ we wanted to do something that would benefit the library directly and be enjoyed by everyone, including those who are in Chautauqua year-round,” Norman said. Ekstrom expressed his sincere thanks. “We’ve needed to create a more comfortable seating area for some time, and when the Karps suggested funding it, I was elated,” he said. “They are loyal patrons of the library and their gift is very fitting. I am so grateful to them for making this possible.” 2016 Visit us online at ciweb.org S U N D AY C A L E N D A R M O N D AY T U E S D AY O F 2016 Season: June 25–August 28 For the most up-to-date schedule or to order tickets, visit us online at ciweb.org General information: 1.800.836.ARTS Tickets: 716.357.6250 Hotel reservations: 1.800.821.1881 E V E N T S W E D N E S D AY T H U R S D AY F R I D AY S AT U R D AY W E E K O N E • Lecture Theme | Roger Rosenblatt & Friends: On Creative Expression • Interfaith Lecture Theme | Biblical Literalism: A Gentile Heresy 26 27 9:15 Fr. Greg Boyle 10:45 Roger Rosenblatt, author, Thomas Murphy. Jane Pauley, author, Skywriting: A Life Out of the Blue. Garry Trudeau, creator, “Doonesbury” 2:00 John Shelby Spong, retired Episcopal bishop of Newark 4:00 New York Brass Arts Trio 8:15* Susquehanna Chorale 10:45 Fr. Greg Boyle, founder and executive director, Homeboy Industries 2:30 U.S. Army Field Band & Soldiers’ Chorus 5:00 Vespers 8:00 Sacred Song Service 28 9:15 Fr. Greg Boyle 10:45 Roger Rosenblatt. Lorin Stein, editor-in-chief, The Paris Review. Pamela Paul, editor, The New York Times Book Review. David Lynn, editor, The Kenyon Review 2:00 John Shelby Spong 6:00 FES. Chautauqua Theater Company 8:15 Tiempo Libre 29 9:15 Fr. Greg Boyle 10:45 Roger Rosenblatt. Alan and Marilyn Bergman, Grammy-, Emmy- and Oscar-winning songwriters 2:00 John Shelby Spong 8:15 Chautauqua Dance Salon. Mark Diamond, director 30 9:15 Fr. Greg Boyle 10:45 Roger Rosenblatt. Ann Patchett, author, Bel Canto 2:00 John Shelby Spong 3:30 CLSC Author Presentation. Geraldine Brooks, The Secret Chord 8:15* Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra. Rossen Milanov, conductor. Augustin Hadelich, violin July 1 9:15 Fr. Greg Boyle 10:45 Roger Rosenblatt. Alan Alda, actor; author, Things I Overheard While Talking to Myself. Arlene Alda, photographer; author, Just Kids from the Bronx 2:00 John Shelby Spong 8:00 Theater. In the Next Room 8:15** An Evening with LeAnn Rimes June 25 8:15** The Temptations and The Four Tops 3:00 6:00 8:15 2 Mary Beth Rogers, author, Barbara Jordan: American Hero Theater (opening). In the Next Room CSO. Rossen Milanov, conductor. Jennifer Koh, violin W E E K T W O • Lecture Theme | Money and Power • Interfaith Lecture Theme | Money and Power Through a Spiritual and Ethical Lens 3 10:45 The Rev. Barbara Brown Taylor, professor of religion, Piedmont College 2:15 Theater. In the Next Room 2:30 Buffalo Silver Band 5:00 Vespers 8:00 Theater. In the Next Room 8:00 Sacred Song Service 4 9:15 Barbara Brown Taylor 10:45 Trevor Potter, founding pres., Campaign Legal Center 2:00 J. Douglas Holladay, founder, PathNorth 4:00 Harlem Quartet & Aldo López-Gavilán 8:00 CSO Independence Day Pops Celebration. Stuart Chafetz, cond. Nicole Parker, vocals. Aldo Lopez-Gavilan, piano. Ilmar Gavilan, violin The Rev. Barbara Brown 5 Taylor 10:45 Mehrsa Baradaran, author, How