Calendar of Events April–June 2015
Transcription
Calendar of Events April–June 2015
April–June 2015 njpac.org 1 2 New Jersey Performing Arts Center April–June 2015 inside what’s Calendar of Events | 6 NJP5 The women of Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater | 4 NJPAC Shining Stars | 11 NJPAC Contributors | 12 Muse | 14 Season Funders | 16 Classical 2015-16 | 18 NJPAC Staff & Administration | 20 Advertising OnStage Publications 937-424-0529 | 866-503-1966 e-mail: korlowski@onstagepublications.com www.onstagepublications.com This program is published in association with OnStage Publications, 1612 Prosser Avenue, Kettering, OH 45409. This program may not be reproduced in whole or in part without written permission from the publisher. JBI Publishing is a division of OnStage Publications, Inc. Contents © 2015. All rights reserved. Printed in the U.S.A. April–June 2015 njpac.org 3 Be inspired by the women of Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater During the company’s celebratory Mother’s Day engagement them not only enjoy the performances, but are invited to join a series of related events, most offering free admission. A vendors’ boutique in the lobby, master classes and dance workshops, children’s book readings, and packages that include brunch or wellness treatments are detailed at njpac.org. Photo by Paul Kolnik Green says she models herself on the stylish yet capable women whose qualities first attracted her to dancing. “If you look at the women in the company, they don’t look like young girls,” Green explains. “There’s a maturity and uniqueness about each of them.” Linda Celeste Sims in Jacqulyn Buglisi’s Suspended Women. By Robert Johnson Jacqueline Green remembers the first time she saw an Ailey dancer up close. It was back in Baltimore, and she was a high school sophomore. Green hadn’t been dancing long, when Linda-Denise Fisher-Harrell stopped by her class at the Baltimore School for the Arts. “I was just blown away, in awe, and I wanted to know everything about her,” says Green. “I thought she was beautiful as a mover, a person, a spirit—everything. And I found out she worked for Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater.” That encounter led Green to the Ailey/ Fordham BFA program in New York City and eventually to the Ailey Company, which she joined in 2011. Green will be among the featured performers in that glamorous crowd when the troupe returns to NJPAC, May 8-10, for its annual Mother’s Day celebration. Moms and those who love 4 New Jersey Performing Arts Center Even in this company of vibrant individuals, of course, some people have earned special distinction. While offering fresh opportunities to young talents like Green, this season’s repertoire also will allow audiences to savor the artistry of two revered company veterans: Hope Boykin, who is in her 15th season with Ailey, and who stars in the season premiere of ODETTA; and Linda Celeste Sims, who joined the troupe in 1996, and who was honored last October with a Bessie Award for Outstanding Performance. “What I hear from dancers who used to be in the company is that Alvin really respected the women a lot,” says Sims, referring to the troupe’s late founder. “He respected them and he treated them well. Maybe it could be because he loved his mother so much.” A charismatic dancer, Ailey would also be recognized for his humanity, and for his vision in creating an institution where black artists could realize their dreams. Sims is also a fan of the late African-American choreographer Ulysses Dove, whose Bad Blood she will perform on Friday evening. “I’m Latin, and I am a little powerhouse. So I love doing Ulysses’ work—I like the fire.” Describing the intensity of her interactions with her partner in Bad Blood’s central duet, Sims says, “I’m pushing him, I’m throwing myself at him, and, yeah, I’m the one who wears the pants.” April–June 2015 Even after performing with the troupe for 19 years, Sims says, “I still dance like a new dancer. I’m the type of person who’s always working on getting stronger, getting better. I never stop learning, going out to find teachers who can coach me. And I never look back.” run of Mamma Mia! in Toronto. Her musical theater experience makes McLaren particularly eager to tackle roles that allow her to create a character or tell a story. As Odetta and Harry Belafonte sing “There’s a Hole in the Bucket,” McLaren and her partner, Marcus Jarrell Willis, pantomime the lyrics while occupying two chairs, essentially dancing from the waist up. “It’s just hilarious,” McLaren says. “It’s a great comedic piece.” On Friday, audiences will see her tender side in Christopher Wheeldon’s After the Rain (Pas de Deux), partnered by her husband, Glenn Allen Sims. And on Saturday she is thrilled to have a role in Suspended Women, by choreographer Jacqulyn Buglisi, a former Martha Graham dancer whom Sims says she met years ago. In fact, Sims was still a child studying at Ballet Hispanico when Buglisi came to teach a course in Graham Technique. ODETTA tells more than one story, however, and they aren’t all playful. In her first season with the Ailey Company, dancer Jacquelin Harris seems too young to have seen much of the world, but Rushing has created a role for her that belies her innocence. Harris dances to Odetta’s recording of the Bob Dylan song “Masters of War,” and she says, “I portray a young woman whose lover goes off to war.” She adds, “There are numerous people, whom I love dearly, who have been out to war or are currently on deployment. So I have personal experience that I definitely can draw from.” “I love Graham because I had teachers like her, who made it so passionate,” Sims says. Speaking of Buglisi, the dancer adds, “She was one of my teachers who really inspired me, and made me who I am today–the kind of teacher who really pushes stuff out of you.” For her part, Boykin says she is thrilled to have the anchor role in Friday’s debut of ODETTA, a premiere that Ailey’s in-house choreographer Matthew Rushing developed with Boykin in mind. ODETTA introduces audiences to the life and music of the late folk singer Odetta Holmes, who was also a civil rights activist and enduring role model. Harris says that watching the more experienced women in the Ailey Company—like Demetia Hopkins Greene (who is scheduled to perform the lead in ODETTA on Sunday)—has taught her something about dance as an identity. She says, “It makes me understand that in order to do this job—in order to be a great dancer—you don’t necessarily have to portray anything. You can just go on stage and be yourself, and there’s a beauty in that as well.” “I heard in a sermon that ‘encouraging’ is actually pouring courage into a person,” Boykin says. “And I think that’s so beautiful, because Odetta did that through her music. She sang her issues. She sang her frustrations. She sang those trials out, and that’s what I have to do as a person, as a human, as a servant of the Lord, as a teacher. I have to dance out my truth.” Robert Johnson is a freelance dance writer. Follow him on Twitter @RobertJ26215165. “She pushes me,” says Rachael McLaren, who also dances in the cast of ODETTA. “Ever since I got into this company, she basically put her hand around my shoulder and she’s been a big sister to me. She’s always encouraged me and pushed me to do more— to trust myself; to love myself; to give what I have to the audience.” Contributing to the diversity of the Ailey Company are the dancers’ varied backgrounds. When McLaren came to New York to study modern dance, she was fresh from a two-year April–June 2015 Photo by Steve Wilson Even as she takes inspiration from Odetta, Boykin herself is inspiring the young women of the Ailey Company. Hope Boykin in Matthew Rushing’s ODETTA njpac.org 5 Photo by Pamela Littky This spring NJPAC has added an exciting line-up of artists to the calendar that you are not going to want to miss! Richard Thompson performs a rare solo concert on April 22... May the Force be with you to join us on June 20 for the only NJ performances of One-Man Star Wars Trilogy written and performed by Charles Ross... classic rock fans won't want to miss the NJPAC debut of Boston on June 5... and join us on June 13 for the only NJ appearance of the spectacular, multi-media live production Invincible: A Glorious Tribute to the King of Pop. This is the closest it gets to seeing and hearing Michael Jackson onstage! Calendar of Events April–June 2015 All events and programs subject to change without notice. April 2015 Friday, April 3 at 8pm The Moody Blues Saturday, April 4 at 8pm Masters of Ceremony DMX, Mobb Deep, EPMD, Rakim, Big Daddy Kane, Slick Rick and Kid Capri Friday, April 10 at 8pm Saturday, April 11 at 2:30 & 8pm Sunday, April 12 at 1:30pm Shen Yun 2015 World Tour 6 New Jersey Performing Arts Center Saturday, April 11 at 7:30pm Bill Charlap presents Bird Lives! A Salute to Charlie Parker Friday, April 24 at 8pm Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry at NJPAC: Jersey Voices Sunday, April 12 at 1 & 4pm Jim Henson’s Dinosaur Train Live! Saturday, April 25 at 7pm Don Quixote New Jersey Ballet Company 56th Anniversary Celebration Friday, April 17 at 8pm The Price Is Right Live! Sunday, April 19 at 3pm An Afternoon with Audra McDonald Wednesday, April 22 at 8pm Richard Thompson Saturday, April 25 at 8pm Swinging on a Star: The Music of Jimmy Van Heusen with Norm Lewis and Rebecca Luker April–June 2015 May 2015 Friday, May 1 at 7:30pm The Princess Bride: An Inconceivable Evening with Cary Elwes Screening, Q&A, Behind-the-Scenes Stories Saturday, May 2 at 5 & 8pm Michael Franks with special guest Raul Midón Friday, May 8 at 8pm Saturday, May 9 at 8pm Sunday, May 10 at 3pm Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater Saturday, May 9 at 2pm The Musical Adventures of Flat Stanley Dallas Children's Theater Sunday, May 10 at 3pm Metropolitan Opera Rising Stars: Romantic Treasures Sunday, May 10 at 7pm WBLS welcomes A Mother’s Day Celebration Maze featuring Frankie Beverly and Toni Braxton at The Prudential Center Friday, May 15 at 8pm André Watts, piano with the NJSO Works by Mozart, Beethoven, Stravinsky and Grieg Friday, May 15 at 8pm Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry at NJPAC: Poetry Like Bread: Poems of Political and Social Consciousness Tuesday, May 19 at 7pm Trending with Scott Simon: Women Who Set the Agenda Friday, May 22 at 7pm NJPAC Stage Exchange: Hoodwinked (Free event – reservations required) Friday, May 22 at 7pm Hispanic Youth Showcase Sunday, May 24 at 7pm Steven Wilson Wednesday, May 27 at 8pm JBL presents A.R. Rahman: The Intimate Concert Tour Saturday, May 30 at 8pm Jonathan’s Choice: Jessica Molaskey Portraits of Joni Mitchell Concert and conversation with radio host Jonathan Schwartz Sunday, May 31 at 7pm Chaka Khan June 2015 Friday, June 5 at 8pm Boston Saturday, June 6 at 2pm The Adventures of Robin Hood Visible Fictions Saturday, June 6 at 8pm Nathalie Pires/Dancas Ocultas Monday, June 8 at 6pm Believe in Newark: Mayor Baraka’s Town Hall on Health Saturday, June 13 at 8pm Invincible: A Glorious Tribute to Michael Jackson Wednesday, June 17 at 8pm Huey Lewis and The News Friday, June 19 at 8pm Jersey (New) Moves! Emerging Choreographers Saturday, June 20 at 3 & 8pm One-Man Star Wars Trilogy Starring Charles Ross Saturday, June 20 at 8pm Gilberto Santa Rosa with Richie Ray & Bobby Cruz Sunday, June 21 at 7pm Earthquake & Friends Father’s Day Celebration Friday, June 26 at 7:30pm Rev. Stef & Jubilation featuring special guest artist Dionne Warwick May 1 April–June 2015 njpac.org 7 NJPAC is turning up the heat in June with the only Northern NJ appearance of Huey Lewis and The News – one of America’s greatest, straight-ahead rock’n’roll bands performing their timeless string of hits on June 17… Gilberto Santa Rosa returns to Prudential Hall on June 20 with special guests Richie Ray & Bobby Cruz… and on June 21, join us for a special Father’s Day Celebration with the explosive comedy of Earthquake & Friends! Please note: Tickets are non-refundable. Artists, dates, times, programs, prices and venues are subject to change. 