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CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA RICCARDO MUTI SYMPHONY CENTER PRESENTS june 2019

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Page 1: CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA RICCARDO MUTI …program concludes with Gershwin’s An American in Paris. Next, Muti closes the season with three highly anticipated performances of Verdi’s

CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA RICCARDO MUTISYMPHONY CENTER PRESENTS

june 2019

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june 2019 1

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 Muti and Verdi Riccardo Muti speaks with CSO program annotator

Phillip Huscher about Aida and his devotion to the music of Giuseppe Verdi.

7 A Fond Farewell Reflections on and by Erina Yashima as she concludes her

tenure as Sir Georg Solti Conducting Apprentice

8 Meet the Musicians Profiles of members of the CSO featured in upcoming

concerto performances

10 Celebrating Yo-Yo Ma’s Tenure as Judson and Joyce Green Creative Consultant

18 Our Donors and Volunteers Recognition of our generous donors and volunteers

23 Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association Board of Trustees

41 Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association Governing Members

43 Our Donors and Volunteers, continuedGLOBAL SPONSOR OF THE CSO

chicago symphony orchestraProgram Book ProductionFrances Atkins Content DirectorPhillip Huscher Program AnnotatorGerald Virgil Senior Content EditorKristin Tobin Designer

Bryan Dowling Exclusive [email protected]

PHOTOGRAPHY BY TODD ROSENBERG

© 2019 Chicago Symphony OrchestraAll rights reserved.

25 Program Information about the program and the performers for this concert

right Taken April 7, 2011, this photo depicts the orchestral, choral, and operatic forces required for performance of Verdi’s Otello. The cast included soprano Krassimira Stoyanova and bass-baritone Eric Owens, who return to Orchestra Hall to perform the roles of Aida and the King in performances of Verdi’s Aida, June 21, 23, and 25, 2019.

PHOTO BY TODD ROSENBERG

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a note from the chair and the president

PHOTOS BY TODD ROSENBERG

The 2018–19 season draws to a close with concerts that exemplify the artistry and vitality of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.

Zell Music Director Riccardo Muti concludes the season with two weeks of subscription concerts. The first pro-gram includes the CSO’s Jennifer Gunn performing two piccolo concertos, one by Vivaldi and the other by Ken Benshoof, and Charles Vernon premieres a newly commis-sioned bass trombone concerto by James Stephenson. The program concludes with Gershwin’s An American in Paris. Next, Muti closes the season with three highly anticipated performances of Verdi’s Aida with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Chorus and distinguished soloists, includ-ing Krassimira Stoyanova in the title role, Francesco Meli as Radamès, and Anita Rachvelishvili as Amneris.

The Joffrey Ballet joins the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in late May for performances of two choreo-graphed works set to the music of Stravinsky. Conducted by Matthias Pintscher, the program also includes works by Rossini and Ravel. In June, Australian conductor

Simone Young makes her CSO debut with works of Liszt and Wagner as well as Schoenberg’s lush orchestration of Brahms’s Piano Quartet no. 1. Finally, Emil de Cou leads the Orchestra and women of the Chicago Symphony Chorus in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban in concert.

In addition, the CSOA presents the thirtieth annual Corporate Night on June 3 with Grammy and Academy Award–winning artist Common and members of the CSO. On June 5, the Civic Orchestra of Chicago joins forces with singers from the Lyric Opera of Chicago’s Ryan Opera Center for scenes conducted by Michael Christie. CSO Judson and Joyce Green Creative Consultant Yo-Yo Ma performs J.S. Bach’s complete cello suites at Jay Pritzker Pavilion in Millennium Park on June 20, and participates in the city-wide “Day of Action,” which focuses on the theme of culture as a means for creating peace, on June 21, and the Negaunee Music Institute’s annual Concert for Peace on June 22.

The twenty-fifth anniversary season of the Symphony Center Presents Jazz series closes with a double-bill performance by Hammond B-3 organist Dr. Lonnie Smith and the Jon Faddis Quartet with special guests, while Rudolf Buchbinder concludes the SCP Piano series with sonatas by Haydn, Beethoven, and Schubert. In addition, there are opportunities to hear members of the CSO in chamber music performances at the Art Institute of Chicago on June 2 and June 16.

Thank you to all our subscribers, donors, volunteers, and sponsors for your gen-erous support throughout the 2018–19 season. We look forward to seeing you at Ravinia this summer and back at Symphony Center in September!

Helen Zell Chair, Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association Board of Trustees

Jeff Alexander President, Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association

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Riccardo Muti speaks with CSO program annotator Phillip Huscher about Aida and his devotion to the music of Giuseppe Verdi.

&muti

Verdi

top to bottomGiuseppe Verdi conducting the Paris Opera premiere of Aida at the Palais Garnier on March 22, 1880. Illustration by Adrien Marie (1848–1891)

Riccardo Muti conducting the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Chorus in Verdi’s Otello at Carnegie Hall, April 15, 2011

&

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june 2019 5

PHILLIP HUSCHERYour personal history with Aida goes back to your childhood, perhaps even before your first memories!

RICCARD O MUTII lived in Molfetta, twenty-five kilometers north of Bari. My father, who was a medical doctor, had a fantastic tenor voice, and he loved opera very much. In Bari there is a theater called Teatro Petruzzelli. My father wanted to hear Aida there, but they didn’t know where to leave their little boy—I was three years old—so they asked the driver to hold the little boy during the perfor-mance. The driver was sitting in the last row of the theater, and I was in his arms. Apparently, for the entire opera, I never cried or gave signs of being uncomfortable. So that was the first time I heard Aida, but I don’t remember what kind of perfor-mance it was!

PHYou conducted Aida for the first time at the Vienna Staatsoper in 1973—some thirty years later—and you made a historic recording in 1974. You returned to Aida in Salzburg in the summer of 2017, and now you lead it in Chicago. Over these many decades, has your understanding of Aida changed in any significant way?

RMWhen I conducted Aida in 1973, it was at the beginning of my career, and my Verdi was much more matter-of-fact. Then I did many other operas of Verdi—not only early Verdi—Nabucco, Atilla, Macbeth, I due Foscari, Simon Boccanegra—but late Verdi—Don Carlos, Otello, Falstaff. Returning to Aida after conducting so many Verdi operas, you approach it in a different way. You know more about the process throughout Verdi’s entire life as a composer, and you realize that what is in Aida—the structure, the harmonies, the dra-matic concept—is already there in the first operas. In the recent performances of Aida in Salzburg, I paid more attention to the fact that Aida is not just an opera of triumph. It is one of Verdi’s most refined scores. Most of the time it’s chamber music: many times there is just one person on stage—Aida alone, Radamès alone—or two, Aida and Amneris—or three. It is a very intimate opera.

& &

left to rightFrancesco Meli (Radamès), Riccardo Muti (conductor), Shirin Neshat (director), Anna Netrebko (Aida), and Luca Salsi (Amonasro) at the Salzburg Festival performance on August 6, 2017. © Salzburg Festival, Photo by Franz Neumayr

The front cover for the score to Aida, published by Ricordi in 1871

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The instrumentation is very sophisticated, very delicate, and most of the time the dialogue between the singers should be intimate—not like you are a big square telling everybody your personal problems. But it is generally played in a heavy way, because when people think of Aida, they think of the Arena di Verona, with elephants and lions in cages. And Amonasro, the father of Aida, comes out dressed like Tarzan, as a sort of slave, when in fact the Ethiopians were a culti-vated people. There are some clichés in this opera that are very difficult to eliminate.

PHIsn’t this a problem for stage directors today?

RMI did Aida in Salzburg with Shirin Neshat, a great and very famous lady. She was born in Iran—she has since left—and she did a lot to help the situation of women in Iran. So I thought of her for this opera, considering the situation of Aida before Amneris—Amneris the daughter of the pharaoh and Aida the slave—even if she’s the daughter of the king of Ethiopia, she’s treated like many women today are treated in that world. In this respect, the relationship between Aida and Amneris becomes an actual problem of today.

PHWhat will the Chicago Symphony Orchestra bring to Aida?

RMI consider the Chicago Symphony today one of the best, if not the best, Verdi orchestra. We have done a lot of Verdi together—Macbeth, Otello, Falstaff, the Requiem—so the orches-tra has approached this composer without bad traditions—the bad habits that affect even many of the important orchestras in important theaters.

Of course, this is a war that has been going on since I started to conduct, and it will continue until the end of my life.

PHOf all the opera composers you have performed in your career, which now spans more than fifty years, why is it that Verdi speaks to you the most profoundly?

RMBecause he speaks to us—about us. Like Mozart. I always stress the relationship between Verdi and Mozart. They speak about our defects, our love, our jealousy—all the human aspects. I have repeated many times the words spoken by Gabriele d’Annunzio, the great Italian poet, when Verdi died: “Diede una voce alle speranze e ai lutti. Pianse ed amò per tutti.”—“He gave a voice to all our hopes and sorrows. He cried and he loved for all of us.” This is Verdi.

top to bottomRiccardo Muti conducting the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Chorus in Falstaff with soprano Eleonora Buratto (Alice Ford) and baritone Ambrogio Maestri in the title role, April 21, 2016

Following reports of the shooting in Thousand Oaks, California, Riccardo Muti addressed the audience at the November 8, 2018, performance of Verdi’s Requiem, which, he said, was designed, “to ask for peace for the dead.” Muti dedicated the performance to victims of violence.

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a fond farewell toErina Yashima, Sir Georg Solti Conducting Apprentice 2016–2019

I n September 2015, a jury headed by Riccardo Muti unanimously chose Erina Yashima as the CSO’s third Sir Georg Solti Conducting

Apprentice. For her apprenticeship, which began officially in February 2016, Yashima spent at least ten weeks each season studying with and assisting Muti during his Chicago residencies in addition to guest conducting the Civic Orchestra of Chicago and various community engagement programs of the Negaunee Music Institute. She also worked with CSO musicians, guest artists, and conductors. Her ability to adapt and excel at myriad musical landscapes quickly made Yashima an invaluable asset to the CSO family throughout her tenure.

While initially a two-year position, in April 2018, Muti announced the extension of Yashima’s position for another season. In April 2019, the Philadelphia Orchestra announced her appoint-ment as its new assistant conductor. In addition to many engagements as conductor in Chicago and her native Germany, Yashima participated in the Italian Opera Academy with Muti in Ravenna, Italy, in 2015. She made her Italian opera debut in February 2017, conducting Rossini’s La Cenerentola with the Luigi Cherubini Youth Orchestra in Lucca and Ravenna and again in Piacenza in 2018. In February 2019, she led the orchestra in a production of Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro in Novara and Ravenna. She has also conducted at the Salzburg Festival and in Venezuela with El Sistema, among other notable venues and ensembles.

Riccardo Muti and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association are grateful for her service and wish Erina Yashima well in her ongoing artistic endeavors.

A note from Erina Yashima

W ords cannot express my gratitude for what the years in Chicago with the CSO family have meant to me. I can

say with certainty that meeting Maestro Muti and

winning the Solti Apprenticeship have made the biggest impact in my career, and I will always look on this as a crucial moment in my life. There is so much I have learned from Maestro Muti and the CSO, and also by taking part in the great community- outreach projects of the Negaunee Music Institute and by working with the Civic Orchestra—an orchestra that will always remain close to my heart. I will miss everyone tremendously, and am very glad that I will come back to Chicago to conduct the CSO Family and School Concerts in November next season!

“ Ms. Yashima has demonstrated great commitment to her role as our Solti Conducting Apprentice and an excellent level of artistry that she shares with our young musicians of the Civic Orchestra. I have respect and appreciation for her artistic qualities that she has demonstrated in Chicago and Europe. I wish her much success in her career.”

—RICCARDO MUTI

The Sir Georg Solti Conducting Apprentice program is named for the CSO’s music director (1969–91), and honors his commitment to working with young musicians. Established in 2009, the apprenticeship is a program of the CSO’s Negaunee Music Institute.

june 2019 7 PHOTOS BY TODD ROSENBERG

top to bottomYashima makes her Orchestra Hall debut, in April 2017, leading the Civic Orchestra in Mozart’s Symphony no. 34 and Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring. Yashima leads a mega ensemble during the 2018 Chicago Youth in Music Festival. The side-by-side rehearsal featured Civic musicians alongside community music students.

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meet the musicians

PHOTO BY TODD ROSENBERG

Jennifer Gunn Piccolo and Flute

June 13–15, Jennifer Gunn performs Ken Benshoof ’s Concerto in Three Movements for Piccolo with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Riccardo Muti.

You perform eighteenth- and twenty-first-century concertos on this program. How do you make the switch stylistically or technically?The two styles are so different that it is easy to switch gears between them—almost natural in a way. Vivaldi concertos for most, if not all, instruments can be quite athletic in nature. What I mean by this is that there are a lot of notes! The Benshoof is a modern concerto, only written a few years ago, and although it also has its fair share of notes, it is very lyrical in nature. Both pieces are a joy to play and

showcase different personalities of the piccolo.

When did you first hear the music of composer Ken Benshoof?I was introduced to Ken Benshoof ’s music through his piccolo sonata called Spindrift, and I fell in love with the piece. Fast forward many years: I was asked by the National Flute Association to premiere his concerto.

Describe the experience of working with the composer and bringing the piece to life.

It was just wonderful work-ing through all the corners of the piece and smoothing things out—I just felt like he wrote it for me. It was some-thing I could sing through. It’s very audience-friendly, it’s fun for me to play, and I’m really excited to bring his music to the Chicago Symphony. To play it with Maestro Muti is a dream come true.

What should the audience particularly listen for in either of these concertos?I think when most people hear the word “piccolo,” they immediately start thinking of fireworks, the Fourth of July, and the Stars and Stripes Forever March by Sousa. Well, I hope after hearing these two concer-tos, they will come away think-ing that this little instrument has a much bigger personality than that! The two concertos that I will play are quite different: they were written hundreds of years apart. While both are delicately orchestrated, the Vivaldi is a real solo effort for the piccolo player, and the Benshoof will be a team effort with the piccolo player out in front leading the way. I think both concertos will demonstrate the beautiful sound and techni-cal ability of the instrument!

home townSelinsgrove, Pennsylvania

year joined the cso2005

educationDuquesne University

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meet the musicians

PHOTO BY TODD ROSENBERG

Charles Vernon Trombone

June 13–15, Charles Vernon performs James Stephenson’s Bass Trombone Concerto [World Premiere, CSO Commission] with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Riccardo Muti.

How were you introduced to the music of James Stephenson?Jim, a trumpet player himself, is a prolific composer of pieces for brass. I’ve played his piece for bass trombone and trombone choir, The Road Not Taken, on recitals many times. He has a good knowledge of the instru-ment. I’ve played and heard his music for orchestra and band, and it’s really exciting to listen to and to play. His orchestrations are fantastic, and in this new concerto, it makes it go over the top!

Describe the experience of working with the composer and bringing this piece to life.Jim lives in Lake Forest, Illinois, so we had regular contact. He was very responsive to my feedback. I shared my idea of

what the bass trombone should be like, sound-wise—range, tessitura, how long you play in a certain register, where rests were needed, etc. I also told him that I want something that sounds great, that’s beautiful to listen to; it’s all about the quality of sound, legato, legatissimo, sing-ing and playing smoothly. I just wanted this to be the greatest piece that has ever been written for the trombone, or especially the bass trombone—one that will stand the test of time over the years and be a piece that every bass-trombone player should play. So, you can see, I had some big demands, but I think he’s done it, and I’m really happy about it.

What should the audience listen for in this concerto?There are some unbelievably exciting moments and beauti-ful, soft, sensual music in the concerto. The orchestration that he has provided for the orches-tra, the Chicago Symphony, will just blow this apart. And with Riccardo Muti, it just doesn’t get any better than that. It’s the luckiest thing that’s ever really happened to me—actually being able to put out there the best that I can play, with the greatest orchestra in the world, with the greatest conductor ever. This is an outstanding opportunity, and I’m just . . . I’m excited! It’s going to be a tremendous thing.

home townAsheville, North Carolina

year joined the cso 1986

educationBrevard CollegeGeorgia State University

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the negaunee music institute at the cso

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Celebrating Yo-Yo Ma’s Tenure as Judson and Joyce Green Creative Consultant

Y o-Yo Ma doesn’t shake hands, he hugs. He remembers names, makes eye contact, and asks, “How have you been?” When

he arrives at an elementary school, Ma walks up to students, introduces himself, and piques their interests with his focused attention. He is a force of positive energy and optimism in an often cynical world. And although his tenure as the CSO’s Judson and Joyce Green Creative Consultant concludes this season—a post held by the world-renowned cellist since its creation in 2010—his impact will long be felt.

“We should not just hope for immediate success,” said Ma, at a recent Negaunee Music

Institute event, “but envision what success should look like twenty years later.” Ma’s ideas on impactful change have been at the foundation of the Negaunee Music Institute’s mission since his arrival. Said Ma, “the Institute should be about building things—things that embolden change.” Over these past nine seasons, Ma inspired and oversaw a purpose-driven approach to Institute programing.

Much of Ma’s work as creative consultant has focused on mentoring the musicians of the Civic Orchestra of Chicago. He encourages them to make their musical journey bigger than them-selves—to get outside of the ever-solitary practice

ALL PHOTOS BY TODD ROSENBERG

clockwise from aboveIn preparation for a conductorless perfor-mance of Beethoven’s Sixth Symphony with the Civic Orchestra, Ma takes a deep dive into the score, leads a rehearsal in Buntrock Hall and Orchestra Hall, and the final performance in May 13, 2013.

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the negaunee music institute at the cso

room and hone their craft, organically, in their communities. “If you want to expand your musicianship, explore your humanity,” says Ma.

It is this philosophy—that growth is stifled in a confined place and needs to occur outside, in areas that offer new energies and perspectives—that served as the catalyst for many of Ma’s “artistic challenges” presented to the Negaunee Music Institute:

Bach MarathonSince 2014, the Civic Orchestra has presented a city-wide, day-long marathon of performances of J.S. Bach’s six Brandenburg Concertos, which provides the orchestra with an opportunity to share the joy of music with diverse audiences during the holidays.

Concerts for Peace In March 2017, Ma led the creation of the Initiative for a More Peaceful Chicago, which empowers peo- ple through numerous projects that engage families that have lost loved ones to gun violence, those

top to bottomMa discusses the importance of arts education with then Chicago Mayor Rahm Emmanuel and Lyric Opera of Chicago Creative Consultant Renée Fleming, December 11, 2013.

Yo-Yo Ma, soloist Takesha Meshé Kizart, and musicians from the Civic Orchestra perform during an inspiring afternoon of music at the CSOA’s second Concert for Peace. The concert featured songs composed by family members in the Purpose Over Pain program, which strives to promote healing for families that have been victims of violence, June 10, 2018.

Ma gives a pop-up performance in the Auburn Gresham neighborhood in the Peace Bus, an anti-gun-violence-awareness vehicle operated by Strides for Peace, June 11, 2017.

Ma gives an impromptu performance outside the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, May 14, 2013.

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incarcerated at Illinois Youth Center Centers, and young parents supported by social service organizations.

Once Upon a Symphony Designed for the youngest concertgoers, the CSO’s Once Upon a Symphony weaves together live music performed by members of the Orchestra, vivid storytelling, sets, and costumes to create a unique and magical experience. These concerts enhance a child’s development as a life-long learner, cultivating skills such as problem solving, focus, perspective, and engaged learning.

