CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA RICCARDO MUTI SYMPHONY … · 2018-12-11 · and rock legends from Oscar...
Transcript of CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA RICCARDO MUTI SYMPHONY … · 2018-12-11 · and rock legends from Oscar...
CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA RICCARDO MUTISYMPHONY CENTER PRESENTS
december 2018/january 2019
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contents
2 A Note from the Board Chair and President A welcoming message from Board of Trustees Chair
Helen Zell and Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association President Jeff Alexander
4 A Certain Electricity by Mike Thomas The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Brass prepares for its
annual concert.
12 Negaunee Music Institute at the Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Learn about the Civic Fellows program and, beginning on page 16, more about the relationship between the Civic Orchestra of Chicago and the CSO.
15 Symphony Center Information Learn more about Symphony Center facilities and resources.
18 Our Donors and Volunteers Recognition of our generous donors and volunteers, plus
photo highlights from Symphony Ball
41 Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association Board of Trustees and Governing Members
44 Our Donors and Volunteers, continuedGLOBAL SPONSOR OF THE CSO
chicago symphony orchestraProgram Book ProductionFrances Atkins Content DirectorPhillip Huscher Program AnnotatorGerald Virgil Senior Content EditorLaura Sauer Content EditorKristin Tobin Designer
Bryan Dowling Exclusive [email protected]
PHOTOGRAPHY BY TODD ROSENBERG
© 2018 Chicago Symphony OrchestraAll rights reserved.
25 Program Information about the program and the performers for this concert
rightAfter near sell-out performances of Handel’s Messiah in 2015, this treasured choral work returns for the holiday season led by renowned English Handelian, Matthew Halls, in his CSO debut. Joining the CSO and Chorus are a distinguished roster of soloists including soprano Amanda Forsythe, mezzo-soprano Sasha Cooke, tenor Nicholas Phan, and, in his CSO debut, baritone Joshua Hopkins. (December 20, 21, 22, and 23)
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a note from the chair and the president
PHOTOS BY TODD ROSENBERG
Zell Music Director Riccardo Muti recently spoke to the audience before a concert about the importance of cultural values passed from one generation to the next. During this festive time of year, many families and friends are able to join us, and we are honored to be part of their holiday traditions. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra gives us the gift of hearing classical repertoire performed at the highest level, making these musical experiences the perfect means for celebration year after year.
Now is also a season for giving and expressing gratitude. All of our programs are made possible through generous gifts from friends like you. Your generosity makes you part of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association’s ongoing pursuit of artistic excellence, development of new audiences, innovative education and community pro-grams, and sharing the music we love with listeners here in Chicagoland and around the world. It also ensures that the important work of the CSOA continues for generations to come.
Please consider supporting the Chicago Symphony Orchestra by making a gift to the Association’s Annual Fund this season. Your support will help the CSO remain a world-class orchestra and will ensure the ongoing legacy of programs that engage over 1,000,000 people each year in life-changing musical experiences.
On behalf of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Chicago Symphony Chorus, Civic Orchestra of Chicago, Negaunee Music Institute, our trustees, volunteers, administration, and above all, the many people whose lives are enriched each year through music, we thank you for your support.
We send our warmest wishes for a music-filled, happy and healthy New Year. We look forward to seeing you in Orchestra Hall soon.
Helen Zell Chair, Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association Board of Trustees
Jeff Alexander President, Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association
dear friends of the cso
To make a contribution, please visit cso.org/makeagift or contact Donor Services at 312-294-3100. Thank you for your support of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
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The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Brass prepares for its annual concert on December 19.
by mike thomas
L ong celebrated for its lyricism, dynamism, and virtuosity, the brass section of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra has been a standout element of a world-class ensemble since
the days of Fritz Reiner. As a separate artistic entity, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Brass has cultivated a rock star–like follow-ing of deeply dedicated fans worldwide. Its concerts, including the annual December showcase at Symphony Center, receive boisterous ovations.
“We actually sell extra seats onstage [to the CSO Brass annual concert], so we’re a little cocky about that,” says CSO trombone Michael Mulcahy, the group’s director, with a laugh. “We’re just a small section of the Orchestra, but we have a pretty strong draw.” Along with Mulcahy, the CSO Brass consists of horns Daniel
ALL PHOTOS BY TODD ROSENBERG
a certain
Electricityleft to rightA view of the 2017 Symphony Center Presents Chicago Symphony Orchestra Brass performance.
CSO Trombone Michael Mulcahy conducting, December 20, 2017
Quotes from past interviews with CSO Brass members appear throughout the article. For more on the CSO and the musicians, please visit csosoundsandstories.org.
december 2018/january 2019 5
Gingrich (acting principal), James Smelser, David Griffin, Oto Carrillo, and Susanna Gaunt; trumpets Mark Ridenour (acting prin-cipal), John Hagstrom, and Tage Larsen; trom-bones Jay Friedman (principal) and Charles
Vernon; and tuba Gene Pokorny (principal).
The origins of the CSO Brass concerts date to the early 1950s, when legendary musicians such as Adolph Herseth, Arnold Jacobs, and Frank Crisafulli formed the Chicago Symphony Brass Quintet. Members of the full section began performing stand-alone concerts in the 1970s. Since 2006, as part of the
Symphony Center Presents Special Concerts offer-ings, the CSO Brass has offered its annual show-case. Although the concerts take place around Christmas, they are not holiday-themed. Of the works on this year’s program, only Tchaikovsky’s
“ I am very honored to be part of the ensemble. The reputation of the brass section developed in the mid-1940s with Arnold Jacobs (tuba) on one end and, later, a new hire Adolph Herseth (trumpet) on the top. With malleable colleagues in the middle between these strong bookends, a formidable brass section was forged.”
— G E N E P OKOR N Y, PR I NC I PA L T U BA
“ I attended my first CSO concert in 1969. I remember climbing the stairs to the gallery and feeling very much out of place—a teenager in Orchestra Hall. Solti conducted Mahler’s Symphony no. 2 that day, and I was transported to a world where I felt I did indeed belong. As I descended those stairs, I was determined to do everything in my power to become a professional musician.”
— DA N I E L G I NG R IC H , AC T I NG PR I NC I PA L HOR N
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Suite from The Nutcracker, arranged by Timothy Higgins, fits that bill.
“That’s not really our forte,” replies Mulcahy concerning holiday fare. “We belong to a very significant institution, so the program itself has to have musical and artistic integrity, as well as being engaging and enter-taining. As part of that, every program [features] music that was origi-nally written for brass, not just arranged [for these instruments].”
An example on this year’s program is Raymond Premru’s Symphony for Brass
and Percussion (1994). Premru’s distinguished career as a trombonist include his longtime membership of the Philharmonia Orchestra of London in addition to leading several jazz groups and brass ensem-bles and performing and recording with jazz and rock legends from Oscar Peterson and Ella Fitzgerald to Pink Floyd, the Rolling Stones, and the Beatles (including the iconic Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band album). The sym-phony encompasses many of these brass styles and timbres with which Premru was famil-
iar as a performer and composer.Performing music by composers who are
themselves brass players has distinct advan-tages. “Sometimes young composers, in particular, will write something with no knowledge of how
any instrument works, so you can only play an approximation,” Mulcahy explains. “Whereas something like Premru’s symphony is very informed and very idi-omatic to play, but very challenging, too.”
Because the CSO Brass performs this annual concert in addition to its CSO performances,
“ Having a job in the CSO is a great honor, but it’s also tough. It’s not like winning an Olympic medal, where once you get it you’re forever seen as a champion. As a CSO musician, you have to keep demonstrating superlative skill every single week. Your commitment to excellence does not end after your audition—it’s a way of life.”
— JOH N HAG ST ROM , T RUM PET
top to bottomMembers of the CSO Brass, including John Hagstrom, Mark Ridenour, and Michael Mulcahy (center), take a bow at last season’s concert.
CSO Trumpet John Hagstrom addresses the audience at the 2017 concert.
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Mulcahy is ever mindful of the group’s endurance when choosing (with input from his colleagues) repertoire. The pro-gram represents a lot of extra work, he acknowledges, “and sometime it’s like, ‘Wow, we’ve got to climb this mountain again.’ But when we give this concert, when we go onstage, we [think], ‘Oh, yeah.’ This is a special atmosphere that’s not present in that way in any other forum. There is an electricity, and our audience goes pretty crazy.”
Mulcahy also knows from extensive personal experience how taxing brass instruments are to play—especially when they make up the majority of instruments onstage. “Musically speaking, we have to represent the entire pallet of the orchestra with about twenty musicians, so it’s artistically challenging,” he says, “And it’s physically challeng-ing, because we have to play all the notes. No one doubles our parts.
“The Chicago Symphony Brass is famous for dynamics and articulation,” adds Mulcahy. “The
ability to play smoothly, the ability to sing, the ability to play with great clarity and articulation, and to sustain a very smooth line are specifically hallmarks of the CSO brass section. And that tradition precedes all of us who are currently in the section.
“Anyone who plays for the Bulls knows there was a certain Michael Jordan in town in the 1990s,” Mulcahy notes, “and that [fact] will forever hover over you.” So while Mulcahy and his col-leagues are intensely present onstage, the past is never far away.
Mike Thomas, a Chicago-based writer, is the author of the books You Might Remember Me: The Life and Times of Phil Hartman and Second City Unscripted: Revolution and Revelation at the World-Famous Comedy Theater.
“ The style [of the CSO Brass] is so strong and has been well established through the years. I was lucky enough to play with Mr. [Arnold] Jacobs and Mr. [Adolph] Herseth for about thirty-five years, to learn from them, and to carry on the tradition with my colleagues.”
— JAY F R I E DM A N , PR I NC I PA L T ROM B ON E
abovePerformers share a laugh with Gene Pokorny (principal tuba) and Charles Vernon (bass trombone), seated fourth and fifth from left, December 20, 2017.
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What’s Old is NewChicago premiere of music from a newly rediscovered 15th-century songbook! Singers & instrumentalists bring this lush music to life, accompanied by gorgeous projected manuscript images.
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“Chicago’s gift to the
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A VIRTUOSIC SHOWCASE OF 19TH-CENTURY ITALIAN MUSIC IN ALL ITS PASSION, JOY AND HEARTBREAK
Includes selections from Verdi’s Nabucco, Macbeth and I vespri siciliani, intermezzos by Puccini and Mascagni and Boito’s Prologue to Mefistofele. Recorded live in Orchestra Hall, June 2017.
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100 years ago, CSO music director
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Symphony Orchestra’s concert
series for children, and it continues
to this day. As part of the centennial
celebration, the Negaunee Music
Institute is collecting stories and
memories of these concerts. If
you’ve ever attended a CSO School
or Family concert, we would love
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Celebrating the 100th season of the CSO’s concert series for children
Please visit cso.org/CentennialStories to share your experience.
PB_Negaunee_100_6.5×9.5.indd 1 10/25/18 12:48 PM
the negaunee music institute at the cso
12 cso.org PHOTOS BY TODD ROSENBERG
Civic Fellows prepare for the future by studying the past
S ince its founding in 1919 by the CSO’s second music director, Frederick Stock, the Civic Orchestra has strived to be an
ensemble that serves Chicago, offering free per-formances at Symphony Center as well as innova-tive programming in communities across the city. Throughout the orchestra’s 100 seasons of growth and evolution, its members have immersed themselves in the rich culture of Chicago’s diverse neighbor-hoods in order to ensure that Civic’s identity as an orchestra for the city endures.
CSO Judson and Joyce Green Creative Consultant Yo-Yo Ma inspired the founding of the Civic Orchestra Fellowship program, which launched in September 2013. Since then, the fellows have been at the forefront of Civic’s work in Chicago’s neighborhoods: teaching and mentoring young musicians, creating interactive concerts for students in schools, and designing musical projects that respond to community need.
O n a rainy Friday in early September, fifteen Civic Orchestra of Chicago Fellows crossed the street to see two exhibits at
the Art Institute of Chicago: John Singer Sargent and Chicago’s Gilded Age and Never a Lovely So Real. The first exhibit featured portraits of prom-inent Chicagoans from the turn of the twentieth century, a period when the city was striving for recognition as a center for art and culture; the second presented photography and film from 1950 to 1980 depicting a cultural history of Chicago’s
neighborhoods, many of them fiercely segregated. The dichotomy of these portrayals of Chicago was fitting for a year in which the Civic Orchestra considers its own 100-year history and its role of the city’s cultural future.
Back at Symphony Center, the fellows reflected on what they saw and considered how Chicago’s complicated sociopolitical history can inform the work they do and the art they create this season. The Civic Fellows will design musical projects that draw inspiration from the past 100 years of Chicago’s history across all of its neighbor-hoods. According to first-year Civic Fellow Juan Olivares, “It’s important that we don’t position
Civic Fellows interact with community partners at (clockwise from top left) Apostolic Church of God, Carson Elementary School, Agassiz Elementary School at the CSO-Connect culminating event hosted by Disney Magnet School, and on stage at Orchestra Hall with the People’s Music School.
december 2018/january 2019 13
the negaunee music institute at the cso
ourselves as the guardians of culture, but rather create work that celebrates the stories, culture, and art that already exist in this city.”
In January 2019, the Civic Fellows will create a memorized, interactive musical program that they will perform in thirteen public elementary,
middle, and high schools. The program will feature excerpts from symphonies by Florence Price, who became the first black American woman to have an orchestral work performed by a major American orches-tra with the 1933 premiere of her Symphony in E minor by the Chicago Symphony under Stock.
The fellows will also col-laborate with teaching artists from the Irene Taylor Trust, a London-based organization, to
write original songs that tell the stories of Chicago teens involved with the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice and with Chicagoans who have lost family members to gun violence.
You can follow the activities of the 2018–19 Civic Fellows at civicfellows.org .
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cameras and recording devices Photography, video recording, audio recording, or the use of any kind of recording device is prohib-ited during the performance in order to protect the rights of our musicians and visiting artists.
mobile devices Please turn off or silence all personal electronic devices before the performance begins.
late seating policy If you must arrive late or reenter the seating area after leaving it, you will be seated at the discretion of the house management during program pauses that are designated by the conductor or musicians. Some programs do not allow for late seating. If you need to leave early, please do so between program works so as not to disturb others.
facilities for patrons with special needs Symphony Center is accessible to all per-sons who have special needs. Push-button doors are located at the south end of the main entrance. Elevators and removable seats on the Main Floor, Upper Balcony, and Gallery make wheelchair access easy and accessible. Restrooms are located on the Lower Level and second, fourth, sixth, and seventh floors. A family-assist restroom is located in the sixth floor lobby for patrons requiring assis-tance from a companion. Call 312-294-3000 for more information.
complimentary cough lozenges Walgreens generously provides the compli-mentary cough lozenges found in the Symphony Center lobbies.
first aid In case of a medical emergency, please contact the nearest usher.
prohibited items Carrying loaded, con-cealed firearms is prohibited in Symphony Center.
backpacks, oversize bags, and parcels The CSOA requires that oversized bags be checked at one of our many Coat Checks
conveniently located throughout Symphony Center. There is no charge to check these items. The CSOA also reserves the right to search bags for security reasons.
emergency evacuation The lighted red EXIT sign nearest your seat indicates the shortest route outdoors. Fire exits are located on all levels of Symphony Center and should be used only in emergencies.
lost and found If you have lost an item, please call our Lost and Found service, 312-294-3000, during business hours. Unclaimed items are held for two months.
the symphony store For CSO record-ings, gifts, and apparel, visit Symphony Store. Open Tuesday through Saturday, 11:30 to 5:00, and before all CSO performances. Located at 67 E. Adams and online at symphonystore.com
december 2018/january 2019 15
symphony center information
We are delighted that you have joined us for this performance. Below you will find information that addresses questions we often receive, and which can help provide the most enjoyable and safest experience for all. For more information, please ask an usher or, after this performance, visit cso.org/plan-your-experience/questions.
We are very grateful to The Saints—Volunteers for the Performing Arts (saintschicago.org), who assist our staff ushers in serving our patrons.
Enhance your concert experienceJoin us for FREE preconcert conversations held 75 minutes prior to all CSO Main concerts (12:15 p.m. for Friday matinees).
Learn about your concerts on CSO Sounds and Stories through articles, interviews, videos, and more! Visit cso.org/sas.
Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube to learn more about the CSO and Symphony Center.
Visit concert event pages on cso.org for more information about your concerts, including artist biographies.
Access program notes before and after the perfor-mance on each concert’s event page at cso.org or at csosoundsandstories.org/category/program-books. You can enjoy learning about the music and the CSO even if you cannot attend a performance!
the negaunee music institute at the cso
16 cso.org PHOTOS BY TODD ROSENBERG
From the Civic Orchestra of Chicago to the Chicago Symphony Orchestra: 100 seasonsSince 1919, young artists have sought membership in the Civic Orchestra of Chicago to develop their talents and prepare for careers as professional musicians. Founded by Frederick Stock, second music director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the Civic Orchestra is the only season-long training orchestra of its kind affiliated with a major American orchestra.
The then Civic Music Student Orchestra was intended to func-tion as a means “to reduce the dependence of this country upon European sources of supply for trained orchestral musicians” as well as a reserve from which talent could be drawn into the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Five hundred young musicians auditioned in January 1920, eighty-six were accepted, and the ensemble made its debut on March 29. Frederick Stock, assistant conductor Eric DeLamarter, and CSO violin and viola George Dasch shared conducting duties, leading works by Elgar, Godard, Grieg, Halvorsen, Keller, and Tchaikovsky in this first concert.
The Civic Orchestra’s first roster in 1919–20 included several future Chicago Symphony Orchestra members, among them cello Theodore Ratzer, hired by Stock in 1920 and a member of the sec-tion until 1957. Currently, fourteen Chicago Symphony Orchestra musicians are Civic Orchestra alumni.
top to bottomCivic Orchestra class photo ca. 1925 under the direction of CSO Assistant Conductor Eric DeLamarter. PHOTO BY BURKE-KORETKE PHOTOGRAPHY
Civic Orchestra member Daniel Gingrich visits Dulles School in the West Woodlawn neighborhood with his Civic Orchestra colleagues on March 8, 1972. Gingrich joined the CSO in 1975, and is now acting principal horn.PHOTO BY TERRY ’S PHOTOGRAPHY
december 2018/january 2019 17
the negaunee music institute at the cso
The program’s unique access to the CSO through immersive experiences with its musi-cians and some of today’s most sought-after conductors—including the CSO’s Zell Music Director Riccardo Muti—helps many Civic alumni go on to prestigious professional positions. Each season there are side-by-side rehearsals, coaching sessions, mock auditions, and private lessons with CSO musicians; reading sessions with guest conductors; career development workshops; master classes with CSO guest artists as opportu-nities arise; and numerous opportunities through-out the season to play chamber music.
Civic Orchestra musicians develop as excep-tional orchestral players and engaged artists, culti-vating their ability to succeed in the rapidly evolv-ing world of music in the twenty-first century. Following is a current list of Civic coaches that work directly with Civic members each season:Robert Chen Concertmaster
The Louis C. Sudler Chair, endowed by an anonymous benefactor
Baird Dodge Principal Second ViolinLi-Kuo Chang Acting Principal Viola
The Paul Hindemith Principal Viola Chair, endowed by an anonymous benefactor
John Sharp Principal CelloThe Eloise W. Martin Chair
Alexander Hanna Principal BassThe David and Mary Winton Green Principal Bass Chair
Sarah Bullen Principal HarpStefán Ragnar Höskuldsson Principal Flute
The Erika and Dietrich M. Gross Principal Flute ChairScott Hostetler Oboe and English HornStephen Williamson Principal ClarinetWilliam Buchman Assistant Principal BassoonDaniel Gingrich Acting Principal HornMark Ridenour Acting Principal TrumpetJay Friedman Principal TromboneCharles Vernon Bass TromboneGene Pokorny Principal Tuba
The Arnold Jacobs Principal Tuba Chair, endowed by Christine Querfeld
David Herbert Principal TimpaniThe Clinton Family Fund Chair
Vadim Karpinos Assistant Principal Timpani, PercussionCynthia Yeh Principal PercussionMary Sauer Former Principal KeyboardPeter Conover Principal Librarian
The Civic Orchestra is very grateful for the mentorship of CSO musicians as well as proud of the myriad distinguished alumni that have graduated from the program. To learn more about the Civic Orchestra’s centennial season visit cso.org/civic .
left to rightComposite of fourteen current CSO members who are Civic alumni, [top, left to right]: horn Oto Carrillo, principal trombone Jay Friedman, violin Kozue Funakoshi, acting principal horn Daniel Gingrich, horn David Griffin; [middle, left to right] bass Mark Kraemer, viola Danny Lai, bass Stephen Lester, viola Diane Mues; [bottom, left to right] cello David Sanders, horn James Smelser, cello Gary Stucka, harp Lynne Turner, and viola Weijing WangPHOTO BY TODD ROSENBERG
Civic’s centennial season began with a special side-by-side concert with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Riccardo Muti.PHOTO BY TODD ROSENBERG
18 cso.org
volunteer leadership and opportunities
The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association is profoundly grateful to the leaders and volunteers listed here and invites you to consider these volunteer opportunities.
governing members are leading individuals of the CSOA family and serve as its first established volunteer group, celebrating their 124th year in the 2018–19 season. GMs provide elevated enthusiasm and support for the CSOA’s artistic excellence and educational innovation. Members receive opportunities to gain a deeper connection with CSO’s musicians and orga-nization, as well as with fellow members through special access, ticketing services, events, and meetings. To learn more, call 312-294-3337.The women’s board promotes the artistic excellence and exemplary education programs of the Orchestra by engaging women leaders in advo-cacy and fundraising efforts. The board supports annual fundraising events to benefit the Orchestra, including its signature event, Symphony Ball. To learn more, please call 312-294-3160.The league is a creative, vibrant, and dedicated group of over 250 members with over an eighty-year history of supporting the CSO. Members plan and produce fundraising and social events; implement outreach opportunities for adults and children, such as the Young Artists Competition and the Docent Program; and support audience development. To learn more, please call 312-294-3170 or email [email protected] overture council is a dynamic group of young professionals ages 21 to 45 who have a love of music and a desire to learn more about how to support the CSO. Members have many opportunities to attend social activities and concert evenings together. Connect with new friends who share the same interests! Check out the Overture Council’s innovative event Soundpost—open to all! Learn more at cso.org/overturecouncil and cso.org/soundpost.The CSO latino alliance is a liaison and partner that connects the CSO with Chicago’s diverse community by creating awareness, sharing insights, and building relationships for generations to come. The group encourages individuals and their families to discover and experience timeless music with other enthusiasts in concerts, receptions, and educational events. To learn more, email [email protected], visit cso.org/latinoalliance, or join the CSO Latino Alliance Facebook group.The mission of the CSOA’s african american network is to engage Chicago’s culturally rich African American community through the sharing and exchanging of unforgettable musical experiences. The AAN seeks to serve and encourage individuals and families, educators and students, musicians and composers, and churches and businesses to expe-rience the timeless beauty of music. To learn more about how you can be involved, contact Sheila Jones, director of community stewardship, at [email protected] or call 312-294-3045.auxiliary volunteers provide invaluable administrative support in a variety of ways by working in the office during regular business hours. Occasional evening and weekend opportunities also are available. Please call 312-294-3160 to learn more.
governing members executive commit teeJared Kaplan ChairmanTimothy A. Duffy Immediate
Past ChairmanCharles Emmons Jr. Vice
Chairman of the Annual FundEric Kalnins Vice Chairman of
Member EngagementMichael A. Perlstein Vice
Chairman of Nominations and Membership
women’s boardElizabeth A. Parker PresidentElisabeth Adams Immediate
Past PresidentHyla Kallen Communications/
Governance ChairJudith E. Feldman Community
Engagement ChairKatie Barber Membership Chair
league executive commit teeMimi Duginger PresidentWilliam Ward Vice President
of AdministrationKathy Solaro Vice President
of AreasNany Friedman Vice President
of EducationMarcia Lewis Vice President
of EventsClaretta Meier Vice President
of FinanceCheryl Istvan Acting Vice
President of FundraisingMary Goodkind Vice President
of MembershipBonnie McGrath SecretaryDenise Stauder Strategic
Planning ChairSue Bridge, Earle Cromer III
Members-at-Large
overture council executive commit teeErika Knierim PresidentJohn Dunson President-elect,
Membership ChairKathryn Davies Activities ChairKathie Chong Audience
Development ChairHank Bell Cultural Outreach ChairAmy Fallon
Communications ChairDavid Greene Social Media ChairElliot Callighan, Kristin Jaburek
Soundpost Co-chairsDanielle Flagg Secretary
latino alliance LeadershipRamiro J. Atristaín-Carrión Chair
The Volunteer Programs office is located at 67 East Adams, 6th floor. 312-294-3160
Contact Karen Bullen at 312-294-3192 or visit cso.org/PlannedGiving for more information.
Join the Theodore Thomas Society
“As loyal audience members and supporters of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Civic Orchestra of Chicago, it was important for our estate plans to support music education and engagement with communities in our great city.”
— Dr. Leo and Catherine Miserendino
Discover the benefits of making a legacy gift to your Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
Named in honor of the founding music director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the Theodore Thomas Society recognizes those who make financial plans to benefit the CSO in the future.
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event spotlight
CSOA’s Annual Symphony Ball October 6, 2018On the evening of October 6, Zell Music Director Riccardo Muti conducted the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s annual Symphony Ball concert. The program, supported by pre-senting sponsor Northern Trust, included four of Brahms’s Hungarian Dances, Puccini’s intermezzo from Manon Lescaut, and waltzes by Josef Strauss and Johann Strauss, Jr. Described by the Chicago Tribune as “poetry on the key-board,” David Fray performed Mozart’s Piano Concerto no. 24. It was a rich evening of Austro-German and Italian musical splendor.
The night began with a champagne reception with hors d’oeuvres and performances by members of the Civic Orchestra of Chicago. After the CSO concert, Symphony Ball guests continued their evening with dinner and dancing in the Grand Ballroom of the Palmer House.