8 New Jersey Performing Arts Center April–June 2015 PROTECTING THE WILDEST JUNGLES ON THE PLANET. MAIN STREET. PRESCHOOL. THE PLAYGROUND. The environment isn’t just some far off place. It’s the lawn under our feet, the food on our plate, and the air we breathe. To learn more, go to NRDC.org. And help protect the jungle creatures in your backyard. Because the environment is everywhere. April–June 2015 njpac.org 9 10 New Jersey Performing Arts Center April–June 2015 Victoria Theater Sunday, May 24, 2015 at 7pm NJPAC presents Steven Wilson Presented in association with Metropolitan Entertainment As a courtesy to the performers and fellow audience members, please be sure to silence all mobile devices. The use of recording equipment and the taking of photographs are strictly prohibited. This program is made possible in part by funds from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State, a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts and by funds from the National Endowment for the Arts. May 2015 njpac.org I Meet the Artist and lush orchestrations. Signing to One Little Indian in the UK, and Epic in the US in 1990, they received tremendous accolades from the music press, with Singles of the Week in Melody Maker, Sounds and Hot Press. Steven Wilson One of the most eclectic and prolific artists in rock music, Steven Wilson has been writing, recording and producing music continuously since the age of 10. A native of Hemel Hempstead in England, Steven was first exposed to music at the age of eight, when he started hearing his father listening to Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon, and his mother to Donna Summer’s Love to Love You Baby, two albums that were pivotal in the development of his musical direction. His father, an electrical engineer, built him a multi-track tape machine, and he began to experiment with overdubbing and developing a repertoire of production techniques. Early demo tapes started to emerge in the mid ’80s while Steven was still at school, and at the end of the decade he created the two projects which gained him entry to the professional music world: Porcupine Tree and No Man. Porcupine Tree, which explored psychedelia, progressive music and his love of ambitious ’70’s music, was initially an imaginary “band” which, in reality, Steven overdubbed all the instruments himself. This even extended to early demo tapes coming with a fictional written history of the band, and biographical info about the fictitious performers. Around the same time, Steven formed No-Man, his long-term collaboration with singer Tim Bowness. Influenced by everything from ambient music to hip-hop, their early singles and albums were a mixture of dance beats II New Jersey Performing Arts Center Meanwhile, things progressed with Porcupine Tree, whose increasing popularity was fast outpacing the imaginary pretext of an actual group. The second full-length album, Up the Downstair was released in 1993 and was praised by Melody Maker as “a psychedelic masterpiece… one of the albums of the year.” This was the first album to include keyboardist Richard Barbieri and bassist Colin Edwin, albeit only as guests at this point, the album was still effectively a solo project. The next album, The Sky Moves Sideways, was a transitional album featuring both solo SW and band pieces, but from then on it became a full band with the addition of Chris Maitland on drums. Further albums throughout the ’90s, and extensive touring resulted in a string of indie chart placings and critical acclaim, many fans hailing them as the Pink Floyd of the ’90s. In 2001 Porcupine Tree was signed to US label Lava Records, under the auspices of Atlantic Records. Now with the support of a major label, and featuring new drummer Gavin Harrison, In Absentia saw the light of day in 2002, featuring a heavier sound than all of the group’s previous works. It charted in many European countries and remains one of the top-selling Porcupine Tree albums. It was also their first album to be released in 5.1 Surround Sound, and won the “Best Made-For-Surround Title” award for the Surround Music Awards 2004. Its 2005 follow-up, Deadwing was inspired by a film script written by Steven and film-maker Mike Bennion, and became the first Porcupine Tree album to chart around the world. The album won “Album of the Year” at the Classic Rock magazine awards, and its surround version received the “Best Made-ForSurround Title” once again. The following year the band released Fear of a Blank Planet, which was nominated for a US Grammy, and won several polls as the best album of the year. Their tenth studio album The Incident was released in late 2009, and became their highest charting album to date, again received a Grammy nomination, and was followed by another extensive tour that included arena shows and concluded with sold out shows at Radio City Music Hall in New York, and the Royal Albert Hall in London. 2010 ended May 2015 Meet the Artist with their status as arguably the biggest “underground” band in the world cemented. Starting in 2003 Steven quietly started to release music under his own name, in the form of a series of two track CD singles on his own label, Headphone Dust, each one featuring a cover version and an original SW song. The choice and treatment of the cover versions was unpredictable, as it featured songs by Alanis Morissette, Abba, The Cure, Momus, Prince and Donovan. Stylistically these cover versions allowed Steven to expand his musical palette into everything from electronica, noise music and stripped down acoustic balladry. This led to his decision to record his first solo album of original music. Between January and August of 2008, Steven began recording material that would comprise Insurgentes. Comprising 10 new tracks that range from ballads and anthems to all-out industrial noise assaults, the dark, cinematic, and richly textured disc represents two years’ worth of creative output and numerous recording sessions worldwide in studios from Mexico City to Japan to Israel. The whole process was visually documented by film-maker Lasse Hoile, and the work in progress Insurgentes film features footage of the recording sessions, surreal sequences, and interviews with Steven and many other musicians about what it means to be a musician in the age of iPods and download culture. A second solo album, Grace for Drowning, was recorded in 2010-11 and released in September 2011 on CD, vinyl and Blu-ray formats as a double disc designed to be listened to as two single albums, with the individual parts named Deform to Form a Star and Like Dust I Have Cleared From My Eye. The album received massive critical acclaim and charted all over the world, notably charting in the top 40 in UK, Holland, Germany and reaching the Polish top 10. It was nominated at the 54th Grammy Awards for “Best Surround Sound Album.” Shortly before the release of the album SW also announced his first solo tour in Europe and North America. The first leg of the tour took place in October and November 2011 and contained songs from both Insurgentes and Grace for Drowning. The tour featured quadrophonic sound and many new visual elements. A second leg of tour took place in April-May 2012, this time also taking in South America, and including May 2015 a brand new 12-minute piece Luminol, which had been written specifically for the new band line up to play. A live DVD/Blu-Ray recorded in Mexico titled Get All You Deserve was released in September 2012, again charting all over Europe (#2 in Germany, #5 in the UK). At the same time that Steven was working on Grace For Drowning, he was also working on a collaboration album with his longtime friend and leader of Swedish band Opeth, Mikael Akerfeldt. Their collaboration was eventually released in May 2012 under the name of Storm Corrosion, and going against all expectation was an extremely atmospheric and darkly orchestrated album, very influenced by both musician’s love of artists such as Scott Walker and Talk Talk. Steven has become known for the high standard of his production and is a sought-after mixer and producer. Artists he has worked with in this capacity include the Norwegian artist Anja Garbarek, Anathema and Swedish progressive-metal band Opeth, for whom he produced and/or mixed four albums. Other projects include Blackfield, a collaboration with Israeli megastar Aviv Geffen, which has now produced two acclaimed albums, and Steven’s drone / ambient / experimental outlet Bass Communion. More recently Steven has become known for his 5.1 surround sound mixing, starting with his own projects, but since 2009 also for the remixing of several classic albums, notably the revamping of the King Crimson catalogue, on which Steven worked closely with band leader Robert Fripp, Jethro Tull and several others yet unannounced projects. In 2012 Steven won the “Guiding Light” trophy at the Progressive Music Awards. He also began writing and recording his third solo studio album, The Raven that Refused to Sing (and Other Stories) in Los Angeles with legendary producer Alan Parsons engineering. The album was released in February 2013 and was a huge critical and commercial success, earning numerous 5-star reviews and charting well across the world. The virtuoso band Steven assembled to record the album— Guthrie Govan (guitar), Adam Holzman (keyboards), Theo Travis (flute / sax), Nick Beggs (bass / stick), and Marco Minneman— accompanied him on a hugely successful world tour in 2013 of 78 shows across 22 countries. njpac.org III Meet the Artist UK shows