EMERITUS BOARD
Opera Fairbanks thanks
the members of our Emeritus Board for their time and dedication to
our company and to the world of music.
Gloria
Marinacci Allen
- Former Opera,
Concert, and Musical Theatre singing actress Gloria Marinacci Allen
has performed in 40 major and 18 minor operatic and musical theatre
roles throughout the United States and abroad; sharing the stage
with such luminaries as Beverly Sills, Dame Joan Sutherland, Sheryl
Milnes, Franco Corelli, Richard Tucker and others. She has appeared
in concert as the “warm up” act for the late Jack Benny and Danny
Kaye. On an international level, she performed numerous concerts
throughout Europe, the Mid-East, the Far-East and Great Britain,
making repeated command performances before the Queen of Thailand,
and the late Princess Grace and Prince Ranier of Monaco. Ms.
Allen’s passion for the works of Stephen Sondheim brought her back
to stage in 1989 for “FOLLIES” in LA and San Diego. Subsequently she
did roles in ”NUNSENSE”, “BIG RIVER”, “PHANTOM” and “ME and MY
GIRL.” Gloria Allen’s greatest thrill was achieved when she was
given the opportunity to portray a woman she had admired since her
college days— Maria Callas – in Terrence McNally’s “MASTER
CLASS. She has been a large-scale events planner and in 2001 was
Director of Ceremonies and Special events for the Special Olympics
World Winter Games, repeating that role for the World Summer Wheel
Chair Games in 2006. During her singing career, Ms. Allen became
interested in opera education and was involved in the development of
several programs for Seattle Opera, Portland Opera and Anchorage
Opera. She is currently producing school and community outreach
programs to make the joy of opera more easily understood by
youngsters and by adults alike. Ms. Allen is presently Artistic
Director of Opera Las Vegas.
Maestro
Gregory Buchalter
- Artistic Director and Conductor
Gregory Buchalter received rave reviews for performances of
Salome with the Savonlinna Opera Festival in Finland with Maria
Ewing and Helga Dernesch. He has conducted at the Vienna Volksoper
and was the first American to conduct with the Kazakstan State
Opera. Recently appointed Artistic Director and Conductor of Opera
Camerata of Washington Opera, Mr. Buchalter is the chorus master of
the Santa Fe Opera and a member of the music staff at the
Metropolitan Opera. The position of “Maestro di Banda” was created
at the Met for Maestro Buchalter, where he has been chorus master
for such productions as the telecast of the Franco Zeferelli
production of Don Giovanni and Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess.
He has prepared several world premieres at the Met: John
Corigliano’s The Ghosts of Versailles, Phillip Glass’s The
Voyage and John Harbison’s The Great Gatsby. At the
Santa Fe Opera, he was instrumental in preparing the American
premiere of Salinnen’s The King Goes Forth To France. Mr.
Buchalter founded his own chorus in 1992, “Choros Aristos,” and led
them in a performance of Rossini’s Petite Messe Solennelle at
New York’s Merkin Hall. As pianist, conductor, lecturer, and vocal
coach he has toured extensively in the United States and to locales
such as Cairo, Kuwait, Malaysia, Turkey, and Hong Kong.
Dominic
Cossa
– Acclaimed Metropolitan Opera Baritone Dominic Cossa has performed
a repertoire of over 50 operas and concertized worldwide . His
extensive roles include Germont in La Traviata, Zurga in
The Pearlfishers, Figaro in The Barber of Seville,
Pierrot in Die Tote Stadt, and Yeletsky in Pique Dame.
Mr. Cossa has performed at the Metropolitan, New York City, and San
Francisco Opera companies, as well as Washington, Houston, Montreal,
Vancouver, Philadelphia; with the New York Philharmonic, the Chicago
Symphony, the Boston Symphony, and the Israel Philharmonic under
eminent conductors such as Ozawa, Bernstein, and Solti. His
recording credits include Julius Caesar with Beverly Sills,
Les Huguenots with Dame Joan Sutherland, L’Elisir d’Amore
with Luciano Pavarotti, and When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard
Bloom’d with the Boston Symphony. Giancarlo Menotti invited Mr.
Cossa to appear in two world premieres: The Hero and
Tamu-Tamu. Mr. Cossa is presently Chair of the Voice/Opera
division of the University of Maryland School of Music.
Phyllis
Curtin
– American soprano Phyllis Curtin made her operatic debut as the
Countess in The Marriage of Figaro with the New England Opera
Theatre in 1946 before going on to international acclaim. Ms.
