UWM Peck-October Programs

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1 UWM Peck School of the Arts Ladies and gentlemen, there can be no flash photography during the performances and no video or audio recording of the show. We thank you for remembering to turn off any personal electronic devices that might beep, buzz, ring, or vibrate. Peck School of the Arts Department of Theatre proudly presents By The Bog Of Cats by Marina Carr Director: Michelle Lopez-Rios October 27-31, 2010 Scenic and Properties Designer ..................... Sandra J. Strawn Costume Designer .................................................... Jeffrey Lieder Lighting Designer...........................................Stephen Roy White Sound Designer .............................................................. Chris Guse Voice and Speech ......................................... Michelle Lopez-Rios Violence Director ............................................................ Bill Watson Time: The Present Place: Boglands of Ireland

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Peck School of the Arts Department of Theatre October 27-31, 2010 proudly presents Time: The Present Place: Boglands of Ireland Ladies and gentlemen, there can be no flash photography during the performances and no video or audio recording of the show. We thank you for remembering to turn off any personal electronic devices that might beep, buzz, ring, or vibrate. 1UWMPeckSchooloftheArts

Transcript of UWM Peck-October Programs

Page 1: UWM Peck-October Programs

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Ladies and gentlemen, there can be no flash photography during the performances and no video or audio recording of the show. We thank you for remembering to turn

off any personal electronic devices that might beep, buzz, ring, or vibrate.

Peck School of the ArtsDepartment of Theatre

proudly presents

By The Bog Of Catsby

Marina Carr

Director: Michelle Lopez-Rios

October 27-31, 2010

Scenic and Properties Designer ..................... Sandra J. Strawn

Costume Designer ....................................................Jeffrey Lieder

Lighting Designer...........................................Stephen Roy White

Sound Designer .............................................................. Chris Guse

Voice and Speech .........................................Michelle Lopez-Rios

Violence Director ............................................................Bill Watson

Time: The Present

Place: Boglands of Ireland

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CAST ( i n a l p h a b e t i c a l o r d e r )

Character ....................................................................................................................................ActorMrs. Kilbride .................................................................................................................Mary BuchelFather Willow .....................................................................................................Ryan CapplemanMonica Murray .......................................................................................................... Jaclyn GreenGhost Fancier ..........................................................................................................John GlowackiXavier Cassidy .....................................................................................Nicholas Callan HaubnerCarthage Kilbride ...................................................................................... Derek Burton MorrisJoseph Swane .............................................................................................................Eric ScherrerHester Swane .......................................................................................................Ashley SevedgeCaroline Cassidy ...........................................................................................Megan C. StapletonYoung Dunne ........................................................................................................... Alex Van AbelJosie Kilbride ..........................................................................................................Megan WatsonCatwoman ....................................................................................................................Sara ZientekVoice of Hester Swane* ...............................................................................Raeleen McMillion

“By the Bog of Cats” traditional as interpreted by Raeleen McMillion.

There will be two 10-minute intermissions

PRODUCTION PERSONNEL

Stage Management StaffStage Manager ......................................................................................................Bethany DaveyAssistant Stage Manager ................................................................... Paul Matthew MaddenAssistant Dramaturg ................................................................................................Ryan Antross

Technical Production StaffTechnical Director ............................................................................................Christopher GuseProduction Shop Supervisor ...............................................................................Tim LaughnerScenic Artisans .............................................................................Casey Miller, Eric Schallhorn,

Theresa Ennis, Ann Volllrath, Christine Isbell, Sarah OlsenTechnical Crew ................................................................................Students of 214 Stagecraft Properties Director............................................................................................. Sandra J. StrawnProps Master ............................................................................................................ Meredith RoatProperties Artisans ......................................................................Samuele Sirna, Lauren PekelMaster Electrician ..........................................................................................Stephen Roy WhiteAssistant LD .................................................................................................................. Ann VollrathElectricians .............................................................................. Ross Zentner and Julia Williams