included sold-out Royal Albert Hall and Royal Festival Hall shows. The latter part of 2014 saw Steven Wilson enter Air Studios to record the highly anticipated follow-up to The Raven… Released in March 2015, via Kscope Records, Hand. Cannot. Erase. is a concept album; a mesmerizing, labyrinthine tale hewn from a vivid blend of fact and fiction. In musical terms, the new songs are a more varied and esoteric bunch than those on The Raven that Refused to Sing, partly due to Steven’s aversion to repeating himself, but also because of the way it reflects its subject matter. One IV New Jersey Performing Arts Center thing that has remained the same is the band, which is once again on hand to display its extraordinary skills and sensitivity. Veering from brooding electronic soundscapes to incendiary progressive rock epics and covering all bases in between, Hand. Cannot. Erase. is simultaneously a summation of everything that came before it in Steven’s career, and quite unlike anything he has recorded before. Fans will be instantly thrilled by his increasingly refined and distinctive compositional voice, and the use of new elements such as Ninet Tayeb’s female vocal contributions, and the unusual use of a boys’ choir (in the context of a rock album at least). May 2015 Victoria Theater Wednesday, May 27, 2015 at 8pm NJPAC presents A. R. Rahman The Intimate Concert North American Live Tour 2015 World Music Series sponsored by American Express As a courtesy to the performers and fellow audience members, please be sure to silence all mobile devices. The use of recording equipment and the taking of photographs are strictly prohibited. This program is made possible in part by funds from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State, a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts and by funds from the National Endowment for the Arts. May 2015 njpac.org V Meet the Artist Working in India’s various film industries, international cinema and theatre, Rahman is one of the world’s all-time top-selling recording artists. In a notable career spanning two decades, Rahman has garnered particular acclaim for redefining contemporary Indian film music and thus contributing to the success of several films. Rahman is currently one of the highest paid composers of the motion picture industry. He is a notable humanitarian and philanthropist, donating and raising money for beneficial causes and supporting charities. Music Style and Impact Skilled in Carnatic music, Western classical, Hindustani music and the Qawwali style of Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Rahman has been noted to write film songs that amalgamate elements of these music systems and other genres, layering instruments from differing music idioms in an improvisatory manner. A. R. RAHMAN A. R. Rahman is an Indian composer, singersongwriter, music producer, musician, multiinstrumentalist and philanthropist. Described as the world’s most prominent and prolific film composer by Time, his works are notable for integrating Eastern classical music with electronic music sounds, world music genres and traditional orchestral arrangements. Rahman has won two Academy Awards, two Grammy® Awards, a BAFTA Award, a Golden Globe, four National Film Awards, fifteen Filmfare Awards and thirteen Filmfare Awards South, in addition to numerous other awards and nominations. His extensive body of work for film and the stage earned him the nickname “the Mozart of Madras,” and several Tamil commentators and fans have coined him the nickname Isai Puyal (English: Music Storm). In 2009, Time placed Rahman in its list of World’s Most Influential People. The UK-based world music magazine Songlines named him one of “Tomorrow’s World Music Icons” in August 2011. Having set up his own in-house studio called Panchathan Record Inn at Chennai, arguably one of Asia’s most sophisticated and high-tech studios, Rahman’s film scoring career began in the early 1990s with the Tamil film Roja. VI New Jersey Performing Arts Center Symphonic orchestral themes have accompanied his scores, occasionally employing leitmotif. In the 1980s, Rahman recorded and played arrangements on monophonic sound, synonymous with the era of his musical predecessors K. V. Mahadevan and Vishwanathan-Ramamoorthy. In later years Rahman’s methodology changed as he experimented with the fusion of traditional instruments with new electronic sounds and technology. Rahman’s musical interests and outlook stem from his love of experimentation. His compositions, in the vein of past and contemporary Chennai film composers, bring out auteuristic uses of counterpoint, orchestration and the human voice, melding Indian pop music with unique timbre, forms and instrumentation. By virtue of these qualities, broad ranging lyrics and his syncretic style, the appeal of his music cuts across the spectrum of classes and cultures within Indian society. His first soundtrack for Roja was listed in Time’s “10 Best Soundtracks” of all time in 2005. Film critic Richard Corliss felt the “astonishing debut work parades Rahman’s gift for alchemizing outside influences until they are totally Tamil, totally Rahman.” Rahman’s initial global reach is attributed to the South Asian diaspora. The music producer Ron Fair considers Rahman to be “one of the world’s great living composers in any medium.” May 2015 Meet the Artist The director Baz Luhrmann notes: “I had come to the music of A. R. Rahman through the emotional and haunting score of Bombay and the wit and celebration of Lagaan. But the more of AR’s music I encountered the more I was to be amazed at the sheer diversity of styles: from swinging brass bands to triumphant anthems; from joyous pop to West-End musicals. Whatever the style, A. R. Rahman’s music always possesses a profound sense of humanity and spirit, qualities that inspire me the most.” Rahman has introduced the 7.1 technology in south Indian movies to provide better output. Film Scoring and Soundtracks When he was nine, Rahman accidentally played a tune on piano during his father’s recording for a film, which R. K. Shekhar later developed into a complete song—“Vellithen Kinnam Pol”—for the Malayalam film Penpada. This track, credited to his father, was sung by Jayachandran and penned by Bharanikkavu Sivakumar. His film career began in 1992, when he started Panchathan Record Inn, a music recording and mixing studio attached to the backyard of his house. Over time it would become the most advanced recording studio in India, and arguably one of Asia’s most sophisticated and high-tech studios. He initially composed scores for documentaries, jingles for advertisements and Indian Television channels and other projects. In 1987 Rahman, then still known as Dileep, got his first opportunity to compose jingles for a new range of watches being launched by Allwyn. In 1992, he was approached by film director Mani Ratnam to compose the score and soundtrack for Ratnam’s Tamil film Roja. During the filming, its cinematographer, Santosh Sivan, signed A. R. Rahman up for the Malayalam movie Yodha, directed by his brother Sangeeth Sivan released later in September 1992. The debut led Rahman to receive the Rajat Kamal (Silver Lotus) Award for “Best Music Director” at the National Film Awards, an unprecedented win for a first-time film composer. Rahman has since been awarded the Silver Lotus three more times for Minsara Kanavu (Tamil) in 1997, Lagaan (Hindi) in 2002, Kannathil Muthamittal (Tamil) in 2003, the most ever by any composer. Roja’s score met with high sales and acclaim in both its original and dubbed versions, led May 2015 by the theme song “Chinna Chinna Aasai” bringing about a marked change in film music at the time. Rahman has worked with Indian poets and lyricists such as Javed Akhtar, Gulzar, Vairamuthu and Vaali. Rahman has consistently produced commercially successful soundtracks when collaborating with particular film directors such as Mani Ratnam and S. Shankar for the films Gentleman, Kadhalan, Indian, Jeans, Mudhalvan, Nayak, Boys, Sivaji and recently for Enthiran. In 2005, Rahman extended his Panchathan Record Inn studio by establishing AM Studios in Kodambakkam, Chennai, thereby creating the most cutting-edge studio in Asia. In 2006, Rahman launched his own music label, KM Music. Its first release was his score to the film Sillunu Oru Kaadhal. Rahman scored the Mandarin language picture Warriors of Heaven and Earth in 2003 after researching and utilizing Chinese and Japanese classical music, and won the Just Plain Folks Music Award for “Best Music Album” for his score of the 2006 film Varalaru (God Father). He co-scored the Shekhar Kapur project and his first British film, Elizabeth: The Golden Age, in 2007. He garnered an Asian Film Award nomination for “Best Composer” at the Hong Kong International Film Festival for his Jodhaa Akbar score. His compositions have been sampled for other scores within India, and appeared in such films as Inside Man, Lord of War, Divine Intervention and The Accidental Husband. In 2008, Rahman scored his first Hollywood picture, the comedy Couples Retreat, which won him the BMI London Award for “Best Score.” Rahman scored the film Slumdog Millionaire in 2008, for which he won a Golden Globe and two Academy Awards, becoming the first Asian to do so. The songs “Jai Ho” and “O...Saya” from the soundtrack met with commercial success internationally. In 2010, Rahman composed scores for the romance film Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa, blockbuster sci-fi romance film Enthiran and Danny Boyle’s 127 Hours. Rahman started off the year 2011 by scoring Imtiaz Ali’s musical film Rockstar. The soundtrack became a phenomenal success and earned Rahman immense critical praise. njpac.org VII Meet the Artist Performing and Other Projects Rahman has been involved in several projects aside from film. Vande Mataram, an album of his original compositions released on India’s 50th anniversary of independence in 1997, enjoyed great commercial success. Vande Mataram is one of the largest selling Indian non-film albums to date. He followed it up with an album for the Bharat Bala-directed video Jana Gana Mana, a conglomeration of performances by many leading exponents and artists of Indian classical music. Rahman has written jingles for ads and composed several orchestrations for athletic events, television and internet media publications, documentaries and short films. He frequently enlists the Czech Film Orchestra, Prague and the Chennai Strings Orchestra. In 1999, Rahman partnered with choreographers Shobana and Prabhu Deva and a Tamil cinema dancing troupe to perform with Michael Jackson in Munich, Germany at his Michael Jackson and Friends concert. In 2002, he composed the music for his maiden stage production, Bombay Dreams, commissioned by musical theatre composer Andrew Lloyd