Civic Fellowship This program immerses

emerging professional musi-cians in rigorous training that enhances their membership in the Civic Orchestra. The fellowship empowers par-ticipants to realize their full potential as artistically excel-lent, civically engaged, and entrepreneurial musicians.

Fellows serve as facilitators for special projects led by Ma, perform at Symphony Center as well as in schools and communities across the city, mentor young musicians, design and implement community engagement projects, and more.

T he end of Ma’s tenure as the Judson and Joyce Green Creative Consultant is really just a beginning to the next chapter of

his long and storied work with the Chicago

top to bottomMa shares a stand with a Civic musician during the culminating concert of Civic Orchestra’s annual Bach Marathon, held at Fourth Presbyterian Church, December 3, 2015.

Ma studies a student’s project at the culminating CSO-Connect showcase at Disney Magnet School and later performs for the students, May 9, 2017.

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Symphony Orchestra—as a world-class soloist and mentor. During a recent Negaunee Music Institute event, he performed the first movement from Bach’s Cello Suite no. 1. He immediately repeated the passage, but asked the audience to sing and sustain the implied pedal note. It was Ma’s hope that this would illustrate humanity’s function—“be the bass note, the support that is felt but not always heard.”

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association is grateful to Judson and Joyce Green for the exceptional leadership and generous support they have provided since 2010 for the creative-consultant position held by Yo-Yo Ma.

clockwise from top leftMa collaborates with a student during an impromptu performance at RefugeeOne in the Uptown neighborhood, November 30, 2017.

Ma shares a stand with a Civic musician during the second annual Concert for Peace, held at St. Sabina Church, June 10, 2018.

Ma dresses for the titular role in the CSO’s premiere performance of Once Upon a Symphony: The Ugly Duckling, May 14, 2011.Yo-Yo Ma performs Bach’s complete suites for

unaccompanied cello at the Jay Pritzker Pavilion in Millennium Park on June 20. He also participates in the Concert for Peace on June 22. For more information, please visit cso.org .

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SYMPHONY CENTER PRESENTS

CSO: June 1Stravinsky & The Joffrey BalletMatthias Pintscher conductorThe Joffrey Ballet Ashley Wheater The Mary B. Galvin artistic directorWorks by Ravel & Stravinsky

CSO Chamber Music: June 2the art institute of chicago Modern BeautyGuadagnini Ensemble David Taylor violinSimon Michal violinNi Mei violinWeijing Wang violaRichard Hirschl celloBrian Lee pianoWorks by Mozart & Chausson

CSO: June 3Common with Members of the Chicago Symphony OrchestraSteven Reineke conductor

Civic Orchestra: June 5Season Finale: Civic and the Ryan Opera CenterMichael Christie conductorMembers of the Patrick G. and Shirley W. Ryan Opera Center at Lyric Opera of Chicago

CSO: June 6–11Simone Young Conducts Wagner & Brahms

Jazz: June 7Dr. Lonnie Smith Trio—Jon Faddis Quartet with special guests

CSO Chamber Music: June 9 beverly arts centerChicago Pro Musica Jennifer Gunn fluteMichael Henoch oboeJohn Bruce Yeh clarinetWilliam Buchman bassoonOto Carrillo hornWorks by Nielsen, Hindemith & Schoenberg

Piano: June 9 Rudolf BuchbinderWorks by Haydn, Beethoven & Schubert

CSO: June 13–15Muti Conducts Beethoven & GershwinRiccardo Muti conductorJennifer Gunn piccoloCharles Vernon bass tromboneAlso featuring concertos by Vivaldi, Benshoof & Stephenson

CSO Chamber Music: June 16the art institute of chicago Celebrating Latin American ArtWinter QuartetGina DiBello violinDanny Lai violaKatinka Kleijn celloWorks by Piazzolla, Ginastera & more

Special: June 20jay pritzker pavilion, millennium parkYo-Yo Ma: The Complete Bach Cello Suites

CSO: June 21–25Muti Conducts Verdi AidaRiccardo Muti conductorKrassimira Stoyanova AidaAnita Rachvelishvili AmnerisFrancesco Meli RadamèsKiril Manolov AmonasroIldar Abdrazakov RamfisEric Owens The KingChicago Symphony Chorus Duain Wolfe chorus director

Special: June 22to be determinedConcert for PeaceYo-Yo Ma celloMembers of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Musicians from the Civic Orchestra of Chicago St. Sabina Band

Film: June 27–29 Harry Potter and the Prisoner of AzkabanTM in ConcertChicago Symphony OrchestraEmil de Cou conductorWomen of the Chicago Symphony Chorus Duain Wolfe chorus director

PB_June_wrap_v2.indd 1 5/20/19 4:41 PM

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june 2019 17

symphony center information

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

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 csosoundsandstories.org.

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!

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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 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 african american network is to engage Chicago’s culturally rich African American community through the shar-ing and exchanging of unforgettable musical experiences. The AAN seeks to serve and encourage individuals and families, educators and stu-dents, 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 AreasNancy Friedman Vice President

of EducationMarcia Lewis Vice President

of EventsClaretta Meier Vice President

of FinanceCheryl Istvan 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

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Contact Karen Bullen at 312-294-3192 or visit cso.org/PlannedGiving for more information.

Join the Theodore Thomas Society

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.

Music was a constant part of the social connection among my friends when I was a teenager. To listen to music back then required a radio and/or record player(!), so we all shared. Through friends, I was introduced to classical music.

When I moved to Chicago, friends had season tickets to the CSO and I joined them sitting in the Terrace. From there we watched the conductors as they used small facial changes to intimately direct the musicians. It was like sitting in the middle of the musicians—such a thrill!

I am so proud to live in Chicago and to enjoy wonderful CSO concerts. The CSO brings me such joy and it was important for me through my estate plans to support this jewel and help ensure future generations of musicians will be able to give the gift of wonderful music to listeners.

— Ms. Dar Johnson

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20 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

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june 2019 21

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

ITW ITW 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.

charles w. douglas, partnerSidley Austin LLP

From one Chicago tradition to another, Sidley Austin LLP congratulates the Chicago Symphony Orchestra on a successful 2018–19 season. We are proud to support an organization that has

contributed so much to the rich heritage of our city. May the music continue to transform and inspire us all.

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.

chris crane, president and ceoExelon

At Exelon, we believe that creativity inspires us all. We are proud to serve as sponsor of the SCP Jazz series. Exelon has a strong tradition of committing our energy and resources to the communities we serve.

Through our corporate citizenship program, Exelon creates collaborations with community- based nonprofits to deliver cutting-edge ideas that achieve meaningful and measurable change  for the better.

global sponsor of the cso

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Founded in 2016, the CSO African American Network aims to engage Chicago’s culturally rich African American community through the sharing and exchanging of unforgettable musical experiences while building relationships for generations to come.

Media sponsor:

Join the AAN today! Visit cso.org/AAN to learn more and sign up.

cso.org/aan • [email protected] • 312-294-3045

Chicago Symphony Orchestra

African American Network

AAN membership is FREE and includes access to: • Special ticket offers reserved only for AAN members

• Preconcert educational seminars and recitals

• The CSO’s annual Black History Month celebration

• Open CSO rehearsals

• Fellowship with like-minded music lovers!

SHEILA JONES director of community stewardship african american network

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chicago symphony orchestra association board of trustees

* Ex officio Trustee † Deceased

june 2019 23

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

honorary trusteesThe Honorable

Richard M. DaleyLady Valerie Solti

trusteesJohn AalbregtsePeter J. BarackH. Rigel BarberRandy Lamm BerlinLaurence O. BoothLori BradleyKay BucksbaumRobert J. BufordLeslie Henner BurnsDebra A. CafaroMarion A. CameronDavid CasperBruce E. ClintonGeorge P. ColisKeith S. CrowDr. Christopher L. CulpStephen V. D’AmoreTimothy A. DuffyMimi Duginger*

Brian W. DuweJ. Bradley FewellRichard C. GodfreyGraham C. GradyLori JulianJared Kaplan*Geraldine KeefeDonna 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. BuntrockRichard 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. JudyRichard B. Kapnick

Donald 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

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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.

Global Sponsor of the CSO

NEW ON CSO RESOUND!

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june 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, June 13, 2019, at 8:00Friday, June 14, 2019, at 1:30Saturday, June 15, 2019, at 8:00

Riccardo Muti ConductorJennifer Gunn PiccoloCharles Vernon Bass Trombone

vivaldi Piccolo Concerto in C Major, RV 444Allegro non moltoLargoAllegro moltojennifer gunn

benshoof Concerto in Three Movements for Piccolo and OrchestraImprovisational, freely flowingCalmOn the moveFirst Chicago Symphony Orchestra performances

jennifer gunn

beethoven Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 36Adagio molto—Allegro con brioLarghettoScherzo: AllegroAllegro molto

intermission

stephenson Bass Trombone ConcertoChapter IChapter II—EpilogueWorld premiereCommissioned for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra by the Edward F. Schmidt Family Commissioning Fund

charles vernon

gershwin An American in Paris

These performances are made possible by the Juli Plant Grainger Fund for Artistic Excellence.The performance of Ken Benshoof’s Concerto in Three Movements is sponsored in part by a generous grant from The Elizabeth Morse Charitable Trust.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.

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26 one hundred twenty-eighth season

comments by phillip huscher

antonio vivaldiBorn March 4, 1678; Venice, ItalyDied July 28, 1741; Vienna, Austria

Piccolo Concerto in C Major, RV 444

composeddate unknown

first performancedate unknown

instrumentationsolo piccolo, string orchestra, harpsichord

approximate performance time10 minutes

first cso performancesMay 6, 7, and 8, 1982, Orchestra Hall. Walfrid Kujala as soloist, Sir Georg Solti conducting

The most original, popular, and influential Italian composer of his time, Antonio Vivaldi was very quickly forgotten. Within a hundred years of his death, he had achieved the ultimate fate of most composers—complete oblivion. After he was finally rediscovered in the early twentieth century, and eventually became one of the most performed of all composers again, he often

was written off as excessively prolific and facile. Stravinsky famously dismissed his entire career as “the same concerto four hundred times,” an assessment that was not just unkind, but also unfair. We now know that he wrote more than five—not four—hundred concertos, in addition to operas (he once claimed ninety-four, no doubt with characteristic exaggeration; some twenty survive), cantatas, and trio sonatas.

Vivaldi began his career as a violin virtuoso (he studied with his father, who played at the great Saint Mark’s Basilica in Venice), but he also prepared for the priesthood and took holy orders at the age of twenty-five. (He soon became known as the “Red Priest,” after the color of his hair.) That same year, he accepted a job as music director, violin teacher, and composer at La Pietà, a Venetian orphanage for girls—a post he would keep for more than thirty-five years, nearly the remainder of his life. At the height of his career, Vivaldi was as highly regarded as any living composer, including J.S. Bach, who admired Vivaldi’s music, copied out several of his scores for performance, and arranged others for different instruments. (Perhaps the most ingenious of Bach’s transcriptions is his reworking of a solo concerto in B minor into a concerto for four harpsichords in A minor.)

Vivaldi’s apparent specialty was the concerto, for one or more solo instruments, which he composed in abundance and with unusual ease, even by his own standards. (Vivaldi claimed he could compose a concerto faster than a scribe could copy it.) It was the publication in Amsterdam in 1711 of a collection of twelve concertos called L’estro armonico (The harmonic inspi-ration) that first spread Vivaldi’s name throughout Europe; it became the best-selling music title of the early eighteenth century. (Bach copied and arranged six of these concertos for

leftAntonio Vivaldi, an engraving of a portrait by François Morellon de La Cave (1696–1768), 1725

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comments

organ or harpsichord.) Vivaldi is said to have established the conventional three-movement baroque concerto form; he didn’t invent it, but by constant use from one work to the next, and with endless variety in its handling, he certainly set in place the pattern others would follow for decades to come. He is also the first com-poser to make regular use of ritornello form—a repeating “refrain,” in different but related keys, for all the instruments, alternating with freer, modulating passages that are dominated by the soloist.

M ore than two-thirds of Vivaldi’s five hundred–plus concertos are for solo instrument—violin (most plentifully, at

more than 230 concertos!), bassoon, cello, oboe, and even mandolin (but no keyboards). A rela-tively meager three concertos are written for “flau-tino,” a “little flute” or high-pitched recorder that is the equivalent of today’s piccolo. (A fourth con-certo may have begun as a concerto for flautino, but was finished as one for violin.) In all of these, the solo role is more virtuosic and demanding than Vivaldi’s normal woodwind writing—the piccolo’s opening music in this C major concerto is largely a volley of rapid-fire sixteenth and thirty-second notes. Vivaldi must have had a superlative player in mind. The pattern here is classic Vivaldi: the two outer movements are dazzling display pieces; the central Largo offers an eloquent and expressive (though still highly florid) change of pace.

ken benshoofBorn 1933, near Newman Grove, Nebraska

Concerto in Three Movements for Piccolo and Orchestra

composed2016

first performanceAugust 13, 2016; San Diego, California

instrumentationsolo piccolo, oboe and english horn, bassoon and contrabassoon, four horns, strings

approximate performance time17 minutes

These are the first Chicago Symphony Orchestra performances.

Ken Benshoof ’s family used to joke that he was world famous—among piccolo players. It was precisely because of his unusual identification with the instrument—his unplanned concentration on works for solo piccolo and his rare understanding of the tiny instrument’s outsize capabilities—that the National Flute Association commis-sioned him to write this Concerto in Three

Movements for its annual convention in San Diego in 2016. Jennifer Gunn was the soloist at the work’s premiere in San Diego that summer—eleven years after she joined the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

Benshoof was drawn to music when, as a five-year-old, he started taking piano lessons from the widow of the town doc-tor where he grew up. “It wasn’t very long before I felt that the pieces she was asking me to play were not very good, and that I probably could write better pieces,” Benshoof once joked. Years later, after serious study—at Spokane Conservatory, the University of Washington, San Francisco State University, and the Guildhall School of Music in London (as a Fulbright scholar)—he began to compile a catalog of his own pieces,

leftKen Benshoof

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28 one hundred twenty-eighth season

comments

most of them chamber works, including a series of eight scores commissioned from the Kronos Quartet.

Before composing this concerto, Benshoof had written two works for piccolo with piano, and one for the combination of piccolo, violin, viola, and cello. In the new score for a larger group of instruments, Benshoof was careful to give the solo piccolo plenty of room to shine, clearing his orchestration of instruments that soar in a similar register, such as the piccolo trumpet or other flutes. (“Piccolo gets the first word, pic-colo gets the last word,” he has said.) In order to cushion the piccolo in a compatible, compli-mentary surrounding, Benshoof included four double-reed instruments—oboe, english horn, bassoon, and contrabassoon—as well as a quartet of french horns. For the solo piccolo, he decided to write against expectations, giving it an abun-dance of low music—“throaty” in Benshoof ’s words—in addition to the high notes for which it is celebrated.

Ken Benshoof on his Concerto in Three Movements

T his is my fourth adventure composing for piccolo. It still surprises me how rich and “throaty” low-register piccolo can

sound and how wonderfully clear and free it can feel as it sails upwards.

I tried to view the piccolo as one character throughout this work: alone at the beginning, gradually forming close relationships with mem-bers of the orchestra, leading to energetic playful-ness with good friends.

There is very little angst in this work. There are no mountains to climb, no battles to be won. But there is emotional richness in the conversational interplay between musicians. And there is a brush with grief in the middle movement.

Perhaps the simplest overview of the three movements could be a morning walkabout, an indoor afternoon (with a little romance), and a party for the evening.

ludwig van beethovenBorn December 16, 1770; Bonn, GermanyDied March 26, 1827; Vienna, Austria

Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 36

aboveLudwig van Beethoven, a portrait on ivory by Christian Horneman (1765–1844), 1803

A young man doesn’t expect to go deaf. And so Beethoven was both surprised and frightened when he admitted to himself a musician’s worst nightmare—that he was having trouble hearing. We can’t be certain when he

first acknowledged his cruel fate, but he appar-ently kept it a secret for a number of years. In June 1801, he finally confessed to his dear friend

Franz Wegeler, who also happened to be a doctor: “For almost two years I have ceased to attend any social functions, just because I find it impossible to say to people: I am deaf.”

By then, Beethoven was worried. He had already sought treatment from a number of doctors who prescribed hot and cold baths, olive oil, pills, and infusions, to no avail—his ears continued to hum and buzz. Young Carl Czerny, on his first visit to Beethoven, probably in 1800, noticed “with the visual quickness peculiar to children,” as he later recalled, “that he had cotton,

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june 2019 29

comments

composed1802

first performanceApril 5, 1803; Vienna, Austria. The composer conducting

instrumentationtwo flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, timpani, strings

approximate performance time34 minutes

first cso performancesDecember 1 and 2, 1893, Auditorium Theatre. Theodore Thomas conducting

July 25, 1940, Ravinia Festival. John Barbirolli conducting

most recent cso performancesJuly 17, 1977, Ravinia Festival. James Levine conducting

June 2, 3, 4, and 7, 2016, Orchestra Hall. Edo de Waart conducting

cso recordings1954. Fritz Reiner conducting. VAI (video)

1962. Leopold Stokowski con-ducting. CSO (Chicago Symphony Orchestra in the Twentieth Century: Collector’s Choice)

1974. Sir Georg Solti conducting. London

1977. James Levine conducting. CSO (From the Archives, vol. 18: A Tribute to James Levine)

1990. Sir Georg Solti conducting. London

which seemed to have been steeped in a yellowish liquid, in his ears.” Czerny didn’t think of this again until he, like much of the music world, heard rumors that Beethoven was hard of hearing.

Beethoven found no relief until he turned to Dr. Johann Adam Schmidt, a professor of general pathology and therapy, who seemed full of sympathy and optimism. Apparently, it was Dr. Schmidt, who, among his other prescriptions, recommended that Beethoven abandon Vienna for rural Heiligenstadt. In late April 1802, Beethoven left for the pastoral suburb that to this day is known for the document he wrote there some six months later. The Heiligenstadt Testament, as it has come to be called, was begun on October 6 and finished four days later. It’s addressed to the composer’s brothers, Carl and Johann. Although Beethoven’s hearing would deteriorate con-siderably in later years, 1802 marked the moment of crisis: the Heiligenstadt Testament includes Beethoven’s admission that his malady was permanent and incurable. He didn’t fail to see the horrible irony of “an infirmity in the one sense which ought to be more perfect in me than in others.”

This, surprisingly, is the background for Beethoven’s Second Symphony—one of his most energetic, cheerful, and outgo-ing works. Beethoven surely had begun the D major symphony before he packed for Heiligenstadt that spring. He finished it there sometime that autumn, in a setting very like the one he would later depict in the Pastoral Symphony. When his student Ferdinand Ries came to visit Beethoven, he

. . . called his attention to a shepherd who was piping very agreeably in the woods on a flute made of a twig of elder. For half an hour Beethoven could hear nothing, and though I assured him that it was the same with me (which was not the case), he became extremely quiet and morose.

The D major symphony, like other music written at the time, shows no signs of Beethoven’s obvious despair. It’s possible that Beethoven put the finishing touches on the confident, rollicking finale of his Second Symphony only days before he confessed thoughts of suicide in the letter to his brothers.