Costume Production StaffCostume Director .....................................................................................................Jeffrey LiederShow Supervisor ......................................................................................................... Beccky RohrAssistant Show Supervisor ..................................................................................... Karmen SeibDrapers ..............................................................Kari Ehler, Chelsea Findlay, Samantha RebroStitchers ................................................................................Emily Peplinski, Karmen Seib, 225

Costume Construction StudentsCostume Crafts ....................................................................... Brent Roberts, Chelsea FindlayWardrobe Supervisor .............................................................................................. Karmen Seib Wardrobe Crew .......................................................... 225 Costume Construction Students

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DIRECTOR ’S NOTES

Marina Carr was born on November 17, 1964 in County Offaly, Ireland. She attended University College Dublin and eventually became writer-in-residence at the Abbey Theatre and Trinity College Dublin. Her play, The Mai, won the Best New Play in the Dublin Theatre Festival. In 1997, Carr was awarded the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize. Known for her fierce and haunting plays, Carr often explores themes of violence, incest, ghosts, myths, and death. By the Bog of Cats retells the Greek myth of Medea. Like Medea, Hester Swane is an outsider with extraordinary abilities who has murdered for the benefit of her lover. Also like Medea, her lover has now abandoned Hester in order to marry a younger bride for financial gain. The abandonment of this lover, together with the abandonment of her mother at a young age, leaves Hester in a volatile and tenuous state.

It is Irish history and culture, however, that dominate this story. Beginning with the dead black swan being dragged on stage (swans appear throughout Irish folklore as shape-shifters for deities taking on human form), Carr introduces us to a unique world. The characters reside on peat bogs--sacred land preserving centuries of conflict dating back to early Celtic sacrifices. Ghosts walk among humans and sometimes the two interact. Being a Traveller, Hester Swane encounters the racist and xenophobic treatment of these nomadic Irish people who are crassly referred to as a “tinkers.” After surviving the Irish industrial school system, notorious for rampant abuse, Hester fights to hold on to her life on the bog.

By the Bog of Cats premiered in 1998 at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin. This main-stage production at Ireland’s premiere national theater was the first by a woman playwright in many years. This speaks to Carr’s exceptional talent in fierce and poetic storytelling. Dubbed Ireland’s premier female playwright, Carr’s work con-tinues to be produced at the Abbey Theatre and around the world.

Michelle Lopez-Rios

DEPARTMENT OF THEATRE

For more information on our outstanding faculty visit arts.uwm.edu/theatre

LeRoy Stoner .............................................................................................................................. Chair

Administrative StaffKristy Volbrecht .....................................................................................................Office Manager

Faculty and Teaching Academic StaffAnne Basting, Ph.D. .............................................................. Associate Professor, PlaywritingJessica Berlin ............................................................................... Lecturer, Stage ManagementDick Chudnow .......................................................................................................Lecturer, ActingR.H. Graham ......................................................... Associate Professor, Graphics and DesignChristopher J. Guse ...........................Associate Professor, Scenic and Audio ProductionJoseph Hanreddy ...........................................................................Visiting Artist in ResidenceRebecca Holderness .......................................................................Assistant Professor, ActingAnthony Horne ..............................................................................Assistant Professor, TheatreTim Laughner .............. Associate Instrumentation Innovator, Scene Shop Supervisor

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SPEC IAL THANKS

San Jose Repertory Theatre Properties Manager, Christopher Kesel; John Gleeson; José Lanters; Bairbre Ni Chiardoha; Tony Horne and our friends

at the Center for Celtic Studies.

DEPARTMENT OF THEATRE (c o n t.)