Webber. Finnish folk music band Varttina collaborated with Rahman to write the music for The Lord of the Rings theatre production and in 2004, Rahman composed the piece “Raga’s Dance” for Vanessa-Mae’s album Choreography performed by Mae and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. Since 2004, Rahman has performed three successful world tours to audiences in Singapore, Australia, Malaysia, Dubai, the United Kingdom, Canada, the United States and India. He has been collaborating with Karen David for her upcoming studio album. A twodisc soundtrack, Introducing A. R. Rahman (2006) featuring 25 of his pieces from Tamil film scores was released in May 2006, and his non-film album, Connections was released in December 2008. Rahman also performed at the White House State Dinner arranged by U.S. President Barack Obama during the official visit of Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on November 24, 2009. Rahman is one of over 70 artists who performed on “We Are the World 25 for Haiti,” a charity single to raise emergency relief funds in the VIII New Jersey Performing Arts Center wake of the 2010 Haiti earthquake. In 2010, Rahman composed “Jai Jai Garvi Gujarat” in honor of the 50th anniversary of the formation of Gujarat State, “Semmozhiyaana Thamizh Mozhiyaam” as part of World Classical Tamil Conference 2010, and the official theme song of the 2010 Commonwealth Games, “Jiyo Utho Bado Jeeto.” Rahman organized his first world tour, named A. R. Rahman Jai Ho Concert: The Journey Home World Tour, in 2010. The tour kicked off on June 11 at New York’s Nassau Coliseum and spanned 16 major cities worldwide. Some of Rahman’s notable compositions were performed live by the London Philharmonic Orchestra in April 2010. In February 2011, he collaborated with Michael Bolton for his new studio album Gems – The Duets Collection. Rahman reworked on his song “Sajna” from the 2009 American film Couples Retreat to create the track. In May 2011, Mick Jagger announced the formation of a new supergroup, SuperHeavy, which included Dave Stewart, Joss Stone, Damian Marley and Rahman. The band’s self-titled album was released in September 2011. The album features Mick Jagger singing in Rahman’s “Satyameva Jayate,” which translates to “the truth alone triumphs.” In January 2012, it was announced the German Film Orchestra Babelsberg would join KM Music Conservatory musicians in a 100-member concert tour of five Indian cities performing Rahman’s compositions. The tour, named Germany and India 2011-2012: Infinite Opportunities. Classic Incantations, marked the centenary of Indian cinema and of Studio Babelsberg, the world’s oldest film studio. In the summer of 2012, Rahman composed a Punjabi song for the London Olympics opening ceremony, organized by Danny Boyle. It was part of a medley which showcased Indian influence in the UK, according to Boyle’s wishes. Another Indian musician, Ilaiyaraja’s song from Tamil-language film Ram Lakshman (1981), was also chosen as part of the medley. In December 2012, Rahman released the single “Infinite Love” in both English and Hindi, commemorating the last day of the Mayan calendar to spread hope, peace and love. May 2015 May 2015 njpac.org IX X New Jersey Performing Arts Center May 2015 Victoria Theater Saturday, May 30, 2015 at 8pm NJPAC presents Jonathan’s Choice: An Evening of Music and Conversation with Jessica Molaskey Portraits of Joni Mitchell Helio Alves, piano Kevin Kanner, drums Leo Traversa, bass John Pizzarelli, vocals/guitar Maddie Pizzarelli, vocals/guitar Julia Gargano, vocals Hosted by Jonathan Schwartz This performance is being recorded for future broadcast by WNYC and The Jonathan Channel. There will be no intermission during this performance. As a courtesy to the performers and fellow audience members, please be sure to silence all mobile devices. The use of recording equipment and the taking of photographs are strictly prohibited. The American Song series at NJPAC is presented, in part, through the generous support of the Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation and David S. Steiner and Sylvia Steiner Charitable Trust. This program is made possible in part by funds from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State, a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts and by funds from the National Endowment for the Arts. May 2015 njpac.org XI Meet the Artists JESSICA MOLASKEY Jessica Molaskey—the critically acclaimed actress and vocalist whose singing voice has been compared to Peggy Lee, Chris Connor, K.d. Lang and even Chet Baker. Jessica has five solo CDs, including A Kiss to Build a Dream On and Sitting In Limbo, which debuted on the Billboard jazz chart. Her other solo recordings—Make Believe, A Good Day and her debut CD, Pentimento—all received critical and popular acclaim. Her most recent is a live CD with the legendary songwriter and singer Dave Frishberg. Ms. Molaskey has sung in concert from Lincoln Center to Carnegie Hall to the Montreal and Monterey Jazz festivals. She has performed at Feinstein’s at Loews Regency with her husband John Pizzarelli, and at the Oak Room in New York’s Algonquin Hotel. For the past nine years she and John have enjoyed soldout engagements at the Café Carlyle in New York, about which Stephen Holden wrote in The New York Times: “The Pizzarelli-Molasky duo are as good as it gets in any entertainment medium, caviar in a world of canned tuna. Once you’ve acquired the taste, there is no substitute.” Jessica is a veteran of over a dozen Broadway shows including the recent revival of Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine’s Sunday in the Park with George, which was nominated for nine Tony Awards. She has appeared in A Man of No Importance at Lincoln Center, written by Terrance McNally, Lynn Ahrens XII New Jersey Performing Arts Center and Stephen Flaherty, Parade (directed by Hal Prince), Dream, Tommy, Crazy for You, Les Misérables, City of Angels, Chess, Cats and Oklahoma! She played Sister Berta singing “How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria” in the recent NBC production of The Sound of Music Live. Ms. Molaskey has premiered music written by Ricky Ian Gordon (Dream True, Sycamore Trees, for which she won a Helen Hayes Award), Adam Guettel (Myths and Hymns), Jason Robert Brown (Songs for a New World, Parade) and Stephen Sondheim (Wise Guys). She has written songs for a dozen recordings, including the critically acclaimed “Greed,” part of a commission for Audra McDonald’s Seven Deadly Sins at Carnegie Hall. Ms. McDonald performed Molaskey’s composition “Cradle and All”—written with Ricky Ian Gordon—for the Lincoln Center Songbook series live on PBS and she recorded it for Build A Bridge, her Nonesuch CD. Other recordings include Fine and Dandy, Myths and Hymns, Parade, Songs For a New World, Weird Romance, Chess, Oklahoma!, Windflowers: The Music of Jerome Moross, Fred Hersch’s CD Two Hands, Ten Voices and the cast album of Dream True by Tina Landau and Ricky Ian Gordon. She currently co-hosts the nationally syndicated radio program, Radio Deluxe with John Pizzarelli, which broadcasts all over in the United States and Canada. May 2015 Meet the Artists JONATHAN SCHWARTZ Jonathan Schwartz joined WNYC in 1999 and he’s been on the radio in New York City since 1967. His programs are extemporaneous. His novels and stories have been published by Random House and Doubleday, including his memoir All in Good Time, hailed by The New York Times as “luminous,” and received enthusiastically by the Wall Street Journal, Newsweek, The New Yorker, Vanity Fair and the Los Angeles Times, among others. Jonathan’s stories and articles have been May 2015 published in dozens of magazines. He was, for four years, the artistic director of Lincoln Center’s American Songbook series, and for five years appeared as the music correspondent on NBC’s Sunday Today Show. He has been a monthly columnist for GQ Magazine and a weekly columnist for the Village Voice. His own three CDs on the Muse label were released in 1978, 1979 and 1983. He has performed more than 400 times at Michael’s Pub, Rainbow & Stars, and other rooms in New York. njpac.org XIII Prudential Hall Sunday, May 31, 2015 at 7pm NJPAC presents Chaka Khan with special guest Stephanie Mills HORIZON FOUNDATION CONCERT SERIES As a courtesy to the performers and fellow audience members, please be sure to silence all mobile devices. The use of recording equipment and the taking of photographs are strictly prohibited. This program is made possible in part by funds from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State, a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts and by funds from the National Endowment for the Arts. XIV New Jersey Performing Arts Center May 2015 Meet the Artists her hometown. The weekend-long celebration included a free outdoor concert in Millennium Park. Earlier in the year she was awarded a BET Honors and was the recipient of the Trumpet Award (Legend Award); honored by the Howard Theatre Restoration, Inc., at its 2nd Annual Gala and Benefit Concert; inducted into the Apollo Legends Hall of Fame at its Annual Spring Gala; inducted into the Hollywood Bowl Hall of Fame; honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and with the United Negro College Fund’s An Evening of Stars Tribute. She also received the Soul Train Legend Award (2009), the BET Lifetime Achievement Award (2006), the GRAMMY Honors Award from the NARAS Chicago Chapter (2006) and the World Music Lifetime Achievement Award (2003). In 2004, she was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Music from the Berklee School of Music in Boston, MA. CHAKA KHAN Chaka Khan is a true Renaissance Woman. A singer, songwriter, producer, visual artist, author, actor, philanthropist, entrepreneur, activist and mother, Chaka is an international music icon who has influenced multiple generations of artists and continues to do so. From the moment she burst onto the music scene in the 1970s as the 18-year-old lead singer of the multi-racial band Rufus, her powerful voice and show-stopping stage presence set her apart from any other singer, and during her 40-year career, she has developed a vast international fan base and performed on six continents. Chaka is a ten-time GRAMMY® Award winner (with 22 GRAMMY nominations) who has the rare ability to sing in eight music genres, including R&B, jazz, pop, rock, gospel, country, classical and dance music. She has released 22 albums and racked up ten #1 Billboard magazine charted songs, eight RIAA certified gold singles and eleven RIAA certified gold and platinum albums. Chaka’s recorded music has produced over 2,000 catalogue song placements. She is also the recipient of numerous awards for her extraordinary achievements in music and entertainment. Last year, the City of Chicago