annual report - Symphony Space
Transcription
annual report - Symphony Space
® ANNUAL REPORT 2014 JULY 1, 2013‑JUNE 30, 2014 OUR PROGRAMS REACHED ... 161,000 PATRONS AT OUR THEATRES 2,000 17 MILLION ADULT LEARNERS IN EDUCATION CENTERS THROUGHOUT NEW YORK SELECTED SHORTS RADIO AND PODCAST LISTENS 12,000 YOUTH IN NYC SCHOOLS INTRO In the 2013-2014 Season, Symphony Space continued to engage our community in a wide variety of affordable arts programs, including music, literature, family, film, and educational offerings. Mission-driven programming that promotes innovation, excellence, engagement, and accessibility played to more than 161,000 patrons in the Peter Jay Sharp and Leonard Nimoy Thalia theatres. Twelve thousand students in New York City schools and 2,000 adult learners in adult education centers throughout the City and State also benefited from our programming. In addition, throughout the year our podcast and public radio broadcasts of Selected Shorts counted 17 million listens worldwide. 3 OUR MEMBERS, DONORS, SUPPORTERS, AND ARTISTS MAKE OUR SUCCESS POSSIBLE. THANK YOU! WE ARE PLEASED TO SHARE THESE HIGHLIGHTS FROM EACH PROGRAM. LITERATURE SELECTED SHORTS Symphony Space’s signature literature program, Selected Shorts, continues to be the standard bearer in its stage, podcast and broadcast iterations. In the past year, Selected Shorts presented such celebrated writers as John Updike, Alice Munro, Dorothy Parker, Neil Gaiman, Lydia Davis, Jonathan Franzen, and newer author-performers such as B. J. Novak. Notable themes for performances explored topics including: • How to be a Man • Lucky Peach magazine and the art of food writing, with guest “rock star” chefs David Chang and Mario Batali • Heroes & Villains • Back to the 80s • Greenwich Village Stories 5 Our stage was graced by many well-known performers, including Alec Baldwin, Sally Field, Zoe Kazan, Holly Hunter, Bobby Cannavale, Edie Falco, Josh Radnor, and Hope Davis. On the radio show, guest hosts included Cynthia Nixon, Robert Sean Leonard, Jane Curtin, Jane Kaczmarek, and Wyatt Cenac. Selected Shorts on Tour brought the staged show experience to over 1,000 dedicated fans at The Getty Center in Los Angeles and the Dallas Museum of Art in Texas, as well as in nearby Bergen County, New Jersey, and New York University. THALIA BOOK CLUB The Thalia Book Club invites authors to engage in intimate conversations with our audience, and to present actors reading from their newest works. This year, we enjoyed evenings with Etgar Keret, Anjelica Huston, J.J. Abrams, Gary Shteyngart, Lorrie Moore, Freakonomics co-authors Stephen J. Dubner and Steven D. Levitt, Art Spiegelman, and Edward St. Aubyn. In addition, we were also pleased to re-visit a classic, Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse. BLOOMSDAY The sold-out 2014 Bloomsday event celebrated the 100th Anniversary of Dubliners, James Joyce’s celebrated short story collection, with live music and readings by Kelli O’Hara and Malachy McCourt, and a reading of “The Dead” by Colum McCann and Cynthia Nixon. 6 THALIA KIDS BOOK CLUB For our youngest book-lovers, this club provides opportunities for them and their parents to engage with writers in the “young adult (YA)” genre, including Rick Riordan (Heroes of Olympus), Kevin Henkes (The Year of Billy Miller), and Jeff Kinney (Diary of a Wimpy Kid). A special event celebrating the life and work of Roald Dahl, presented in part by First Book Manhattan, a nonprofit that provides books for children in need, was also held in the spring, and included a performance from the Broadway show, Matilda, which is based on Dahl’s novel. THALIA KIDS BOOK CLUB CAMP The Camp, held for four weeks each summer—and previously cited as one of the “Best Special Interest Camps in NYC” by TimeOut New York — hosted 96 literary-loving tweens and teens with author-driven discussions, writing exercises, and literature-based field trips. 