Jeffrey Lieder .......................................Associate Professor, Head of Costume ProductionMichelle Lopez-Rios ...................................................... Assistant Professor, Voice & SpeechJessica Maerz, Ph. D. .............................Assistant Professor, Theatre History, DramaturgyRaeleen McMillion ..................................................................................Senior Lecturer, ActingRobin Mello, Ph.D. ................................................... Associate Professor, Theatre EducationCorliss Phillabaum, Ph.D. ............................................. Professor Emeritus, Theatre HistoryLouella Powell .................................................................................................Lecturer, CostumesPamela J. Rehberg ...................................................................Associate Professor, CostumesAlvaro Saar-Rios ....................................................................................... Lecturer, Play AnalysisPamela Schermer .... Associate Professor, Visual Communication for Performing ArtsSandra J. Strawn .............................................. Associate Professor, Properties Production,

Head of Technical ProductionJames Tasse .............................................................................................................Lecturer, ActingJenny Wanasek ......................................................................................................Lecturer, ActingWilliam Watson ...............................................................Associate Professor, Head of ActingStephen R. White ..................................................................Senior Lecturer, Lighting Design

Peck School of the ArtsWade Hobgood ......................................................................................................................... DeanScott Emmons ....................................................................................................... Associate Dean

Administrative StaffMary McCoy ................................................................................................ Assistant to the DeanSue Thomas ...............................................................................................Administrative OfficerRandall Holper ..................................................................................................Facilities Manager

Marketing and Development StaffEllen Schupper .............................................................................................. Director, MarketingDiane Grace ............................................................................................. Director, DevelopmentNicole Schanen............................................................................................ Marketing SpecialistCraig Kroeger .....................................................................................................Graphic DesignerRegan Jacobson .......................................................................................................Web Designer

Box OfficeJan Brooks ...................................................................................................... Box Office ManagerCharles Hoehnen ...................................................................... Assistant Box Office Manager Box Office Staff ...............................................................Katherine Feekin, Sarah Hernandez

Natalie Kubicek, Stephanie NinnemannChris Ouchie, April Paul,

Samantha Roeming

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Peck School of the Arts Theatre Calendar

Mainstage Theatre Series

Labworks Series

To purchase ticketsCall the box office at (414) 229-4308 or visit in person

at the Helene Zelazo Center for the Performing Arts, 2419 E. Kenwood Blvd. More information at arts.uwm.edu

Tickets: $17 general/$12 seniors, faculty, alumni/$10 students.All performances take place in the Mainstage Theatre, 2400 E. Kenwood Blvd.

Lovers’ QuarrelsDecember 8–12

7:30 pm on Wednesday-Saturday; 2 pm on SundayDirector: Bill Watson

The Last Days of Judas IscariotMarch 9–13

7:30 pm on Wednesday–Saturday; 2 pm on SundayDirector: Rebecca Holderness

No, No, NanetteMay 4–8

7:30 pm on Wednesday–Friday; 2 pm and 7:30 pm on Saturday; 2 pm on SundayDirector: Tony Horne

Tickets: $5. All performances take place in Kenilworth Studio 508, 1925 E. Kenilworth Place

As It Is in HeavenOctober 15 - 24

7:30 pm on Friday - Saturday; 2 pm on SundayDirector: Jenny Wanasek

Short CutsNovember 5 - 14

7:30 pm on Friday - Saturday; 2 pm on SundayDirector: Raeleen McMillion

The Second Best Bed:Shakespeare’s Women Revealed

February 25 - March 67:30 pm on Friday - Saturday; 2 pm on Sunday

Director: James Tasse

Aimee and JaguarApril 22 - May 1

7:30 pm on Friday - Saturday; 2 pm on SundayDirector: Joseph Hanreddy

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Coming soon to the Peck School of the Arts!

Fine Arts QuartetAll concerts at 3pmNovember 14, 2010

February 6, 2011March 6, 2011

Institute of Visual Arts (Inova)Through December 12, 2010

Greater Milwaukee Foundation’s Mary L. Nohl Fund Fellowships Exhibition

Art & DesignMost Wednesdays

Artists Now! Lecture SeriesNational and international guest speakers

DanceDecember 9-12, 2010

New Dancemakers

February 6-8, 2011Winterdances: Égalité!

FilmDecember 17, 2010

Student Film & Video Festival

December 18, 2010 Senior Screening

MusicNovember 12, 2010

Symphony Orchestra & Choirs

December 3, 2010Symphony Orchestra & Band

TheatreSee page 5

For a full calendar of more than 350 events, visit us online at

arts.uwm.edu

FREE!