honored her with a street naming of “Chaka Khan Way” and declared Sunday, July 28, 2013, “Chaka Khan Day” in Chicago, May 2015 In 1999, she established the Chaka Khan Foundation, which includes a variety of programs and initiatives that assist women and children at risk. In July, 2012, she received the McDonald Corporation’s 365Black Award, honoring her for her leadership of the Chaka Khan Foundation. Besides being a successful musician and a devoted philanthropist, she is also a successful entrepreneur. In 2004, she launched a line of gourmet chocolates, Chakalates, which was sold in 20 Neiman Marcus stores around the country. In February 2013, she re-launched her signature brand of chocolates nationally and internationally, and also introduced the Khana Sutra candle, the first product in a fragrance line for men, women and the home. Chaka Khan was born Yvette Stevens in 1953. She grew up in Chicago, Illinois, the eldest of five siblings. As teenagers, she and her sister Bonnie formed a singing group, The Crystalettes, with two friends from school, and Chaka later sang with several local groups before she became the lead singer for the band Ask Rufus, which would become Rufus. With Chaka the group immediately began turning out hit after hit, and it was the beginning of a legendary music career. Living for a time in London and Germany, she currently resides in Los Angeles. She has two children, Indira Milini and Damien. Her life and career are chronicled in her autobiography, Through the Fire, which was published by njpac.org XV Meet the Artists Rodale Books in 2003 and is currently being updated for re-release and adapted into a screenplay. 2013-14 marked Chaka’s 40th anniversary in music and entertainment. In March, a documentary series on her life, Being, premiered on the Centric Channel. In May she performed in the UK at the 50th Southport Weekender event and three sold-out shows at London’s famous Ronnie Scott’s Jazz club with Incognito as her backing band. June 2014 found her at the Bonnaroo Festival in Tennessee, featured in a Super Jam with The Derek Trucks Band, Anthony Hamilton, Taj Mahal, Ben Folds and Susan Tedeschi, and over the summer she also headlined opening night at the Toronto Jazz Festival, performed on The Wendy Williams Show and at Wendy’s private birthday party, and was named Grand Marshal for Chicago’s Bud Billiken Parade, the largest and oldest African American parade. While in Chicago she performed at a benefit concert in Chicago for the Red Pump Project, which raises HIV/AIDS awareness among young girls and women. Governor Pat Quinn designated August 9 as “Chaka Khan Day” in the state of Illinois. The year-long celebration included the release of her first songbook for piano, vocal and guitar, The Chaka Khan Songbook. Chaka is currently at work on a series of mixed media visual works with a planned gallery exhibition in 2015, as well as a new CD, also set for release in 2015. STEPHANIE MILLS Stephanie Mills is one of the most distinctive voices in contemporary music whose onstage energy and power inspires standing ovations wherever she performs. She is a legendary GRAMMY and American Music Awardwinning recording artist with five best-selling albums and ten Billboard #1 singles. Over the span of 35 years illustrious career, Stephanie Mills has distinguished herself as an actress and performer. Stephanie‘s critically acclaimed appearances in shows like the four-time Tony Award-winning The Wiz have assured her of her consistent and loyal fan base. XVI New Jersey Performing Arts Center Stephanie hails from Brooklyn, New York and grew up singing in her home church. Her vocal abilities became evident by age nine. For six consecutive weeks, young Stephanie won the amateur night at the acclaimed Apollo Theatre. She then went on to do her first Broadway musical, Maggie Flynn. She performed on such classic television shows such as Captain Kangaroo and The Electric Company. Stephanie signed with 20th Century Fox Records in 1979. While working with producers James Mtume and Reggie Lucas, she recorded “Whatcha Gonna Do With My Lovin’,” and by 1984 she had climbed the charts with major hits “Sweet Sensation,” “Never Knew Love Like This Before” (a gold single), “Two Hearts” (a duet with Teddy Pendergrass), “Keep Away Girls,” “How Come U Don’t Call Me Anymore?.” Stephanie scored three best-selling albums in a row with Whatcha Gonna Do With My Lovin’, Sweet Sensation and Stephanie in a span of just two years. Stephanie has an insatiable appetite for singing. It is one of the things she loves to do. She says it makes her happy and she looks forward to putting out new music in the future. She hopes her music will make her fans as happy as it has made her! May 2015 NJPAC Shining Stars The New Jersey Performing Arts Center reserves special accolades for its Shining Stars, the generous visionaries, luminaries and great dreamers who made everything possible. This list includes contributors whose cumulative giving to NJPAC totals $1 million and above. As of June 30, 2014 Dreamers $10,000,000 million & above State of New Jersey Women’s Association of NJPAC The Prudential Foundation The Raymond G. Chambers Family Victoria Foundation Betty W. Johnson Lore and Eric F. Ross Judy and Josh Weston The Star Ledger/Samuel I. Newhouse Foundation Allen and Joan Bildner Katherine M. and Albert W. Merck Merck Company Foundation Toby and Leon G. Cooperman City of Newark Essex County New Jersey State Council on the Arts Luminaries $5,000,000 million & above CIT Bank of America Visionaries $1,000,000 million & above Alcatel-Lucent American Express Company The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation AT&T ADP Randi and Marc E. Berson Casino Reinvestment Development Authority Chubb Foundation Joanne D. Corzine Foundation Jon S. Corzine Foundation Doris Duke Charitable Foundation Ford Foundation Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation Veronica M. Goldberg The Griffinger Family Harrah’s Foundation The Horizon Foundation for New Jersey Hess Foundation, Inc. Jaqua Foundation Johnson & Johnson Family of Companies JPMorgan Chase Kresge Foundation The Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation Arlene and Leonard Lieberman A. Michael and Ruth C. Lipper McCrane Foundation, Inc. New Jersey Cultural Trust Panasonic Corporation of North America Dr. Victor and Mrs. Jane Parsonnet Pfizer Inc. PSEG Foundation Michael F. Price PwC Robert Wood Johnson Jr. Charitable Trust Arthur F. and Patricia E. Ryan The Sagner Family Foundation The Smart Family Foundation/David S. Stone, Esq., Stone and Magnanini Charlotte and Morris Tanenbaum Turner Construction Company Turrell Fund Diana and Roy Vagelos Verizon Wells Fargo Mary Ellen and Robert Waggoner Wallace Foundation NJPAC Leadership Board of Directors Co-Chair William J. Marino Marc H. Morial Harold L. Morrison, Jr. Thomas M. O’Flynn Victor Parsonnet, M.D. Co-Chair Philip R. Sellinger, Esq. John R. Strangfeld Jeffrey S. Sherman, Esq. Susan N. Sobbott President and CEO The Hon. Clifford M. Sobel John Schreiber David S. Stone, Esq. Treasurer Michael A. Tanenbaum, Esq. Marc E. Berson Joseph M. Taylor Stephen M. Vajtay, Jr., Esq. Assistant Treasurer Steven M. Goldman, Esq. Robert C. Waggoner Nina M. Wells, Esq. Secretary Josh S. Weston Michael R. Griffinger, Esq. Linda A. Willett, Esq. John S. Willian Assistant Secretary Donald A. Robinson, Esq. Directors Emeriti *Founding Chair Dennis Bone Raymond G. Chambers Barbara Bell Coleman Albert R. Gamper *Chair Emeritus Morris Tanenbaum Arthur F. Ryan Diana T. Vagelos Lawrence E. Bathgate Ex Officio II, Esq. The Hon. Christopher J. Brian T. Bedol Christie James L. Bildner, Esq. Daniel M. Bloomfield, M.D. The Hon. Mildred C. Crump Ann Dully Borowiec The Hon. Joseph N. Linda Bowden DiVincenzo, Jr. Jacob Buurma, Esq. The Hon. Andrew P. Percy Chubb III Sidamon-Eristoff J. Fletcher Creamer, Jr. The Hon. Kimberly M. Pat A. Di Filippo Guadagno Robert H. Doherty The Hon. Ras J. Baraka Brendan P. Dougher Thasunda Brown Duckett Elizabeth A. Mattson Patrick C. Dunican, Jr., Esq. WA Board of Trustees Anne Evans Estabrook Christine C. Gilfillan Leecia R. Eve, Esq. President Gregg N. Gerken Christine Gilfillan Suzanne Spero Savion Glover Nina M. Wells, Esq. Veronica M. Goldberg Co-Executive Steven E. Gross, Esq. Vice Presidents William V. Hickey Mary Beth O’Connor Judith Jamison Vice President, Fund The Hon. Thomas H. Kean Development Ralph A. LaRossa Tenagne Girma-Jeffries Michelle Y. Lee Vice President, Ann M. Limberg Promotion A. Michael Lipper, CFA Thomas J. Marino, CPA April–June 2015 Mary Kay Strangfeld Vice President, Advocacy Karen C. Young Treasurer Robin Cruz McClearn Assistant Treasurer Marcia Wilson Brown, Esq. Secretary Robert Curvin, Ph.D. Samuel A. Delgado Steven J. Diner, Ph.D. Andrew Dumas, Esq. Dawood Farahi, Ph.D. Curtland E. Fields Albert R. Gamper, Jr. Bruce I. Goldstein, Esq. Renee Golush Paula Gottesman Sandra Greenberg Kent C. Hiteshew Beverly Baker Patrick E. Hobbs Audrey Bartner John A. Hoffman, Esq. Tai Beauchamp Lawrence S. Horn, Esq. M. Michele Blackwood, Reverend M. William M.D., F.A.C.S. Howard, Jr. Mary Ellen Burke Reverend Reginald Jillian Castrucci, Esq. Jackson Patricia A. Chambers* Howard Jacobs Sally Chubb* ** Byerte W. Johnson, Ph.D. Barbara Bell Coleman** Robert L. Johnson, M.D. Erica Ferry Marilyn Joseph Chanda Gibson Donald M. Karp, Esq. Marilyn “Penny” Joseph Douglas L. Kennedy Veronica M. Goldberg* Gene R. Korf, Esq. Archie Gottesman Rabbi Clifford M. Kulwin Bunny Johnson Ellen W. Lambert, Esq. Heather B. Kapsimalis Michelle Y. Lee Ruth C. Lipper Paul Lichtman Dena F. Lowenbach Lester Z. Lieberman Pamela T. Miller, Esq. Gabriella E. Morris, Esq.