Curtis Opera Theatre Presents Mozart’s Così fan tutte March 3–6

PHILADELPHIA, PA—February 24, 2022—The Curtis Opera Theatre presents Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Così fan tutte March 3 through 5 at 7:30 p.m. and March 6 at 2:30 p.m. at the Philadelphia Film Center. Leading the new production are director Eve Summer, who directed Curtis’s last opera production of Albert Herring in March 2020, and conductor George Manahan.

With a libretto by Lorenzo Da Ponte, Così fan tutte is one of Mozart’s opera masterpieces. In this uproarious fiancée-swapping romantic comedy, brothers Guglielmo and Ferrando scheme to test the fidelity of their betrothed, the sisters Fiordiligi and Dorabella. With the help of their friend Don Alfonso and the mischievous maid Despina, the two brothers put their love to the test.

Conductor George Manahan, the director of orchestral activities at the Manhattan School of Music and a frequent collaborator with the Curtis Opera Theatre, returns to lead the cast and members of the Curtis Symphony Orchestra in this fully staged opera, sung in Italian with English supertitles. Stage director Eve Summer returns for her second Curtis Opera Theatre production. Scenic designs are by Cameron Anderson, costume designs are by Whitney Locher, lighting designs are by Steve Shack, hair and make-up designs are by Brittany Rapisse, and Craig Napoliello serves as the scenic design associate.

Single tickets start at just $19 and are available for purchase at Curtis.edu. Curtis also offers flexible create-your-own subscriptions by choosing any two performances in the Winter/Spring 2022 season, starting at just $38. Learn more and purchase at Curtis.edu/Subscribe or email tickets@curtis.edu for information. The Curtis Opera Theatre is generously supported by the Ernestine Bacon Cairns Trust, the Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, and the Wyncote Foundation.

The Curtis Opera Theatre returns to the Philadelphia Film Center on Thursday, May 5 and Saturday, May 7 at 7:30 p.m. for a production of The Dangerous Liaisons by Conrad Susa and Philip Littell. On April 29 at 8 p.m. the Curtis Symphony Orchestra takes to the stage of Verizon Hall for a performance conducted by Robert Spano of Bartók’s ferocious Second Piano Concerto, featuring soloist Yefim Bronfman, and Tchaikovsky’s brooding Fifth Symphony. To learn more about these performances, as well as the Student Recital Series, Ensemble 20/21 concerts, and more, visit Curtis.edu/Calendar.

The Curtis Opera Theatre has become known for imaginative productions, bold concepts, and absorbing theatre. Under the artistic direction of Eric Owens, promising young singers work alongside established professional directors and designers, resulting in fresh interpretations of standard repertoire and contemporary works. All of Curtis’s 25 students in vocal studies are cast regularly throughout each season, receiving a rare level of performance in fully staged productions, in recitals at Field Concert Hall, and as soloists with Curtis on Tour and the Curtis Symphony Orchestra. Curtis’s educational approach opens professional opportunities for Curtis graduates, who sing with top opera companies across the United States and Europe, including La Scala, Covent Garden, the Vienna Staatsoper, Houston Grand Opera, the San Francisco Opera, and the Metropolitan Opera.

The Curtis Institute of Music educates and trains exceptionally gifted young musicians to engage a local and global community through the highest level of artistry. For nearly a century Curtis has provided each member of its small student body with an unparalleled education alongside musical peers, distinguished by a “learn by doing” philosophy and personalized attention from a faculty that includes a high proportion of actively performing musicians. With admissions based solely on artistic promise, no student is turned away due to financial need. Curtis invests in each admitted student, ensuring no tuition is charged for their studies and they enter the profession free from educational debt. In a typical year, Curtis students hone their craft through more than 200 orchestra, opera, and solo and chamber music offerings in Philadelphia and around the world. Learn more at Curtis.edu.

 


 

CURTIS OPERA THEATRE: COSÌ FAN TUTTE

Music by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Libretto by Lorenzo Da Ponte

Thursday, March 3 at 7:30 P.M.
Friday, March 4 at 7:30 P.M.
Saturday, March 5 at 7:30 P.M.
Sunday, March 6 at 2:30 P.M.