the Other Half Banks 2:00 Rabbi Arthur Waskow, founder and director, The Shalom Center 5 & 7 FES. Harlem Quartet 8:00 Theater. In the Next Room 8:15* Music School Festival Orchestra. Timothy Muffitt, conductor 9:15 6 The Rev. Barbara Brown Taylor 10:45 Steve Forbes, chairman and editor-in-chief, Forbes 2:00 David Korten, president, Living Economies Forum 2:15 Theater. In the Next Room 8:00 Theater. In the Next Room 8:15 The Capitol Steps: Mock the Vote 9:15 7 9:15 Barbara Brown Taylor 10:45 Zephyr Teachout, associate prof. of law, Fordham University 2:00 John M. Buchanan, former editor and publisher, The Christian Century 3:30 CLSC Author Presentation. Larissa MacFarquhar, Strangers Drowning 4:00 Theater. In the Next Room 8:15* CSO. Rossen Milanov, cond. Alexander Korsantia, piano 8 The Rev. Barbara Brown Taylor 10:45 Timothy J. Roemer, former U.S. ambassador to India; senior strategic adviser, Issue One’s ReFormers Caucus 2:00 Bill Moyers, managing editor, Moyers & Company 4:00 Theater. In the Next Room 8:15** The Avett Brothers 9:15 9 2:15 3:00 8:15 Theater. In the Next Room Dorrie Fontaine, dean, University of Virginia School of Nursing Chautauqua Opera with the Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra. La Traviata. Steven Osgood, conductor W E E K T H R E E • Lecture & Interfaith Lecture Theme | Moral Leadership in Action 10 10:45 The Rev. Raphael Warnock, senior pastor, The Historical Ebenezer Baptist Church, Atlanta 2:30 Brass Band of the Western Reserve 2:15 Theater. In the Next Room 5:00 Vespers 8:00 Theater. In the Next Room 8:00 Sacred Song Service 11 9:15 Raphael Warnock 10:45 DeRay Mckesson, Black Lives Matter activist; mayoral candidate, City of Baltimore 2:00 Andrew Young, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations 4:00 Sixth Floor Project 4:00 Tracey L. Meares, Walton Hale Hamilton Professor of law, Yale University 8:15 MFSO. Timothy Muffitt, cond. 12 13 9:15 Raphael Warnock 10:45 Arthur C. Brooks, president, American Enterprise Institute 9:15 The Rev. Raphael Warnock 2:00 David N. Saperstein, U.S. 10:45 Joyce Banda, former ambassador-at-large for president, Republic of Malawi International Religious 2:00 Jim Wallis, president and Freedom founder, Sojourners 8:15 Charlotte Ballet in Residence 7:30* Family Entertainment Series. with the Chautauqua Acrobats of Cirque-tacular Symphony Orchestra. JeanPierre Bonnefoux, director. Grant Cooper, conductor 14 9:15 Raphael Warnock 10:45 Ellen J. Kullman, former CEO, DuPont 2:00 Ralph Reed, founder and chairman, Faith & Freedom Coalition 3:30 CLSC Author Presentation. Dan Ephron, Killing a King 8:00 Theater. New Play Workshop 8:15* Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra. Teddy Abrams, conductor. Edgar Meyer, bass 15 9:15 The Rev. Raphael Warnock 10:45 Anna Maria Chávez, CEO, Girl Scouts of the USA 2:00 Joan Chittister, OSB, best-selling author. Daisy Khan, founder and executive director, Women’s Islamic Initiative in Spirituality and Equality (WISE) 4:00 Theater. New Play Workshop 8:15 Colvin & Earle 16 2:15 3:00 8:15 Theater. New Play Workshop Kara Richardson Whitely, author, Gorge: My Journey Up Kilimanjaro at 300 Pounds CSO Opera Highlights Concert. Chautauqua Opera Young Artists. Steven Osgood, conductor. Kathleen Smith Belcher, stage director W E E K F O U R • Lecture Theme | Our Search for Another Earth • Interfaith Lecture Theme | Searching for an Interstellar Spirituality? 