After Beethoven returned to Vienna, his hearing and his spirits both unimproved, he began to make plans for a major concert of his music, to be held on April 5, 1803, which would include

leftJohann Adam Schmidt (1759–1809), Beethoven’s physician. Stipple engraving by Carl Heinrich Rahl (1779–1843) after Josef Anton Kapeller (1761–1806), 1801. Vienna, Austria

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not only his new symphony, but also the premieres of his Third Piano Concerto and the oratorio Christ on the Mount of Olives. That con-cert, conducted by the com-poser, achieved the combi-nation (not unknown in our own time) of mixed reviews and a box-office bonanza.

Although Beethoven and his audience considered Christ on the Mount of Olives the main attraction, the Second Symphony would ultimately triumph. One reporter decided on the spot that “the first symphony is better than the later one,” although he did acknowl-edge that Beethoven seemed to be “striving for the new and surprising.” Around this time, Beethoven said to a friend, “I am only a little sat-isfied with my previous works. From today I will take a new path.” That path was forged primarily by the daring venture of the Eroica Symphony, but the Second Symphony is already a sign of fresh things to come, and it’s a great advance over the First. The influential Beethoven biographer Maynard Solomon calls it “both retrospective and prospective.”

I t’s still Haydn’s orchestra—pairs of winds, with horns, trumpets, timpani, and strings—and the layout of his last twelve symphonies—four

movements, with a slow introduction and a rondo finale—that serve as Beethoven’s starting point. This is music that Haydn would have understood

but couldn’t have written. Beethoven’s slow introduc-tion is a full thirty-three measures of powerful, expansive music, rich in the kind of dramatic gesture he would later exploit so famously. The ensuing Allegro con brio crackles with a nervous energy and maintains an all-business edge unprecedented in symphonic music.

The Larghetto, on the other hand, moves at a gracious and easy pace that’s rare for this com-poser. Leisure wasn’t to Beethoven’s taste; several years later, when he devised

the misguided notion of arranging this symphony for piano trio, he added “quasi andante” to the larghetto marking to keep things moving.

Instead of the minuet-and-trio combination third movement of the Haydn model (it served Beethoven well in his own First Symphony), Beethoven now writes scherzo, forever chang-ing the complexion of the standard symphonic design. Beethoven’s scherzo, more compact than many of Haydn’s minuets, is wildly playful, with just enough weight to suggest the drama that’s always present in Beethoven, even when he’s play-ing games. The explosive finale is what we now call pure Beethoven, although audiences in 1803 didn’t yet know what that meant, and no doubt found it shocking and unpredictable, with its coltish movement and energy, and its uninhibited, nose-thumbing sense of humor.

aboveMarble statue of Beethoven sculpted by Fritz Hänlein after a 1902 model by Robert Weigl (1851–1902). Heiligenstadt Park, Vienna. Dedicated in 1910

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james stephensonBorn February 4, 1969; Joliet, Illinois

Bass Trombone Concerto

composed2018–19

instrumentationsolo bass trombone, two flutes, alto flute and piccolo, two oboes and english horn, two clarinets, E-flat clarinet and bass clarinet, two bassoons and contrabassoon, four horns, three trumpets, two tenor trombones and tuba, timpani, percussion (vibraphone, triangle, glockenspiel, cymbals, suspended cymbals, marimba, cabasa, small polished stone, chimes, snare drum, tam-tam, shakers, xylophone, claves, wood blocks, crotales, bucket of water, triangle, bass drum, tambou-rine, thai gong), harp, strings

approximate performance time23 minutes

These are the world pre-miere performances.

Commissioned for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra by the Edward F. Schmidt Family Commissioning Fund

The Chicago Symphony was the first orchestra James Stephenson ever heard. Raised in Lockport, southwest of the city, his parents brought him to Orchestra Hall when he was eight or nine years old. He still remembers how comfortable the seats were, and he recalls being knocked out by the sound of the orchestra. Above all, he noticed how prominent the

trumpet part was. That became the instrument he fell in love with. After he started studying trumpet around the age of twelve, he picked up every Chicago Symphony Orchestra recording he could find. He wanted to hear how Adolph “Bud” Herseth, Chicago’s legendary principal trumpet, played Pictures from an Exhibition under Fritz Reiner, or under Rafael Kubelík, or Sir Georg Solti. He compared the Orchestra’s Bruckner recordings under Solti (“more direct brass sound”) and Barenboim (“more organ-like”). He savored the classic Reiner records from the 1950s—Bartók’s Concerto for Orchestra, The Fairy’s Kiss by Stravinsky. He sought out obscure works, such as Hovhaness’s Mysterious Mountain, as well as the popular blockbusters—Mahler’s symphonies, Strauss’s tone poems. “All these pieces are brass heavy,” he said recently, “because I was going to be a trumpet player forever, or so I thought. So I needed to learn how to play by listening to the best.”

Over the next years, he continued to listen to the Chicago Symphony—on the radio while he was in high school at Interlochen (he spent one summer at Tanglewood), and back in Orchestra Hall when he came home on break from the New England Conservatory of Music, where he earned a degree in trumpet performance. By then, Stephenson was fascinated with the whole orchestra: he had moved beyond zeroing in on the sound of the Orchestra’s brass, to listen to Frank Miller, the principal cello, or Ray Still, principal oboe. Stephenson did become a professional trumpet player: he spent seventeen seasons with the Naples (Florida) Philharmonic, a position he landed immediately after graduating from the New England Conservatory. At the age of twenty-five, when he signed up for a summer composing class at Northwestern University, he had started doing arrangements, but he had never composed a

leftJames Stephenson

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single “original” note. It was the beginning of a new love.

In 2007, Stephenson decided to give up per-forming in order to concentrate on writing music full time; he and his wife, who also played in the Naples orchestra, and their four young children, moved back to the Chicago area. Stephenson came late to composition, and, as a result, he is largely self-taught. Writing music quickly became his full-time profession, and it has turned out to be an unexpectedly satisfying form of self-expression. “Though I try not to take myself too seriously,” he wrote three years ago in an arti-cle for New Music Box, “I take music very seri-ously. I reveal much more about myself in a piece of music than I would ever do in person.” Today he says simply, “Music to me is my life. It is com-pletely my passion.”

As a performer, Stephenson had developed a wide circle of colleagues who not only encour-aged his early work, but wanted new concertos to play. By now he has written solo works—sonatas and concertos—for nearly every instrument in the orchestra that he knows from sitting among its ranks. These include three concertos for his own instrument, the trumpet, all of them com-posed for Ryan Anthony, principal trumpet of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, whom he has known since they were teenagers. Sounds Awakened, a recent french horn concerto, was written for Gail Williams, who was a member of the Chicago Symphony for twenty years—she stepped down in 1998—and, as it turned out, was on stage the day Stephenson heard his first concert in Orchestra Hall. “There is nothing better than writing a solo feature for a good friend,” he says. “You can really take in their sound, their personality, and try to recreate it in a musical work where they will be inspired to shine.” Next on Stephenson’s agenda: concertos for piano, for guitar, and another for horn. (His Symphony no. 3, Visions, his larg-est work to date, received its first performance in April.) The new bass trombone concerto for Charles Vernon that is being premiered this week carries on this tradition of composing for friends and, in this case, for the orchestra Stephenson knows best.

James Stephenson on his Bass Trombone Concerto

W hen Charlie Vernon first told me in November 2015 that I would be writing a new bass trombone concerto

for him, he highlighted two things: (1.) that it be the “most profound, beautiful, and lasting musical event to be played on the bass trombone” (thanks, Charlie, I’ll do my best . . .; and (2.) that it would be “a great story, like a book you can’t stop reading.”

As I thought about these requirements, I began to think about something I consider pretty pro-found: life itself. Perhaps this is because at the time of the world premiere I will be fifty years old, when one starts thinking about such heavy subjects, but suffice it to say that it seemed a good time to write something that heeded the signifi-cance of life.

In thinking about life, I kept coming back to its rhythms and its ups and downs. This idea spurred my initial inspiration, and I began to feel a pulse that would inspire the entire work. A pulse, of course, fits nicely into both worlds: life and music. I couple this early on with a rising-note motif of A–B–C, which serendipitously couples nicely with Charlie’s idea of this piece being like the reading of a book.

And so the piece evolves, with the main A–B–C motif generally revealed in rising fashion in Chapter I, and in falling fashion in Chapter II. Ups and downs. The first movement is that of a bass trombone coming of age. It enters the world boldy, but then goes through moments of confusion, nervousness, development, and finally confidence and fun, the latter with jazz references, in honor of one of Charlie’s favorite mediums), as the move-ment ends with the protagonist at its height. The concerto has traveled from A minor to A major. Life is good.

The second movement (Chapter II) picks up right where the first left off. It is audacious music brimming with pomposity and with resolute puffed chest. As it continues, the motif reverses, and lyrical music rides on top of contrapuntal orches-tral scoring, as if wisdom has taken the place of

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hustling angst. The music builds, pulses, and grows, and portrays heart-wrenching “life-moments” before finally beginning to subside to a period of much reflection and thought. There is a direct segue (no pause) into the Epilogue, now back in A minor, which, for a while, remains almost still. But life is reaffirmed, and the music continues to pulse, ending rapturously in A major, with the bass trombone still at the top of its game.

I grew up going to Chicago Symphony concerts as a child. Then, as a young trumpeter, I often

dreamt of some day sitting and performing on the stage at Symphony Center in Chicago. Even though that dream won’t happen, I am thrilled to have a world premiere of my music with my favorite orchestra, on that very stage, and under the direction of Maestro Riccardo Muti. I have Charlie Vernon to thank for this, and I can only hope that my music will serve the bass trombone and music world well, and come as close as pos-sible to Charlie’s vision of a “profound, beautiful, and lasting” creation.

george gershwinBorn September 26, 1898; Brooklyn, New YorkDied July 11, 1937; Hollywood, California

An American in Paris

When George Gershwin arrived in Paris in March 1928, he was as famous as any living musician. Even in Europe his best songs, such as “The Man I Love,” “Someone to Watch Over Me,” and “Fascinating Rhythm” were whistled on

the street, and Rhapsody in Blue was the most talked-about composition in a city that has always loved music.

Gershwin’s music is still so popular that it’s easy to overlook his classical roots. His first musical memory was of an automatic piano, in a penny arcade on 125th Street, playing Anton Rubinstein’s Melody in F—one of those rare pieces that had become a popular classic, giving Gershwin the idea at an early age that serious and commercial music could be one and the same. As a teenager, Gershwin attended recitals by celebrity soloists such as Josef Lhevinne and Efrem Zimbalist. He played piano in the Beethoven Society Orchestra

at Public School 63, and studied music theory as well as piano. Even after George quit school at fifteen to become “probably the youngest piano pounder ever employed in Tin Pan Alley,” he didn’t forget his greater ambitions.

In the early 1920s, while Gershwin was turning out a steady stream of hits (and making the kind of money that is unheard of in the classical music business), he was more determined than ever to write serious music that was equally popu-lar. The historic premiere of Rhapsody in Blue, at New York’s Aeolian Theater in 1924, announced to the music world that Gershwin was a far more complex and ambitious musician than a mere songwriter. (And just to confuse matters, that same year Gershwin produced some of his finest songs, including “Fascinating Rhythm.”) During the mid-1920s, while he enjoyed the life of a rich celebrity, collecting modern art and mov-ing his family out of their dreary apartment into a five-story townhouse on the Upper West Side, Gershwin began to compose a piano concerto, three piano preludes, and this tone poem—a love

aboveGeorge Gershwin, ca. 1920s–’30s. Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Bain News Service

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composed1928

first performanceDecember 13, 1928; New York City

instrumentationtwo flutes and piccolo, two oboes and english horn, two clarinets and bass clarinet, three saxophones, two bassoons, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones and tuba, timpani, bass drum, bells, cymbals, snare drum, taxi horns, tom-toms, triangle, wire brushes, wood block, xylophone, celesta, strings

approximate performance time17 minutes

first cso performancesJune 14, 1933, Auditorium Theatre. William Daly conducting (Chicago World’s Fair: A Century of Progress International Exposition)

July 25, 1936, Ravinia Festival. William Daly conducting

February 13, 1945, Orchestra Hall. Désiré Defauw conducting

most recent cso performancesJuly 11, 2014, Ravinia Festival. Robert Moody conducting

March 24 and 25, 2017, Orchestra Hall. Bramwell Tovey conducting

cso recording1990. James Levine conducting. Deutsche Grammophon

song to Paris—while still maintaining his roles as pianist, tune-smith, and conductor.

In January 1928, Gershwin accepted an invitation to visit friends in Paris. Recognizing the need for a change from the frenetic New York scene—he currently had two hit shows, Funny Face and Rosalie, running simultaneously—Gershwin immediately started thinking about a “rhapsodic ballet,” which he quickly entitled An American in Paris. By the time he and his brother Ira boarded a steamer for Europe on March 9, George had already sketched the piece in versions for one and two pianos.

A dyed-in-the-wool New Yorker, Gershwin was dazzled by this great cosmopolitan city; looking down from the top of the Eiffel Tower, he was positively dizzy. To Gershwin, Paris had always been a city of music, and now, in his mind, it was Ravel’s city. These two famous, successful composers had just met at Ravel’s fifty-third birthday party the previous month in New York City. (Ravel specifically asked that Gershwin be invited.) They hit it off at once; Gershwin played the piano until 4 a.m., and Ravel stayed to the very end. Another night the two went off to hear jazz in Harlem.

In Paris, Gershwin continued to work on the score of his new piece, and he spent one entire afternoon shopping the auto sup-ply stores on the Avenue de la Grande Armée in search of the ideal car horns for the traffic scene he had in mind. (He took four horns home with him for the New York premiere.) Gershwin told a reporter that An American in Paris was “written very freely and is the most modern music I’ve yet attempted.” It’s certainly Gershwin’s most accomplished and ambitious orchestral work to date. For the first time, Gershwin’s trademark jazzy rhythms, bluesy harmonies, and unforgettable melodies are all woven into a big, sophisticated work of symphonic dimensions. By 1928, Gershwin had developed a fine ear for orchestral color and a sense of cinematic panorama. Despite his claim that he hadn’t written program music (the play-by-play scenario printed in the score and often quoted is by Deems Taylor, not Gershwin), the work is unforgettably descriptive, from its opening walking music (think Gene Kelly, Hollywood, 1951) to the car-honking traffic jam. Gershwin did identify the American’s “spasm of homesickness” after too many drinks in a street café, but neither he nor Taylor managed to explain the hot Caribbean rhythm midway through. An American in Paris was a hit at its New York premiere, just months after Gershwin came home, and, inevita-bly, was soon loved in Paris, too.

Phillip Huscher has been the program annotator for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra since 1987.

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Riccardo Muti Conductor

Born in Naples, Italy, Riccardo Muti is one of the preeminent conductors of our day. In 2010, when he became the tenth music director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra (CSO), he had more than forty years of experience

at the helm of Maggio Musicale Fiorentino (1968–80), the Philharmonia Orchestra (1973–82), the Philadelphia Orchestra (1980–92), and Teatro alla Scala (1986–2005).

Muti studied piano under Vincenzo Vitale at the Conservatory of San Pietro a Majella in his hometown of Naples, graduating with distinction. He subsequently received a diploma in compo-sition and conducting from the Giuseppe Verdi Conservatory in Milan, also graduating with distinction. His principal teachers were Bruno Bettinelli and Antonino Votto, principal assistant to Arturo Toscanini at La Scala. After he won the Guido Cantelli Conducting Competition—by unanimous vote of the jury—in Milan in 1967, Muti’s career developed quickly. In 1968, he became principal conductor of Florence’s Maggio Musicale, a position that he held until 1980.

Herbert von Karajan invited him to conduct at the Salzburg Festival in Austria in 1971, and Muti has maintained a close relationship with the summer festival and with its great orchestra, the Vienna Philharmonic, for more than forty-five years. When he conducted the philharmonic’s 150th anniversary concert in 1992, he was pre-sented with the Golden Ring, a special sign of esteem and affection, and in 2001, his outstanding artistic contributions to the orchestra were further recognized with the Otto Nicolai Gold Medal. He is also a recipient of a silver medal from the Salzburg Mozarteum for his contribution to the music of W.A. Mozart and the Golden Johann Strauss Award by the Johann Strauss Society of Vienna. He is an honorary member of Vienna’s Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde (Society of the Friends of Music), the Vienna Hofmusikkapelle,

the Vienna Philharmonic, and the Vienna State Opera.

Muti succeeded Otto Klemperer as chief conductor and music director of London’s Philharmonia Orchestra in 1973, holding that position until 1982. From 1980 to 1992, he was music director of the Philadelphia Orchestra, and in 1986, he became music director of Milan’s Teatro alla Scala. During his nineteen-year tenure, Muti conducted operatic and symphonic reper-toire ranging from the baroque to the contempo-rary, also leading hundreds of concerts with the Filarmonica della Scala and touring the world with both the opera company and the orchestra. His tenure as music director, the longest of any in La Scala’s history, culminated in the trium-phant reopening of the restored opera house with Antonio Salieri’s Europa riconosciuta, originally commissioned for La Scala’s inaugural perfor-mance in 1778.

Muti has received innumerable interna-tional honors. He is a Cavaliere di Gran Croce of the Italian Republic, Officer of the French Legion of Honor, and a recipient of the German Verdienstkreuz. Queen Elizabeth II bestowed on him the title of honorary Knight Commander of the British Empire, Russian President Vladimir Putin awarded him the Order of Friendship, and Pope Benedict XVI made him a Knight of the Grand Cross First Class of the Order of Saint Gregory the Great—the highest papal honor. Muti also has received Israel’s Wolf Prize in Music, Sweden’s prestigious Birgit Nilsson Prize, Spain’s Prince of Asturias Award for the Arts, from Japan the Order of the Rising Sun Gold and Silver Star and most recently the Praemium Imperiale, and the gold medal from Italy’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs for his promotion of Italian culture abroad as well as the prestigious “Presidente della Repubblica” award from the Italian government. Muti has received more than twenty honorary degrees from universities around the world.

Passionate about teaching young musi-cians, Muti founded the Luigi Cherubini Youth Orchestra in 2004 and the Riccardo Muti Italian Opera Academy in 2015. Through Le vie dell’Am-icizia (The roads of friendship), a project of the

PHOTO BY TODD ROSENBERG

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Ravenna Festival in Italy, he has conducted in many of the world’s most troubled areas in order to bring attention to and advocate for civic and social issues.

Riccardo Muti’s vast catalog of recordings, numbering in the hundreds, ranges from the traditional symphonic and operatic repertoires to contemporary works. He also has written two books, Verdi, l’italiano and Riccardo Muti: An Autobiography: First the Music, Then the Words, both of which have been published in several languages.

During his time with the CSO, Muti has won over audiences in greater Chicago and

across the globe through his music making as well as his demonstrated commitment to sharing classical music. His first annual free concert as CSO music director attracted more than 25,000 people to Millennium Park. He regularly invites subscribers, students, seniors, and people of low incomes to attend, at no charge, his CSO rehearsals. Muti’s commitment to artistic excel-lence and to creating a strong bond between an orchestra and its communities continues to bring the Chicago Symphony Orchestra to ever higher levels of achievement and renown.

riccardomutimusic.com

Muti Releases Third Book, Infinity Between the Notes: My Journey in MusicFollowing his CSO residency in May, Riccardo Muti participated in a special program on May 19 in Milan, Italy, to launch his new autobiography entitled L’infinito tra le note: Il mio viaggio nella musica (Infinity Between the Notes: My Journey in Music). In the book, published in Italian by Solferino, Muti examines the mystery of music through eight lessons from music history, drawing on his long experience as a conductor. He discusses his teachers as well as his favorite composers, including Mozart and Verdi, along with lesser-known Italian compos-ers such as Gaspare Spontini and Giovanni Paisiello.