FREE!

FREE!

FREE!

FREE!

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Chamber Music Milwaukee

“Chamber Music by Film Composers”Monday, November 1st, 2010

7:30pm Helen Bader Concert Hall

“Viktor’s Tale” from The Terminal (2004) ......................................................John Williams b. 1932

Todd Levy, clarinetJeannie Yu, piano

Suite Bourgeoise (1940) ...............................................................................Malcolm Arnold 1. Prelude 1921-2006 2. Tango (Elaine) 3. Dance (censored) 4. Ballad 5. Valse (ugo)

Caen Thomason-Redus, fluteMargaret Butler, oboe

Jeannie Yu, piano

Nocturne, “The Crimson Day Withdraws” ................................................... John Williams from Concerto for Horn (2003)

Greg Flint, hornJeffry Peterson, piano

Elegy for Cello and Piano ................................................................................. John Williams

Stefan Kartman, celloJeannie Yu, piano

Romance-Impromptu (1948) .......................................................................Erich Korngold 1897-1957

Stefan Kartman, celloJeannie Yu, piano

Intermission

Souvenirs de Voyage (1967) ................................................................. Bernard Herrmann 1911-1975 1. Andante pastorale - Allegro 2. Berceuse 3. Andante tranquillo quasi barcarolla

Todd Levy, clarinetThe Arcas String Quartet:

Ilana Setapen, violin Margot Schwartz, violin

Wei-Ting Kuo, violaPeter Thomas, cello

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John Williams, “Viktor’s Tale” from The Terminal Born in 1932 in New York City, John Williams was a fine pianist as a child, and in his twenties he studied with Rosina Lhévinne at Juilliard. He became a Hollywood studio pianist in the late 1950s, and began composing for television. By the mid-1960s he turned to film composi-tion, and the rest is history: his portfolio of celebrated film scores is enormous, including Jaws, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Star Wars, E.T.: the Extra-Terrestrial, and Schindler’s List, to name but a few. From

1980 to 1993 he was conductor of the Boston Pops Orchestra, succeeding Arthur Fielder. In addition to his film work, Williams has worked extensively in writing concert music. His style, while advanced, maintains an expressive use of tonality. “Viktor’s Tale” is taken from Williams’s score to the film The Terminal (2004).

Malcolm Arnold, Suite Bourgeoise The English composer Malcolm Arnold was a gifted trumpeter, playing in his early years with both the London Philharmonic Orchestra and the BBC Symphony Orches-tra. Then, in the late 1940s, he turned his attention to composition, working in the areas of both concert music and film scoring. He wrote the score to more than 100 films, sometimes producing as many as six per year; his best known was written for the 1957 film The Bridge on the River Kwai, for which he won an Academy Award. His concert music is generally conservative, only occasionally serial, and enriched by his facility at composing pleasing melodies. After composing his ninth and last sym-phony, he retired from composition in the late 1980s. He was knighted in 1993 and died in 2006. The Suite Bourgeoise, scored for flute, oboe, and piano, was composed in 1940. Its five brief movements are cast in a melodious, post-tonal idiom full of rhythmic interest, particularly in the final waltz.

John Williams, Nocturne, “The Crimson Day Withdraws” from Concerto for HornWilliams’ Horn Concerto was composed in 2003 on a commission from Chicago Symphony Orchestra principal horn player Dale Clevenger. Williams conducted the premiere in Chicago in November of that year. “The Crimson Day Withdraws” is the fifth and final movement of the work. While it begins and ends quietly, its character is ever-changing, featuring modernist dissonance coupled with jazz-like harmonies.