Presented by the Women’s Board of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association and chaired by Leigh Ann and Casey Herman along with co-chairs Donna L. Kendall and David E. McNeel, the gala event raised over $1.31 million for the organization. The evening also honored longtime supporters Richard and Helen Thomas with many attendees making gifts in tribute to their generosity.
PHOTOS BY TODD ROSENBERG
Presented by the Women’s Board of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association
symphony ball chairsLeigh Ann and Casey Herman
symphony ball co-chairsDonna L. KendallDavid E. McNeel
women’s board presidentElizabeth A. Parker
honoreesRichard and Helen Thomas
global sponsorBank of America
presenting sponsorNorthern Trust
official airlineUnited Airlines
media sponsorsWBBM Newsradio 780
and 105.9 FMChicago Magazine
left to rightDavid E. McNeel, Casey and Leigh Ann Herman, Donna L. Kendall, Riccardo Muti, and Keiko and Jeff Alexander
Mimi and Robert Murley celebrate the start of the season on the dance floor.
december 2018/january 2019 21
event spotlight
clockwise from topMembers of the Women’s Board of the CSOA enjoy Symphony Ball, an event they present each season.
Keith Crow and Elizabeth A. Parker with Leigh Ann and Casey Herman
CSO violins Gina DiBello, Qing Hou, Yuan-Qing Yu (assistant concertmaster), Sando Shia, Rachel Goldstein, Florence Schwartz, Zell Music Director Riccardo Muti, Susan Synnestvedt, Stephanie Jeong (associate concertmaster), and Aiko Noda backstage at the Symphony Ball concert
Herald trumpets welcome guests to the Palmer House
22 cso.org
sponsors
The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association is grateful for the generous support of this season’s major corporate sponsors.
global sponsor of the cso
official airline of the cso
december 2018/january 2019 23
executive spotlight
renée me tcalf, marke t executive, illinois global commercial banking
Bank of America Merrill LynchBank of America is proud to continue its long-standing support of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Our partnership not only delivers artistic quality but also helps to create meaningful connections
with a diverse audience base in Chicago and around the world.
e. scot t santi, chairman and chief executive officer
ITWITW is proud to support the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and its long tradition of excellence in providing extraordinary classical music perfor- mances for audiences here in Chicago
and around the world.
steve shebik , vice chairThe Allstate Corporation
Allstate applauds the CSO for its commitment to enrich community and educational programs in our hometown of Chicago. We are a proud supporter of the Negaunee Music Institute
at the CSO, as we believe that good starts young.
david r. casper, u.s. ceoBMO Financial Group
The Chicago Symphony Orchestra commands the admiration of music lovers worldwide. Its reputation across the world brings acclaim to our great city, and its programming and outreach connect audiences
through the bond of music. As a proud admirer and supporter, BMO is pleased to help play a role in strengthening the CSO, one of our city’s greatest cultural legacies.
ed wehmer, president & ceoWintrust Financial
Chicago has become a cultural touchstone for some of the most celebrated musical acts in the world. As Chicago’s Bank, we’re honored to support the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and its dedication
to inspiring musicians in our community with educational programs that instill hard work, discipline, and creativity and through the power of music. Their work demonstrates that we can all play a unique part to produce something magical.
christopher l . culp, managing directorFinancial Economics Consulting, Inc.
The CSO commands respect both locally and worldwide and is an important ambassador of our city to the rest of the world. We are proud to support this amazing and unparalleled symphony
in all of its pursuits at home and abroad.
global sponsor of the cso
Available at cso.org, iTunes, The Symphony Store and through digital retailers everywhere.
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CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
MUTIRICCARDO
BRUCKNER
Resound_no_RGB.indd 1 10/3/18 11:04 AM
december 2018/january 2019 25
one hundred twenty-eighth season
Chicago Symphony OrchestraRiccardo Muti Zell Music DirectorYo-Yo Ma Judson and Joyce Green Creative Consultant GLOBAL SPONSOR OF THE CSO
Thursday, December 20, 2018, at 8:00Friday, December 21, 2018, at 1:30Saturday, December 22, 2018, at 8:00Sunday, December 23, 2018, at 2:00
Matthew Halls ConductorAmanda Forsythe SopranoSasha Cooke Mezzo-sopranoNicholas Phan TenorJoshua Hopkins BaritoneChicago Symphony Chorus
Duain Wolfe Director
handel MessiahPart 1
intermission
Part 2Part 3
The appearance of Matthew Halls is made possible by the Juli Plant Grainger Fund for Artistic Excellence.
The appearance of the Chicago Symphony Chorus is made possible by a generous gift from Jim and Kay Mabie.
United Airlines is the Official Airline of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
This program is partially supported by a grant from the Illinois Arts Council Agency.
26 one hundred twenty-eighth season
The Chicago Symphony Orchestra is grateful to
Bank of America
for its generous support as the Global Sponsor of the CSO.
global sponsor of the cso
comments by phillip huscher
december 2018/january 2019 27
george frideric handelBorn February 23, 1685; Halle, Saxony, GermanyDied April 14, 1759, London, England
Messiah
composedAugust 22–September 14, 1741
first performanceApril 13, 1742; Dublin, Ireland; the composer conducting
instrumentationsoloists and mixed chorus, two oboes, two bassoons, two trumpets, timpani, strings, organ
approximate performance time2 hours, 25 minutes
first cso performancesDecember 25 and 26, 1891, Auditorium Theatre. Jennie Patrick Walker, Pauline Rommeiss Bremmer, William J. Lavin, and Emil Fischer as soloists; Apollo Musical Club (William L. Tomlins, director); William L. Tomlins conducting
most recent cso performancesDecember 10, 11, 12, 15, and 20, 2015, Orchestra Hall. Lydia Teuscher, Allyson McHardy, Jeremy Ovenden, and Kyle Ketelsen as soloists; Chicago Symphony Chorus (Duain Wolfe, director); Bernard Labadie conducting
cso recording1984. Kiri Te Kanawa, Anne Gjevang, Keith Lewis, and Gwynne Howell as soloists; Chicago Symphony Chorus (Margaret Hillis, director); Sir Georg Solti conducting
On April 6, 1759, just eight days before he died, Handel appeared in public for the last time, blind and partially paralyzed by a series of strokes, to attend London’s annual performance of his Messiah. Not a year has passed without a performance of it since. Messiah has even been sung in a Zulu translation by a black choir, perform-ing with a white orchestra, at the
Pietermaritzburg City Hall in Natal, South Africa, for an enthusiastic audience that included the king of the Zulu nation.
Handel couldn’t have imagined such a fate for his oratorio—even though its annual presentation was already something of a London ritual at the end of his life—for the idea of playing music of previous generations was nearly unheard of during his lifetime. The concept of music speaking to an entirely different culture wasn’t something that would have occurred even to as worldly a man as Handel—born in Germany, trained in Italy, a resident of England, famous throughout western Europe, fluent in four languages, and exceptionally well traveled for a citizen of the eighteenth century, when most people lived and died within a few miles of their birthplace.
But Messiah was an exception—recognized as a landmark almost at once and loved more than any other piece of vocal music by generation after generation, each with its own ideas about how Handel’s music should sound. Its history followed a very different course from Bach’s Saint Matthew Passion, com-posed just fourteen years before Messiah, which was all but for-gotten after Bach’s death and waited until Mendelssohn’s famous revival in 1829—a century after the first performance—for its rediscovery.
Unlike Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony or Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring, works that today also are considered icons, Messiah was acclaimed from the start. After the public rehearsal that pre-ceded the first performance in Dublin in 1742, the local Journal reported that Messiah “was allowed by the greatest Judges to be the finest Composition of Musick that ever was heard,” an
aboveGeorge Frideric Handel, portrait by Balthasar Denner (1685–1749), 1733
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28 one hundred twenty-eighth season
opinion that was challenged surpris-ingly little in the years ahead (although London, Handel’s adopted hometown, was indifferent at first). Performances of Messiah quickly became a kind of sacred rite. With the 1784 presenta-tion in Westminster Abbey, which commemorated the twenty-fifth anniversary of the composer’s death and featured 261 singers, 229 orches-tral musicians, and three conduc-tors, its status as the ultimate musi-cal blockbuster—a guaranteed box office smash, an unparalleled spiritual experience—was secure. (As was the tradition of monster performances, which lasted more than a century and a half, climaxing with the 1883 pro-duction in London’s Crystal Palace with 500 orchestral players and 4,000 singers—a fashion George Bernard Shaw, a lone voice of reason at the time, dismissed as “the silly notion that big music requires big bands and choruses.”)
In 1789, Mozart made his own orchestration of Messiah “arranged for greater serviceability for our day,” as the title page explained, that is a labor of love, though also a misrepresentation of Handel’s score. No one, it seemed, was immune to Messiah. “I would uncover my head and kneel down at his tomb,” Beethoven said, when he was asked what he thought of the composer of Messiah, an appraisal confirmed by the way he emulated Handel’s “And he shall reign” fugue in the “Dona nobis pacem” of his own great Missa solemnis. Inevitably, for a work of such widespread popularity, there have been skeptics, beginning with Charles Jennens himself, who wrote, “His Messiah has disap-pointed me” after the very first performance, later admitting that Handel had made a “fine Entertainment” of the text, “tho’ not near so good
as he might & ought to have done.” Attending a later performance, Samuel Johnson chose to compose a Latin poem extolling the virtues of staying at home rather than listen, and Ezra Pound eventually wrote his own verdict, lumping together “Heer Haendel and boiled potatoes.”
M essiah was mentioned for the first time in a letter dated July 10, 1741, from Charles Jennens, who is best known today for
compiling the oratorio’s text: “Handel says he will do nothing next Winter, but I hope I shall perswade him to set another Scripture Collection I have made for him . . . The Subject is Messiah.” Handel apparently was easily persuaded, and he
aboveA view of the interior of Westminster Abbey by Edward Edwards (1738–1806), on the occasion of the Commemoration of Handel in 1784, ca. 1790. Yale Center for British Art
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december 2018/january 2019 29
composed the music—more than 250 pages of manuscript—in little more than three weeks, beginning on August 22. (The speed, the concentration of energy, and the lavishness of invention weren’t unusual for Handel—he moved on to Samson as soon as he finished Messiah, completing it a month later.)
The first performance was given not in London, where Handel had lived for nearly thirty years, but in Dublin, Ireland, during the nine months he spent there beginning in late 1741, follow-ing a disastrous London season for his operas at the box office. Handel was already popular in Dublin, and there was great interest in the con-certs he announced for the winter and spring. The climax was to come on April 13 with a new work that hadn’t yet even been performed in London—Messiah.
Anticipation was high. The concert announcement that ran in the Dublin papers requested “the Favour of the Ladies not to come with Hoops this Day,” and asked the men, like-wise, to leave their swords at home, to make room for a bigger crowd. The performance was scheduled for noon (allowing the audience to get home in time for dinner, normally served at four), and the doors opened at eleven in the morning. Denied their hoops and swords, some seven hundred Dubliners jammed Neale’s Music Hall, designed for no more than six hundred. Handel conducted from the keyboard and even played organ concertos, demonstrating his cele-brated skill at improvising, during the breaks. If
subsequent London performances are any judge, he wore his huge signature white wig, and, as Burney later reported, “when things went well at the Oratorio, it had a certain nod, or vibration, which manifested his pleasure and satisfaction.” Things apparently went very well, and Messiah found such a large and eager public with its first performance that a repeat was scheduled for June 3.
London didn’t share Dublin’s enthusiasm at first, and the performances that Handel gave there both in March 1743 and April 1745 failed to generate excitement. That all changed with the revival Handel led in 1750 to benefit the Foundling Hospital, which launched the successful series of annual charity performances that continued till the composer’s death nine years later. By then Messiah had become a tradition. In all, Handel gave thirty-six performances of his most popular work during the last seventeen years of his life, making adjustments of various kinds—vocal lines rewritten and arias transposed to suit different
left to rightCharles Jennens (1700–1773), who compiled Messiah’s texts, in a portrait by Thomas Hudson (1701–1779). Handel House Museum, London
Neale’s Music Hall in Fishamble Street, Dublin, where Messiah was premiered in 1742
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30 one hundred twenty-eighth season
singers, entirely new pieces added—nearly every time.
Messiah is unique, even in Handel’s output. Unlike traditional oratorios, it has no dramatic characters. The story, as pieced together by Jennens (drawing texts from the Old Testament and from the Book of Common Prayer, the ser-vice book of the Church of England), is told by an anonymous narrator. This distance from the action is underlined by Handel’s decision, unique in his oratorios, to divide the music into “parts” rather than “acts.” (The texts were so famil-iar that Handel’s listeners all knew the words by heart—forging a rare bond with the audi-ence that finds its ultimate expression in today’s do-it-yourself performances.)
T he musical glories of Messiah are often unconventional (although our familiarity with the score tends to distort our sense
of what was the norm). There are many unusual touches: the opening recitative, “Comfort ye my people,” so melodic and richly accompanied that it sounds like an aria; the aria “O thou that tellest good tidings,” in which the traditional repeat of the main section is hijacked by the full chorus, to thrilling effect; a duet, “He shall feed His Flock,” in which the two voices never sing together, or even in alternation, but successively, with the soprano
magically taking over from the mezzo-soprano at the moment the text shifts from Isaiah to Saint Matthew.
The arias range from the grand (“The trumpet shall sound”) to the deeply introspective (“He was despised”), and often demand opera-house virtuosity. There’s an unusual amount of music for the chorus in Messiah—more than in any other Handel oratorio except Israel in Egypt—although the subtlety, imagination, and variety of Handel’s choral writing has long been overshadowed by the brilliant “Hallelujah” that ends part 2. (The habit of standing for this number was begun by King George II at one of the first London performances, although it has been suggested that he was merely confused about the time of the next intermission.)
In his will, Handel left his set of Messiah performing parts to the Foundling Hospital in London, which had already benefited consider-ably from the composer’s annual performances there, in the hope that their Messiah tradition would continue. They are now in the library of the Thomas Coram Foundation, the successor to the hospital. And Messiah itself has become an institution.
Phillip Huscher has been the program annotator for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra since 1987.
MESSIAH
part 1
Sinfonia (Overture)
Tenor Recitative
Comfort ye my people, saith your God. Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem, and cry unto her, that her warfare is accomplish’d, that her iniquity is pardon’d. The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness: prepare ye the way of the Lord, make straight in the desert a highway for our God.(Isaiah 40:1–3)
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Tenor Air
Ev’ry valley shall be exalted, and ev’ry mountain and hill made low; the crooked straight, and the rough places plain.(Isaiah 40:4)
Chorus
And the glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together, for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it.(Isaiah 40:5)
Bass Recitative
Thus saith the Lord of Hosts: yet once, a little while, and I will shake the heav’ns, and the earth, the sea, and the dry land; and I will shake all nations; and the desire of all nations shall come.(Haggai 2:6–7)
The Lord, whom ye seek, shall suddenly come to His temple; ev’n the messenger of the Covenant, whom ye delight in: behold, He shall come, saith the Lord of Hosts.(Malachi 3:1)
Alto Air
But who may abide the day of His coming, and who shall stand when He appeareth? For He is like a refiner’s fire.(Malachi 3:2)
Chorus
And He shall purify the sons of Levi, that they may offer unto the Lord an offering in righteousness.(Malachi 3:3)
Alto Recitative
Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Emmanuel: God with us.(Isaiah 7:14, Matthew 1:23)
Alto Air and Chorus
O thou that tellest good tidings to Zion, get thee up into the high mountain; O thou that tellest good tidings to Jerusalem, lift up thy voice with strength; lift it up, be not afraid; say unto the cities of Judah, Behold your God!(Isaiah 40:9)
Arise, shine, for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee.(Isaiah 60:1)
(Please turn the page quietly.)
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32 one hundred twenty-eighth season
Bass Recitative
For behold, darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the people: but the Lord shall arise upon thee, and His glory shall be seen upon thee. And the Gentiles shall come to thy light, and kings to the brightness of thy rising.(Isaiah 60:2–3)
Bass Air
The people that walked in darkness have seen a great light: and they that dwell in the land of the shadow of death, upon them hath the light shined.(Isaiah 9:2)
Chorus
For unto us a Child is born, unto us a Son is given, and the government shall be upon his shoulder; and His Name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, the Mighty God, the Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace.(Isaiah 9:6)
Pifa (Pastoral Symphony)
Soprano Recitative
There were shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night.(Luke 2:8)
And lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone round about them: and they were sore afraid.(Luke 2:9)
Soprano Recitative
And the angel said unto them, Fear not; for behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day, in the city of David, a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord.(Luke 2:10–11)
And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heav’nly host, praising God, and saying:(Luke 2:13)
Chorus
Glory to God in the highest, and peace on earth, good will toward men.(Luke 2:14)
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december 2018/january 2019 33
Soprano Air
Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion; shout, O daughter of Jerusalem: behold, thy King cometh unto thee. He is the righteous Saviour, and He shall speak peace unto the heathen.(Zechariah: 9:9–10)
Alto Recitative
Then shall the eyes of the blind be open’d, and ears of the deaf unstopped. Then shall the lame man leap as an hart, and the tongue of the dumb shall sing.(Isaiah 35:5–6)
Alto and Soprano Air
He shall feed His flock like a shepherd: and He shall gather the lambs with his arm, and carry them in his bosom, and gently lead those that are with young.(Isaiah 40:11)
Come unto Him, all ye that labour, that are heavy laden, and He will give you rest. Take His yoke upon you, and learn of Him, for He is meek and lowly of heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls.(Matthew 11: 28–29)
Chorus
His yoke is easy, and His burthen is light.(Matthew 11:30)
intermission
part 2
Chorus
Behold the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sin of the world.(John 1:29)
Alto Air
He was despised and rejected of men, a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief.(Isaiah 53:3)
(Please turn the page quietly.)
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34 one hundred twenty-eighth season
Chorus
Surely, He hath borne our griefs and carried our sorrows: He was wounded for our transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon Him.(Isaiah 53:4–5)
Chorus
And with His stripes we are healed.(Isaiah 53:5)
Chorus
All we like sheep have gone astray, we have turned ev’ry one to his own way; and the Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us all.(Isaiah 53:6)
Tenor Recitative
All they that see Him laugh Him to scorn; they shoot out their lips, and shake their heads, saying:(Psalms 22:7)
Chorus
He trusted in God that He would deliver Him: let Him deliver Him, if He delight in Him.(Psalms 22:8)
Tenor Recitative
Thy rebuke hath broken His heart; He is full of heaviness. He looked for some to have pity on Him, but there was no man, neither found He any to comfort Him.(Psalms 69:20)
Tenor Air
Behold, and see if there be any sorrow like unto His sorrow.(Lamentations 1:12)
Soprano Recitative
He was cut off out of the land of the living: for the transgression of Thy people was He stricken.(Isaiah 53:8)
Soprano Air
But Thou didst not leave His soul in hell; nor didst Thou suffer Thy Holy One to see corruption.(Psalms 16:10)
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Chorus
The Lord gave the word: great was the company of the preachers.(Psalms 68:11)
Soprano Air
How beautiful are the feet of Him that preach the gospel of peace, and bring glad tidings of good things.(Romans 10:15)
Bass Air
Why do the nations so furiously rage together: why do the people imagine a vain thing? The kings of the earth rise up, and the rulers take counsel together against the Lord and against His Anointed.(Psalms 2:1–2)
Chorus
Let us break their bonds asunder, and cast away their yokes from us.(Psalms 2:3)
Tenor Recitative
He that dwelleth in heaven shall laugh them to scorn: the Lord shall have them in derision.(Psalms 2:4)
Tenor Air
Thou shalt break them with a rod of iron; Thou shalt dash them in pieces like a potter’s vessel.(Psalms 2:9)
Chorus
Hallelujah, for the Lord God Omnipotent reigneth.(Revelation 19:6)
The kingdom of this world is become the Kingdom of our Lord, and of His Christ; and He shall reign for ever and ever.(Revelation 11:15)
King of Kings, and Lord of Lords.(Revelation 19:16)
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36 one hundred twenty-eighth season
part 3
Soprano Air
I know that my Redeemer liveth, and that He shall stand at the latter day upon the earth. And though worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I see God.(Job 19:25–26)
For now is Christ risen from the dead, the first fruits of them that sleep.(1 Corinthians 15:20)
Chorus
Since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive.(1 Corinthians 15:21–22)
Bass Recitative
Behold, I tell you a mystery; we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet.(1 Corinthians 15:51–52)
Bass Air
The trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed.(1 Corinthians 15:52)
Soprano Air
If God be for us, who can be against us? Who shall lay anything to the charge of God’s elect? It is God that justifieth. Who is he that condemneth?(Romans 8:31)
It is Christ that died, yea rather, that is risen again, who is at the right hand of God, who makes intercession for us.(Romans 8:34)
Chorus
Worthy is the Lamb that was slain, and hath redeemed us to God by His blood, to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honour, and glory, and blessing. Blessing and honour, glory and power be unto Him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb, for ever and ever. Amen.(Revelation 5:12–13)
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december 2018/january 2019 37
Matthew Halls Conductor
These concerts mark Matthew Halls’s debut with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
The word “versatile” is an apt description for British conductor Matthew Halls. He first came to prominence as a keyboard player and early music conductor, but is now better known for his dynamic and intelligent work with major symphony orchestras
and opera companies, and for his probing and vibrant interpretations of music of all periods.
Increasingly in demand by North American symphony orchestras, Halls has performed with the Cleveland and Philadelphia orchestras; the Dallas, Pittsburgh, Houston, Seattle, Indianapolis, and Utah symphony orchestras; Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra; and the National Arts Centre Orchestra in Ottawa. He also led Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony in his debut with the Toronto Symphony. Having served as artistic director of the Oregon Bach Festival for five years, Halls is equally at home conducting baroque and contemporary repertoire.
In the 2018-19 season, Halls’s North American guest appearances include returns
to the St. Louis, Dallas, and Indianapolis symphony orchestras and the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra. In addition, he conducts the San Diego and Jacksonville symphony orchestras as well as the Handel and Haydn Society in Boston. Last season, he made his New York debut at Lincoln Center’s Mostly Mozart Festival in a performance with violinist Joshua Bell.
In recent seasons, Halls has performed in Australia with the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra, Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra, and the Auckland Philharmonia. His is a regular guest with the Iceland Symphony Orchestra, having recently presented a series of five perfor-mances of all of Beethoven’s piano concertos with pianist Paul Lewis. Recent European appearances include the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, the Warsaw Philharmonic, Mozarteum Salzburg, the South Netherlands Philharmonic, and Capriccio Baroque Orchestra.
Matthew Halls is represented on disc by Handel’s Parnasso in festa, winner of the Stanley Sadie Handel Recording Prize, released by Hyperion. On Linn Records, he has recorded a set of four of Bach’s harpsichord concertos con-ducted from the keyboard, which Gramophone praised; Bach’s Easter and Ascension oratorios; as well as award-winning discs of Purcell’s Sonatas in Three and Four Parts.
PHOTO BY ERIC RICHMOND
profiles
38 one hundred twenty-eighth season
Amanda Forsythe Soprano
first cso performancesJuly 31, 2004, Ravinia Festival. Vaughan Williams’s Serenade to Music, Christoph Eschenbach conducting
December 1, 2, and 3, 2016, Orchestra Hall. Handel’s Laudate pueri Dominum and Silete venti, Nicholas Kraemer conducting
most recent cso performancesMarch 22, 23, and 24, 2018, Orchestra Hall. Schubert’s Mass no. 6 in E-flat major, Riccardo Muti conducting
Amanda Forsythe is recognized internationally as a leading interpreter of baroque repertoire. She sang Eurydice on the 2015 Grammy Award–winning recording of Charpentier’s The Descent of Orpheus to the Underworld; and her
debut solo album of arias by Handel, The Power of Love, with Apollo’s Fire, was released in 2015 on the Avie label to widespread critical acclaim. She toured with French countertenor Philippe Jaroussky, performing works based on the Orpheus myth and subsequently recorded the role of Euridice in a new edition of Gluck’s Orfeo with him for the Erato label. She is a regular soloist with the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra, Boston Early Music Festival, the Handel and Haydn Society, Boston Baroque, Apollo’s Fire, and Tafelmusik.
Amanda Forsythe’s orchestral engagements in recent seasons have included Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Boston Symphony Orchestra and Los Angeles Philharmonic); Handel’s Sileti venti and Laudate pueri, and Schubert’s Mass no. 6 in E-Flat (Chicago Symphony Orchestra); and Bach’s Magnificat and a concert performance as Marzelline in Beethoven’s Fidelio (Accademia Nazionale di
Santa Cecilia). Following performances as Amour in Gluck’s Orphée at the Royal Opera House (Covent Garden), she participated in tours of the work, and of Mozart’s Mass in C minor and Requiem with the Monteverdi Choir and Orchestra under Sir John Eliot Gardiner.
On the opera stage, Forsythe has sung Pamina in The Magic Flute and Iris in Semele in Seattle; Pamina in Rome; Nannetta in Falstaff, Amour in Orphée, Manto in Steffani’s Niobe, and Barbarina in The Marriage of Figaro at the Royal Opera House; Jemmy in William Tell, Corinna in Il viaggio a Reims, and Rosalia in The Curious Misunderstanding at the Rossini Opera Festival in Pesaro; and Dalinda in Ariodante in Geneva and Munich.
Her collaborations with leading baroque ensembles and chamber orchestras have included Alexander’s Feast (Tafelmusik), Messiah (Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra), Mozart’s concert arias (Kymi Sinfonietta in Finland), Iole in Hercules (Handel and Haydn Society), the title roles in Teseo (Philharmonia Baroque at Tanglewood) and Partenope and Poppea in Agrippina (Boston Baroque), Isabelle in The Carnival of Venice, Serpina in La serva padrona, Edilia in Almira, and the title roles in The Coronation of Poppea, Venus and Adonis, and Niobe (Boston Early Music Festival), many of which were recorded commercially.
Amanda Forsythe’s future engagements include the title roles in Semele (Opera Philadelphia) and The Coronation of Poppea (Boston Baroque), Angelica in Orlando generoso (Boston Early Music Festival), Cabri and Carmi in La Betulia liberata (Les Talens Lyriques at Salzburg Mozart Week), a concert tour of the U.S. with Philippe Jaroussky, and debuts with the Philadelphia Orchestra in Mozart’s Requiem and the Lucerne Symphony Orchestra in Messiah. Other future engagements include a return to the Royal Opera House as Marzelline in Fidelio.