Paisiello’s Missa defunctorum was featured in his perfor-mances this spring with the Luigi Cherubini Youth Orchestra—also a subject in his book—in Pavia (May 25 and 26) and Florence (May 28). Muti and the orchestra were joined by soprano Benedetta Torre, mezzo-soprano Daniela Barcellona, tenor Giovanni Sala, and bass Gianluca Buratto and the Bavarian Radio Chorus. Marking the occasion of the opening of the thirtieth anniversary season of the Ravenna Festival, Maestro Riccardo Muti and pianist Maurizio Pollini—two of Italy’s most esteemed living artists—gave a special concert on June 5 at the Palazzo Mauro de André with the Cherubini Youth Orchestra.

Following his CSO June residency, Muti travels to Athens, Greece, and Ravenna, Italy, to lead the Luigi Cherubini Youth Orchestra and Greek musicians in performances of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, as part of the annual Roads of Friendship concerts, presented by the Ravenna Festival on July 9 and 11. Other summer 2019 activities for Muti include his annual Italian Opera Academy in Ravenna, this year with sessions for young conductors and répétituers planned around Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro. Muti also returns to the Salzburg Festival in August for performances of Verdi’s Requiem with the Vienna Philharmonic, Concert Association of the Vienna State Opera Chorus, and soloists including soprano Krassimira Stoyanova, mezzo-soprano Anita Rachvelishvili, tenor Francesco Meli, and bass Ildar Abdrazakov.

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profiles

Jennifer Gunn Piccolo

first cso performancesMay 22, 23, 24, and 27, 2008, Orchestra Hall. Vivaldi’s Piccolo Concerto in C major, RV 443; Harry Bicket conducting

most recent cso performancesNovember 20, 21, 22, 23, and 25, 2014, Orchestra Hall. Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos nos. 2, 4, and 5; Nicholas Kraemer conducting

Jennifer M. Gunn was appointed flute and piccolo of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra by Daniel Barenboim in 2005.

Since joining, she has been active in the life of the Orchestra in many ways, including performances

on its contemporary music series MusicNOW, the CSO Chamber Music series, and the Once Upon a Symphony series designed for families with young children. Gunn also has served as a piccolo and flute coach for the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, participated in the Dream Out Loud Music Education Advocacy Campaign, and joined Zell Music Director Riccardo Muti for several of the programs for at-risk and incarcerated youth at Chicago-area juvenile justice centers.

Equally at home on flute or piccolo, Gunn has been featured as a soloist with the Orchestra on many occasions. She made her flute solo debut under the direction of Ludovic Morlot on the MusicNOW series playing Shirish Korde’s Nesting Cranes in 2007. A year later, she made her piccolo debut as soloist under the direction of Harry Bicket performing Vivaldi’s Concerto in C Major (RV 443) on the CSO’s subscription series. Gunn also has featured as a flutist in Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos with her CSO colleagues under the direction of both Nicholas Kraemer and Pinchas Zukerman.

Gunn has enjoyed many occasions to join col-leagues in a variety of performance settings. In the Chicago area, she has been a guest with the Bach Week Festival, Dempster Street Pro Musica, Music of the Baroque, and the Civitas Ensemble. Beyond Chicago, Gunn has enjoyed collaborations at the Sunflower Music Festival in Topeka, Kansas; Buzzards Bay Musicfest in Marion, Massachusetts; Arizona Musicfest in Scottsdale, Arizona; and the St. Bart’s Music Festival in Saint Barthélemy, French West Indies. She can also be heard on recordings featuring the music of composers Mason Bates, Anna Clyne, and Victoria Bond, as well recordings of the Orchestra on the CSO Resound label.

In demand as a clinician, Jennifer Gunn has taught master classes around the world, includ-ing a regular summer class at Orford Musique in Canada, and served as a guest artist at the 2018 International Piccolo Festival in Grado, Italy. She is a frequent guest at universities around the country, teaching flute and piccolo master classes at Carnegie Hall, Butler School of Music at the University of Texas–Austin, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, University of Missouri–Kansas City, and Northwestern University. Gunn also has been an orchestral coach with the National Youth Symphony (NYO) and the New World Symphony.

Gunn has held previous positions includ-ing assistant principal flute of the Louisville Orchestra, principal flute of the Fort Wayne Philharmonic, and second flute of the Wheeling Symphony Orchestra. She holds a bachelor of music degree from the Mary Pappert School of Music at Duquesne University (Pennsylvania), where she studied with Robert Langevin and Rhian Kenny. She had additional studies at the University of Akron (Ohio) with George Pope and Mary Kay Robinson.

She is married to Jonathan Gunn, professor of clarinet at University of Texas Butler School of Music.

PHOTO BY TODD ROSENBERG

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Charles Vernon Bass Trombone

first cso performancesApril 30, May 2, and 3, 1991, Orchestra Hall. Zwilich’s Concerto for Bass Trombone, Strings, Timpani, and Cymbals. Daniel Barenboim conducting

most recent cso performancesFebruary 1, 2, and 3, 2018, Orchestra Hall. Higdon’s Low Brass Concerto, Riccardo Muti conducting

February 16, 2018; Carolina Performing Arts Memorial Hall, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Higdon’s Low Brass Concerto, Riccardo Muti conducting

Charles Vernon began his orchestral career as bass trombone in 1971 with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. In 1980, he went to the San Francisco Symphony for one season. He was then chosen by Riccardo Muti to play bass

trombone with the Philadelphia Orchestra, where he remained for five years until joining the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in 1986.

A native of Asheville, North Carolina, Vernon attended Brevard College and Georgia State University, where he studied with William “Bill” Hill; and at Arizona State University with Gail Wilson. Other teachers included Arnold Jacobs and Edward Kleinhammer, former tuba and bass trombone of the CSO, respectively.

Vernon has been on the faculties of Catholic University, Brevard Music Center, Philadelphia

College of Performing Arts, Roosevelt University, Curtis Institute of Music, and Northwestern University. Currently professor of trombone at DePaul University, he also makes many solo and teaching appearances around the world.

In 1991, under then music director Daniel Barenboim, he gave the world premiere of Ellen Taaffe Zwilich’s Concerto for Bass Trombone, which was commissioned by the Orchestra for its centennial season. Vernon and his wife Alison have commissioned several song cycles for soprano, trombone, and piano by American composer Eric Ewazen and per-formed widely for many European and U.S. audiences. On September 28, 2006, he and the Orchestra under conductor Miguel Harth-Bedoya performed the world premiere of Chick’a’Bone Checkout, a concerto for alto, tenor, and bass trombone written by trombonist and composer Christian Lindberg.

Vernon, a long-time master swimmer on the Evanston (Illinois) Masters Swim Team, also holds a first-degree black belt in taekwondo. He has two sons: Mark, the eldest, is a video-game designer for Ubisoft in San Francisco; Gary, a martial-arts instructor at Connelly’s Academy, resides in Chicago. In addition, Alison Vernon is music director of Countryside Church Unitarian Universalist in Palatine (Illinois).

Information concerning music written or arranged for Charles Vernon as well as books, recordings, and a documentary film on the Lindberg/Vernon project can be found at CharlieVernon.net.

PHOTO BY TODD ROSENBERG

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june 2019 39

chicago symphony orchestraNow 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 began her two-year term in the fall of 2018. 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

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40 one hundred twenty-eighth season

* Assistant concertmasters are listed by seniority. ‡ On sabbatical § On leaveThe Louise H. Benton Wagner Chair 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.

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 Bae §Cornelius 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 ChenSunghee Choi

Wei-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

PrincipalThe Adolph Herseth Principal Trumpet Chair, endowed by an anonymous benefactor

John 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 CarlsonPaul ChristopherDave HartgePeter LandryTodd SnickJoe Tucker

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chicago symphony orchestra association 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].

june 2019 41

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 (4)Dora J. AalbregtseFloyd AbramsonFraida AlandSandra AllenRobert A. AlsakerMegan P. AndersonMrs. Ruth T. AndersonMychal P. AngelosDr. Edward ApplebaumDavid ArchDr. Kent ArmbrusterCarey AugustMarta Holsman BabsonEd BachrachMara Mills BarkerMerrill BarnesPeter BarrettRoberta BarronRoger BaskesRobert H. BaumDr. Robert A. BeattyMike BellArlene BennettEdward H. Bennett IIIMeta S. BergerD. Theodore BerghorstAnn BerlinPhyllis BerlinRonald 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 BossovJanet S. BoyerJohn D. BramsenMr. Roderick BranchMs. Jill BrennanBarbara BridgesBob Brink †Adrienne BrookstoneArnold Brookstone

Mr. Roger O. BrownMrs. Roger O. Brown †Mrs. William Gardner BrownJohn D. BrubakerMrs. Patricia BryanGilda BuchbinderSamuel BuchsbaumLisa Dollar BuehlerMrs. Dean L. BuntrockLynn BurtElizabeth Nolan BuzardMs. Lutgart CalcoteThomas CampbellMs. Vera A. CappBryce CarmineMary Anne CarpenterWendy Alders CartlandJudy CastelliniTina ChapekisLinton 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. 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 FrankMr. Paul E. FreehlingMitzi FreidheimMr. Philip M. FriedmannMalcolm M. GaynorRobert D. GechtFrank GelberMrs. Lynn GendlemanDr. Mark GendlemanRabbi Gary S. GersonIsak V. 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. GordonDonald J. GralenDr. Ruth GrantMary 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 Gutting †Lynne 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 HarrisMr. King Harris

Dr. 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. 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 KapnickMrs. Lonny H. KarminMr. John A. KarolyMrs. Byron C. KarzasBarry D. KaufmanKenneth KaufmanMarie KaufmanDon KaulMarilyn M. KeilEllen KelleherMolly KellerJonathan KemperDonald G. Kempf, Jr.Linda J. Kenney, PhDGerould KernJohn C. Kern †Elizabeth I. Keyser

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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].

42 cso.org

Richard L. KeyserEmmy KingSusan KiphartCarol KippermanDr. Jay KleimanCarol Evans KlenkJean KlingensteinMrs. Harriet B. KoehlerMr. Henry L. KohnSanfred KoltunJoseph 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. MathieMarianne C. MayerSteven D. McCormickHoward M. McCue IIIAnn Pickard McDermottDr. James L. McGeeDr. John P. McGee II †Sharon McGeeMrs. Lester McKeeverJohn A. McKennaMrs. Peter McKinneyMrs. C. Bruce McLaganMrs. James M. McMullanJames Edward McPhersonMr. Paul MeisterMs. Mary MittlerDr. Toni-Marie MontgomeryCharles A. MooreEmilie Morphew, M.D.Christopher MorrowDaniel R. MurrayEileen M. MurrayMr. Stuart C. NathanMrs. Ray E. Newton, Jr.

Edward A. NieminenDr. Zehava L. NoahKenneth R. NorganSusan NoyesMr. Gerard NussbaumMartha C. NussbaumWilliam A. ObenshainShelley OchabMrs. 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 PrinsBetsey PuthDiana 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. RubnitzSandra Rusnak

David 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 SchlossShirley SchlossmanDouglas 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 ShulruffHonorable Richard J. SiegelLinda 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 SnyderKathleen SolaroMrs. Ida N. SondheimerO.J. SopranosMrs. James Cavanaugh SpainOrli StaleyWilliam D. StaleyHelena StancikasGrace StanekDr. Eugene StarkLeonidas StefanosMs. Momoko SteinerMrs. Richard J. SternBruce StevensLiz StiffelLawrence E. StricklingHarvey J. Struthers, Jr.Patricia StudyCheryl SturmMrs. 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. ValukasJohn E. Van HornMrs. Peter E. Van NiceMrs. Herbert A. VanceWilliam C. VanceJulia Vander PloegThomas D. Vander VeenDr. Michael ViglioneCatherine M. VillinskiMr. 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 WhiteM.L. WinburnStephen R. WintersPeter WolfMrs. Arnold R. WolffLaura WollDr. Hak Yui WongCourtenay R. WoodMichael H. WooleverMs. Debbie WrightRonald YonoverOwen YoungmanDavid J. ZampaDr. John P. ZarembaMs. Anne ZenzerRichard E. ZieglerKaren Zupko

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Gifts listed as of April 2019

honor roll of donors

june 2019 43

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 BankExelonNorthern TrustPNC BankSidley Austin LLP

$50,000 –$99,999Anonymous (1)AbbottCIBCFinancial Economics Consulting Inc.Jenner & Block LLPKirkland & Ellis LLPPricewaterhouseCoopers LLPSP Plus

$25 ,000 –$49,999Abbott FundAriel InvestmentsBaker McKenzieBulgariGCM GrosvenorJPMorgan Chase & Co.KPMG LLPMagellan Development Group, LLCMayer Brown LLPS&C Electric Company FundSkadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher &

Flom LLPTiffany & Co.WalgreensWintrust Financial

$15 ,000 –$2 4 ,999AonDLA PiperEvans Food Group, Ltd.Fifth Third BankGoldman Sachs & Co.McDermott Will & Emery LLPMcKinsey & CompanyOxford Bank & TrustSheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton LLP

$5 ,000 –$14 ,999AccentureAmsted Industries IncorporatedBairdBlueCross and BlueShield of IllinoisThe Boston Consulting GroupBurwood Group, Inc.Choose ChicagoCognitive Capital PartnersComPsych CorporationConcentric Equity PartnersCredit SuisseDeloitteDentonsThe Edgewater FundsErnst & Young LLPEvolve IPFellowes, Inc.Grant Thornton LLPThe Japanese Chamber of Commerce

of ChicagoLatham & 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.Central Building & Preservation LPColumbia Capital Management, LLCDeka LashDraper and Kramer IncorporatedDS&P Insurance Services, Inc.Eagle Capital Management, LLCEast Loop DentalElk Grove Graphics, A Vomela

Network CompanyExchequerGemini Graphics, Inc.Generations DentalGoodSmith Gregg & Unruh LLPHyatt Hotels CorporationKimco ServicesKinder MorganMacLean-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

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44 cso.org

honor roll of donors

Gifts listed as of April 2019

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 FoundationIrving Harris FoundationWalter E. Heller Foundation, in honor of

Alyce DeCostaJCS Arts, Health & Education Fund of the

DuPage FoundationJohn D. and Catherine T.

MacArthur FoundationNational Endowment for the ArtsThe Negaunee FoundationPritzker Military FoundationThe Rhoades Fund at The Chicago

Community 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 FoundationBarker Welfare FoundationCrain-Maling FoundationJohn R. Halligan Charitable FundLeslie Fund, Inc.Bowman C. Lingle TrustThe Elizabeth Morse Charitable TrustMichael 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 FoundationStanley L. and Lucy Lopata

Charitable FoundationNIB FoundationPrince Charitable TrustsCharles and M. R. Shapiro FoundationThe George L. Shields FoundationTully Family Foundation

$5 ,000 –$9,999Harry F. and Elaine Chaddick FoundationFranklin Philanthropic FoundationHoellen Family FoundationHunter Family FoundationJS Charitable TrustKovler Family FoundationThe Mayer & Morris Kaplan

Family FoundationE. Nakamichi FoundationSiragusa Family Foundation

$2 ,500 –$4 ,999The Allyn Foundation, Inc.Arts Midwest Touring FundCharles H. and Bertha L.

Boothroyd FoundationWilliam M. Hales FoundationBenjamin J. Rosenthal FoundationWalter and Caroline Sueske

Charitable Trust

$1,000 –$2 , 499Geraldi Norton FoundationPritzker Traubert Family Foundation

foundation spotlight

The Walter E. Heller FoundationThe Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association is deeply grateful to the Walter E. Heller Foundation for its many years of generosity in support of numerous symphony performances, special programs, and the establishment of the broadcasting studio within Symphony Center. We are honored to dedicate the Foundation’s generous funding to Alyce H. DeCosta.

Alyce H. DeCosta was a dedicated philanthropist who loved Chicago and helped nurture cultural life in the city through her generous support for the arts and higher education. Mrs. DeCosta was a leading member of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra family, having served as a Governing Member and as a Life Trustee of the Board of Directors. For many years, she was the president of the Walter E. Heller Foundation, a philanthropic foundation named after her late husband, the founder and past Chairman of the Walter E. Heller Co.

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association is proud to recognize the Walter E. Heller Foundation and the continuing legacy of Alyce H. DeCosta during the 2018–19 season.

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† DeceasedGifts listed as of April 2019

june 2019 45

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)David and Juli GraingerNational Endowment for the ArtsThe Grainger Foundation

legacy circle $5 ,000,000 –$9,999,999Anonymous (1)BPEstate of Mrs. Robert C. BorwellRosemarie and Dean L. BuntrockCity of Chicago Department of Cultural

Affairs and Special EventsDavid † and Mary Winton GreenJudson and Joyce GreenMr. & Mrs. Dietrich M. GrossIllinois Arts Council AgencyMr. † & Mrs. Kenneth A. JulianThe John D. and Catherine T.

MacArthur FoundationThe Estate of Eloise W. Martin †The Andrew W. Mellon FoundationCathy and Bill OsbornThe Regenstein FoundationIn loving memory of Alice Welsh SkillingRichard and Helen ThomasUnited Airlines

leadership circle $2 ,500,000 –$4 ,999,999Anonymous (1)Randy L. and Melvin R. BerlinComEdEstate of Nelson D. CorneliusThe Davee FoundationFidelity InvestmentsJulius N. Frankel FoundationEstates of Karl and Helen Malecki FruhMarguerite DeLany HarkThe Irving Harris FoundationITWJPMorgan Chase & Co.Kraft FoodsMargot and Josef LakonishokJim and Kay MabieMacy’s

Estate of Claire Bastian MaynardNorthern TrustRobert R. McCormick FoundationEstate of Virginia H. RogersSage Foundation, Melissa Sage FadimSara Lee FoundationRobert E. † and Cynthia M. SargentEstate of Florence Davis SewellState of IllinoisThe Wallace FoundationEstate of Louise Benton Wagner

founders circle $1,000,000 –$2 , 499,999Anonymous (8)AT&TAbbott FundAllstate Insurance CompanyMr. † & Mrs. † Roger A. AndersonAon CorporationArthur Andersen LLPElizabeth M. Ashton TrustBMO Harris BankThe Brinson FoundationMr. & Mrs. William Gardner BrownThe Buchanan Family FoundationMatthew † and Kay BucksbaumThe Elizabeth F. Cheney FoundationCitadel FoundationBruce and Martha Clinton for The Clinton

Family FundCooper Family FoundationThe Crown FamilyMr. † & Mrs. † Arthur EdelsteinEstate of Mr. Edmund FroehlichElaine † and Zollie S. † FrankNancy and Larry FullerLloyd A. Fry FoundationHelen M. Galvin Charitable TrustEstate of Alan GarberEstate of William B. GrahamAnn and Gordon Getty FoundationMrs. Willard GidwitzEllen and Paul GignilliatGilchrist FoundationRichard † and Mary L. GrayJudson and Joyce GreenEstates of Betty and Lester GuttmanMrs. Sally M. Hands †John Hart and Carol PrinsWalter E. Heller Foundation in honor of

Alyce DeCostaJames C. Hemphill †Pamela Kelley Hull / Roger B. HullMr. & Mrs. Verne G. IstockJCS Arts, Health and Education Fund of

the DuPage FoundationMr. & Mrs. William R. JentesThe Joyce FoundationKirkland & Ellis LLP

LaSalle BankLewis-Sebring Family FoundationEstate of Marion J. LivingstonEstate of Marlon and Glen A. LloydMr. Arthur MalingMayer Brown LLPNancy Lauter McDougal and

Alfred L. † McDougalMr †. & Mrs. James M. McMullanJanet L. MelkMerrill LynchMorgan 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 † RichmanHulda B. And Maurice L.