 

Philadelphia Film Center
1412 Chestnut Street

George Manahan, conductor Steve Shack, lighting designer
Eve Summer, stage director Brittany Rapisse, hair and make-up designer
Cameron Anderson, scenic designer Craig Napoliello, scenic design associate
Whitney Locher, costume designer

 

CAST

March 3, 5 March 4, 6
Fiordiligi Sophia Hunt Emily Damasco
Dorabella Ruby Dibble Lucy Baker
Ferrando  Joseph Tancredi Ethan Burck
Guglielmo  Ben Schaefer Patrick Wilhelm
Despina Lindsey Reynolds Sarah Fleiss
Don Alfonso Thomas Petrushka Evan Gray

Fully staged production with members of the Curtis Symphony Orchestra, sung in Italian with English supertitles by Sonja Friedman.

2-concert create-your-own-subscriptions begin at $38 at Curtis.edu/Subscribe or email tickets@curtis.edu.

Single tickets start at $19 at Curtis.edu.

All guests five years of age and older will need to show proof of COVID-19 vaccination for entry into the Philadelphia Film Center. Adults 18 years and older will be required to show photo identification with their vaccination proof. Masks are required at all times except when eating or drinking in the theater.

The Curtis Opera Theatre is generously supported by the Ernestine Bacon Cairns Trust, the Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, and the Wyncote Foundation.

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Press Contact
Patricia K. Johnson
Vice President of Communications and Public Affairs
(215) 717-3190

Curtis Symphony Orchestra Presents Strings, Symphonies, and Strauss at Verizon Hall on February 20

PHILADELPHIA, PA—February 8, 2022—The Curtis Symphony Orchestra makes a dynamic return to the stage for the first time since February 2020 with Strings, Symphonies, and Strauss, led by Peter Oundjian, conductor emeritus of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, for in-person audiences on Sunday, February 20 at 8 p.m. at Verizon Hall at the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts. From Richard Strauss to Jessie Montgomery, this program reveals the remarkable musical variety of the modern era.

The program opens with Jessie Montgomery’s Starburst for Strings, which the Leonard Bernstein Award recipient describes as “a play on imagery of rapidly changing musical colors.” The concert continues with the enduring Lyric for Strings by Curtis alumnus George Walker (Piano and Composition ’45). Rita E. Hauser Conducting Fellow Robert Kahn leads the orchestra in Igor Stravinsky’s Symphonies of Wind Instruments, which draws upon Russian folk music. Alumnus and faculty member Alan Morrison (Organ ’91, Accompanying ’93) performs the solo in the exuberant Toccata Festiva by Samuel Barber (Composition ’34). Rounding out the program is Richard Strauss’s Also sprach Zarathustra, which audiences will recognize from the Stanley Kubrick film 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Single tickets start at just $19 and are available for purchase at KimmelCulturalCampus.org. Curtis also offers flexible create-your-own subscriptions by choosing any two performances in the Winter/Spring 2022 season, starting at just $38. Learn more and purchase at Curtis.edu/Subscribe or email tickets@curtis.edu for information. This concert is supported by the Jack Wolgin Curtis Orchestral Concerts Endowment Fund.

The Curtis Symphony Orchestra returns to Verizon Hall again on Friday, April 29 at 8 p.m. for a performance conducted by Robert Spano of Bartók’s ferocious Second Piano Concerto, featuring soloist Yefim Bronfman, and Tchaikovsky’s brooding Fifth Symphony. In March, Curtis Opera Theatre returns to live performance with Mozart’s delightful Così fan tutte, followed by The Dangerous Liaisons by Conrad Susa and Philip Littell in May. To learn more about these performances, as well as the Student Recital Series, Ensemble 20/21 concerts, and more, visit Curtis.edu/Calendar.

Recognized as a masterful and dynamic presence in the conducting world, Peter Oundjian has developed a multi-faceted portfolio as a conductor, violinist, professor, and artistic advisor. He has been celebrated for his musicality, an eye towards collaboration, innovative programming, leadership and training with students, and an engaging personality.

Now conductor emeritus, Mr. Oundjian’s fourteen-year tenure as music director of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra served as a major creative force for the city and was marked by a reimagining of the TSO’s programming, international stature, audience development, touring, and a number of outstanding recordings, garnering a GRAMMY nomination in 2018 and a JUNO award for Vaughan Williams: Orchestral Works in 2019. From 2012–2018, Mr. Oundjian served as music director of the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, leading international tours of North America, China, and a European festival tour with performances at festivals in Bregenz, Dresden, Innsbruck, Bergamo, and Ljubljana, among others. His final appearance with the orchestra as music director was at the 2018 BBC Proms where he conducted Britten’s War Requiem.

