Tag Archives: UC College-Conservatory of Music

EXECUTION OF JUSTICE Runs April 18-20

CCM_logoEXECUTION OF JUSTICE
Presented by UC College-Conservatory of Music
April 18-20
University Heights

Directed by Michael Burnham

A chilling examination of the trial of Dan White for the murder of Harvey Milk, San Francisco’s first openly gay Supervisor, and Mayor George Moscone. Scrupulous in its objectivity, EXECUTION OF JUSTICE puts the trial on trial and measures the distance between “politics,” “action” and “the law.” Mature subject matter.

  • Thu-Fri, April 18-19 at 7:30pm
  • Sat, April 20 at 2pm & 7:30pm

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PARADE Runs April 5-21

TC_ParadePARADE
Presented by The Carnegie
April 5-21
Covington

Reviews: Enquirer | Talkin’ Broadway | CityBeat |

Local media coverage: Enquirer article |

Directed by Dee Anne Bryll & Ed Cohen
Music direction by Steve Goers

Cast: Leo Frank-Collin Kessler, Lucille Frank-Jenny Hickman, Jim Conley-Noah Ricketts, Mary Phagan-Alison Bagli, Frankie Epps / Young Solider-Eric Geil, High Dorsey-Matt Hill, Governor John Slaton-Ben Biggers, Tom Watson-Nate Irvin, Judge Roan / Old Soldier-Thomas Knapp, Mrs. Phagan-Sarah Bishop, Britt Craig-Charlie Meredith, Minola “Minnie” McKnight-Kimber Sprawl, Newt Lee-Blaine Krauss, Luther Rosser / Mr. Peavy-John McGill, Riley-Kameron Richardson, Angela-Raven Thomas, Iola Stover-Lawson Young, Monteen-Emily Trumble, Essie-Taylor Alexander, Sally Slaton-Katie Wesler, Officer Ivey-Connor Deane & Detective Starnes-Tyle Huckstep

In the sweltering intolerance of 1913 Atlanta, northerner and Jewish factory manager Leo Frank is wrongfully accused of murdering of a 13-year-old girl under his employment. As press frenzy and public outrage whip his trial into a referendum, Frank’s only hope lies in a brave crusade by the southern wife he never understood, among a people that never understood him. The 2000 Tony Award winner for “Best Book” and “Best Score,” PARADE is a transformational story of a country at odds with its declarations of equality, brought to life by the remarkable talent of CCM’s musical theatre program.

  • Fri*-Sat April 5-6 at 7:30pm
  • Sun, April 7 at 3pm
  • Fri**-Sat, April 12-13 at 7:30pm
  • Sun, April 14 at 3pm
  • Fri-Sat, April 19-20 at 7:30pm
  • Sun, April 21 at 3pm
    *Performance includes ASL interpreting and closed captioning
    **Performance includes closed captioning only

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ARSENIC AND OLD LACE Runs April 4-6

DAFT_Arsenic and Old LaceARSENIC AND OLD LACE
Presented by DAFT Theater (UC Student Theater Group)
April 4-6
University Heights

Directed by Elena Elder & Kiya Fix

Cast:

^ denotes Arsenic Cast (4th, 6th evening)
* denotes Old Lace Cast (5th, 6th matinee)

  • Abby Brewster: Emma Seymour ^*
  • Rev. Harper: Nikolas Schoonmaker^ & Peyton Hahn*
  • Teddy Brewster: Andrew Van Matre ^*
  • Officer Brophy: Michelle Hamad ^ & Samantha Scheifele*
  • Officer Klein: Stephen Doyel^ & Sameam Shahrestani*
  • Martha Brewster:Rachel Krallman^*
  • Elaine Harper: Natalie Brdar^*
  • Mortimer Brewster: Cody Hendershot^ & Jake Grieco*
  • Mr. Gibbs: Sierra Ross^ & Patrick Kevin*
  • Jonathan Brewster: Ryan Paluch^ & Austin Jutte*
  • Dr. Einstein: Ceara Glenn^ & Kaitlin Otto*
  • Officer O’Hara: Chris Postell^ & Andres Lopez*
  • Lieutenant Rooney: Abbie Wallace^ & Juan David Lopez*
  • Mr.Witherspoon: Sierra Ross^*
  • Betty: Teresa Pestian^*
  • Hoskins: Elena Elder^*
  • Spenalzo: Kiya Fix^*