* Kevin Luing Joseph Manfredi Trish Morris-Yamba Ferlanda Fox Nixon, Esq. Robert L. Marcalus Antonio S. Matinho Christine Pearson Bari J. Mattes Patricia E. Ryan* ** John E. McCormac, CPA Mikki Taylor Catherine M. McFarland Diana T. Vagelos* ** *Founding Member Joyce R. Michaelson **Trustee Emerita Maria L. Nieves Edwin S. Olsen Council of Trustees Barry H. Ostrowsky, Esq. Val Azzoli Richard S. Pechter Michael F. Bartow Daria M. Placitella Frederic K. Becker, Esq. Jay R. Post, Jr., CFP Rona Brummer Steven J. Pozycki John M. Castrucci, CPA Clement A. Price, Ph.D. Elizabeth G. Christopherson Marian Rocker Susan Cole, Ph.D. David J. Satz, Esq. Robert S. Constable Barbara J. Scott Irene Cooper-Basch Gary Shaw Anthony R. Coscia, Esq. Marla S. Smith Edward Cruz Suzanne M. Spero Andrea Cummis Joseph P. Starkey Sylvia Steiner Arthur R. Stern Andrew Vagelos Richard J. Vezza Kim Wachtel Rita K. Waldor Constance K. Weaver Elnardo J. Webster, II E. Belvin Williams, Ph.D. Gary M. Wingens, Esq. Jazz Ambassadors Trayton M. Davis Paul V. Profeta Jeffrey S. Sherman NJPAC Senior Management Team John Schreiber President and CEO Bobbie Arbesfeld Senior Advisor Peter H. Hansen Senior Vice President, Development Lisa Hayward Vice President, Development Lennon Register Vice President & CFO Ross S. Richards Senior Vice President, Operations and Real Estate David Rodriguez Executive Vice President & Executive Producer Alison Scott-Williams Vice-President, Arts Education Warren Tranquada Executive Vice President and COO Donna Walker-Kuhne Vice President, Community Engagement Theater Square Development Company, LLC John Schreiber President Lawrence P. Goldman Thomas L. Lussenhop Project Advisors njpac.org 11 NJPAC Contributors Business Partners NJPAC is deeply grateful to the following corporations, foundations, individuals and government agencies for their generous annual support of artistic and arts education programs, the endowment fund, and maintenance of the Arts Center. As of March 1, 2015 Benefactor Level $1,000,000 & above Women’s Association of NJPAC New Jersey State Council on the Arts Leadership Circle $200,000 & above Bank of America The Horizon Foundation for New Jersey Merck Company Foundation The Prudential Foundation Panasonic Corporation of North America American Express ADP Bank of America Charitable Foundation TD Bank PSEG Foundation Victoria Foundation Co-Chair Circle $100,000 & above Kia Motors America, Inc. U.S. Trust Wells Fargo Director’s Circle $50,000 & above BD Capital One, N.A. Chase Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation The Blanche & Irving Laurie Foundation The Philip and Janice Levin Foundation NJM Insurance Group PwC The Star-Ledger Steinway and Sons Surdna Foundation TD Charitable Foundation United Airlines Verizon President’s Circle $25,000 & above Atlantic Tomorrow’s Office Bloomberg Chubb Corporation The Coca-Cola Foundation Foundation for Newark’s Future Gibbons P.C Greenberg Traurig, LLP CohnReznick LLP Investors Bank Johnson & Johnson Family of Companies Lowenstein Sandler PC McCarter & English, LLP The Johnny Mercer Foundation Richmond County Savings Foundation The Law Firm of Robinson, Wettre and Miller Sills Cummis & Gross P.C. Composer’s Circle $10,000 & above Audible Inc. The Berger Organization Berkeley College BNY Mellon Wealth Management C.R. Bard Foundation Coca Cola Refreshments Genova Burns Giantomasi Webster The Hyde and Watson Foundation ISS Facility Services J. Fletcher Creamer & Son, Inc. Jacobs Levy Equity Management Landmark Fire Protection M&T Bank The Nicholas Martini Foundation Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP Profeta & Associates PNC Bank, N.A. The PNC Foundation Ronald McDonald House Charities Sandalwood Securities SP+ Turrell Fund Turner Construction Company The Edward W. and Stella C. Van Houten Memorial Fund Wyndham Worldwide Encore Circle $5,000 & above Accenture, LLP Advance Realty Group Barnabas Health Brach Eichler LLC ShopRite of Newark C&K Properties CBRE Citi Deloitte & Touche Devils Arena Entertainment DeWitt Stern Group Doherty Enterprises Eisai USA Foundation EisnerAmper LLP Elberon Development Co. EpsteinBeckerGreen Ernst & Young, LLP Fidelity Investments Fifth Third Bank Gallagher Bollinger 12 New Jersey Performing Arts Center Gateway Group One Gellert Global Group Ann & Gordon Getty Foundation Goldman Sachs & Co. The Gertrude L. Hirsch Charitable Trust Heritage Capital Group Inserra Shop-Rite Supermarkets The Lichtman Foundation Linden Cogeneration Plant L+M Partners Inc. Lite DePalma Greenberg, LLC McElroy, Deutsch, Mulvaney & Carpenter LLP Mountain Development Corp. Nordstrom The George A. Ohl, Jr. Charitable Trust Peapack-Gladstone Bank Peerless Beverage Company Podvey, Meanor, Catenacci, Hildner, Cocoziello & Chattman PointProspect Consulting, LLC Provident Bank Foundation Michael Rachlin & Company LLC RBH Group Remy Martin Riker, Danzig, Scherer, Hyland & Perretti LLP Sedgwick LLP SILVERMAN Summit Medical Group The Law Offices of Bruce E. Baldinger, LLC TigerShark Foundation Towers Watson Co. WeiserMazars LLP Windels Marx Lane & Mittendorf, LLP Wolff & Samson PC April–June 2015 The Vanguard Society NJPAC is deeply grateful to the following individuals and families for their generous annual support of artistic and As of March 1, 2015 arts education programs, the endowment fund and maintenance of the Arts Center. Benefactor $1,000,000 & above Judy and Josh Weston Leadership Circle $200,000 & above Toby and Leon Cooperman The Chambers Family and The MCJ Amelior Foundation Betty Wold Johnson The Smart Family Foundation/David S. Stone, Esq., Stone and Magnanini Co-Chair Circle $100,000 & above Director’s Circle $50,000 & above Edison Properties Newark Foundation The Griffinger Family William J. and Paula Marino McCrane Foundation, Inc., care of Margrit McCrane Steve and Elaine Pozycki Pat and Art Ryan The Walter V. and Judith L. Shipley Family Foundation Allen and Joan Bildner Ann and Stan Borowiec Jennifer A. Chalsty Trayton M. and Maris R. Davis Veronica M. Goldberg William and Joan Hickey Dana and Peter Langerman Arlene and Leonard Lieberman A. Michael and Ruth C. Lipper/Lipper Family Charitable Foundation Harold and Donna Morrison Thomas O’Flynn and Cheryl Barr Marian and David Rocker The Sagner Family Foundation John and Mary Kay Strangfeld Michael and Jill Tanenbaum John and Suzanne Willian/ Goldman Sachs Gives President’s Circle $25,000 & above Sandy Hill Foundation Jeffrey and Karen Sherman David S. Steiner and Sylvia Steiner Charitable Trust Morris and Charlotte Tanenbaum Mary Ellen and Robert C. Waggoner Composer’s Circle $10,000 & above Jean and Bruce Acken Audrey Bartner Judy and Brian Bedol Judith Bernhaut Mindy A. Cohen and David J. Bershad Randi and Marc E. Berson Nancy and James Bildner Rose and John Cali Carol and Roger Chartouni Stewart and Judy Colton Jodi and Wayne Cooperman Edward and Sharon Cruz Linda and Pat Di Filippo Richard and Thasunda Duckett Patrick C. Dunican, Jr., Esq. Steven M. Goldman, Esq. Phyllis and Steven E. Gross Steve and Bonnie Holmes Meg and Howard Jacobs Kaminsky Family Foundation Don and Margie Karp The Honorable and Mrs. Thomas H. Kean Lee and Murray Kushner and Family Michelle Y. Lee Judith and Lester Lieberman Ann M. Limberg Amy and William Lipsey Barry and Leslie Mandelbaum Norma and Robert Marcalus Richard S. and Kayla L. Pechter Mr. Arnold and Dr. Sandra Peinado Mr. and Mrs. Leslie C. Quick, III Susan and Evan Ratner Karen and Gary D. Rose The Rubenstein Foundation Philip R. Sellinger Susan N. Sobbott Cliff and Barbara Sobel Joan Standish Lizzie and Jonathan Tisch Warren and Alexine Tranquada Diana and Roy Vagelos Ted and Nina Wells Jan and Barry Zubrow Encore Circle $5,000 & above Anonymous Barbara and Val Azzoli Lawrence E. Bathgate/Bathgate, Wegener & Wolf Barbara and Edward Becker The Russell Berrie Foundation Stephen and Mary Birch Foundation Daniel M. Bloomfield, M.D. Denise and Dennis Bone Betsy and Kurt Borowsky/ Pick Foundation Ms. Linda M. Bowden and Mr. Harold B. Jenssen Liz and Blair Boyer James C. Brady Norman L. Cantor Mr. and Mrs. Percy Chubb, III Sylvia J. Cohn Bobbie and Bob Constable Brendan P. Dougher Susan and Thomas Dunn April–June 2015 Dexter and Carol Earle Foundation Leecia Roberta Eve Robert and Brenda Fischbein Philanthropic Fund of the Jewish Community Foundation Gregg N. Gerken Lucia DiNapoli Gibbons Lawrence P. Goldman and Laurie B. Chock Archie Gottesman and Gary DeBode Dr. and Mrs. Frank Gump Peter O. Hanson Hobby’s Restaurant/The Brummer Family Jockey Hollow Foundation The Huisking Foundation Karma Foundation/Sharon Karmazin Rabbi and Mrs. Clifford M. Kulwin Ralph and MartyAnn LaRossa Elaine and Rob LeBuhn Carmen and Benito Lopez Dena F. and Ralph Lowenbach Tom and Joanne Marino Judy and Heath McLendon Mary Beth O’Connor, Lucky VIII Films Edwin S. and Catherine Olsen Deanne Wilson and Laurence B. Orloff Jean and Kent Papsun Dr. and Mrs. Victor Parsonnet James and Nancy Pierson Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Radest Jessie Richards E. Franklin Robbins Charitable Trust Susan Satz John Schreiber Helen M. Taverna and Mark E. Reagan Robert and Sharon Taylor Steve and Gabi Vajtay Thomas C. Wallace Linda A. Willett, Esq. Helene and Gary Wingens njpac.org 13 Muse (myooz) n. A source of inspiration; esp. a guiding genius Join NJPAC’s Muse Society NJPAC has established The Muse Society to ensure it can continue to offer life-affirming educational programs and inspirational performances. The Muse Society recognizes those visionary friends who include NJPAC in their financial planning through bequests, charitable gift annuities, insurance and other deferred gifts. For more information or to notify NJPAC of your intent to include it in your estate planning, contact Peter H. Hansen, Senior Vice President of Development, at (973) 297-5817. The Muse Society We are deeply grateful to the following friends who have included the Arts Center in their estate plans and made known their future gift. As of March 1, 2015 Audrey Bartner Andrew T. Berry, Esq. † Allen I. Bildner † Candice R. Bolte Edmond H. & Joan K. Borneman Raymond G. Chambers Toby & Leon Cooperman Fred Corrado Ann Cummis Mr. & Mrs. James Curtis Harold R. Denton Richard E. DiNardo Charles H. Gillen † Phyllis & Steven E. Gross Jackie & Larry Horn Rose Jacobs † Gertrude Brooks Josephson † and William Josephson in Memory of Rebecca and Samuel Brooks Adrian and Erica Karp Joseph Laraja Sr. † Leonard Lieberman † Ruth C. Lipper Dena and Ralph Lowenbach Opera Link/Jerome Hines † Joseph and Bernice O’Reilly † Mr and Mrs. Paul B. Ostergaard Donald A. Robinson, Esq. Estate of Eric F. Ross † Arthur F. and Patricia E. Ryan Ethel Smith † Paul Stillman Trust † Morris and Charlotte Tanenbaum Carolyn M. VanDusen Artemis Vardakis † Judy and Josh Weston † Deceased Members New Jersey Performing Arts Center gives special thanks to the following Members who help meet the Arts Center’s annual financial needs with gifts of $650 to $4,999. For information on becoming a Member, please call (973) 297-5809. As of March 1, 2015 Connoisseurs $3,000 & above Mr. and Mrs. Lee Augsburger Mr. and Mrs. Stephen D. Bach Ms. Susan Blount Patricia L. Capawana Eleonore Kessler Cohen and Max Insel Cohen Joanne M. Friedman Herb and Sandy Glickman Alice Gerson Goldfarb Renee and David Golush Hellring Lindeman Goldstein & Siegal LLP Louis V. Henston Mrs. Robert G. Kuchner LeClairRyan Ellen and Donald Legow Amy and John McHugh Ms. Christine S. Pearson J.G. Petrucci Co. Inc. John J. Phillips Dennis and Family Laurence and Elizabeth Schiffenhaus Stephen and Mary Jo Sichak Richard Verdoni, M.D. Richard J. and Arlene Vezza Mr. and Mrs. Edward D. Zinbarg Aleta and Paul Zoidis Platinum $1,250 & above Anonymous Ronald K. Andrews Joseph and Jacqueline Basralian George Bean Eileen R. Becker Barata B. Bey Marianne and Harold Breene Barbara and David Bunting Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Chapin, III Austin G. Cleary