2012/2013

Cendrillon Jules Massenet

Cinderella

Two Hundred Forty-Seventh Program of the 2012-13 Season _______________________ Indiana University Opera Theater presents as its 427th production

Cendrillon Music by Jules Massenet Libretto by Henri Cain Ronald Zollman, Conductor Albert-André Lheureux, Stage Director C. David Higgins, Set and Costume Designer Julie Duro, Lighting Designer William Jon Gray, Chorus Master Gary Arvin, Diction Coach

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Musical Arts Center Thursday, November 8 7:00 p.m. Friday, November 9 Saturday, November 10 8:00 p.m. Sunday, November 11 2:00 p.m. music.indiana.edu

Cast

November 8 November 10

November 9 November 11

Lucette (Cendrillon). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Alyssa Martin Jacquelyn Matava Pandolfe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Reuben Walker Preston Orr Madame de la Haltière. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Eileen Jennings Jane Rownd Noémie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Anastasia Talley Abbey Curzon Dorothée. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Amber McKoy Madolynn Pessin La Fée (Fairy Godmother) . . . . . . . . . . . . Angela Yoon Sandra Periord Le Prince Charmant (Prince Charming) . . . . . Sarah Ballman Michael Brandenburg La Surintendant des Plaisirs (Master of Ceremonies). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bruno Sandes Le Doyen de la Faculté (Dean of Faculty). . . . Andrew LeVan Le Roi (The King) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ryan Kieran Le Premier Ministre (Prime Minister). . . . . . Zachary Coates Le Héraut (The Herald). . . . . . . . . . . . . Daniel Lentz Six Esprits (Six Spirits). . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kathryn Summersett, Emily Smith Elizabeth Faranda, Rachel Evans Meghan Folkerts, Anna Prokop Princesses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sarah Akemon, Monica Armstrong Danielle Guevara, Alana Hodgdon Kaitlin Jellison, Abigail Mowery Demi Alexandra Vanderwerff, Sarah Wells Modiste. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Christopher Seefeldt Hairdresser / Servant. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Brayton Arvin Tailor / Servant. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Max Zander

One 15-Minute Intermission TO OUR PATRONS: Curtain time for IU Opera Theater is promptly on the hour, by which time, all opera goers should be in their seats. Latecomers will be seated only on the third balcony or at the discretion of the management. Thank you for your cooperation.

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Synopsis by Matthew Leone

Act I Madame de la Haltière’s Mansion Courtier Pandolfe and his second wife, Madame de la Haltière, are busy preparing for a grand ball at the King’s palace. As the servants complain of Madame’s badgering, Pandolfe longs for happier times. He wonders why he gave up a peaceful existence with his daughter, Lucette (Cendrillon), to marry the spiteful Madame Haltière. He also laments over Madame’s conceited daughters, Noémie and Dorothée, as well as the unfortunate fate that has befallen his daughter due to the marriage. Madame Haltière and her daughters go over their plan to attract Prince Charming’s attention at the ball and, joined by a gloomy Pandolfe, they depart for the King’s palace. Shortly afterward, Cendrillon ponders her circumstances—she would love to attend the ball, but her housework beckons. After she falls asleep, the Fairy appears and commands her sprites to fashion a gown and carriage for Cendrillon. After the Fairy awakens her, Cendrillon is excited to attend the ball but worries that she will be recognized. The Fairy then gives her a crystal slipper, which will make her unrecognizable, and she also warns Cendrillon that she must return home by midnight. Cendrillon promises the Fairy she will return on time and then departs for the ball.

Act II The King’s Palace The ball has begun, although Prince Charming is glum, despite the encouragement from the Master of Ceremonies and his Courtiers. As the Prince longs for true love, the King enters and reminds his son that he must choose a bride. A “suite dansante” signals the entry of numerous guests, including Pandolfe, Madame Haltière, and her excited daughters. Suddenly, Cendrillon enters, and, while Haltière and her daughters scoff at the new arrival, the other guests—including the Prince—are entranced by her appearance. Prince Charming approaches Cendrillon and courts her, and, although Cendrillon is initially evasive, love soon blossoms between them. Suddenly, the clock strikes midnight, and Cendrillon quickly departs, leaving the stunned Prince behind.

Act III Scene 1: Madame de la Haltière’s Mansion Cendrillon returns home, but she is troubled—in her hasty departure, she lost the crystal slipper. Shortly thereafter, Pandolfe, Madame Haltière, Noémie, and Dorothée enter. They are engaged in a heated discussion over the mysterious guest that captivated Charming’s attention. Cendrillon joins in, sensing her father’s discomfort. Discussion soon turns to argument, and Madame Haltière says that the Prince ultimately rejected the mysterious guest after the ball. This last comment leaves Cendrillon disturbed and forces Pandolfe to angrily order his wife and stepdaughters to their rooms. Pandolfe consoles Cendrillon, promising they will return to his country home to find peace again. However, Cendrillon believes her stepmother’s lies and resolves to run away to die and end her father’s suffering. She rushes off as lightning fills the sky. Scene 2: The Fairy’s Domain At a great oak tree in an enchanted forest, sprites inform the Fairy of Cendrillon and the Prince’s unfortunate predicaments. The Fairy then draws Cendrillon and the Prince together at the oak tree, concealing their identities from one another with a wall of clover. The Prince tells of his experience at the ball, in which a mysterious woman captured his heart, only to leave suddenly at midnight. As their conversation unfolds, they both recognize each other’s identities. The Fairy removes the clover barrier (at their insistence), and they share a passionate embrace. As the sprites gather around, a magic sleep overtakes them.

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Act IV Scene 1: The Terrace of Cinderella’s Home Some time has passed. Pandolfe keeps vigil over his daughter, who was found months earlier by a stream, delirious. He convinces her that the story she had told him—about the Fairy, the Prince, the crystal slipper—was simply a dream. As they celebrate spring and the beauty of nature, Madame Haltière arrives. The King has summoned ladies from across the lands (including Madame Haltière and her daughters) to claim the crystal slipper. If the slipper’s owner is not found, the Prince will die of despair. Cendrillon, recognizing her supposed dream was actually real, begs for the Fairy’s help so she can go to the palace. Scene 2: The King’s Palace Various princesses and ladies of rank enter the court. Prince Charming is on the verge of fainting from his despair when suddenly Cendrillon appears. The crowd looks on in amazement, and the Prince, recognizing Cendrillon, embraces her as they express their love for one another. Pandolfe arrives with Madame Haltière and her daughters. Since Cendrillon is not wearing the crystal slipper, her identity is revealed to her family. The King, the court, Pandolfe, and even Madame Haltière praise the reunited couple. As Pandolfe announces that everything has ended happily, the ensemble bids the audience farewell, hoping that we have enjoyed the fairy tale.

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Program Notes by Virginia Whealton

The story of Cinderella is so well known that it hardly seems to need introduction: a beautiful, kind, hardworking girl, mistreated by her stepmother and stepsisters, goes to a ball and wins the heart of a prince with the help of her fairy godmother and a glass slipper. Yet Jules Massenet’s Cendrillon (1899) was not merely meant to tell the tale of a wronged but ultimately triumphant heroine. Instead, in the manner of the French tradition of opéra-féerie (fairy opera), all components of Massenet’s Cendrillon—music, dance, and scenic display—come together to offer a musical and visual spectacle of an enchanted, long-ago world. As if to make sure that nobody could mistake the operatic genre of Cendrillon, the work closes with the chorus, “The play is over. We have done our best to take you away to Fairyland!” It should come as no surprise, then, that Massenet called Cendrillon not an opera but a conte de fées—a fairy tale. Massenet’s librettist, Henri Cain, created a plot that offered many opportunities to explore the fantastic delights of fairyland. Cain based his libretto of Cendrillon on the version of Cinderella written by Charles Perrault, a seventeenth-century author who crafted elegant versions of many old folktales. Perrault’s Cendrillon was a compact work, and a poem at the end of the tale summarized its morals. The first: graciousness supersedes beauty and is a true gift of the fairies. The second: even those endowed with the best talents may not succeed without the help of a fairy godmother (quite a moral, indeed!). Although Cain retained the skeleton of Perrault’s plot, which differs from some modern versions of the tale in that Cendrillon’s father is not dead but merely unable to confront his overbearing wife, he abandoned the didactic flavor of the story in favor of creating luxurious tableaux. For example, spirits and elves, and not just the Fairy Godmother, come to Cendrillon’s aid as she prepares for the ball. (In this opera, Cendrillon’s true and rightful name is Lucette; however, her stepfamily mockingly calls her “Cendrillon” after the cinders of the hearth by which she often sits.) In Act III, Scene 4, Cain adds a dream-like sequence in which both Cendrillon and Prince Charming wander into the domain of the fairies after having been separated at the ball. Massenet’s music perfectly evokes this ethereal realm, as the Fairy Godmother sings haunting vocalises atop a faint, sometimes whispering, sometimes wordless chorus of the spirits. Although Cain creates fantastical journeys into fairyland, he also portrays the foibles and faults of the human world. In the first act, he satirizes Cendrillon’s family, and Massenet’s music complements Cain’s libretto. In Act I, Scene 2, Pandolphe, Cendrillon’s henpecked father, expresses his frustration with his wife and his desire to be a master rather than a subject. Massenet gives Pandolphe nervous buffa patter, suggesting that his situation is at least partly comic. When Pandolphe considers the miseries of his daughter, however, he sings in a more lyrical and intimate style, though he lacks the melodic sensitivity, harmonic color, and sensitive scoring that characterize Massenet’s dramatic writing at its finest. Pandolphe’s weak music mirrors his weak character. In the following scene, Cendrillon’s stepmother enters to a grand,

regal fanfare, but she too quickly becomes a comic figure as she and her daughters chatter about the upcoming ball and sing along with an affected, slightly off kilter, and rather waltz-like minuet. Only in Act I, Scene 5, with Cendrillon’s first aria, does a more serious and non-caricatured tone set in. Sitting by the fire, Cendrillon repeatedly sings a wistful, sinuous melody, accompanied by a delicate filigree and high drone-like shimmer. Yet in between repetitions of her melancholy tune, she bursts into a joyous, waltz-like strain. From her first appearance, Cendrillon is a character of emotional breadth. Massenet’s writing for her, from this hearth song to her final duet with Prince Charming, “Vous êtes mon Prince charmant” (Act IV, Scene 3), showcases the expressive power that is the hallmark of his operatic writing. Act II, set at the ball, originally included a series of dances, or entrées. These added to the visual spectacle of Cendrillon, and they were a nod to the long tradition of character dances in French opera, in which different people or groups of people present themselves in succession. Not all of the entrées will be performed this evening, but you will hear the king’s Rigadoun. This dance, antiquated even in Massenet’s own time, evokes Cendrillon’s “long ago” world. The premiere of Cendrillon on May 24, 1899, at the Opéra-Comique in Paris was nothing short of triumphant. The opera enjoyed great success in France and abroad until World War I. But as the twentieth century progressed, performances of Cendrillon dwindled. Ironically, the very qualities that made Cendrillon so appealing to its original audiences have since caused it to be compared negatively to other Massenet operas, such as Manon (1884) and Thaïs (1894), which ostensibly carry heavier dramatic weight. The negative critical response aside, Cendrillon is a poignant reflection of the world into which it was born, France’s belle époque, or beautiful age, at the turn of the last century. Like the art nouveau glass of Gallé, the jewelry René Lalique, or the furniture of Gaillard, Cendrillon reflects a society that resisted the coldness of industrialism by seeking to infuse everyday life with beauty, mystery, and fantasy.

Director’s Notes “Cendrillon,” or “Nothing is Impossible” by Albert-André Lheureux

“Coeur sans amour, printemps sans roses! ... Heart void of love, and spring bare of flowers!” If you’ve found love, do not avoid it, live completely in it—you should not miss true love! Life without a deep love is not a life. Each of us should find one’s charming Prince or Princess. We need hope. We also need to dream another world where violence and hate would be banished and where pure love would have its full place. The fairy says in Massenet’s Cendrillon, “Ah, now love! For an hour, let it seem that you love in a dream!” Jules Massenet’s lyrical work Cendrillon is also the hidden story of a spoiled marriage, which led to separation. The child from this first marriage (Lucette/ Cendrille/Cendrillon) was put aside by her stepmother, herself already being the mother of two children. But Cendrillon deserves joy, light, and a successful life also. Fortunately, nothing is impossible, and the dream will come true in the rest of the story. Who out of seven billion people in the world does not know Perrault’s tale or the masterpiece by Walt Disney? Yes, for all of us, it is first of all a fairy tale. But, in the final analysis, Cendrillon’s story also touches—as in a game—upon the complex relationships of recomposed families, especially in Jules Massenet’s and librettist Henri Cains’ work. The father does not have the power (which is usually du côté de la barbe, or “on the side of the beard”) in this new family. Unfortunately, he let little Lucette— referred to as Cendrille or Cendrillon—into the clutches of his new wife, Madame de la Haltière, which is a disaster. Although living as a le grillon du Foyer, or domestic, she still seeks fulfillment. This is a sparkling work full of vibrant music, intelligence, and sensitivity, in which drama alternates with humor. Never before had Massenet found such funny verve. This work, looking like lace, and this music, finely nuanced, do not disprove the critics of the end of the nineteenth-century, who often said that this opera was “feminine” thanks to its subtleties, sensitivity, and mystery. The work irradiates from inside; a soft light, often nostalgic, emanates from these sublime pages. The adaptation of Perrault’s tale into a wonderful theatrical poem by Henri Cain brings two different worlds together—one made of wonder and enchantment, the other made out of reality with its psychological dimension. The audience may even question dream and reality, as Cendrillon and her father do. Massenet and Cain bring back for us childhood and our light dreams but also our first nightmares in the middle of agitated nights. What immense talents and what great poetry are put together!