It’s 1941, Brooklyn NY, and Mortimer Brewster, a New York critic of both drama and marriage, is finally getting hitched to Elaine Harper, the girl next door. Before heading off for an evening at the theater with his new bride to be, Mortimer stops in to deliver the news to his aunts, Abby and Martha Brewster, two sweet little old ladies who donate toys to charity and car for their nephew Teddy, a bugle blowing nut-bag who thinks he’s Theodore Roosevelt. But Abby and Martha aren’t as sweet and innocent as they seem. Mortimer soon discovers, to his horror, that his dear old aunties have a dozen bodies buried in the basement. It seems the Brewster sisters have a new hobby- luring lonely old men into their home and serving them Elderberry Wine with their own special recipe, a teaspoonful of arsenic, a teaspoonful of strychnine and just a pinch of cyanide. To make matters worse, Mortimer’s deranged and very dangerous brother Jonathan shows up. Jonathan, on the run from the law, has a dead body in the trunk of his car, a drunken plastic surgeon at his side, and a face that looks like Boris Karloff. Mortimer frantically attempts to deal with dead bodies, insane asylum directors, attempted murders, and a new bride all in one crazy Halloween night.

  • Thu-Fri, April 4-5 at 8pm
  • Sat, April 6 at 2pm & 8pm

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LCT Awards S.L.U.T. Top Prize in CCM’s TRANSMIGRATION Series

CCM_SLUTPanelists for the League of Cincinnati Theatres (LCT) have recognized S.L.U.T. as the best production at the University of Cincinnati’s College Conservatory of Music’s TRANSMIGRATION series, the Drama department’s annual presentation of student written and produced work. Panelists awarded second place to Sentenced, and honorable mentions to 2122 Michigan Avenue and The Sherwin Williams Effect.

The fifth-annual festival allows the audience to experience half-hour works produced by small groups of Drama majors, who create and design all aspects of their productions from start to finish. The festival is an exciting event for both guests and the presenters, as audiences get the opportunity to see up to four very different pieces of new theatre in a single night and the students premiere works that are entirely their own. This year, six shows were presented. “TRANSMIGRATION teaches our actors to be entrepreneurs,” says Richard Hess, chair of CCM’s Drama Department and director of the TRANSMIGRATION Festival. “There are absolutely no holds barred, with the exception of the thirty-minute time limit, allowing our students to learn to express from within.”

S.L.U.T. was praised for its imaginative and engaging plot, while Sentenced was noted to be strong on acting and overall storytelling. 2122 Michigan Avenue and The Sherwin Williams Effect were both described as “original, creative, and hilarious”. Overall, the panelists were “impressed by the tight ensemble nature of each one” of the TRANSMIGRATION presentations. “Trust and commitment shone with each cast.”

The League of Cincinnati Theatres was founded in 1999 to strengthen, nurture and promote Cincinnati’s theatre community. LCT provides its member companies and individual members with education, resources and services to enhance the quality and exposure of the theatre community in Cincinnati and increase community awareness, attendance and involvement. More information about the League can be found at www.leagueofcincytheatres.com.

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CCM’s Kurt Weill Festival Continues With Iconic Musical THREEPENNY OPERA

Running Feb. 28 through March 10, this dynamic new production features set designs by Tony Award-winning guest artist John Arnone

Sophomore Hannah Zazzaro as Sukey Tawdry & junior Max Clayton as Macheath. Photography by Mark Lyons.

Sophomore Hannah Zazzaro as Sukey Tawdry & junior Max Clayton as Macheath. Photography by Mark Lyons.

CINCINNATI, OH —The University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music’s (CCM) year-long Kurt Weill Festival resumes this month with a dynamic new production of the iconic musical The Threepenny Opera. Composed by Kurt Weill with book and lyrics by dramatist Bertolt Brecht (adapted into English by Marc Blitzstein), The Threepenny Opera weaves the riveting tale of notorious bandit and womanizer Macheath (“Mack the Knife”) and his seedy companions in London’s underworld. Weill’s innovative score invented a new form of musical theatre, leading the way for such shows as Chicago and Cabaret.