John Williams, Elegy for Cello and PianoThis work has its origins with a violinist and mother who tragically lost both her young children, Alexandra and Daniel. Subsequently, she worked with a number of composers, including Williams, who wrote music in their memory. The compositions were then performed at a memorial service in Los Angeles. The Elegy, performed there by Williams and cellist John Walz, is based on a melodic fragment drawn from Williams’s score to the 1997 film Seven Years in Tibet, a soundtrack in which the celebrated cellist Yo-Yo Ma played, and so the composer retained the cello’s sonority in scoring the Elegy for cello and piano, later creating a version for cello and orchestra that was first performed in 2002. Williams has subsequently written, “I’m … happy to report that this lovely young woman is recovering from the unrecoverable, has started another gorgeous family, and is playing as brilliantly as ever. Bless her.”

Korngold, Romance-ImpromptuOf Austrian birth, Erich Wolfgang Korngold began composing as a child. When he was just nine years old, he presented his cantata Gold to Mahler, who praised it highly, recommending that he study with Zemlinsky. His early works also won accolades from Richard Strauss, and the pianist Artur Schnabel loved and often played his Piano Sonata in E, written at the age of 13. He began writing operas in his teens, culminating in his greatest

accomplishments in this field, Die tote Stadt and Das Wunder der Heliane. In 1934, Korngold went to Hollywood, where he would pioneer the new field of film scor-ing, writing the soundtracks for such films as Captain Blood and The Adventures of Robin Hood; the latter earned him his second Academy Award. After World War II,

PROGR A M NOTES BY TIMOTHY NOONAN

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ARTIST B IOS

Margaret ButlerOboist Margaret Butler grew up in Rhode Island where she began her studies on the recorder and flute. A love for the sound of the Baroque oboe led her to study the modern oboe. She received her Bachelor of Music degree from the New England Conservatory of Music and her Master of Music degree from Rice Univer-sity’s Shepherd School of Music. Margaret participated in the Ban! Summer Music Festival where she was a featured soloist and has also played in Graz, Austria with the American Institute of Musical Studies. She was principal oboist for the Florida Grand Opera, Miami City Ballet and Palm Beach Opera before joining the Milwau-kee Symphony Orchestra in 2002. In 2007, she played principal oboe for the Santa Fe Opera Company and participated as a soloist in the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival. The following Spring she was invited to play as guest principal oboist for the Royal Scottish National Orchestra. In addition to performing with the Mil-waukee Symphony, Margaret is principal

oboist for the Milwaukee Ballet Orchestra and is on faculty at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

Gregory FlintGregory Flint is associate professor of horn at the University of Wisconsin-Mil-waukee and co-director of the Chamber Music Milwaukee concert series. As a performer, he is currently principal horn with the Elgin Symphony, the Chicago Jazz Orchestra, Present Music of Mil-waukee and the Fulcrum Point New Music Project. He often performs with the Milwaukee Symphony, and has also appeared with the Chicago Symphony, Colorado Symphony Orchestra, Lyric Op-era of Chicago, Honolulu Symphony, the Florida Orchestra, and the Ravinia Festival Orchestra. A busy chamber musician, Flint is a founding member of the critically acclaimed Asbury Brass Quintet, hornist with the Tower Brass of Chicago, and has also toured regularly with the Prairie Winds and the Chicago Brass Quintet.Past summers have included solo ap-

PROGR A M NOTES BY TIMOTHY NOONAN

he turned increasingly to the composition of concert music. His Violin Concerto of 1937 was premiered by Heifetz, and Furtwängler gave the first performance of his Symphonic Serenade for string orchestra. The Romance-Impromptu, scored for cello and piano, was conceived for the score to the film Deception (1946), starring Bette Davis, Claude Rains (who plays a composer), and Paul Henreid (who plays the role of a cellist). In the end, though, the work was not used in the film, and thus stands as an independent concert piece.

Bernard Herrmann, Souvenirs de VoyageBernard Herrmann was educated in music at New York University and the Juilliard School, studying composition with Bernard Wagenaar and Percy Grainger. In the 1930s he began composing music for radio programs, many of which were directed by Orson Welles. This relation-ship led to Herrmann’s first film score, composed for no less a film than Citizen Kane. Later, in the 1950s and 1960s, he entered into a partner-ship with Alfred Hitchcock, and wrote the scores for such classics as

Vertigo, North by Northwest, and Psycho. He also composed for television programs such as Rawhide and The Twilight Zone, and late in his career he wrote the score to Taxi Driver (1976), a film that appeared after his death in late 1975.