Rothschild FoundationSandra and Earl Rusnak, Jr.Frances S. Schaffner †Mr. John Schmidt and Dr. Janet GilboyDr. Scholl FoundationThe Searle Family TrustSears, Roebuck and Co.Barbara and Barre Seid FoundationMrs. Soretta ShapiroSidley Austin LLPMr. † & Mrs. Ralph SmykalMr. & Mrs. Louis Sudler, Sr.Beatrice B. Tinsley Charitable TrustWaste Management, Inc.Estate of Bernhard Eckhart Williams

sustaining member $500,000 –$999,999Anonymous (6)Mr. & Mrs. William Adams IVThe Paul M. Angell Family FoundationAmerican Express CompanyBaldwin PianosWayne BalmerBarker Welfare FoundationJulie and Roger BaskesBaxter International Inc.Arlene and Marshall † BennettEstate of Norma Zusnek BennettBarbara † and James F. † BeréArnie and Ann BerlinBessemer Trust Company, N.A.The Boeing Company

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† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of April 2019

46 cso.org

honor roll of donors

BorgWarner Inc.Estate of Marie K. BurnsideLeroy Wesley Busby, Jr. †Estate of Victor I. CharbulakChicago Merchantile ExchangeAryls † and John R. † ConradRobert and Joanne Crown Income

Charitable FundTony and Lawrie DeanEstate of Katherine S. DunbaughEYThe Field Foundation of Illinois, Inc.Mr. Daniel Fischel and Ms. Sylvia NeilMr. † & Mrs. Donald F. FlynnMr. & Mrs. David W. Fox, Sr.Rhoda Lea and Henry S. † FrankMr. & Mrs. Richard J. FrankeFruit of the Loom, Inc.Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. GlossbergRichard and Alice GodfreyWilliam A. and Anne GoldsteinMr. Kenneth C. GriffinEstate of Elsa and George GrikshellRobin Tieken HadleyJulie † and Parker † HallJohn R. Halligan Charitable FundSally Mead Hands FoundationMr. & Mrs. Thomas C. HeagyEstates of Benjamin W. and

Natalie HeinemanMr. & Mrs. Jay L. HendersonEstate of Helen HoaglandEstate of Elizabeth HoffmanHSBC—North AmericaFMC TechnologiesEstate of Amanda JohnsonMr. & Mrs. Paul JudyThe Kapnick FamilyMr. & Mrs. George KennedyRichard P. and Susan Kiphart FamilyDr. David † and Mrs. Barbara KipperLester B. Knight Charitable TrustRobert Kohl and Clark PellettJoseph and Judith KonenKPMG LLPKay and Fred KrehbielArthur Krom †Bowman C. Lingle TrustLing Z. and Michael C. MarkovitzOscar G. and Elsa S. Mayer

Family FoundationJudy and Scott McCueMercedes-Benz Of North America, Inc.Bruce P. Olson †Estate of Dorothy and William Paulick Jr.Michael Woll Fund at

The Pauls FoundationEstate of Helen PerkinsPharmaciaEstate of Halina PresleyCOL (IL) Jennifer N. Pritzker, IL ARNG

(Retired)Estate of Ruth Ray

Sherry and Bob † ReumSheli Z. and Burton X. RosenbergMarie Louise † and Samuel R. † RosenthalMs. H. Cary RossMrs. Rudy Ruggles †Patrick G. and Shirley W. Ryan FoundationS&C Electric CompanyEstate of Alice F. SawyerEstates of Beverly and Grover SchiltzMr. † & Mrs. Irving Seaman, Jr.Megan and Steve ShebikMr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Sheffield, Jr.Mrs. Joan SiegelWalter and Kathleen SnodellSP PlusEstate of Audrey and Edward SpiegelMr. & Mrs. William C. SteinmetzCarl W. Stern and Holly Hayes-SternRoger and Susan Stone

Family FoundationMr. & Mrs. William H. StrongMr. & Mrs. Louis Sudler, Jr.Estate of Helen L. TeichEstate of Martha W. TolmanToyota Motor CorporationHoward and Paula † TrienensPenny and John Van HornCatherine M. and Frederick H. WaddellEstate of Nancy L. WaldThe Walgreen CompanyThe 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 April 2019. 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. BuntrockMr. & Mrs. James B. FadimMr. Daniel Fischel and Ms. Sylvia NeilJudson and Joyce GreenMr. Kenneth C. GriffinMr. & Mrs. Dietrich M. GrossThe Julian Family FoundationMargot and Josef LakonishokJim and Kay MabieNancy Lauter McDougal and

Alfred L. McDougal †The James and Madeleine McMullan

Family FoundationCathy and Bill OsbornCOL (IL) Jennifer N. Pritzker, IL

ARNG (Retired)

Megan and Steve ShebikRichard and Helen ThomasHelen and Sam Zell

$100,000 –$149,999Anonymous (3)Julie and Roger BaskesThe Davee FoundationIrving Harris Foundation, Joan W. HarrisRobert Kohl and Clark PellettLing Z. and Michael C. MarkovitzCynthia M. SargentCatherine M. and Frederick H. Waddell

$75 ,000 –$99,999AnonymousChristopher L. CulpChet Gougis and Shelley OchabJohn Hart and Carol PrinsPamela Kelley Hull & Roger B. HullMs. Patricia HydeMr. & Mrs. Verne G. IstockMr. & Mrs. William R. JentesNancy and Sanfred KoltunJudy and Scott McCueSandra and Earl Rusnak, Jr.Rose Shure Trust

$50,000 –$74 ,999Anoymous (2)Dora J. and R. John AalbregtseMr. & Mrs. William Adams IVPatricia and Laurence BoothKay BucksbaumRobert J. BufordMs. Marion A. CameronBruce and Martha Clinton for The Clinton

Family FundThe Crown FamilyDr. Eugene FamaRhoda Lea and Henry S. † FrankEllen and Paul GignilliatMs. Susan GoldschmidtRichard † and Mary L. GrayJim and SuAnne LopataSusan RegensteinBarbara and Barre Seid FoundationMichael and Linda SimonLiz StiffelPenny and John Van Horn

$35 ,000 –$49,999AnonymousMr. & Mrs. William Gardner BrownJohn D. and Leslie Henner BurnsMr. & Dr. George ColisDan J. Epstein Family FoundationRichard and Alice GodfreyMr. Collier HandsMs. Donna L. KendallMs. Sadie Lapinsky

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† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of April 2019

june 2019 47

honor roll of donors

Mrs. John Shedd Reed †Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Sheffield, Jr.Walter and Kathleen SnodellMs. Liisa M. Thomas and

Mr. Stephen L. Pratt

$25 ,000 –$34 ,999Anonymous (3)Peter and Elise BarackSharon and Charles AngellRobert H. Baum and MaryBeth KretzMr. & Mrs. David CasperMs. Debora de Hoyos and

Mr. Walter CarlsonTimothy A. and Bette Anne DuffyMr. & Mrs. Brian DuweSheri and J. Bradley FewellMr. & Mrs. David W. Fox, Sr.Nancy and Larry FullerWilliam A. and Anne GoldsteinMary Louise GornoMr. Graham C. GradySue and Melvin GrayMary Winton GreenMr. & Mrs. Jay L. HendersonDiana C. Hunter, in memory of

Henry S. FrankJared Kaplan and Maridee QuanbeckMs. Geraldine KeefeSidney Kohl Family FoundationMr. & Mrs. James KolarJoseph and Judith KonenRandall S. KrosznerMs. Ruth LabitzkeLewis-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 PawlickLeAnn Pedersen Pope and

Clyde F. McGregorAndra and Irwin PressDr. Mohan RaoDiana and Bruce RaunerDr. Petra and Mr. Randy O. RissmanSheli Z. and Burton X. RosenbergMr. & Mrs. Jason and Kristen RossiMr. & Mrs. Scott SantiMr. John Schmidt and Dr. Janet GilboyDr. & Mrs. Robert ShillmanMarion E. SimonBill and Orli Staley FoundationThierer Family FoundationMr. & Mrs. Richard P. Toft

Terrence and Laura TruaxMr. & Mrs. Robert A. Wislow

$20,000 –$2 4 ,999AnonymousArnie and Ann BerlinMarguerite DeLany HarkMs. Leigh Ann HermanRichard P. † and Susan Kiphart FamilyMs. Betsy LevinMichuda Construction Inc.Mr. Robert PetersonMr. & Mrs. John PrattIda N. Sondheimer & Family, in memory of

Joseph SondheimerMr. Irving Stenn, Jr.Roger and Susan Stone Family FoundationThe Family of Helmut and Irma StraussMr. † & Mrs. H. Blair White

$15 ,000 –$19,999Anonymous (2)Merrill and Judy BlauJoyce ChelbergSue and Jim CollettiMr. Jerry J. CritserMs. Nancy DehmlowJohn and Fran EdwardsonAnne H. EvansMr. & Mrs. Richard J. FrankeMr. & Mrs. Cyrus F. Freidheim, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. GlossbergLynne R. HaarlowJoan M. HallMr. & Mrs. R. HelmholzMr †. & Mrs. Joel D. HonigbergMs. Kola KennedyAnne and John † KernDr. June KoizumiDr. Eva Lichtenberg and Dr. Arnold TobinMr. & Mrs. † James LoewenbergMs. Emilysue PinnellMs. Judy PomeranzJerry RoseMr. & Mrs. Albert SchlachtmeyerMr. & Mrs. Alejandro SilvaCarl W. Stern and Holly Hayes-SternMary StowellMr. Christian VinyardDr. Marylou Witz

$11,500 –$14 ,999AnoymousMr. Roderick BranchMr. & Mrs. Stuart ApplebaumMr. Edward M. Bakwin †Henry and Gilda BuchbinderMs. Sharon ConwayMr. Philip DarlingMs. Shawn M. Donnelley and

Dr. Christopher M. KellyDr. & Mrs. James L. DowneyMr. & Mrs. Bernard Dunkel

Mr. & Mrs. John P. GrubeMr. & Mrs. David HackettDr. Michael KrcoEvelyn Meine Ensemble

Engagement FundEdward and Gayla NieminenMary and Joseph PlauchéMs. Cecelia SamansMr. & Mrs. David SavnerDr. & Mrs. Eugene and Jean StarkMr. & Mrs. Scott SwansonAnn S. Wolff

$7,500 –$11, 499Anonymous (7)Mrs. Rosa Acevedo and

Mr. Jose Luis PradoJeff and Keiko AlexanderMr. & Mrs. Christopher BarberMr. Peter BarrettProfessor M. Cherif Bassiouni † and

Elaine KlemenMr. Lawrence BellesMrs. James F. Beré †Henry R. Berghoef and

Leslie Lauer BerghoefMr. Donald BousemanMr. & Mrs. Arnold BrookstoneMr. & Mrs. † Roger O. BrownTom and Dianne CampbellMs. Vera CappMr. & Ms. Keith ClaytonDouglas and Carol CohenMr. Lawrence CorryMr. & Mrs. William A. CraneMari Hatzenbuehler CravenMr. & Mrs. Charles DemirjianMs. Christina DonohueMr. † & Mrs. David A. DonovanMr. & Mrs. William DooleyMr. & Mrs. Charles W. DouglasMs. Ann DrakeDavid and Deborah DranoveDr. George Dunea and Dr. Sally DuneaMr. † & Mrs. Richard EldenMs. Paula ElliottMr. & Mrs. Samuel H. EllisConstance M. FillingMs. Sonia FlorianDr. & Mrs. Mark GendlemanMr. & Mrs. † Isak V. GersonJeannette and Jerry GoldstoneDr. Alexia GordonJames and Brenda GruseckiMrs. 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 III

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† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of April 2019

48 cso.org

honor roll of donors

Fred and Sandra HolubowJanice L. HonigbergMr. & Mrs. † Howard JessenMr. & Mrs. George E. JohnsonRonald B. JohnsonMr. & Mrs. Edward T. JoyceBarbara and Kenneth KaufmanJean KlingensteinDr. † & Mrs. H. LeichenkoDrs. Edmund & Julie LewisMr. † & Mrs. Paul LiebermanMr. & Mrs. John LillardThe Loewenthal Fund at The Chicago

Community TrustMr. Russ LymanMr. & Mrs. † Barry MacLeanDr & Mrs. Daniel MassHeather McWilliamsCharles A. MooreEmilie Morphew, M.D.David and Dolores NelsonMs. Susan NorvichMs. Martha NussbaumBill and Penny ObenshainMr. & Mrs. William J. O’NeillThe Osprey FoundationMr. & Mrs. James O’Sullivan, Jr.Mrs. China I. OughtonMs. Elizabeth Parker and Mr. Keith CrowPasquinelli Family FoundationGerald † and Mona PennerDr. & Mrs. Ray PensingerRoxy and Richard PepperSue and Thomas PickDr. Diana RobinMs. Judy RungePatrick G. and Shirley W. Ryan FoundationMr. Richard RyanRita † and Norman SackarKarla 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. SnyderMs. Momoko SteinerFay S. Stern †, in memory of John N. SternCheryl SturmMr. & Mrs. Louis Sudler, Jr.Mrs. Vernon ThomasDr. Cynthia M. Valukas and

Mr. Joseph A. KohlMr. & Mrs. William C. VanceMs. Nancy VoorheesTheodore and Elisabeth WachsMr. † & Mrs. Jacob WeglarzMr. & Mrs. Robert G. WeissIn memory of Peter Leland Wentz and

Vida Broadbent WentzCraig and Bette WilliamsM.L. Winburn

Sarah R. Wolff and Joel L. HandelmanRonald and Geri Yonover Foundation

$4 ,500 –$7, 499Anonymous (10)Fraida and Bob AlandMr. Edward Amrein, Jr. and

Mrs. Sara Jones-AmreinMr. George AnastaploGeoffrey A. AndersonMegan P. and John L. AndersonCushman L. and Pamela AndrewsMarta Holsman BabsonMr. Neal BallMs. Elaine BaumannDonna 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 BossovMs. Janet BoyerMr. & Mrs. John D. BramsenMyrna R. BromleyMr. & Mrs. Samuel BuchsbaumKay and Rhett † ButlerElizabeth Nolan and Kevin BuzardMs. Lutgart CalcoteAnn and Richard CarrMia Celano and Noel DunnMr. James ChamberlainMr. Wesley M. ClarkDr. Edward A. Cole and

Dr. Christine A. RydelJane and John C. ColmanE. and V. Combs FoundationMrs. Francie 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. & Mrs. Richard CremieuxMr. Ivo Daalder and Mrs. Elisa D. HarrisDancing Skies FoundationDr. & Mrs. Tapas K. Das GuptaIn Loving Memory of

Alice Furumoto-DawsonDuane M. DesParte and

John C. SchneiderJanet Wood DiederichsMs. Marilyn Duginger

Mr. & Mrs. Frank A. DusekMr. & Mrs. Timothy EarleMr. & Mrs. Stephen EastwoodMr. & Mrs. Louis M. Ebling IIIMichael and Kathleen ElliottCharles and Carol EmmonsScott and Lenore EnloeSidney Epstein † and

Sondra Berman EpsteinMrs. Carol Evans, in memory of

Henry EvansMr. Fred EychanerMrs. Walter D. FacklerTarek and Ann FadelJeffrey Farbman and Ann GreensteinSally S. FederMs. Sharon Ferrill †Dr. & Mrs. Sanford Finkel, in honor of

Robert CoadKenneth M. Fitzgerald and Ruby CarrHenry and Frances FogelGinny and Peter ForemanMr. & Mrs. Willard FraumannJerry Freedman & Elizabeth SacksSusan 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.Mrs. Amy G. Gordon and

Mr. Michael D. GordonMr. Gerald and Dr. Colette GordonRuth Grant and Howard SchwartzDr. Jerri E. GreerSusan † and Kendall GriffithMr. & Mrs. John GrowdonMr. & Mrs. John HalesStephanie and Howard HalpernAnne Marcus HamadaRonald and Diane HamburgerJohn and Sally HardMary E. HarlandJames W. HaughMr. & Mrs. Joseph Andrew HaysJanet and Bob HelmanSonny and Marlene HershMr. & Mrs. Jeffrey W. HesseThe Hickey Family FoundationWilliam B. HinchliffRichard and Joanne HoffmanMr. William J. Hokin †Dr. & Mrs. James HollandJames and Eileen HolzhauerJames and Mary HoustonMr. † & Mrs. Peter HuizengaTex and Susan HullMichael and Leigh Huston

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honor roll of donors

Leland 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 KaplanMr. & Mrs. Edward Kaplan/

Kaplan FoundationMrs. Lonny H. KarminLarry † and Marie KaufmanMr. Tyrus KaufmanDon Kaul and Barbara Bluhm-KaulMarilyn M. KeilMr. & Mrs. Michael KeiserJim and Ellen KelleherMr. & Mrs. Jeff KellerPatricia Kenney and Gregory O’Leary,

in honor of Ann BlickensderferMrs. Elizabeth KeyserEsther G. KlatzMr. & Mrs. Richard K. KomarekMr. & Mrs. Jack KozikDr. & Mrs. Mark KozloffMr. & Mrs. David KravitzKay and Fred KrehbielDavid and Susan KreismanMr. & Mrs. Ronald KrueckMr. Dennis KuhnsMr. & Mrs. Rubin P. KuznitskyPatricia LeeMr. Jeffrey LennardWally and Carol LennoxMr. Michael LeppenMr. Julius Lewis †Ms. Barbara Lieber †Dr. Philip R. Liebson &

Mrs. Carole F. LiebsonDr. Herbert & Francine LippitzDiane and William F. LloydMrs. Gabrielle LongS. Stella MahMr. & Mrs. Duncan MacLeanThe Malott Family FoundationMr. & Mrs. Patrick A. MartinMs. BeLinda Mathie and Dr. Brian HaagMrs. Robert Mayer †Margaret H. and Steven D. McCormickAnn Pickard McDermottIn memory of William and

Carolyn McKittrickJames Edward McPhersonMr. Gregory and Dr. Alice MelchorMs. Judith Moniak †Drs. Bill and Elaine MoorDr. Charles MorcomMr. † & Mrs. William NeimanMrs. Ray E. Newton, Jr.Dr. Zehava L. NoahMr. & Mrs. Richard NoparMr. & Mrs. Norman L. OlsonMr. Bruce Oltman

John and Joy O’MalleyDianne M. and Robert J. Patterson, Jr.Mr. Michael PayetteMs. Shauna PeetRichard and Frances PennMr. & Mrs. Michael A. PerlsteinMr. & Mrs. Norman PermanLorna and Ellard Pfaelzer, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Thomas D. PhilipsbornMs. Kimberly PickenpaughMrs. Sherri PincusMr. Samuel PressMr. & Mrs. John PuthHarper ReedMs. Helen ReedAnn and Bob Reiland, in memory of

