Transcript
Page 1: 2012.2013 Hopkins Center Season Brochure

2012 | 2013

CELEBRATING 50 YEARS OF ARTISTIC INSPIRATION, DISCOVERY AND PASSION!

HOPKINS CENTER FOR THE ARTS

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The house lights dim, the audience goes quiet. What happens next? Perhaps something that will change forever people in that room: inspire, uplift or challenge them, offer them utterly new perspectives.

There have been many such moments in the 50 years since the opening of Dartmouth’s Hopkins Center: performances by artists at the top of their craft, premieres and commissions of new works of music, theater, dance and film, and opportunities for individuals to experiment and grow as artists and meet and work with mentors who have led them to new places.

Maybe you were there when the dance company Pilobolus was born, or saw one of its many return engagements. Or saw Werner Herzog or Oliver Stone or Meryl Streep receive Dartmouth Film Society awards. Or witnessed world premieres of Hop-commissioned work by Laurie Anderson, Art Spiegelman, Mikhael Baryshnikov or Walter Piston. Or basked in the star power of performers like Bruce Springsteen, Yo-Yo Ma, Ravi Shankar, Joshua Bell, Grace Bumbry, the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater or Pete Seeger. Or took part in a master class with a mentor musician, dancer or theater artist who opened up new creative vistas. These and other great experiences have placed the Hop at the forefront of academic arts centers.

For more about how artists teach one another, see the “On Mentorship” statements throughout this publication.

The Hop’s celebratory 50th-anniversary season of 2012-13 will be another cornucopia of great opportunities for the people who are a part of the Hop—artists and audiences, teachers and learners, from Dartmouth, the Upper Valley and beyond. World-known artists and exciting up-and-comers, established repertoire and brand-new work, the large-group experience of the concert hall and the intimate one-on-one of a mentorship moment all play a part as this vital center enters its next half-century.

IGNITING YOUR PASSION FOR THE ARTS

hop.dartmouth.edu

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Wynton Marsalis

VISITING ARTIST SEASON PREVIEW THU | JUL 26 | 5:30 PM | THE MOORE THEATER | FREE

Be among the first to experience the sights and sounds of the Hop’s 50th Anniversary Visiting Artist season with Hop Programming Director Margaret Lawrence. Enjoy delicious refreshments courtesy of the Canoe Club, plus the chance to win Hop tickets, dinner at the Canoe Club and more. Behind-the-scenes tours of the Hop follow the presentation.

CELEBRATING 50 YEARS OF ARTISTIC INSPIRATION, DISCOVERY AND PASSION!

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YO-YOTHU | SEP 13 | 7 PMWhether mingling with young music students or playing before television audiences of millions, Yo-Yo Ma radiates a warmth and accessibility that belie the enormous accomplishments of this unflagging musical explorer. Along with his 75 albums, 16 Grammy Awards and exciting collaborations with global artists across all musical genres, he is also admired for his longstanding mentorship of young musicians, including the members of the inventive string quartet Brooklyn Rider (see p. 12). Playing unaccompanied cello, this exceptional artist offers a fitting launch for the Hop’s 50th year.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM $45/70/85 | DS $10 18&U $33/33/33 Sponsored by The Hanover Inn.

Funded in part by the Marion and Frederick B. Whittemore ‘53, T’54 Distinguished Artist Series Fund and Hopkins Center Members.

“ The adjective SUBLIME could have been created for the magic that Yo-Yo Ma conjures with his cello.” Toronto Star

ma

ON MENTORSHIP: Violinist Isaac Stern first heard Ma play at age six and took it upon himself to help Ma’s family settle in the US and help Ma find teachers and opportunities.

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kiddpivot

THE TEMPEST REPLICA

“ There are few choreographers of Pite’s generation who can create such A WORLD OF INVENTION.”The Guardian (UK)

maFRI & SAT | SEP 14 & 15 | 8 PMShakespeare’s intense, magical Tempest is the inspiration for this riveting work of dance theater by Kidd Pivot, led by the smoking hot sensation of international dance, Canadian choreographer Crystal Pite (“an image-maker of rare distinction”—The Australian). Exploring themes of isolation, captivity and desire, The Tempest Replica showcases Pite’s distinctive style: a fusion of street movement and classical rigor that is theatrical, witty and thrillingly kinetic.