The characters of the ultimately burlesque mother, two daughters, and court dignitaries—puppets full of desire for power, ambition, or gold—are a sharp contradiction with the characters of Cendrillon and her father, who are humanity itself. As for the fairy and her acolytes—the spirits—through their magic enchantments, they succeed to humanely eliminate sadness and confusion, which very often invade each of our lives. They even make Prince Charming, a child spoiled by his father and his entourage, friendly. He is deeply moving in his amorous quest. How many brainwaves are needed (the gorgeous choirs that sometimes are heard in the distance, and so many other rare pearls) in order to allow the two lovers to find each other and say, “De nous, l’Amour fera des Dieux.” (“And love shall make us both divine.”), as well as “Je t’aime et je t’aimerai toujours.” (“I love you, and I’ll always love you.”). Massenet’s Cendrillon has a happy ending—like in Perrault and Disney—but also has a dramatic aspect that was not really in the original tale, which is developed here thanks to a concrete approach towards reality and its hazards. Ultimately, what should a stage director do in front of such a masterpiece, oscillating between dream and reality, to be faithful to the work and to give way to its streams in order to best serve its genius and the particular lights (sometimes new) on a universal myth? Yes, dream is close to reality—we should believe it. On Candide’s lips, Voltaire had spoken of the “Meilleur des mondes possibles” (“Best of possible worlds”). Leonard Bernstein also has transposed it in music, in one of the most beautiful musicals ever written. Through these two works and their messages, let’s try to find some clues to life. A human life on this earth often looks like a labyrinth in which it is difficult to find a positive progression. Let’s try, in particular through the example of Cendrillon, to become more human and to more often turn towards those in pain. Because egoism contributes to nothing but a person’s drying out. Let’s live happiness we build at every meeting in our lives, and let’s spread it around us. Let’s try, during our short passage on earth, to live in sharing and in love with one another. Enjoy the evening with Massenet, his enchanting music, and Perrault. And, first of all, with the wonderful young artists I have had the pleasure to direct—they who have the joy of waking up to the true wealth of our humanity: art and beauty.

Artistic Staff Conductor From New York’s Carnegie Hall to Sydney’s Opera House—via Amsterdam’s Concertgebouw, Salle Pleyel in Paris, Suntory Hall in Tokyo, and Berlin’s Philharmonic Hall—Ronald Zollman’s name has become a familiar one to many international concertgoers. Now the principal guest conductor of the Czech Radio Symphony Orchestra in Prague, he was born in Antwerp (Belgium), where he began his musical training at the age of four. He later became the pupil of Igor Markevitch and Nadia Boulanger in Paris. He has appeared as a guest conductor with important orchestras on all continents, such as BBC Symphony Orchestra, Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, Residentie Orchestra, Orchester des Hessischen Rundfunks, Scottish Chamber Orchestra, San Diego Symphony, Sydney Symphony Orchestra, Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, Bamberger Symphoniker, Swedish Radio Orchestra,  and Tokyo Philharmonic.  In the field of opera, Zollman has been the guest of La Monnaie in Brussels (Cosi fan Tutte, La Bohème, Where the Wild Things Are,  Rake’s Progress), the English National Opera (La  Traviata), the  Netherlands Opera (Albert Herring), the Scottish Opera (Turn of the Screw), the Banff Festival (Don Giovanni), and the BBC (Der Prinz von Homburg). This production of Cendrillon is his fourth appearance in the pit at IU Opera Theater. From 1989 till 1993, Zollman was musical director of the National Orchestra of Belgium, a position he then held since 1993 with the Philharmonic Orchestra of UNAM in Mexico City. In September 2002, he took the music directorship of the Northern Israel Symphony (Haifa), and, in September 2009, he became director of orchestral studies at the Carnegie Mellon School of Music in Pittsburgh, as well as music director of their Philharmonic Orchestra, with which he recently appeared at New York’s Carnegie Hall and Washington’s Kennedy Centre. Also active in the world of film music, Zollman recorded the soundtrack for Le Maître de Musique (The Master of Music), the award-winning motion picture featuring José Van Dam, which was a nominee for Best Foreign Picture at the Academy Awards in Hollywood. The musical quality of this soundtrack was recognized with a Gold Record award. Zollman’s discography includes recordings with the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, the National Orchestra of Belgium, the Jeunesses Musicales World Orchestra (Berlin), the Zürcher Kammerorchester, the Symphony Orchestra of Basel, and many others.

Stage Director Albert-André Lheureux is a stage director and a theater manager. He founded the Theâtre de l’Esprit Frappeur at Brussels when he was 18. Soon he was appointed artistic and technical director of Forest National, the Brussels Sports and Culture Centre. In Belgium, he also founded and managed the Theâtre du Jardin Botanique and the Theâtre du Résidence Palace. In 1963, he started a theater movement in Brussels called Jeune Theâtre (Young Theater); he himself kept acting for 10 years. Lheureux has staged more than 70 dramatic productions in theaters of numerous countries. Since 1983, he also acts as an opera director. He has staged approximately 60 operas, among them Ravel’s L’enfant es les Sortilèges, Penderecki’s The Devils of Loudun, Saint-Saëns’ Samson and Delilah, Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte, Don Giovanni, Così fan tutte, and The Abduction from the Seraglio, Gounod’s Faust, Mireille, and Romeo and Juliet, Verdi’s Othello, Leigh’s Man of La Mancha, Rossini’s Cenerentola and Il barbiere di Siviglia, Gagneux’s Orfeus, Mussorgsky’s Khovantchina, Reyer’s Sigurd, Prodromides Les Traverses du Temps, Penderecki’s Czarna Maska, Puccini’s La Bohème and Manon Lescaut, Beethoven’s Fidelio, Bizet’s Carmen, Strauss’s Ariadne auf Naxos, and Meyerbeer’s Les Hugenots. He has done most of his opera staging in French cities, including at Opéra de Massy (Paris), Opéra de Rennes, Opéra d’Angers, Opéra de Toulon, Opéra de Metz, and others. He has produced several grand open-air performances that have been visited by over 100,000 people during summers in Belgium, Spain, Cyprus, and Sweden. From 2000 to 2002, he was an artistic advisor to the Cyprus open air festival. Lheureux has taught interpretation at the National Theater School of Canada and the Diffusion Arts Institute of Belgium, where he has also been coordinator of the theater section. He has received many awards, among them the International Grand Prix at the Brazilian Short Film Festival for his film Possession du Condamné, inspired by Jean Genet’s poetry, and the Grand Prix of the Belgian Society of Authors. In France, he was awarded Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (The Order of Arts and Letters). In 2012, one hundred years after Massenet’s death, Lheureux directs, among other theatrical activities, two of Massenet’s operas: Werther at the Vanemuine Opera in Estonia and this production of Cendrillon.

Set & Costume Designer Born in Bloomington, Ind., and raised not two blocks from campus, C. David Higgins started his theatrical studies at IU intent on becoming an actor/dancer before he discovered his love for scenic design. He studied with the famous C. Mario Cristini and became proficient in the Romantic-Realist style of scenic design and painting. After earning his master’s degree, he joined the staff of Indiana University Opera Theater and worked there as master scenic artist from the time the Musical Arts Center opened in 1971 until his retirement in December 2011. He was appointed to the faculty in 1976 and served as chair of the Opera Studies Department and principal designer for Opera Theater. His design credits throughout the United States include the San Antonio Festival, Memphis Opera, Norfolk Opera, Louisville Opera, Detroit Symphony, Canton Ballet, and Sarasota Ballet, as well as many other venues. His Indiana University productions have been seen throughout North America as rentals by major regional opera companies. His many international credits include the Icelandic National Theater; Ballet San Juan de Puerto Rico; Korean National Opera; Seoul City Opera; Korean National Ballet; Dorset Opera (England); Teatro la Paz de Belém, Brazil; and the Teatro National de São Paulo, Brazil. He has designed the scenery for the world première of Our Town (Ned Rorem), the American premières of Jeppe (Sandström) and The Devils of Loudun (Penderecki), and the collegiate premières of Nixon in China (Adams) and The Ghosts of Versailles (Corigliano), as well as many other operas and ballets. Known for his Italianate painting style, Opera News magazine has referred to Higgins as one of the finest American scenic artists today.

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Lighting Designer Lighting designer Julie Duro returns to IU Opera Theater, where she designed the lighting for Così fan tutte, Il Barbiere di Siviglia, Manon, and Romeo et Juliette in past seasons. She has worked with many opera, dance, and theater companies throughout the United States. Her work in opera includes designs for the Santa Fe Opera, Opera International in Washington, D.C., Opera Illinois, Dayton Opera, Triangle Opera Theater, Florida State Opera, Houston’s Ebony Opera Guild, the Connecticut Opera, the Green Mountain Opera Festival, and Opera North. She has worked extensively at the Westport Country Playhouse in Westport, Conn., where she designed the lighting for A Word or Two Before You Go, a one-man show written by and starring Christopher Plummer, and The Member of the Wedding, directed by Joanne Woodward. Her work in dance encompasses designs for North Caroline Dance Theatre, the Australian Ballet, Southern Ballet Theatre, Dances Patrelle, the Lar Lubovitch Dance Company, and Mark Stuart Dance Theatre. She was the resident lighting designer for the critically acclaimed Ohio Ballet from 1996 to 1999, and she works frequently with Tulsa Ballet, where she designed the lighting for Don Quixote, Cinderella, and The Nutcracker in 2009, and with Pittsburgh, where her work can be seen each year in The Nutcracker. In addition, she has designed lighting for Luna Stage, Artpark, Pennsylvania Centre Stage, the Asolo Conservatory in Florida and The Juilliard School, and she is the resident lighting designer for the yearly Salute to the Presidential Scholars in Washington, D.C., at the Kennedy Center.

Chorus Master William Jon Gray is chair of the Choral Department at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music, where he conducts the Pro Arte Singers—the university’s internationally recognized early music chamber choir—and teaches graduate-level conducting, choral literature, and score reading. He was named chorus director of Chicago’s Music of the Baroque’s in 2010, collaborating with conductors Jane Glover and Nicholas Kraemer. Gray has been associate conductor of the Carmel Bach Festival in California, leading major choral and orchestral works and preparing performances with internationally renowned conductor Bruno Weil. He has also been assistant conductor of the Handel and Haydn Society of Boston. Gray has made guest appearances with orchestras and at festivals around the United States, including the Handel and Haydn Society, Princeton Festival, National Chamber Orchestra, Billings Symphony, and the Lafayette Symphony. He has appeared as guest director of the professional chorus of Chicago’s Grant Park Music Festival, collaborating with Carlos Kalmar in performances of Dvorak’s Requiem and The Spectre’s Bride, as well as Haydn’s The Seasons. He has prepared choruses for the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra and the National Chamber Orchestra, and he currently serves as faculty director of opera choruses for IU Opera Theater, collaborating with such notable directors as Tito Capobianco (La Traviata), Colin Graham (Peter Grimes), Vincent Liotta (A View from the Bridge), and Tomer Zvulun (Faust). Gray served as artistic director of the Masterworks Chorus and Orchestra of Washington, D.C., from 1986 to 1993 and was artistic director of the Bach Chorale Singers from 1994 to 2010, conducting more than 100 performances of major choral works. With the Bach Chorale Singers, he received national critical acclaim for the commercially released recording In Praise of the Organ: Latin Choral and Organ Music of Zoltán Kodály. In November 2012, Jubilate, a new recording of early and modern Christmas music will be released featuring the professional chorus and orchestra of Chicago’s Music of the Baroque. Gray studied at Indiana University, New England Conservatory, Boston University, and The Juilliard School. He performed frequently with Robert Shaw as a member of the Robert Shaw Festival Singers, both in recordings and in concerts in France and at Carnegie Hall.

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Diction Coach Gary Arvin has served as vocal coach and assistant conductor for the Houston Grand Opera, the Santa Fe Opera, the Cincinnati Opera, and the American Institute of Musical Studies in Graz, Austria. He formerly was the official competition pianist for the International Belvedere Competition in Vienna, the world’s largest operatic singing competition. Equally active in Art Song, Arvin has appeared in recital with singers throughout the United States, Austria, Germany, Czechoslovakia, Finland, and Korea, and distinguished himself as a pianist-collaborator both here and abroad for Gérard Souzay in French mélodies, Hans Hotter in German Lieder, and Sir Peter Pears in the vocal works of Benjamin Britten. Arvin has recorded for ORF (Austria), the National Radio of Finland, the National Radio of the Czech Republic, and Sung-Eun Records (Korea).  His recital appearances have included the major concert stages of Vienna, Salzburg, Prague, Helsinki, Seoul, New York, Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Houston, and Santa Barbara. As a Fulbright Scholar, Arvin studied at the Hochschule für Musik und darstellende Kunst in Vienna after earning degrees in voice and languages from Indiana University and vocal coaching from the University of Illinois. He is currently associate professor of vocal coaching, repertoire, and diction at the Jacobs School of Music. He was diction coach for recent IU Opera Theater productions of Faust, Roméo et Juliette, and The Light in the Piazza.

Cast Lucette (Cendrillon) Alyssa Martin, mezzo-soprano, is currently a second-year master’s student at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music, where she also received her bachelor’s degree in May 2011. She has been seen on the IU Opera stage as Dorabella in the 2011 production of Così fan tutte and as Prince Orlovsky in the 2010 production of Die Fledermaus. She has also sung the role of Zweite Dame in W. A Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte at the Bay View Music Festival in Petoskey, Mich. She was most recently seen as a festival artist at Utah Festival Opera, where she covered Siebel in Faust. She is the recipient of several awards, including second prize at the Indianapolis Matinee Musicale, second prize at the Utah Festival Opera Competition, and first prize and Audience Favorite at the Dayton Opera Guild Competition. She completed her undergraduate studies under the tutelage of Patricia Stiles and is currently a student of Carol Vaness. Praised by The New York Times as “a moving performer,” mezzo-soprano Jacquelyn Matava is currently a second-year doctoral student at the Jacobs School of Music, studying with Mary Ann Hart. A native of Farmington, Conn., Matava received her Bachelor of Arts cum laude from Vassar College, with majors in both music and economics. She spent the 2011 and 2012 summers as a vocal fellow at the Tanglewood Music Center, where she collaborated with Dawn Upshaw and Stephanie Blythe. With IU Opera Theater, she has sung the roles of Nancy in Britten’s Albert Herring, Cecilia March in Adamo’s Little Women, and Marthe in Gounod’s Faust. Matava also performed as a soloist in Stravinsky’s Les Noces with IU Ballet Theater and the Contemporary Vocal Ensemble. Other performances at IU include the Neighbor in Stravinsky’s Mavra, the Gypsy Woman in Rachmaninoff’s Aleko, and scene performances as Hermia in Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and the title roles in Thomas’s Mignon and Rossini’s La Cenerentola. In June 2012, she sang the role of Susannah Dickinson in the workshop/premiere performance of Timothy Noble’s Alamo. An avid performer of choral repertoire, Matava has been heard as a soloist in performances of Duruflé’s Requiem, Handel’s Messiah¸ Bach’s Mass in B Minor, and Mozart’s Requiem.