Arthur and Ruth KochMari Yamamoto RegnierBurton and Francine RissmanCharles and Marilynn RivkinMs. Carol RobertsBob Rogers TravelMr. John W. Rogers, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Harry J. RoperDr. & Mrs. Louis RosenblumSharon and Louis F. RosenthalD.D. RoskinMr. & Mrs. Frank A. RossiMrs. Donald Roth †Jay and Maija RothenbergMs. Roberta H. RubinMr. & Mrs. Rich RyanWilliam and Mary RyanCarol S. SonnenscheinMr. David SandfortMr. Muneer A. Satter and

Ms. Kristen H. HertelMr. Timothy M. SawyierThe Schreuder FamilyShannon SchuylerDonald L. and Susan J. SchwartzMr. & Mrs. Chandra SekharIlene and Michael Shaw Charitable TrustJessie Shih and Johnson HoDr. & Mrs. Richard J. SiegelMs. Ann SilbermanJulia M. SimpsonValerie SlotnickMrs. Jackson W. Smart, Jr.Mrs. Nancy SmerzMrs. Diane W. SmithLouise K. SmithJames and Diane SnyderDr. & Mrs. R. SolaroMrs. Linda SpainJoel and Beth SpenadelRobert and Emily SpoerriMs. Adena StabenDusan Stefoski and Craig SavageNancy and Bruce StevensMr. Hal S.R. StewartLaurence and Caryn StrausLawrence E. Strickling and Sydney L. Hans

Mr. & Mrs. William H. StrongMr. & Mrs. Robert SzalayMr. Patrick Tagny DiesseJoan and Michael ThronRay and Mary Ann TittleBill † and Anne TobeyJohn T. and Carrie M. TraversHoward and Paula † TrienensMr. & Mrs. William & Joan TrukenbrodKsenia A. and Peter TurulaVirginia C. ValeMrs. Dorothy VanceMr. & Mrs. Peter E. Van NiceCatherine M. VillinskiHilary and Barry WeinsteinLinda † and Marc WeissbluthBert and Barbara WellerMr. & Ms. Richard WilliamsStephen R. WintersPeter WolfMichael † and Laura WollDr. Hak WongDavid WoodhouseMichael H. and Mary K. WooleverPaul and Mary YovovichMs. Karen Zupko

$2 ,500 –$4 , 499Anonymous (18)Elaine and Floyd AbramsonMs. Patti AcurioMs. Susan AdlerMs. Rochelle AllenSandra Allen and Jim PerlowMr. & Mrs. Robert A. AlsakerDr. Diane AltkornMr. & 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. AronsonMs. Marie AsburyMr. & Mrs. Peter AscoliMr. & Mrs. Theodore M. AsnerCarey and Brett AugustEd BachrachMr. & Mrs. William BardeenPaul and Robert Barker FoundationMr. Merrill and Mr. N.M.K. BarnesMr. Peter BarrettRoberta and Harold S. BarronMs. Barbara BarzanskyMs. Sandra BassDr. & Mrs. Robert A. BeattyMs. Michele BeckerMr. Ken BelcherMr. & Mrs. Richard BenckMr. Thomas BergDr. Leonard & Phyllis BerlinMr. & Mrs. Robert L. Berner, Jr.

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† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of April 2019

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honor roll of donors

Catherine & Ron BevilLois R. and Maurice J. BeznosMrs. Arthur A. BillingsMr. & Mrs. Harrington BischofJim † and Dianne BlancoAnn BlickensderferMr. & Mrs. Andrew BlockTimothy and Karen BondyCassandra L. BookMr. James BorkmanMr. & Mrs. James BorovskyMr. Douglas BraganMs. Jill BrennanBarbara and Powell BridgesIn memory of Bob BrinkMr. & Ms. Joel BroskMr. & Mrs. John BrubakerMr. & Mrs. Timothy BryanLinda S. BuckleyLisa Dollar Buehler and Bill EscamillaMs. Jeanne BuschCarmine FoundationDrs. Virginia and Stephen CarrWendy Alders CartlandMr. & Mrs. Jerome CastelliniMr. & Mrs. Candelario CelioTina and Fredrick ChapekisJayson and Elizabeth CheeverLinton J. ChildsJan and Frank Cicero, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. ClancyPatricia A. ClickenerMitchell Cobey and Janet RealiMs. Jean CocozzaLewis CollensPeter Conover and Kristi SlonigerMary Ellen Cooney and Ken Higgins †Nancy R. CorralPatricia Cox and FamilyMs. Juli CrabtreeMr. Earle Cromer IIIMr. Bert CrosslandConstance CwiokMr. & Mrs. Robert J. DarnallDr. Brenda A. Darrell and

Mr. Paul S. WatfordMelissa and Gordon DavisMuller Davis † and Lynn StrausMr. Guy DeBoo and Ms. Susan FranzettiDecyk Watts Charitable FoundationMr. Steven DeliMr. & Mrs. James W. DeYoungPaul and Nona DixMr. & Mrs. Otto Doering IIIWendy EagerMr. & Mrs. David P. Earle IIIMr. & Mrs. Larry K. EbertLa and Philip EngelMrs. Janice EngleMarilyn D. Ezri, M.D.Dr. Robert A. Fajardo and Judith MarohnMr. & Mrs. William F. FarleyCathy and Joe Feldman

Judith E. FeldmanSteven and Carol FelsenthalDonald and Signe FergusonHector Ferral, M.D.Mr. Conrad FischerEvelyn T. FitzpatrickMrs. Roslyn K. FlegelMr. & Mrs. Donald FleischmanMrs. Donna FlemingEileen T. Flynn and Thomas J. InglisMr. Robert Fordham †Mrs. John D. FosterMs. Irene FoxArthur 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 GilsonEunice and Perry GoldbergJudy & Bill GoldbergAlfred G. GoldsteinMr. † & Mrs. Thomas M. GoldsteinRobert and Marcia GoltermannMr. Jacques GordonSamantha GordonMr. Peter Gotsch and Dr. Jana FrenchDonald J. GralenMs. Freddi GreenbergThomas † and Delta GreeneTimothy and Joyce GreeningDr. Michael GreenwaldMr. & Mrs. Byron GregoryMr. & Mrs. Jerome GroenJacalyn GronekMrs. Marguerite GuidoDr. & Mrs. John W. Gustaitis, Jr.Anastasia and Gary † GuttingMr. & Mrs. Ernst A. HäberliJerry A. Hall, M.D.Ms. Nancy HallerMs. Agnes HamosDr. & Mrs. Chester HandelmanMr. & Mrs. Stuart HandlerDr. Robert A. HarrisMrs. John M. HartiganMs. Kyle HarveyThomas and Connie Hsu HaynesJames and Lynne † HeckmanMr. Steven HeiseMr. James R. Helbert † and

Mrs. Mary Mako HelbertMs. Dawn E. HelwigDr. & Mrs. Arthur L. HerbstMarjorie Friedman HeymanMr. Paul E. HicksRobert A. Hill and Thea Flaum HillJames & Megan HinchsliffMrs. Edwin P. Hoffman

Ms. Gretchen Hoffmann and Mr. Joseph Doherty

Eugene HollandMr. Todd HollemanMr. & Mrs. Richard S. Holson IIIMs. Joanna HorsnailFrances and Franklin † HorwichMs. Roberta M. HorwitzCarter Howard and Sarah KreppBruce and Carol HuckDavid and Marcia HulanDr. Ronald L. HullingerMr. Harry Hunderman and

Ms. Deborah SlatonMs. Patricia HurleyMichael 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 KalninsWayne S. and Lenore M. KaplanJohn 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 KmetkoMr. & Mrs. Thomas KnauffMrs. Harriet B. KoehlerMr. & Mrs. Norman KoglinCookie Anspach Kohn and Henry L. KohnEldon and Patricia KreiderMs. Iris KriegDrs. 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. Handler

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† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of April 2019

june 2019 51

honor roll of donors

Anne E. Leibowitz FundSheila Fields LeiterMary and Laurence LevineAverill and Bernard † LevitonGregory M. Lewis and Mary E. StrekStewart and Susan LiechtiPatricia M. LivingstonMs. Alma LizcanoReva and John S. Lizzadro, Sr.Jane and Peter LoebRenée LoganMs. Jean LorenzenMr. Edward MackMr. Daniel Macken and

Mr. Merlyn HarboldDr. & Mrs. Michael S. MalingMr. Daniel ManoogianDan and Lynne Mapes-RiordanBarbara and Larry MargolisRobert † and Judy MarthMs. Marjorie MartinArthur and Elizabeth MartinezRobert & Doretta MarwinMarianne 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. Michael MelkoMr. 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. MunstermanMr. George MurphyEileen M. MurrayJo Ann and Stuart NathanMr. & Mrs. Kenneth NebenzahlMr. Richard NichollsKenneth R. NorganMrs. Janis NotzMr. Gerard and Dr. Linda NussbaumSharon and Lee OberlanderEric and Carolyn Oesterle

Michael and Kay O’HalleranMarjory OlikerMr. Thomas OrlandoBeatrice F. OrzacMr. & Mrs. Gerald OstermannMr. Bruce OttleyMrs. Evelyn E. PadorrMr. Timothy J. PatenodeEugene and Lois PavalonKingsley PerkinsDr. William PeruzziDavid and Sara PetersonStanley M. and Virginia Johnson PillmanMr. & 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 RabmanMary RaffertyJohn and Mary † RaittDorothy V. RammMark & Nancy RatnerMs. Polly RattnerAl and Lynn ReichleMark S. ReiterMerle ReskinMary K. RingRoberts 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 RosenzweigBob RoweMrs. Susan B. RubnitzTina and Buzz RuttenburgMr. Agustin G. SanzRaymond and Inez SaundersMr. Laurence SaviersSusan Schaalman Youdovin and

Charlie ShulkinMr †. and Mrs. Nathan SchlossShirley and John † SchlossmanDouglas M. SchmidtMr. & Mrs. Richard H. SchnadigMr. & Mrs. Thomas ScorzaStephen A. and Marilyn ScottDrs. Deborah and Lawrence SegilRonald and Nancy SemerdjianDiana and Richard SeniorMs. 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.Charles F. SmithMs. Patricia SmytheMr. & Mrs. O. J. SopranosMr. & Mrs. Michael SpainHelena StancikasSylvia SteenMr. & Mrs. Leonidas StefanosMr. & Mrs. Stephen R. SmithVirginia Lee StiglerDr. & Mrs. Ralph StollMr. & Mrs. Harvey J. Struthers, Jr.Ms. Minsook SuhMr. Sean SusaninMr. & Mrs. Gregory TaubeneckMr. James ThompsonMs. Carla M. ThorpeDrs. Karl and Sarah TichoMs. Mary TorresJoan and David TrushinPhil † and Paula TurnerMr. & Mrs. Robert W. TurnerMrs. Elizabeth TwedeLori L. and John R. TwomblyHenry and Janet UnderwoodZalman and Karen UsiskinMrs. James D. Vail IIIMr. Peter ValeJim and Cindy ValtmanMs. Julia Vander PloegThomas D. Vander Veen, Ph.D.Dr. Michael ViglioneFrank VillellaMs. Raita VilninsMr. & Mrs. Mark A. WagnerLuluMr. & 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 WeinerSamuel † and Chickie WeisbardAbby and Glen WeisbergMrs. Barbara H. West †Mr. & Mrs. Peter WestMs. Zita WheelerDan and Paula Wise

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† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of April 2019

52 cso.org

honor roll of donors

Courtenay R. Wood and H. Noel Jackson, Jr.

Cheryl B. and James T. WormleyMr. & Mrs. Donald WoulfeMs. Debbie WrightOwen and Linda YoungmanMr. Laird Zacheis and Ms. Sunhee LeeAlexander F. Zajczenko and

Julie SchwertfegerDavid and Eileen ZampaDr. & Mrs. John ZarembaMolly Ziegler and Karen WhittMs. Anne ZenzerRichard E. ZieglerMs. Camille ZientekDr. Michael P. Zygmunt

$1,000 –$2 , 499Anonymous (28)Arlene and Marshall † BennettRichard J. Abram and Paul ChandlerMr. & Mrs. Sherwin AbramsMichael and Mary AbroeNancy A. AbshireThe Acorn FoundationMr. & Mrs. Stanley AdelmanIn memory of Martha and Bernie AdelsonMr. David R. AdlerSarah AdlerDr. & Mrs. Carl H. AlbrightMs. Judy AllenMs. Mary T. AlrothMrs. Evelyn AlterDr. Ronald and Barbara AltmanDr. Charles and Marie Grass AmentaMs. Carol AndersonMr. Karl Anderson and Ms. Pamela ShuMr. & Mrs. Andrew FeinbergDr. Smiljana AntonijevicDr. & Mrs. Robert ArensmanMr. Kevin ArmstrongGregory Yuri AronoffMary Jane and Bob AsherMr. Sinan AtacJack S. AtenAthena FundMs. Frances AtkinsMr. Bhupat AtluriTom AuchterMs. Bernice AuslanderMs. Marlene BachMr. Tom BachtellDr. Richard BaerCatherine Baker and Timothy KentJon W. and Diane BalkeEdith M. BallinMs. Barbara BallingerMr. Robert BarkeiMs. Judith BarnardMr. Carroll BarnesMr. & Mrs. John BarnesPatrick BarnesJames and Bartha Barrett

Nita & 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 BeidlerMr. & Mrs. Tedd BelytschkoPatti and Nebil BenaissaMichelle BennettMs. Susan BennettMr. & Mrs. Charles S. BergenMr. Marc BerlowGene and Natalie BernardoniMr. Louis BernsteinMs. Catherine BerryMr. & Mrs. Loren Berry IIIMs. Ludmila BidwellMr. Jerry BiedemanBigoness FamilyJohn Billo and Kenneth JamesMr. & Mrs. Charles BlackMr. Joe BlackburnIn Memory of John R. BlairDavid E. Blatt and David M. MooreMr. & Mrs. David BlumbergMs. Barbara BlumenthalMr. & Mrs. Norman BobinsSusanna BodnarMr. Edward Boehm IIIMs. Virginia BoehmeMr. & Mrs. Peter BorichMr. & Mrs. Fred P. BosselmanMr. John BostjancichMr. & Mrs. David BoydCarl and Kathryn BoyensDrs. Nader and Mandan BozorgiZachary and Laura BravosMs. Danolda BrennanMr. Richard BresowarMr. & Mrs. Joseph BreuMr. Michael BrewerMs. Susan BridgeMr. & Mrs. Robert BrightfeltMr. Wesley BroquardMr. Lee M. Brown, Mr. John B. Newman,

and Ms. Pixie NewmanMs. Alice BrunnerMrs. Dan BrusslanMs. Kamala BucknerMr. † & Mrs. Allen BuhlerJack M. BulmashMs. Kathryn BurgdorferMr. & Mrs. Kenneth J. Burns, Jr.Mr. David BurrageMr. & Ms. John A. Burrell

Mr. George BurrowsBob and Lynn BurtMr. & Mrs. Mark BushmanMr. & Mrs. John ButlerGabriel and Jill BuzasMs. Linda CalandraMr. & Mrs. Wiley Caldwell, Jr.Mr. Robert CallahanMr. & Mrs. Dennis CalvaneseFather John CanaryRobert and Kay CarlsonDavid and Orit CarpenterMr. Fairbank CarpenterMr. & Mrs. Blouke CarusDonald & Linda CassilBeverly † and Lawrence CentellaMr. † & Mrs. Henry T. ChandlerMr. Aaron ChandranMr. Rowland ChangMs. Margaret ChaplanMr. & Mrs. John ChapmanMr. Myron CherryMs. Melinda CheungHarriett and Myron CholdenMr. & Mrs. Gerry ChrismanMr. George ChristakesBruce ChristianMr. & Mrs. Stanley ChristiansonMr. & Mrs. Joseph ChungPeter and Hedy CiocciMs. Kathleen ClarkStephen ClarkNancy J. ClawsonRobert Coen and Marjorie CoenMr. & Mrs. Frank CohenDavid ColburnMs. Kathryn CollierMr. Jonathan CollinsMr. Stan CollinsMr. & Mrs. Mathew CollopyJames D. ComptonMrs. Eileen ConaghanMr. Richard ConnaughtonPeter and Beverly Ann ConroyJoe and Judy CosenzaMatt and Carrie CotterMr. & 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. BrownRobert Allen DaughertyDenise and Dr. Ariel DavidSue and Kent DavisMr. & Mrs. Richard DavisonRomke de HaanMr. Eric C. Dean

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† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of April 2019

june 2019 53

honor roll of donors

Mary Dedinsky and William Carlisle Herbert

Delaney Delaney & Voorn LTDMrs. David DeMarMrs. Adele DeMooyDr. & Mrs. Terrence DemosMs. Marcia DevlinMr. & Mrs. Byram DickesMs. Amy Dickinson and

Mr. James FutranskyLinda and Peter DiDonatoMr. William Dietz, Jr.Mr. Frank DileonardoMichael and Laurel DiPrimaKevin & Kelly DockeryMrs. Janice DomanikMr. Fred DonnerMs. Joan D. DonovanMrs. Adrienne DoppeltMrs. Catherine DouglasDr. & Mrs. Heratch DoumanianNatalie and Joshua DranoffPaige DrufovkaMs. Rosanne DruianIngrid and Richard DubberkeMr. & Mrs. Andrew DudaMr. & Mrs. Eugene DudaMr. Ronald DukeMr. & Mrs. Robert DulskiDr. Thomas Durica & Sue JacobMr. & Mrs. Dan DvorkinTerry Charles DwortzJoan & Warren EagleEast Loop DentalJudge 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. EisenbergMr. H.J. EisenmanReese and Jeanne ElledgeThomas EllerMr. & Mrs. Victor Elting IIIMs. Laura EmerickMr. & Mrs. A. Gerald EricksonDr. & Mrs. James ErtleKeith and Diane ErtnerNancy EstradaPaul and Clare FahertyLaura and John FairfieldJudith Farquhar and James HeviaMr. & Mrs. Robert FeitlerDr. & Mrs. William FeltenMr. & Mrs. Joel FenchelFrank J. & Diana Lynn Feraco TrustMs. Lisa FergusonJoy FettDebra Fienberg

Sandra E. FienbergMr. & Mrs. Dean FischerStephen and Patricia FisherMr. Patrick Fitzgerald and

Ms. Mary K. KrigbaumMs. Lola FlammMr. William FleigMs. Anita D. FlournoyMr. Paul FongBeth Healy & Mike FordneyMr. Mark FossMs. Stacie M. FrankLawrence and Pamela FrankelDr. & Mrs. James FranklinAllen J. Frantzen and George R. PatersonDr. † & Mrs. Uwe FreeseMr. & Mrs. Louis Freidheim, Jr.Dr. Maija Freimanis and David A. MarshallFred FreitagMr. M. FrenkelMr. George Frerichs and

Ms. Cheryl D. McIntyreMs. Diane Tkach and Mr. James F. FreundtDr. & Mrs. Gary J. FriendDr. Barbara FullerMr. & Mrs. James GaebeMs. Cecile GaganMr. & Mrs. John D. Galbraith IIIMrs. Joan M GalinskiPeter GallanisDr. & Mrs. Ronald GanellenBrandi GarciaDr. 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 Gierke †Mr. Ben Gierl and Ms. Karla HayterMr. & Mrs. Alan GilbertMargaret GillingLawrence and Amy GillumMr. & Mrs. John GinascolDr. & Mrs. Paul B. GlickmanMr. David GlueckWilliam and Ethel GofenNorman † and Barbara GoldMr. Stanford GoldblattMr. † & 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 Gordon

