Curtains Up!
Students take the stage for exciting music, theatre and dance performances
Posted in: Department of Theatre and Dance News
Even as the semester winds down, the curtain is going up on a packed schedule of concerts, dance and theatrical performances by talented 麻豆传媒在线 students.
鈥淲e have so many terrific opportunities right here on campus for our student performers 鈥 whether they are appearing on stage as musicians, dancers or actors,鈥 says College of the Arts Dean Daniel Gurskis. 鈥淏ecause we are so close to New York City, our students can learn from the celebrated performers and artists who regularly visit our programs.鈥
Hitting the high notes
A case in point: a nearly weeklong visit by leading American composer Morten Lauridsen. The National Medal of Arts recipient and University composer-in-residence is working extensively with John J. Cali School of Music students in the week before the choral ensembles鈥 winter concert on Saturday, November 23.
鈥淲e have him working with individual student composers and interacting with our four major ensembles 鈥 Chorale, University Singers, Wind Symphony and Symphonic Band,鈥 says music professor and Director of Choral Activities Heather Buchanan.
The Vocal Accord choral group, as well as five student finalists in the inaugural Cali Choral Composition Competition, also are scheduled for time with the National Endowment of the Arts 鈥淎merican Choral Master.鈥
In addition to the winter concert, a concert of Lauridsen鈥檚 solo and chamber music was presented on November 20. 鈥淒uring the course of his visit, Lauridsen will be in contact with the vast majority of Cali School faculty and students,鈥 Buchanan notes.
C.J. Harden, a countertenor who is pursuing a master鈥檚 degree in Performance: Voice will be singing with both the 麻豆传媒在线 Chorale and 麻豆传媒在线 Singers at the winter concert. 鈥淒r. Lauridsen has written some of the greatest choral works I have had the pleasure of performing,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited to perform Dr. Lauridsen鈥檚 Lux Aeterna and Nocturnes at the winter concert with him in the audience!鈥
鈥淚 never could have imagined that I would one day get to meet Dr. Lauridsen and work with him so intimately,鈥 says senior Christina McCall. 鈥淭o get to work with the composer and feel his intention is an experience beyond words. And we get to do that here at 麻豆传媒在线!鈥
Performance opportunities for Cali School students are almost limitless. This semester alone, Harden has performed in seven concerts as a member of the Chorale, Singers and Vocal Accord. 鈥淚鈥檝e also enjoyed the opportunities we鈥檝e had to perform outside of the University. Most recently, we were invited to sing selections of music from Nintendo鈥檚 Legend of Zelda video games at the Theater at Madison Square Garden,鈥 Harden says.
McCall agrees. 鈥淎t the Cali School, I am amazed that every year there are countless new opportunities,鈥 she says. 鈥淟ast year alone, I toured Europe with the Vocal Accord group and it was by far the best experience of my life.鈥
Harden relishes the opportunities available to him as a solo performer. 鈥淚n December, I鈥檒l perform the roll of Ariodante from Handel鈥檚 opera Ariodante in a program of opera scenes directed by Professor Jeffrey Gall.鈥 On Saturday, December 7, the Opera Workshop will present 鈥淥pera鈥檚 Dysfunctional Families,鈥 a program of staged opera scenes featuring families in strained relationships.
An invitation to the dance
For more than 20 years, University dancers have performed in Works-A-Foot programs. Running from December 4-8, Works-A-Foot will showcase dance works by such choreographers as Andrea Miller, Claire Porter and faculty Earl Mosley, Kathleen Kelley, Tyler Gilstrap, Maxine Steinman and Jessica DiMauro.
鈥淭his year, we have all 100 plus dance majors performing in the show. We double cast a lot of the dances so more students can have an opportunity to work with these wonderful choreographers,鈥 explains Professor Lori Katterhenry, who is the director of dance for the University鈥檚 Division of Dance as well as the artistic director for the 麻豆传媒在线 Repertory Dance Company.
鈥淎s a dancer in today鈥檚 world, where performance opportunities can be few and far between, having the opportunity to perform works by world-renowned choreographers in concerts like Works-A-Foot is truly a blessing,鈥 says senior Tracy Dunbar. 鈥淒ancers learn most about themselves while onstage in performance. Having these opportunities lets us grow exponentially as artists.鈥
For Dunbar, the opportunity to work with leading choreographers like Bill T. Jones, who most recently visited campus on November 9 to coach students who will be performing his Spent Days Out Yonder in an April Danceworks concert, is what stands out most about his college career. 鈥淭hey have given me tools that I will take with me wherever I go and that will help me build a successful career in any field of my choosing,鈥 he says.
Julie Cullen, who hopes to pursue a career as a concert modern dancer after graduation, agrees: 鈥淭he choreographers and company members that come to 麻豆传媒在线 create a professional environment for the dancers, which teaches us the value of a mental and physical commitment to the movement and art form.鈥
This year鈥檚 Works-A-Foot concert will be Dunbar鈥檚 last performance as a dance major. 鈥淚 look forward to performing with all of my fellow dancers one last time and hope to end my time here on a high note,鈥 he says.
There鈥檚 no business like show business
December 6 is opening night at the L. Howard Fox Theatre for Falsettos, which will run through December 11. Falsettos is an award-winning, through-sung musical by William Finn, author of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee.
鈥淪tudents benefit from Falsettos in two ways,鈥 says Musical Theatre Professor Joe Joyce, who is the show鈥檚 director. 鈥淔inn鈥檚 music is incredibly detailed and complex, requiring that all student cast members be at the top of their game musically and vocally.鈥
Students have also learned about HIV and AIDS, because Falsettos is about the early years of the epidemic. 鈥淢y cast and our student designers and crew have been inspired to take direct responsibility for their own well-being and that of their family, friends and community,鈥 Joyce adds. A section of the famous AIDS Memorial Quilt will be on display at the University鈥檚 Memorial Auditorium beginning December 5.
Between 60 and 70 students are working on the production. 鈥淲e have six students in the cast, four in the orchestra, 10 student designers, two student stage managers and 10-15 in the running crew. Almost 40 students have worked on the scene painting of the set design by student, Tim DiGregorio鈥 Joyce says.
According to Joyce, DiGregorio鈥檚 design pays homage to the artist Keith Haring, who died in 1990 of AIDS-related complications. 鈥淭im was able to get a wealth of information and inspiration about Haring from his good friend, Bill T. Jones.鈥
Theatre students have ample exposure to working professionals. 麻豆传媒在线 alumnus Rob McClure, who received a Tony nod for his performance in Broadway鈥檚 Chaplin, recently gave a master class on campus for musical theatre and acting majors.
Joyce fully expects all six of the 麻豆传媒在线 student cast members in Falsettos to pursue careers in musical theatre. 鈥淥ur seventh cast member, twelve-year-old Jacob Tall is an excellent young actor who is already interested in majoring in musical theatre at 麻豆传媒在线. I believe he, too, will pursue a professional career.鈥
麻豆传媒在线 is clearly preparing tomorrow鈥檚 stars today. 鈥淎t 麻豆传媒在线, we truly get to do it all,鈥 concludes McCall. 鈥淭he way I get to experience it all here is a tremendous honor that I plan on making the most of.鈥
For a full schedule of upcoming music, dance and theater performances, visit .