Herrmann was an active composer of concert music as well. Scored for clarinet and string quartet, the three-movement Souvenirs de Voyage was composed in 1967. The first movement begins with a slow introduction featuring a long, touching melody in the clarinet above sustained and muted strings. This gives way to an Allegro moderato full of soaring melodies for both the clarinet and the strings. The slow second movement is a berceuse (lullaby) with a middle section in which the cello and clarinet engage in a lyrical dialogue. And the gentle “love song” (canto amoroso) finale brings the work to a soft and peaceful close.

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pearances in Spain, Costa Rica and South America. Gregory currently spends his summer months in New Mexico as a member of the Santa Fe Opera orchestra.

Stefan KartmanStefan Kartman is currently Associate Professor of Cello and Chamber Music at the University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee. In addition to solo performance, he has performed to critical acclaim as cellist of the Kneisel Trio and the Florestan Duo. He has given performances and master-classes in conservatories and schools of music worldwide including the Cleve-land Institute of Music (USA), the Xiamen Conservatory of Music (China), and the D’Albaco Conservatory of Music (Italy), among many others.

An avid chamber music enthusiast, Dr. Kartman has served on the faculties of the Alfred University Summer Chamber Music Institute, the MidAmerica Chamber Music Festival, the Troy Youth Chamber Music Institute, the Green Mountain Chamber Music Festival, and was artistic director of the Milwaukee Chamber Music Festival. His early training in chamber music was with his father, Myron Kartman, of the Antioch String Quartet and during his formal training as a chamber musician, he studied with members of the Guarneri and Juilliard String Quartets and the Beaux Arts Trio.

Dr. Kartman received degrees from Northwestern University, The Juilliard School of Music, and his doctorate from Rutgers University. He has been teaching assistant to Harvey Shapiro and Zara Nelsova of the Juil-liard School and proudly acknowledges the pedagogical heritage of his teachers Shapiro, Nelsova, Bernard Greenhouse, Alan Harris, and Anthony Cooke.

Todd LevyPrincipal Clarinet of the MSO and The Santa Fe Opera orchestras, two-time Grammy Award winner Todd Levy has performed as a soloist at Carnegie Hall, Mostly Mozart, with the Israel Philharmon-ic, and at the White House; as chamber musician with members of the Guarneri, Juilliard, Orion, Miami quartets, James Levine, Christoph Eschenbach, and Mit-suko Uchida; and as guest principal clari-net with the New York Philharmonic, the

Metropolitan Opera, and frequently for Seiji Ozawa and Ricardo Muti in Japan. He has performed world premiere concerti or chamber works by composers such as John Harbison, Joan Tower, Peter Schick-ele, Paquito D’Rivera, Morton Subotnick, and Marc Neikrug and performs on the new release of Marc Neikrug’s Through Roses chamber work with violinist Pinchas Zuckerman, actor John Rubenstein and the composer conducting.

He has recorded the Brahms Clarinet Sonatas for Avie, and three educational book/CD’s of clarinet competition works for G. Schirmer/Hal Leonard, and a new edition/CD of the Bernstein Clarinet Sonata for Boosey and Hawkes/Hal Leonard. He performs exclu-sively on Vandoren reeds, mouthpieces, and ligatures, and Selmer Signature clarinets. He is also on the faculty of UW-Milwaukee and is co-director of Chamber Music Milwaukee.