7 UPTOWN SHOWDOWN The relatively new program, which stages hilarious debates on important/inconsequential subjects (“Cats vs. Dogs”, “Babies vs. Old People”, “Fashion vs. Comfort”) and displays the quicksilver minds of some of New York City’s brightest comedians, became a destination evening for knowing audiences who love entertainment on the edge. The program attracted talent including Janeane Garofalo, Tom Cavanagh, Wyatt Cenac, and Michael Ian Black, and from Saturday Night Live, Sasheer Zamata and Brooks Wheelan. MUSIC Symphony Space continues to offer vibrant, challenging, and world-embracing performances in its music program. Highlights this year included: •KURT WEILL ON BROADWAY: This 70th anniversary celebration of the Broadway premiere of Weill’s One Touch of Venus featured a seasoned Broadway cast of performers, including Melissa Errico, Brent Barrett, Judy Blazer, and Ron Raines, backed by Le Train Bleu Orchestra. The evening was funded in part by the Kurt Weill Foundation for Music and presented five singers who were current winners of the Foundation’s Lotte Lenya Prize. •THE SLEEPING AROUND FESTIVAL AND WALL TO WALL CABARET: Respectively, our Spring Festival and 44th celebration of our founding event. Sleeping Around celebrated the great art arising from the collaborations of visual, fine, and performing artists residing in iconic hotels throughout New York (e.g., The Algonquin, The Chelsea Hotel, The Plaza) by presenting their works. Wall to Wall Cabaret extracted one of the most enduring art forms from these associations — cabaret — and followed its creative path over the decades, in our traditional day-long marathon format, opened by Broadway and cabaret’s own Barbara Cook, and closed eight hours later by legendary songstress Marilyn Maye. The depth of the history and the breadth of the performances were truly astounding. 9 •THE ROYAL OPERA HOUSE presented some of the most stunning operas at Covent Garden, London, have been captured on high-definition film and are presented at Symphony Space. This season’s offerings included Eugene Onegin, La Donna del Lago, and Parsifal, which played to packed houses and audience acclaim. •WOODY’S CHILDREN: In this sold-out event, Tom Chapin, Christine Lavin, David Amram, Holly Near, Tom Paxton, and others celebrated the 45th anniversary of the eponymous public-radio music program hosted by Robert Sherman. •KRZYSZTOF PENDERECKI, considered by many to be Poland’s greatest living composer, made a rare US appearance (with an onstage interview), connected to an evening of performances of his works. La Donna del Lago 10 Parsifal Eugene Onegin JUST KIDDING Lightware Theatre: Dino Light Just Kidding is our weekly family music program for children ages 2 to 7 to enjoy with their parents. The shows run on Saturdays from October to April. In addition to giving families the opportunity to spend time together, we also groom the next generation of theatre-goers. Impressive shows this season were: •LUNCH MONEY WITH BELLE ET BETTE: “PLANET HOPPING” paired the popular South Carolina kids’ band with an award-winning puppetry troupe for its first collaborative multigenre performance. Just Kidding was proud to be the premiere performance that launched their tour. •LIGHTWIRE THEATRE: DINO LIGHT The Louisiana-based group, who use dance, puppetry, and electro-luminescent wire to create awe-inspiring spectacles of light, were finalists on NBC’s “America’s Got Talent.” In validation of the quality we put on the stage for families from October to April, five musical artists from the 2013-2014 season received Grammy or Juno nominations. 