PHOTO BY ARIELLE DONESON
profiles
december 2018/january 2019 39 PHOTO BY VERO KHERIAN
Sasha Cooke Mezzo-soprano
first cso performancesNovember 5, 6, 7, and 10, 2009, Orchestra Hall. Mendelssohn’s Incidental Music to A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Bernard Haitink conducting
most recent cso performancesFebruary 23, 24, and 25, 2017, Orchestra Hall. Prokofiev’s Ivan the Terrible, Riccardo Muti conducting
Grammy Award–winning mezzo-soprano Sasha Cooke, hailed in The New York Times and Opera News, is sought after by the world’s leading orchestras, opera companies, and chamber music ensembles for her versatile repertoire and
commitment to new music.In 2018–19, Cooke’s operatic engagements
include role debuts as Eduige in Rodelinda at the Gran Teatre del Liceu in Barcelona and the title role in Orlando with the San Francisco Opera. She returns to the role of Hansel in Humperdinck’s Hansel and Gretel with the Los Angeles Opera under the direction of James Conlon. Concert appearances include the Cleveland Orchestra for Mahler’s Symphony no. 2 (Resurrection) with Franz Welser-Möst that also incorporates a domestic tour, the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington (D.C.) for Ravel’s Shéhérazade under Mirga Gražinyté-Tyla, and the Houston Symphony in her first performance of Dvořák’s Stabat mater led by Andrés Orozco-Estrada. She celebrates the centennial of Leonard Bernstein’s birth by performing his songs with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, in addition to the compos-er’s Symphony no. 1 (Jeremiah) with the Nashville
Symphony and Symphony no. 3 (Kaddish) with the St. Louis Symphony and Leonard Slatkin. She reprises Passage (a work she created at the Kennedy Center in 2017) with the Sioux City Symphony Orchestra.
Sasha Cooke has performed at the Metropolitan Opera in New York, Opéra National de Bordeaux, English National Opera, Houston Grand Opera, the Israeli Opera in Tel Aviv, the Santa Fe Opera, Seattle Opera, and more. A graduate of Rice University, the Juilliard School, and the Metropolitan Opera Lindemann Young Artist Development Program, she has appeared with over sixty symphony orchestras worldwide under such leading conductors as Harry Bicket, Sir Andrew Davis, Gustavo Dudamel, Sir Mark Elder, Alan Gilbert, Bernard Haitink, James Levine, Riccardo Muti, Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Tugan Sokhiev, Michael Tilson Thomas, Osmo Vänskä, Edo de Waart, and Jaap van Zweden.
Highlights of her career have included world premieres of operas by Mark Adamo, Mason Bates, William Bolcom, Laura Kaminsky, Nico Muhly, John Musto, and Joby Talbot, as well as international and domestic tours with the San Francisco Symphony. She has performed at such prestigious venues as the Royal Concertgebouw in Amsterdam; the Barbican Centre and Wigmore Hall in London; Madrid’s Auditorio Nacional de Música; the Hollywood Bowl; Elbphilharmonie in Hamburg; Kennedy Center in Washington (D.C.); Theater an der Wien in Vienna; and Alice Tully Hall, Brooklyn Academy of Music, and Carnegie Hall in New York.
Sasha Cooke is a recording artist for the BIS, Hyperion, Pentatone, Naxos, Bridge, Yarlung, GPR Records, and Sono Luminus labels.
sashacooke.com
profiles
39A one hundred twenty-eighth season
Nicholas Phan Tenor
first cso performancesApril 11, 12, and 13, 2002, Orchestra Hall. Berlioz’s Les Troyens, part 2: The Trojans at Carthage, Zubin Mehta conducting
August 14 and 16, 2008, Ravinia Festival. Mozart’s The Abduction from the Seraglio, James Conlon conducting
most recent cso performancesJuly 23, 2010, Ravinia Festival. Vocal Suite from Bernstein’s Candide, John Axelrod conducting
March 22, 23, and 24, 2018, Orchestra Hall. Schubert’s Mass no. 6 in E-flat major, Riccardo Muti conducting
American tenor Nicholas Phan is increasingly recognized as an artist of distinction. With an incredibly diverse repertoire that ranges from Claudio Monteverdi to Nico Muhly and beyond, he performs regularly with the world’s
leading orchestras and opera companies. Phan is also an avid recitalist and a passionate advocate for art song and vocal chamber music; in 2010, he cofounded Collaborative Arts Institute of Chicago, an organization devoted to promoting this underserved repertoire.
Phan once again launched his new season in Chicago, curating CAIC’s seventh annual Collaborative Arts Festival. Other highlights of his 2018–19 season include two role debuts: Eumolpus in Stravinsky’s Perséphone with the San Francisco Symphony and Michael Tilson Thomas; and the title role in Handel’s Jephtha with Boston Baroque and Martin Pearlman. The title role in Bernstein’s Candide, with the Israel Philharmonic and Marin Alsop, marks his
debut in Israel. In addition to three programs with the San Francisco Symphony, he returns to major orchestras across the country, including the Dallas and St. Louis symphony orchestras. A celebrated recording artist, Phan is heard on two albums this season: the recently released recording of Berlioz’s Romeo and Juliet with the San Francisco Symphony and Tilson Thomas and the forthcoming disc of Handel’s Joseph and His Brethren with Nicholas McGegan and Philharmonia Baroque.
Nicholas Phan’s most recent solo album, Illuminations, was released on Avie Records in April 2018. His previous solo album, Gods and Monsters, was nominated for the 2017 Grammy Award for Best Classical Vocal Solo Album. His other solo albums, A Painted Tale, Still Falls the Rain, and Winter Words, made many “best of ” lists, including those of The New York Times, The New Yorker, Chicago Tribune, and The Boston Globe. Phan’s growing discography also includes a Grammy Award–nominated recording of Stravinsky’s Pulcinella with Pierre Boulez and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, L’Olimpiade: The Opera with the Venice Baroque Orchestra, Scarlatti’s La gloria di primavera with Philharmonia Baroque, an album of Bach’s secular cantatas with Bach Collegium Japan and Masaaki Suzuki, Bach’s Saint John Passion (in which he sings both the Evangelist and the tenor arias) with Apollo’s Fire, and the world premiere recordings of two orchestral song cycles: The Old Burying Ground by Evan Chambers and Elliott Carter’s A Sunbeam’s Architecture.
nicholas-phan.comfacebook.com/nicholasphantenortwitter.com/grecchinois@grecchinois
PHOTO BY HENRY DOMBEY
profiles
december 2018/january 2019 39B PHOTO BY © SIMON PAULY
Joshua Hopkins Baritone
These concerts mark Joshua Hopkins’s debut with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
Chosen by Opera News as one of twenty-five artists poised to break out and become a major force in the coming decade, Canadian baritone Joshua Hopkins has been critically hailed. In the 2018–19 season, he makes his San Francisco
Opera debut as Harry Bailey in Jake Heggie and Gene Scheer’s It’s a Wonderful Life. He also revisits the role of Valentin in Faust with Washington National Opera in Washington (D.C.). Role debuts this season include Dr. Malatesta in Don Pasquale with Pittsburgh Opera, as well as the title role in Billy Budd with Central City Opera. Concert engagements include Handel’s Messiah with the San Francisco Symphony and Jane Glover and Haydn’s Creation with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra under Matthew Halls.
Hopkins’s past engagements include his European concert debut with the Principality of Asturias Symphony Orchestra in Spain perform-ing Lieberson’s Songs of Love and Sorrow, Bach’s Magnificat with the Orchestra of St. Luke’s under
Robert Spano at Carnegie Hall in New York, and both Nielsen’s Symphony no. 3 and Mozart’s Mass in C minor with the New York Philharmonic and Alan Gilbert. Hopkins toured North America with Les Violons du Roy and Bernard Labadie in Bach’s Christmas Oratorio and Handel’s Messiah in Quebec, Montreal, Los Angeles, and at Carnegie Hall. He has also performed and recorded Bach’s Saint John Passion with Portland Baroque and Arion Baroque orchestras. He has sung Messiah with many ensembles across North America, including the San Francisco Symphony, Philadelphia Orchestra, National Arts Centre Orchestra in Ottawa, and the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington (D.C.).
Additional highlights include his debut with the Cleveland Orchestra led by Vladimir Ashkenazy in performances of Grieg’s incidental music to Peer Gynt, Handel’s Dettingen Te Deum with the San Francisco Symphony, Mozart’s Magic Flute with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra led by Bernard Labadie, and Brahms’s Requiem with Hans Graf and the Houston Symphony and later at Baldwin Wallace University’s Eighty-fifth Bach Festival.
Joshua Hopkins also made debuts with the New World Symphony in an all-Schumann program under Michael Tilson Thomas and the Hamburg and Baltimore symphony orchestras as Dr. Pangloss in Bernstein’s Candide conducted by Jeffrey Tate and Marin Alsop, respectively.
39C one hundred twenty-eighth season
The appearance of the Chicago Symphony Chorus is made possible by a generous gift from
Jim and Kay Mabie.
profiles
december 2018/january 2019 39D
Chicago Symphony Chorus
The Chicago Symphony Chorus celebrated its sixtieth anniversary in 2017–18. Led by chorus director and conductor Duain Wolfe since 1994, the ensemble performs regularly with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in Orchestra Hall and at the Ravinia Festival.
The history of the Chorus began in 1957, when sixth music director Fritz Reiner invited Margaret Hillis to establish a chorus to equal the quality of the Orchestra. Hillis accepted the challenge and the Chicago Symphony Chorus debuted in March and April 1958, in Mozart’s Requiem under Bruno Walter and Verdi’s Requiem under Reiner.
Hillis served the Chorus for thirty-seven years, until her retirement in 1994; ninth music director Daniel Barenboim appointed Wolfe as her succes-sor in June of that year.
The Chorus frequently performs under music director Riccardo Muti as well as guest conductors. Highlights of 2018–19 include Mozart’s Requiem and Verdi’s Aida in concert at season’s end.
The Chorus first performed in Carnegie Hall in 1967 in Henze’s Muses of Sicily and Ravel’s Daphnis and Chloe under seventh music director Jean Martinon, and most recently in 2015 with Riccardo Muti for Scriabin’s Prometheus and Prokofiev’s Alexander Nevsky. Touring interna-tionally with the Orchestra, the Chorus traveled
to London and Salzburg in 1989 with Sir Georg Solti for performances of Berlioz’s The Damnation of Faust and to Berlin in 1999 with Barenboim for Brahms’s A German Requiem and Pierre Boulez for Schoenberg’s Moses and Aron.
World premieres featuring the Chorus have included Ned Rorem’s Goodbye My Fancy, John Harbison’s Four Psalms, and Bernard Rands’s apókryphos. The Chorus has collaborated with visiting orchestras including the Berlin Philharmonic under Claudio Abbado, the Boston Symphony Orchestra and Seiji Ozawa, the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra with Zubin Mehta, and the Staatskapelle Berlin under Barenboim.
Since first recording commercially in 1959—Prokofiev’s Alexander Nevsky under Reiner—the Chorus has amassed a discography that includes hallmarks of the choral repertoire and several complete operas. The Chorus most recently received a 2010 Grammy Award for Best Choral Performance for Verdi’s Requiem, led by Riccardo Muti on CSO Resound. The Chorus has received an additional nine Grammy awards for Best Choral Performance for Verdi’s Requiem, Beethoven’s Missa solemnis, Brahms’s A German Requiem, Berlioz’s The Damnation of Faust, Haydn’s The Creation, and Bach’s Mass in B minor with Solti; Brahms’s Requiem and Orff ’s Carmina Burana with James Levine; and Bartók’s Cantata profana with Boulez.
The Chorus has appeared on two movie soundtracks with the Orchestra: Fantasia 2000 led by Levine and John Williams’s score for Lincoln, conducted by the composer. Recordings on CSO Resound featuring the Chorus include Mahler’s Second and Third symphonies, Poulenc’s Gloria, and Ravel’s Daphnis and Chloe under Bernard Haitink; and Berlioz’s Lélio, Verdi’s Otello, and most recently Schoenberg’s Kol Nidre under Riccardo Muti.
PHOTO BY TODD ROSENBERG
profiles
39E one hundred twenty-eighth season PHOTO BY TODD ROSENBERG
Duain Wolfe Chorus Director and Conductor
Now in his twenty-fifth season as director of the Chicago Symphony Chorus, Duain Wolfe has prepared over 150 programs for concerts in Orchestra Hall and at the Ravinia Festival, as well as many works for commercial recordings.
Wolfe also directs choral works at the Aspen Music Festival and the National Arts Centre in Ottawa, and he is founder-director of the Colorado Symphony Chorus (now in its thirty-fifth season), a position he maintains along with his Chicago Symphony Chorus post.
Winner of two Grammy awards in 2010 (Best Choral Performance and Best Classical Album) for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s recording of Verdi’s Requiem with Zell Music Director Riccardo Muti, in 2012 Wolfe received the Michael Korn Founders Award from Chorus America in recognition of his contributions to the professional choral arts. He also prepared the Chicago Symphony Chorus for the Grammy Award–winning recording of Wagner’s Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg with Sir Georg Solti, and for the CSO Resound release of Verdi’s Otello conducted by Riccardo Muti.
Well known for his work with children, Wolfe is conductor laureate of the Colorado Children’s
Chorale, an organization that he founded and conducted for twenty-five years. Also active in opera, he served as conductor of the Central City Opera Festival for twenty years.
Among the many performances for which Wolfe has prepared the Chicago Symphony Chorus are Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony; Cherubini’s Requiem; Brahms’s A German Requiem; Orff ’s Carmina Burana; Verdi’s Requiem, Otello, Macbeth, and Falstaff; and Schoenberg’s Kol Nidre with Alberto Mizrahi as narrator, recorded during performances in Orchestra Hall in 2012 and recently released on CSO Resound—all conducted by Riccardo Muti. World premieres include John Harbison’s Four Psalms and Bernard Rands’s apókryphos, both commissioned by the CSO.
Wolfe prepared the Chicago Symphony Chorus for its most recent Carnegie Hall perfor-mances of Scriabin’s Prometheus and Prokofiev’s Alexander Nevsky in 2015, under Riccardo Muti, as well as Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony with the Staatskapelle Berlin in 2000 with Daniel Barenboim. He also prepared the Chorus for performances of Schoenberg’s Moses and Aron (led by Pierre Boulez) and Brahms’s A German Requiem (led by Barenboim) at the Berlin Festtage in 1999.
Duain Wolfe’s activities have earned him an honorary doctorate and numerous awards, including the Bonfils Stanton Award in the Arts and Humanities and the Colorado Governor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts.
profiles
december 2018/january 2019 39F
The Chorus was prepared for these performances by Duain Wolfe.* Section leader
Chicago Symphony ChorusDuain Wolfe Chorus Director and ConductorCheryl Frazes Hill Associate DirectorJennifer Kerr Budziak Assistant DirectorAndrew Lewis Assistant DirectorBenjamin Rivera Assistant Director
Gretchen AdamsAlicia Monastero AkersMelissa ArningLaura BoguslavskyMadison BoltMichael BoschertEvan BravosMichael BrownJennifer Kerr BudziakDiane Busko BryksAnastasia Cameron BalmerMichael CavalieriBethany ClearfieldRyan J. CoxLeah DexterMicah A. Dingler*Katarzyna DorulaJeffrey DukeKathryn DuncanStacy EckertNicholas Falco
Henriët FourieAce T. GangosoKlaus Georg*Jennifer Gingrich*David Govertsen*Kimberly GundersonElizabeth HaleyMichael Randall HawesDaniel Julius Henry, Jr.Betsy HoatsCarla JanzenGarrett JohannsenAlison KellyRobin A. KesslerJess KoehnSusan KroutMathew LakeKatelyn LeeRosalind LeeKristin LelmAmanda Compton LoPresti*
Kathleen MaddenSuzanne Ma-EbersoleBill McMurrayStephen MollicaLillian MurphyNathan S. OakesSheri OwensDouglas PetersAmy PickeringCari PlachySarah Ponder*Angela PresuttiNicholas PulikowskiMargaret QuinnetteLeo RadosavljevicStephen RichardsonAlexia RiveraCole SeatonCindy SennekeCassidy SmithSean Stanton
Alan TaylorPaul W. ThompsonAnna VanDeKerchoveEric WestDebra Wilder*
managerCarolyn D. Stoner
assistant chorus manager and librarianShelley Baldridge
rehearsal pianistsChuck FosterJohn GoodwinSharon PetersonAndrew Rosenblum
chicago symphony orchestra
39G one hundred twenty-eighth season
Now celebrating its 128th season, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra is consistently hailed as one of the world’s leading orchestras. In September 2010, renowned Italian conductor Riccardo Muti became its tenth music director. His vision for the Orchestra—to deepen its engagement with the Chicago community, to nurture its legacy while supporting a new generation of musicians, and to collaborate with visionary artists—signals a new era for the institution.
The Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s distin-guished history began in 1889, when Theodore Thomas, then the leading conductor in America and a recognized music pioneer, was invited by Chicago businessman Charles Norman Fay to establish a symphony orchestra here. Thomas’s aim to establish a permanent orchestra with performance capabilities of the highest quality was realized at the first concerts in October 1891. Thomas served as music director until his death in 1905—just three weeks after the dedication of Orchestra Hall, the Orchestra’s permanent home designed by Daniel Burnham.
Frederick Stock, recruited by Thomas to the viola section in 1895, became assistant conductor in 1899, and succeeded the Orchestra’s founder. His tenure lasted thirty-seven years, from 1905 to 1942—the longest of the Orchestra’s music direc-tors. Dynamic and innovative, the Stock years saw the founding of the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, the first training orchestra in the United States affiliated with a major symphony orchestra, in 1919. Stock also established youth auditions, orga-nized the first subscription concerts especially for children, and began a series of popular concerts.
Three distinguished conductors headed the Orchestra during the following decade: Désiré Defauw was music director from 1943 to 1947; Artur Rodzinski assumed the post in 1947–48; and Rafael Kubelík led the ensemble for three seasons from 1950 to 1953. The next ten years belonged to Fritz Reiner, whose recordings with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra are still considered per-formance hallmarks. It was Reiner who invited Margaret Hillis to form the Chicago Symphony Chorus in 1957. For the five seasons from 1963 to 1968, Jean Martinon held the position of music director.
Sir Georg Solti, the Orchestra’s eighth music director, served from 1969 until 1991. He then held the title of music director laureate and
returned to conduct the Orchestra for several weeks each season until his death in September 1997. Solti’s arrival launched one of the most successful musical partnerships of our time, and the CSO made its first overseas tour to Europe in 1971 under his direction, along with numerous award-winning recordings.
Daniel Barenboim was named music director designate in January 1989, and he became the Orchestra’s ninth music director in September 1991, a position he held until June 2006. His tenure was distinguished by the opening of Symphony Center in 1997, highly praised oper-atic productions at Orchestra Hall, numerous appearances with the Orchestra in the dual role of pianist and conductor, twenty-one international tours, and the appointment of Duain Wolfe as the Chorus’s second director.
From 2006 to 2010, Bernard Haitink held the post of principal conductor, the first in CSO his-tory. Pierre Boulez’s long-standing relationship with the CSO led to his appointment as principal guest conductor in 1995. He was named Helen Regenstein Conductor Emeritus in 2006, a posi-tion he held until his death in January 2016. Only two others have served as principal guest conduc-tors: Carlo Maria Giulini, who began to appear in Chicago regularly in the late 1950s, was named to the post in 1969, serving until 1972; Claudio Abbado held the position from 1982 to 1985.
In January 2010, Yo-Yo Ma was appointed the CSO’s Judson and Joyce Green Creative Consultant by Riccardo Muti. In this role, he part-ners with Muti, staff, and musicians to provide program development for the Negaunee Music Institute at the CSO.
Mead Composer-in-Residence Missy Mazzoli was appointed by Riccardo Muti and begins her two-year term this fall. In addition to composing, she curates the contemporary MusicNOW series.
Since 1916, recording has been a signifi-cant part of the Orchestra’s activities. Current releases on CSO Resound, the Orchestra’s inde-pendent recording label, include the Grammy Award–winning release of Verdi’s Requiem led by Riccardo Muti. Recordings by the CSO have earned sixty-two Grammy awards from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences.
cso.org
* Assistant concertmasters are listed by seniority. ‡ On sabbatical § On leaveThe Louise H. Benton Wagner Chair currently is unoccupied. The Adolph Herseth Principal Trumpet Chair, endowed by an anonymous benefactor, currently is unoccupied.The Chicago Symphony Orchestra string sections utilize revolving seating. Players behind the first desk (first two desks in the violins) change seats systematically every two weeks and are listed alphabetically. Section percussionists also are listed alphabetically.