CCM’s Mainstage Series production of this jazz-infused musical is directed by Robin Guarino, with musical direction by Roger Grodsky, choreography by Patti James and scenic designs by Tony Award-winning guest artist John Arnone.

The Threepenny Opera runs Thursday, Feb. 28, through Sunday, March 10, in UC’s Patricia Corbett Theater. Tickets are on sale now. This production contains mature subject matter.

Premiering in Berlin in 1928, The Threepenny Opera is a satirical take on traditional opera and operetta, perhaps best known for its opening ballad “Mack the Knife,” which has since been recorded by countless artists including Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, Bobby Darin and Frank Sinatra. The Threepenny Opera exhibits a segment of Weill’s eclectic body of work that is totally distinctive from the one audiences saw during CCM’s acclaimed revival of Weill, Langston Hughes and Elmer Rice’s opera Street Scene this past November.

THEATRE OF EPIC PROPORTIONS
Adapted from an 18th century ballad opera by John Gay (which itself was a parody of baroque composer George Frideric Handel’s operas), The Threepenny Opera is a work of “epic theatre,” designed to challenge conventional notions of property and art. A theatrical movement from the early to mid-20th century, epic theatre is characterized in part by keeping viewers aware that they are watching a play. “Brecht deliberately takes an ‘anti-naturalistic’ approach,” Guarino explains, “making the audience conscious that they are experiencing art, often by breaking the fourth wall and inspiring social action by disrupting the expectation of simple ‘threepenny’ entertainment.”

One of the ways that CCM’s production will underscore this tradition is by placing the show’s musicians on stage and in costume. “Brecht wanted the music to actually interrupt the play,” says CCM Associate Professor of Musicology and Kurt Weill expert bruce mcclung. “The original production had two different lighting systems so that it would be obvious to the audience when the cast switched from spoken dialogue to singing. Brecht wanted to highlight the break between the two.”

A TONY AWARD-WINNING ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE HELPS SET THE STAGE
Set in an anachronistic Victorian London, The Threepenny Opera features set designs by John Arnone, a Tony Award winner whose impressive list of credits for theatre, film and television spans nearly 40 years. As a founding member of New York’s Lion Theatre Company, Arnone designed numerous critically acclaimed productions including Music Hall Sidelights featuring Kathy Bates as Colette and K: Impressions of Kafka’s The Trial for which he received his first Obie Award. With director Des McAnuff, Arnone worked on over 15 productions at La Jolla Playhouse beginning in 1984, including works by Shakespeare, Moliere, Checkov and new works. They returned to Broadway in 1993 with The Who’s Tommy, which earned five Tony Awards including Best Set Design for Arnone, and the revival of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, which won a Tony for its star Matthew Broderick. In addition to being a Tony Award and O­­­bie Award winner, Arnone is the recipient of the Drama Desk Award, NAACP Award, Ovation Award, New York Theater Wing Award, and others.

Arnone will serve as a master teacher-in-residence at CCM for the two weeks leading up to The Threepenny Opera’s opening, but his work on this production actually began last summer. Arnone and Guarino devised an impressive industrial setting for this musical based on Caspar Neher’s designs for the original 1928 production of The Threepenny Opera. Students in CCM’s Department of Theatre Design and Production are in turn bringing these designs to life one piece at a time. CCM senior Michael Feldmann serves as Technical Director for this production, overseeing the realization of Arnone’s substantial designs. “The steel portion of this set alone easily weighs over three tons,” he says. “The finished structure will show signs of rusting and aging,” he adds, suggesting that The Threepenny Opera’s set will be as weathered and compromised as the show’s morally ambiguous characters.