THE MOORE THEATER | $25/33/40 | DS $10Funded in part by the Robert Grinnell Fund and the Expeditions program of the New England Foundation for the Arts, made possible with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts, with additional support from the six New England state arts agencies.

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FRI & SAT | SEP 21 & 22 | 8 PMThe puppetry geniuses behind the Tony-winning War Horse revisit their landmark first theatrical collaboration with internationally acclaimed visual artist William Kentridge. Taking a 19th-century German play about a beleaguered Everyman and transposing

it to the mine-scarred landscape of 1950s South Africa, Woyzeck on the Highveld “lends a magical, dreamlike quality to this age-old tale” (Belfast Telegraph)

through hand-carved puppets alongside live actors, haunting township music and Kentridge’s evocative animated charcoal drawings.

THE MOORE THEATER | $25/33/40 | DS $10 | 18&U $17/17/19Funded in part by the Wetzel Family Fund.

“ Handspring has pushed puppetry into a new dimension of EXPRESSIVE THEATRICALITY.” The Independent (UK)

(SOUTH AFRICA)

HandspringPuppet

CompanyWOYZECK ON THE HIGHVELD

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SAT | SEP 29 | 8 PMChosen by Songlines magazine readers as Best New Artist of 2012, Mali’s FatoumataDiawara combines elements of jazz and funk with the rocking rhythms and plaintive melodies of her ancestral Wassoulou tradition. Her gorgeously melodic songs evoke the tough choices facing young Africans, especially women. Toumani Diabaté and Herbie Hancock are just a few of the major players who have fallen for her dusky, yearning vocals and spare, hypnotic arrangements.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $23/30/30 | DS $10 | 18&U $17/17/19

“ THE MOST BEGUILING TALENT to hit the world music scene in some time.” Daily Telegraph (UK)

diawara fatoumata

CAPITOL STEPSthe

TUE | OCT 2 | 7 PMThirty years after being founded by Senate staffers satirizing their employers, the Steps

are still putting the “mock” in “democracy” with antic live shows and hilarious song lyrics zinging politics and culture (including the recent Fun Fun Fun ‘Til Obama Takes Our Tea Bags Away and I’ve Grown Accustomed to My Facebook). The perfect comic

relief for an election year, the group “brings chuckles…rave reviews…guffaws… and bipartisan grins all around. The satire hits the mark” (Wall Street Journal).

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $23/30/30 | DS $10 Presented in partnership with the Nelson A. Rockefeller Center at Dartmouth College.

“ When it comes to SATIRE, you haven’t seen the real thing until you have been to The Capitol Steps.” Washington Post

Company

American Sign Language Interpreted

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BRIGHT LIGHTS, BIG BIRTHDAYBe a part of the excitement October 12-14 as the Hop throws a weekend-long birthday celebration of performances, film, projection art, and parties. Mingle with Hop supporters from far and near at free and ticketed events capturing the animating spirit of this 50-years-young institution. Purchase weekend passes admitting you to all performances and selected social gatherings.*

IGNITING IMAGINATION—A SALUTE TO THE HOP’S 50 YEARS!FRI | OCT 12 | 7:30 PM | SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | PRICES TBA | RESERVED SEATING*Actor and comedian Aisha Tyler ‘92 (Friends, The Talk) hosts a multimedia show of inspirational music, theater and dance by distinguished guests and Dartmouth student artists, faculty and alumni. Special appearances by filmmaker Ken Burns H’93, actor/singer Jennifer Leigh Warren ‘77, and Michael Odokara-Okigbo ‘12 (of Dartmouth Aires’ The Sing-Off fame), video tributes and much more. Co-produced by Dartmouth College Gospel Choir Director Walt Cunningham and Hop Director of Student Performance Programs Director Joshua Price Kol ‘93.