2013’s Best Children’s Album winners, the Okee Dokee Brothers, again appeared on our stage. Mister G — another performer from season 2013/2014 — is a current nominee for a Latin Grammy for best family album. Just Kidding Birthday Party 12 EDUCATION Symphony Space’s education programs are year-round multidisciplinary programs that use workshops, lecturedemonstrations, and interactive performances to move teaching and learning to a whole new level for professionals and their students. 12,000 SCHOOL-AGE STUDENTS PARTICIPATED 96% TEACHERS RATED THE GLOBAL ARTS PROGRAM AS HIGHLY EFFECTIVE 14 GLOBAL ARTS: CULTURAL LITERACY AND HERITAGE The Global Arts program (GAP) offers semester-long residencies, workshops, and interactive performances to bring social studies curricula to life for New York City students. Making connections between cultures through the artistic traditions of Africa, Asia, Latin America, Native America, and Early American cultures, these programs are based on New York State’s Learning Standards, address the Common Core standards, as well as the New York City Department of Education’s Blueprint for Teaching and Learning in the Arts. They are available in several forms to meet the needs of individual schools: •CURRICULUM ARTS PROJECT (CAP) places teaching artists in classrooms for semester-long residencies, providing long-term engagement with artists, art forms, and world cultures. Using artworks as primary sources, CAP gives students opportunities to create, perform, think critically, and increase their engagement with classroom lessons. Students learn to analyze works of art to uncover information about the culture they contain. •STANDALONE WORKSHOPS AND ASSEMBLIES are distilled from the CAP curriculum and led by the same expert teaching artists who conduct the CAP residencies. These à la carte options bring meaningful arts engagement and cultural experiences to schools whose classroom time or resources are too limited for a full CAP residency. With many offerings, schools can choose to introduce students to a culture with one workshop or focus on a particular culture or art form through an abbreviated series of workshops. •CULTURAL FIELD TRIPS TO SYMPHONY SPACE bring students to our Peter Jay Sharp Theatre for interactive, culturallysignificant, and educational performances by GAP teaching artists. Teachers receive resource guides that include context and performance descriptions, suggested activities, and preperformance assignments. These guides also give teachers the tools necessary to be sure that the New York City Blueprint for Teaching and Learning in the Arts and Common Core ideas are being addressed. Of participating teachers surveyed, 96% rated GAP as highly effective or effective in supporting their classroom’s curriculum. The program was rated as highly effective or effective in helping students understand other perspectives and cultures by 96% of the teachers, as well. In 2013/2014, Symphony Space’s Global Arts: cultural literacy & heritage reached 12,000 students. ALL WRITE! Symphony Space’s All Write! education program introduces adult literacy students — which include General Education Development (GED) and English for Speakers of other Languages (ESOL) 15 students — to the beauty and the power of the written word, at a special Selected Shorts show with performances by actors who the audience may already know. The students return to their classes, where writing becomes an integral part of their language skills