Curtin’s Town Hall debut was in 1950. She debuted with New York City
Opera as three heroines in The Trial by von Einum in 1953 and
continued performances in that venue to 1960. Ms. Curtin was
featured by the Metropolitan Opera in 1961, 1966-1970, and 1972-73.
She also made appearances at the Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires, the
Glyndebourne Festival, the Vienna State Opera, and La Scala. Ms.
Curtin created roles in several world premieres including Floyd’s
Susannah, Floyd’s Wuthering Heights, Milhaud’s La Mère
Coupable, and Floyd’s The Passion of Jonathan Wade. Her
American premieres include Britten’s Peter Grimes, Britten’s
War Requiem, Milhaud’s Medea and Shostakovich’s
Symphony No. 14. Ms. Curtin has concertized worldwide and
recorded extensively, receiving Grammy nominations for the
Shostakovich and Ginastera’s Milena. A former
artist-in-residence at Aspen Music Festival and professor of voice
and Master of Branford College at Yale University, Ms. Curtin is
artist-in-residence and head of vocal studies at the Tanglewood
Music Center. She has also taught in Canada, China, England, and
Russia. She has served on the National Council for the Arts and was
designated a U.S. Ambassador for the Arts. Ms. Curtin is presently
Artistic Director of the Opera Institute and Dean Emerita of Boston
University’s College of Fine Arts.
Maestro
Plácido Domingo
-
Plácido Domingo is renowned worldwide as a singer,
conductor and arts administrator. He has sung 123 roles, more than
any other tenor in history, performed in every major opera house and
made well over 100 recordings, garnering nine Grammy Awards and two
Latin Grammies. He has made more than 50 videos and three
theatrically released films: La Traviata, Otello and
Carmen. More than one billion people in 117 nations saw his live
telecast of Tosca from the authentic Roman locations. After
serving as artistic director of LA Opera and Washington National
Opera, he became general director of both companies in 2003. He
founded Operalia, the biggest annual international vocal
competition, discovering many singers who now enjoy international
stardom. In recent years he has been awarded the Kennedy Center
Honor, Presidential Medal of Freedom, France’s Commandeur de la
Legion d’Honneur, an Honorary Knighthood of the British Empire and
an Oxford Doctorate. This season’s conducting engagements include
Madama Butterfly in Washington and Valencia, Tosca in
Vienna and La Bohème at the Met. Singing engagements include
Siegmund
in Washington and with the
Kirov Opera in Orange County; Alfano’s
Cyrano de Bergerac
in Valencia; Vidal Hernando in Luisa Fernanda with LA Opera;
and the title role in the world premiere of Tan Dun’s The First
Emperor at the Metropolitan Opera, his 124th role.
Carlisle
Floyd
– One of the foremost opera composers and librettists in the world
today, Carlisle Floyd has “captured the American spirit” in his
music. Blessed with an artistic soul, he has been a painter and
writer as well as a composer. His most famous works include
Susannah, Of Mice and Men, and Cold Sassy Tree.
Susannah premiered in 1955 and has since been performed in
every major American city as well as in England and Germany, and is
the subject of multiple recordings. Other operas by Mr. Floyd
include Bilby’s Doll, Willie Stark, The Soujourner
and Mollie Sinclair, Flower and Hawk, Markheim,
Slow Dusk, The Passion of Jonathan Wade, and Wuthering
Heights. Mr. Floyd served on the Music Panel for the National
Endowment for the Arts and was the first chairman of the NEA’s
Opera/Musical Theatre Panel upon its creation in 1976. His work has
been commissioned by the Ford Foundation, Kennedy Center Foundation,
New York City Opera, Santa Fe Opera, Houston Grand Opera, and
Greater Miami Opera. Mr. Floyd is Professor Emeritus of Composition
at the University of Houston.
Thomas
Jaber
– Professor of Music, Director of Choral Activities
and Vocal Coaching at Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music. He
has conducted and/or coached opera for the Amalfi Coast Music
Festival, the Chautaqua Opera, Houston Grand Opera, Curtis Institute
of Music, Academy of Vocal Arts, and the Opera Company of
Philadelphia/Luciano Pavarotti International Competition. Mr. Jaber
also has served on the faculties of the Curtis Institute of Music,
Baylor University (Brown Visiting Professor of Opera), and Temple
University. Mr. Jaber has recorded with the Houston Symphony
Chamber Players under Maestro Christoph Eschenbach and with
Houston’s Mercury Baroque Ensemble and appeared in recital as
collaborative pianist, harpsichordist and organist.