WORLD PREMIERE OUTDOOR PROJECTION INSTALLATION BY ROSS ASHTON FRI | OCT 12 | 9 PM | HOP PLAZA AND DARTMOUTH GREEN | FREEWatch as the façade of the Hopkins Center becomes a huge, image-filled canvas for a site-specific creation by the award-winning British artist and designer whose projections onto Buckingham Palace enlivened the UK’s 2012 Diamond Jubilee Celebration (see photo above).

DARTMOUTH PREMIERE STILL MOVING: PILOBOLUS AT FORTY SAT | OCT 13 | 2 PM | HOOD MUSEUM OF ART AUDITORIUM | SCREENING IS FREE, BUT TICKETEDDartmouth Film Professor Jeffrey Ruoff’s new documentary captures the past and present of the influential Dartmouth-born dance company on the eve of its 40th anniversary, when it returned to the Hop for a world premiere.

JOHN LITHGOW IN STORIES BY HEARTSAT | OCT 13 | 8 PM | SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | PRICES TBA | RESERVED SEATING*See description at right.

* Tickets to Igniting Imagination and Stories By Heart are available as part of a weekend pass for the Hop 50th Anniversary Celebration, as are complimentary tickets to the Pilobolus At Forty screening. Weekend passes are available at the $250 and $500 level and include all performances as well as selected social events. After weekend pass sales are concluded, Hop Members will have an opportunity to obtain individual tickets to those three events in advance of the on-sale date for the general public. Igniting Imagination and Stories By Heart are not considered part of a season order. For additional event information or to purchase weekend passes, visit hop.dartmouth.edu/50thweekend.

Ross Ashton projection work at Buckingham PalaceAisha Tyler Ken Burns Pilobolus

JOIN US FOR A FESTIVE ANNIVERSARY WEEKEND!

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JOHNLITHGOW

SAT | OCT 13 | 8 PMTony, Emmy and Golden Globe Award winner John Lithgow celebrates the power of stories in this funny, touching one-man theatrical memoir. Invoking memories of his small-town-theater director father while weaving in two great stories the family loved reading aloud, this master actor deftly pivots from quiet reflection to zany abandon, portraying a company of distinct, outrageous characters (including a parrot). A triumph at New York’s Lincoln Center and London’s National Theatre, Stories by Heart marks the Hop’s birthday bash weekend with theatrical bonhomie.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | PRICES TBA*

“ Is there another actor breathing who’s as sweetly charming as John Lithgow? BRAVURA STORYTELLING.” Variety

BRIGHT LIGHTS, BIG BIRTHDAYJOIN US FOR A FESTIVE ANNIVERSARY WEEKEND!

STORIES BY HEART featuring works by P.G. WODEHOUSE & RING LARDNER

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Chick Corea

WED | OCT 17 | 7 PMWith powerful, velvety harmonies and quicksilver rhythmic shifts, Georgian choral music evokes the remote, pristine beauty of its homeland. Made up of singers from the choir of Tbilisi’s main cathedral, this all-male group was the hit of a 2010 Lincoln Center festival of polyphony, mixing together haunting sacred chant and wild, primeval folk songs for a heady representation of one of the world’s great singing cultures.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $25/33/40 | DS $10 | 18&U $17/17/19

“ Sophisticated polyphony [performed with] PASSION AND INVENTION evokes a distant musical past even as it surprises by its modernity.” Wall Street Journal

“ [Corea and Burton have] ONE OF JAZZ’S MOST CELEBRATED COLLABORATIONS…uncommon in its popularity, longevity and creative output.” Los Angeles Times

ENSEMBLE BASIANI GEORGIA

of WITH SPECIAL GUESTS

HARLEM STRING QUARTET

Hot House TourGary Burton &

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Chick Corea

WITH SPECIAL GUESTS

HARLEM STRING QUARTET

Hot House TourGary Burton

THU | OCT 18 | 7 PMFrom their sublime 1972 album Crystal Silence to their latest joint project, Hot House, pianist Corea and vibraphonist Burton weave together individually brilliant improvisatory voices with a breathtaking synergy. The much-lauded duo—with a combined 24 Grammy awards—are joined by the Harlem String Quartet, praised for “bringing a new attitude to classical music” (Cincinnati Enquirer), on standards and exciting new “chamber jazz” compositions.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $28/43/55 | DS $10Sponsored by Ledyard Bank.