Pandolfe A native of Henderson, Texas, baritone Preston Orr is a master’s student at the Jacobs School of Music. With IU Opera Theater, he has sung the roles of Marco in Gianni Schicchi, The Notary in Der Rosenkavalier, and Louis in A View from the Bridge, as well as appearing in the choruses of Così fan tutte, La Bohème, and Candide. He has also been seen as Jacob Walker in the workshop reading of Timothy Noble’s new musical, Alamo, as Mang Ong in the workshop production of P. Q. Phan’s new opera, The Tale of Lady Thi Kinh, and as the Old Gypsy in Aleko in the opera workshop directed by Carol Vaness. Last summer, he debuted the role of Lewis in Brenda Sparks’s That Way Goes the Game, a new work of art song theatre, at the Vancouver International Song Institute. He received his Bachelor of Music degree magna cum laude from Vanderbilt University, where he studied with Gayle Shay. With Vanderbilt Opera Theatre, he sang the roles of Papageno in The Magic Flute, Frank Maurrant in Street Scene, and Figaro in The Marriage of Figaro. He is a student of Timothy Noble.

Reuben Walker is making his debut on the IU Opera stage and is pursuing a Master of Music in Voice Performance degree in his first year at the Jacobs School of Music. He is studying with Patricia Havranek. Walker grew up in Washington state and completed his undergraduate degree at Western Washington University, where he was a Presser Scholar. There, he performed the title role in the university’s production of Don Giovanni and performed Gustav Mahler’s Kindertotenlieder as a concerto competition finalist. In his time at Jacobs, he has performed as soloist for Vaughan Williams’ Five Mystical Songs and as a member of the Don Giovanni opera chorus.

Madame de la Haltière Eileen Jennings is a mezzo-soprano from Cleveland, Miss., studying with Patricia Havranek as she works toward the Doctor of Music in Voice Performance. Jennings has performed with IU Opera Theater in Albert Herring as Florence Pike, in She Loves Me as Ilona Ritter, and in The Love for Three Oranges as Princess Clarissa. She covered the role of Madame de la Haltiere in IU’s previous production of Cendrillon. She performed the role of Mother Goose in Stravinsky’s The Rake’s Progress at the Princeton Festival in Princeton, N.J., in 2011. Jennings is committed to her community, spending her summers teaching music to 4-12-year-old children in the Mississippi Delta at the Janice Wyatt Summer Arts Institute, a program she attended from its inception for eight years. A native of Hammond, La., mezzo-soprano Jane Rownd is pursuing a doctoral degree under the tutelage of Scharmal Schrock. Rownd has been seen in IU Opera Theater’s Albert Herring (Mrs. Herring), Little Women (Meg March), and Lucia di Lammermoor (Alisa), as well as in Stravinsky’s Mavra (The Mother) with IU Studio Opera. Her previous stage credits include The Marriage of Figaro (Cherubino), Die Fledermaus (Prince Orlovsky), and A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (Domina). On the concert stage, she has been a featured soloist in Bernard Rands’ “now, again” with the IU New Music Ensemble and Durufle’s Requiem, Handel’s Messiah, Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater, and Mozart’s Coronation Mass and Vesperae de Dominica. Rownd holds a master’s degree from the Jacobs School and received her bachelor’s degree with honors from Southeastern Louisiana University, where she studied with Scharmal Schrock and David Bernard.

Noémie Soprano Abbey Curzon from Calgary, Canada, has a Bachelor of Music degree from Rice University in Houston. In the summer of 2009, she covered Olympia in Les Contes d’Hoffmann at the Brevard Summer Institute. In 2010, she appeared as Frederika in the Shepherd School of Music’s production of A Little Night Music and was Amore in its fall production of L’Incoronazione di Poppea. This past summer, she performed the role of Josephine in H.M.S. Pinafore at Brevard, N.C., with the Janiec Opera Company. Curzon is a first-year master’s student at Jacobs, studying with Patricia Wise. Anastasia Talley is making her IU debut as Noémie. She is a first-year master’s student and is pursuing her degree in voice performance. She received her bachelor’s degree in music education from the University of Southern Mississippi (USM). While at USM, she performed the role of Musetta (La Bohème) and First Lady (Die Zauberflöte). She has also performed roles for community outreach, which include the title role of Seymour Barab’s Little Red Riding Hood and the role of the Rose in Rachel Portman’s The Little Prince. In addition to operatic performances, she also performed as a soprano soloist in Haydn’s Missa brevis Sancti Joannis de deo (also known as the Little Organ Mass) and Bach’s Mass in B Minor. Talley is a student of Mary Ann Hart.

Dorothée Amber McKoy, mezzo-soprano, is in the third year of her master’s degree at the Jacobs School of Music as a student of Patricia Havranek. She received her Bachelor of Music-Performance from the University of Wisconsin (UW)-Whitewater while studying with Brian Leeper. Recent opera credits include the Unicorn in the world-premiere opera Mooch the Magnificent by Indiana composer Lauren Bernofsky (with Roundabout Opera for Kids), Jack/Rapunzel’s Prince in Into the Woods (Roundabout Opera for Kids), La Conversa in Suor Angelica (Indiana University Opera), Prince Orlovsky in a concert version of Die Fledermaus (UW-Whitewater), Cherubino in Le Nozze di Figaro (UW-Whitewater), and Grandma in Little Red Riding Hood (UW-Whitewater in 2010, Roundabout Opera for Kids in 2011). In October 2010, McKoy was an Encouragement Award winner in the Wisconsin District Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions. Mezzo-soprano Madolynn Pessin received her Bachelor of Vocal Performance at Webster University and is now pursuing a Master of Music at Indiana University under the instruction of Mary Ann Hart. At Webster, Pessin made her debut in short operatic scenes as Rose Maybud from Gilbert and Sullivan’s Ruddigore, Meg Page from Verdi’s Falstaff, and then concluded her performances with the title role from Bizet’s Carmen. This is her debut with IU Opera Theater.

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La Fée (Fairy Godmother) Soprano Sandra Periord is a native of Saline, Mich., in her third year of undergraduate studies in voice performance at the Jacobs School of Music. This is her debut on the MAC stage. Last year, she performed in IU Opera Theater’s La Bohème and Candide, as well as Roundabout Opera for Kid’s production of Into the Woods. In February, Periord received the Joann Athanas Memorial Award from the National Society of Arts and Letters Competition. Prior to coming to IU, she won first place in the National Association of Teachers of Singing competitions and was a finalist in the Michigan Madrigal Competition. This summer, she attended the premiere season of Opera NEO in San Diego, Calif. She is a student of Alice Hopper. Coloratura soprano Angela Yoon is a native of South Korea. She is currently pursuing her Master of Music degree studying under Robert Harrison at Indiana University, where she is also an assistant instructor in the Voice Department. Yoon earned her bachelor’s degree from Baylor University, where she studied with Robert Best. Prior to Baylor, she studied at McLennan College with Lise Uhl. Previous roles in operas and scenes have included Frasquita (Carmen), Madame Goldentrill (Impresario), Königin der Nacht (Die Zauberflöte), Sandman (Hansel and Gretel), Plaintiff (Trial by Jury), and Mabel (The Pirates of Penzance).

Le Prince Charmant (Prince Charming) Mezzo-soprano Sarah Ballman, from Eagle Grove, Iowa, is in the final semester of her master’s degree at Indiana University, where she studies with Patricia Havranek. Ballman received her Bachelor of Arts degree in voice with honors at South Dakota State University (SDSU) in Brookings, S.D., in 2009, where she studied with Emily Wood Toronto. Throughout her years at SDSU, Ballman performed in many opera scenes, including from Rossini’s La Cenerentola (Angelina), Bizet’s Carmen (Carmen), and Mozart’s The Magic Flute (Pamina). She also performed the role of Olga in the world premiere of the chamber opera The Trickster and the Troll, written by Kristen Kuster, with the Heartland Opera Troupe in 2008. At IU, Ballman has performed with the Contemporary Vocal Ensemble and was chosen as the mezzosoprano soloist for Aaron Copland’s In the Beginning, performed in Chicago at the KAM Isaiah Israel Synagogue in 2010 with the choir. Ballman has also performed with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra as the alto soloist for George Frideric Handel’s Messiah and with the Bloomington Chamber Singers as the alto soloist for Ludwig van Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis. Her roles with IU Opera Theater include Una Conversa in Puccini’s Suor Angelica and Octavian in Richard Strauss’ Der Rosenkavalier. Next semester, she will be performing the role of Nefertiti in IU Opera Theater’s new production of Philip Glass’s Akhnaten. Tenor Michael Brandenburg, a native of Austin, Ind., studied voice with Joseph Levitt while pursuing an M.S. in Aquatic Biology at Ball State University. He has studied the roles of Don Jose in “Carmen” and Alfred in “Die Fledermaus.” He was a 2010 semi-finalist in the Bel Canto Foundation Competition in Chicago and an Indiana District winner in the 2010 and 2012 Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions. He is currently pursuing a Performer Diploma at the Jacobs School of Music and is a fellow of the school. Brandenburg is a student of Timothy Noble.

La Surintendant des Plaisirs (Master of Ceremonies) Bruno Sandes was born in Juazeiro, Brazil. He had his first experience with professional singing when he was accepted into one of the most famous choirs from Northeast Brazil, with which he stayed for five years as soloist. In Brazil, he worked with music with children at social risk and sang in concerts to raise funds for charities. In 2006, Sandes met his mentor and first voice coach, Fátima de Brito, who encouraged and guided him towards a soloist career. The baritone sang on tour through Austria, Italy, and Germany. As a soloist, he won second prize representing South America in Germany in the Heart of Europe International Choir Competition. He has sung in several concerts in Brazil and Europe, and was chosen as a guest soloist for the traditional Easter and Christmas Concerts at the Metropolitan Cathedral in Alagoas, Brazil. Sandes won first place in the XI Maracanto International Voice Competition, was selected as a semifinalist in the IX Maria Callas International Voice Competition, and was one of six singers in the 42nd International Winter Festival of Campos do Jordão (the largest music festival in Latin America). Currently, Sandes is pursuing a Bachelor of Music in Voice Performance at the Jacobs School of Music, studying with Robert Harrison.

Le Doyen de la Faculté (The Dean of Faculty) Andrew LeVan is in his third year of study for a Master of Music in Voice Performance and is a student in the studio of Brian Horne. He was recently seen as Mayor Upfold in IU Opera’s production of Benjamin Britten’s Albert Herring. He has performed with the Ohio Light Opera and Indiana Festival Theater in addition to his work with IU Opera. He received his bachelor’s degree in voice performance from the College of Wooster, where he studied with Carrie Culver and David Templeton.

Le Roi (The King) From Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, N.Y., Ryan Kieran is a sophomore earning his Bachelor of Music in Voice Performance. He attended Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts, participating in shows such as Gilbert and Sullivan’s Naughty Marietta and leading as the Poet in Robert Wright’s and George Forrest’s Kismet. This is Kieran’s first principal role on the MAC stage. He sang in the chorus for IU Opera’s production of Leonard Bernstein’s Candide last spring, He is looking forward to his involvement in upcoming performances such as Falstaff and studies with Timothy Noble.

Le Premier Ministre (Prime Minister) Baritone Zachary Coates received his bachelor’s degree in voice performance from Westminster Choir College of Rider University and is currently pursuing a Master of Music degree at Indiana University, studying voice with Andreas Poulimenos. At the Jacobs School, he has been seen in the role of Wagner (Faust), Guglielmo (Così fan tutte), Sid (Albert Herring), and the lead in Don Giovanni. He has appeared with Westminster Opera Theater singing Golaud (Pelleas et Melisande), the Father (Hansel and Gretel), the Marquis de la Force (Les Dialogues des Carmelites), and Pinellino (Gianni Schicchi), and with the Princeton Amateur Society singing King Melchior (Amahl and the Night Visitors). Coates has also appeared frequently as a concert soloist, including performances of the Faure Requiem with the IU Symphonic Choir, the Mozart Requiem with the Westminster Symphonic Choir, and Haydn’s Mass in Time of War with the American Classical Orchestra under conductor Thomas Crawford.

Le Héraut (Herald) At IU, Daniel Lentz most recently sang bass and baritone roles in the opera project Lully: Glory without Love? Earlier in 2012, he sang the bass solos in Buxtehude’s Membra Jesu nostri cantata with Concentus. In 2011, he sang the bass solos in J. S. Bach’s Nun komm, der Heiden Heiland with the Bloomington Bach Cantata Project. Also in 2011, he sang chorus roles in Bernard Rand’s world premiere of Vincent at IU Opera. In 2010, he made his debut with the Piccolo Spoleto Festival at Charleston, S.C., in the title role of Gianni Schicchi. He taught voice on the adjunct faculty at The College of Charleston. He was featured for two seasons at the Bay View Music Festival in Michigan, as Papageno in Die Zauberflöte in 2010 and as Il conte di Almaviva in Le Nozze di Figaro in 2009. A native of Ohio, Lentz received his Bachelor of Music from The College of Wooster and his Master of Music from IU. At IU, roles have included Haly in L’Italiana in Algeri, Antonio in Le Nozze di Figaro, Curio in Giulio Cesare, Betto in Gianni Schicchi, and Mefistofeles in Schumann’s Scenes from Goethe’s Faust. Lentz was recently awarded the Artistic Excellence Award from the Jacobs School of Music and has begun course work towards the Doctor of Music in Voice Performance. He studies with Patricia Stiles. Upcoming productions at IU include the roles of Elviro in Handel’s Xerxes.