17 10:45 The Rev. Tony Campolo, founder and president, Evangelical Association for the Promotion of Education 2:30 Chautauqua School of Dance Student Gala. Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux, director 5:00 Vespers 8:00 Sacred Song Service 18 9:15 The Rev. Tony Campolo 10:45 Phil Plait, creator, Slate’s “Bad Astronomy” blog 2:00 David Weintraub, author, Religions and Extraterrestrial Life: How Will We Deal with It? 4:00 Chautauqua Quartet 8:15 Music School Festival Orchestra. Timothy Muffitt, conductor 19 20 21 9:15 The Rev. Tony Campolo 9:15 The Rev. Tony Campolo 10:45 Charles C. Mann, historian, 10:45 Sara Seager, professor 9:15 The Rev. Tony Campolo science journalist; author, of planetary science and 10:45 Jill Tarter, founder and 1491: New Revelations of the physics, MIT Bernard M. Oliver Chair for Americas Before Columbus 2:00 Fr. José Gabriel Funes, fmr. SETI Research, SETI Institute 2:00 Joshua Ambrosius, assistant director, Vatican Observatory 2:00 Michael Waltemath, co-editor, professor of political science, 5:00 CLSC. David McCullough, Touching the Face of the University of Dayton The Wright Brothers Cosmos: On the Intersection 5 & 7 FES. Chautauqua Opera 6 & 7 FES. Lynn Trefzger…Voices of Space Travel and Religion 8:15* CSO. “Bernstein on of Comedy 8:15 Chautauqua Symphony Broadway.” Rossen Milanov, 8:15* An Evening Piano Recital Orchestra. Rossen Milanov, conductor with Alexander Gavrylyuk conductor. Felix Fan, cello 22 9:15 The Rev. Tony Campolo 10:45 David W. Miller, chief technologist, NASA. Ellen Stofan, chief scientist, NASA 2:00 Paul Root Wolpe, director Center for Ethics, Emory University 8:00 Theater. The Profane 8:15** An Evening with Huey Lewis and The News 23 Mary Mapes, former principal producer, CBS’s “60 Minutes Wednesday” 6:00 Theater (opening). The Profane 8:15 Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra. Rossen Milanov, conductor. Alexander Gavrylyuk, piano 3:00 W E E K F I V E • Lecture Theme | People and Environment • Interfaith Lecture Theme | A Theology of Ecology 24 25 9:15 The Rev. Otis Moss III 10:45 Joel Sartore, photographer and founder, Photo Ark 2:00 Karenna Gore, director, Center for Earth Ethics, Union Theological Seminary 4:00 Calmus 8:15 Chautauqua Festival Dancers with the Music School Festival Orchestra. JeanPierre Bonnefoux, director 10:45 The Rev. Otis Moss III, senior pastor, Trinity UCC, Chicago 2:15 Theater. The Profane 2:30 NYSSSA School of Choral Studies 5:00 Vespers 8:00 Theater. The Profane 8:00 Sacred Song Service 26 9:15 The Rev. Otis Moss III 27 9:15 The Rev. Otis Moss III 10:45 Nalini Nadkarni, professor of 10:45 Cory Richards, expedition photographer, National biology, University of Utah Geographic 2:00 Rabbi Ellen Bernstein, 2:00 Imam Abdulaziz Eddebbarh, founder, Shomrei Adamah retired scientist and engineer, 5 & 7 Family Entertainment Series. Bash the Trash Los Alamos Natl. Laboratory 8:15 CSO. “Total Tchaikovsky.” 4:00 Theater. The Profane Rossen Milanov, conductor. 8:15* An Evening of Pas de Deux. Jon Nakamatsu, piano. Charlotte Ballet in Residence. Chautauqua Dance dancers. Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux, Abigail Rethwisch, soprano director 28 9:15 The Rev. Otis Moss III 10:45 David Doubilet, underwater photographer, Natl. Geographic 2:00 Susan M. Darlington, prof. of anthropology and Asian studies, Hampshire College 3:30 CLSC. Lily King, Euphoria 4:00 Theater. The Profane 8:15* CSO. Rossen Milanov, cond. Charles Berginc, trumpet. Kathryn Henry, soprano. CTC actors. Andrew Borba, dir. 29 9:15 The Rev. Otis Moss III 10:45 Bryan Christy, chief correspondent, Special Investigations Unit, National Geographic magazine 2:00 The Rev. Gerald L. Durley, pastor emeritus, Providence Missionary Baptist Church 4:00 Theater. The Profane 7:30 Chautauqua Opera with the CSO. The Mikado 8:15† Britt Nicole 30 8:00 2:15 3:00 8:15 Old First Night Run/Walk Theater. The Profane Stephen Kurkjian, author, Master Thieves: The Boston Gangsters Who Pulled Off the World’s Greatest Art Heist Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra with the Music School Festival Orchestra. Rossen Milanov, conductor W E E K S I X • Lecture Theme | The Future of Cities • Interfaith Lecture Theme | Religious Voices in the City 31 August 1 10:45 The Rev. John Philip Newell, poet, peacemaker, minister and scholar, Church of Scotland 2:15 Theater. The Profane 2:30 American Legion Band of the Tonawandas 5:00 Vespers 8:00 Theater. The Profane 8:00 Sacred Song Service 9:15 The Rev. John Philip Newell 10:45 David Simon, creator and writer, HBO’s “The Wire” 2:00 Diana Butler Bass, author, Grounded: Finding God in the World — A Spiritual Revolution 4:00 Sō Percussion 7:30 Chautauqua Opera with the Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra. The Mikado 8:15*† Sultans of String 2 9:15 John Philip Newell 10:45 Sergio Fajardo, governor, Antioquia, Colombia. Carolina Barco, former Colombian ambassador to the U.S. 2:00 Ronn Richard, pres. and CEO, Cleveland Foundation. The Rev. Stephen Rowan, sr. pastor, Bethany Baptist Church. Rabbi Robert Nosanchuk, sr. rabbi, Anshe Chesed Fairmount Temple 5:00 FES. Chautauqua Opera 7:30 OLD FIRST NIGHT 3 9:15 John Philip Newell 10:45 Michele Dunne, director, Middle East Program, CEIP. Kareem Ibrahim, project leader, TADAMUN (Cairo) 2:00 William Barber II, founder, Moral Mondays North Carolina 3:30 Adrian Matejka, author, The Big Smoke 8:00 Theater. New Play Workshop 8:15* Dance Innovations. Charlotte Ballet in Residence. Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux, dir. 4 9:15 Rev. John Philip Newell 10:45 George W. “Mac” McCarthy, pres. and CEO, Lincoln Inst. of Land Policy. Neema Kudva, assoc. professor, Cornell AAP 2:00 Timur R. Yuskaev, dir., Imam and Muslim Community Leadership, Hartford Seminary 3:30 CLSC Author Presentation. Brian Hart, The Bully of Order 4:00 Theater. New Play Workshop 8:15 CSO. JoAnn Falletta, cond. Marina Piccinini, flute 5 9:15 The Rev. John Philip Newell 10:45 Saskia Sassen, Robert S. Lynd Professor of sociology, Columbia University 2:00 The Rev. John Philip Newell. Diana Butler Bass 4:00 Theater. New Play Workshop 8:15** Straight No Chaser 6 3:00 8:15 G. Terry Madonna, director, Center for Politics and Public Affairs, Franklin and Marshall College; director, Franklin and Marshall College Poll CSO Opera Pops Concert. Chautauqua Opera Young Artists. Stuart Chafetz, conductor. Kathleen Smith Belcher, stage director W E E K S E V E N • Lecture Theme | Pushing Our Bodies’ Limits • Interfaith