Funded in part by the Class of 1961 Legacy Fund and the Expeditions program of the New England Foundation for the Arts, made possible with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts, with additional support from the six New England state arts agencies.

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THEATREWORKS USA

“ His ability to remix his own voice is REMARKABLE.” Village Voice

adamAND FRIENDSmatta

THU | OCT 25 | 7 & 9:30 PMVocal percussionist Adam Matta “breaks barriers of sound and speed…with

drum kit, horn and bass sounds flying from his mouth” (Africasgateway.com), wowing collaborators including Bobby McFerrin, Béla Fleck and the Carolina

Chocolate Drops. At the Hop, Matta and musicians including violinist Julianne Carney, guitarist Eyal Maoz and Ned Rothenberg on

woodwinds create an arresting, improvised mash-up of hip hop, rock, electronica, jazz, Middle Eastern music and video imagery.

WARNER BENTLEY THEATER $25 | DS $10 | GENERAL ADMISSION

Speaks Martha

SAT | DEC 1 | 3 PMMartha’s a loveable but ordinary mutt—until the day she slurps up some alphabet soup and suddenly gains the power of speech. From then on, it’s Martha’s world, and we’re just living in it. Martha plays tricks on the pizza delivery person, answers radio call-in trivia questions and noses her way around “no dogs allowed” policies in this musical adaption of author, illustrator and dog lover Susan Meddaugh’s endearing book series.

Recommended for ages 5 and up.

THE MOORE THEATER | $18/18/23 | DS $10 | 18&U $13/13/18

“ The ever-dependable touring company for kids…THEY’RE CHARMERS.” Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

MUSIC DEPARTMENT RESIDENCY

HUMAN BEATBOX

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TUE & WED | JAN 8 & 9 | 7 PMA 1930s-era factory is the setting for this theatrical circus show that tips its expertly juggled hat to the visual glories of the Industrial Age. The overall-clad “workers”—veterans of Cirque du Soleil and the Pickle Family and Moscow circuses—make mind-boggling use of the factory’s gadgets as they balance, bounce, dangle, fly and clown their way through a day on the job. Delighting audiences from San Francisco to Dubai, Birdhouse is an all-ages treat.

THE MOORE THEATER | $25/40/40 | DS $10 | 18&U $15/23/23

“ Exceptional, evocative, eye-catching, ear-catching and…ENGROSSINGLY ENTERTAINING.” New York Times

CIRQUE MECHANICS

Birdhouse Factory

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HOP COMMISSION/WORLD PREMIEREBrooklyn

RIDER

ON MENTORSHIP: “ He has shown us that the power of music rests not in what you can accomplish instrumentally, but in your ability to communicate values and invest in human relationships.” Brooklyn Rider’s Nick Cords on Yo-Yo Ma

“ The dazzling fingers-in-every- pie versatility that Brooklyn Rider exhibits is ONE OF THE WONDERS OF CONTEMPORARY MUSIC.”Los Angeles Times

FRI | JAN 18 | 8 PMSince gaining renown in Yo-Yo Ma’s Silk Road Ensemble, the members of Brooklyn Rider have continued to reinvent the string quartet everywhere from Joe’s Pub to the South by Southwest Festival, working with musicians across all genres. Celebrating the Hop’s 50th anniversary, the “stunningly imaginative” (Lucid Culture) quartet premieres Brooklyn Almanac, in which jazz and indie rock greats Bill Frisell, Nik Bärtsch (Ronin), Padma Newsome (The National), Ethan Iverson (The Bad Plus) and Greg Saunier (Deerhoof) compose works inspired by great artists of the past five decades.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $25/33/40 | DS $10 | 18&U $17/17/19Funded in part by the Frank L. Harrington 1924 Fund No. 3 and the Expeditions program of the New England Foundation for the Arts, made possible with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts, with additional support from the six New England state arts agencies.