Highlights of past seasons include appearances with the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande; and the Detroit, Atlanta, Colorado, Dallas, Saint Louis, Baltimore, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, and New Zealand symphony orchestras. With the onset of world-wide concert cancellations, he prioritized support for his students at the Yale School of Music and the Juilliard School and the creation of a virtual summer festival in Boulder, where he is music director of the Colorado Music Festival.

Mr. Oundjian has been a visiting professor at the Yale School of Music since 1981, and in 2013 was awarded the school’s Sanford Medal for Distinguished Service to Music. An outstanding violinist, Mr. Oundjian spent fourteen years as the first violinist for the renowned Tokyo String Quartet before turning his energy towards conducting.

Alan Morrison is one of the most sought-after American concert organists, performing in Alice Tully, Jacoby, Verizon, Benaroya, and Spivey halls; Meyerson Symphony Center; Overture Center; Jack Singer Concert Hall; the Crystal Cathedral; National Cathedral in Washington, D.C.; and colleges, cathedrals, and churches throughout North America, Europe, Russia, and Brazil.

Mr. Morrison has been a featured artist for numerous national and regional conventions of the American Guild of Organists. He won first prize in both the Mader (California) and Poister (New York) National Organ Competitions, as well as the silver medal at the 1994 Calgary International Organ Festival. Mr. Morrison’s numerous recordings are regularly featured on radio stations worldwide, and his television appearances include two episodes of Mister Roger’s Neighborhood as both an organist and pianist.

A graduate of Curtis (organ and piano accompanying) and the Juilliard School (organ), Mr. Morrison is college organist at Ursinus College in Collegeville, Pa. and organist in residence at Spivey Hall in Morrow, Ga. In 2002 he joined the faculty of the Curtis Institute of Music where he holds the Haas Charitable Trust Chair in Organ Studies.

Acclaimed for its “otherworldly ensemble and professional level of sophistication” (New York Times), the Curtis Symphony Orchestra offers a dynamic showcase of tomorrow’s exceptional young talent. Each year the 100 extraordinary musicians of the orchestra work with internationally renowned conductors, including Osmo Vänskä, Vladimir Jurowski, Marin Alsop, Simon Rattle, Robert Spano, and Yannick Nézet Séguin, who also mentors the early-career conductors who hold Rita E. Hauser Conducting Fellowships. This professional training has enabled Curtis alumni to assume prominent positions in America’s leading orchestras, as well as esteemed orchestral, opera, and chamber ensembles around the world.

The Curtis Institute of Music educates and trains exceptionally gifted young musicians to engage a local and global community through the highest level of artistry. For nearly a century Curtis has provided each member of its small student body with an unparalleled education alongside musical peers, distinguished by a “learn by doing” philosophy and personalized attention from a faculty that includes a high proportion of actively performing musicians. With admissions based solely on artistic promise, no student is turned away due to financial need. Curtis invests in each admitted student, ensuring no tuition is charged for their studies and they enter the profession free from educational debt. In a typical year, Curtis students hone their craft through more than 200 orchestra, opera, and solo and chamber music offerings in Philadelphia and around the world. Learn more at Curtis.edu.

CURTIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
The Jack Wolgin Orchestral Concerts

Strings, Symphonies, and Strauss
Sunday, February 20 at 8 p.m.

Verizon Hall at the Kimmel Center
Broad and Spruce Streets, Philadelphia

Peter Oundjian, conductor
Robert Kahn, Rita E. Hauser Conducting Fellow
Alan Morrison, organ

JESSIE MONTGOMERY Starburst for Strings
GEORGE WALKER Lyric for Strings
IGOR STRAVINSKY Symphonies of Wind Instruments
SAMUEL BARBER Toccata Festiva, Op. 36
RICHARD STRAUSS Also sprach Zarathustra, Op. 30

2-concert create-your-own-subscriptions begin at $38 at Curtis.edu/Subscribe or email tickets@curtis.edu.

Single tickets start at $19 at KimmelCulturalCampus.org.

The guest conductor for this Curtis Symphony Orchestra performance is made possible by the Gustave and Rita Hauser Chair.

As part of the Kimmel Cultural Campus’s Safe and Clean Commitment, all guests 5 years of age or older are required to show proof of full COVID-19 vaccination for entry. Adults 18+ will also be required to show photo identification. Masks must be worn by guests at all times inside the venue, except while consuming food or beverage. Visit KimmelCulturalCampus.org/SafeAndClean for details.