Six Esprits (Six Spirits) Kathryn Summersett, soprano, hails from the small town of L’Anse, Mich., and is currently in her second year of doctoral studies for performance in early music at the Jacobs School. She studies under tenor Paul Elliot and received her Master of Music in 2011 at the University of North Texas (UNT). With the UNT opera, she performed the role of Despina in Così fan tutte. She soloed at Boston Early Music Festival 2009 with the UNT collegium, for which she received a positive review in Early Music America magazine. In summer 2010, she performed at the University of Cordoba, Argentina, with soprano Patricia Gonzalez, and participated in American Bach Soloists’ first summer academy. In June 2011, she soloed again at Boston Early Music Festival with the UNT collegium, as well as in Early Music America’s Young Performers Festival. Also in 2011, she received the Adams/ Nordstrom Early Music Award, given to one graduating student per year. In June 2012, Summersett was the first vocalist to receive a scholarship to attend the Lute Society of America conference. Also that summer, she performed in the Accademia D’Amore in Seattle, Wash. This is her debut with IU Opera Theater. Emily Smith is a senior voice performance major from Newport News, Va. She has appeared in the choruses for IU’s productions of Die Zauberflöte, Faust, and A View from the Bridge. In addition, she was featured as an emerging artist in the scene workshop at Oberlin in Italy as Susanna from Le Nozze di Figaro. She sang in the chorus for L’Elisir d’Amore in Cortona, Italy, with the same group. This is Smith’s first role with IU Opera Theater. She is a student of Timothy Noble.

Six Esprits (Six Spirits) (cont.) Elizabeth Faranda is from Spring City, Pa., and is in her first year of her Master of Music in Voice Performance. This is her second production at IU; she was a member of the chorus in IU Opera’s latest production of The Merry Widow. She received her Bachelor of Music from Ithaca College, where she performed Proserpina in Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo and A Rosette in Rachel Portman’s The Little Prince. She performed the role of Peep-Bo and was an ensemble member with the Savoy Company of Philadelphia. Faranda studies with Patricia Wise. Southern California native Rachel Evans, soprano, is in the first year of her doctoral studies at IU, under the tutelage of Patricia Havranek. She earned her B.A. and M.M. degrees at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), where she performed numerous roles as a mezzo-soprano, including Zita in Gianni Schicchi (Puccini), La Badessa and La Maestra Delle Novitzie in Suor Angelica (Puccini), Dorabella in Così fan tutte (Mozart), Mallika in Lakme: Redux (Delibes/Oliver/Ryback), Fate in Lorca: Child of the Moon (Krouse), Nancy in Albert Herring (Britten), L’Enfant and L’Ecureuil in L’enfant et les Sortileges (Ravel), and Ramiro in La Finta Giardiniera (Mozart). She performed the role of Zita in Gianni Schicchi (Puccini) with the Hawaii Performing Arts Festival in 2011. Roles with the Lyric Opera of Los Angeles include Armelinde in Cendrillon (Pauline Viardot) and Suse Blunt in Der Vampyr (Marschner). She sang four seasons in the Los Angeles Opera chorus; and has appeared as a soloist with the Pasadena Symphony, UCLA Chorale, UCLA Chamber Singers, and University Chorus. Mezzo-soprano Meghan Folkerts, a native of Scottsdale, Ariz., is a first-year master’s student of Mary Ann Hart, pursuing her degree in voice performance. This is her IU Opera Theater debut. Last summer, she performed the roles of Maddalena in Rigoletto, the Third Lady in Die Zauberflöte, Mallika in Lakmé, and Paquette in Candide in Northwestern University’s Opera Scenes Program under the direction of W. Stephen Smith and Gene Roberts. She received her bachelor’s degree in vocal performance from Wisconsin Lutheran College (WLC) and studied with Carolyn Fons. While at WLC, she performed roles in many theater productions, including Mopsa (The Winter’s Tale), the Doctor (New York), Lady Jedburgh (Lady Windermere’s Fan), and Anita (West Side Story). Folkerts also frequently appeared as a concert soloist at WLC, including in Mass in G Minor by Vaughan Williams, Liebeslieder, Op. 52 by Brahms, and Te Lucis Ante Terminum by McDermid. Mezzo-soprano Anna Mary Prokop is thrilled to participate in her first production with IU Opera Theater. A Maryland native, she received her Bachelor of Music at The Boston Conservatory. Highlights from her undergraduate degree include alto soloist in Haydn’s Theresienmesse and mezzo-soprano soloist in Orff’s Carmina Burana. Operatic roles include Suzy in La Rondine, Amastre (cover) in Serse, and the Sandman in Hansel and Gretel. Prokop is a first-year master’s student in the studio of Marietta Simpson.

Philharmonic Orchestra Violin I Mariana Cottier-Bucco Johna Smith Alan Snow Sara Chen Jonathan Chern Christy Chen Leo Kowalski Anna Roder Anastasia Falasca Emily Acri Pablo Munoz Eva van Haaften Violin II Dechopol Kowintaweewat I Pei Lin Clara Vazquez Akari Hatanaka Ji Hye Choi Arianna Cappon Jasmine Scott Jason Mellow Ari Fisher Jessica Bouma Viola Andrew Francois Evan Robinson Colin Wheatley Abigail Rojansky Ryan Beauchamp Patrick Miller Benjamin Wagner Camilla Berretta Esther Han Cello Jacob Wunsch Jae Choi Sonja Kraus Wei-Ting Chang

Cello (cont.) Miles Norman Lauren Coburn Emily Candaux Anna Chesson Bass Daniel Carson Kaden Henderson Dominic Kenny Josue Corona Carl Egbert Flute Felice Doynov Jessica Lipstone Victor Villarreal, Piccolo Oboe Lindsay Flowers, English Horn Vivian Ferrillo Clarinet Roy Park Erik Franklin Bassoon Margaret Fay Reiss Schoendorf Horn Jesse Clevenger Drew Wright Clark Hutchinson Kenji Ulmer Michael Hill Trumpet Zachary Kingins Samuel Callahan

Trombone Logan Chopyk Matthew Williamson Cameron Smith, Bass Tuba Daniel Herrick Timpani Erich Rieppel Percussion Jonathan Tomasello Bridget Leahy Julian Loida Harp Natalie Salzman Molly Grettenberger Banda Sarah Shin, Flute Mylie Payne, Oboe Shannon Walsh, Trumpet Ethan Cobb, Trumpet Jonathan Milke, Percussion Susanna Johnson, Viola Ji Hyun Yim, Celesta Ju-An Park, Harmonium Heather Hills, Harp Rebecca Cieply, Harp Orchestra Manager Anna Tsai Johna Smith, Asst. Orchestra Set-Up Johna Smith Emily Acri Brenton Carter Akari Hatanaka Anna Roder Librarian Mariel Stauff

Cendrillon Opera Chorus William Jon Gray, Chorus Master Evan Rees, Rehearsal Accompanist Soprano Elena Figueroa Caroline Jamsa Carey Jarosik Rainelle Krause Caitlin McDougall Elizabeth Nixon Katherine Polit Gabrielle Stuart Davis Soprano / Mezzo Soprano Deborah Backman Georgia Boonshoft Martha Eason Kelsey Randall Janessa Reames Olivia Savage Danielle Steg

Tenor Benjamin Cortez Behrouz Farrokhi Benjamin Seiwert Richard Smagur Asitha Tennekoon Jacob Williams Baritone / Bass Zachary Coates Matthew Cooksey Will Dickinson Connor Duffy Jason Eck Evan Forbes Tyler Henderson Ryan Kieran Benjamin Koenig Daniel Lentz Dieran Manning William Paget Bruno Sandes Christopher Seefeldt

Cendrillon Children’s Chorus Brent Gault, Children’s Chorus Master Lauren Hime and Brian McNulty, Assistants Tamara Brown Basia Bryan Brittany Dobbins Grace GoldenAmelia Goswami Emilie Goswami Nick Irmscher Vivian Livesay Eleanor Lloyd

Alexandra Lucas Kelsey May Niccolo Miles Olivia McDermott-Sipe Haley Paulin Olivia Self Sophie Whikehart

Student Production Staff Assistant Conductor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Brian Onderdonk Assistant Chorus Master . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Genna Kim Choreographer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jacob Taylor Assistant Stage Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jake Wiener Head Fly Person . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . David Gordon-Johnson Deck Supervisors . . . . . . . . . . Mitch Anthony, Robbie Kozub, Steven Wilson Deck Crew . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kristin Allen, Lindsay Hubble, Sarah Hunt Kainan Kawamura, Tyler Keown, Hafsah Khan Jacob Morehead, Anna Moore, Caitlain Patton Kristen Pickett, Sarah Schaefer, Amy Schulze Lynn Schulze, Alana Shanon Matthew Storino, Holly Noel Yeung Electrics Assistants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Patrick Clark, Krista Laskowski Electrics Crew . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Nathan Belton, Daniel Hamilton Alexis Jarson, Rebecca Johnstone, Tim Krachuk Elizabeth Parker, Zachary Schmidt, June Tomastic Caitlin Watkins, Betsy Wray Props Master . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ashley Hughes, Monica Armstrong Paint Assistants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Brendon Marsh, Christa Ruiz Paint Crew . . . . . . . . . . Monica Armstrong, Brayton Arvin, Hanna Brammer Krista Grant, Eva Mahan-Taylor, Alyssa Martin Wig, Hair, and Makeup Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Barbara Abbott Costume Crew . . . . . . . . Hannah Andrews, Mara Jacobucci, Toni Kitsopoulos Rachel Perkins, Will Perkins Christa Ruiz, Olivia Yokers Supertitle Operator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chan Mi Jean Audio Production Crew . . . . . . . . . Andreas Kramer, Blake Rhein, Tal Samuel Video Production Crew . . . . . . . . . Diego Otero, Avery Reidy, Matthew Tobey

Jacobs School of Music Honor Roll Fiscal Year 2011-2012

Individual, Corporate, and Foundation Supporters The Jacobs School of Music wishes to recognize those individuals, corporations, and foundations who have made contributions to the school between July 1, 2011, and June 30, 2012. Those listed here are among the Jacobs School’s most dedicated and involved benefactors, and it is their outstanding generosity that enables the IU Jacobs School of Music to continue to be the finest institution of its kind in the nation.

$1,000,000 and Up David H. Jacobs The Estate of Barbara M. Jacobs

Louise Addicott-Joshi and Yatish Joshi

Gary and Kathy Anderson Carl A. Cook

Gayle T. Cook The Estate of Mary M. Freeburne

Wilton and Sara Aebersold Luba Dubinsky Mary C. Gasser Ann and Gordon Getty Rusty and Ann Harrison Ruth W. Johnson

The Estate of Virginia A. Jones Shalin C. Liu Pierpont A. Mack Cullen and Rachel McCarty Patricia S. McGiverin Jon A. Olson

S. Sue Aramian Hank Bode and Susan Cartland-Bode Carol V. Brown Jack and Pamela Burks Park & Louise Carmon

The Estate of Juanita M. Evans Linda K. Fischer Jay and Karen Goodgold Katherine C. Lazerwitz

Marianne L. Ackerson Donald and Charlene Allen William Banzhaf and Cathy Tschannen Gregory J. Baranko Olimpia F. Barbera Robert Barker and Patsy Fell-Barker David H. Barnard Frederick and Beth Behning F. Dale and Linda Bengtson Norma B. Beversdorf Richard and Mary Bradford Roberta Brokaw Jeffrey C. Brown and Craig Morris Pamela S. Buell J. Peter Burkholder Donald and Jean Burkholder Eleanor J. Byrnes David and Marcella Carlton J.P. and Barbara Carver William and Anita Cast Fred and Beth Cate Harriet R. Chase Mark S. Cobb John and Carol Cornwell J. Neal Cox William and Marion Crawford Eloise M. Cure Danny and Patty Danielson

Lenore S. Davis Jay and Jacqueline Dickinson Gary and Sandra Dowty Jeremiah and Chelsea Duggan D. Kim and Jane Dunnick Mary E. Forbes Ramona R. Fox Edward and Mary Anne Fox M. A. Gilbert Glen G. Graber John and Susan Graham Jim and Roberta Graham Frank Graves and Christine Dugan Henry C. Gulick Fadi Haddad and Aline Hamati-Haddad Alan J. Harris Dale C. Hedding The Estate of Bernhard C. Heiden Jolaine L. Hill J. Stanley and Alice Hillis William T. Hopkins Leland and Donna Horrall Ross S. Jennings Ted W. Jones Chitate Kagawa Thomas and Gail Kasdorf Donald A. Kidd George and Cathy Korinek

The Estate of Paul and Anne Plummer

$100,000 - $999,999 Jack and Dora Hamlin Sandy Littlefield

$10,000 - $99,999 Stanley E. Ransom The Estate of Virginia Schmucker The Estate of Eva Sebok The Estate of Samuel W. Siurua Robert D. Sullivan Marianne W. Tobias

$5,000 - $9,999 Dennis and Judith Leatherman The Estate of Denis Sinor Peter Slemon Charles H. Webb

$1,000 - $4,999 Peter and Monika Kroener The Kuehn Foundation Thomas and Theresa Kulb Robert and Sara LeBien Jeanette C. Marchant Beverly A. McGahey A. G. McGrannahan John and Geraldine Miller James and Jacqueline Morris Lawrence and Betty Myers Delano and Luzetta Newkirk Eugene O’Brien Joan C. Olcott Carol Orr Herbert E. Parks and Gertrude Doyle Daniel T. Perantoni Leonard Phillips and Mary Wennerstrom Edward and Lois Rath Nancy P. Rayfield Robert and Joy Renshaw Gwyn and Barbara Richards Harold and Jeannette Segel Jefferson S. Shreve Janet S. Smith Fredric and Roberta Somach W. Craig Spence Ellen Strommen

Linda Strommen Mark A. Sudeith Charles and Lisa Surack Kevin Theile Susan C. Thrasher Randall and Deborah Tobias

Bruce and Madelyn Trible Nicoletta Valletti Calvin and Margaret Varnell Wolfgang Waversik Natasha Wendt John P. Wentworth

James and Ruth Allen Charles and Margaret Athey Harvey and Linda Auerbach Linda A. Baker Brian M. Barnicle Charles and Gladys Bartholomew Brett and Amy Battjer Christopher and Ruth Borman Douglass and Ruth Boshkoff Karen M. Boston-Wright Brayton and Tracie Brunkhurst Scott Cameron Douglas and Roseann Christian Miriam S. Clarke James and Carol Clauser Timothy, Cheryl, John, and Elisabeth Dahlstrand Ralph and Nancy Daum Susan L. DiLeonardo Thomas and Marian Drake