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THE THIRD REICHGANESH VERSUS

“ COURAGEOUS, CONFRONTING, INTELLIGENT and magisterially considered theatre.” The Age (Australia)

BACK TO BACK THEATRE

FRI & SAT | JAN 18 & 19 | 8 PMThis internationally acclaimed troupe engages its company members—

who include people with perceived intellectual disabilities—in the creation of profound, startlingly original work. In this award-

winning play-within-a-play, a theatrical group led by an overbearing director creates a show about the elephant-

headed god travelling through Nazi Germany to reclaim the Swastika, an ancient Hindu symbol of well-being. Actors, director and we, the audience, are confronted with—and changed by—the hot-button issues that theater and the

Third Reich raise for people outside of “normal.”

Includes adult language/content.

THE MOORE THEATER | $25/33/40 | DS $10

(AUSTRALIA)

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“ EASYGOING MUSICAL INTERACTION and virtuosic soloing… delivered with a crisp, driving sense of swing.” Los Angeles Times

THU | JAN 24 | 7 PMSuperb soloists led by one of the biggest names in jazz, trumpeter

Wynton Marsalis, JLCO is dedicated to sharing worldwide and with all ages the greatness of “America’s classical music”—as well as its fun,

flash and exuberance. All of those elements come to the fore when the orchestra teams up with a phenomenal young tap dancer Marsalis

has mentored, Jared Grimes (“brilliant technique and happy, generous nature”—New York Times), in fierce, joyful rhythmic duets.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $38/53/63 | DS $10 | 18&U $25/25/25Sponsored by Downs Martin Rachlin PLLC.

Funded in part by the Marion and Frederick B. Whittemore ‘53, T’54 Distinguished Artist Series Fund and Hopkins Center Members.

Jared Grimes

ON MENTORSHIP: “He gives me that kind of hope and

inspiration to reach higher—I can keep rising, keep pushing it and finding new forms.” Jared Grimes on Wynton Marsalis

Wynton MarsalisWITHLincoln Center OrchestraJazzAT

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“ Ms. Josefowicz…[played] with GLEAMING SOUND, supple technique.” New York Times

JosefowiczLeila

VIOLIN

John Novacek PIANO

SAT | JAN 26 | 8 PMViolinist Leila Josefowicz has been stunning audiences internationally with her dynamic presence and ravishing virtuosity since her debut in 1994 at Carnegie Hall. A passionate advocate of new works, she also displays a keen understanding of the traditional repertoire. At the Hop, her compelling program includes Brahms’ Sonatensatz, Schumann’s Sonata No. 1, Falla’s Suite Populaire, Kurtag’s Three Pieces, and Beethoven’s Sonata No. 8.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $25/33/40 | DS $10 | 18&U $17/17/19Funded in part by the Robert Grinnell Fund.

WITH

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“ Not one note sounds dutiful; JOY AND A SENSE OF DISCOVERY ARE EVERYWHERE.”The Times (London)

BAROQUE ORCHESTRAVENICETUE | FEB 5 | 7 PMAcclaimed as one of Europe’s premier “period instrument” ensembles, the Venice Baroque Orchestra makes early music sound utterly fresh, ardently capturing not only the gorgeous timbres of the era but also its ebullience and experimentation. Directed since its start 15 years ago by preeminent Baroque scholar and harpsichordist Andrea Marcon, the group returns to the Hop with a lively program of its fellow Venetian, Vivaldi, as well as Bach, Handel, Telemann and others of that time.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $25/33/40 | DS $10 | 18&U $17/17/19Funded in part by the Frank L. Harrington 1924 Fund No. 3.

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BAROQUE ORCHESTRAVENICE

WED | FEB 6 | 7 PMCanzoniere Grecanico Salentino is at the heart of a new generation of artists reinterpreting the ancient, pagan pizzica tarantata music and dance of southern Italy’s wild and remote Adriatic coast. A triumph at New York’s 2012 globalFEST, they can enchant listeners with a tender love song and then electrify them with driving dance numbers on guitar, drums, accordion, bagpipes and a touch of 21st-century groove. Don’t miss this New England debut!

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $23/30/30 | DS $10 | 18&U $17/17/19

canzonieresalentino

grecanico“ One of the best translators of this rapturous and speedy style [the tarantella]…HYPNOTIC.” New York Daily News

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SUN | FEB 10 | 3 PMWeaving stirring period songs and actual events into a fictional narrative, this gripping new production shows America’s Civil War through the eyes of young people caught in the crossfire: a runaway slave who demands the right to fight his own fight; his former best friend and “master”; an Irish immigrant who volunteers to defend his new home; and a girl who masquerades as a drummer boy. A vivid introduction to a momentous historical turning point.