Mr. and Mrs. William F. Conger Carol and John Cornwell Carmen Amalia Corrales Andrea Cummis 14 New Jersey Performing Arts Center Carolyn Davis D’Maris and Joseph Dempsey Michael J. and Mary Ann Denton Robert M. Embrey Alice and Glenn Engel Herbert and Karin Fastert Dorothy Thorson Foord Lauren and Steven Friedman Doralee and Lawrence Garfinkel Thomas P. Giblin Mr. and Mrs. Michael Gilfillan Karolee and Sanford Glassman Sue Goldberg Ellen L. and Jonathan L. Goldstein Dorothy Gould and Michalene Bowman Dr. and Mrs. Jorge G. Guerra Mysia and Hank Hoogsteden Lonnie and Bette Hanauer Bob Haralambakis Kitty and Dave Hartman Mary Ellen and Gates Hawn Jackie and Larry Horn Richard and Cindy Johnson John Kappelhof Adrian and Erica Karp Mr. and Mrs. Henry Klehm, III April–June 2015 Platinum $1,250 & above (continued) Max L. Kleinman Koven Foundation Irvin and Marjorie Kricheff Dr. and Mrs. Donald Louria Liz and David Lowenstein Kevin and Trisha Luing Lum, Drasco & Positan LLC Massey Insurance Agency Jack and Ellen Moskowitz Mr. Bruce Murphy and Ms. Mary Jane Lauzon H. Herbert Myers Memorial Foundation Michael and Nancy Neary Mrs. Norma Sewall Nichols Jeffrey S. Norman North Ward Center Dr. Christy Oliver and Bessie T. Oliver Bobbi and Barry H. Ostrowsky Wayne Paglieri and Jessalyn Chang Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Rabinowitz Drs. Shirley and Morton Rosenberg Brent N. Rudnick Barbara Sager Mr. and Mrs. Newton B. Schott, Jr. Rita and Leonard Selesner Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Shapiro Joan and Allan Spinner Elaine J. Staley Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Taylor Jeanne and Vince Tobin Ms. Kate S. Tomlinson and Mr. Roger Labrie Mr. and Mrs. R. Charles Tschampion George Ulanet Company Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Weinbach Dr. Joy Weinstein and Dr. Bruce Forman The Honorable Alvin Weiss Dr. Dorian J. Wilson Sonny and Alan Winters Mr. and Mrs. Pat Wood Karen C. Young Claire and Gil Zweig Copper $650 & above Susan and N. William Atwater Dr. Sherry Barron-Seabrook and David Seabrook Tai Beauchamp Victoria and A. Nurhan Becidyan Marge and John Bonnet Henry Brandon Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Braun James and Sharon Briggs Dr. Kimberly Brown (and Parkway Eye Care Center) Jean and Michael Chodorcoff Judith Musicant and\ Hugh A. Clark Nancy Clarke Robert and Josephine Cleary Willie L. Cooper Pamela J. Craig and Robert V. Delaney Mr. and Mrs. David R. Dacey Elayne Wishart and Bruce L. Deichl Mr. and Mrs. Michael Dixon Irwin and Janet Dorros Barbara Duncan James P. Edwards Mr. Richard R. Eger and Ms. Anne Aronovitch Harlean and Jerry Enis Dani Faibes Mr. and Mrs. Myron Feldman Sanford and Zella Felzenberg Rebecca Glass and Derek Fields Barbara and Marc Gellman Kenneth and Claudia Gentner Dr. Louis Gianvito Clifford and Karen Goldman Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Goodfellow Thomas L. Green Wayne and Catherine Greenfeder Linda and John Groh Peter H. Hansen James E. Heims April–June 2015 Lorraine and Bob Henry Mr. and Mrs. Dan Herbert Lynn A. and Gregory E. Hlubik Joan Hollander Salutes NJPAC Jean A. Horton N. Lynne Hughes, Esq. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Jacob Linda and Charles Jantzen Linda A. Jenkins Marilyn Joseph James & Carolyn Kinder Joan and Daniel Kram Mark and Sheryl Larner Lois Lautenberg Deanna and Frank Lawatsch Zoraya E. Lee-Hamlin Jody Levinson Melanie and Alan Levitan Joan M. Lowery Paulina K. Marks Carol and Thomas Martin Edward and Jeanne Martine Henry and Carol Mauermeyer Cindy L. McCollum and Josh Mackoff Dr. Rashied McCreary Robert L. and Rita Modell Jeffrey A. Moran Drs. Douglas and Susan Morrison Joan Murdock Joanne Nabors Joseph and Sheila Nadler Nora O’Brien-Suric William and Patricia O’Connor Margaret H. Parker Lisa and Daniel Peterson Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Peyton Jay R. Post, Jr., CFP Dr. Kalmon D. Post and Linda Farber-Post Caroline and Harry Pozycki Katherine McLain Pursley and Joseph J. Pursley Susan Ramundo Brian James Remite Dr. Diane M. Ridley-White C. James Rimes Dr. Marcia Robbins-Wilf Betty Robertson Ina and Mark Roffman Ann Roseman and Stan Lumish Carole Roth-Sullivan Suzanne and Richard Scheller Sharon and James Schwarz Drs. Rosanne S. Scriffignano and Anthony Scriffignano Jeffrey and Lisa Silvershein Edie Simonelli Marilyn and Leon Sokol Mr. and Mrs. Robert Spalteholz Rosemary and Robert Steinbaum Beverly and Ed Stern Lei Sun Alexander Sweetwood Marilyn Termyna Marva Tidwell Louise and David J. Travis The Henry S. & Agnes M. Truzack Foundation Daniel and Elaine Turner Mr. and Mrs. David S. Untracht Frank and Polly Vecchione Paul and Sharlene Vichness Mr. Leigh R. Walters and Robin Walters Anne M. Wargo Susan D. Wasserman Joyce Watterman Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Weldon, III Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Whelan E. Belvin Williams, Ph.D. Deter Wisniewski Steven Witt Kathleen and Vincent Zarzycki Jodi and Michael Zwain njpac.org 15 Season Funders New Jersey Performing Arts Center is grateful to the following partners for their commitment and investment in NJPAC’s mission. The Chambers Family and The MCJ Amelior Foundation Toby & Leon Cooperman Betty Wold Johnson McGladrey LLP Edison Properties Newark Foundation Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation The Griffinger Family The Philip and Janice Levin Foundation William J. & Paula Marino Major support provided by: The Merck Company Foundation Panasonic Corporation of North America The Smart Family Foundation/ David S. Stone, Esq., Stone and Magnanini Additional support provided by: McCrane Foundation, Inc., care of Margrit McCrane PNC Bank, N.A. Steve & Elaine Pozycki Pat & Art Ryan The Walter V. and Judith L. Shipley Family Foundation The Star-Ledger Verizon Victoria Foundation Judy & Josh Weston Steinway & Sons John & Mary Kay Strangfeld Surdna Foundation Michael & Jill Tanenbaum John & Suzanne Willian/ Goldman Sachs Gives The New Jersey Cultural Trust Official Sponsors: Official Soft Drink of NJPAC Official Airline of NJPAC Official Automotive Partner of NJPAC Media Sponsor NJPAC is grateful for the extraordinary commitment of: For Your Information As part of our Enhanced Safety Program, the following items are prohibited upon entry into Prudential Hall, the Victoria Theater, and all public spaces of NJPAC: backpacks, large pocketbooks, shopping bags, suitcases, briefcases, weapons, animals (except service animals). Late Seating Policy: Latecomers and persons leaving the theater midshow will be seated/re-seated at the discretion of the management. Camera and Recording Equipment is Prohibited: The use of recording equipment and the taking of photographs of any performance or the possession of any device for such use without the written permission of the management is strictly prohibited. Parking Facilities: Easy parking is available in the 1,100-car garage under Military Park, directly across from NJPAC. Safe and secure surface parking is also available. 16 New Jersey Performing Arts Center Smoking is prohibited throughout all indoor spaces of NJPAC. Lost and Found: Any found items should be returned to NJPAC Security or Guest Services staff. If you believe you have lost an item, call (973) 297-5868. Found clothing items will be held for 30 days after which they will be donated to a local shelter. Mobile Device Courtesy Reminder: Please respect performers and fellow audience members by ensuring that all cellular phones and mobile devices are turned off during performances. Newark Light Rail: NJ Transit’s Newark Light Rail offers frequent service in Downtown Newark that includes a station stop at NJPAC, offering a convenient alternative to driving to a performance or event. This service is an extension of the Newark City Subway and connects all rail lines served by Newark Penn and Broad Street Stations. Other popular destinations served by the extension are the Bears and Eagles Riverfront Stadium, The Newark Museum and Broad Street area businesses. For more information, visit njtransit.com/nlr. Disabilities: All Tiers of Prudential Hall and the Victoria Theater are wheelchair accessible. Open captioning is provided at select performances. Sennheisser Infraport infra red audio receivers are available free-of-charge from an NJPAC Guest Service staff member. NJPAC welcomes children of all ages to its family events, but adult performances are not recommended for children 5-years-old and younger. New Jersey Performing Arts Center. NJPAC, One Center Street, Newark, NJ, 07102; Telephone: (973) 642-8989, Box Office: (888) 466-5722; njpac.org April–June 2015 April–June 2015 njpac.org 17 Maestros and masterworks A roster of internationally beloved artists, including Joshua Bell, Lang Lang and Daniele Gatti, is announced for NJPAC’s 2015-16 Classical music season Photo by xun-chi Sponsored by Bank of America, the 201516 Classical Series opens in the splendor of Prudential Hall on Saturday, Sept. 26, when Lang Lang performs in recital, his first concert at NJPAC in four seasons. A native of China, yet a citizen of the world, this electrifying pianist is a favorite of NJPAC audiences. The program will be announced at a later date. Lang Lang returns to Prudential Hall on September 26, 2015 Whether you’re a classical music listener who wants heart-thumping power that channels down to the toes, or lilting melodies that caress the ear, a half-dozen concerts announced for the New Jersey Performing Arts Center’s 2015-16 season are bound to enthrall. “NJPAC has assembled one of the strongest classical seasons since its opening: headline soloists such as Lang Lang, Pinchas Zukerman and Joshua Bell join world-class conductors, ranging from Valery Gergiev to Michael Tilson Thomas,” said David Rodriguez, NJPAC’s Executive Vice President and Executive Producer. “Throughout the season, audiences are taken on a journey from the rhythmic strength of Stravinsky to the melodic phrasing of Copland, and everything in between.” Great Britain’s finest ensembles—the London Symphony and Royal Philharmonic orchestras—and Paris’ Orchestre National de France meet on these shores in the season ahead, and one of this country’s classical showstoppers, the San Francisco Symphony, arrives packing works by American composer Aaron Copland. Two acclaimed soloists— pianist Lang Lang and violinist Joshua Bell— make return appearances; however, Bell also will assume the role of conductor when he leads the Academy of St Martin in the Fields. All told, a colorful season of superstar virtuosos—with a distinct British accent. 