Lecture Theme | The Limits and Transcendence of Our Humanity 7 10:45 The Rev. Thomas Long, Bandy Professor of preaching, emeritus, Emory University 2:30 Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra Special Matinée. Rossen Milanov, conductor 5:00 Vespers 8:00 Sacred Song Service 8 9:15 The Rev. Thomas Long 10:45 Nina Jablonski, professor of anthropology, Penn State Univ. 2:00 Ron Cole-Turner, prof. of theology and ethics, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary 5:00 Chautauqua Opera with the NOW Ensemble. Song From the Uproar 8:15 Chautauqua Voice Program with the MSFO. Marlena Malas, chair. Timothy Muffitt, cond. 9 9:15 The Rev. Thomas Long 10:45 Fareed Zakaria, host, CNN’s “Fareed Zakaria GPS” 2:00 James “J.” Hughes, executive director, Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies 7:30* Family Entertainment Series. Wild Kingdom featuring Peter Gros 10 9:15 The Rev. Thomas Long 10:45 Randy Schekman, investigator and professor of cell and developmental biology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute 2:00 Robert M. Geraci, author, Virtually Sacred: Myth and Meaning in World of Warcraft and Second Life 7:30 Music School Festival Night Celebration 11 9:15 The Rev. Thomas Long 12 10:45 Michael J. Sandel, Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Professor of government, Harvard Univ. 2:00 Ilia Delio, co-author, Humanity on the Threshold: Religious Essays on Transhumanism 8:00 Theater. Taming of the Shrew 8:15 Charlotte Ballet in Residence with the CSO. Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux, director. Grant Cooper, conductor 9:15 The Rev. Thomas Long 10:45 Janet Mock, gender rights advocate; author, Redefining Realness 2:00 Hava Tirosh-Samuelson, director of Jewish studies, Arizona State University 3:30 CLSC. Lucy Kalanithi presents When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi 8:15* Canadian Brass 13 Terry Stone, managing partner, Health & Life Sciences practice group, Oliver Wyman 6:00 Theater (opening). The Taming of the Shrew 8:15** Chris Botti & Joshua Bell with the Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra 3:00 W E E K E I G H T • Lecture Theme | War and Its Warriors: Contemporary Voices • Interfaith Lecture Theme | The Ethical Realities of War 10:45 The Rev. Amy K. Butler, 14 senior minister, The Riverside Church, New York City 2:15 Theater. The Taming of the Shrew 2:30 Chautauqua School of Dance Student Gala. Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux, director 5:00 Vespers 8:00 Theater. The Taming of the Shrew 8:00 Sacred Song Service 15 9:15 The Rev. Amy K. Butler 10:45 Phil Klay, author, Redeployment 2:00 Rita Nakashima Brock, founding co-director, Soul Repair Center, Brite Divinity School 4:00 Lysander Piano Trio 8:15* Music School Festival Orchestra. Timothy Muffitt, conductor 9:15 The Rev. Amy K. Butler 16 9:15 The Rev. Amy K. Butler 17 10:45 Kayla Williams, author, Love 10:45 Wes Moore, executive My Rifle More Than You producer and host, PBS’s 2:00 Jonathan Shay, retired “Coming Back with Wes Moore” clinical psychiatrist, U.S. 2:00 Pamela Lightsey, associate Department of Veterans Affairs dean, Boston University 2:15 Theater. Taming of the Shrew School of Theology 6:00 FES. Chautauqua Regional 2:15 Theater. Taming of the Shrew Youth Ballet 3:30 CLSC. Diane Ackerman, 8:15* CSO. “An Evening in Spain.” The Zookeeper’s Wife Rossen Milanov, conductor. 