Stephany A. Dunfee Charles L. Fugo Jon and Jann Fujimoto James and Tania Gardner Frank and Suzanne Gault Robert and Elizabeth Glassey Dorothy J. Hastings Gene F. Hedrick Laura B. Hentges Allan Hershfield and Alexandra Young Jerome and Lucinda Hey Rona Hokanson Harvey B. Holly William and Karol Hope Chester Hublar Robert J. Hublar Lawrence and Celeste Hurst Jeffrey S. Jepsen

Susan L. Adams James A. Allison Judith C. Anderson Jeffrey G. Anderson Kenneth and Elizabeth Aronoff James F. Ault Helen L. Aylsworth James and Mary Babb David Y. Bannard Mark and Ann Bear William and Nichole Bier Myron and Susan Bloom Louise Breau-Bontes Clayton and Pauletta Brewer Craig M. Brown Winston and Marilyn Budrow John N. Burrows Phyllip B. Campbell Philip and Elizabeth Capasso Lloyd and Dorinda Chase Robert and Gayle Chesebro Jerald and Megan Chester Aileen Chitwood Paul and Catherine Christenson Jonathan D. Chu David Clark and Diane Coutre Mark R. Conrad Floyd O. Cooley Katherine R. Covington Janice E. Daniels John D. Danielson Bette G. Davenport Todd and Paulette Davidson Robert and Josette Degeilh Richard and Barbara Dell Mary L. Denne Dominic and Susan Devito Kim and Dianne Diefenderfer Clarence and Judith Doninger Peter E. Ellefson William and Harriet Fierman Jorja Fleezanis

Roger and Jean Fortna Bernard J. Froelich Don and Sandra Freund Gabriel and Sara Frommer Thomas E. Gerber Susann Gilbert Alan R. Goldhammer Selma C. Grant Linda J. Greaf Doris A. Greenough Charles and Theresa Greenwood David E. Greiwe Joan Hall Stephen and Jo Ellen Ham Steven and Leona Handelman Sheila Hass Harlow and Harriet Hopkins Donna Hornibrook Emily L. Hostetter Nancy O. Hublar John and Victoria Huntington Marshall L. Hutchinson Wayne and Kristin Jones Russell L. Jones Kenneth and Elyse Joseph Kenneth and Linda Kaczmarek Carol R. Kelly Marilyn J. Kloss Charles C. Knox Virginia A. Krauss Kerry Krutilla and Shu-Chuan Chiu Scott R. Latzky Gregory and Veronica Leffler Amy L. Letson Eric and Rebecca Lightcap Thomas and Nancy Liley John and Barbara Lombardo Robert W. Magnuson Mary C. Majerus Herm and Carol McCreary Jerry and Phyllis McCullough P. Douglas McKinney

Craig and Cynthia Weyers Allen and Nancy White David L. Wicker Mark Wiedenmayer Laura S. Youens-Wexler Mimi Zweig

$500 - $999 Michael W. Judd Patrick and Marianne McCall Jeffrey and Cynthia McCreary Carmen J. McGrae David and Catherine Meltzer Ralph W. Morris Philip and Jennifer Nubel Dennis W. Organ PQ Phan Mary A. Rickert Randy Schekman and Nancy Walls Scharmal K. Schrock Richard C. Searles Odette F. Shepherd William R. Shindle Mary L. Stein Susan E. Trippet L. Alan and Elizabeth Whaley Barrie and Margaret Zimmerman

$250 - $499 Ralph and Shirley Melton Emanuel and Kathleen Mickel Terry and Sara Miller Travis and Sarah Miller Sam and Kathryn Morrison Ray and Wendy Muston Andrea Myslicki Margaret V. Norman Charles Owen Carol L. Pampalone Edward Petsonk R. Alan and Brenda Quick Carolyn J. Rice Joann Richardson James and Mary Alice Rickert Christopher and Stephanie Ritrievi Bruce Ronkin and Janet Zipes Sanford E. Rosenberg Byuong and Patine Ryu Monte Schwarzwalder and Rebecca Henry Andrew and Natalie Scott David and Barbara Sheldon Wayne and Lois Shipe James B. Sinclair John L. Snyder Stanley and Cynthia Springer Mike St John James L. Strause Karen M. Taylor Robert M. Thompson Eric and Rina Turpen Lawrence A. Vanore John and Tamyra Verheul Donald H. Wissman Earl S. Woodworth Christopher Young and Brenda Brenner Giovanni Zanovello Larry and Joyce Zimmerman Conrad and Debora Zimmermann

$100 - $249 Lois C. Adams Miller James and Tomilea Allison Jean L. Almaria Joseph and Sharon Amlung Paula J. Amrod Michael Anderson and Nancy Snustad Jeffrey J. Anderson Donna K. Anderson Brad E. Annis Roy and Janice Applegate Kevin B. Arbogast Brian K. Arreola Mary K. Aylsworth Mary R. Babbitt Robert and Sandra Babbs Margaret K. Bachman Wesley A. Ballenger Sandra C. Balmer Daniel C. Balog Samuel and Janet Baltzer Pamela L. Banks Brent Baranko and Anne Gmelich Baranko John and Patricia Barnes Charles L. Barr Ann Barras Patricia W. Barrett Robert R. Bartalot Michael and Joan Bartos Robert W. Bastian John and Paula Bates Barbara S. Baum Cecelia Beam Martin and Judy Becker William and Sharon Beecroft David and Ingrid Beery Suzanne K. Belbutoski David and Ingrid Bellman Joseph and Marjorie Belth Sharon M. Berenson Brian and Jan Berg Lauren Bernofsky Olesia O. Bihun Wilhelm and Renee Bilgram Cheryl A. Bintz David and Judy Blackwell Heinz and Gayle Blankenburg John and Mary Blutenthal Michael and Pamela Bobb Richard and Jana Bobo Christine M. Bohlman Lawrence and Mary Bond Frank R. Booth Francis and Kay Borkowski Arthur and Karen Bortolini Gilles Bouyer and Patricia Reese Carolyn E. Bowen Bennet and Cynthia Brabson Elizabeth M. Brannon Jeffrey L. Bransford M. Ruth Brauch Ashley B. Breland Paul E. Bresciani William Brittenback and William Meezan Keith and Maggie Brown Dorothea M. Brown Wayne Brown and Brenda Kee Montgomery and Mary Brown Marian T. Brown Edward P. Bruenjes

Elsbeth Brugger Earl and Merribeth Bruning Mark and Jody Bruns Schuyler and Mary Buck David and Brenda Buehler Hal and Freddie Burke James R. Burke Ralph and Ann Burns Doris J. Burton Giuliana C. Busch Rebecca C. Butler Margaret R. Buttermore John and Kristine Callahan Nanette Canfield Donald Capparella and Amy Dorfman Joseph R. Car Lisa C. Cardwell Ponten James A. Carlson John C. Carmichael James and Melanie Case Glen J. Cavanagh Robert and Susan Cave James and Janice Childress Timothy W. Chipman Matthew Christ and Sophia Goodman Katherine Ciesinski Cynthia M. Cirome Jeffrey Clanton and Scott Stewart Peter D. Claypool Marjorie L. Clayton Frederick and Emma Clem Andrew Cogbill and Mara Parker Jeffrey S. Cohen Robert and Marica Coleman James D. Collier Roger S. Collins Timothy and Sandra Connery Charles and Ann Conrad Richard K. Cook Gail M. Cotler Nora B. Courier Cynthia M. Crago Gretchen E. Craig Genevieve S. Crane Bettejane Crossen Janet S. Crossen Samuel and Mary Crowl Michael G. Cunningham Bradley and Cheryl Cunningham John T. Dalton Eugene B. Daniels Mary W. Davidson Allan J. Dean Robert and Helen Dedmon Patrick and Karen Dessent Roger D. Dickerson Barbara C. Dickey Arthur and Loreen Dimmick Richard and Barbara Domek D. Michael Donathan Paul T. Dove John and Sharon Downey Margaret J. Duffin Gregory S. Dugan Barbara J. Dunn Dale and Edith Dzubay Silsby S. Eastman Robert and Robin Eatman Patricia Eckstein Marjorie A. Eddy

Frank and Vickie Edmondson Ryan T. Edwards Mark and Karin Edwards John and Anne-Marie Egan Anne C. Eisfeller J R. Elkins Joseph E. Elliott Judith T. Elliott Charles and Anna Ellis Michael J. Ellis Marc Embree and Jane Bunnell Steven K. Emery Herman and Mary Emmert Antonio and Jane Escueta Gerald and Coleen Falasca Mark and Jennifer Famous Elliot Fan and Elaine Chu John and Suzanne Farbstein John Fearnsides and Margaret Jenny Arthur and Therese Fell Martin and Susie Fine Donald and Myra Fisher William and Eleanor Folley Constance C. Ford Bruce and Betty Fowler Graham V. Fuguitt Mauricio Fuks and Violaine Gabriel-Fuks David and Marilyn Fulton James and Darla Gavin David and Linda Giedroc Sander and Marina Gilman Bonnie L. Gilson Robert and Corinne Glass John M. Glover Walter A. Goldreich Edward R. Goldstein Richard S. Gorden Sylvia S. Gormley Arlene Goter Brian E. Graban Pamela Grant Susan E. Grathwohl Warren and Barbara Gray Stephen C. Greist Teddy and Phyllis Gron Holli M. Haerr Franck P. Hagendorf Laurel K. Hagerman Patricia L. Hales Anthony J. Halloin Kenneth and Judy Hamilton Brooks and Donna Hamm Robert and Julie Hammel Norman L. Hanks Thompson and Lynn Hanks Charlene A. Harb Steven and Carol Harlos Ellie M. Harlow Stephen and Martha Harris Donald W. Harris Theodore R. Harvey William R. Harvey John and Debra Hatmaker John and Martha Head Clayton and Ellen Heath Karl S. Henry Thomas and Suzanne Herendeen Jan Herlinger Florence E. Hiatt Leslie W. Hicken Margaret M. Hickman

J. William and Karen Hicks Dana E. Higbee Kathryn K. Hodge Mark and Elizabeth Hofeldt Lowell and Ruth Hoffman Marilyn L. Hoffman Sarah K. Hogan Fred M. Holdeman Richard Holen and Anne Kojola-Holen Nicholas and Katherine Holzmer Dennis and Judith Hopkinson Gregory A. Horn Ray and Phyllis Horton Ivan and Anne Hughes John and Cindy Hughes Marcia A. Hughes Craig D. Hultgren Diane S. Humphrey Wesley L. Humphrey Mike Hurtubise and Ann Murray Paul and Jean Ingraham Roger and Carol Isaacs Jennifer A. Jafari Carole L. James Charles and Laurie Jarrett Warren W. Jaworski Glenn E. Jenne Donald and Wendy Jensen Robert and Kathryn Jessup Martin D. Joachim Ted and Barbara Johnson Thomas and Marilyn Johnson Carl L. Johnson James and Marla Johnson Paul R. Johnston Howard and Donna Kaplan David and Harriett Kaplan Kathleen Katra Janet Kelsay Karen L. Keltner Margaret A. Kennedy-Dygas Richard E. Kennon Kevin Kerwin and Katherine Mahoney-Kerwin Martin W. Kettelhut Robert and Stephanie Keys Myrna M. Killey John and Julianne King Laura J. King W. John and Sarah Kitzmiller Kristin J. Knipp Iris J. Knollenberg Kimberly J. Koons Marilyn L. Kouba George J. Kozacik Joseph C. Kraus Joel S. Krueger Scott W. Kunkel Larry and Judy Lafferty David and Judith Lahm David K. Lamb Dodd and Myrna Lamberton Glenda G. Lamont Thomas and Nancy Lancaster Betty E. Landis Mary T. Langdon Lois B. Lantz Aldis and Susan Lapins Gregory Largent and Anna Leppert-Largent Nathan Larimer and Cara Owens David and Suzanne Larsen Timothy and Sara Laughlin

George Lawrence and Judith Auer Charles and Holly Ledvina Briant Lee and Nancy White-Lee James A. Leick Kristin M. Lensch Jeffrey M. Levenson Joseph J. Lewis Jerry and Jane Lewis Timothy Lewis Zhi Li Michael Lind William and Karen Lion Barbara A. Lockard-Zimmerman Charles and Jo Lohmeyer Robert and Susan Long Warren E. Loomis Luiz F. Lopes John and Rachel Lorber Marie T. Lutz Alma E. Lyle Joan I. Lynch Michael J. MacLean Robert and Marcia Mahnken David and Barbara Malson Mayer and Ellen Mandelbaum Joseph and Leslie Manfredo Rochelle G. Mann Rudy T. Marcozzi Brian D. Marcus Philip and Rovena Marcus Georgianna E. Marks Kathleen Maroko Noel and Helena Masters Thomas O. Mastroianni Perry J. Maull Matthew and Kelly Mayer Barbara E. Mayhew Philip and Elizabeth McClintock Gregory and Margaret McClure Thomas and Norma McComb Scott and Kelly McCray Patrick and Catherine McGinn Francis and Winnifred McGinnis Ellen L. McGlothin James and Nelia McLuckie Mary Jo McMillan Michael and Marcia McNelley Mary K. Mehner James F. Mellichamp Glenn and Edith Mellow Milford and H. Patricia Merrill Ben F. Miller Margaret J. Miller Ronald and Joyce Miller Thomas J. Miller Raymond and Clara Millett Darwin L. Missling Patrick and Frances Mitchell Richard J. Mlynarski Rosalind E. Mohnsen Jacqueline Monnier David and Maria Montgomery Jay E. Montgomery Philip and Patty Moreau Gerald E. Mummert Ronald L. Munson Cassie M. Murphy Dudley G. Murphy Darla J. Myers George and Diane Nadaf Robert E. Nagel David and Jean Nanney Emile G. Naoumoff David L. Newby