learning. Students then submit their own written work to a jury from which a selection of student works is read by the same actors at a second performance. “I LEFT THE THEATRE FEELING INSPIRED AND UPLIFTED. I ACTUALLY FELT AS IF I FLOATED THROUGH THE REST OF THE DAY ON AN AWESOME HIGH FROM THIS AMAZING EXPERIENCE. THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR ALL YOU DO.” —ALL WRITE! ADULT LITERACY PROGRAM INSTRUCTOR, AFTER THE PERFORMANCE OF STUDENT-WRITTEN WORKS This season, we aided 1,700 students in 26 programs spread throughout the five boroughs, including 300 students in Buffalo, NY. Returning and new partners of the program included the NYC Department of Education; the three public library systems (NY, Brooklyn, Queens); the CUNY system, and a number of independent social service and educational agencies. In spring 2014, an assessment of the All Write! program was implemented under the guidance of an outside consultant, Innovations Quantified. Teachers posted these observations of their students: • at least 50% of their students now write more, due to All Write! participation. • at least 50% of their students now read more. • 95% of student participants had been positively affected by All Write! • 55% of TABE (Tests for Adult Basic English) scores were positively affected by All Write! “[I WAS ABLE] TO ATTEND THE ALL WRITE! [CLOSING CEREMONY] AT THE CENTRAL LIBRARY TODAY AND, UM, WHOA!!! THREE PROFESSIONAL ACTORS READ ALOUD STUDENT WORKS. . . YOU COULD FEEL ELECTRICITY IN THE ROOM AS EACH STUDENT HEARD THEIR OWN WORK READ ALOUD FOR ALL TO HEAR BY A PROFESSIONAL ACTOR. THEY WERE GIVEN VOICE. I FELT THE STUDENTS WHO LEFT THE AUDITORIUM WERE NOT THE SAME ONES WHO CAME IN THE HOUR BEFORE.” —ALL WRITE! INSTRUCTOR, SYRACUSE, NEW YORK (2013) Of the students who responded, 90% report that they read more often, 91% report that they write more often, and 95% report that they feel more hopeful about their future, all as a result of participating in All Write! We also assessed student writing pre- and post-All Write! That assessment showed that 89% of those students’ writing improved by an average of 38%, with more striking improvements appearing among English as a Second Language (ESL) students, where the average increase in score was 48%. 16 2,000 STUDENTS IN 29 PROGRAMS THROUGHOUT NEW YORK STATE FILM PROGRAM Leonard Nimoy Thalia War Horse THE LEONARD NIMOY THALIA The Leonard Nimoy Thalia is the program’s center for award-winning documentaries, dramas, foreign and indie features. Legendary film makers Martin Scorsese and Woody Allen have said that they “cut their teeth” on afternoons and evenings of intense film-watching at the Thalia. Who knows what future greats are learning from our unique programming now? Afternoon Of A Faun 18 Grand Budapest Hotel In addition to our Thalia Docs series and the Thalia Film Club (hosted by film critic Marshall Fine), the Thalia entered into a partnership with National Theatre Live of London to present the high-definition recordings of the stunning plays that have graced their stages. Theatre and film buffs flocked to the Thalia to enjoy performances of: War Horse, King Lear, Coriolanus, Hamlet, Othello, and a Halloween encore of Frankenstein, among others. RENTAL PROGRAM Seating in the Peter Jay Sharp Theatre Symphony Space’s mission to make the arts accessible to all audiences and artists is also fulfilled by The Symphony Space Rental Program, which offers our Peter Jay Sharp Theatre, Leonard Nimoy Thalia, Studio, and Bar Thalia to community and arts groups at discounted rates. This year’s varied presenters included: • The Gingold Theatrical Group, which moved their monthly Project Shaw