Jeffry PetersonPeterson is best known for his work in the field of collaborative piano and has performed throughout the United States with such celebrated singers as Yolanda Marculescu, Erie Mills, Ev-elyn Lear and Kurt Ollmann. Peterson performs regularly on UWM’s Chamber Music Milwaukee series; other notable performances include a recital with soprano Mary Elizabeth Williams at the Mateus Festival in Portugal and performances with Erie Mills, soprano, and James Tocco, pianist, at the John Downey Festival in London. Record-ing credits include collaborations with Yolanda Marculescu-Stern, an album of American flute music with Robert Good-berg, and the Something to Sing About choral anthology for G. Schirmer. His CD with the renowned soprano Erie Mills, Always It’s Spring (VAI audio), includes three songs by John Downey. Songs of Love and Longing, with soprano Valerie Errante, was released on Albany Classics in 2008, and Skyborn Music, with the Mil-waukee Choral Artists, will be released on the Gothic label in fall 2009. Peterson is professor of piano at UWM and often performs with the UWM voice fac-ulty. He founded UWM’s Vocal Arts Series. He chairs the graduate program in vocal accompanying and recently introduced a new Bachelor’s degree in Collaborative Piano at UWM.

ARTIST B IOS (c o n t.)

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ARTIST B IOS (c o n t.)

Caen Thomason-Redus Thomason-Redus is Assistant Professor of Flute at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and enjoys traveling the world performing and teaching. Solo appear-ances in recent years include the Milwau-kee Symphony Orchestra, the National Flute Association Convention, and UWM’s major ensembles.Recital programs vary greatly and include everything from vir-tuosic baroque sonatas to contemporary African American music for solo flute. At UWM, Caen is particularly active in cham-ber music through the faculty artist series Chamber Music Milwaukee and his own series of recitals. You can hear him on The Flute Collection and the Moyse Collection of Flute Classics, two sets of recordings and anthologies published by Schirmer. Prior to arriving in Milwaukee, Caen spent two years performing with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra as their Minority Fellow and now performs often with pro-fessional orchestras such as the St. Louis, Milwaukee and Kansas City symphonies. Caen began playing Muramatsu flutes in 2003 and is a Muramatsu Artist.

Caen’s previous teaching activities include faculty positions at Wayne State Univer-sity and the Sphinx Preparatory Academy, both located in downtown Detroit. He is professionally active with the National Flute Association, Early Music Now, the Milwaukee Youth Symphony Orchestra, and several other arts organizations.

Jeanie YuYu is an award-winning pianist who is equally at home with chamber music, collaborative arts, and solo performanc-es. She has performed as soloist with the Flint Symphony, Portland Symphony, Marina del Rey-Westchester Symphony, Des Moines Symphony, Des Moines Brandenburg Symphony, the Xiamen Symphony Orchestra(China), Sheboygan Symphony Orchestra, and the Milwaukee Ballet Orchestra. She is an avid chamber musician who is an associate member of the Rembrandt Chamber Players in Chicago. She received her Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees from the Juilliard School, and her Doctorate Degree from the Peabody Conservatory.

ARCAS QUARTET B IOS

Ilana SetapenSince her solo orchestral debut at age 15 with the Amarillo Symphony, Ilana Setapen has been flourishing as a violinist with a powerful and original voice. She is the newly appointed Associate Concertmaster of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra and the Assistant Concertmaster of the Grant Park Festival Orchestra in Chicago. Ms. Setapen has won top prizes in many competitions, such as the Irving M. Klein International String Competition, the Pasa-dena Showcase Competition, the Kingsville International Competition and the Ama-rillo Young Performers Competition. At the age of 21, she became concertmaster of the Riverside County Philharmonic in Los Angeles. She has also been concertmaster of the Juilliard Orchestra, the Colburn Orchestra, the American Youth Symphony, the National Repertory Orchestra, and the USC Thornton Symphony. Solo appear-ances have been with the Milwaukee Symphony, the Riverside Philharmonic, the Pasadena Pops, the American Youth Symphony, the Idaho Falls Symphony, the National Repertory Orchestra, and the

Amarillo Symphony, among others. She has participated in numerous festivals such as the New York String Seminar, Aspen Music Festival, ENCORE School for Strings, and the National Repertory Orchestra. Also an avid chamber musician, she was for two years the first violinist of the award-winning Calla Quartet in New York. Solo and chamber music performances have brought her abroad to France, Brazil, Hol-land, England, Monaco, and Italy. She has also performed in Carnegie Hall, Wigmore Hall, and Disney Hall.