William Newkirk and Cheryl Tschanz Gail C. Newmark Omar and Julia Nielsen Ann E. Norz Edward C. Nowacki Rebecca A. O’Connor David and Diane O’Hagan Melinda P. O’Neal Adrienne Ostrander Russell L. Otte Mary A. Owings Hyung-Sun Paik Marilyn Park-Ellington Robert and Sandra Parker Peggy W. Paschall Walter and Beverly Pavasaris Kenneth D. Pennington Kathie I. Perrett Wayne H. Peterson Byron and Nancy Peterson Douglas Peterson and Pamela Hanson-Peterson Lamar Peterson and Eleanor Fell Robert and Pamela Phillips David and Deborah Pierson Margaret A. Piety Ernest and Patricia Pinson Patrick E. Pope James H. Potts Gregg and Shayla Powell Gregory Powell and Miriam McLeod Powell Sylvanna T. Prechtl Jan E. Prokop Nancy G. Puckett Julia D. Ragains-Slawin John A. Rathgeb Alan and Diana Rawizza George Rebeck Lincoln and Marlene Records Jack and Phyllis Relyea Laura J. Rexroth Steven L. Rickards David W. Riddles William and Nancy Riggert Scott and Katherine Riley Paul and Barbara Ristau Donald and Lucy Ritter Alice E. Robbins Jerry and Cynthia Robinson Roger Roe Edward and Donna Ronco Linda J. Rosenthal James and Maureen Ross Carolyn R. Roush Christina A. Runnacles-Hightower Paul and Sheila Ryan Irving L. Sablosky Mary L. Sachse Robert and Ruth Salek James R. Saliers Janice Salvucci David and Ann Samuelson James, Laura, and Judith San Pietro Michael and Susan Sanders Anne E. Sanders Stephanie Sant’Ambrogio Virginia G. Sarber John and Donna Sasse Susan J. Schaefer John and Sarah Schaffer Beth E. Schlicksup Tamara L. Schmiege Richard and Sabine Schneider

Loren Schoenberg Fredric and Nancy Schroeder Kenneth and Cecile Schubert Matthew R. Schuler Christopher and Janet Schwabe Beverly Scott and Sylvia Patterson-Scott Michael Scott and Monica Murray Perry and Lisa Scott Walter Scott Wolf Sebastian Harry and Priscilla Sebel John A. Seest Uriel and Ilana Segal Mary K. Seidholz Christian and Mary Seitz James M. Self Danny and Sarah Sergesketter Nadine E. Shank John and Merry Shapiro Richard and Karen Shepherd Sandra K. Sherman Richard J. Sherr John and Rebecca Shockley Thomas and Donna Shriner W. Robert and Jill Siddall Charles and Eleanor Six Abner Slatt and Pamela Haft John and Donna Slinkard James R. Smart Eliot R. Smith Estus Smith Frances L. Smith Marvin K. Smith Lucille Snell Steve and Mary Snider Susan E. Snortland George and Barbara Sorrells James and Carolyn Sowinski

Paul V. Spade C. Gregory and Mary Spangler Fredrick and Lori Spencer Viola J. Spencer Barry R. Springer Peter and Ann Spurbeck Darell and Susan Stachelski David E. Starkey Gary and Anne Steigerwald Paul Stephenson and Maria Schmidt Malcolm and Ellen Stern Janis M. Stockhouse Lawrence F. Stoffel Karolyn H. Stonefelt Eric and Etsuko Strohecker Boyd and Sally Sturdevant Lester Suehiro and Bunnie Au-Suehiro John and Myra Swallow Gregory and Rhonda Swanson Michael D. Sweeney Rick and Leaetta Taflinger Yasuoki Tanaka Lester I. Tanji Dana W. Taylor Joyce A. Taylor Kathleen A. Taylor Mark and Beth Taylor Michael W. Taylor Nancy C. Teutemacher Amy R. Tharp Derrick and Nancy Tietz Scott Tisdel and Stefanie Jacob Dava A. Tobey Joseph and Diana Tompa Jonathan Towne and Rebecca Noreen Stephanie G. Tretick Philip and Alice Trimble Joshua and Julia Tripp

Linda J. Tucker John and Alice Tweedle Charles and Janet VanNatta Robert C. VanNuys Dianne Vars Matthew and Therese Veldman William and Shirley Vessels Erin M. Volland James R. Volstorf William and Jane Volz Charlotte E. Wagner Barbara J. Waite Harvey and Melissa Walfish Dennis and Julie Walsh Sarah F. Ward Garry P. Wasserman Paul and Mary Waytenick Jerry and Bonnie Weakley Wayne and Rebecca Weaver Eugene and Frances Weinberg Jason M. Welch George Weremchuk Phyllis C. Wertime Mark and Karen Weserhausen Marian P. White Lloyd and Barbara White James T. White Tony J. Wiederhold Robert Wilson and Cecily Shull Dolores Wilson James F. Winfield William and Carola Winkle Carl and Donna Wiuff Peter and Teresa Wolf George W. Wolfe Danny and Karen Wright James and Patricia Wright David and Joan Zaun Timothy and Sara Zwickl

Corporations and Foundations $100,000 and Up Georgina Joshi Foundation, Inc.

Cook, Inc.

Ann & Gordon Getty Foundation

Summer Star Foundation for Nature, Art, and Humanity

$25,000 - $99,999 $10,000 - $24,999 Harrison Steel Castings Company, Inc.

$1,000 - $9,999 Americas Society Avedis Zildjian Company

Bloomington Classical Guitar Society, Inc. Camerata, Inc.

Christ Church Cathedral City Optical Company Inc. Community Chamber Music Association

The Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation I-Association Shawnee Summer Theatre of Greene County, Inc.

Juan Orozco LTD Inc. Opera Illinois League

Up to $1,000 Sigma Alpha Iota Bloomington Alumnae Chapter TIS Group The Woman’s Club

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

Dean’s Circle

Visionary Members $10,000 and Up Gary and Kathy Anderson Carl A. Cook

Gayle T. Cook Ann and Gordon Getty

David H. Jacobs Ruth W. Johnson

Strategic Members $5,000 - $9,999 Sue Aramian Jack and Pamela Burks

Jay and Karen Goodgold Dennis and Judith Leatherman

Supporting Members $2,500 - $4,999 William and Marion Crawford Frank Graves and Christine Dugan Henry C. Gulick William T. Hopkins

Peter and Monika Kroener Eugene O’Brien Gwyn and Barbara Richards

Curt and Judy Simic Mark A. Sudeith David L. Wicker

Contributing Members $1,000 - $2,499 Robert Barker and Patsy Fell-Barker F. Dale and Linda Bengtson Don and Jean Burkholder Eleanor J. Byrnes David and Marcella Carlton J. P. and Barbara Carver William and Anita Cast Harriet R. Chase Mark Cobb John and Carol Cornwell Danny and Patty Danielson Lenore S. Davis Jeremiah and Chelsea Duggan D. Kim and Jane Dunnick John and Susan Graham

Jim and Roberta Graham Fadi Haddad and Aline Hamati-Haddad Alan J. Harris Dale C. Hedding Jolaine L. Hill Ross S. Jennings Ted W. Jones Thomas and Gail Kasdorf Donald A. Kidd George and Cathy Korinek Thomas and Theresa Kulb Robert and Sara LeBien P. A. Mack Jeanette C. Marchant

John and Geraldine Miller Lawrence and Betty Myers Del and Lettie Newkirk Joan C. Olcott James and Carol Orr Herbert Parks and Gertrude Doyle Robert and Joy Renshaw Harold and Jeannette Segel Jefferson S. Shreve Fredric and Roberta Somach William C. Spence Charles and Lisa Surack Randall and Deborah Tobias Bruce and Madelyn Trible Natasha Wendt

Artist’s Circle $500 - $999

Charles and Margaret Athey Harvey and Linda Auerbach Linda A. Baker Charles and Gladys Bartholomew Christopher and Ruth Borman Karen M. Boston-Wright Roberta Brokaw Brayton and Tracie Brunkhurst Miriam S. Clarke James and Carol Clauser Susan L. DiLeonardo

Stephany Dunfee Charles L. Fugo Harvey B. Holly William and Karol Hope Jeffrey S. Jepsen Michael W. Judd Patrick and Marianne McCall Jeffrey and Cynthia McCreary Beverly A. McGahey Carmen McGrae Philip and Jennifer Nubel

Dennis W. Organ Mary A. Rickert Randy Schekman and Nancy Walls Scharmal K. Schrock Richard C. Searles Odette F. Shepherd Mary L. Stein Susan C. Thrasher Susan E. Trippet John and Tamyra Verheul

$250 - $499 Susan L. Adams Helen L. Aylsworth James and Mary Babb David Y. Bannard Mark and Ann Bear Louise Breau-Bontes Clayton and Pauletta Brewer John N. Burrows Lloyd and Dorinda Chase Robert and Gayle Chesebro Jerald and Megan Chester Aileen Chitwood Paul and Catherine Christenson David Clark and Diane Coutre Mark R. Conrad Katherine R. Covington John D. Danielson Todd and Paulette Davidson Robert and Josette Degeilh Richard and Barbara Dell Mary L. Denne Kim and Dianne Diefenderfer Clarence and Judith Doninger William and Harriet Fierman Jorja Fleezanis

Gabriel and Sara Frommer Thomas E. Gerber Selma C. Grant Linda J. Greaf Doris A. Greenough David E. Greiwe Steven and Leona Handelman Harlow and Harriet Hopkins Donna Hornibrook Emily L. Hostetter Russell L. Jones Carol R. Kelly Marilyn Kloss Charles C. Knox Virginia A. Krauss Kerry Krutilla and Shu-Chuan Chiu Scott R. Latzky Gregory and Veronica Leffler Amy L. Letson Eric and Rebecca Lightcap Thomas and Nancy Liley John and Barbara Lombardo Mary C. Majerus Herm and Carol McCreary Emanuel and Kathleen Mickel

Lois C. Adams Miller Joseph and Sharon Amlung Paula J. Amrod Michael Anderson and Nancy Snustad Donna K. Anderson Roy and Janice Applegate Kevin B. Arbogast Brian K. Arreola Mary K. Aylsworth Sandra C. Balmer Samuel and Janet Baltzer Pamela L. Banks John and Patricia Barnes Charles L. Barr Patricia W. Barrett Robert R. Bartalot Michael and Joan Bartos Robert W. Bastian Barbara S. Baum Cecelia Beam Martin and Judy Becker William and Sharon Beecroft David and Ingrid Beery Suzanne K. Belbutoski Sharon M. Berenson Olesia O. Bihun Wilhelm and Renee Bilgram Cheryl A. Bintz David and Judy Blackwell Heinz and Gayle Blankenburg Michael and Pamela Bobb Richard and Jana Bobo Lawrence and Mary Bond Arthur and Karen Bortolini Carolyn E. Bowen Elizabeth M. Brannon M. Ruth Brauch Ashley B. Breland William M. Brittenback and William Meezan Dorothea M. Brown Montgomery and Mary Brown Marian T. Brown Earl and Merribeth Bruning

Hal and Freddie Burke Ralph and Ann Burns Doris J. Burton Giuliana C. Busch Rebecca C. Butler Margaret R. Buttermore John and Kristine Callahan Nanette Canfield Donald Capparella and Amy Dorfman Joseph R. Car James A. Carlson John C. Carmichael Robert and Susan Cave James and Janice Childress Timothy W. Chipman Cynthia M. Cirome Peter D. Claypool Marjorie L. Clayton Andrew Cogbill and Mara Parker Robert and Marcia Coleman Roger S. Collins Timothy and Sandra Connery Nora B. Courier Cynthia M. Crago Genevieve S. Crane Janet S. Crossen Samuel and Mary Crowl Michael G. Cunningham Bradley and Cheryl Cunningham John T. Dalton Eugene B. Daniels Patrick and Karen Dessent Roger D. Dickerson Barbara C. Dickey Arthur and Loreen Dimmick Richard and Barbara Domek D. Michael Donathan Paul T. Dove John and Sharon Downey Margaret J. Duffin Silsby S. Eastman Robert and Robin Eatman Patricia Eckstein Frank and Vickie Edmondson

Terry and Sara Miller Andrea Myslicki Margaret V. Norman Edward Petsonk Leonard Phillips and Mary Wennerstrom R. Alan and Brenda Quick Edward and Lois Rath Carolyn J. Rice James and Mary Alice Rickert Christopher and Stephanie Ritrievi Bruce Ronkin and Janet Zipes Sanford E. Rosenberg Byuong and Patine Ryu David and Barbara Sheldon William R. Shindle Wayne and Lois Shipe James B. Sinclair Stanley and Cynthia Springer Mike St John James L. Strause Robert M. Thompson Lawrence A. Vanore L. Alan and Elizabeth Whaley Donald H. Wissman Larry and Joyce Zimmerman

$100 - $249 Ryan T. Edwards Mark and Karin Edwards John and Anne-Marie Egan Anne C. Eisfeller J R. Elkins Joseph E. Elliott Judith T. Elliott Charles and Anna Ellis Michael J. Ellis Marc Embree and Jane Bunnell Mary L. Emmert Antonio and Jane Escueta Gerald and Coleen Falasca Mark and Jennifer Famous John and Suzanne Farbstein John Fearnsides and Margaret Jenny Constance C. Ford Bruce and Betty Fowler Graham V. Fuguitt Mauricio Fuks and Violaine Gabriel-Fuks Sander and Marina Gilman Bonnie L. Gilson John M. Glover Walter A. Goldreich Richard S. Gorden Sylvia S. Gormley Arlene Goter Teddy and Phyllis Gron Franck P. Hagendorf Laurel K. Hagerman Patricia L. Hales Kenneth and Judy Hamilton Brooks and Donna Hamm Norman L. Hanks Charlene A. Harb Steven and Carol Harlos Stephen and Martha Harris Donald W. Harris Theodore R. Harvey John and Debra Hatmaker Clayton and Ellen Heath Laura B. Hentges Thomas and Suzanne Herendeen Florence E. Hiatt