series from The Players Club to Symphony Space. • From Munich, Orchestra Jakobsplatz made their North American debut. • Hip Hop Public Health brought celebrities like Jordin Sparks, Doug E. Fresh, and Ashanti to the Sharp stage to help raise awareness for Michelle Obama’s fight against childhood obesity. • Theatre Within presented a stunning line-up for the 33rd Annual John Lennon Tribute, featuring the talents of Steve Earle, Raul Malo, Marc Cohn, Joan Osborne, Teddy Thompson, Dana Fuchs, Bettye LaVette, Toshi Reagon, Rich Pagano and The Buffers. We are also pleased to offer special, even more substantial subsidies to specific groups whose artistic goals complement Symphony Space’s programs and mission: • The New York Gilbert & Sullivan Players • Afro Latin Jazz Alliance • American Symphony Orchestra • World Music Institute and several others who bring diverse audiences and fantastic programming to our theatres. Floor-plan of the Peter Jay Sharp Theatre 20 SPECIAL EVENTS Symphony Space Gala 2014 21 Cast of “Fiddler at 50” Gala FIDDLER AT 50 GALA The Spring 2014 Gala celebrated the 50th anniversary of Fiddler on the Roof and its lyricist, Upper West Side resident Sheldon Harnick. The evening’s highlight was the 45-minute review of Fiddler’s iconic score, produced and directed by John McDaniel (“The Rosie O’Donnell Show,” “Grease,” “Annie Get Your Gun”) and Jim Caruso (“Liza at The Palace,” “Cast Party/Broadway at Birdland”). 300 guests enjoyed headlining musical performances by Leslie Uggams, Linda Lavin, Tovah Feldshuh, Kate Baldwin, BD Wong, Len Cariou, and Clint Holmes, along with several other Broadway talents. “Fiddler at 50” was our most successful Gala to-date. ARTFUL DINING Symphony Space’s nearest and dearest members and donors participated in a number of art salons held in the homes of Board members, staff and prime supporters. Each event brings our audiences into intimate contact with authors, musicians, conductors, and performers to enjoy scintillating conversations. Thank you to ASO conductor Leon Botstein, Symphony Space Board-member and talented pianist Lenore Davis, composer Philip Glass, chef extraordinaire Marcus Samuelsson, pianists Daniel Gortler and Idith Meshulam — and our hosts — for providing memorable artistic experiences throughout the season. Marcus Samuelsson 22 Philip Glass FY 14 CONTRIBUTED INCOME $2,039,847 FY14 INCOME $5,863,398 21% RENTALS 22% TICKETS 3% FEES/OTHER 7 % CONCESSION/ SALES 1 2% ENDOWMENT 3 5% CONTRIBUTED INCOME FY14 EXPENSES $5,863,398 6% GOVERNMENT 11% INDIVIDUALS 25% FOUNDATIONS 2 3% SPECIAL EVENTS 17% COPORATIONS 3% MISC 23 1 % DONATED 74% PROGRAMS MATERIALS 17% ADMINISTRATION 15% MEMBERSHIP 10% FUNDRAISING SYMPHONY SPACE 2013/2014 BOARD LIST CHAIR Steven Aresty President Alfred Dunner Retail PAST CHAIR Steven M. Alden Of Counsel, Debevoise & Plimpton VICE CHAIR Christopher P. Dixon Non-executive Vice Chairman, Minyanville Media VICE CHAIR Amy Wilson Actor and Writer PRESIDENT & CEO Cynthia Elliott Symphony Space SECRETARY Louis B. Bernstein Attorney/Litigator/Mediator, AXIOM Global, Inc. TREASURER Claire Aidem President and Co-Founder, CM Career Management IconicTV Gregory Generet Entertainer $100,000 AND ABOVE Zabar’s Jesse Haines Head of Marketing, Mobile Ads Google, Inc. $25,000 TO $99,999 Amazon.com, Inc. Corporate Giving Program Steven & Sheila Aresty Kay & Elliot Cattarulla Benjamin Fried & Noreen Wu Houghton Mifflin Harcourt National Endowment for the Arts New York City Department of Cultural Affairs New York State Council on the Arts Elizabeth R. Rea and Leclare Ratteree The Scherman Foundation, Inc. The Peter Jay Sharp Foundation The Shubert Foundation Jeremy T. Smith