18 New Jersey Performing Arts Center Next up, on Saturday, Oct. 24, is the London Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Valery Gergiev and featuring guest soloist Yefim Bronfman on piano. A pair of works by Bartók (the dazzling Piano Concerto No. 3 and the suite from The Miraculous Mandarin) are matched with Stravinsky’s complete The Firebird, rounding out an intriguing offering of early 20th-century masterpieces. Bronfman’s performance of Bartók’s Third Piano Concerto has been called “brilliantly charismatic” by The New York Times. A second London orchestra crosses the pond on Friday, Jan. 8, 2016. The Royal Philharmonic, with Pinchas Zukerman both on the podium and as violin soloist, portrays its prowess with Elgar, Mozart and Brahms. The renowned musician, music director and teacher, who is the orchestra’s principal guest conductor, is front and center for Elgar’s beloved Serenade for Strings and Mozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 (a work he has perfected in performance since his teens). Concluding the bill is Brahms’ sublime First Symphony, popularly recorded and performed by the orchestra and praised by reviewers. “I am delighted to be returning to the New Jersey Performing Arts Center with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra,” said Zukerman. “Prudential Hall is a gorgeous hall with great acoustics.” Later that month, another champion violinist— Julian Rachlin—joins the Orchestre National de France and conductor Daniele Gatti on Friday, Jan. 29, 2016. A magical program is composed of Debussy (Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune), Shostakovich (Violin Concerto No. 1) and Tchaikovsky (the breathtaking April–June 2015 Symphony No. 5). France’s national orchestra has been a critics’ darling since Gatti, who also is the new chief conductor of the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, became music director in 2008. Symphony, with what promises to be an exuberant celebration of Copland. Music Director Michael Tilson Thomas conducts, and Israeli pianist Inon Barnatan is guest soloist, in a program featuring the composer’s Orchestral Variations (1957), Inscape (1967) and Piano Concerto (1926). The bill also includes Schumann’s Symphony No. 2, glowingly illustrative of the Romantic repertoire. Joshua Bell was heard at NJPAC last Spring, blazing into Sibelius’ Violin Concerto and Ravel’s Tzigane, backed by the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra. On Saturday, March 19, 2016, he is accompanied by the orchestra Described as “a true poet of the keyboard” he serves as music director—London’s by London’s Evening Standard, Barnatan Academy of St Martin in the Fields—and leads is known widely for his compelling and symphonies by Prokofiev (No. 1, “Classical”) insightful musicianship. In December “At one point, Newark was his whole life. 2014, his and Beethoven (his cheery No. 8). As a bonus, debut with the NJSO—performing Chopin’s stand at Piano one endConcerto of Broadway Newark praised as the ensemble performs the ConcertHe’d Romance No. in1—was as by modern composer Gyōrgy Ligeti.a kid, and say:“unflaggingly elegant” ‘Someday, I’m going by to The go toStar-Ledger. the end of this street.’ It was a big deal for him. Little Hearts will flutter when Bell’s fans hear that A tradition, the Bank of America Classical did he know he’d join the will U.S. continue Air Force,tothenbe held an he has chosen Tchaikovsky’s pyrotechnic Overtures, Violin Concerto for his solo showpiece, a hour priorwith to each concert. These go all around the globe Dizzyclassical and many composition he practically owns. more times with interactive presentations are hosted by his own band. At one point, Maestro George Marriner Maull of New going to is the end of Broadway Newark was Wrapping up on Friday, April 15, 2016 Jersey’s DiscoveryinOrchestra andthe are free to the energy-fueled, youthful San be-all Francisco ticketfor holders. and end-all him.” 2015-16 Bank of America Classical Series Lang Lang in recital London Symphony Orchestra Valery Gergiev, conductor Royal Philharmonic Pinchas Zukerman, conductor & violin Orchestra National de France Daniele Gatti, conductor Joshua Bell & Academy of St Martin in the Fields San Francisco Symphony Michael Tilson-Thomas, conductor Photo by Erik Kabik Sep 26 Oct 24 Jan 8 Jan 29 Mar 19 Apr 15 Joshua Bell leads and performs with Academy of St Martin in the Fields on March 19, 2016 April–June 2015 njpac.org 19 NJPAC Staff & Administration DEVELOPMENT Peter Hansen* Senior Vice President, Development Lisa Hayward Vice President, Development Sue-Ellen M. Wright Assistant Vice President, Corporate, Foundation & Government Relations Ursula Hartwig-Flint*** Director, Donor Services Lauren Antonelli Manager, Individual Giving Eileen Greenlay Manager, Corporate Development Patricia Bachorz Grant Writer Jessica Spielberg Senior Prospect Researcher Evelyn Wen-Ting Chiu ARTS EDUCATION Coordinator, Alison Scott-Williams Individual Giving Vice President, Arts Education Hillary Cohen Jennifer Tsukayama Membership Coordinator Senior Director, Bailey Fox Arts Education Development Associate, Caitlin Evans Jones** Corporate & Foundations Director of Partnerships & Stacey Goods Professional Development Development Associate, Rebecca Hinkle Database Director, Arts Training Shara Morrow Jamie M. Mayer Director, In-School Programs Senior Administrative Assistant Michele Wright FINANCE Director of Music Programs Lennon Register & New Initiatives Vice President & CFO Erika Hicks Mary Jaffa** Program Manager of Assistant Vice President, In-School Programs (Music) Finance Rosa Hyde Rene Tovera**** Manager, Performances Assistant Vice President Eyesha Marable & Controller Manager, Sales & Partnerships Betty Robertson* Patricia Sweeting Senior Accountant— Coordinator, After School & General Accounting Summer Programs Manuela Silva*** Alexis Almeida Senior Accountant-Payroll Program Coordinator Geraldine Richardson ** for Music Programs & Staff Accountant— New Initiatives Accounts Payable Christopher Phillips Amite Kapoor Administrative Assistant & Business Information Analyst Office Manager Lauren McCarthy Kristina Watters Administrative Assistant Administrative Assistant & HUMAN RESOURCES Office Manager Marsha R. Bonner OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT John Schreiber President & CEO Josephine (Jo) Edwards Executive Assistant to the President and CEO Casey Hastrich Senior Administrative Assistant Bobbie Arbesfeld*** Senior Advisor David Rodriguez Executive Vice President & Executive Producer Kira M. Ruth** Administrative Assistant & Office Manager Warren Tranquada* Executive Vice President & COO Pamela C. Chisena*** Administrative Manager COMMUNICATIONS Debra R. Kinzler Assistant Vice President, Communications COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT Donna Walker–Kuhne Vice President, Community Engagement Jose R. Acevedo Manager of Group Sales Chiara Morrison Manager of Community Engagement & Cultivation Brittany Blackwell Coordinator, Community Engagement Penny Claiborne** Coordinator, Group Sales Erma Jones*** Senior Administrative Assistant Service Recognition (as of 10/1/14) * * * * 20+ years * * * 15+ years * * 10+ years * 5+ years MARKETING Katie Sword Assistant Vice President, Marketing Linda Fowler Director, Content Marketing Debra L. Volz** Director, Advertising & Graphic Production Nathan Leslie Charlene A. Roberts Marketing Managers Doris Ann Pezzolla*** Senior Graphic Designer Sandra Silva Graphic Designer Tina Boyer Advertising & Production Coordinator Latoya Dawson Advertising & Graphic Production Assistant Shachi Parikh Marketing Coordinator Jerome H. Enis**** Consultant, Herbert George Associates OPERATIONS Ross Richards*** Senior Vice President, Operations & Real Estate Chad Spies** Assistant Vice President, Site Operations Todd Vanderpool Site Operations Manager Elizabeth Mormak* Senior Administrative Assistant Todd Tantillo** Chief Engineer J. Dante Esposito*** Lead Engineer Brian Cady* Michel Lionez Cuillerier*** Sherman Gamble** Mariusz Koniuszewski* Maintenance Engineers John Hook Chief of Security Thomas Dixon*** Safety and Security Manager Robin Jones* Senior Director of House Management Molly Roberson Jennifer Yelverton* House Managers Kathleen Dickson*** Assistant Vice President, Senior Head Usher Human Resources Lamont Akins*** Ginny Bowers Coleman** Jerry Battle* Director of Volunteer Services Edward Fleming** Aga Ziaja Cynthia Robinson** HR Business Partner Head Ushers Rosetta Lee * Lauren Vivenzio*** Receptionist & Purchasing/ Manager, Operations HR Administrator Hernan Soto*** INFORMATION Operations Support TECHNOLOGIES Staff Supervisor Ernie DiRocco* Denise Williams Chief Information Officer Operations Support and Carl Sims*** Services Coordinator Director of Network Jose Almonte Infrastructure Trenice Hassell Rodney Johnson* Corey Lester Support Analyst, Vincent Ransom IT and Telecom Aaron Ratzan Brian Remite* Francisco Soto Database Analyst, Operations Support Staff Customer Care Systems George Gardner*** House Painter 20 New Jersey Performing Arts Center PRODUCTION Chris Moses* Senior Director of Production DJ Haugen Christopher Staton Production Managers Samantha Davis Assistant Production Manager, Administration Adam Steinbauer Assistant Production Manager William Worman** Head Carpenter Richard Edwards*** Mario Corrales*** Assistant Head Carpenters Jacob Allen* Head Electrician John Enea Gummersindo Fajarado*** Assistant Head Electricians Paul Allshouse* Head of Audio Al Betancourt ** Jon Hiltz** Assistant Head of Audio Robert Binetti* Bryan Danieli** John Finney* George Honczarenko* Stage Crew Eunice Peterson*** Senior Artist Assistant Melvin Anderson Lowell Craig** Caresse Elliott Daniel Ovalle Allison Wyss*** Artist Assistants PROGRAMMING Evan White** Senior Director of Programming Andy Donald Producer, Artistic Development & Community Programming Craig Pearce Program Manager, Arts Education Kitab Rollins* Manager, Performance & Broadcast Rentals Andrea Cummis William W. Lockwood Jr.*** Programming Consultants SPECIAL EVENTS Austin Cleary** Assistant Vice President Roslyn Brown* Event Planner TICKET SERVICES Erik Wiehardt* Director, Ticket Services Yesenia Jimenez *** Associate Director, Priority Customers Stephanie Miller*** Associate Director, Ticketing System Nicole Craig** Senior Box Office Manager Robin Polakoff Ticketing Systems Specialist Veronica Dunn-Sloan* Box Office Manager Daryle Charles April Jeffries Robert Paglia Priority Customer Representatives Jana Thompson Box Office Representative WOMEN’S ASSOCIATION OF NJPAC Gail P. Stone* Managing Director Amy Mormak Manager, Events & Marketing April–June 2015 I may not know you, but I will help save your life WE ALL HAVE TO LOOK OUT FOR EACH OTHER. WHEN YOU HELP THE AMERICAN RED CROSS, YOU HELP AMERICA. THROUGH HER INVOLVEMENT WITH THE AMERICAN RED CROSS, PATTI LABELLE HELPS TO SAVE LIVES EVERY DAY. TO LEARN HOW PATTI LABELLE IS HELPING, OR TO FIND OUT WHAT YOU CAN DO TO HELP, VISIT REDCROSS.ORG.