8:00 Theater. Taming of the Shrew Jason Vieaux, guitar 8:15 Paul Thorn 18 19 9:15 The Rev. Amy K. Butler 10:45 David H. Petraeus, retired 9:15 The Rev. Amy K. Butler four-star general, U.S. Army. 10:45 Bryan Doerries, founder, Wes Moore Theater of War 2:00 Shareda Hosein, retired lt. 2:00 Paul K. Chappell, author, colonel, U.S. Army Reserves The Art of Waging Peace 3:30 CLSC. Stanley Lombardo 4:00 Theater. The Taming of the presents Homer’s Iliad Shrew 4:00 Theater. Taming of the Shrew 8:15 The Purple Xperience: 8:15 CSO. Ankush Kumar A Concert Celebration of Bahl, conductor. Nicolas the Life & Inspiration of Dautricourt, violin Prince 20 3:00 8:15 Angela Lee Duckworth, author, Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra. “Night at the Movies.” Rossen Milanov, conductor. Columbus Symphony Chorus W E E K N I N E • Lecture Theme | America’s Music with Wynton Marsalis and Jazz at Lincoln Center • Interfaith Lecture Theme | America’s Spiritual Songbook 21 22 9:15 Dwight D. Andrews 10:45 The Rev. Dwight D. Andrews, senior minister, 10:45 Wynton Marsalis, artistic First Congregational Church director, Jazz at Lincoln UCC, Atlanta Center 2:30 Barbershop Harmony Parade 2:00 The Rev. Dwight D. Andrews. 5:00 Vespers Jared Jacobsen, coordinator 8:00 Sacred Song Service of worship and sacred music, Chautauqua Institution 10:45 The Rev. Calvin O. Butts, 28 5:00 Jazz at Lincoln Center pastor, The Abyssinian Baptist Church, New York City 8:15 Boogie Stomp! The Get Up and Dance Musical 2:30 East Winds Symphonic Band Celebration 8:00 Sacred Song Service 23 9:15 The Rev. Dwight D. Andrews 10:45 Geoffrey C. Ward, co-writer, “Jazz” 2:00 Steven Darsey, author, The God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob: Music and Worship. Timothy B. Miller, tenor 8:15* Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra with the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra. Cristian Macelaru, conductor 24 9:15 The Rev. Dwight D. Andrews 10:45 Amphitheater Lecture 2:00 The Rev. James Evans, author, The Ambivalent Gospel of Motown 8:15* Garth Fagan Dance 25 26 9:15 Dwight D. Andrews 9:15 Dwight D. Andrews 10:45 Cécile McLorin Salvant, 10:45 Wynton Marsalis. Geoffrey Grammy-winning jazz vocalist C. Ward 2:00 Michael Weis, cantor, 2:00 Rabbi Kenneth A. Kanter, Brotherhood Synagogue, New director, Rabbinical School, York City Hebrew Union College3:30 CLSC Author Presentation. Jewish Institute of Religion Billy Collins, Aimless Love 8:15** The Abyssinian Mass. Jazz 8:15** Jazz at Lincoln Center at Lincoln Center Orchestra. Orchestra with Wynton Chorale Le Chateau. Damien Marsalis: Birth of the Sneed, conductor. The Rev. American Orchestra Calvin O. Butts, narrator MSFO: Music School Festival Orchestra · FES: Family Entertainment Series · *Community Appreciation Night · **Preferred seating available · †Emerging Artist Series Experience Chautauqua at the Athenaeum Hotel 27 Steven J. Brown, chief operating officer, National Business Aviation Association 8:15** Mary Chapin Carpenter 3:00 Schedule as of May 13, 2016 (Subject to change) 30 with an all-inclusive package Save up to 20% Book today 800.821.1881 or athenaeum-hotel.com
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