The Kurt Weill Foundation for Music Stanley & Judy Zabar Ricardo Hornos Psychologist, Writer, Producer Tania León Composer, Conductor, Pianist Doug Liman Filmmaker Richard Mittenthal President and COO, TCC Group Jane Pollock Writer and Documentarian Elizabeth Richebourg Rea Photographer President, Dungannon Foundation Judith Saffer Assistant General Counsel (retired), BMI Ina Bort Attorney Marcia Santoni Chief of External Affairs, Pathways to Housing Pamela Carter Attorney Jeremy T. Smith Actor, Philanthropist Kay Cattarulla Literary and Film Producer Gustavo Szulansky President, Super Soccer Stars, Inc. Melvin Cohen CEO (retired), Dome’L Inc. George Wein Music Impresario Carmen de Lavallade Actor, Dancer, Choreographer B.D. Wong Actor David Foster President, BV Resources, Inc. Lori Zabar Decorative Arts Scholar Benjamin Fried CIO, Google, Inc. 24 DONOR LIST $10,000 TO $24,999 Steven & Evelyn Alden Joseph & Catherine Aresty Anonymous Lily Auchincloss Foundation, Inc. Susan Beckerman Louis B. Bernstein & Dr. Barbara Weinstein Ina Bort & Catherine Sharkey Mel & Carol Cohen Consolidated Edison Company of New York Lenore & Robert Davis The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation Christopher & Barbara Dixon William H. Donner Foundation David Foster & Mina Samuels William L. Haines Ricardo Hornos & Lisa Kohl Penny & Thomas Jackson Beth Kobliner & David Shaw Leonard & Susan Bay Nimoy McKinsey & Company The Henry Nias Foundation Jane K. Pollock & Phillip Berney Karen Pritzker RD Rice Construction, Inc. The Fan Fox and Leslie R. Samuels Foundation The Peter Jay Sharp Foundation The Harold & Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust Gustavo Szulansky Warren & Jane Weiss Amy Wilson & David Flannery Lori Zabar & Mark Mariscal $5,000 TO $9,999 Jody & John Arnhold Alan L. Aufzien Axe-Houghton Foundation Gina & David Boonshoft Stephen & Evelyn Colbert Colgate-Palmolive Company The Joseph and Joan Cullman Foundation for the Arts, Inc. Susan Fine & Arne Mishkin Freddie & Myrna Gershon Ann and Gordon Getty Foundation Goldman, Sachs & Co. Herman Goldman Foundation The Grodzins Fund Jesse & Nick Haines Doug Liman Richard Mittenthal & Patsy Glazer Peter & Gwen Norton Judith Saffer Jeffrey Scheuer Bernice Schoenbaum R.L. & Jane Stine The Seth Sprague Educational and Charitable Foundation Solon E. Summerfield Foundation, Inc. Virgil Thomson Foundation Michael Tuch Foundation, Inc. George Wein $1,000 TO $4,999 Lynn Ahrens & Neil Costa Claire & Larry Aidem Lily Aidem The Amphion Foundation Anonymous (2) Stuart Applebaum Frances C. Ashley Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation, Inc. Jenny L. Bader & Roger Berkowitz Alec Baldwin Neil S. Barsky & Joan Davidson Khary P. Barnes Elizabeth & Rick Bellingham The Bernstein Family Foundation, Inc. John W. Bernstein & Diana Davenport Ralph & Barbara Binder Margaret A. Boulware Jonathan L. Brandt Robert & Carol Braun Broadcast Music, Inc. Frank & Nancy Bynum Timothy Callahan Lois & Mark Cardillo Kevin Carroll Linda & Arthur Carter Mary Dixie Carter Pamela & Jon Carter Richard & Lisa Cashin Theodore S. Chapin Jessica & Scott Chestman Connie Cholewczynski Patrick Cook The Aaron Copland Fund for Music, Inc. Oscar & Betty Davis Jonathan & Barbara Denham Charles Dimston Alice M. Ditson Fund of Columbia University Jeanne Donovan-Fisher Cynthia Elliott & R. Douglass Rice Inger Elliott Extell Development Company Anna May & Timothy Feige Joseph & Barbara Friedman Jean Golden Judith Gordon Charles & Joan Gross Lawrence Haverty Allison & W.K. Hill-Edgar Ellen Hamilton Merrill G. & Emita E. Hastings Foundation Louise Kurz Hirschfeld & Lewis B. Cullman Ronald & Priscilla