Ms. Setapen grew up in Amarillo, Texas. She studied with Robert Lipsett both at the University of Southern California and at the Colburn Conservatory. She received her Master of Music Degree from the Juilliard School as a student of Donald Weilerstein and Ronald Copes. She performs on a 1624 Brothers Amati violin on loan from Frank Almond.

Margot SchwartzA native of Oakland, California, violinist Margot Schwartz is currently a member

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ARCAS QUARTET B IOS (c o n t.)

of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra. She has appeared as soloist with the Berkeley Symphony, Oakland East Bay Symphony, Northwestern University Chamber and Music Academy of the West Festival Orchestras. As a chamber musi-cian, in which capacity she has performed extensively on both violin and viola, she was a winner of the Yale School of Music’s Chamber Music Competition and has performed at New York’s Bargemusic and at the Kennedy Center. Margot has performed orchestrally in over twenty countries, as well as on a substitute basis with some of the nation’s top orches-tras, and has taught violin at the Music Institute of Chicago and Homestead High School in Mequon. Her summer plans this year include performances in the San Francisco Bay Area, Brainerd, Minnesota, Bellingham, Washington, and Fish Creek, Wisconsin. Margot holds a Master’s de-gree from the Yale School of Music, where she studied with Ani Kavafian, and a Bachelor’s degree which she earned cum laude at the Northwestern University School of Music, where she was a student of Roland and Almita Vamos.

Wei-Ting KuoWei-Ting Kuo was born in Taiwan, where he began his viola studies at the age of 9. He quickly gained recognition after winning the first prize in the Taiwan Viola Competition and attracted critical atten-tion as the first violist to win the first prizes in the Hsing-Tien-Gong String Competi-tion, the Young Artist Showcase String Competition, and the National Taiwan Normal University String Competition. He was awarded and recognized as the ‘Most Potential Young Musician’ by the members of the Taiwan National Symphony Orches-tra. He attended the Taos Music Festival in 2008 and recently was selected as a finalist for the 2008 Primrose International Viola Competition. In 2009, Mr.Kuo was a prizewinner of the Tokyo International Viola Competition and also received a special Prize for the best interpretation. In 2009 he also attended the Ravinia Festival in Chicago. Currently Mr. Kuo is the As-sistant Principal Violist in the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra.

Peter ThomasOriginally from Stevens Point, Wis-consin, where he started to play the cello in 1986 at age five, Peter Thomas was born into a family of musicians. He graduated from the ASTEC Suzuki Education Program in 1999 studying under Dr. Lawrence Leviton and went on to win numerous scholarships and competitions as an undergraduate at the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities. Mr. Thomas received his bachelor of music degree in 2003, having studied with Tanya Remenikova and Joseph Johnson, Principal Cello of the Milwau-kee Symphony Orchestra. In 2005 he earned a master of music degree at the Cleveland Institute of Music under the guidance of Stephen Geber, Principal Cello (retired) of the Cleveland Orches-tra. Mr. Thomas was appointed to the cello section of the Dayton Philhar-monic Orchestra in May 2005, and won the position of Assistant Principal Cello of the Cincinnati Chamber Orchestra in March 2006. In October 2007, Thomas moved to Miami Beach and joined the New World Symphony, America’s Or-chestral Academy, where he performed Elgar’s Cello Concerto as the NWS 2008 Concerto Competition winner. As of November 2008, Mr. Thomas resides in Milwaukee after winning a section cello position in the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra. An active chamber musician and experimental collaborator, Thomas can be heard with his string quartet, the Arcas Quartet, and his classically infused indie-rock band, I’m Not A Pilot, in the Milwaukee area and on many local radio stations. Thomas is also a dedicated teacher and his students have won competitions and scholarships in Ohio, Florida, Oregon, and Wisconsin. During the summer, Thomas performs with the Sun Valley Symphony in Idaho and he will be performing Saint-Saens’s Cello Concerto No.1 with the Central Wiscon-sin Symphony Orchestra in April 2011.