december 2018/january 2019 39H
chicago symphony orchestra
Chicago Symphony OrchestraRiccardo Muti Zell Music DirectorYo-Yo Ma Judson and Joyce Green Creative ConsultantDuain Wolfe Chorus Director and ConductorMissy Mazzoli Mead Composer-in-Residence
violinsRobert Chen Concertmaster
The Louis C. Sudler Chair, endowed by an anonymous benefactor
Stephanie Jeong Associate ConcertmasterThe Cathy and Bill Osborn Chair
David Taylor Yuan-Qing Yu
Assistant Concertmasters*So Young BaeCornelius ChiuAlison DaltonGina DiBelloKozue FunakoshiRussell HershowQing HouBlair MiltonPaul Phillips, Jr. ‡Sando ShiaSusan SynnestvedtRong-Yan Tang
Baird Dodge PrincipalSylvia Kim Kilcullen Assistant
PrincipalLei HouNi MeiFox FehlingHermine GagnéRachel GoldsteinMihaela IonescuMelanie KupchynskyWendy Koons Meir ‡Matous MichalSimon MichalAiko NodaJoyce NohNancy ParkRonald SatkiewiczFlorence Schwartz
violasLi-Kuo Chang Acting Principal
The Paul Hindemith Principal Viola Chair, endowed by an anonymous benefactor
John BartholomewCatherine BrubakerYouming Chen
Sunghee ChoiWei-Ting KuoDanny LaiDiane MuesLawrence NeumanMax RaimiWeijing Wang
cellosJohn Sharp Principal
The Eloise W. Martin ChairKenneth Olsen Assistant
PrincipalThe Adele Gidwitz Chair
Karen BasrakLoren BrownRichard HirschlDaniel KatzKatinka KleijnDavid SandersGary StuckaBrant Taylor
bassesAlexander Hanna Principal
The David and Mary Winton Green Principal Bass Chair
Daniel ArmstrongJoseph DiBelloMichael HovnanianRobert KassingerMark KraemerStephen LesterBradley Opland
harpsSarah Bullen PrincipalLynne Turner
flutesStefán Ragnar Höskuldsson
PrincipalThe Erika and Dietrich M. Gross Principal Flute Chair
Richard Graef Assistant Principal
Emma GersteinJennifer Gunn
piccoloJennifer Gunn
oboesWilliam Welter Principal
The Nancy and Larry Fuller Principal Oboe Chair
Michael Henoch Assistant PrincipalThe Gilchrist Foundation Chair
Lora SchaeferScott Hostetler
english hornScott Hostetler
clarine tsStephen Williamson PrincipalJohn Bruce Yeh Assistant
PrincipalGregory SmithJ. Lawrie Bloom
e -flat clarine tJohn Bruce Yeh
bass clarine tJ. Lawrie Bloom
bassoonsKeith Buncke PrincipalWilliam Buchman Assistant
PrincipalDennis Michel ‡Miles Maner
contrabassoonMiles Maner
hornsDaniel Gingrich Acting
PrincipalJames SmelserDavid GriffinOto CarrilloSusanna Gaunt
trumpe tsMark Ridenour Acting
PrincipalJohn HagstromTage Larsen
trombonesJay Friedman Principal
The Lisa and Paul Wiggin Principal Trombone Chair
Michael MulcahyCharles Vernon
bass tromboneCharles Vernon
tubaGene Pokorny Principal
The Arnold Jacobs Principal Tuba Chair, endowed by Christine Querfeld
timpaniDavid Herbert Principal
The Clinton Family Fund ChairVadim Karpinos Assistant
Principal
percussionCynthia Yeh PrincipalPatricia DashVadim KarpinosJames Ross
librariansPeter Conover PrincipalCarole KellerMark Swanson
orchestra personnelJohn Deverman DirectorAnne MacQuarrie
Manager, CSO Auditions and Orchestra Personnel
stage techniciansChristopher Lewis
Stage ManagerBlair CarlsonDave HartgePeter LandryTodd SnickJoe Tucker
administration
40 one hundred twenty-eighth season
Jeff Alexander President
president ’s officeKaren Rahn Executive Assistant to the
President/ Secretary of the BoardMónica Lugo Executive Assistant to the
Music Director
Human ResourcesLynne Sorkin DirectorSarah McElroy Coordinator
artistic administrationCristina Rocca Vice President
The Richard and Mary L. Gray ChairGuillermo Muñoz Küster Executive Assistant &
Associate Artist Coordinator, CSOJames M. Fahey Director, Programming,
Symphony Center PresentsRandy Elliot Director, Artistic AdministrationMonica Wentz Manager, Artistic Planning &
Special ProjectsLena Breitkreuz Artist Coordinator, Symphony
Center PresentsCaroline Eichler Artist Coordinator, CSOPhillip Huscher Scholar-in-Residence &
Program AnnotatorPietro Fiumara Artists Assistant
ChorusCarolyn Stoner ManagerShelley Baldridge Assistant Manager &
Librarian
orchestra and building operationsVanessa Moss Vice PresidentHeidi Lukas DirectorMichael Lavin Assistant Director, Operations,
SCP & Rental EventsJeffrey Stang Production Manager, CSOJoseph Sherman Production Manager, SCP &
Rental EventsCharles Braico House ManagerMichael Manning Manager, Audio Media &
OperationsCharlie Post Audio Engineer
Negaunee Music Institute at the CSOJonathan McCormick Director, Education &
The Negaunee Music InstituteJon Weber Director, School & Family ProgramsMolly Walker Orchestra Manager,
Civic Orchestra of ChicagoJames Hall Manager, Community Programs &
Civic Orchestra EngagementKaty Clusen Manager, School &
Family ProgramsSarah Vander Ploeg Coordinator, School &
Community PartnershipsKimberly Joslyn Coordinator, Civic Orchestra
of ChicagoBenjamin Wise Assistant, Institute Programs
Rosenthal ArchivesFrank Villella Director
Orchestra PersonnelJohn Deverman DirectorAnne MacQuarrie Manager, CSO Auditions &
Orchestra Personnel
FacilitiesJohn Maas Director
EngineersTim McElligott Chief EngineerMichael McGeehan Lead EngineerKevin WalshDan Platt
ElectriciansRobert Stokas Chief ElectricianDoug Scheuller
Stage TechniciansChristopher Lewis Stage ManagerBlair CarlsonDave HartgePeter LandryTodd SnickJoe Tucker
finance and administrationStacie Frank Vice President &
Chief Financial OfficerRenay Johansen Slifka Executive Assistant
AccountingKerri Gravlin Director, Financial
Planning & AnalysisKathryn Preston ControllerPaulette Jean Volf, Janet Kosiba
Assistant ControllersJanet Hansen Payroll ManagerMarianne Hahn Accounting ManagerMonique Henderson Senior AccountantHyon Yu General Ledger ManagerCynthia Maday Accounts Payable ManagerJessica Lotz Payroll Assistant
Information TechnologyDaniel Spees DirectorDouglas Bolino Client Systems AdministratorJackie Spark Tessitura Data &
Application Administrator
sales and marke tingElisabeth Madeja Interim Vice PresidentMelanie Kalnins Director, Marketing &
Business AnalysisSheila Jones Director, Community Stewardship/
African American Network
Web Systems and ApplicationsSean Hopp DirectorSteven Burkholder Manager
MarketingElisabeth Madeja DirectorLauren Matson Manager, Patron RetentionDavid Nutt ManagerStephanie Lo Integrated Media SpecialistNamita Shah Digital Marketing CoordinatorLaura Sauer Coordinator, Audience
Development & Editor
CreativeTodd Land DirectorEddie Limperis Designer
ContentFrances Atkins DirectorLaura Emerick Digital Content EditorGerald Virgil Senior EditorKristin Tobin Designer
Communications and Public RelationsEileen Chambers OfficerDana Navarro ManagerClay Baker Coordinator
Sales and Ticketing OperationsJoseph Fernicola DirectorPavan Singh Customer Relations Manager
Ticket Sales and Patron ServicesPatrice Fumbanks, Caitlin Manning
Supervisors
VIP ServicesRobert Coad Manager
Group SalesBrian Koenig ManagerShifra Werch Group Sales Specialist
Box OfficeJoseph Garnett ManagerSteve Paulin Assistant ManagerJames KrierChristie NawrockiFernando VegaJohn McGinnis
The Symphony StoreTyler Holstrom Manager
developmentKristopher Simmons Executive AssistantBobbie Rafferty Director, Individual Giving &
Affiliated Donor GroupsAllison Szafranski Director, Leadership GiftsAlfred Andreychuk Director, Endowment Gifts
& Planned GivingCharles Palys Major Gifts Officer &
AdministratorMiguel Fernández, Rebecca Hill
Major Gifts OfficersRachel Zupp Associate Director,
Governing MembersKaren Bullen Manager, Endowment Gifts &
Planned GivingErin Gernon Prospect Research Specialist &
Moves Management CoordinatorNeomia Harris Senior Assistant, Individual
Giving Programs & Planned Giving
Institutional AdvancementSusan Green Director, Foundation &
Government RelationsNick Magnone Associate Director,
Corporate DevelopmentLee Ann Norman Grant WriterJennifer Adams Manager,
Corporate Development
Donor Engagement and Development OperationsLisa McDaniel Director, Donor EngagementLiz Heinitz Director, Annual Giving &
Development OperationsAndrew Leeson Associate Director,
Annual GivingKimberly S. Duffy Senior Donor
Engagement ManagerLuciana Bonifazi Communication Manager,
Donor EngagementKayleigh Dudevoir Donor Engagement ManagerAriana Strahl Coordinator, Donor EngagementKirk McMahon Associate Director, Donor &
Development ServicesPeter Rosenbloom Coordinator, Donor ServicesJeremy Krifka Manager, Donor &
Development Services
CSOA_181217.indd 1 12/7/18 2:26 PM
chicago symphony orchestra association board of trustees
* Ex officio Trustee † Deceased
december 2018/january 2019 41
officers (2018 –19)Helen Zell ChairMary Louise Gorno Vice ChairRobert A. Kohl Vice ChairLiisa Thomas Vice ChairJames W. Mabie TreasurerJeff Alexander PresidentKaren Rahn Secretary of
the BoardStacie M. Frank
Assistant TreasurerThe Honorable
Rahm Emanuel Honorary Chairman
The Honorable Bruce Rauner Honorary Chairman
honorary trusteesThe Honorable
Richard M. DaleyLady Valerie Solti
trusteesJohn AalbregtsePeter J. BarackH. Rigel BarberRandy Lamm BerlinLaurence O. BoothKay BucksbaumRobert J. BufordLeslie Henner BurnsDebra A. CafaroMarion A. CameronDavid CasperBruce E. ClintonGeorge P. ColisDr. Christopher L. CulpTimothy A. DuffyMimi Duginger*Brian W. Duwe
J. Bradley FewellRichard C. GodfreyGraham C. GradyLori JulianJared Kaplan*Donna L. KendallJames KolarRandall S. KrosznerJosef LakonishokPatty LaneBeth ManninoMark G. McGrathChristopher MelvinRenée MetcalfMary Pivirotto MurleySylvia NeilElizabeth Parker*Gerald PaulingJose Luis PradoDr. Irwin PressCol. Jennifer N. PritzkerDr. Mohan RaoBurton X. RosenbergKristen C. RossiEarl J. Rusnak, JrE. Scott SantiSteven E. ShebikAlejandro SilvaWalter SnodellDaniel E. Sullivan, Jr.Scott SwansonNasrin ThiererLiisa ThomasTerrence J. TruaxFrederick H. WaddellPaul R. WigginRobert WislowHelen Zell
life trusteesWilliam Adams IVMrs. Robert A. BeattyMarshall Bennett †Arnold M. BerlinWilliam G. BrownDean L. BuntrockRobert N. BurtRichard ColburnRichard H. CooperAnthony T. DeanCharles DouglasJohn A. EdwardsonThomas J. EyermanJames B. FadimDavid W. Fox, Sr.Richard J. FrankeCyrus F. Freidheim, JrH. Laurance FullerMrs. Robert W. GalvinPaul C. GignilliatJoseph B. GlossbergWilliam A. GoldsteinMary Louise GornoHoward L. GottliebChester A. GougisRichard Gray †Joyce T. GreenMary Winton GreenDietrich GrossDavid P. HackettJoan W. HarrisJohn H. HartThomas C. HeagyJay L. HendersonDebora de HoyosMrs. Roger B. HullJudith W. IstockWilliam R. JentesPaul R. Judy
Richard B. KapnickDonald G. Kempf, JrGeorge D. KennedyMrs. John C. KernRobert KohlFred A. KrehbielCharles Ashby LewisEva F. LichtenbergJohn S. LillardDonald G. LubinJames W. MabieJohn F. ManleyLing Z. MarkovitzR. Eden MartinArthur C. MartinezJudith W. McCueLester H. McKeeverDavid E. McNeelJohn D. NicholsJames J. O’ConnorWilliam A. OsbornMrs. Albert PawlickJane DiRenzo PigottJohn M. PrattMrs. Neil K. Quinn †John W. Rogers, Jr.Jerry RoseFrank A. RossiCynthia M. SargentJohn R. SchmidtThomas C. Sheffield, Jr.Rita SimóRobert C. SpoerriCarl W. SternRoger W. StoneWilliam H. StrongLouis C. Sudler, Jr.Richard L. ThomasRichard P. ToftPenny Van Horn
chicago symphony orchestra association governing members
42 cso.org
governing members executive commit tee (2018 –19)Jared Kaplan ChairmanTimothy A. Duffy Immediate
Past ChairmanCharles Emmons, Jr.
Vice Chairman of the Annual FundEric Kalnins Vice Chairman of
Member EngagementMichael A. Perlstein
Vice Chairman of Nominations & Membership
governing members (2018 –19)Anonymous (3)Dora J. AalbregtseFloyd AbramsonFraida AlandSandra AllenRobert A. AlsakerMegan P. AndersonMrs. Ruth T. AndersonMychal P. AngelosDr. Edward ApplebaumDavid ArchDr. Kent ArmbrusterCarey AugustVernon Armour †Marta Holsman BabsonEd BachrachMara Mills BarkerMr. Merrill BarnesPeter BarrettRoberta BarronRoger BaskesRobert H. BaumMr. Robert A. BeattyMike BellArlene BennettEdward H. Bennett IIIMrs. James F. Beré †Meta S. BergerD. Theodore BerghorstAnn BerlinPhyllis BerlinRobert L. Berner, Jr.Ronald A. BevilMr. William E. BibleMrs. Arthur A. BillingsTomás BissonnetteDianne BlancoJudy BlauMerrill BlauDr. Phyllis C. BleckAnn BlickensderferMrs. Ted C. Bloch †Terry BodenMrs. Suzanne BorlandJames G. BorovskyAdam BossovJohn D. BramsenMr. Roderick BranchMs. Jill BrennanBarbara BridgesBob Brink
Adrienne BrookstoneArnold BrookstoneMrs. Roger O. BrownMrs. William Gardner BrownJohn D. BrubakerMrs. Patricia BryanGilda BuchbinderSamuel BuchsbaumLisa Dollar BuehlerMrs. Dean L. BuntrockLynn BurtElizabeth Nolan BuzardMs. Lutgart CalcoteThomas CampbellBryce CarmineMary Anne CarpenterWendy Alders CartlandJudy CastelliniLinton J. ChildsMrs. William C. ChildsFrank Cicero, Jr.Dana Green ClancyMr. Wesley M. ClarkPatricia A. ClickenerMitchell CobeyJean M. CocozzaMrs. Douglas CohenRobin Tennant ColburnLewis CollensMrs. Jane B. ColmanMrs. Earle M. Combs IIIMs. Cecilia ConradPatricia CoxMrs. Beatrice G. CrainMrs. William A. CraneMari Hatzenbuehler CravenMr. Richard CremieuxMr. Jerry J. CritserRebecca E. CrownMrs. Robert J. DarnallDr. Tapas K. Das GuptaMichael DawsonRoxanne DecykMs. Nancy DehmlowDuane M. DesParteJanet Wood DiederichsPaul DixMrs. William F. DooleySara L. DowneyMs. Ann DrakeDavid DranoveDr. George DuneaMr. Frank A. Dusek, CPAMrs. Dorne EastwoodMrs. Larry K. EbertLouis M. Ebling IIIMrs. Arthur Edelstein †Mrs. Richard EldenMr. Richard Elden †Kathleen H. ElliottMrs. Samuel H. EllisMr. Charles Emmons, Jr.Mrs. Janice EngleScott EnloeCynthia G. Esler †Dr. Marilyn D. EzriTarek FadelMelissa Sage Fadim
Jeffrey FarbmanWilliam FarleySally S. FederJoe FeldmanSigne FergusonHector Ferral, M.D.Mr. Harve FerrillMs. Constance M. FillingMr. Daniel FischelKenneth M. FitzgeraldEileen T. FlynnMrs. John D. FosterRhoda Lea FrankMrs. Zollie S. Frank †Mr. Paul E. FreehlingMitzi FreidheimMr. Philip M. FriedmannMalcolm M. GaynorRobert D. GechtFrank GelberMrs. Lynn GendlemanDr. Mark GendlemanIsak V. GersonRabbi Gary S. GersonDr. Bernardino GhettiKaren GianfranciscoMrs. Willard GidwitzEllen GignilliatJerome GilsonMr. James J. GlasserMr. Jonathan W. GlossbergMrs. Madeleine Condit GlossbergMrs. Mary Anne GoldbergMrs. Judy GoldbergAlfred G. GoldsteinAnne GoldsteinJerry A. GoldstoneMarcia GoltermannMary GoodkindMrs. William M. Goodyear, Jr.Dr. Alexia GordonMr. Michael D. GordonChester A. GougisDonald J. GralenMary L. GrayFreddi L. GreenbergJoyce GreeningDr. Jerri GreerKendall GriffithJerome J. GroenJacalyn GronekMrs. John GrowdonJohn P. GrubeJames P. GruseckiJoel R. Guillory, Jr., M.D.Dr. John W. Gustaitis, Jr.Gary GuttingLynne R. HaarlowMrs. Ernst A. HäberliJerry A. Hall, M.D.Joan M. HallDr. Howard HalpernMrs. Richard C. HalpernAnne Marcus HamadaJoel L. HandelmanJohn HardMrs. William A. HarkMrs. Caryn Harris
Mr. King HarrisDr. Robert A. HarrisJames W. HaughThomas HaynesMrs. Joseph Andrew HaysJames HeckmanMrs. Patricia Herrmann HeestandMary Mako HelbertBob HelmanMarilyn P. HelmholzRichard H. HelmholzDr. Arthur L. HerbstMarlene Kovar HershSeymour “Sonny” I. HershJeffrey W. HesseMarjorie Friedman HeymanKonstanze L. HickeyThea Flaum HillMrs. Mary P. HinesMr. William J. Hokin †Wayne J. Holman IIIMr. Richard S. Holson IIIFred E. HolubowMr. James HolzhauerCarol HonigbergJanice L. HonigbergMrs. H. Earl Hoover †Mrs. Nancy A. HornerMrs. Arnold Horween, Jr.Frances G. HorwichMrs. Peter H. HuizengaMichael L. IgoeMr. Craig T. IngramMrs. Verne G. IstockDr. Peter IvanovichMrs. Nancy Witte JacobsCynthia Jamison-MarcyDr. Todd JanusJohn JaworBenetta Park JensonMs. Justine JentesMrs. William R. JentesBrian JohnsonGeorge E. JohnsonRonald B. JohnsonMrs. Shirley JohnsonDr. Patricia Collins JonesMs. Stephanie JonesEdward T. JoyceEric KalninsMrs. Carol K. KaplanMrs. Dolores Kohl KaplanJared KaplanClaudia Norris KapnickMr. John A. KarolyMrs. Byron C. KarzasBarry D. KaufmanKenneth KaufmanMarie KaufmanDon KaulMarilyn M. KeilJim KelleherMolly KellerJonathan KemperDonald G. Kempf, Jr.Linda J. Kenney, PhDGerould KernJohn C. Kern
governing members
† DeceasedItalics indicate Governing Members who have served at least five terms (fifteen years or more).The Governing Members are the CSOA’s first philanthropic society, supporting its artistic excellence and community engagement. In return, members enjoy exclusive benefits and recognition. For more information, please contact 312-294-3337 or [email protected].
december 2018/january 2019 43
Elizabeth I. KeyserRichard L. KeyserEmmy KingSusan KiphartCarol KippermanDr. Jay KleimanCarol Evans KlenkJean KlingensteinMrs. Harriet B. KoehlerMr. Henry L. KohnSanfred KoltunJudy KonenJack KozikDr. Mark KozloffMr. David KravitzDr. Michael KrcoDavid KreismanMaryBeth KretzDr. Vinay KumarDr. Paul KurtinRubin KuznitskyMr. John LaBarberaArthur LadenburgerPatricia LeeSunhee LeeEleanor LeichenkoSheila Fields LeiterJeffrey LennardLaurence H. LevineMrs. Bernard LevitonDr. Edmund J. LewisGregory M. LewisMrs. Paul LiebermanPhilip R. Liebson, M.D.Patricia M. LivingstonJohn S. Lizzadro, Sr.Jane LoebJames R. LoewenbergRenée LoganAmy LubinMrs. Duncan MacLeanDr. Michael S. MalingMr. Daniel ManoogianJudy MarthPatrick A. MartinBeLinda I. MathieJames MatsonMarianne C. MayerSteven D. McCormickHoward M. McCue IIIAnn Pickard McDermottDr. James L. McGeeDr. John P. McGee IIMrs. Lester McKeeverJohn A. McKennaMrs. Peter McKinneyMrs. C. Bruce McLaganMrs. James M. McMullanJames Edward McPhersonMr. Paul MeisterMs. Mary MittlerDr. Toni-Marie MontgomeryEmilie Morphew, M.D.Kate B. MorrisonChristopher MorrowMr. Herbert F. MunstermanDaniel R. MurrayEileen M. Murray
Mr. Stuart C. NathanMrs. Ray E. Newton, Jr.Edward A. NieminenDr. Zehava L. NoahKenneth R. NorganSusan NoyesMr. Gerard NussbaumMartha C. NussbaumWilliam A. ObenshainMrs. James J. O’ConnorEric OesterleMrs. Norman L. OlsonJoy O’MalleyMr. Thomas OrlandoBeatrice F. OrzacMr. Gerald A. OstermannJames J. O’Sullivan, Jr.Bruce L. OttleyMrs. China I. OughtonMichael L. OwenMrs. Evelyn E. PadorrMr. Bruno A. PasquinelliMr. Timothy J. PatenodeRobert J. Patterson, Jr.Mr. Michael PayetteFrances PennMrs. Richard S. PepperJean E. PerkinsKingsley PerkinsMr. Michael A. PerlsteinDr. William PeruzziRobert C. PetersonSara PetersonEllard Pfaelzer, Jr.Mrs. Sue N. PickVirginia Johnson PillmanMrs. Sherri PincusBetsey N. PinkertHarvey R. PlonskerMr. John F. Podjasek IIIJudy PomeranzMr. Michael PopeStephen PotterCarol PrinsMr. Leigh RabmanDiana M. RaunerSusan RegensteinMari Yamamoto RegnierMark S. ReiterMary Thomson RennerMerle ReskinBurton R. RissmanCharles T. RivkinCarol RobertsMr. John H. RobertsDavid RobinDr. Diana RobinBob RogersKevin M. RooneyHarry J. RoperMrs. Sheli Z. RosenbergDr. Ricardo RosenkranzMichael RosenthalDr. Roseanne RosenthalBetsy RosenzweigDr. H. Jay Rothenberg, M.D.Roberta H. RubinMrs. Susan B. Rubnitz
Sandra RusnakDavid W. “Buzz” RuttenbergMary RyanMrs. Patrick G. RyanRichard O. RyanWilliam RyanNorman K. SackarMr. Agustin G. SanzInez SaundersDavid SavnerMr. Timothy M. SawyierKarla SchererDavid M. SchiffmanJudith Feigon SchiffmanRosa SchlossDouglas M. SchmidtJana SchreuderAl SchriesheimDonald L. SchwartzDr. Penny Bender SebringChandra SekharDr. Ronald A. SemerdjianMrs. Richard J.L. SeniorIlene W. ShawPam SheffieldJames C. Sheinin, M.D.Richard W. SheproJessie ShihMrs. Elizabeth ShoemakerMorrell McK. Shoemaker, Jr.Stuart ShulruffLinda SimonCraig SirlesValerie SlotnickMrs. Jackson W. Smart, Jr.Mrs. Nancy SmerzCharles F. SmithDiane W. SmithLouise K. SmithMary Ann SmithStanton Kinnie Smith, Jr.Stephen R. SmithBetty W. SmykalDiane SnyderKimberly SnyderMrs. Ida N. SondheimerO.J. SopranosMrs. James Cavanaugh SpainOrli StaleyWilliam D. StaleyHelena StancikasGrace StanekDr. Eugene StarkLeonidas StefanosMs. Momoko SteinerMrs. Richard J. SternBruce StevensLiz StiffelVirginia Lee StiglerLawrence E. StricklingHarvey J. Struthers, Jr.Patricia StudyCheryl SturmMr. Sean SusaninMrs. Robert SzalayMr. Patrick Tagny DiesseMr. Gregory TaubeneckMr. David A. Thomson
Dr. Robert ThomsonMr. Scott ThomsonMs. Carla M. ThorpeJoan ThronMrs. Ray S. Tittle, Jr.William R. Tobey, Jr.John T. TraversDavid TrushinPaula TurnerRobert W. TurnerHenry J. UnderwoodZalman UsiskinMrs. James D. Vail IIIMrs. Virginia C. ValeDr. Cynthia M. ValukasPenelope Van HornMrs. Peter E. Van NiceMrs. Herbert A. VanceWilliam C. VanceJulia Vander PloegThomas D. Vander VeenDr. Michael ViglioneMr. Christian VinyardTheodore WachsMark A. WagnerBernard T. WallNicholas WallaceMs. Carol WarshawskyPaul S. WatfordDr. Catherine L. WebbMrs. Jacob WeglarzMrs. Joseph M. WeilDr. Jamie WeinerChickie WeisbardMr. Robert G. WeissBarbara WellerMrs. Barbara H. West †Penelope G. WestMrs. H. Blair WhiteMrs. Arnold R. WolffLaura WollDr. Hak WongCourtenay R. WoodMichael H. WooleverMs. Debbie WrightOwen YoungmanDavid J. ZampaDr. John P. ZarembaMs. Anne ZenzerRichard E. ZieglerKaren Zupko
Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
honor roll of donors
44 cso.org
Corporate PartnersThe Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association gratefully acknowledges the following corporate partners for their generous support. For more information on becoming a corporate partner, please contact Jennifer Adams at 312-294-3122 or [email protected].
global sponsor of the csoBank of America
$250,000 and aboveITWUnited Airlines
$100,000 –$2 49,999Allstate Insurance CompanyBMO Harris BankExelonKirkland & Ellis LLPNorthern TrustPNC Bank
$50,000 –$99,999AnonymousAbbottFinancial Economics Consulting Inc.Jenner & Block LLPPricewaterhouseCoopers LLPSidley Austin LLPSP Plus
$25 ,000 –$49,999AnonymousAbbott FundBaker McKenzieBulgariCIBCJPMorgan Chase & Co.KPMG LLPMagellan Development Group, LLCMayer Brown LLPS&C Electric Company FundSkadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher &
Flom LLPWalgreensWintrust Financial
$15 ,000 –$2 4 ,999AonDLA PiperEvans Food Group, Ltd.Fifth Third BankMcDermott Will & Emery LLPMcKinsey & CompanyOxford Bank & TrustSheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton LLP
$5 ,000 –$14 ,999AccentureAmsted Industries IncorporatedAriel InvestmentsBairdBlueCross and BlueShield of IllinoisThe Boston Consulting GroupChoose ChicagoCognitive Capital PartnersComPsych CorporationConcentric Equity PartnersCredit SuisseDeloitteDentonsThe Edgewater FundsErnst & Young LLPEvolve IPFellowes, Inc.Goldman Sachs & Co.Grant Thornton LLPLatham & Watkins LLPLazardLocke Lord LLPMolexNuveenPeoples GasSchiff Hardin LLPSegal ConsultingSipi Metals CorporationStarshak Winzenburg & Co.The Navarre Law FirmWeiss Financial, Inc.William Blair
$1,000 –$4 ,999Advent Systems, Inc.American Agricultural Insurance CompanybKL ArchitectureBuilding Consultants, Ltd.Burwood Group, Inc.Central Building & Preservation LPColumbia Capital Management, LLCDeka LashDraper and Kramer IncorporatedDS&P Insurance Services, Inc.The Duchossois GroupEagle Capital Management, LLCElk Grove Graphics, A Vomela
Network CompanyExchequerGemini Graphics, Inc.Generations DentalGoodSmith Gregg & Unruh LLPHyatt Hotels CorporationKimco ServicesKinder MorganLake Capital, LLCMacLean-Fogg CompanyOld Republic International CorporationParkway ElevatorsSahara EnterprisesThe Law Offices of Jonathan N. SherwellShetland Limited PartnershipShow ServicesShure IncorporatedTCB Mailing, Inc.Vienna BeefWellington Management Company
up to $1,000Allied UniversalEssendantFlooring Management Group, Inc.Global Water Technology, Inc.Kristy’s Audacious Interiors, LLCThe Ungar Group
december 2018/january 2019 45
honor roll of donors
Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
honor roll of donors
Foundations and Government AgenciesThe Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association gratefully acknowledges the following foundation and government partners for their generous support. For more information, please contact Susan Green at 312-294-3121.
$100,000 and aboveAnonymous (2)Paul M. Angell Family FoundationThe Elizabeth F. Cheney FoundationThe Davee FoundationJulius N. Frankel FoundationWalter E. Heller Foundation, in honor of
Alyce DeCostaJCS Fund of the DuPage FoundationJohn D. and Catherine T.
MacArthur FoundationNational Endowment for the ArtsThe Negaunee FoundationPritzker Military FoundationZell Family Foundation
$50,000 –$99,999The Brinson FoundationThe Chicago Community TrustRobert and Joanne Crown Income
Charitable Fund, in memory of Joanne Strauss Crown
Lloyd A. Fry FoundationSally Mead Hands FoundationIllinois Arts Council AgencyPolk Bros. Foundation
$25 ,000 –$49,999Alphawood FoundationThe Barker Welfare FoundationCrain-Maling FoundationJohn R. Halligan Charitable FundLeslie Fund, Inc.Bowman C. Lingle TrustThe Elizabeth Morse Charitable TrustThe Michael G. Woll Fund at
The Pauls FoundationHulda B. and Maurice L.
Rothschild Foundation
$10,000 –$2 4 ,999Anonymous (1)Robert & Isabelle Bass Foundation, Inc.The Buchanan Family FoundationDarling Family FoundationIrving Harris FoundationStanley L and Lucy Lopata
Charitable FoundationNIB FoundationPrince Charitable TrustsThe Rhoades FoundationCharles and M. R. Shapiro FoundationThe George L. Shields FoundationTully Family FoundationRonald and Geri Yonover Foundation
$5 ,000 –$9,999Harry F. and Elaine Chaddick FoundationFranklin Philanthropic FoundationHoellen Family FoundationHunter Family FoundationJS Charitable TrustKovler Family FoundationThe Mayer & Morris Kaplan
Family FoundationMilne Family FoundationDr. Scholl FoundationArch W. Shaw FoundationSiragusa Family Foundation
$2 ,500 –$4 ,999The Allyn Foundation, Inc.Arts Midwest Touring FundCharles H. and Bertha L.