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Press Contact
Patricia K. Johnson
Vice President of Communications and Public Affairs
(215) 717-3190

Michelle Cann Receives Andrew Wolf Chamber Music Award

PHILADELPHIA—February 7, 2022—The Curtis Institute of Music, together with Bay Chamber Concerts, is pleased to announce that pianist Michelle Cann has received the 2022 Andrew Wolf Chamber Music Award. Ms. Cann’s remarkable career has already been noted by the top honor from the Sphinx Organization, collaborations with artists including Leila Josefowicz, the Catalyst Quartet, and Karen Slack, and invitations from the Chamber Music Society of Detroit, Chamber Music Cincinnati, and San Francisco Performances. With the Catalyst Quartet, Ms. Cann recorded piano quintets of Florence Price, released in February 2022 by Azica Records. She is represented by Curtis’s professional artist management initiative.

The Andrew Wolf Chamber Music Award of $25,000 recognizes a pianist under the age of forty who has made a serious commitment and contribution to the landscape of chamber music. As the most recent recipient of the award, Ms. Cann joins a distinguished roster of a dozen prizewinners, which includes fellow Curtis alumni Jonathan Biss (’01), Anna Polonsky (’99), and Natalie Zhu (’97).

In selecting Ms. Cann as the 2022 winner, the award committee praised, “Michelle has a rare combination of gifts. This includes a wonderful technique and superb musicianship, of course. But it also includes that rare ability to show unique musical personality while at the same time supporting and encouraging the voices of others in a chamber music ensemble.”

“A compelling, sparkling virtuoso” (Boston Music Intelligencer), pianist Michelle Cann made her orchestral debut at age fourteen and has since performed as a soloist with numerous orchestras including The Philadelphia Orchestra, The Cleveland Orchestra, the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, and the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra.

A champion of the music of Florence Price, Ms. Cann performed the New York City premiere of the composer’s Piano Concerto in One Movement with The Dream Unfinished Orchestra in July 2016 and the Philadelphia premiere with The Philadelphia Orchestra in February 2021, which the Philadelphia Inquirer called “exquisite.”

Highlights of her 2021–22 season include debut performances with the Atlanta, Detroit, and St. Louis symphony orchestras, as well as her Canadian concert debut with the National Arts Centre Orchestra in Ottawa. In March she will receive the 2022 Sphinx Medal of Excellence, the highest honor bestowed by the Sphinx Organization. Embracing a dual role as both performer and pedagogue, her season includes teaching residencies at the Gilmore International Keyboard Festival and the National Conference of the Music Teachers National Association.

Ms. Cann regularly appears in solo and chamber recitals throughout the U.S., China, and South Korea. Notable venues include the National Centre for the Performing Arts (Beijing), the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts (Washington, D.C.), Walt Disney Concert Hall (Los Angeles), and the Barbican (London). She has also appeared as cohost and collaborative pianist with NPR’s From The Top.

An award winner at top international competitions, in 2019 she served as the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra’s MAC Music Innovator in recognition of her role as an African-American classical musician who embodies artistry, innovation, and a commitment to education and community engagement.

Ms. Cann studied at the Cleveland Institute of Music and the Curtis Institute of Music, where she holds the inaugural Eleanor Sokoloff Chair in Piano Studies.

Established in 1986, the Andrew Wolf Chamber Music Award honors the memory of Andrew Wolf, a 1966 graduate of the Curtis Institute, a cofounder of Bay Chamber Concerts, and a leading chamber music pianist, who died in 1985 at age 42. Mr. Wolf collaborated with many distinguished musicians during his short career and established a specialty in chamber music. As a teenager, he cofounded Bay Chamber Concerts in Rockport, Maine, with the idea of giving talented young musicians an opportunity to perform with some of the world’s great artists. Today, Bay Chamber Concerts continues its tradition of discovering, supporting, and encouraging extraordinary young musicians and sponsors this prize.

Nominations for the award are made by leaders in the world of chamber music and, like the overall selection process, are not made public to honor Mr. Wolf’s concern that performers should not be stigmatized by competing and not winning competitions. In the final round to determine the winner, judges attend live performances anonymously to hear finalists play.

More information about Ms. Cann is available at Curtis.edu/MichelleCann.

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PRESS CONTACTS:
Curtis Institute of Music
Patricia K. Johnson

Vice President of Communications and Public Affairs
(215) 717-3190

Andrew Lane
Vice President, Touring and Artist Management
(215) 717-3124

Bay Chamber Concerts
Manuel Bagorro
Artistic Director
(347) 326-3623