Merle GordonDr. & Mrs. Robert GordonMr. Andrew GoreMr. & Mrs. James GorterDavid and Elizabeth GrahamCarol R. GrantMr. Ellsworth GrantBrooks and Wanza GrantierMr. & Mrs. Delmon GrapesMr. Anthony GreenRochelle and Michael GreenfieldMr. & Mrs. David GreensteinMr. David GriffinGregory GrobarcikCharles Grode and Heidi LukasMr. & Mrs. Jim GrotelueschenMr. Robert GrundstadGeorge F. and Catherine S. HaberHalasmani/Davis FamilyTimothy R. Hale & Katherine Grace HaleMrs. Mary HallmanJohn and Patricia HamiltonMs. Lee HamiltonHill and Cheryl HammockStuart and Shelly HanflingDavid HansenMr. Michael Hansen and

Ms. Nancy RandaMr. Charles HanusinPatrick C HarbourMs. Patricia HarperRobert and Margot HaselkornDr. & Mrs. James HaughtonDr. & Mrs. Paul J. HauserMr. William P. Hauworth IIBridgette Hayes and Eric HayesMs. Joan HeaneyJohn Heaton and Margaret Martin-HeatonWilliam HeffernanMrs. Nancy HeilRoss and Andrea HeimDr. Joseph N. Heiney and

Mr. Khadbaatar JargalsaikhanMrs. Valerie HeintzMr. & Mrs. Quentin HeislerMr. David HelversonMs. Ayana HendersonMr. Thomas C. HennigerMichael and Suzanne HensleyMr. David HerbertMr. † & Mrs. Peter HerrBarbara and Jim HerstLarry HerzogHarriet E. HeydaJeana HillMr. Felipe HillardMr. & Mrs. David HilliardJames and Margot HinchliffThe Rev. Melinda Hinners-Waldie and

Mr. Benjamin WaldieMs. Judith HirschDr. Richard HirschmannMrs. Annika Hoffman

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† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of April 2019

54 cso.org

honor roll of donors

David Glenn HoffmanMr. Karl HoffmanSuzanne Hoffman and Dale SmithMr. Jim HollandMs. 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 HuckmanRyan HullingerMr. & Mrs. Robert HutchinsDr. Victoria Ingram and Dr. Paul NavinMr. & Mrs. Jorge IorgulescuCheryl IstvanMr. Benjamin IvoryMs. Marina JacksMr. Harold E Jackson JrMerle L. JacobMs. Ann JagiellaMr. Matt JamesFather Daniel JarosewicMrs. Sonya JasperMr. & Mrs. Joel JastrombMs. Lynn JerathMrs. Mary Johnston, Ph.D.Jean and Cynthia JohoMr. Thomas JonesDr. Rebecca JosefsonDaniel P. and Barbara J. JustusMr. & Mrs. Saul KadinMr. † & Mrs. Tom KallenJames KallianisThomas and Reseda KalowskiSteven Kaplan and Carol RubinRoula and George KarcazesMr. & Mrs. Byron C. KarzasMrs. Louise KaschDouglas and Dana KaslMs. Katie Miller and Mr. Jonathan MillerMr. Neil KatzDr. & Mrs. Robert KatzMs. Carole KellerNancy and Donald KempfMs. Helen KesslerMr. & Mrs. W. K. KetchumMs. Catherine KetterMr. & Mrs. † Algimantas KezelisEllen KingHank KinzieMr. & Mrs. John E. KirkpatrickKathy Kirn and David LevinsonMr. & Mrs. Gene KieselMs. Lilia KiselevMr. & Mrs. David KistenbrokerJack and Terry KleckaMr. & Mrs. LeRoy KlemtJanice KlichMr. William Klingelhoffer and

Ms. Jill BrindelMs. Mary Klyasheff

Ms. 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 KusekGary J. KussowDr. Marina and Andrey KuznetsovMr. Chaeyoung KwonMr. Thomas LadMarvin & Carol LaderCarl LaMarkLisa and Bill LandesRichard Landgraff and Bernadette FoleyMr. & Mrs. Frederick LangrehrMr. John LansingDJ and Natalie LaRocqueMs. Pamela LarsenMs. Leah LaurieMs. Ruby LawSharon and Bill LearElaine Lebhoff-Ries, MD, and

Michael Ries, MDMr. & Mrs. Peter LedererMr. Mark LedogarMr. & Mrs. Bruce LeepDr. & Mrs. Jan LeestmaDarla and Hunter LeggittMr. Jonathon LeikJohn and Jill LeviMrs. Richard LeviFay and Daniel LevinDr. & Mrs. Stuart LevinMr. Jerrold LevineAbby and Jonathan LevineDr. & Mrs. Robert LevyJosephine Lewis and Morton DubmanMs. Judith LewisDr. Marcia A. LewisCara LichtensteinBrian Lighty and Andrew BigelowMr. Ross LillieRobert † and Joan LipsigMs. Anne LittleMr. Melvin LoebKathleen Lockhart & James DixonMr. † & Mrs. Gerald F. LoftusMs. Isabela LopesMs. Melynda LopinMr. & Ms. Matthew LoPrestiMs. Esther LothDonna and Richard LoundyMr. Joel LoweryTimothy Lubenow

Amy and Don LubinJennifer and Dan LubyRonald and Carlotta LucchesiMr. Philip LumpkinMr. & Mrs. Michael LutzMr. 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 MannosMark & Wendy MantoMarty L. ManuelSharon L. ManuelMr. & Ms. Steven MarcusMr. Robert MarksMr. Timothy MarshallMr. & Mrs. Roland MartelMs. Mirjana MartichMs. Molly MartinSharon and Eden MartinMr. Julio MartinezDrs. Annette and John MartiniMr. † & Mrs. Lowell Mason, Jr.Dr. & Mrs. Walter MasseyMs. Catherine MastersDr. Ann B. MatasarMarilyn and Myron MaurerMs. Adele MayerLarry and Donna MayerMr. † & Mrs. George MazeMs. Sue McCandlessJohn McCartneyMr. Robert McColleyMs. Marilyn McCoyMs. Margaret McCoyMr. & Mrs. H. O. McDowell IIIMr. & Mrs. William McDowell, Jr.Ms. Patricia A. McGuireMr. & Mrs. George C. McKannMr. Charles McKeeMr. & Mrs. Lester McKeeverDr. & Mrs. Bruce McLeodMs. Florence McMillanDennis and Elyse McWherterMr. Nick McWilliamsMrs. Erma MedgyesySheila and Harvey MedvinMrs. Helen MehlerMs. Claretta MeierDr. & Mrs. Jack L. MelamedMr. Ernst MelchiorDr. Janis MendelsohnDr. Ellen MendelsonMrs. Robert MendelsonJim and Ginger MeyerMr. & Mrs. Thomas Meyers, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Micatka

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† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of April 2019

june 2019 55

honor roll of donors

Simon MichalAmy MichalakMrs. Edward MillerFloyd and Elizabeth 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 MoltzIan and Robyn MoncriefDr. Anthony Montag † and

Dr. Katherine GriemHugh and Della Rae MooreMalcolm MooreLloyd and Donna MorganSanford and Monica MorgansteinJoyce and Rick MorimotoAnn T. MoroneyMrs. MaryLouise MorrisonWayne L. Mory and Marcia SnyderDavid MoscowMr. Vijai MosesMs. Vanessa MossAllison MoultonJT Mueller and Jennifer LiuPhyllis and Zane MuhlLuigi H. MumfordMr. Henry MunezMr. Mark NaborMr. Robert NapierMs. Victoria NeeMr. & Mrs. Herbert Neil, Jr.Deborah J. NelsonKay A. NelsonMr. Wayne NelsonMr. Wayne NestanderMr. John NewmanMr. Robert NewmanMs. Hathuy NguyenRichard NiJeff NicholsMs. Sylvette NicoliniMr. John NighMr. William NovshekMr. & Mrs. James NowackiMark and Gloria NusbaumMr. & Mrs. † Bernard NusinowMrs. Susan NutsonMr. Douglas NygaardMr. & Mrs. Delano O’BanionMargo and Michael ObermanDr. Dragic ObradovicMr. Álvaro R. ObregónDr. Kathryn Occhipinti and

Jerome WojciechowshiMs. Christina OchsBrendan O’ConnorJames J. and Ellen O’Connor

Barbara and Larry OlinSarah and Wallace OliverMr. Arne OlsonLarry and Karen OlsonMr. Thomas O’Neill IIIMr. & Mrs. Paul OppenheimDr. Michael OrenKathleen Field OrrMs. Maria OrtizMr. Ronald OrzelMichael and Rebecca OwenGarry and Joanne OwensDaniela PaganiRichard and Carolyn PalasMs. Joan PantsiosDan and Diane ParrlliMr. & Mrs. Charles R. Patten, Jr.Mr. Mark PattisMr. & Mrs. Dan PeichlHarold E. † and Marcia A. Pendexter, Jr.Ms. Ana Luz Perez DuranRobert & Barbara PerkausMs. Bertha PerlowMs. Dona PerryMr. & Mrs. † James PetersMrs. Victorina PetersonMs. Lynn PetrelliRita PetrettiMrs. Jana PharissGenevieve PhelpsMr. & Mrs. Robert G. PierceRob and Mindy PierceKaren and Dick PigottDr. & Mrs. V.K.G. PillayLee Ann and Savit PirlMr. & Mrs. Joel PokornyDon and Martha PollakMr. & Mrs. Byron PollockMr. John PorterDr. William PorterAllan and Carla PriceMr. & Mrs. Brad PriceD. Elizabeth PriceJean M. and R. PriceMs. Eleanor PrinceBarry and Elizabeth PritchardRodney L. PruittDrs. Joseph and Kimberly PyleMr. Duaine QuainiChris and Elizabeth QuiggMs. Cheryl QuinlanMirjam QuinnMr. Robert Rada †Dr. Homer RaddenMs. Bobbie RaffertyMs. Tara RaghavanAnna Rappaport and Peter W. PlumleyMr. Jeffrey RappinDr. & Mrs. Pradeep RattanMs. Carol RechMrs. Caroline Reed †Jack W. ReevesMs. Catherine Reiter

Mr. 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 RiegerMr. & 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 RooneyWilliam J. RosasAl 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 RubensteinMs. Emmie RuffinMr. & Ms. Kevin A. RussellMs. Mary RussellDr. Wilmer RuttPatrick Ryan and Mary McBridePriscilla E. Ryan and Frank BattleMrs. Martha SabranskyDrs. David and Karen SagerAnna Salman and Brian DeRosaDr. † & Mrs. Edwin SalterBettylu and Paul SaltzmanMr. Alfred SalvinoSuzanne G. SamuelsMr. & Mrs. Lawrence SauterMichael and Judith SawyierMs. Annette SayreKathleen and Anthony SchaefferRobert P. SchaibleScott SchepkeMrs. Rebecca ScheweMr. & Mrs. John SchladweilerJeremy Schlee

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† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of April 2019

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honor roll of donors

Mrs. Julie SchmidtMr. Robert SchmidtBarbara and Lewis SchneiderMs. Marcia SchneiderJohn J. and Barbara L. SchornackMr. & Mrs. Steve SchuetteMs. Virginia Hall SchulteGerald and Barbara SchultzEdward and Irma SchwartzJohn SchwartzSusan and Charles SchwartzMs. Terry 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. ShieldsSusan Shimmin and David TeklerCarolyn M. ShortEllen and Richard ShubartMs. Judith SiabaChian Ban SiauMs. Debra SiegelMr. & Mrs. Thomas SilbermanDr. Rita Simó and Mr. Tomás BissonnetteMr. Jack SimpsonMr. 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 SobekIn Memory of Timothy SoleimanMr. Ethan SolomonJudith SommersDr. Stuart SondheimerMs. Sondra SonnebornMrs. Hugo SonnenscheinMr. Alexander SozdatelevMs. Vesselina SpassovaMr. George SpeckMr. Michael SprinkerAnne-Marie St. GermaineMrs. Julie StaglianoCharles and Joan StaplesMrs. Marjorie K. StaplesMs. Denise StauderMs. Sue StealeyMs. Corinne SteedeMr. & Mrs. Eric Steele

George and Julie SteffenCarol D. SteinMr. Andrew SteinwoldMr. & Mrs. Ronald StepanskyMrs. Marjorie H. StephanMr. & Mrs. Mark SternMr. Bradley SterrenbergMs. Karen StevensMs. Kathleen StewartCharles and Catherine StichPatrick 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 SullivanMr. & Mrs. Paul 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 TambuatcoSamuel TaniosMr. Charles TauscheMr. Frank TenBrinkMrs. Florence & Ron TestaThachana ThanakitcharuMr. Markell ThrashMr. & Mrs. Myron TierskyMr. Steve TomashefskyMr. Mark TomassiniMs. Tatia TorreyBruce and Jan TranenJames M. and Carol TrappDr. Carol Ann TrautMrs. Sally TreKellMs. Joanne TremulisSteve & Jocelyn TrokenheimMrs. Robert TrotterMs. Corina TsangDr. Sabrina S. TsaoMr. Jay TunneyMrs. Jean M. UnsworthEllen and Jerry UptonMr. Theodore UtchenMr. & Mrs. Allan VagnerRuben A. ValadezMs. Betty VandenboschFrances and Peter VandervoortMs. Barbara Van DrielDr. Eladio VargasJose Vargas

Mr. David J. VarnerinTodd and Cari ViereggMs. Linda VincentMr. John VinciMs. Carol VixMs. Darla VollrathDr. Malcolm V. Vye and Ms. Sherie SteinMs. Beth WaiteRobert 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 WeissenselLinda WelshDrs. Anne and Dennis WentzMs. Patricia WerhaneMr. Donald WertzDr. & Mrs. Robert WertzMrs. Walter WesleyMs. Caroline WetterstenAllen WheatcroftMr. John WheelerPeter and Valerie WhitcupFrank White and Sierra KellyDr. Wesley WhiteMr. & Mrs. † William WhiteMrs. William WhiteMs. Susan WhitingDr. & Mrs. Lawrence WickMr. Eric Wicks and Ms. Linda BakerJamie Wigglesworth AIARobert J. Wilczek † and Shirley PfenningMrs. Albert Williams, Jr. †Jennifer D. WilliamsNorman WilliamsScott R. Williamson and

Susanna E. KrentzNorma E. Davis WillisPeter and Michele WillmottMr. Robert WilsonDr. Wendall WilsonMartha Wiltsie †Ted Windsor & Associates

Consulting ActuariesDr. Doris Wineman, Ph.D.Dr. Lawrence WinerMr. & Mrs. Alex WinklerCaroline WinnMs. Ann WinshipHerbert and Ruth Winter FoundationMs. Florence WintersRita WiseMr. Michael WislekPaul Wochinske & Kathleen RattereeBarbara and Steven Wolf

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honor roll of donors

Duain WolfePeggy and Ted WolffMr. Joseph Wolnski and

Ms. Jane ChristinoDr. Christopher and Julie WoodJudge Diane Wood and Dr. Robert SufitMark & Randi WoodworthProf. Robert WoottonElizabeth WrightMrs. Jane Stroud WrightDennis XieDr. Robert B. YahrDr. Nanajan YakoubDr. Travis Yamanaka and Yuri YatsudaIn memory of Anthony C. YuDr. Robert G. ZadylakMrs. IdaLynn ZahourKarl and Joan C. ZeislerMs. Mary ZeltmannIrene Ziaya and Paul ChaitkinMs. Susan ZickThe Charles A. Zika FamilyDrs. Donald Zimmerman and

Susan PearlsonMike ZimmermanMr. & Mrs. Martin E. ZimmermanDr. & 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 aboveAnonymous (1)Elizabeth F. Cheney FoundationJudson and Joyce GreenThe Julian Family FoundationThe Negaunee Foundation

$100,000 –$149,999Allstate Insurance CompanyThe James and Madeleine McMullan

Family FoundationPolk Bros. FoundationMegan and Steve Shebik

$75 ,000 –$99,999John Hart and Carol PrinsJudy and Scott McCueRose Shure Trust

$50,000 –$74 ,999Anonymous (1)Abbott FundAlphawood FoundationBarker Welfare FoundationRobert and Joanne Crown Income

Charitable FundLloyd A. Fry FoundationEllen and Paul GignilliatNancy Lauter McDougal and

Alfred L. McDougal †National Endowment for the ArtsThe Rhoades FoundationBarbara and Barre Seid FoundationMichael and Linda Simon

$35 ,000 –$49,999Anonymous (1)Bowman C. Lingle TrustMichael G. Woll Fund at the

Pauls Foundation

$25 ,000 –$34 ,999Anonymous (1)Leslie Fund, Inc.PNCWintrust Financial Corp.Helen and Sam Zell

$20,000 –$2 4 ,999Illinois Arts Council AgencyRichard P. and Susan Kiphart FamilyPrince Charitable TrustsCharles and M. R. Shapiro FoundationThe George L. Shields FoundationMr. Irving Stenn, Jr.

$15 ,000 –$19,999Anonymous (1)Dora J. and R. John AalbregtseBruce and Martha Clinton for The Clinton

Family FundSue and Jim CollettiMr. Jerry J. CritserRobert Kohl and Clark PellettMr. Russ LymanSandra and Earl Rusnak, Jr.Dr. Marylou Witz

$11,500 –$14 ,999Dr. June KoizumiEvelyn Meine Ensemble

Engagement Fund

$7,500 –$11, 499Robert & Isabelle Bass Foundation, Inc.Mr. Lawrence BellesThe Buchanan Family Foundation

Mr. Lawrence CorryMr. † & Mrs. David A. DonovanMr. & Mrs. Allan DrebinAnne H. EvansMr. & Mrs. Robert GeraghtyMr. & Mrs. Joseph B. GlossbergRichard and Alice GodfreyChet Gougis and Shelley OchabMary Winton GreenThe League of the Chicago Symphony

Orchestra AssociationLing Z. and Michael C. MarkovitzMs. Susan NorvichGerald † and Mona PennerMs. Judy PomeranzMrs. John Shedd Reed †Robert E. † and Cynthia M. SargentThe Siragusa FoundationMs. Liisa M. Thomas and

Mr. Stephen L. PrattPenny and John Van Horn

$4 ,500 –$7, 499Anonymous (1)Robert H. Baum and MaryBeth KretzBlue Cross Blue Shield of IllinoisMr. Donald BousemanMs. Marion A. CameronAnn and Richard CarrMr. & Ms. Keith ClaytonMari Hatzenbuehler CravenMr. & Mrs. Bernard DunkelDr. & Mrs. Eugene and Jean StarkDr. Alexia GordonDr. & Mrs. James HollandMr. James Kastenholz and

Ms. Jennifer SteansMs. Barbara Lieber †Milne Family FoundationDavid and Dolores NelsonMr. & Mrs. William J. O’NeillMs. Judy RungeMs. Cecelia SamansDr. Scholl FoundationSegal ConsultingThe Navarre Law FirmTheodore and Elisabeth Wachs

$2 ,500 –$4 , 499Anonymous (1)Ms. Patti AcurioAlfredo and Ada Capitanini FoundationArts Midwest Touring FundDaniel and Michele BeckerCharles H. and Bertha L.