Boothroyd FoundationCarl Forstmann Memorial FoundationWilliam M. Hales FoundationBenjamin J. Rosenthal FoundationWalter and Caroline Sueske
Charitable Trust
$1,000 –$2 , 499Geraldi Norton FoundationPritzker Traubert Family Foundation
foundation spotlight
The Pauls FoundationThrough its mission to support arts organizations with funding that makes a marked difference in their ability to offer programming to people in Chicago and beyond, The Pauls Foundation strives to reach as many organiza-tions as possible whose work has a significant and meaningful impact through the arts. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association appreciates the opportunity to partner with the foundation in support of advanced music studies and professional development for Civic Orchestra of Chicago musicians. This season, The Michael G. Woll Fund at The Pauls Foundation supports five Civic Fellows: Devin Gossett, Bryant Millet, Lucas Steidinger, Renee Vogen, and Kelsey Williams.
The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association and the Civic Orchestra of Chicago thank The Pauls Foundation for its generosity and commitment to supporting the next generation of classical musicians.
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
46 cso.org
honor roll of donors
The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association deeply appreciates the generous support of all its donors. To learn more, please call 312-294-3100.
Lifetime SupportThe Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association recognizes lifetime, cumula-tive gifts, and commitments in support of all areas and programs of the CSOA.
charles norman faye circle $20,000,000 +Bank of AmericaThe Negaunee FoundationHelen and Sam Zell
heritage circle $10,000,000 –$19,999,999Anonymous (1)Estate of Mrs. A. Watson ArmourDavid and Juli GraingerThe Grainger Foundation
legacy circle $5 ,000,000 –$9,999,999Anonymous (1)Estate of Mrs. Robert C. BorwellBPRosemarie and Dean L. BuntrockThe Chicago Community TrustCity of Chicago Department of Cultural
Affairs and Special EventsJudson and Joyce GreenDavid † and Mary Winton GreenMr. & Mrs. Dietrich M. GrossIllinois Arts Council AgencyMr. † and Mrs. Kenneth JulianThe John D. and Catherine T.
MacArthur FoundationEstate of Eloise MartinThe Andrew W. Mellon FoundationThe Regenstein FoundationSage Foundation, Melissa Sage FadimIn loving memory of Alice Welsh SkillingRichard and Helen ThomasUnited Airlines
leadership circle $2 ,500,000 –$4 ,999,999Anonymous (2)Abbott FundRandy L. and Melvin R. BerlinBruce and Martha Clinton for The Clinton
Family FundEstate of Nelson D. CorneliusThe Crown FamilyThe Davee FoundationExelonFidelity InvestmentsJulius N. Frankel FoundationMarguerite DeLany Hark
The Irving Harris Foundation, Joan W. Harris
ITWThe Kapnick FamilyKraft FoodsMargot and Josef LakonishokJim and Kay MabieJP Morgan Chase & Co.Macy’sEstate of Claire Bastian MaynardThe Robert R. McCormick FoundationNorthern TrustCathy and Bill OsbornEstate of Virginia H. RogersSara Lee FoundationCynthia M. SargentEstate of Florence SewellState of IllinoisEstate of Louise Benton WagnerThe Wallace Foundation
founders circle $1,000,000 –$2 , 499,999Anonymous (8)Allstate Insurance CompanyMr. † and Mrs. Roger A. AndersonAonEstate of Elizabeth M. AshtonAT&TBaxter International Inc.BMO Harris BankThe Brinson FoundationMr. & Mrs. William Gardner BrownThe Buchanan Family FoundationMatthew † and Kay BucksbaumThe Elizabeth F. Cheney FoundationCitadel FoundationCooper Family FoundationMr. † & Mrs. † Arthur EdelsteinErnst & Young LLPMrs. Zollie S. Frank †Estate of Edmund FroehlichLloyd A. Fry FoundationNancy and Larry FullerHelen M. Galvin Charitable TrustEstate of Alan GarberAnn and Gordon Getty FoundationMrs. Willard GidwitzEllen and Paul GignilliatGilchrist FoundationMr. & Mrs. Joseph B. GlossbergEstate of William B. Graham and
William B. Graham TrustRichard † and Mary L. GrayKenneth C. Griffin Charitable FundEstates of Lester and Betty GuttmanJohn Hart and Carol Prins
Walter E. Heller Foundation, in memory of Alyce DeCosta
Estate of James C. HemphillJudy and Verne IstockMr. & Mrs. William R. JentesThe Joyce Family FoundationKirkland & Ellis LLPLaSalle BankLewis-Sebring Family FoundationEstate of Marion J. LivingstonEstates of Glen A. and Marion LloydArthur Maling TrustMayer Brown LLPMerrill LynchJudy and Scott McCueNancy Lauter McDougal and
Alfred L. McDougal †The James and Madeleine McMullan
Family FoundationJanet L. MelkMorgan StanleyThe Elizabeth Morse Charitable TrustThe Elizabeth Morse Genius
Charitable TrustMotorola, Inc.Alexandra and John NicholsNuveenMr. † & Mrs. Albert PawlickPolk Bros. FoundationThe Port, Washlow, and Errant FamiliesPricewaterhouseCoopers LLPPrince Charitable TrustsThe Pritzker FoundationEstate of Christine QuerfeldPriscilla and John † RichmanSandra and Earl Rusnak, Jr.Estate of Frances S. SchaffnerDr. Scholl FoundationMr. John Schmidt and Dr. Janet GilboyThe Searle Family TrustSears, Roebuck, and Co.Barbara and Barre Seid FoundationSoretta † and Henry † ShapiroSidley Austin LLPThe Sindelar FamilyMr. † & Mrs. Ralph SmykalBeatrice B. Tinsley Charitable TrustWaste Management, Inc.Estate of Bernard Williams
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
december 2018/january 2019 47
honor roll of donors
sustaining member $500,000 –$999,999Anonymous (4)Mr. & Mrs. William Adams IVAmerican Express CompanyThe Paul M. Angell Family FoundationEstate of Wayne BalmerBaldwin PianosBarker Welfare FoundationJulie and Roger BaskesArlene and Marshall BennettEstate of Norma Zuzanek BennettMr. † & Mrs. † James F. BeréArnie and Ann BerlinBessemer Trust Company, N.A.The Boeing CompanyBorgWarner Inc.Estate of Marie K. BurnsideEstate of Leroy Wesley Busby, Jr.Estate of Victor I. CharbulakMr. † & Mrs. † John R. ConradRobert and Joanne Crown Income
Charitable FundTony and Lawrie DeanEstate of Katherine S. DunbaughThe Field Foundation of Illinois, IncMr. † & Mrs. Donald F. FlynnMr. & Mrs. David W. Fox, Sr.Rhoda Lea and Henry S. † FrankMr. & Mrs. Richard J. FrankeJohn R. Halligan Charitable FundRichard and Alice GodfreyMr. † & Mrs. † George GrikshellRobin Tieken HadleyJulie † and Parker † HallSally Mead Hands FoundationMr. & Mrs. Thomas C. HeagyEstates of Benjamin W. and
Natalie HeinemanMr. & Mrs. Jay L. HendersonEstate of Helen HoaglandEstate of Elizabeth HoffmanPamela Kelley Hull / Roger B. HullEstate of Amanda JohnsonMr. & Mrs. Paul JudyMr. & Mrs. George KennedyRichard P. † and Susan Kiphart FamilyDr. David † and Mrs. Barbara KipperRobert Kohl and Clark PellettJoseph and Judith KonenKPMG LLPKay and Fred KrehbielEstate of Arthur KromLing Z. and Michael C. MarkovitzOscar G. and Elsa S. Mayer
Family FoundationMercedes-Benz of North America, Inc.Bruce P. Olson †Estate of Dorothy and William Paulick, Jr.Estate of Helen PerkinsEstate of Halina J. Presley
COL (IL) Jennifer N. Pritkzer, IL ARNG (Retired)
Pritzker Military FoundationEstate of Ruth RaySherry and Bob † ReumSheli Z. and Burton X. RosenbergEstate of Harriet Cary RossHulda B. and Maurice L.
Rothschild FoundationMrs. Rudy Ruggles †Patrick G. and Shirley W. Ryan FoundationS&C Electric Company FundEstate of Alice F. SawyerEstates of Beverly and Grover SchlitzMr. † & Mrs. Irving Seaman, Jr.Megan and Steve ShebikMr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Sheffield, Jr.Estate of Berton E. SiegelMrs. Joan SiegelSP PlusEstates of Edward and Audrey SpiegelMr. & Mrs. William C. SteinmetzRoger and Susan Stone
Family FoundationMr. & Mrs. William H. StrongMr. & Mrs. Louis Sudler, Jr.Estate of Helen L. TeichToyota Motor CorporationCatherine M. and Frederick H. WaddellEstate of Nancy L. WaldWalgreensThe Helen F. Whitaker FundWoods Fund of Chicago
Annual SupportThe Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association gratefully acknowledges the following individuals for their annual gifts and commitments in support of the CSOA through October 23, 2018. To learn more, please call Bobbie Rafferty, Director, Individual Giving and Affiliated Donor Groups, at 312-294-3165.
$150,000 and aboveAnonymous (3)Randy L. and Melvin R. BerlinRosemarie and Dean L. BuntrockJudson and Joyce GreenMr. Kenneth C. GriffinMr. & Mrs. Dietrich M. GrossThe Julian Family FoundationMargot and Josef LakonishokThe League of the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra AssociationJim and Kay MabieNancy Lauter McDougal and
Alfred L. McDougal †The James and Madeleine McMullan
Family FoundationThe Negaunee Foundation
Cathy and Bill OsbornCOL (IL) Jennifer N. Pritzker, IL
ARNG (Retired)Megan and Steve ShebikRichard and Helen ThomasUnited AirlinesHelen and Sam Zell
$100,000 –$149,999Anonymous (4)Julie and Roger BaskesThe Davee FoundationIrving Harris Foundation, Joan W. HarrisLing Z. and Michael C. MarkovitzRobert Kohl and Clark PellettCatherine M. and Frederick H. Waddell
$50,000 –$99,999Anonymous (2)Dora J. and R. John AalbregtseMr. & Mrs. William Adams IVPatricia and Laurence BoothKay BucksbaumRobert J. BufordMs. Marion A. CameronThe Crown FamilyChristopher L. CulpDr. Eugene and Mrs. Sallyann FamaMr. Daniel Fischel and Ms. Sylvia NeilRhoda Lea and Henry S. † FrankMs. Susan Goldschmidt and
Mr. Miles TaubChet Gougis and Shelley OchabRichard † and Mary L. GrayJohn Hart and Carol PrinsPamela Kelley Hull / Roger B. HullMs. Patricia HydeMr. & Mrs. Verne G. IstockMr. & Mrs. William R. JentesNancy and Sanfred KoltunJim and SuAnne LopataJudy and Scott McCueSusan RegensteinSandra and Earl Rusnak, Jr.Cynthia M. SargentBarbara and Barre Seid FoundationRose Shure TrustMichael and Linda SimonLiz Stiffel
$25 ,000 –$49,999Anonymous (3)Sharon and Charles AngellPeter and Elise BarackRobert H. Baum and MaryBeth KretzMr. & Mrs. William Gardner BrownJohn D. and Leslie Henner BurnsMr. & Mrs. David CasperBruce and Martha Clinton for The Clinton
Family FundMr. & Dr. George ColisThe Crown Family
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
48 cso.org
honor roll of donors
Ms. Debora de Hoyos and Mr. Walter Carlson
Timothy A. and Bette Anne DuffyMr. & Mrs. Brian DuweJohn and Fran EdwardsonDan J. Epstein Family FoundationMr. & Mrs. James B. FadimSheri and J. Bradley FewellMr. & Mrs. David W. Fox, Sr.Nancy and Larry FullerEllen and Paul GignilliatRichard and Alice GodfreyWilliam A. and Anne GoldsteinMary Louise GornoMr. Graham C. GradyMary Winton GreenMr. & Mrs. Jay L. HendersonJared Kaplan and Maridee QuanbeckMs. Donna L. KendallSidney Kohl Family FoundationMr. & Mrs. James KolarJoseph and Judith KonenRandall S. KrosznerLewis-Sebring Family FoundationMr. Terrance Livingston and
Ms. Debra CafaroBeth A. Mannino and Paul SchickPatty and Mark McGrathMr. David E. McNeelMr. & Mrs. Christopher MelvinMs. Renee MetcalfMs. Mary MolloyMr. & Mrs. Robert S. MurleyDaniel R. MurrayAlexandra and John NicholsMr. & Mrs. Gerald L. Pauling IIMr. † & Mrs. Albert PawlickAndra and Irwin PressDr. Mohan RaoDiana and Bruce RaunerMrs. John Shedd Reed †Sheli Z. and Burton X. RosenbergMr. & Mrs. Jason and Kristen RossiMr. & Mrs. Scott SantiMr. John Schmidt and Dr. Janet GilboyMr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Sheffield, Jr.Dr. & Mrs. Robert ShillmanMarion E. SimonWalter and Kathleen SnodellBill and Orli Staley FoundationThierer Family FoundationMs. Liisa M. Thomas and
Mr. Stephen L. PrattMr. & Mrs. Richard P. ToftTerrence and Laura TruaxPenny and John Van HornMr. & Mrs. Robert A. Wislow
$15 ,000 –$2 4 ,999Anonymous (3)Arnie and Ann BerlinJoyce Chelberg
Sue and Jim CollettiMr. Jerry J. CritserMr. † & Mrs. David A. DonovanAnne H. EvansMr. & Mrs. Richard J. FrankeMr. & Mrs. Cyrus F. Freidheim, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. GlossbergSue and Melvin GrayLynne R. HaarlowMr. Collier HandsMarguerite DeLany HarkMr. & Mrs. R. HelmholzMs. Leigh Ann HermanMr. † & Mrs. Joel D. HonigbergMs. Kola KennedyAnne and John KernDr. June KoizumiDr. Eva Lichtenberg and Dr. Arnold TobinMr. & Mrs. James LoewenbergMichuda Construction Inc.Mr. Robert PetersonMs. Emilysue PinnellMs. Judy PomeranzLeAnn Pedersen Pope and
Clyde S. McGregorMr. & Mrs. John PrattDr. Petra and Mr. Randy O. RissmanJerry RoseMr. & Mrs. Albert SchlachtmeyerMr. & Mrs. Alejandro SilvaIda N. Sondheimer & Family, in memory of
Joseph SondheimerMr. Irving Stenn, Jr.Carl W. Stern and Holly Hayes-SternRoger and Susan Stone Family FoundationBill and Anne TobeyMr. Christian VinyardMr. † & Mrs. H. Blair WhiteDr. Marylou Witz
$7,500 –$14 ,999Anonymous (3)Mrs. Rosa Acevedo and
Mr. Jose Luis PradoJeff and Keiko AlexanderMr. & Mrs. Stuart ApplebaumProfessor M. Cherif Bassiouni † and
Elaine KlemenMr. & Mrs. Christopher BarberMr. Peter BarrettMr. Lawrence BellesMrs. James F. Beré †Henry R. Berghoef and
Leslie Lauer BerghoefMerrill and Judy BlauMr. Donald BousemanMr. Roderick BranchMr. & Mrs. Arnold BrookstoneMr. & Mrs. Roger O. BrownHenry and Gilda BuchbinderTom and Dianne CampbellMs. Vera Capp
Mr. & Ms. Keith ClaytonDouglas and Carol CohenMr. Lawrence CorryMr. & Mrs. William A. CraneMari Hatzenbuehler CravenDancing Skies FoundationMr. Philip DarlingMs. Nancy DehmlowMs. Shawn M. Donnelley and
Dr. Christopher M. KellyMr. & Mrs. William DooleyMr. & Mrs. Charles W. DouglasDr. & Mrs. James L. DowneyMs. Ann DrakeDr. George Dunea and Dr. Sally DuneaMr. & Mrs. Bernard DunkelMr. † & Mrs. Richard EldenMs. Paula ElliottMr. & Mrs. Samuel H. EllisDr. & Mrs. Mark GendlemanMr. & Mrs. † Isak V. GersonJeannette and Jerry GoldstoneMr. & Mrs. John P. GrubeJames and Brenda GruseckiMr. & Mrs. David HackettMrs. Richard C. HalpernHarris Family FoundationMr. & Mrs. Michael R. HassanMr. & Mrs. Thomas C. HeagyPati and O.J. HeestandDavid Herro and Jay FrankeMr. & Mrs. Mark C. HibbardMrs. Mary P. HinesMr. & Mrs. Wayne J. Holman IIIFred and Sandra HolubowJanice L. HonigbergMr. & Mrs. † Howard JessenMr. & Mrs. George E. JohnsonRonald B. JohnsonMr. & Mrs. Edward T. JoyceBarbara and Kenneth KaufmanJean KlingensteinFerdinand and Bernadette KorndorfDr. Michael KrcoDr. † & Mrs. H. LeichenkoMs. Betsy LevinDrs. Edmund & Julie LewisMr. † & Mrs. Paul LiebermanMr. & Mrs. John LillardThe Loewenthal Fund at The Chicago
Community TrustHeather McWilliamsCharles A. MooreEmilie Morphew, M.D.David and Dolores NelsonEdward and Gayla NieminenMs. Susan NorvichMs. Martha NussbaumBill and Penny ObenshainMr. & Mrs. William J. O’NeillThe Osprey FoundationMrs. China I. Oughton
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
december 2018/january 2019 49
honor roll of donors
Ms. Elizabeth Parker and Mr. Keith CrowPasquinelli Family FoundationGerald † and Mona PennerRoxy and Richard PepperSue N. and Thomas F. PickMary and Joseph PlauchéAl and Lynn ReichleDr. Diana RobinMs. Judy RungePatrick G. and Shirley W. Ryan FoundationMr. Richard RyanMr. & Mrs. David SavnerKarla Scherer and Harve FerrillDavid and Judy SchiffmanMr. & Mrs. Michael SchollAl Schriesheim and Kay TorshenJoan and George SegalDavid and Judith L. SensibarThe Earl and Brenda Shapiro FoundationKimberly M. SnyderDr. & Mrs. Eugene and Jean StarkFay S. Stern, in memory of John N. SternMary StowellCheryl SturmMr. & Mrs. Louis Sudler, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Scott SwansonDr. Cynthia M. Valukas and
Mr. Joseph A. KohlMr. & Mrs. William C. VanceMs. Nancy VoorheesMr. † & Mrs. Jacob WeglarzIn memory of Peter Leland Wentz and
Vida Broadbent WentzCraig and Bette WilliamsM.L. WinburnAnn S. WolffSarah R. Wolff and Joel L. Handelman
$4 ,500 –$7, 499Anonymous (8)Mr. Edward Amrein, Jr. and
Mrs. Sara Jones-AmreinGeoffrey A. AndersonMegan P. and John L. AndersonCushman L. and Pamela AndrewsMarta Holsman BabsonMr. Edward M. BakwinMr. Neal BallMr. Peter BarrettDonna and Mike BellMs. Dorothy J. BensonMeta S. and Ronald † Berger
Family FoundationMr. & Mrs. D. Theodore BerghorstMr. Howard BernickMr. & Mrs. William E. BibleMrs. Nancy BlumMs. Terry BodenAmy and Brian Boonstra, in memory of
Jung R. Lee and Ida BychkovMr. & Mrs. John BorlandAdam Bossov
Mr. & Mrs. John D. BramsenMyrna R. BromleyMr. & Mrs. Samuel BuchsbaumKay and Rhett † ButlerMs. Lutgart CalcoteAnn and Richard CarrMia Celano and Noel DunnMr. Wesley M. ClarkThe Clinton Family FundJane and John C. ColmanMrs. Frances ComerDr. Thomas H. ConnerMr. Robert CookeMary Lynn CooneyJenny L. Corley in memory of
Dr. W. Gene CorleyMr. & Mrs. Richard CorradoAnita J. Court, Ph.D.Ms. Jane CoxMrs. Beatrice G. CrainMr. Ivo Daalder and Mrs. Elisa D. HarrisDr. & Mrs. Tapas K. Das GuptaMr. & Mrs. Charles DemirjianDuane M. DesParte and
John C. SchneiderJanet Wood DiederichsDavid and Deborah DranoveMs. Marilyn DugingerMr. & Mrs. Timothy EarleMr. & Mrs. Stephen EastwoodMr. & Mrs. Louis M. Ebling IIICharles and Carol EmmonsScott and Lenore EnloeSidney Epstein † and
Sondra Berman EpsteinMr. Fred EychanerMrs. Walter D. FacklerTarek and Ann FadelJeffrey Farbman and Ann GreensteinMs. Sharon Ferrill †Constance M. FillingDr. & Mrs. Sanford FinkelKenneth M. Fitzgerald and Ruby CarrHenry and Frances FogelGinny and Peter ForemanMr. & Mrs. Willard FraumannGerald FreedmanSusan and Paul FreehlingMr. & Mrs. Philip FriedmannSandy and Frank GelberCamillo and Arlene GhironMs. Karen GianfranciscoMrs. Willard GidwitzMr. & Mrs. James J. GlasserMr. Jonathan W. GlossbergLyn GoldsteinMary and Michael GoodkindMr. & Mrs. William M. Goodyear, Jr.Dr. Alexia GordonMr. Gerald and Dr. Colette GordonMrs. Amy G. Gordon and
Mr. Michael D. Gordon
Dr. Jerri E. GreerSusan † and Kendall GriffithMr. & Mrs. John HalesJoan M. HallStephanie and Howard HalpernAnne Marcus HamadaJohn and Sally HardMary E. HarlandJames W. HaughMr. & Mrs. Joseph Andrew HaysJanet and Bob HelmanSonny and Marlene HershThe Hickey Family FoundationWilliam B. HinchliffRichard and Joanne HoffmanMr. William J. Hokin †Dr. & Mrs. James HollandMr. & Mrs. Richard S. Holson IIIJames and Eileen HolzhauerJames and Mary HoustonMr. † & Mrs. Peter HuizengaTex and Susan HullLeland E. Hutchinson and Jean E. PerkinsMrs. Babette InglehartMs. Elizabeth InglehartDr. Peter IvanovichDr. & Mrs. Todd and Peggy JanusJoseph and Rebecca JarabakMs. Justine Jentes and Mr. Dan KurunaDolores Kohl Kaplan and
Morris A. Kaplan †Mr. & Mrs. Edward Kaplan/
Kaplan FoundationLarry † and Marie KaufmanMr. Tyrus KaufmanDon Kaul and Barbara Bluhm-KaulMarilyn M. KeilMr. & Mrs. Michael KeiserJim and Ellen KelleherMr. & Mrs. Jeff KellerMrs. Elizabeth KeyserEsther G. KlatzMr. & Mrs. Richard K. KomarekMr. & Mrs. Jack KozikMr. & Mrs. David KravitzKay and Fred KrehbielDavid and Susan KreismanMr. & Mrs. Ronald KrueckMr. & Mrs. Rubin P. KuznitskyPatricia LeeMr. Jeffrey LennardWally and Carol LennoxMr. Julius Lewis †Dr. Herbert & Francine LippitzDiane and William F. LloydS. Stella MahThe Malott Family FoundationMr. & Mrs. Patrick A. MartinDr. & Mrs. Daniel MassMrs. Robert MayerMargaret H. and Steven D. McCormickAnn Pickard McDermott
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
50 cso.org
honor roll of donors
In memory of William and Carolyn McKittrick
James Edward McPherson and David L. Murray
Mr. Gregory and Dr. Alice MelchorMs. Judith Moniak †Dr. Bill MoorDr. Charles MorcomMr. † & Mrs. William NeimanMrs. Ray E. Newton, Jr.Dr. Zehava L. NoahElizabeth Nolan and Kevin BuzardMr. & Mrs. Norman L. OlsonMr. Bruce OltmanMr. & Mrs. James O’Sullivan, Jr.Dianne M. and Robert J. Patterson, Jr.Mr. Michael PayetteMs. Shauna PeetRichard and Frances PennDr. & Mrs. Ray PensingerMr. & Mrs. Norman PermanLorna and Ellard Pfaelzer, Jr.Ms. Kimberly PickenpaughMr. Samuel PressMr. & Mrs. John PuthMs. Helen ReedAnn and Bob Reiland, in memory of
Arthur and Ruth KochMs. Carol RobertsBob Rogers TravelMr. John W. Rogers, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Harry J. RoperSharon and Louis F. RosenthalD.D. RoskinMr. & Mrs. Frank A. RossiMrs. Donald Roth †Jay and Maija RothenbergMs. Roberta H. RubinWilliam and Mary RyanRita † and Norman SackarMs. Cecelia SamansMr. David SandfortMr. Muneer A. Satter and
Ms. Kristen H. HertelMr. Timothy M. SawyierThe Schreuder FamilyDonald L. and Susan J. SchwartzIlene and Michael Shaw Charitable TrustJessie Shih and Johnson HoMs. Ann SilbermanJulia M. SimpsonMitchell † and Valerie SlotnickMrs. Jackson W. Smart, Jr.Mrs. Nancy SmerzMrs. Diane W. SmithLouise K. SmithJames and Diane SnyderMr. † & Mrs. James Cavanaugh SpainRobert and Emily SpoerriMs. Adena StabenDusan Stefoski and Craig SavageMs. Momoko Steiner
Mr. Hal S.R. StewartLaurence and Caryn StrausLawrence E. Strickling and Sydney L. HansMr. & Mrs. William H. StrongRuth Miner Swislow †Mr. & Mrs. Robert SzalayMr. Patrick Tagny DiesseRay and Mary Ann TittleJohn T. and Carrie M. TraversHoward and Paula † TrienensMr. & Mrs. William & Joan TrukenbrodVirginia C. ValeMr. & Mrs. Peter E. Van NiceMrs. Dorothy VanceMr. & Mrs. Robert G. WeissBert and Barbara WellerMr. and Ms. Richard WilliamsMr. Stephen WintersMichael † and Laura WollDr. Hak WongMichael H. and Mary K. WooleverMs. Karen Zupko
$2 ,500 –$4 , 499Anonymous (17)Elaine and Floyd AbramsonMs. Susan AdlerFraida and Bob AlandMs. Rochelle AllenSandra Allen and Jim PerlowMr. & Mrs. Robert A. AlsakerMr. & Mrs. Michael AndersonMs. Doris AngellMychal P. Angelos, in memory of
Dorothy A. AngelosDr. Edward Applebaum and Dr. Eva RedeiDavid and Suzanne ArchDr. & Mrs. Kent ArmbrusterMrs. Jeanne B. AronsonCarey and Brett AugustEd BachrachMr. & Mrs. William BardeenPaul and Robert Barker FoundationMr. Merrill and Mr. N.M.K. BarnesRoberta and Harold S. BarronMs. Barbara BarzanskyMs. Sandra BassMs. Elaine BaumannDr. & Mrs. Robert A. BeattyMs. Michele BeckerMr. Ken BelcherMr. & Mrs. Richard BenckDr. Leonard & Phyllis BerlinMr. & Mrs. Robert L. Berner, Jr.Catherine & Ron BevilLois R. and Maurice J. BeznosMrs. Arthur A. BillingsMr. & Mrs. Harrington BischofJim † and Dianne BlancoAnn BlickensderferMr. & Mrs. Andrew BlockCassandra L. Book
Mr. & Mrs. James BorovskyMs. Jill BrennanBarbara and Powell BridgesConnie and Bob BrinkMr. & Ms. Joel BroskMr. & Mrs. John BrubakerMr. & Mrs. Timothy BryanLinda S. BuckleyLisa Dollar Buehler and Bill EscamillaCarmine FoundationWendy Alders CartlandMr. & Mrs. Jerome CastelliniMr. & Mrs. Candelario CelioMr. James ChamberlainMr. David A. ChambersJayson and Elizabeth CheeverLinton J. ChildsJan and Frank Cicero, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. ClancyPatricia A. ClickenerMitchell Cobey and Janet RealiMs. Jean CocozzaDr. Edward A. Cole and
Dr. Christine A. RydelLewis CollensMary Ellen Cooney and Ken Higgins †Patricia Cox and FamilyMs. Juli CrabtreeMr. & Mrs. Richard CremieuxMr. Earle Cromer IIIMr. Bert CrosslandConstance CwiokDr. Brenda A. Darrell and
Mr. Paul S. WatfordMr. & Mrs. Robert J. DarnallMelissa and Gordon DavisMuller Davis † and Lynn StrausIn Loving Memory of
Alice Furumoto-DawsonMr. Guy DeBoo and Ms. Susan FranzettiDecyk Charitable FoundationMr. Steven DeliMr. & Mrs. James W. DeYoungPaul and Nona DixThe Duchossois GroupMr. & Mrs. Frank A. DusekWendy EagerMr. & Mrs. David P. Earle IIIMr. & Mrs. Larry K. EbertMichael and Kathleen ElliottLa and Philip EngelMrs. Janice EngleMrs. Carol Evans, in memory of
Henry EvansMarilyn D. Ezri, M.D.Mr. & Mrs. William F. FarleySally S. FederCathy and Joe FeldmanJudith E. FeldmanSteven and Carol FelsenthalDonald and Signe FergusonHector Ferral, M.D.