Joe and Margaret Hickman Dana E. Higbee Kathryn K. Hodge Mark and Elizabeth Hofeldt Lowell and Ruth Hoffman Fred M. Holdeman Nicholas and Katherine Holzmer Dennis and Judith Hopkinson Ray and Phyllis Horton Ivan and Anne Hughes Craig D. Hultgren Diane S. Humphrey Wesley L. Humphrey Mike Hurtubise and Ann Murray Jennifer A. Jafari Carole L. James Warren W. Jaworski Glenn E. Jenne Robert and Kathryn Jessup Martin D. Joachim Wayne and Kristin Jones Howard and Donna Kaplan David and Harriett Kaplan Janet Kelsay Margaret A. Kennedy-Dygas Richard E. Kennon Martin W. Kettelhut Myrna M. Killey John and Julianne King Laura J. King John and Sarah Kitzmiller Iris J. Knollenberg Kimberly J. Koons Marilyn L. Kouba Joseph C. Kraus Scott W. Kunkel Larry and Judy Lafferty Dodd and Myrna Lamberton Thomas and Nancy Lancaster Mary T. Langdon Lois B. Lantz Aldis and Susan Lapins Nathan Larimer and Cara Owens David and Suzanne Larsen George Lawrence and Judith Auer Briant Lee and Nancy White-Lee James A. Leick Joseph J. Lewis Zhi Li William and Karen Lion Barbara A. Lockard-Zimmerman Charles and Jo Lohmeyer John and Rachel Lorber Marie T. Lutz Joan I. Lynch Michael J. MacLean Robert and Marcia Mahnken Mayer and Ellen Mandelbaum Rochelle G. Mann Rudy T. Marcozzi Brian D. Marcus Philip and Rovena Marcus Georgianna Marks Kathleen Maroko Thomas O. Mastroianni Barbara E. Mayhew Philip and Elizabeth McClintock Francis and Winnifred McGinnis Ellen L. McGlothin James and Nelia McLuckie Mary Jo McMillan Michael and Marcia McNelley James F. Mellichamp Glenn and Edith Mellow Ralph and Shirley Melton

Milford and H. Patricia Merrill Margaret J. Miller Ronald and Joyce Miller Raymond and Clara Millett Darwin L. Missling Patrick and Frances Mitchell Rosalind E. Mohnsen Jacqueline Monnier David and Maria Montgomery Jay E. Montgomery Philip and Patty Moreau Cassie M. Murphy Dudley G. Murphy George and Diane Nadaf David and Jean Nanney Emile G. Naoumoff David L. Newby William Newkirk and Cheryl Tschanz Gail C. Newmark Omar and Julia Nielsen Ann E. Norz Rebecca O’Connor David and Diane O’Hagan Adrienne Ostrander Russell L. Otte Mary A. Owings Hyung-Sun Paik Carol L. Pampalone Marilyn Park-Ellington Peggy W. Paschall Kenneth D. Pennington Kathie I. Perrett Byron and Nancy Peterson David and Deborah Pierson Margaret A. Piety Patrick E. Pope Gregory Powell and Miriam McLeod Powell Sylvanna Prechtl Jan E. Prokop Nancy G. Puckett Julia D. Ragains-Slawin Lincoln and Marlene Record Jack and Phyllis Relyea Steven L. Rickards David W. Riddles William and Nancy Riggert Scott and Katherine Riley Donald and Lucy Ritter Jerry and Cynthia Robinson Roger Roe Edward and Donna Ronco Linda J. Rosenthal James and Maureen Ross Carolyn R. Roush Paul and Sheila Ryan Mary L. Sachse Robert and Ruth Salek Janice Salvucci David and Ann Samuelson Anne E. Sanders Stephanie Sant’Ambrogio Virginia G. Sarber John and Donna Sasse Susan J. Schaefer John and Sarah Schaffer Tamara L. Schmiege Richard and Sabine Schneider Fredric and Nancy Schroeder Matthew R. Schuler Christopher and Janet Schwabe Monte Schwarzwalder and Rebecca Henry Perry and Lisa Scott

Beverly Scott and Sylvia Patterson-Scott Michael Scott and Monica Murray Walter L. Scott Harry and Priscilla Sebel Uriel and Ilana Segal Mary Seidholz Christian and Mary Seitz Danny and Sarah Sergesketter Nadine E. Shank John and Merry Shapiro Richard and Karen Shepherd John and Rebecca Shockley Thomas and Donna Shriner W. Robert and Jill Siddall Charles and Eleanor Six Abner Slatt and Pamela Haft Frances L. Smith Estus Smith Eliot R. Smith Marvin K. Smith Steve and Mary Louise Snider Susan E. Snortland John L. Snyder George and Barbara Sorrells C. Gregory and Mary Spangler Fredrick and Lori Spencer Viola J. Spencer Peter and Ann Spurbeck Darell and Susan Stachelski David E. Starkey Paul Stephenson and Maria Schmidt Boyd and Sally Sturdevant Lester Suehiro and Bunnie Au-Suehiro Gregory and Rhonda Swanson Michael D. Sweeney Yasuoki Tanaka Lester I. Tanji Mark and Beth Taylor Joyce A. Taylor Dana W. Taylor Kathleen A. Taylor Nancy C. Teutemacher Amy R. Tharp Joseph and Diana Tompa Jonathan Towne and Rebecca Noreen Stephanie G. Tretick Philip and Alice Trimble Linda Tucker John and Alice Tweedle Charles and Janet VanNatta Robert C. VanNuys Dianne Vars William and Shirley Vessels James R. Volstorf William and Jane Volz Charlotte E. Wagner Barbara J. Waite Harvey and Melissa Walfish Sarah F. Ward Paul and Mary Waytenick Jerry and Bonnie Weakley Wayne and Rebecca Weaver Eugene and Frances Weinberg Jason M. Welch George Weremchuk Marian P. White Lloyd and Barbara White Robert Wilson and Cecily Shull Dolores Wilson James F. Winfield Carl and Donna Wiuff Danny and Karen Wright Timothy and Sara Zwickl

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

Over $10,000,000 Lilly Endowment, Inc.

The Estate of Barbara M. Jacobs

David H. Jacobs, Jr. Dorothy Richard Starling Foundation The Georgina Joshi Foundation, Inc. Cook, Inc.

Louise Addicott-Joshi and Yatish Joshi The Estate of Paul and Anne Plummer Jack and Linda Gill Jack and Dora Hamlin

The Estate of Eva Sebok The DBJ Foundation Gary and Kathy Anderson The Estate of Eva M. Heinitz The Estate of Ione B. Auer Ann and Gordon Getty Foundation Wilbert W. Gasser* and Mary Kratz Gasser

The Estate of George A. Bilque Ann and Gordon Getty Alexander S. Bernstein Jamie Bernstein Nina Bernstein Simmons The Estate of Ruth E. Thompson Jack and Pamela Burks

The Estate of Wilfred C. Bain The Estate of Samuel W. Siurua The Estate of Lucille Espinosa The Estate of David H. Jacobs The Estate of Marvin Carmack The Estate of Maidee H. Seward The Estate of John D. Winters The Estate of Nina Neal Paul and Cynthia S. Skjodt Deborah J. Simon The Estate of Emma B. Horn David and Jacqueline Simon

Bren Simon The Estate of Melvin Simon The Estate of Herman B. Wells The Estate of Harold R. Janitz Presser Foundation Olimpia F. Barbera Jamey and Sara Aebersold The Estate of Alvin M. Ehret Christel DeHaan Richard E. Ford Christel DeHaan Family Foundation Marianne W. Tobias

The Estate of Frances A. Brockman The Estate of Charlotte Reeves Smithville Telephone Company, Inc. Scott and Kathryn Schurz The Estate of Mavis M. Crow Harrison Steel Castings Company, Inc. Peter and Monika Kroener Betty Myers Bain Rusty and Ann Harrison Fred Simon The Estate of Eleanor Knapik The Estate of Margaret E. Miller The Estate of Mary C. Tilton The Estate of Robert A. Edwards Robert Barker and Patsy Fell-Barker Stephen and Margaret Cole Russell The Estate of Jean P. Nay Thomson, Inc. The Estate of Marjorie Gravit

The Estate of Theodore C. Grams Penn Asset Equity, LLC Paul and Ellen Gignilliat Artur Balsam Foundation Jean Creek and Doris Shoultz-Creek The Estate of William H. Earles The Estate of Virginia Schmucker The Estate of Robert D. Aungst Leonard Phillips and Mary Wennerstrom Cole & Kate Porter Memorial Graduate Fellowship in Music Hank J. Bode and Susan Cartland-Bode Bennet and Cynthia Brabson The Estate of Ursula Apel P. A. Mack The Estate of Eugene Knapik The Estate of Thomas L. Gentry The Estate of Jascha Heifetz The Estate of Margaret H. Hamlin

Over $1,000,000 The Estate of Juana Mendel The Estate of Clara L. Nothhacksberger The Estate of Juanita M. Evans Krannert Charitable Trust

$500,000 - $999,999 Arthur R Metz Foundation Robert R. O’Hearn The Estate of Frederick G. and Mary M. Freeburne Gayle T. Cook Carl A. Cook * Deceased

$250,000 - $499,999 The Estate of Sylvia F. Budd Beatrice P. Delany Charitable Trust Irwin-Sweeney-Miller Foundation The Estate of Angeline M. Battista IBM Global Services Murray and Sue Robinson Rudolph and Joy Rasin Shalin C. Liu Summer Star Foundation for Nature, Art, and Humanity The Estate of Lee E. Schroeder Herbert Simon

$100,000 - $249,999 Brabson Library and Education Foundation The Estates of Samuel and Martha Siurua Georgia Wash Holbeck Living Trust William D. Rhodes Foundation Ford Meter Box Foundation, Inc. Marianne Y. Felton David and Neill Marriott The Estate of Dagmar K. Riley The Estate of David C. Hall Dick and Barbara Schilling Kenneth C. Whitener Joan & Marvin Carmack Foundation Robert and Sandra Harrison The Estate of Dorothy Rey Fred C. Arto Eric D. Batterman Memorial Scholarship

The Legacy Society The Legacy Society at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music honors the following individuals who have included the Jacobs School as a beneficiary under their wills, trusts, life insurance policies, retirement plans, and other estate-planning arrangements. Richard and Ann Alden Jeanette Amboise-Chaumont Gary J. Anderson Dennis and Virginia Bamber Olimpia F. Barbera Christa-Maria Beardsley Michael E. Bent Richard and Mary Bradford Mildred J. Brannon Marjorie Buell Pamela Buell Sarah Clevenger Eileen T. Cline Jack and Claire Cruse John* and Doris* Curran Susie Dewey D. Michael Donathan Luba Dubinsky Thomas and Ellen Ehrlich H. C. Engles Eleanor R. Fell Marianne Y. Felton Michael and Sara Finton Philip* and Debra Ford Marcella I. Gercken Monroe A. Gilbert Harold* and Lucille Goodman Glen G. Graber Ken and Kathleen Grandstaff Ruth Grey Ransom* and Mary Jo Griffin Jonathan L. Gripe Kathy Gripe

Jack and Dora Hamlin Charles Handelman J. Richard Hasler Gerald W. Hedman David and Mildred Hennessy Clara Hofberg Rona Hokanson David M. Holcenberg William T. and Kathryn* Hopkins David E. Huggins Harriet M. Ivey Walter and Bernice* Jones Myrna M. Killey C. Ray and Lynn Lewis Richard and Ann Lilly George and Brenda Little Harriett Z. Macht P. A. Mack Charles J. Marlatt Susan G. McCray Douglas McLain Sylvia A. McNair Donald and Sonna Merk William F. Milligan Robert A. Mix Dale and Cynthia Nelson Del and Letty Newkirk Robert O’Hearn Fred Opie and Melanie Spewock Richard* and Eleanor Osborn Arthur Panousis James and Helen Pellerite Jean R. and Charles F.* Peters

Leonard Phillips and Mary Wennerstrom Jack W. Porter Ben B. Raney, Jr. Stanley E. Ransom Clare G. Rayner Robert and Carlene Reed Charlotte Reeves Albert and Lynn Reichle Gwyn and Barbara Richards Ilona Richey Murray and Sue Robinson John* and Patricia Ryan Barbara R. Sable Roy and Mary Samuelsen Hubert A. Seller John and Lorna Seward Odette F. Shepherd Donald G. Sisler Catherine A. Smith George P. Smith, II Mary L. Snider William and Elizabeth Strauss Douglas* and Margaret Strong Robert D. Sullivan Hans* and Alice Tischler Henry and Celicia Upper Nicoletta Valletti Robert J. Waller Patrice M. Ward-Steinman Charles H. Webb Michael D. Weiss Robert and Patricia Williams * Deceased

Friends of Music Honor Roll Fiscal Year 2011-2012

The mission of the Society of the Friends of Music is to raise scholarship funds for deserving, talented students at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music. The society was established in 1964 by a small group led by Herman B Wells and Wilfred C. Bain. We are pleased to acknowledge outright gifts made between July 1, 2011, and June 30, 2012.

Friends of Music

$100,000 and Above The Estate of Marvin Carmack

David H. Jacobs, Jr.

Ruth Albright Eleanor J. Byrnes

Jim and Laura Byrnes Mark and Alora McAlister

$5,000 - $99,000 Murray and Sue Robinson Scott and Kathryn Schurz

Guarantor Scholarship Circle Hoagy Carmichael $10,000

Rusty and Ann Harrison

Dick and Barbara Schilling

Cole Porter $5,000 - $9,999 Bob Barker and Patsy Fell-Barker Nelda M. Christ Jeanette C. Marchant

John and Adele* Edgeworth Stephen and Jo Ellen Ham Susie J. Dewey

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

Herbert Kuebler and Phil Evans

Charles and Julia McClary

Ross S. Jennings Darby A. McCarty Raymond H. Tichenor*

Silver $1,000 - $2,499 Gary and Kathy Anderson Shaun and Jill Byrnes Jennifer Cast and Elizabeth Franklin William and Anita Cast Soeun Cho Jean Creek and Doris Shoultz-Creek Regina Dean Barbara J. Dunn Don B. Earnhart Paul and Ellen Gignilliat James and Joyce Grandorf Robert R. Greig Frank and Athena Hrisomalos

Peter P. Jacobi Ruth W. Johnson Kenneth and Linda Kaczmarek Timothy Kittleson and Michael Donaldson Peter and Monika Kroener Dennis and Judith Leatherman Ronald and Linda Maus Michael and Laurie McRobbie Gerald and Anne Moss Dale and Cynthia Nelson Rita O’Neill

John Pence John and Lois Pless Amy Rafkin Gwyn and Barbara Richards Phyllis C. Schwitzer Jefferson S. Shreve Curtis and Judith Simic L. Robert and Sylvia Stohler Gregg and Judith Summerville Mark Webb and Lee Ann Smith Jack R. Wentworth J. William and Joan Whitaker

Dean Wilfred C. Bain Circle Patrons $500 - $999 Robert Agranoff and Susan Klein James and Ruth Allen James and Susan Alling Margaret K. Bachman Olimpia F. Barbera A. James Barnes Richard E. Bishop Leland and Helen Butler John and Cathleen Cameron Edward S. Clark Fred and Suzanne Dahling Lee and Eleanore Dodge Sterling and Melinda Doster Mary P. Doyle Frank Eberle and Cathy Cooper