FREE PRE-SHOW TALKS EXPLORE THE GENESIS OF THE ENGLISH ADAPTATION OF THE THREEPENNY OPERA

University of Houston Professor of Music and Kurt Weill Foundation grant-recipient Howard Pollack will present a pair of free talks about The Threepenny Opera on Friday, March 1. Pollack will discuss Marc Blitzstein’s historic English adaptation of the musical at 2:30 p.m. in conjunction with CCM’s Thinking About Music Lecture Series. Pollack will present a second talk at 7:15 p.m., leading up to the 8 p.m. performance of The Threepenny Opera. Both talks take place in the Baur Room of UC’s Corbett Center for the Performing Arts in CCM Village.

PERFORMANCE TIMES

  • 8 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 28
  • 8 p.m. Friday, March 1 *
  • 2 and 8 p.m. Saturday, March 2
  • 2 p.m. Sunday, March 3
  • 8 p.m. Thursday, March 7
  • 8 p.m. Friday. March 8
  • 2 and 8 p.m. Saturday, March 9
  • 2 p.m. Sunday, March 10 

*Note: The March 1 performance of The Threepenny Opera will be preceded by a FREE pre-show talk by noted Kurt Weill Scholar Howard Pollack at 7:15 p.m. in the Baur Room of the Corbett Center for the Performing Arts.

LOCATION
Patricia Corbett Theater, CCM Village
University of Cincinnati

PURCHASING TICKETS
Tickets to The Threepenny Opera are $30 for adults, $19 for non-UC students and $17 for UC students with valid ID. $12 student rush tickets will be available for the Saturday matinee performances beginning at 1 p.m. on March 2 and March 9; limit two rush tickets per student ID. This production contains mature subject matter.

Tickets can be purchased in person at the CCM Box Office, over the telephone at 513-556-4183 or online at ccm.uc.edu/boxoffice.

PARKING AND DIRECTIONS
Parking is available in the CCM Garage (located at the base of Corry Boulevard off Jefferson Avenue) and additional garages throughout the UC campus. Please visit uc.edu/parking for more information on parking rates.

For directions to CCM Village, visit ccm.uc.edu/about/directions.

ABOUT THE KURT WEILL FOUNDATION FOR MUSIC
The Kurt Weill Foundation for Music Inc. administers, promotes and perpetuates the legacies of Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya. It encourages broad dissemination and appreciation of Weill’s music through support of performances, productions, recordings and scholarship; it fosters understanding of Weill’s and Lenya’s lives and work within diverse cultural contexts; and, building upon the legacies of both, it nurtures talent, particularly in the creation, performance and study of musical theater in its various manifestations and media. Learn more about the Kurt Weill Foundation for Music by visiting www.kwf.org.

CCM’s production of The Threepenny Opera is a contin­uation of a year-long festival funded in part by the Kurt Weill Foundation for Music. Other upcoming festival events include “Into a Lamplit Room,” a cabaret night of the songs of Kurt Weill compiled and directed by CCM’s Patricia A. Corbett Distinguished Chair of Musical Theater Aubrey Berg and featuring students from the Musical Theatre program running at 7 p.m. on Sunday, March 3, and Sunday, March 10. The CCM Chamber Choir and Brass Choir will perform Weill’s Kiddush (Prayer for Sanctification) at 3 p.m. on Sunday, March 10, and the CCM Chorale will perform “Ho Billy, O!” from Weill and Alan Jay Lerner’s 1948 musical Love Life at 8 p.m. on Tuesday, March 12.

For a full schedule of festival events, visit www.uc.edu/news/NR.aspx?id=16709.

Funded in part by the Kurt Weill Foundation for Music, Inc., New York, NY

The Otto M. Budig Family Foundation: Season Presenting Sponsor and Musical Theatre Program Sponsor

ArtsWave: Community Partner

Macy’s: Mainstage Season Production Sponsor

The University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music (CCM) is recognized both nationally and internationally as one of the leading conservatories for the performing and electronic media arts, composition, scholarship and pedagogy.

CCM is the largest single source of performing arts events in Ohio with an annual calendar of nearly 1,000 performances and presentations, ranging from solo recitals to full-scale opera and musical theatre performances.

All event dates and programs are subject to change. For a complete calendar of events or to view CCM’s 2012-2013 season brochure visit our website at http://ccm.uc.edu.

UC’s College-Conservatory of Music – The Sound of Synergy

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