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
december 2018/january 2019 51
honor roll of donors
Mr. Conrad FischerEvelyn T. FitzpatrickMrs. Donna FlemingEileen T. Flynn and Thomas J. InglisMr. Robert Fordham †Mrs. John D. FosterArthur L. Frank, M.D.Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd A. Fry IIIJan Gaines and Andrew S. KenoeEstate of Florence GanjaJudy and Mickey GaynorRobert D. GechtRabbi Gary S. Gerson and
Dr. Carol R. GersonBernardino and Caterina GhettiMr. & Mrs. Jerome GilsonMr. & Mrs. Perry GoldbergJudy & Bill GoldbergAlfred G. GoldsteinMr. & Mrs. Thomas M. GoldsteinRobert and Marcia GoltermannMr. Jacques GordonDonald J. GralenMs. Freddi GreenbergThomas † and Delta GreeneTimothy and Joyce GreeningMr. & Mrs. Byron GregoryMr. & Mrs. Jerome GroenJacalyn GronekMr. & Mrs. John GrowdonMrs. Marguerite GuidoDr. & Mrs. John W. Gustaitis, Jr.Anastasia and Gary GuttingMr. & Mrs. Ernst A. HäberliJerry A. Hall, M.D.Ms. Nancy HallerRonald and Diane HamburgerMs. Agnes HamosDr. & Mrs. Chester HandelmanMr. & Mrs. Stuart HandlerDr. Robert A. HarrisMrs. John M. HartiganMs. Kyle HarveyThomas and Connie Hsu HaynesJames and Lynne † HeckmanMarjorie Friedman HeymanMr. Steven HeiseMr. James R. Helbert † and
Mrs. Mary Mako HelbertDr. & Mrs. Arthur L. HerbstMr. & Mrs. Jeffrey W. HesseMr. Paul E. HicksRobert A. Hill and Thea Flaum HillJames & Megan HinchsliffMrs. Edwin P. HoffmanMs. Gretchen Hoffmann and
Mr. Joseph DohertyEugene HollandMr. Todd HollemanMs. Joanna HorsnailFrances and Franklin † HorwichMs. Roberta M. Horwitz
Carter Howard and Sarah KreppBruce and Carol HuckDavid and Marcia HulanDr. Ronald L. HullingerMr. Harry Hunderman and
Ms. Deborah SlatonMichael and Leigh HustonMichael L. IgoeMr. Craig T. IngramMs. Frieda Ireland and Mr. Carroll DamronMrs. Nancy Witte JacobsMr. & Mrs. Stan JakopinCynthia Jamison-MarcyMr. & Mrs. † Edgar D. Jannotta, Sr.Mr. John JaworBenetta and Paul JensonMr. & Mrs. Edward Jepson, Jr.Joni and Brian JohnsonMaryl Johnson, M.D.Dr. Patricia Collins JonesMs. Stephanie JonesMs. Kathleen JordanMs. Hyla KallenEric and Melanie KalninsMrs. Lonny H. KarminJohn and Kerma KarolyMs. Ethelle KatzBarry D. KaufmanSusie Forstmann KealyJonathan and Nancy Lee KemperLinda J. Kenney, PhDGerould and Jewell KernMr. & Mrs. Richard KeyserMr. Howard KiddAnne G. Kimball and Peter SternThe King Family FoundationCarol KippermanDr. Jay and Georgianna KleimanMr. & Mrs. James KlenkAnna Z. KleymenovaMr. Thomas KmetkoMrs. Harriet B. KoehlerMr. & Mrs. Norman KoglinCookie Anspach Kohn and Henry L. KohnDr. & Mrs. Mark KozloffEldon and Patricia KreiderDrs. Vinay and Raminder KumarPaul and Ruth Ann KurtinBob and Marian KurzMr. John LaBarberaMr. & Mrs. Mark LabkonArthur and Olga LadenburgerMr. Craig Lancaster and
Ms. Charlene T. HandlerAnne E. Leibowitz FundSheila Fields LeiterMary and Laurence LevineAverill and Bernard LevitonGregory M. Lewis and Mary E. StrekPhilip R. Liebson, M.D.Stewart and Susan LiechtiPatricia M. Livingston
Reva and John S. Lizzadro, Sr.Jane and Peter LoebRenée LoganMs. Jean LorenzenMr. Russ LymanMr. Edward MackMr. Daniel Macken and
Mr. Merlyn HarboldMr. & Mrs. Duncan MacLeanDr. & Mrs. Michael S. MalingMr. Daniel ManoogianDan and Lynne Mapes-RiordanRobert † and Judy MarthMs. Marjorie MartinArthur and Elizabeth MartinezMr. & Mrs. Robert MarwinMs. BeLinda Mathie and Dr. Brian HaagMarianne C. MayerDr. & Mrs. James McCrearyRosa and Peter McCullaghDr. & Mrs. James McGeeDr. & Mrs. John McGee IIBonnie McGrathBill McIntoshJohn and Etta McKennaDr. & Mrs. Peter McKinneyJane and Bruce McLaganMr. Zarin MehtaMr. & Mrs. Paul MeisterMr. Robert O. MiddletonMr. Llewellyn Miller and
Ms. Cecilia ConradEdward & Lucy R. Minor
Family FoundationDr. Leo and Catherine MiserendinoMs. Mary MittlerMr. Frank Modruson and
Ms. Lynne ShigleyMr. & Mrs. Robert MoellerDr. Toni-Marie MontgomeryMaria and Carl E. MooreMr. & Mrs. Stephen MoralesMrs. Frank MorrisseyThe Morrow Family FoundationCatherine Mouly and LeRoy T. Carlson, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Herbert F. MunstermanEileen M. MurrayJo Ann and Stuart NathanMr. & Mrs. Kenneth NebenzahlMr. Richard NichollsMr. & Mrs. Richard NoparKenneth R. NorganMrs. Janis NotzMr. Gerard and Dr. Linda NussbaumSharon and Lee OberlanderEric and Carolyn OesterleMichael and Kay O’HalleranMarjory OlikerJohn and Joy O’MalleyMr. Thomas OrlandoBeatrice F. OrzacMr. & Mrs. Gerald Ostermann
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
52 cso.org
honor roll of donors
Mr. Bruce OttleyMichael and Rebecca OwenMrs. Evelyn E. PadorrMr. Timothy J. PatenodeEugene and Lois PavalonKingsley PerkinsMr. & Mrs. Michael A. PerlsteinDr. William PeruzziDavid and Sara PetersonMr. & Mrs. Thomas D. PhilipsbornStanley M. and Virginia Johnson PillmanMrs. Sherri PincusMr. & Mrs. Dale R. PinkertHarvey and Madeleine PlonskerJohn F. Podjasek III Charitable FundTerrence PolichChristine and Michael PopeStephen and Ann Suker PotterSusan and Joseph A. Power, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Leigh RabmanJohn and Mary † RaittDorothy V. RammMark & Nancy RatnerHarper ReedMari Yamamoto RegnierMark S. ReiterMerle ReskinMary K. RingBurton and Francine RissmanCharles and Marilynn RivkinRoberts Family FoundationWilliam and Cheryl RobertsDavid and Kathy RobinErik and Nelleke RoffelsenKevin M. Rooney and Daniel P. VicencioMr. & Mrs. Saul RosenMr. & Mrs. Richard RosenbergMichael RosenthalDr. Roseanne RosenthalBetsy RosenzweigMrs. Susan B. RubnitzTina and Buzz RuttenburgMr. & Mrs. Rich RyanRaymond and Inez SaundersMr. Laurence SaviersMr. † and Mrs. Nathan SchlossShirley and John † SchlossmanDouglas M. SchmidtMr. & Mrs. Richard H. SchnadigMr. & Mrs. Thomas ScorzaStephen A. and Marilyn ScottDrs. Deborah and Lawrence SegilMr. & Mrs. Chandra SekharRonald and Nancy SemerdjianMr. & Mrs. Richard J.L. SeniorDr. Jerry and Eunice ShapiroMs. Courtney SheaMary and Charles M. SheaMs. Mary Beth SheaDr. & Mrs. James C. SheininRichard W. Shepro and Lindsay E. RobertsElizabeth and John Shoemaker
Mr. Morrell Shoemaker, Jr.Stuart and Leslie ShulruffMargaret and Alan SilbermanMr. & Mrs. John SimmonsJack and Barbara SimonThe Honorable John B. Simon and
Mrs. Millie Rosenbloom SimonMr. Larry SimpsonCraig SirlesMary Ann SmithMary Beth and Stanton K. Smith Jr.Melissa and Charles F. SmithMr. & Mrs. Stephen R. SmithMs. Patricia SmytheCarol S. SonnenscheinMr. & Mrs. O. J. SopranosMr. & Mrs. Michael SpainJoel and Beth SpenadelHelena StancikasSylvia SteenMr. & Mrs. Leonidas StefanosVirginia Lee StiglerDr. & Mrs. Ralph StollMr. & Mrs. Harvey J. Struthers, Jr.Ms. Minsook SuhMr. Sean SusaninMr. & Mrs. Gregory TaubeneckMr. James ThompsonMs. Carla M. ThorpeJoan and Michael ThronDrs. Karl and Sarah TichoMs. Mary TorresJoan and David TrushinPhil † and Paula TurnerMr. & Mrs. Robert W. TurnerKsenia A. and Peter TurulaMrs. Elizabeth TwedeLori L. and John R. TwomblyHenry and Janet UnderwoodZalman and Karen UsiskinMr. Peter ValeMs. Julia Vander PloegThomas D. Vander Veen, Ph.D.Dr. Michael ViglioneMs. Raita VilninsTheodore and Elisabeth WachsMr. & Mrs. Mark A. WagnerMr. & Mrs. Bernard WallNicholas and Jessica WallaceMr. & Mrs. William A. WardMs. Carol WarshawskyIn memory of Abby S. Magdovitz-
Wasserman from David Wasserman, MD
Dr. Catherine L. WebbSusan A. WeberMr. & Mrs. Joseph M. WeilDrs. Carolyn and Jamie WeinerHilary and Barry WeinsteinSamuel † and Chickie WeisbardAbby and Glen WeisbergLinda and Marc Weissbluth
Mrs. Barbara H. West †Mr. & Mrs. Peter WestMs. Zita WheelerDan and Paula WiseCourtenay R. Wood and
H. Noel Jackson, Jr.Cheryl B. and James T. WormleyMr. & Mrs. Donald WoulfeMs. Debbie WrightOwen and Linda YoungmanPaul and Mary YovovichMr. Laird Zacheis and Ms. Sunhee LeeDavid and Eileen ZampaDr. & Mrs. John ZarembaMs. Anne ZenzerMolly Ziegler and Karen WhittRichard E. ZieglerMs. Camille ZientekDr. Michael P. Zygmunt
$1,000 –$2 , 499Anonymous (27)Mr. & Mrs. Sherwin AbramsMr. Richard AbramMichael and Mary AbroeNancy A. AbshireThe Acorn FoundationMs. Patti AcurioMr. & Mrs. Stanley AdelmanIn memory of Martha and Bernie AdelsonMr. David R. AdlerSarah AdlerDr. & Mrs. Carl H. AlbrightMs. Judy AllenMs. Mary T. AlrothMrs. Evelyn AlterDr. Diane AltkornDr. Ronald and Barbara AltmanDr. Charles and Marie Grass AmentaMs. Carol AndersonMr. Karl Anderson and Ms. Pamela ShuDr. Smiljana AntonijevicDr. & Mrs. Robert ArensmanMr. Kevin ArmstrongGregory Yuri AronoffMs. Marie AsburyMr. & Mrs. Peter AscoliMary Jane and Bob AsherMr. & Mrs. Theodore M. AsnerMr. Sinan AtacJack S. AtenAthena FundMs. Frances AtkinsMr. Bhupat AtluriTom AuchterMs. Bernice AuslanderMr. Tom BachtellDr. Richard BaerCatherine Baker and Timothy KentJon Balke and G. BalkeEdith M. BallinMs. Barbara Ballinger
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
december 2018/january 2019 53
honor roll of donors
Mr. Robert BarkeiMs. Judith BarnardMr. Carroll BarnesMr. & Mrs. John BarnesPatrick BarnesJames and Bartha BarrettNita & Alvin BarshefskyWilliam BartleyMr. & Ms. John J. BasalayHoward and Donna BassMichael and Gail BauerMr. Ronald BauerRobert and Linda BaumMs. Patricia BayerleinMs. Ellen BechtholdPaul Becker and Nancy BeckerDr. & Mrs. Enrique BeckmannKirsten Bedway and Simon PeeblerShirley BehrendtPrue and Frank BeidlerArlene and Marshall † BennettMichelle BennettMs. Susan BennettMr. Thomas BergMr. & Mrs. Charles S. BergenMr. Marc BerlowGene and Natalie BernardoniMs. Catherine BerryMr. & Mrs. Loren Berry IIIMr. Jerry BiedemanBigoness FamilyMr. & Mrs. Charles BlackMr. Joe BlackburnMr. & Mrs. David BlumbergMr. & Mrs. Norman BobinsSusanna BodnarMr. Edward Boehm IIIMs. Virginia BoehmeTimothy and Karen BondyMr. & Mrs. Peter BorichMr. James BorkmanMr. & Mrs. Fred P. BosselmanMr. John BostjancichDrs. Nader and Mandan BozorgiMr. Douglas BraganMs. Danolda BrennanMr. Richard BresowarMr. & Mrs. Joseph BreuMr. Michael BrewerMs. Susan BridgeMr. & Mrs. Robert BrightfeltMrs. Walter BrissendenMr. Wesley BroquardMr. Lee M. Brown, Mr. John B. Newman,
and Ms. Pixie NewmanMrs. Dan BrusslanMr. † and Mrs. Allen BuhlerDr. Jack BulmashMs. Kathryn BurgdorferDr. Mary Louise Burger †Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth J. Burns, Jr.Mr. David Burrage
Mr. George BurrowsBob and Lynn BurtMs. Jeanne BuschMr. & Mrs. Mark BushmanMr. & Mrs. John ButlerGabriel and Jill BuzasMs. Linda CalandraMr. & Mrs. Wiley Caldwell, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Dennis CalvaneseFather John CanaryRobert and Kay CarlsonMr. Fairbank CarpenterDrs. Virginia and Stephen CarrBeverly and Lawrence CentellaMr. † & Mrs. Henry T. ChandlerMr. Aaron ChandranMr. Rowland ChangMs. Margaret ChaplanMr. & Mrs. John ChapmanMr. Myron CherryHarriett and Myron CholdenMr. & Mrs. Gerry ChrismanMr. George ChristakesBruce ChristianMr. & Mrs. Stanley ChristiansonMs. Kathleen ClarkStephen ClarkNancy J. ClawsonRobert Coen and Marjorie CoenMr. & Mrs. Frank CohenDavid ColburnMs. Kathryn CollierMr. Jonathan CollinsMr. Stan CollinsE. and V. Combs FoundationJames D. ComptonMrs. Eileen ConaghanPeter Conover and Kristi SlonigerPeter and Beverly Ann ConroyNancy R. CorralJoe and Judy CosenzaMr. & Mrs. Bill CottleKristen and John CourtneyGayla W. CoxMs. Susan CrawJay Crawford and Lynne FriedlanderHector CruzSen. John CullertonWilliam and Janice CutlerMrs. Marcia DamDr. Mark E. Dato and Dr. Mary P. BrownMr. Robert DaughertyDenise and Dr. Ariel DavidMr. & Mrs. Richard DavisonRomke de HaanMr. Eric C. DeanDelaney Delaney & Voorn LTDMrs. David DeMarMr. Adrian DemooyDr. & Mrs. Terrence DemosMs. Marcia DevlinMr. & Mrs. Byram Dickes
Ms. Amy Dickinson and Mr. James Futransky
Mr. Peter DiDonatoMr. William Dietz, Jr.Mr. Frank DileonardoMichael and Laurel DiPrimaKevin & Kelly DockeryMr. & Mrs. Otto Doering IIIMrs. Janice DomanikMr. Fred DonnerMs. Joan D. DonovanMrs. Adrienne DoppeltMrs. Catherine DouglasDr. & Mrs. Heratch DoumanianNatalie and Joshua DranoffMs. Rosanne DruianIngrid and Richard DubberkeMr. & Mrs. Andrew DudaMr. & Mrs. Eugene DudaMr. Ronald DukeMr. & Mrs. Robert DulskiMs. Ana Luz Perez DuranDr. Thomas Durica & Sue JacobMr. & Mrs. Dan DvorkinMr. & Mrs. Warren EagleJudge Frank EasterbrookMr. Nik B. EdesGary and Deborah EdidinElaine Edwards and Fred L. BonnerRichard Egen and Donna EgenNancy EibeckEdward and Nancy EichelbergerMr. & Mrs. Estia EichtenSondra and Karl S. EisenbergRobert S. and Ardyth J. EisenbergReese and Jeanne ElledgeThomas EllerMr. & Mrs. Victor Elting IIIMs. Laura EmerickMr. & Mrs. A. Gerald EricksonDr. & Mrs. James ErtleNancy EstradaPaul and Clare FahertyLaura and John FairfieldDr. Robert A. Fajardo and Judith MarohnMr. & Mrs. Andrew FeinbergMr. & Mrs. Robert FeitlerDr. & Mrs. William FeltenMr. & Mrs. Joel FenchelJoy FettSandra E. FienbergStephen and Patricia FisherMr. Patrick Fitzgerald and
Ms. Mary K. KrigbaumMs. Lola FlammMrs. Roslyn FlegelMr. William FleigMs. Anita D. FlournoyMr. Paul FongMr. Michael FordneyMr. Mark FossMs. Stacie M. Frank
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
54 cso.org
honor roll of donors
Lawrence and Pamela FrankelDr. & Mrs. James FranklinAllen J. Frantzen and George R. PatersonDr. † & Mrs. Uwe FreeseMr. & Mrs. Louis Freidheim, Jr.Fred FreitagMr. George Frerichs and
Ms. Cheryl D. McIntyreDr. & Mrs. Gary J. FriendDr. Barbara FullerMr. & Mrs. James GaebeMs. Cecile GaganMrs. Joan M GalinskiDr. & Mrs. Ronald GanellenDr. Francisco GarciniMr. John GardnerMr. & Mrs. † Robert J. GareisDrs. Henry and Susan GaultNancy GavlinCassandra SalgadoLouis and Judith GenesenMr. & Mrs. John E. GepsonMrs. Elizabeth GibbyMr. James GibsonMs. Sharon GibsonMs. Gloria GierkeMr. Ben Gierl and Ms. Karla HayterMr. & Mrs. Alan GilbertMargaret GillingLawrence and Amy GillumMr. & Mrs. John GinascolMr. David GlueckWilliam and Ethel GofenNorman † and Barbara GoldMr. † & Mrs. Samuel GoldenDr. & Mrs. Marshall D. Goldin, in memory
of Dr. William WarrenAdele and Marvin GoldsmithMs. Maria GoncaloMs. Sarah GoodGordon and Nancy GoodmanIsabelle GoossenLeo & Linda GordonMerle GordonMr. Andrew GoreMr. & Mrs. James GorterMr. Peter Gotsch and Dr. Jana FrenchDavid and Elizabeth GrahamCarol R. GrantMr. Ellsworth GrantMr. Brooks GrantierMr. & Mrs. Delmon GrapesRochelle and Michael GreenfieldMr. & Mrs. David GreensteinMr. David GriffinGregory GrobarcikCharles Grode and Heidi LukasMr. & Mrs. Jim GrotelueschenGeorge F. and Catherine S. HaberHalasmani/Davis FamilyTimothy R. Hale & Katherine Grace HaleMrs. Mary Hallman
John and Patricia HamiltonMs. Lee HamiltonHill and Cheryl HammockStuart and Shelly HanflingMr. Michael Hansen and
Ms. Nancy RandaMs. Patricia HarperRobert and Margot HaselkornDr. & Mrs. James HaughtonDr. & Mrs. Paul J. HauserMr. William P. Hauworth IIBridgette Hayes and Eric HayesMs. Joan HeaneyMrs. Nancy HeilRoss and Andrea HeimDr. Joseph N. Heiney and
Mr. Khadbaatar JargalsaikhanMr. David HelversonMs. Dawn E. HelwigMr. Thomas C. HennigerMichael and Suzanne HensleyMr. David HerbertMr. † & Mrs. Peter HerrBarbara and Jim HerstLarry HerzogHarriet E. HeydaJeana HillMr. & Mrs. David HilliardJames and Margot HinchliffThe Rev. Melinda Hinners-Waldie and
Mr. Benjamin WaldieMs. Judith HirschDr. Richard HirschmannMr. Christian HoffmanDavid Glenn HoffmanMr. Karl HoffmanSuzanne Hoffman and Dale SmithMs. Sharon Flynn HollanderMrs. J. HolmbeckDr. George Honig and Ms. Olga WeissMr. & Mrs. Peter HorneVicki and Thomas Horwich FoundationMs. Amanda Howland and
Dr. Phillip E. LaneMichael and Beverly HuckmanMs. Patricia HurleyDr. Victoria Ingram and Dr. Paul NavinMr. & Mrs. Jorge IorgulescuCheryl IstvanMr. Benjamin IvoryMr. Harold E. Jackson JrMerle L. JacobMs. Ann JagiellaMr. Matt JamesMrs. Sonya JasperMs. Lynn JerathMrs. Mary Johnston, Ph.D.Jean and Cynthia JohoMr. Thomas JonesDr. Rebecca JosefsonMr. † & Mrs. Tom KallenJames Kallianis
Thomas and Reseda KalowskiSteven Kaplan and Carol RubinWayne S. and Lenore M. KaplanRoula and George KarcazesMr. & Mrs. Byron C. KarzasMrs. Louise KaschDouglas and Dana KaslMr. Neil KatzDr. & Mrs. Robert KatzMs. Carole KellerMs. Robyn KelleyMr. & Mrs. W. K. KetchumMs. Catherine KetterMr. & Mrs. † Algimantas KezelisEllen KingHank KinzieMr. & Mrs. John E. KirkpatrickKathy Kirn and David LevinsonMs. Lilia KiselevMr. & Mrs. David KistenbrokerJack and Terry KleckaMr. & Mrs. LeRoy KlemtJanice KlichMs. Mary KlyasheffMr. & Mrs. Thomas KnauffMs. Erika KnierimRobert and Andrea KnightMr. George KochMr. & Mrs. Thomas KoelblKoldyke Family FundMr. Edward KossMr. Mark KraemerMrs. Leona KrompartMr. & Mrs. Larry KrucoffMaria KubikMr. & Mrs. Walfrid KujalaMr. Steven KukalisDr. & Mrs. Ken KuoMs. Michele KurlanderMr. Matthew KusekMr. & Mrs. Gary KussowDr. Marina and Andrey KuznetsovMr. Chaeyoung KwonMr. Thomas LadMarvin & Carol LaderLisa and Bill LandesRichard Landgraff and Bernadette FoleyMr. John LansingDJ and Natalie LaRocqueMs. Pamela LarsenMs. Leah LaurieMs. Ruby LawSharon and Bill LearMr. & Mrs. Peter LedererMr. Mark LedogarMr. & Mrs. Bruce LeepDarla and Hunter LeggittJohn and Jill LeviMrs. Richard LeviFay and Daniel LevinDr. & Mrs. Stuart LevinAbby and Jonathan Levine
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
december 2018/january 2019 55
honor roll of donors
Dr. & Mrs. Robert LevyJosephine Lewis and Morton DubmanMs. Judith LewisDr. Marcia A. LewisCara LichtensteinBrian Lighty and Andrew BigelowMr. Ross LillieRobert † and Joan LipsigMs. Anne LittleMs. Alma LizcanoKathleen Lockhart & James DixonMr. Melvin LoebMr. † & Ms. Gerald F. LoftusMrs. Gabrielle LongMs. Isabela LopesMs. Melynda LopinMr. & Ms. Matthew LoPrestiMs. Esther LothDonna and Richard LoundyMr. Joel LoweryAmy and Don LubinJennifer and Dan LubyRonald and Carlotta LucchesiMr. & Mrs. Michael LutzMr. Aaron MaciasMr. Glen J. Madeja and Ms. Janet SteidlMs. Janice MagnusonDr. Allan MaierMs. Jeanne MalkinMs. Margaret A. MaloneMr. Gary L. Mandell and Mrs. Diana KonMiles ManerIn honor of Miles ManerMs. Amy B. Manning and