Stephen A. Ehrlich James and Jacqueline Faris Eugene J. Farkas Richard S. Forkner Edward and Mary Anne Fox Norman and Sharon Funk Howard and Virginia Gest Robert and Ann Harman Diane S. Humphrey Keith and Doris Johnson Gerald and Shirley Kurlander Robert and Sara LeBien Jerry and Phyllis McCullough William and Diana Miller Michael Molenda and Janet Stavropoulos

Ed Mongoven and Judy Schroeder Vera M. O’Lessker James and Carol Orr Leonard Phillips and Mary Wennerstrom Fred A. Place David and Virginia Rogers John and Lorna Seward Anthony and Jan Shipps Sheldon Stryker George and Viola Taliaferro Henry and Celicia Upper Galen Wood John and Linda Zimmermann

Sustainers $300 - $499 S. Christian and Mary Albright Rodger and Diana Alexander Marian Bates Mark and Ann Bear Shirley Bell Paul W. Borg Del and Carolyn Brinkman Jack and Pamela Burks Gerald and Elizabeth Calkins James and Carol Campbell Sarah Clevenger Bruce Corner and Gaye Gronlund James B. Culver Linda Degh-Vazsonyi John and Beth Drewes Harvey and Phyllis Feigenbaum J. Robert and Betty Fields Anne T. Fraker Kenneth R. Gros Louis Robert and Martha Gutmann Ralph Hamon and Sandra Kirby

Dell C. Harmsen Steven L. Hendricks Ernest Hite and Joan Pauls Lawrence and Celeste Hurst Anna L. Jerger Donald and Margaret Jones Howard and Linda Klug George and Cathy Korinek Ronald and Carolyn Kovener William and Mary Kroll Michael Larsen and Ayelet Lindenstrauss John and Julia Lawson Harlan Lewis and Doris Wittenburg Howard and Carolyn Lickerman P. A. Mack Perry J. Maull John and Geraldine Miller Herbert and Judy Miller Dawn E. Morley

Delano and Luzetta Newkirk Leonard and Louise Newman Martin Newman and Shirley Clements Newman Roger and Ruth Newton Harold and Denise Ogren Donald Orr and Caryl Thompson John and Lislott Richardson Albert and Kathleen Ruesink L. David Sabbagh and Linda Simon Richard C. Schutte Karen Shaw R. H. Small and E. Jane Hewitt Hugh and Cynthia St. Leger Margaret Strong Lewis H. Strouse Paula W. Sunderman Kenneth and Marcia VanderLinden Charles and Jane Watkins Steven and Judith Young

Donors $100 - $299 David and Melanie Alpers Ethan and Sandra Alyea Janette Amboise-Chaumont John and Teresa Ayres Richard and Adrienne Baach Mark J. Baker William and Honey Baldwin David and Judith Barnett Robert and Patricia Bayer David and Ingrid Beery Eva D. Bernhardt-Kabisch Michael and Vonora Bishop Donald P. Bogard Ellen R. Boruff Dirk Bowman and Melanie Hart Herbert and Juanita Brantley Keith and Maggie Brown Alexander and Virginia Buchwald Richard and Mary Burke Derek and Marilyn Burleson Barbara J. Byrum Barbara Carlson Carrol Cecil and Virginia Long-Cecil Milford and Margaret Christenson Marjorie L. Clayton Charles and Helen Coghlan Steven and Karin Coopersmith Lynn and Ute Coyne John R. Cutter Mark and Holly Dame Jefrey and Pamela Davidson Janice M. Dawson Julia DeHon Aldo and Deborah Della Ragione Theodore R. Deppe Gayl and Beverly Doster Jon and Sarah Dunn Peter and Pearl Ekstrom David R. Elliott Joe and Gloria Emerson Michael and Cheryl Engber Marianne Y. Felton George and Jo Fielding Linda Figen Charles R. Forker Don and Sandra Freund Bernardino and Caterina Ghetti Robin and Katherine Gilbert-O’Neil Jeffrey and Toby Gill Michael and Patricia Gleeson James and Constance Glen Vincent M. Golik Robert Goulet and Barbara Wolf Donald Gray and Susan Gubar John J. Greenman Jerry and Linda Gregory Samuel and Phyllis Guskin Thomas and Susan Hacker Hendrik and Jacobina Haitjema Richard Ham and Allison Stites Stanley and Hilary Hamilton Robert and Julie Hammel Andrew Hanson and Patricia Foster Kenneth and Janet Harker R. Victor Harnack Pierrette Harris Robert and Emily Harrison

James R. Hasler Lenore S. Hatfield Brett and Colleen Herrick James and Sandra Hertling David and Rachel Hertz John D. Hobson Cynthia R. Hogan Rona Hokanson Richard and Lois Holl Norman and Judy Holy Donna Hornibrook Ruth D. Houdeshel Jeffrey and Lesa Huber Llewellyn and Sally Humphreys Roger and Carol Isaacs Hideo and Setsuko Ito Donald and Wendy Jensen Marley Jesseph Martin D. Joachim Lora D. Johnson Ted Jones and Marcia Busch-Jones* Burton and Eleanor Jones Gwen J. Kaag Berkley Kalin Martin and Linda Kaplan Patricia C. Kellar Janet Kelsay Marilyn J. Kelsey Thomas and Mary Kendrick John and Julianne King Karl and Lynda Koehler Ernest and Dawn Koenig Peter Koenig and Mary Jamison Maryann Kopelov Shirley Krutilla Yvonne Y. Lai James* and Katherine Lazerwitz Edoardo A. Lebano Phillip and Linda Leckey Susanne J. Leggett Louis and Myrna Lemberger Leslie and Kathleen Lenkowsky Jon and Susan Lewis Mitzi A. Lewison Peter and Carol Lorenzen Terry Loucks Alvin and Susan Lyons Andrew and Jane Mallor William and Eleanor Mallory James L. McLay Theodore and Bessie Megremis Stephen and Sandra Moberly Alfred and Carol Moellering John and Patricia Mulholland Frank T. Nagler Lee and Ardith Nehrt Gloria G. Noone Douglas and Roma North Edward and Soili Ochsner Wesley and Patricia Oglesby Joan C. Olcott Marcus R. Oliphant Robert and Mary Orben Dan F. Osen Elayne Ostrower Harlan and Joanna Peithman James and Helen Pellerite

Harriet S. Pfister Ronald and Frona Powell Maryrose L. Pratter Earl and Dorothy Prout Richard Pugh and Elizabeth Baker Thomas and Bonnie Reilly Carl Rexroad and Carol Pierce Joseph M. Rezits Myfanwy Richards Joe and Sandra Ridenour Betty Rieger Roger and Tiiu Robison Catherine D. Rockwood John H. Rogers Allan and Barbara Ross John and Mary Rucker Jerard and Nancy Ruff Edward and Janet Ryan Arthur and Norma Schenck Lynn L. Schenck Deborah Besore-Schilling Fred and Jane Schlegel Robert and Alice Schloss Richard C. Searles Richard Shiffrin and Judith Mahy-Shiffrin J. Robert Shine Richard and Denise Shockley Michael A. Simkowitz Ruth Skernick Catherine A. Smith David Smith and Marie Libal-Smith Janet S. Smith Ethel C. Smith Fredric and Roberta Somach Stephen T. Sparks Janos and Rae Starker Malcolm and Ellen Stern Blount and Anna Stewart Robert and Virginia Stockton Bruce and Shannon Storm Ellen Strommen Linda Strommen William and Gayle Stuebe Lynette A. Svensson Saundra B. Taylor Charlotte H. Templin Charles E. Thompson William and Elizabeth Thomson Samuel Troxal and Donovan Walling Jeffrey S. Tunis Charles J. Van Tassel Wayne and Jane Vincent Sharon P. Wagner Martha F. Wailes George Walker and Carolyn Lipson-Walker Ewing and Kay Werlein G. Cleveland and Frances Wilhoit Robert and Patricia Williams James and Ruth Witten Thomas and Sara Wood Robert and Judy Woodley Virginia A. Woodward Thomas and Maria Zoss Mimi Zweig * Deceased

Corporations and Foundations Argonaut Club Avery & Greig, LLP Big Red Liquors, Inc.

Bloomington Thrift Shop Five Star Quality Care, Inc.

Redbud Hills Smithville Telephone Company, Inc.

Companies Providing Matching Gifts Eli Lilly & Company Global Impact

Goodrich Foundation IBM International Foundation

OneAmerica Financial Partners, Inc.

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

Esther Ritz Collyer* Douglas and Virginia Jewell Jeanette Calkins Marchant, in memory of Velma and Emerson Calkins

James and Helen Pellerite Judith E. Simic

Memorials and Honorariums Each year, we receive gifts in honor or in memory of individuals whose leadership and good works have enriched the lives of so many. We are pleased to recognize those special individuals and the donors whose gifts they have inspired. Ruth Albright, in memory of David Albright The Argonaut Club, in honor of Robert E. Williams Avery & Greig, LLP, in honor of David H. Jacobs’ 60th birthday Bill and Anita Cast, in memory of Esther Collyer Jennifer Cast and ElizabethFranklin, in honor of Anita Cast Janice Dawson, in honor of David H. Jacobs’ 60th birthday Regina Dean, in honor of David H. Jacobs’ 60th birthday Aldo and Deborah Della Ragione, in honor of David H. Jacobs’ 60th birthday Susie Dewey, in memory of Robert Dewey Stephen Ehrlich, in honor of John and Beth Drewes Richard and Susan Ferguson, in memory of Esther Collyer Richard Forkner, in memory of Frieda Myers Jeffrey and Toby Gill, in memory of Alan Bell James and Constance Glen, in memory of Kenda Webb Paul and Joyce Grant, in honor of Stephen and Jo Ellen Ham Robert Greig, in honor of David H. Jacobs’ 60th birthday

Richard Ham and Allison Stites, in memory of Frieda Myers and in honor of Jo Ellen Ham Stephen and Jo Ellen Ham, in memory of Jeanne Forkner and Frieda Myers Ruth Houdeshel, in memory of Harry Houdeshel Peter Jacobi, in memory of David Albright Ross Jennings, in memory of Esther Collyer Timothy Kittleson and Michael Donaldson, in honor of David H. Jacobs’ 60th birthday Darby McCarty, in memory of David Albright Michael Molenda and Janet Stavropoulos, in memory of David Albright Vera O’Lessker, in memory of Esther Collyer and Eleanor Phillippe Rita O’Neill, in honor of David H. Jacobs’ 60th birthday Kent and Suzann Owen, in memory of Esther Collyer Harlan and Joanna Peithman, in memory of Kenda Webb and in honor of Charles Webb John Pence, in honor of David H. Jacobs’ 60th birthday Wayne Peterson, in honor of Anita Cast

Richard Pugh and Elizabeth Baker, in memory of Josef Gingold Amy Rafkin, in honor of David H. Jacobs’ 60th birthday Redbud Hills, in honor of Leonard and Louise Newman Carl Rexroad and Carol Pierce, in memory of George Van Arsdale Murray and Sue Robinson, in memory of David Albright Debi Besore-Schilling, in honor of Sylvia McNair Robert and Alice Schloss, in honor of the marriage of Chih-Yi Chen and Glen Kwok Joseph and Michelle Smuckler, in honor of Leonard and Louise Newman’s anniversary Henry and Celicia Upper, in memory of David Albright Ewing and Kay Werlein, in honor of Charles Webb Galen Wood, in honor of David H. Jacobs’ 60th birthday Sally Worrell, in memory of Esther Collyer Brian and Susan Yeley, in memory of David Albright Steven and Judith Young, in honor of Richard Saucedo * Deceased

IU Opera Theater Production Staff General Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dean Gwyn Richards Executive Director of Production . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Timothy Stebbins Director of Coaching and Music Administration . . . . . . . . . . . Kevin Murphy Executive Administrator of Instrumental Ensembles . . . . . . Thomas Wieligman Coordinating Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kimberly Carballo Coach/Accompanists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mark Phelps, Brian Eads Stage Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Trevor Regars Assistant Stage Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Nicholas Rainey Technical Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Alissia Lauer Director of Paint and Props . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mark F. Smith Lead Costume Specialist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dana Tzvetkova Costume Specialists . . . . . . . . . . . . Soraya Noorzad, Magdalena Tortoriello Wigs and Makeup Designer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Christy Clark Head of Lighting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Patrick Mero House Electrician . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Fritz Busch Stage Carpenters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ken D’Eliso, Andrew Hastings Administrative Production Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sarah Slover Director of Recording Arts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Konrad Strauss Sound Designer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Douglas McKinnie Audio Technician . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Fallon Stillman Audio Engineer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kyle Zucker Director of Marketing and Publicity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Alain Barker Box Office and House Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tridib Pal Publicity/Media Relations Specialist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Linda Cajigas Director of Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Neil Robinson Director of Digital Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Patrick Eddy Social Media Specialist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Brooke Feldman Program Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jonathan Shull Auditions and Casting Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Maria L. Levy Assistant Technical Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Nicholaus Miller Assistant Stage Carpenter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Zac Goodwin Assistant Electrician . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Skylar Delk Assistant Properties Master . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gwen Law Assistant First Hand . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Swallow Leach Assistant First Hand . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wendy Langdon Assistant First Hand . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noriko Zulkowski Assistant First Hand . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sarah Akemon

See it all W. A. Mozart Sept. 14, 15, 21, 22

The Merry Widow Franz Lehár Oct. 18, 19, 20, 21 new production

Cendrillon (Cinderella)

Jules Massenet Nov. 8, 9, 10, 11

Xerxes George Frideric Handel Feb. 1, 2, 8, 9 new production

BALLET

OPERA

Don Giovanni

Light and Shade Sept. 28, 29 Fall Ballet Sweet Fields Eight Easy Pieces Eight More Appalachian Spring

The Nutcracker Nov. 30 | Dec. 1, 2

Old World New World

March 22, 23 Spring Ballet Bournonville Suite The Four Temperaments Western Symphony

Akhnaten Philip Glass Feb. 22, 23 | March 1, 2 new production

Falstaff Giuseppe Verdi April 5, 6, 12, 13

Tickets Musical Arts Center Box Office Monday - Friday, 11:30-5:30 (812) 855-7433 music.indiana.edu/boxoffice

music.indiana.edu/operaballet