Boothroyd FoundationMr. Douglas BraganThe Brinson FoundationPatricia A. ClickenerDr. Edward A. Cole and

Dr. Christine A. RydelMary Ellen Cooney and Ken Higgins †Anita J. Court, Ph.D.

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† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of April 2019

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Ms. Jane CoxDan and Paula WiseMrs. Carol Evans, in memory of

Henry EvansMs. Irene FoxCamillo and Arlene GhironWilliam B. HinchliffSusie Forstmann KealyEsther G. KlatzAnne E. Leibowitz FundMr. Edward MackEdward & Lucy R. Minor

Family FoundationDr. Leo and Catherine MiserendinoMaria and Carl E. MooreMr. & Mrs. Stephen MoralesMrs. Frank MorrisseyMr. & Mrs. Thomas D. PhilipsbornMs. Kimberly PickenpaughMary and Joseph PlauchéBenjamin J. Rosenthal FoundationDavid and Judith L. SensibarJessie Shih and Johnson HoMs. Adena StabenMr. Hal StewartLaurence and Caryn StrausWalter and Caroline Sueske

Charitable TrustMr. & Mrs. William & Joan TrukenbrodMr. Peter Vale

$1,000 –$2 , 499Anonymous (7)Mr. Edward Amrein, Jr. and

Mrs. Sara Jones-AmreinMr. & Mrs. Andrew DudaDr. Smiljana AntonijevicGregory Yuri AronoffMr. Sinan AtacJack S. AtenAthena FundCatherine Baker and Timothy KentJon W. and Diane BalkeMr. Carroll BarnesMr. & Mrs. John BarnesMr. Peter BarrettWilliam BartleyMs. Barbara BarzanskyHoward and Donna BassMichael and Gail BauerPatti and Nebil BenaissaMichelle BennettMs. Susan BennettMr. & Mrs. William E. BibleMs. Ludmila BidwellMr. James BorkmanAdam BossovMyrna R. BromleyMr. Lee M. Brown, Mr. John B. Newman,

and Ms. Pixie NewmanMr. & Mrs. Samuel BuchsbaumMr. & Mrs. Kenneth J. Burns, Jr.John D. and Leslie Henner Burns

Ms. Vera CappDonald & Linda CassilMr. & Mrs. Candelario CelioJayson and Elizabeth CheeverMr. Wesley M. ClarkMr. Jonathan CollinsMr. & Mrs. Bill CottleMr. Bert CrosslandConstance CwiokMelissa and Gordon DavisRomke de HaanLinda and Peter DiDonatoMr. Frank DileonardoMs. Joan D. DonovanMs. Ana Luz Perez DuranGary and Deborah EdidinNancy EibeckRobert S. and Ardyth J. EisenbergElk Grove GraphicsMs. Paula ElliottCharles and Carol EmmonsMrs. Walter D. FacklerTarek and Ann FadelJudith E. FeldmanJoy FettDr. & Mrs. Sanford Finkel, in honor of the

Civic Horn SectionEvelyn T. FitzpatrickMs. Lola FlammMrs. Roslyn K. FlegelBeth Healy & Mike FordneyJerry Freedman & Elizabeth SacksMr. M. FrenkelMr. George Frerichs and

Ms. Cheryl D. McIntyreDr. & Mrs. Ronald GanellenGenerations DentalLawrence and Amy GillumMrs. Amy G. Gordon and

Mr. Michael D. GordonCharles Grode and Heidi LukasHalasmani/Davis FamilyMr. & Mrs. John HalesJohn and Patricia HamiltonMrs. Valerie HeintzMs. Dawn E. HelwigMr. Thomas C. HennigerBarbara and Jim HerstJames & Megan HinchsliffSuzanne Hoffman and Dale SmithMr. 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 KezelisMr. Howard KiddKinder MorganAnna Z. KleymenovaMs. Leah Laurie

Ms. Ruby LawMr. & Mrs. Stewart LiechtiDr. Herbert & Francine LippitzMs. Alma LizcanoMr. † & Mrs. Gerald F. LoftusMr. Glen J. Madeja and Ms. Janet SteidlMs. Janice MagnusonMs. Jeanne MalkinMs. Margaret A. MaloneMs. Amy B. Manning and

Mr. Paul C. ZiebertRobert & Doretta MarwinDr & Mrs. Daniel MassMs. Catherine MastersMs. Adele MayerMr. † & Mrs. George MazeRosa and Peter McCullaghJim and Ginger MeyerMr. Robert MiddletonFloyd and Elizabeth MillerMs. Annet MirandaAnn T. MoroneyWayne L. Mory and Marcia SnyderAllison MoultonDeborah J. NelsonEdward and Gayla NieminenMrs. Susan NutsonMr. Álvaro R. ObregónMarjory OlikerMr. Bruce OltmanDr. Michael OrenMs. Joan PantsiosDan and Diane ParrlliDianne M. and Robert J. Patterson, Jr.Eugene and Lois PavalonMs. Shauna PeetPoetry FoundationMr. John PorterSusan and Joseph A. Power, Jr.D. Elizabeth PriceMark & Nancy RatnerHarper ReedAl and Lynn ReichleDr. Hilda RichardsMiles and Peggy RidgwayMary K. RingMr. Paul RinkMr. Alexander RipleyDr. Wilmer RuttDrs. David and Karen SagerMr. David SandfortMr. Laurence SaviersMrs. Rebecca ScheweMr. & Mrs. Albert SchlachtmeyerMr. Robert SchmidtGerald and Barbara SchultzMr. & Mrs. Thomas ScorzaStephen A. and Marilyn ScottThomas and Nancy SharpThe Honorable John B. Simon and

Mrs. Millie Rosenbloom SimonMr. Larry SimpsonDr. Sabine Sobek

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† Deceased ** FellowItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of April 2019

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honor roll of donors

Dr. & Mrs. R. SolaroMr. Alexander SozdatelevMrs. Julie StaglianoMs. Denise StauderMr. Andrew SteinwoldMr. & Mrs. Steve SchuetteMr. Frederick Sturm and

Ms. Deborah GillaspieSharon SwansonMrs. Florence & Ron TestaMs. 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 WinshipPaul Wochinske & Kathleen RattereeMark & Randi WoodworthCheryl B. and James T. WormleyElizabeth WrightDavid and Eileen ZampaMolly Ziegler and Karen WhittIrene Ziaya and Paul Chaitkin

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

centennial season sponsorsThe Centennial Campaign for the Civic Orchestra of Chicago and Chicago Symphony Orchestra concert series for children is supported with a generous lead gift from The Julian Family Foundation.

The 2018–19 Civic Centennial season is sponsored by The Elizabeth F. Cheney Foundation.

Major support for the Centennial season is provided by an Anonymous Family Foundation, Dora J. and R. John Aalbregtse, Mr. and Mrs. William Adams IV, John Hart and Carol Prins, Robert Kohl and Clark Pellett, Judy and Scott McCue, Nancy Lauter McDougal and Alfred L. † McDougal, The Negaunee Foundation, The Osprey Foundation, Megan and Steve Shebik, Michael and Linda Simon, and Penny and John Van Horn.

We are also thankful to the following donors for making a special commitment during our Centennial seasons: Anonymous, Ms. Patti Acurio, Mr. & Mrs. William E. Bible, Mr. James Borkman, Ann and Richard Carr, Tarek and Ann Fadel, Camillo and Arlene Ghiron, Dr. Alexia Gordon, Halasmani/Davis Family, Ms. Ruby Law, Stewart and Susan Liechti, Mrs. Frank Morrissey, Allison Moulton, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas D. Philipsborn, Gerald and Barbara Schultz, Ms. Corina Tsang, and In Memory of Edward Zasadil.

To make your gift in support of the Centennial season, please contact the CSO Development office at [email protected] or 312-294-3100.

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 musi-cian(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.

To learn more, please call Bobbie Rafferty, Director of Individual Giving, 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

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† Deceased ** FellowItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of April 2019

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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

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

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 of Endowment Gifts and Planned Giving, at 312-294-3150.

stradivarian associatesThe Chicago Symphony Orchestra is pleased to recognize the following individuals 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 April 2019.

Anonymous (9)Dora J. and R. John AalbregtseLisa J. AdelsteinEvy Johansen AlsakerRobert A. AlsakerGeoffrey A. AndersonMychal P. Angelos, in memory of

Dorothy A. AngelosDr. Jeff BaleLeland and Mary BartholomewMarlys A. BeiderDr. C. BekermanMartha BellMike and Donna BellCeline BendyJulie Ann Benson

K. Richard and Patricia M. BerletMerrill and Judy BlauAnn BlickensderferDanolda BrennanMr. Leon Brenner, Jr.Mitchell J. BrownMr. 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 GornoDr. & 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 PellettEdwin and Karen KramerMr. & 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 MoorCraig and Rose MooreCharles MooreMr. & Mrs. Mario A. Munoz

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honor roll of donors

John 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 SilverMr. 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 VinyardDr. 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. Callahan

Dr. & 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 ElledgeCharles and Carol EmmonsTarek and Ann FadelJames B. FadimLeslie FarrellDonna FeldmanFrances and Henry FogelAllen J. FrantzenGustave D. FriesemNancy and Larry FullerDileep GangolliMr. William E. GardnerMiss Elizabeth GatzDr. & Mrs. Mark GendlemanMrs. 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 HeinrichWilliam B. HinchliffMrs. Morris H. HirshMr. Thomas HochmanMrs. Walter HorbanJames and Mary HoustonMr. James HumphreyMrs. Marian JohnsonMs. Janet JonesMarshall KeltzValerie and George KennedyPaul KeskeMr. & Mrs. Frank L. Klapperich, Jr.Mrs. LeRoy Klemt

Sally 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 MallowSharon L. ManuelMrs. John J. MarkhamKathleen W. MarkiewiczJudith W. McCue and

Howard M. McCue IIIMr. 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 Simpson

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Mr. 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. ValeFrank VillellaMr. Milan VydarenyDr. Malcolm VyeAdam R. Walker and BettyAnn MocekMr. Frank WalschlagerLouella Krueger WardDr. Catherine L. WebbKarl WechterClaude M. WeilJoan and Marco WeissMr. Thomas WeylandLinda and Payson S. WildKayla 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. Anderson and Ruth T. AndersonFaye AngellElizabeth M. AshtonIrwin AskowJames E.S. BakerJacqueline and Frank BallWayne BalmerPaul BarkerPatricia Anne Barton

Barbara 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 BrownDr. Mary Louise Hirsch BurgerMarie Kraemer BurnsideNorma CadieuElizabeth R. CapilupoRose Mary CarterCharles R. CasperMargaret G. ChamalesMarcia 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. FordhamRichard FosterEtha Beatrice FoxElaine S. FrankHenry S. FrankHerbert B. FriedDr. Muriel S. FriedmanHynda and Maurice GamzeFlorence GanjaAlan J. GarberMrs. Helen S. GardnerMartin and Francey GechtBetsy N. and James R. GetzJeanne Brown GordonBarbara L. GouldElizabeth S. GraettingerWilliam B. GrahamRichard GrayDavid GreenAllen J. Greenberger

Dr. 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 HoheiselAllen 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 PertSadie LapinskyH. 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 Mohr

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† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of April 2019

june 2019 63

honor roll of donors

Edward 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. PlautCharles 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. RohdeIrmgard 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. Snell

Karen A. SorensenGeorgette Grosz SpertusEdward J. and Audrey M. SpiegelVito StaglianoLucille G. and David W. StotterThe Family of Helmut and Irma StraussDr. 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 WallachJean Angus and Ferre C. WatkinsVirginia O. WeaverAnn Dow WeinbergJames M. WellsBarbara Huth WestJoyce Hadley WilliamsArnold 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 April 2019.

memorial gif ts

In memory of Ruth AndersonJames and Carol KlenkLarry Simpson

In memory of Marshall BennettKay Bucksbaum

In memory of Sally J BensonDorothy J Benson

In memory of John R. BlairBarbara Blair

In memory of Gary A. DavisSteven Andes

In memory of David DonovanLisa and Paul Wiggin

In memory of Bob DrinanElizabeth Scott

In memory of Robert L. Drinan, Jr.Lisa Haberman

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. and Mrs. Louis M. Ebling III

In memory of Cecile Renaud GornoLynne R. Haarlow

In memory of Richard GrayJudy and Scott McCueDaniel LevinBeatrice MayerJohn Hart and Carol Prins

In memory of William J. HokinSusan Drymalski BoweyMr. Matthew ColnonAnonymous

In memory of Bernard H. HolstEdith A. Holst

In memory of Zave Hillel GussinNathan Kahn

In memory of Gary GuttingSarah SmithUniversity of Notre Dame

For Mrs. Anne Kern, in memory of your loving husband JohnWilliam and Anne Goldstein

In memory of beloved parents Arthur and Ruth KochAnn and Bob Reiland

In memory of Ed KoleskeDorothy Erickson

In memory of Nancy LoewenbergSusan Carlins

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† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of April 2019

64 cso.org

honor roll of donors

In memory of Bez MayhallGrant Larsen

In memory of Bernice and Earl MeltzerMrs. Judy Lewis

In memory of Albert NagyAndrea Stamm

In memory of Betty Fae NusinowMr. Bernard Nusinow

In memory of William OchabJohn and Dora Aalbregtse

In memory of my beautiful and loving Aunt Betty Piper, who loved the CSOAnne Nguyen

In memory of Ruth Ann QuinnPhil and Gaye Kenny

In memory of Mrs. John Shedd ReedRichard A. and Janice Y. Domanik

In memory of Marjorie Lindsay ReedPamela K Hull

In memory of Bennett ReimerElizabeth A. Herbert

In memory of Virginia H. Rogers and Arthur E. Leckner, Jr.Robert Wilson

In memory of Haley Ann Royko, our beloved granddaughterRuth Smerling

In memory of Dolores SavinPam and Charles Meyerson

In memory of Alan L. ShulmanJune Shulman

In memory of Fred SpectorChicago Symphony Orchestra

Alumni Association

In memory of Andrea SwanDavid Moore

In memory of Ruth SwislowJudy and Gary KatzMary Sara McDonald and Daniel PascaleJerry and Maia Mullin

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 Dr. Edward L. Applebaum and Dr. Eva E. RedeiFrieda Applebaum

In honor of Peter Barack’s birthdayNorm and Judy Soep

In honor of Jonathan Becker’s birthdayBonnie Forkosh, Dick Cohen, and

Dave Cutler

In honor of Ann BlickensderferGregory O’Leary

In honor of David ChambersMs. Priscilla Angly

In honor of Robert CoadDavid ShayneMr. & Mrs. Marco Weiss

In honor of Edith Demar’s birthdaySteve and Susan Maynard

In honor of the upcoming marriage of Larry DeMar and Amy MayLove, the Rosens and the Marks

(Kurt, Jennifer, Robin, Peter, Madeline)Ian Rosen

In honor of Glenn DerringerJanet Duffy

In honor of Janet Diederich’s 90th birthdayYen-Li Thompson

In honor of Daniel GingrichBarbara Meyer

In honor of Paul B. Glickman—Happy BirthdayPhilip and Leah Marcus

In honor of Gloria Gottlieb’s new great granddaughter RemiMrs. Helaine Billings

In honor of Judson and Joyce GreenMr. & Mrs. Kaplan

In honor of Mrs. Lori JulianRobert T. and Catherine B. Napier

In honor of Chuck KachelPat Daley

In honor of Mary PlauchePamela and Paul James

In honor of the birthday of Cindy SargentPaul and Ellen Gignilliat

In honor of Dr. John and Mrs. Connie SkoseyLaura

In honor of Denise StauderJanet Duffy

In honor of Richard and Helen ThomasDawn Kerth

In honor of Helen and Sam ZellMs. Myrna KaplanNancy and Don Borzak

league of the chicago symphony orchestra association tribute program

In memory of Dorothy ClarkBetsy BeckmannHelene BellMim DugingerSarah GoodRenèe LubellThe Spice Investment ClubJacqueline Spillman

In memory of William FaldnerSheri Hammonds

In memory of Robert GuidoPenny and John Van Horn

In memory of Robert F. JaegerSusan and Nicholas Bridge

In memory of John KernPenny and John Van Horn

In memory of Helen MelherBetsy BeckmannHazel Fackler

In memory of Ruth Ann QuinnHazel FacklerPenny and John Van Horn

In memory of Faye StopeckMargo and Mike Oberman

In memory of Ruth SwislowMaureen ShellyPenny and John Van Horn

In memory of Claire Ellen WilsonBeth Lodal

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† DeceasedItalics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.Gifts listed as of April 2019

june 2019 65

honor roll of donors

In honor of the Civic Orchestra CentennialNatalie and Paul SikesElizabeth and Maureen ShellyBetsy and Enrique Beckmann

In honor of Heratch and Sonya DoumanianThe Streeterville Area of the League of

the CSOA

In honor of Barbara DwyerClaretta Meier

In honor of Mimi DugingerPenny and John Van Horn

In honor of Lori JulianRobert MarksMargo and Michael ObermanKathy and John SolaroThe Streeterville Area of the League of

the CSOA

In honor of Maestro MutiSheila Jones and Hope College

Preparatory High School

In honor of Molly McGrath’s art works being exhibited in New YorkBonnie McGrath

In honor of Linda and Bill Ward’s 50th wedding anniversaryBarbara Dwyer

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 Group

Bridges Mavrakakis LLPBrightwok KitchenWilliam BuchmanRobert J. BufordBulgariSarah BullenJohn D. and Leslie Henner BurnsElliot Callighan, Ramova MusicCapstone Financial AdvisorsOto CarrilloLi-Kuo ChangChicago BearsChicago Cultural CenterChicago MagazineChicago Tribune CompanyCivitasDLA Piper LLP (US)Drury Lane TheaterEmmett’s BreweryMelissa 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 AssociatesHispanicProHotel Santa FeIron Galaxy StudiosIwan Ries & Co.Jet’s PizzaRobb Jibson, So MidwestGabrielle JohnsonKathy JordanNicholas JosephLori JulianCarole KellerAnne and John † KernLagunitas Brewing Co.Lincoln Park ZooYo-Yo MaBeth Mannino and Paul SchickMaple & AshMayer Brown LLPJudy and Scott McCueMcKinsey & Company

Metropolitan BrewingNational Hispanic Sales NetworkNicado Publishing / NegociosNowShelley Ochab and Chester GougisCathy and Bill OsbornJonathan PegisSara and Chris PfaffPianoForteGene PokornyPricewaterhouseCoopers LLPR. Crusoe & SonAnna and Iliana ReganJohn RogersThe Santa Fe OperaScott and Nancy SantiLora SchaeferCourtney SheaSteve and Megan ShebikShow ServicesSlover Linett StrategiesJames SmelserMike Smith, Photographic

Services InternationalSoldier FieldThe Sound Co-Op, LLCSpring Mountain VineyardsSteinway Piano Gallery ChicagoMichelle SterlingSusan SynnestvedtBrant TaylorDavid TaylorBenjamin TeichmanTheatrical Lighting ConnectionThink-cellTime Out ChicagoTootsie RollUnion StationUnited AirlinesVirginia WoolfVirtue CiderWalgreensWBBMWBEZWDCBWFMTWheaton CollegeChris WhiteJohn WilliamsWLS-FMWrigley FieldWXRTCynthia YehYuan-Qing YuSam and Helen Zell

Page 68: CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA RICCARDO MUTI …program concludes with Gershwin’s An American in Paris. Next, Muti closes the season with three highly anticipated performances of Verdi’s

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