Hoffman Hope G. Jessup Leslie Kandell Eric Katzman & Melissa Elstein Melanie Katzman & Russell Makowsky Thomas M. Kelly Jayme Koszyn Bob & Daphne Kricheff Eugene M. Lang Pierre & Jasmine Le Veaux Elizabeth Leber Marjeta & Edward Lederman Lemberg Foundation, Inc. Peter & Lauren Lese Michael Levine Jeanne Linnes Literacy Assistance Center, Inc. Carol Loewenson & Andrew Levander Priscilla Lundin & William Schwartz Rebecca Lynch Marcia & Mickey Lyons Robert & Donna MacNeil Eileen & Gregory Makoff Barry Malin 25 Office of the Manhattan Borough President Sonia Manzano & Richard Reagan Marquis George MacDonald Foundation Karen McKinnon Jean M. McCarroll Constance & H. Roemer McPhee Richard & Ronay Menschel Robyn Mewshaw Dean Michaels Allan Miller & Marie Winn Irene Miller & Anoush Khoshkish Lynn Minton & Ed Buhl Susan Moldow & William Shinker Rob Morea Henry Myerberg & Karen Davidov Music Theatre International The Nederlander Organization Maury Newburger Mimi Oka & Jun Makihara Mitchell Paluszek Alvin Perlmutter & Joan Konner Jean Pfeffer James & Ellyn Polshek Bruce & Catharine Polsky Mike Pratt Warrie & James Price Elise & Jerry Pustilnik Kalpana Raina Jordan Roth & Richie Jackson Caryl Ratner Bruce & Francesca Rudin The Rudin Foundation, Inc. Julia Reid Bridgette & Scott Russinoff Rivka Saker & Uzi Zucker Marie Salerno & Sam Roberts Marcia Santoni & John Morris Steven Schrader & Lucy Kostelanetz Margaret A. Schuette Karen & Jeffrey Sherman Samira & Jeff Sine Elisa L. Stein Robin C. Stevens Daniel & Toby Talbot Merritt Tilney & Doug Kaden Mark Tompkins Mei-Mei Tuan & Andrew Thompson Paul & Fran Turner Jack Viertel Cora Vizcarra Bob & Terry Weigel Jack Wettling Deborah E. Wiley E.J. Wohlgemuth Barry Wong & Doris Lee BD Wong Brian Wong Miles Woodlief Peg Wreen & David Stirk William Morris Endeavor Sondra Zabar & Ira Breite Larry and Anne Zimmerman $500 TO $999 Shahara Ahmad-Llewellyn ASCAP Bass & Lemer LLP James R. Berns Al Berr Ethan Binder & Gayle Cunningham Rodrigo Bitar & Paula Campos Annette & Stanley Blaugrund Nadine & Edward Cohen Ronald & Roberta Columbus Frank Drury & Aileen Dresner Susan & Thomas Dunn Herb Elish & Eloise Hirsh Dorinda Elliott & Adi Ignatius Marcy Epstein Tovah Feldshuh & Andrew Levy Laura & Robert Fleder Brandon Fradd Edith & Albert Fried Jill Furman Mary W. Gibbons Landor Robert Ginsberg Shelby & Robin Goldgrab Stewart Gross & Lois Perelson-Gross Igal Kesselman Harold Koda & Alan Kornberg Celia Kupferberg Ward & Nancy Laracy Helen & Rudolph Mariscal Cynthia Nixon & Christine Marinoni William Pinzler & Christine Millen Carol Quinn & David Mayo Judith Rivkin & George Davison Deborah Rothschild Ronni Rubin Bolger Robert & Judith Rubin Morley & Jane Safer Linda & Andrew Safran Sheri Sandler & Mark Schneider Robert & Cynthia Schaffner Noah & Kate Scooler Randi Sherman Stuart Sherman Jennifer Shotwell Richard J. Sirota Daniel Slifkin Charles J. Sperling James & Helen Stambler Neuberger Randolph & Emilia Taylor Nicholas Von Moltke Carissa & Gregory Weiss Roger Yaseen & Kimberly Smith Dana Zucker & Brahm Cramer AND 1,968 DONORS FROM $25-$499 THANK YOU It has been Symphony Space’s distinct pleasure over the past year to produce and present programming that reflects artistic leadership while promoting innovation, excellence, engagement, and accessibility to artists and audiences alike. In the 2014-15 Season, in addition expanding and refining all programming, we are celebrating our 37th year of operations and the 30th Anniversary Season of Selected Shorts. We look forward to seeing you at 95th Street and Broadway often in future seasons. ® 2537 BROADWAY AT 95TH STREET NEW YORK, NY 10025 SYMPHONYSPACE.ORG | 212.864.1414