Mr. Paul C. ZiebertMr. George MannosMr. & Mrs. Mark MantoMarty L. ManuelSharon L. ManuelMr. and Ms. Steven MarcusBarbara and Larry MargolisMr. Robert MarksMr. Timothy MarshallMr. & Mrs. Roland MartelMs. Mirjana MartichSharon and Eden MartinMr. Julio MartinezDrs. Annette and John MartiniMr. † & Mrs. Lowell Mason, Jr.Dr. & Mrs. Walter MasseyDr. Ann B. MatasarMarilyn and Myron MaurerMs. Adele MayerLarry and Donna MayerMr. & Mrs. George MazeMs. Sue McCandlessJohn McCartneyMr. Robert McColleyMs. Marilyn McCoyMr. & Mrs. William McDowell, Jr.Ms. Patricia A. McGuireMr. & Mrs. George C. McKann
Mr. Charles McKeeMr. & Mrs. Lester McKeeverDr. & Mrs. Bruce McleodMs. Florence McMillanDennis and Elyse McWherterSheila and Harvey MedvinMrs. Erma MedgyesyMrs. Helen MehlerMs. Claretta MeierDr. & Mrs. Jack L. MelamedMr. Ernst MelchiorDr. Janis MendelsohnMrs. Robert MendelsonJim and Ginger MeyerMr. & Mrs. Thomas Meyers, Jr.Floyd and Elizabeth MillerMs. Katie Miller and Mr. Jonathan MillerMrs. Edward MillerMrs. Mary MillerMs. Vlasta MinarichDr. & Mrs. Robert MinkusMr. & Mrs. Newton MinowMs. Helen MinskerMs. Annet MirandaMr. Fred MittelstaedtMr. Hiroshi and Mrs. Chika MiyamoriMr. & Mrs. Ken MollMr. Sanford MoltzDr. Anthony Montag and
Dr. Katherine GriemHugh and Della Rae MooreMalcolm MooreLloyd and Donna MorganSanford and Monica MorgansteinAnn T. MoroneyMrs. MaryLouise MorrisonWayne L. Mory and Marcia SnyderDavid MoscowMr. Vijai MosesMs. Vanessa MossJT Mueller and Jennifer LiuZane and Phyllis MuhlLuigi H. MumfordMr. Henry MunezMr. George MurphyMr. Mark NaborMs. Victoria NeeMr. & Mrs. Herbert Neil, Jr.Deborah J. NelsonKay A. NelsonMr. Wayne NelsonMr. John NewmanMs. Hathuy NguyenRichard NiJeff NicholsMs. Sylvette NicoliniMr. John NighMr. William NovshekMr. & Mrs. James NowackiMrs. Susan NutsonMr. Douglas NygaardMr. & Mrs. Delano O’Banion
Margo and Michael ObermanDr. Dragic ObradovicMr. Álvaro R. ObregónDr. Kathryn Occhipinti and
Jerome WojciechowshiBrendan O’ConnorJames J. and Ellen O’ConnorBarbara and Larry OlinSarah and Wallace OliverMr. Arne OlsonLarry and Karen OlsonMr. Thomas O’Neill IIIMr. & Mrs. Paul OppenheimDr. Michael OrenMs. Maria OrtizKathleen Field OrrMr. Ronald OrzelGarry and Joanne OwensDaniela PaganiRichard and Carolyn PalasMs. Joan PantsiosDan and Diane ParrlliMr. & Mrs. Charles R. Patten, Jr.Harold E. † and Marcia A. Pendexter, Jr.Robert & Barbara PerkausMs. Bertha PerlowMs. Dona PerryMr. & Mrs. † James PetersMrs. Victorina PetersonMs. Lynn PetrelliRita PetrettiMrs. Jana PharissGenevieve PhelpsMr. & Mrs. Robert G. PierceMr. & Mrs. Robert L. PierceKaren and Dick PigottDr. & Mrs. V.K.G. PillayMr. Savit PirlMr. & Mrs. Joel PokornyDon and Martha PollakMr. John PorterDr. William PorterAllan and Carla PriceMr. & Mrs. Brad PriceD. Elizabeth PriceJean M. and R. PriceMs. Eleanor PrinceRodney L. PruittDrs. Joseph and Kimberly PyleChris and Elizabeth QuiggMs. Cheryl QuinlanMirjam QuinnMr. Robert RadaDr. Homer RaddenMs. Bobbie RaffertyMary RaffertyMs. Tara RaghavanAnna Rappaport and Peter W. PlumleyMr. Jeffrey RappinDr. & Mrs. Pradeep RattanMs. Kathleen RattereeMs. Polly Rattner
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
56 cso.org
honor roll of donors
Ms. Carol RechMrs. Caroline Reed †Jack W. ReevesMr. James RhoadsBenjamin and Florence M. RhodesMr. & Mrs. Evan RichardsDr. Hilda RichardsRobert J. Richards and
Barbara A. RichardsMs. Evelyn R. RicherLyn RidgewayMiles and Peggy RidgwayDrs. Rodney and Patricia RiegerElaine Lebhoff-Ries, MD, and
Michael Ries, MDMr. & Mrs. Richard Rieser, Jr.Ms. Karen L. RigottiRing Family FoundationJerry and Carole RingerMr. Paul RinkMr. Alexander RipleyDr. Anita RobbinsThomas Roberts and Teresa GroschMs. Cristina RoccaMr. James RocksMr. David RodenMr. Steven RoessLance & Lori RogersMr. & Mrs. Kenneth RooneyAl and Mimi RoseMr. Edgar RoseMs. Roberta RosellDr. & Mrs. Melvin RosemanMs. Elaine RosenMr. † & Mrs. Sherman RosenJohn RosensweigMrs. Babette RosenthalLorelei RosenthalDr. & Mrs. Robert RosnerJoan and Ashley RossMr. & Mrs. Michael RothmanMs. Sharon RothsteinMr. Zhaosong RuanPeter and Monique RubHelen and Marc RubensteinMr. & Ms. Kevin A. RussellMs. Mary RussellPatrick Ryan and Mary McBridePriscilla E. Ryan and Frank BattleMrs. Martha SabranskyDrs. David and Karen SagerAnna Salman and Brian DeRosaDr. † & Mrs. Edwin SalterBettylu and Paul SaltzmanSuzanne G. SamuelsMr. & Mrs. Lawrence SauterKathleen and Tony SchaefferRobert P. SchaibleScott SchepkeMrs. Rebecca ScheweMr. & Mrs. John SchladweilerMrs. Julie Schmidt
Mr. Robert SchmidtMr. & Mrs. Lewis M. SchneiderMs. Marcia SchneiderJohn J. and Barbara L. SchornackMr. & Mrs. Steve SchuetteMs. Virginia Hall SchulteGerald and Barbara SchultzEdward and Irma SchwartzDr. Howard Schwartz and Dr. Ruth GrantJohn SchwartzSusan and Charles SchwartzThomas and Maryellen ScottMr. & Mrs. Richard SeidMs. Gail SeidelDavid and Christine SeidmanMr. Mark SexauerMr. Todd ShamalyDr. & Mrs. Charles ShapiroMr. & Mrs. Myron ShapiroThomas and Nancy SharpMr. Christopher SheahenMs. Kim ShepherdMr. & Mrs. Mitsuzo ShidaDr. & Mrs. Mark C. ShieldsCarolyn M. ShortEllen and Richard ShubartMs. Judith SiabaChian Ban SiauMs. Debra SiegelMr. & Mrs. Thomas SilbermanDr. Rita Simó and Mr. Tomás BissonnetteMr. Thomas SimpsonMr. Alvin SingerMr. & Mrs. Robert SingerThomas G. SinkovicChristine A. SlivonMr. & Mrs. Frederic SmiesAugustine SmithPat and J. Clarke SmithMr. & Mrs. Paul SnopkoFrank So and Deborah HuggettDr. Sabine SobekDr. & Mrs. R. SolaroIn Memory of Timothy SoleimanMr. Ethan SolomonJudith SommersDr. Stuart SondheimerMs. Sondra SonnebornMr. Alexander SozdatelevMs. Vesselina SpassovaMr. George SpeckMr. Michael SprinkerAnne-Marie St. GermaineMrs. Julie StaglianoCharles and Joan StaplesMr. & Mrs. William StaplesMs. Denise StauderMs. Corinne SteedeMr. & Mrs. Eric SteeleGeorge and Julie SteffenCarol D. SteinMr. Andrew Steinwold
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald StepanskyMrs. Marjorie H. StephanMr. & Mrs. Mark SternMs. Karen StevensMs. Kathleen StewartPatrick StiffIn memory of Marjorie StoneEllen Stone-BelicSteve and Ann StranahanMr. & Mrs. Alfred Stresen-Reuter, Jr.Pam and Russ StrobelDonna StroderDr. & Mrs. Frank StuartMr. Frederick Sturm and
Ms. Deborah GillaspieBarry and Winnifred SullivanMrs. Jeanne SullivanMs. Mary SummersDr. Xiang Qing SunMr. † & Mrs. Michael Supera, in honor of
Helen ZellMr. Gregory SurufkaMr. & Mrs. Mark SutherlandDr. John SwansonSharon SwansonMr. & Mrs. Richard TaftMs. Claudine TambuatcoMs. Diane Tkach and Mr. James F. FreundtSusan Shimmin and David TeklerMr. Frank TenBrinkThachana ThanakitcharuMr. & Mrs. Myron TierskyMr. Steve TomashefskyMr. Mark TomassiniMs. Tatia TorreyBruce and Jan TranenJames M. and Carol TrappDr. Carol Ann TrautMrs. Sally TreKellMs. Joanne TremulisMrs. Robert TrotterMs. Corina TsangDr. Sabrina S. TsaoMr. Jay TunneyMrs. Jean M. UnsworthEllen and Jerry UptonMr. Theodore UtchenMr. & Mrs. Allan VagnerMrs. James D. Vail IIIJim and Cindy ValtmanMs. Barbara TaylorMs. Betty VandenboschFrances and Peter VandervoortJose VargasMr. David J. VarnerinMr. & Mrs. Todd ViereggFrank VillellaMs. Linda VincentMs. Carol VixMs. Darla VollrathDr. Malcolm V. Vye and Ms. Sherie SteinLulu
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
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honor roll of donors
Robert J. WalkerMr. Les WallingaMr. Frank WalschlagerRobert Walsh and Doris WalshMorrison C. WarrenMs. Vanessa J. WeathersbyMr. † & Mrs. William Weaver, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. David WeberMr. Tom WedellJudge Eugene WedoffCynthia & Ben WeeseMr. Brian WeisbartMiss Genevieve WeissenselDrs. Anne and Dennis WentzMs. Patricia WerhaneMr. Donald WertzMrs. Walter WesleyAllen WheatcroftMr. Peter WhitcupFrank White and Sierra KellyDr. Wesley WhiteMrs. William WhiteMs. Susan WhitingDr. & Mrs. Lawrence WickMr. Eric Wicks and Ms. Linda BakerJamie Wigglesworth AIAMrs. Albert Williams, Jr.Jennifer WilliamsNorman WilliamsScott R. Williamson and
Susanna E. KrentzNorma E. Davis WillisPeter and Michele WillmottDr. Wendall WilsonMartha WiltsieTed Windsor & Associates
Consulting ActuariesDr. Doris Wineman, Ph.D.Caroline WinnMs. Ann WinshipHerbert and Ruth Winter FoundationMs. Florence WintersMr. Michael WislekBarbara and Steven WolfDuain WolfePeggy and Ted WolffMr. Joseph Wolnski and
Ms. Jane ChristinoDr. Christopher and Julie WoodDavid WoodhouseMrs. Randi WoodworthProf. Robert WoottonElizabeth WrightMrs. Jane Stroud WrightDennis XieDr. Robert B. YahrSusan Schaalman Youdovin and
Charlie ShulkinIn memory of Anthony C. YuDr. Robert G. ZadylakMrs. IdaLynn ZahourKarl and Joan C. Zeisler
Ms. Mary ZeltmannIrene Ziaya and Paul ChaitkinMs. Susan ZickThe Charles A. Zika FamilyDrs. Donald Zimmerman and
Susan PearlsonDr. & Mrs. Larry ZollingerMs. Barbara Zutovsky
Negaunee Music Institute at the Chicago Symphony OrchestraThe Negaunee Music Institute connects individuals and communities to the extraordinary musical resources of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. The follow-ing donors are gratefully acknowledged for making a gift in support of these education and engagement programs. To make a gift, contact CSOA Development at 312-294-3100. To learn more, please call Bobbie Rafferty, Director, Individual Giving and Affiliated Donor Groups, at 312-294-3165.
$150,000 and aboveThe Elizabeth F. Cheney FoundationJudson and Joyce GreenThe Julian Family FoundationThe Negaunee Foundation
$100,000 –$149,999Anonymous (1)Allstate Insurance CompanyThe James and Madeleine McMullan
Family FoundationMegan and Steve Shebik
$50,000 –$99,999Anonymous (2)Robert and Joanne Crown Income
Charitable FundLloyd A. Fry FoundationJohn Hart and Carol PrinsJudy and Scott McCueNancy Lauter McDougal and
Alfred L. McDougal †National Endowment for the ArtsPolk Bros. FoundationBarbara and Barre Seid FoundationRose Shure Trust
$25 ,000 –$49,999Anonymous (1)Abbott FundAlphawood FoundationThe Barker Welfare FoundationCrain-Maling FoundationJohn and Fran EdwardsonEllen and Paul Gignilliat
Robert Kohl and Clark PellettBowman C. Lingle TrustLeslie Fund, Inc.Michael G. Woll Fund at
The Pauls FoundationPNCMichael and Linda SimonWintrust Financial Corp.
$15 ,000 –$2 4 ,999Anonymous (1)Dora J. and R. John AalbregtseSue and Jim CollettiMr. Jerry J. CritserIllinois Arts Council AgencyPrince Charitable TrustsSandra and Earl Rusnak, Jr.Charles and M. R. Shapiro FoundationThe George L. Shields FoundationMr. Irving Stenn, Jr.Dr. Marylou Witz
$7,500 –$14 ,999Mr. Lawrence BellesThe Buchanan Family FoundationMr. Lawrence CorryMr. † & Mrs. David A. DonovanMr. & Mrs. Allan DrebinAnne H. EvansMr. and Mrs. Robert GeraghtyMr. & Mrs. Joseph B. GlossbergRichard and Alice GodfreyChet Gougis and Shelley OchabMary Winton GreenDr. June KoizumiThe League of the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra AssociationLing Z. and Michael C. MarkovitzMs. Susan NorvichGerald † and Mona PennerMs. Judy PomeranzMrs. John Shedd Reed †Al and Lynn ReichleRobert & Isabelle Bass Foundation, Inc.The Siragusa FoundationMs. Liisa M. Thomas and
Mr. Stephen L. PrattPenny and John Van Horn
$4 ,500 –$7, 499Milne Family FoundationRobert H. Baum and MaryBeth KretzBlue Cross Blue Shield of IllinoisMr. Donald BousemanMs. Marion A. CameronAnn and Richard CarrMr. & Ms. Keith ClaytonThe Clinton Family FundMari Hatzenbuehler CravenMr. & Mrs. Bernard DunkelDr. & Mrs. James HollandThe Navarre Law Firm
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
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honor roll of donors
David and Dolores NelsonMr. & Mrs. William J. O’NeillMary and Joseph PlauchéThe Rhoades FoundationMs. Judy RungeMs. Cecelia SamansDr. Scholl FoundationSegal ConsultingDr. & Mrs. Eugene and Jean Stark
$2 ,500 –$4 , 499Anonymous (1)Arts Midwest Touring FundDaniel and Michele BeckerThe Brinson FoundationCharles H. and Bertha L.
Boothroyd FoundationAlfredo and Ada Capitanini FoundationPatricia A. ClickenerMary Ellen Cooney and Ken Higgins †Anita J. Court, Ph.D.Ms. Jane CoxCamillo and Arlene GhironDr. Alexia GordonWilliam B. HinchliffSusie Forstmann KealyAnne E. Leibowitz FundMr. Russ LymanEdward & Lucy R. MinorFamily FoundationDr. Leo and Catherine MiserendinoMaria and Carl E. MooreMr. and Mrs. Stephen MoralesMs. Kimberly PickenpaughBenjamin J. Rosenthal FoundationDavid and Judith L. SensibarJessie Shih and Johnson HoMs. Adena StabenMr. Hal StewartWalter and Caroline Sueske
Charitable TrustRuth Miner Swislow †Mr. & Mrs. William & Joan TrukenbrodMr. Peter ValeDan and Paula Wise
$1,000 –$2 , 499Anonymous (4)Ms. Patti AcurioMr. Edward Amrein, Jr. andMrs. Sara Jones-AmreinDr. Smiljana AntonijevicGregory Yuri AronoffMr. Sinan AtacJack S. AtenAthena FundCatherine Baker and Timothy KentJon Balke and G. BalkeMr. Carroll BarnesMr. & Mrs. John BarnesMr. Peter BarrettWilliam Bartley
Howard and Donna BassMichael and Gail BauerMichelle BennettMs. Susan BennettMr. & Mrs. William E. BibleMr. James BorkmanAdam BossovMr. Douglas BraganMr. & Mrs. Samuel BuchsbaumJohn D. and Leslie Henner BurnsMr. & Mrs. Kenneth J. Burns, Jr.Ms. Vera CappJayson and Elizabeth CheeverMr. Wesley M. ClarkDr. Edward A. Cole and
Dr. Christine A. RydelMr. Jonathan CollinsMr. & Mrs. Bill CottleMr. Bert CrosslandConstance CwiokMelissa and Gordon DavisRomke de HaanMr. Frank DileonardoMs. Joan D. DonovanMr. and Mrs. Andrew DudaNancy EibeckRobert S. and Ardyth J. EisenbergElk Grove GraphicsMs. Paula ElliottCharles and Carol EmmonsMrs. Carol Evans, in memory ofHenry EvansMrs. Walter D. FacklerTarek and Ann FadelJudith E. FeldmanDr. & Mrs. Sanford Finkel, in honor of
Katinka KleijnEvelyn T. FitzpatrickMs. Lola FlammMrs. Roslyn FlegelMr. Michael FordneyGerald FreedmanMr. George Frerichs and
Ms. Cheryl D. McIntyreDr. & Mrs. Ronald GanellenGenerations DentalLawrence and Amy GillumCharles Grode and Heidi LukasHalasmani/Davis FamilyMr. & Mrs. John HalesJohn and Patricia HamiltonMs. Dawn E. HelwigBarbara and Jim HerstMr. Karl HoffmanMs. Sharon Flynn HollanderMs. Amanda Howland and
Dr. Phillip E. LaneDavid and Marcia HulanMichael and Leigh HustonMr. Benjamin IvoryThomas and Reseda KalowskiMr. & Mrs. † Algimantas Kezelis
Mr. Howard KiddKinder MorganEsther G. KlatzAnna Z. KleymenovaMs. Leah LaurieMs. Ruby LawMr. & Mrs. Stewart LiechtiDr. Herbert & Francine LippitzMr. † & Ms. Gerald F. LoftusMr. Edward MackMr. Glen J. Madeja and Ms. Janet SteidlMs. Janice MagnusonMs. Jeanne MalkinMs. Margaret A. MaloneMs. Amy B. Manning and
Mr. Paul C. ZiebertMr. & Mrs. Robert MarwinMs. Adele MayerMr. and Mrs. George MazeRosa and Peter McCullaghJim and Ginger MeyerMr. Robert MiddletonMs. Annet MirandaAnn T. MoroneyMrs. Frank MorrisseyWayne L. Mory and Marcia SnyderDeborah J. NelsonMrs. Susan NutsonMr. Álvaro R. ObregónMarjory OlikerDr. Michael OrenMs. Joan PantsiosDan and Diane ParrlliDianne M. and Robert J. Patterson, Jr.Eugene and Lois PavalonMs. Shauna PeetMs. Ana Luz Perez DuranMr. & Mrs. Thomas D. PhilipsbornPoetry FoundationMr. John PorterSusan and Joseph A. Power, Jr.D. Elizabeth PriceMark & Nancy RatnerMs. Kathleen RattereeHarper ReedDr. Hilda RichardsMiles and Peggy RidgwayMary K. RingMr. Paul RinkMr. Alexander RipleyDrs. David and Karen SagerMr. David SandfortMr. Laurence SaviersMrs. Rebecca ScheweMr. & Mrs. Albert SchlachtmeyerMr. Robert SchmidtMr. & Mrs. Thomas ScorzaStephen A. and Marilyn ScottThomas and Nancy SharpThe Honorable John B. Simon and
Mrs. Millie Rosenbloom SimonMr. Larry Simpson
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
december 2018/january 2019 59
honor roll of donors
Suzanne Hoffman and Dale SmithDr. Sabine SobekMr. Alexander SozdatelevMrs. Julie StaglianoMs. Denise StauderMr. Andrew SteinwoldLaurence and Caryn StrausMr. Frederick Sturm and
Ms. Deborah GillaspieSharon SwansonMs. Tatia TorreyMs. Corina TsangMs. Darla VollrathLuluMs. Vanessa J. WeathersbyMr. Brian WeisbartAbby and Glen WeisbergMs. Zita WheelerFrank White and Sierra KellyMs. Susan WhitingScott R. Williamson and
Susanna E. KrentzDr. Wendall WilsonM.L. WinburnTed Windsor & Associates
Consulting ActuariesMs. Ann WinshipMrs. Randi WoodworthCheryl B. and James T. WormleyElizabeth WrightDavid and Eileen ZampaIrene Ziaya and Paul ChaitkinMolly Ziegler and Karen Whitt
endowed fundsAnonymous (3)Cyrus H. Adams Memorial Youth
Concert FundDr. † & Mrs. † Bernard H. AdelsonMarjorie Blum-Kovler Youth Concert FundCNAKelli Gardner Youth Education
Endowment FundMary Winton GreenWilliam Randolph Hearst Foundation
Fund for Community EngagementRichard A. HeisePeter Paul Herbert Endowment FundThe Kapnick FamilyLester B. Knight Charitable TrustThe Malott Family Very Special
Promenades FundThe Eloise W. Martin Endowed
Fund in support of the Negaunee Music Institute at the Chicago Symphony Orchestra
The Negaunee FoundationNancy Ranney and Family and FriendsDolores M. Rix Endowment FundToyota Endowed FundThe Wallace FoundationZell Family Foundation
civic orchestra of chicago scholarshipsMembers of the Civic Orchestra receive an annual stipend to help offset some of their living expenses during their training in Civic. The following donors have generously underwritten a Civic musician(s) for the 2018–19 season.
Fifteen Civic members participate in the Civic Fellowship program, a rigorous artistic and professional development curriculum that supplements their membership in the full orchestra. Major funding for this program is generously provided by The Julian Family Foundation.
The 2018–19 Civic Centennial season is sponsored by The Elizabeth F. Cheney Foundation.
To learn more, please call Bobbie Rafferty, Director, Individual Giving and Affiliated Donor Groups, at 312-294-3165.