Michael
Douglas Jones – Bass Michael
Douglas Jones made his international debut in Sweden, singing the
role of Director in Kafka’s Chimp (John Metcalf), shortly
after singing its world premiere at Banff Music Centre for the
Arts. Mr. Jones won the prestigious Jessies award for “outstanding
performance by an actor in a leading role” for his creation of the
Marquis in 120 Songs for Marquis de Sade (Hannan) in the
world premiere co-produced by Modern Baroque Opera and Vancouver New
Music. Other world premieres include Westergaard’s The Tempest
as Caliban, and Underhill’s Star Catalogues as Tycho Brahe.
Mr. Jones has recorded opera in progress for Atlantic Records and
new works of composers on the BMI label. He has performed with
companies worldwide, including New York City Opera, Florentine
Opera, Pitea Chamber Opera, Tulsa Opera, San Antonio Symphony,
Modern Baroque Opera, Opera Memphis, Chants Libres, Fort Worth
Opera, Quantum Theater, Sarasota Opera, New Orleans Opera, Stony
Brook Opera Theatre, Anchorage Opera, Opera Festival of New Jersey,
Banff Centre for the Arts, Le Nouvel Ensemble Moderne, Vancouver New
Music, Greensboro Opera, Baton Rouge Opera, Lyric Opera of Dallas,
and National Opera.
Louise
McClelland
– Mezzo-soprano Louise McClelland has performed extensively in
Europe and concertized across the United States. Famous for her
performances and expertise regarding composer Hugo Wolf, she was
awarded the HW Medallion in Vienna. Ms. McClelland is the
translator and editor of
Hugo Wolf:
Letters to Melanie Köchert.
Much sought after as a vocal instructor and master class teacher,
she is Professor Emerita of Opera/Voice at the University of
Maryland.
Cindy
C. Oxberry
– Multi-talented Cindy Oxberry has performed in Opera and Musical
Theatre across the United States and in Europe. Ms. Oxberry is a
stage director, arts administrator, producer, teacher, and
performer. In addition to staging productions for the Washington
Savoyards, she served as stage director for the Celebration of
Placido Domingo’s 40th Anniversary in the International
World of Opera.
Stephen R. Smoot
– A native of
Columbus, Ohio, Mr. Smoot studied voice at The Ohio State University
and continued his training with Gloria Marinacci in Anchorage,
Alaska. He has appeared from “pole to pole” having performed with
the Anchorage Opera, The Alaska Light Opera Theatre, Opera/Columbus,
Lyric Opera of Chicago, and the South American tour of the Virginia
Opera’s acclaimed production of Porgy and Bess. Mr. Smoot founded
and directed the Columbus Ensemble Singers and was a founding member
of the vocal quintet, Voix du Jour. He spent two summers singing at
the Mount Washington Hotel in New Hampshire, toured with the Detroit
Institute of Art’s national children’s opera tour of Aladdin, and
spent two summers as the managing director of the Alaska Cabin Nite
at the Denali National Park in Alaska. He appeared in the world
premiere of the Lyric Opera of Chicago production of Amistad and
appeared in the first national tour of ShowBoat! While in Columbus,
Mr. Smoot was seen at The Little Theatre off Broadway (Godspell,
Little Shop of Horrors, Is There Life After High School), CATCO (Rap
Master Ronnie), and Player’s Theatre (Phantom) and was a Cantor at
St. Joseph Cathedral. Currently living in Chicago and in his third
season as the Artistic Manager of the Ravinia Festival, Mr. Smoot is
in his eleventh season as principal Cantor at Holy Name Cathedral.
Before moving to Ravinia, he spent six seasons as the Assistant
Music Administrator at Lyric Opera of Chicago. Believing that
education in the arts is the foundation for its future, Mr. Smoot
was a resident artist with Urban Gateways: The Center for Arts in
Education.
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March
2008:
Check back soon
for info on our upcoming 8K RUN OF THE VALKYRIES, August 2,
2008 at 12 noon. This event will be part of the Flint Hill Series
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PIKES WATERFRONT LODGE
"The Official Hotel of Opera
Fairbanks"
Click here
Official "Run of the Valkyries" Sponsor
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Opera
Fairbanks is supported by a grant from the Alaska State Council on the Arts and
the National Endowment for the Arts. |
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