Dr. † & Mrs. † Bernard H. AdelsonRebecca Boelzner**, viola
Robert H. Baum and MaryBeth KretzPei-yeh Tsai**, keyboard
Mr. Lawrence Belles and Elizabeth F. Cheney FoundationJoanna Nerius, violin
Sue and Jim CollettiLaura Pitkin**, horn
Lawrence CorryKevin Lin, viola
Mr. Jerry J. CritserJoe Bauer**, double bass
Robert and Joanne Crown Income Charitable FundMiguel Aguirre, violinNicolas Chona, clarinetAndrew Cooper, oboeIzumi Hoshino, violinRachel Peters, violinVincent Trautwein, double bass
Mr. † & Mrs. David A. DonovanAleksa Masyuk, viola
Mr. & Mrs. Allan Drebin and Elizabeth F. Cheney FoundationGregory Heintz, double bass
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Geraghty and Elizabeth F. Cheney FoundationHannah Cartwright, violin
Mr. & Mrs. Paul C. GignilliatJamie Lee, violinLiaht Slobodkin, violin
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. GlossbergEnrique Olvera, viola
Richard and Alice GodfreyJoy Vucekovich, violin
Chet Gougis and Shelley OchabHanna Pederson, viola
Mary Winton GreenAdam Attard, double bass
Jane Redmond Haliday ChairAdam Ayers, cello
The Julian Family FoundationHannah Christiansen, violinRoslyn Green**, viola
Lester B. Knight Charitable TrustStephanie Diebel, hornJames Perez, tromboneSofie Yang, violin
Robert Kohl and Clark PellettJohn Heffernan**, violin
League of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra AssociationAlexandria Hoffman**, flute
Leslie Fund Inc.Queenie Edwards**, violinJuan Gabriel Olivares**, clarinet
Judy and Scott McCueDenielle Wilson, cello
Nancy Lauter McDougal and Alfred L. McDougal †Nicholas Adams, double bassMathew Burri, double bass
Ms. Susan NorvichEleanor Kirk, harp
Mrs. Mona Penner in memory of Gerald PennerSarah Bowen, violin
Prince Charitable TrustsQuinn Delaney**, bassoon
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
60 cso.org
honor roll of donors
Mrs. John Shedd Reed †Alex Norris, violin
Al and Lynn ReichleJarrett McCourt, tuba
Sandra and Earl J. Rusnak Jr.Anna Piotrowski, violin
Barbara and Barre Seid FoundationMatthew Kibort, timpaniKelly Quesada, cello
The George L. Shields Foundation Inc.Eva María Barbado Gutiérrez, celloBen Roidl-Ward, bassoonBenjamin Wagner, viola
The David W. and Lucille G. Stotter ChairPauline Kempf, violin
In memory of Ruth Miner SwislowMaria Arrua, violinBrent Taghap, violin
Lois and James Vrhel Endowment FundVincent Galvan, double bass
Dr. Marylou WitzCarmen Abelson**, violin
Michael G. † and Laura WollKelsey Williams, horn
Michael G. Woll Fund at the Pauls FoundationDevin Gossett, hornBryant Millet, trumpetLucas Steidinger, tromboneRenée Vogen, horn
AnonymousPhilip Bergman**, cello
AnonymousRobinson Schulze**, bass tromboneJacob Thonis, bassoon
The Centennial Campaign for the Civic Orchestra of Chicago and Chicago Symphony Orchestra concerts for chil-dren is supported with a generous lead gift from The Julian Family Foundation.
** Civic fellow
Theodore Thomas SocietyListed below are generous donors who have made commitments to the Chicago Symphony Orchestra through their wills, trusts, and other estate plans, including life-income arrangements. The Society honors their generosity, which helps to ensure the long-term financial stability and artistic excellence of the CSOA. To learn more, please call Al Andreychuk, Director, Endowment Gifts and Planned Giving, at 312-294-3150.
stradivarian associatesThe Chicago Symphony Orchestra is pleased to recognize the following individ-uals for generously creating a revocable bequest of $100,000 or more, or an irrevocable life-income trust or annuity of $50,000 or more, to benefit the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association, as of October 2018.
Anonymous (9)Dora J. and R. John AalbregtseLisa J. AdelsteinEvy Johansen AlsakerRobert A. AlsakerGeoffrey A. AndersonRuth T. AndersonMychal P. Angelos, in memory of
Dorothy A. AngelosDr. Jeff BaleLeland and Mary BartholomewMarlys A. BeiderDr. C. BekermanMartha BellMike and Donna BellCeline BendJulie Ann BensonK. Richard and Patricia M. BerletMerrill and Judy BlauAnn BlickensderferDanolda BrennanMr. Leon Brenner, Jr.Mitchell J. BrownDr. Mary Louise Hirsh BurgerMr. Frank and Dr. Vera ClarkPatricia A. ClickenerJudith and Stephen F. CondrenAnita CrocusHarry and Jean EisenmanDr. Marilyn EzriMrs. William M. FloryMr. & Mrs. David W. Fox, Sr.Rhoda Lea FrankMary J. and Ronald P. FrelkPenny and John FreundMr. & Mrs. Paul C. GignilliatLyle GillmanMerle GordonMary Louise Gorno
Dr. & Mrs. David GranatoMary L. GrayMary Winton GreenDr. Jon Brian GreisJohn and Patricia HamiltonJohn Hart and Carol PrinsMr. William P. Hauworth IIThomas and Linda HeagyMr. R.H. HelmholzStephanie and Allen HochfelderConcordia HoffmannFrank and Helen HoltMark and Elizabeth HurleyMichael L. Igoe, Jr.Ms. Darlene JohnsonRonald B. JohnsonRoy A. and Sarah C. JohnsonMr. & Mrs. Paul R. JudyLori JulianJared Kaplan and Maridee QuanbeckWayne S. and Lenore M. KaplanHoward KaspinJames KemmererEsther G. KlatzRobert Kohl and Clark PellettMr. & Mrs. Alan KubickaRobert B. Kyts Memorial FundCharles Ashby Lewis and
Penny Bender SebringRobert Alan LewisSheldon H. MarcusMr. Robert C. MarksMarilyn G. MarrJames Edward McPhersonMarcia and Jack L. Melamed, M.D.Janet L. MelkDr. Leo and Catherine MiserendinoDrs. Bill and Elaine MoorDr. & Mrs. Craig D. MooreCharles MooreMr. & Mrs. Mario A. MunozJohn H. NelsonMuriel NeradEdward A. and Gayla S. NieminenDr. Joan E. PattersonDonald PeckMrs. Thomas D. PhilipsbornJudy PomeranzNeil K. QuinnRandall and Cara RademakerAl and Lynn ReichleAnn and Bob ReilandWendy ReynesDr. Edward O. RileyCharles and Marilynn RivkinDavid and Kathy RobinJerry RoseRichard O. RyanJohn A. SalkowskiCecelia SamansFranklin SchmidtJoanne Silver
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
december 2018/january 2019 61
honor roll of donors
Mr. Craig SirlesBetty W. SmykalAnnette and Richard SteinkeMrs. Deborah SterlingMr. & Mrs. William H. StrongMr. & Mrs. John C. TelanderKarin and Alfred TennyRichard and Helen ThomasMs. Carla M. ThorpeMr. & Mrs. Richard P. ToftDr. Richard TresleyPaula TurnerRobert W. Turner and Gloria B. TurnerMr. & Mrs. John E. Van HornMr. Christian VinyardJoan and Marco WeissDr. Robert G. ZadylakHelen Zell
membersAnonymous (31)Valerie and Joseph AbelLouise AbrahamsJudy L. AllenAnn S. AlpertMs. Judith L. AndersonSteven Andes, Ph.D.Catherine AranyiMr. Neal BallMara Mills BarkerDr. & Mrs. Robert BeattyArlene BennettWilliam and Ellen BentsenJoan I. BergerHarriet H. BernbaumCandace BroeckerMrs. Lucille BrouseJohn L. BrowarCatherine BrubakerJoseph BucEdward J. BuckbeeMichelle Miller BurnsMr. Robert J. CallahanDr. & Mrs. Joseph R. CarMr. & Mrs. William P. CarmichaelDr. Marlene E. CasianoBill and Betsy ClineBeverly Ann and Peter ConroySharon ConwayMr. Robert L. CrawfordMr. Jerry J. CritserRon and Dolores DalyMr. & Mrs. John DanielsMr. & Mrs. Clyde H. DawsonSylvia Samuels DelmanMrs. David A. DeMarMs. Phyllis DiamondMr. Richard L. EastlineNancy Schroeder EbertMs. Estelle EdlisRobert J. ElisbergRichard Elledge
Charles and Carol EmmonsJames B. FadimLeslie FarrellDonna FeldmanFrances and Henry FogelAllen J. FrantzenGustave D. FriesemNancy and Larry FullerDileep GangolliMr. & Mrs. William E. GardnerMiss Elizabeth GatzMrs. Willard GidwitzMr. Joseph GlossbergAdele and Marvin GoldsmithJoan E. GordonDouglas Ross GortnerChet Gougis and Shelley OchabMr. & Mrs. George GrahamMs. Elizabeth A. GrayDelta A. GreeneNancy P. GriffinMrs. Ann B. GrimesMrs. Barbara GundrumLynne R. HaarlowMrs. Robin Tieken HadleyMr. Tom HallMr. & Mrs. Tom HallettMrs. David J. HarrisDr. & Mrs. Donald HeinrichJohn and Linda HillmanWilliam B. HinchliffMrs. Morris H. HirshMr. Thomas HochmanMrs. Walter HorbanJames and Mary HoustonMrs. Marian JohnsonMs. Janet JonesMarshall KeltzValerie and George KennedyPaul KeskeMr. & Mrs. Frank L. Klapperich, Jr.Mrs. LeRoy KlemtSally Jo KnowlesMrs. Russell V. KohrMs. Barbara KopsianLiesel E. KossmannRichard J. KostEugene KrausFrederick and Virginia LangrehrThomas and Annelise LawsonPatricia LeeDr. & Mrs. David J. LeeheyDr. & Mrs. Robert L. LevyMs. Sally LewisDr. Eva F. LichtenbergMr. Michael LicitraDr. & Mrs. Philip R. LiebsonBonnie Glazier LipeGlen J. Madeja and Janet SteidlAnn Chassin MallowMrs. John J. MarkhamKathleen W. Markiewicz
Judith W. McCue and Howard M. McCue III
Mr. William McIntoshMrs. Leoni McVeyMrs. Harmon MeigsDale and Susan MillerKathryn MillerMichael Miller and Sheila NaughtenThomas R. MullaneyDavid J. and Dolores D. NelsonFranklin NussbaumJames F. OatesDiana J. and Gerald L. OgrenMr. & Mrs. Paul Oliver, Jr.Wallace and Sarah OliverLynn OrschelDr. David G. Ostrow and
Mr. Rafael GomezHelen and Joseph PageGeorge R. PatersonDianne M. and Robert J. Patterson, Jr.Mary PerlmutterElizabeth Anne PetersMrs. Lewis D. PetryJudy C. PettyKaren and Dick PigottLois PolakoffJeanne ReedDr. Merrell ReissMs. Oksana Revenko-JonesDon and Sally RobertsMs. Rosemary RobertsMs. Elaine RosenMrs. Ben J. RosenthalDr. Virginia C. SaftCraig SamuelsSue and William SamuelsMr. Douglas M. SchmidtDavid ShayneMr. Morrell A. ShoemakerAnne SibleyLarry SimpsonMr. Allen R. SmartMary SoleimanJim SpiegelJulie StaglianoMrs. Zelda StarMr. Charles J. StarcevichKaren SteilTimothy and Kathleen StockdaleMr. John StokesMr. & Mrs. Robert SwansonJeffrey and Linda SwogerMr. & Mrs. Jerald ThorsonKaren Hletko TierskyMyron TierskyJacqueline A. TillesMr. James M. TrappMr. Donn N. TrautmanMs. Rose Gray TynanMr. Theodore UtchenVirginia C. Vale
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
62 cso.org
honor roll of donors
Frank VillellaMr. Milan VydarenyDr. Malcolm VyeAdam R. Walker and BettyAnn MocekMr. Frank WalschlagerLouella Krueger WardDr. Catherine L. WebbKarl WechterClaude M. WeilMr. Thomas WeylandLinda and Payson S. WildMrs. Albert D. Williams, Jr.Kayla Anne WilsonNora M. WinsbergMr. & Mrs. Stephen M. WolfAnn WolffBeth Wollar
in memoriamListed below are individuals who were Theodore Thomas Society members and patrons who made exceptional commitments to the Chicago Symphony Orchestra through their estates. They are remembered with gratitude for their generosity and visionary support.
Anonymous (7)Hope A. AbelsonElizabeth E. AblerRichard AbrahamsFrances B. AbrahamsonDonald AldermanSara AnastaploRoger A. AndersonFaye AngellElizabeth M. AshtonIrwin AskowJames E.S. BakerJacqueline and Frank BallWayne BalmerPaul BarkerPatricia Anne BartonBarbara Burt BaumannHortense K. BeckerMarshall BennettNorma Zuzanek BennettSally J. BensonHarry H. BernbaumLenore M. BernerEleanor BolzNaomi T. BorwellHarriet B. BradyMarjorie L. BredehornPatricia W. and Kenneth A. BroHoward BroeckerClaresa Forbes Meyer BrownMarie Kraemer BurnsideElizabeth R. CapilupoRose Mary CarterCharles R. CasperMargaret G. Chamales
Marcia S. CohnMilton ColmanRobert CookeNelson D. CorneliusBillie Dale DelevittRobert L. DevittEdison and Jane Warner DickHoward M. DonaldsonJames F. DrennanWilliam B. DrewryRobert L. Drinan, Jr.William A. DumbletonEvelyn DybaMarian EdelsteinDr. Edward ElisbergKelli Gardner EmeryJoseph R. EnderShirley L. and Robert EttelsonShirley Mae EvansMildred F. FanslauDr. James D. FentersNatalie N. FerryRobert B. FordhamEtha Beatrice FoxElaine S. FrankHenry S. FrankHerbert B. FriedDr. Muriel S. FriedmanHynda and Maurice GamzeFlorence GanjaAlan J. GarberMartin and Francey GechtBetsy N. and James R. GetzJeanne Brown GordonBarbara L. GouldElizabeth S. GraettingerWilliam B. GrahamRichard GrayDavid GreenAllen J. GreenbergerDr. Robert A. GreendaleErnest A. Grunsfeld IIIElizabeth and Paul GuenzelCecile GuthmanBetty and Lester GuttmanA. William Haarlow IIIGrace and Vernon HajeckClarine and James HallJulie and J. Parker HallRichard HalvorsenChalkley J. HambletonLeah C. and Robert J. HammanCAPT Martin P. Hanson, USN Ret.Allan E. HarrisMelville D. HartmanLawrence J. HelsternAdolph “Bud” and Avis HersethMarriane Deson HersteinMary Jo HertelHelen HoaglandRichard J. HofemannBlanche Hoheisel
Allen H. HowardHugh Johnston HubbardJoseph H. HuebnerMrs. Henry IshamBarbara IssermanPhyllis A. JonesJoseph M. KacenaStuart KaneMorris A. KaplanRussell V. KohrJeffrey W. KormanSarah H. and Bertram D. KribbenWilliam KruppenbacherEvelyn and Arnold KupecRuth Lucie LabitzkeLouise H. LandauAlice M. La PertH. Elizabeth and Earl D. LarsenCaressa Y. LauerRobert A. LeadyArthur E. Leckner, Jr.Lena T. LevinsonBeryl M. LewisRichard Alan LivingstonMrs. Richard Q. LivingstonMarion M. and Glen A. LloydMary LongbrakeWilliam C. LordanArthur G. MalingJune Betty and Herbert S. ManningMrs. Robert C. MarksIrl and Barbara MarshallEloise MartinVirginia Harvey McAnultyHelen C. McDougal, Jr.Eunice H. McGuireCarolyn D. and William W. McKittrickHugo J. MelvoinShirley R. MesirowBeth Ann Alberding MohrEdward MillerMicki MillerKathryn MuellerMarietta MunnisDavid H. NelsonHelen M. NelsonOtto NeradJohn and Maynette NeundorfPiri E. and Jaye S. NiefeldJoan Ruck NopolaCarol Rauner O’DonovanT. Paul B. O’DonovanMary and Eric OldbergBruce P. OlsonSuzanne and Brace PattouDorothy and William G. Paulick, Jr.Bette G. PetersenHelen J. PetersenMadge and Neil PetersenMaxine R. PhilipsbornWalter PlackoElaine and Harold H. Plaut
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
december 2018/january 2019 63
honor roll of donors
Charles J. PollyeaMiriam PollyeaVirginia and Eugene PomeranceHalina J. PresleyChristine QuerfeldRuth Ann QuinnDolores M. RixMuriel F. RederWalter ReedPaul H. ResnikSheila Taaffe ReynoldsJoan L. RichardsDavid M. RobertsRosemary RobertsVirginia H. RogersJill N. RohckIrmgard Hess RosenbergerBen J. RosenthalHarriet Cary RossEdith S. RuettingerAnthony RyersonMargaret R. SagersBeverly and Grover SchiltzErhardt SchmidtMuriel SchnierowDonald R. SchreiberMargaret and Edwin SeeboeckDenise SelzJoseph J. SemrowIngeborg Haupt SennotHerman ShapiroSoretta and Henry ShapiroMuriel ShawRose L. and Sidney N. ShureMr. William F. SibleyDr. & Mrs. Alfred L. SiegelJoan H. and Berton E. SiegelPeter E. SincoxDavid SlesurJean H. SmithWillis B. SnellKaren A. SorensenGeorgette Grosz SpertusEdward J. and Audrey M. SpiegelVito StaglianoLucille G. and David W. StotterDr. Gerald SunkoRuth Miner SwislowAndrew and Peggy ThomsonJ. Ross ThomsonBeatrice B. TinsleyC. Phillip TurnerPaul D. UrnesRobert L. VolzLois and James VrhelCecilia Sue and Burton J. WadeLouise Benton WagnerMichael Jay WalankaNancy L. WaldEsther H. WaldmanJeanne WalkerLaurie Wallach
Jean Angus and Ferre C. WatkinsVirginia O. WeaverJames M. WellsBarbara Huth WestArnold WolffRonald R. Zierer
Tribute ProgramThe Tribute Program provides an opportunity to celebrate milestones such as birthdays, weddings, anniversaries, and graduations. It also can serve as a way to honor the memory of friends and family. An Honor or Memorial Gift enables you to express your feelings in a truly distinctive and memorable way. Contributions may be any amount and are placed in the Orchestra’s Endowment Fund. For more information regarding this program, please call 312-294-3100. Listed below are Honor and Memorial Gifts of $100 or more received through October 23, 2018.
memorial gif ts
In memory of Marshall BennettKay Bucksbaum
In memory of Jeannette DritzCraig Schechtman
In memory of Sam EpsteinMs. Corinne Brophy
In memory of Henry FrankEugene and Sue Gilbertson
In memory of Nancy GersonMr. & Mrs. Louis M. Ebling III
In memory of Richard GrayDaniel LevinBeatrice MayerJudy and Scott McCue
In memory of William J. HokenAnonymousMr. Matthew Colnon
In memory of beloved parents Arthur and Ruth KochAnn and Bob Reiland
In memory of Bernice and Earl MeltzerMrs. Judy Lewis
In memory of Marjorie Lindsay ReedRichard A. and Janice Y. DomanikPamela K. Hull
In memory of Fred SpectorChicago Symphony Orchestra
Alumni AssociationCatherine HoranRuth Ann and Tom Watkins
In memory of Ruth SwislowJudy and Gary KatzMary Sara McDonald and Daniel Pascale
In memory of John D. Van PeltSharon Quintenz Van Pelt
In memory of Dr. William WarrenDr. & Mrs. Marshall Goldin
honor gif ts
In honor of Peter Barack’s birthdayNorm and Judy Soep
In honor of David ChambersMs. Priscilla Angly
In honor of Edit Demar’s birthdaySteve and Susan Maynard
In honor of the upcoming marriage of Larry DeMar and Amy MayThe Rosens and The Marks
In honor of Glenn DerringerJanet Duffy
In honor of Gloria Gottlieb’s new great granddaughter, RemiMrs. Helaine Billings
In honor of Judson and Joyce GreenMr. & Mrs. Kaplan
In honor of the birthday of Sue Lerch LeibowitzFrom your children and grandchildren
In honor of the birthday of Cindy SargentPaul and Ellen Gignilliat
In honor of Denise StauderJanet Duffy
In honor of Richard and Helen ThomasDawn Kerth
In honor of Helen and Sam ZellMrs. Myrna KaplanNancy and Don Borzak
† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of October 23, 2018
64 cso.org
honor roll of donors
league of the chicago symphony orchestra association tribute program
In memory of Dorothy ClarkBetsy BeckmannHelene BellMimi DugingerSarah GoodRenèe LubellThe Spice Investment ClubJacqueline Spillman
In memory of Ruth Ann QuinnHazel Fackler
In memory of Helen MelherHazel Fackler
In honor of Heratch and Sonya DoumanianThe Streeterville Area of the League of
the CSOA
In honor of Barbara DwyerClaretta Meier
Contributed Gifts and ServicesThe Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association is grateful to Steinway & Sons for its generous support.
Dora and John AalbregtseMr. & Mrs. Willam Adams IVAllium String QuartetAplandAvalon String QuartetBaker & McKenzieBanfiChris and Katie BarberBBJ LinenRobert and Fran BeattyBetsy and Enrique BeckmannBelmont Yacht ClubBelvedere VodkaBig Foot MediaBlue Plate CateringBoleoBooth HansenBoston Consulting GroupBridges Mavrakakis LLPBrightwok KitchenWilliam BuchmanRobert J. BufordBulgariSarah BullenJohn D. and Leslie Henner BurnsElliot Callighan, Ramova MusicCapstone Financial Advisors
Oto CarrilloLi-Kuo ChangChicago BearsChicago Cultural CenterChicago MagazineChicago Tribune CompanyCivitasPatsy DashDLA Piper LLP (US)Drury Lane TheaterE&J Gallo WineryEmmett’s BreweryMrs. Walter D. FacklerMelissa and Jamey FadimDonna and David FlemingForbidden RootFour Seasons Hotel ChicagoFour Seasons Resort Scottsdale
at Troon NorthFour Seasons Westlake VillageFrederick C. Robie HouseFrederick Lynn HaberdasshereSusanna GauntGemini Graphics, Inc.Daniel GingrichGoddess and the BakerGoose Island Beer Co.The Grammy AwardsGreenwich StudiosDavid GriffinJohn HagstromElisa Harris and Ivo DaalderJohn Hart and Carol PrinsMr. & Mrs. Thomas C. HeagyLeigh Ann and Casey HermanHewitt AssociatesHillshire SnackingHispanicProHotel Santa FeIron Galaxy StudiosIwan Ries & Co.Jet’s PizzaRobb Jibson, So MidwestGabrielle JohnsonKathy JordanNicholas JosephLori JulianCarole KellerAnne and John KernKimpton Gray HotelLincoln Park ZooYo-Yo MaBeth Mannino and Paul SchickMaple & AshMayer Brown LLPTammy McCannJudy and Scott McCueMcKinsey & CompanyMetrograph CommissaryMetropolitan BrewingNational Hispanic Sales NetworkNicado Publishing / NegociosNow
Shelley Ochab and Chester GougisCathy and Bill OsbornLiz Parker and Keith CrowPaul Rehder SalonJonathan PegisSara and Chris PfaffPianoForteGene PokornyPricewaterhouseCoopers LLPR. Crusoe & SonMary and Scott RaffertyAnna and Iliana ReganJohn RogersRuthie and Rich RyanThe Santa Fe OperaScott and Nancy SantiLora SchaeferCourtney SheaSteve and Megan ShebikShow ServicesSlover Linett StrategiesJames SmelserMike Smith, Photographic
Services InternationalKathy SolaroSoldier FieldThe Sound Co-Op, LLCSpring Mountain VineyardsSteinway Piano Gallery ChicagoMichelle SterlingSusan SynnestvedtBrant TaylorDavid TaylorBenjamin TeichmantesoriTheatrical Lighting ConnectionThink-cellTime Out ChicagoTootsie RollUnion League Club of ChicagoUnion StationUnited AirlinesVancouver Symphony OrchestraVirginia WoolfVirtue CiderWalgreensWBBMWBEZWDCBWFMTWheaton CollegeChris WhiteJohn WilliamsWLS-FMWrigley FieldWXRTCynthia YehYuan-Qing YuSam and Helen Zell
For complete programming, visit cso.org.
December, January & February CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA RICCARDO MUTI Zell Music Director
SYMPHONY CENTER PRESENTS
Visit cso.org or call 312-294-3000 for more information or to order tickets.S Y M P H O N Y C E N T E R | 2 2 0 S O U T H M I C H I G A N A V E N U E | C H I C A G O , I L 6 0 6 0 4
Special: December 19 The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Brass
CSO: December 20–23 Handel Messiah Matthew Halls conductor Amanda Forsythe soprano Sasha Cooke mezzo-soprano Nicholas Phan tenor Joshua Hopkins baritone Chicago Symphony Chorus Duain Wolfe chorus director
CSO: January 10–12Elgar Enigma Variations & Songs by Ives, Copland, Corigliano & moreBramwell Tovey conductorThomas Hampson baritone
Family: January 12Once Upon a Symphony®: The Ugly DucklingMembers of theChicago Symphony Orchestra
Civic Orchestra: January 15Tchaikovsky 4 & Works by Elgar & Vaughan Williams Bramwell Tovey conductor
Special: January 26Live from Here with Chris Thilewith special guest Jason Isbell
Piano: January 27Leif Ove AndsnesWorks by Schumann, Janáček & Bartók
Jazz: February 1Joshua Redman Quartet featuring Aaron Goldberg, Reuben Rogers & Gregory Hutchinson -Anat Cohen Tentet
Civic Orchestra: February 5UChicago PremieresCliff Colnot conductor
Special: February 10Chinese New Year CelebrationChina National Peking Opera Company Hubei Chime Bells National Chinese Orchestra
Visiting Orchestra: February 12Royal Concertgebouw OrchestraDaniel Harding conductorbrahms Symphony No. 4r. strauss Ein Heldenleben
CSO Chamber Music: February 13Civitas Ensemble Yuan-Qing Yu violin Ni Mei violinWei-Ting Kuo violaKenneth Olsen celloJ. Lawrie Bloom clarinetWinston Choi pianoWorks by Glinka, Khachaturian & Taneyev
CSO: February 14–17Tchaikovsky Winter Dreams Symphony & Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No. 3Pablo Heras-Casado conductorSimon Trpčeski piano
Film: February 15North by NorthwestChicago Symphony Orchestra Richard Kaufman conductor
CSO: February 21–23Muti Conducts the Mozart RequiemRiccardo Muti conductorBenedetta Torre sopranoSara Mingardo contraltoSaimir Pirgu tenorMika Kares bassChicago Symphony Chorus Duain Wolfe chorus director
Jazz: February 22Jazz in the Key of Ellisonfeaturing Will Downing, Nona Hendryx, Quiana Lynell, Nicholas Payton and the Andy Farber Orchestra
CSO Chamber Music: February 24fullerton hall, art institute of chicagoPioneering ArtistsOberon Ensemble Lei Hou violinQing Hou violinCatherine Brubaker violaKaren Basrak celloVictor Asuncion pianoWorks by Crawford Seeger, Beach & Schumann
Piano: February 24Beatrice RanaWorks by Chopin, Ravel & Stravinsky
Special: February 28Kodo One Earth Tour 2019: Evolution
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