Recommended for ages 7 and up.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM $18/18/23 | DS $10 | 18&U $13/13/18

“ TASTEFUL, IMAGINATIVE, AND SKILLFUL players” Boston Globe

Sally Pinkas &Evan Hirsch

TUE | FEB 12 | 7 PM Since a debut at a Valentine’s Day concert, this husband-and-wife piano

duo have received standing ovations for delightful performances around the world. Inviting and inspired, their collaborations infuse works for two pianos with the intimacy and understanding that only a long-time couple

can share. At the Hop, the duo performs Poulenc’s Sonata for Two Pianos, Bolcom’s Recuerdos (“Reminiscences”) and other works.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $21/23/27 | DS $10 | 18&U $17/17/19

CIVIL WARTHETHEATREWORKS USA

American Sign Language Interpreted

PIANO DUO

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Kinan Azmeh CLARINET

Jasser Haj Youssef VIOLIN & VIOLA D’AMORE

Basel Rajoub SAXOPHONEAND GUESTS

“ Azmeh [is]… LAVISHLY TALENTED, intensely soulful.” New York Times

FROM THE ARAB LANDSNew Sounds

TUE | FEB 26 | 7 PMThis adventurous program brings together eminent performer-composer-improvisers from Syria and Tunisia creating new music inspired by the rich cultural heritage of their Arab lands. Often performing on instruments not native to the Middle East, these artists exemplify the talent, achievement and breadth of a rising generation of cosmopolitan Arab musicians, combining Western classical music, jazz and classical Arabic music’s microtonal subtleties and more than 50 scales.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $23/30/30 | DS $10 | 18&U $17/17/19Funded in part by the Wetzel Family Fund.

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AMERICAN DANCE

THEATER

ALVIN AILEYHOP CO-COMMISSION

FRI & SAT | MAR 1 & 2 | 8 PMSUN | MAR 3 | 2 PM

A defining force in American dance for 55 years, Ailey brings a “sizzling physicality and technical prowess” (Toronto Star) to gorgeous, thought-provoking repertoire. The

program includes the company’s triumphant signature work Revelations, which celebrates the strength and joy of the Southern black church; and a new

Hop/Ailey-commissioned work that innovatively fuses the many dynamic facets of American dance, from ballet to hip hop, and

showcases the artistry and versatility of the Ailey dancers.

THE MOORE THEATER | $25/57/67 | DS $10Funded in part by the Marion and Frederick B. Whittemore ‘53, T’54

Distinguished Artist Series Fund, the Wetzel Family Fund and the Class of 1961 Legacy Fund.

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MERMAID THEATRE OF NOVA SCOTIA

Guess How Much I Love You

I Love My Little Storybook

&SAT | MAR 23 | 3 PMFresh on the furry heels of last year’s Good Night Moon and The Runaway Bunny, this acclaimed puppet theater company returns to the Hop with another winning stage adaptation of classic picture books about bunnies. With a recorded narration by Emmy-winning actor Beau Bridges and delightful original music, Mermaid’s exquisite puppetry captures the look and feel of the award-winning Guess and its “nut brown hares.”

Recommended for ages 3 and up.

THE MOORE THEATER | $18/18/23 | DS $10 | 18&U $13/13/18

“ A FUSION OF SIGHT, SOUND AND SPIRIT that is in international demand.” The Chronicle-Herald (Nova Scotia)

“SPECTACULAR DANCING that thrills you to your marrow.”

San Francisco Chronicle

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ULTIMA VEZWHAT THE BODY DOES NOT REMEMBER

TUE & WED | MAR 26 & 27 | 7 PMIn 1987, influential Belgian choreographer Wim Vandekeybus created an international sensation with his first dance work, What the Body Does Not Remember, and it remains astonishing today. Athletic, precisely timed dancers push themselves to the limit as they breathlessly run, roll, launch themselves into the air and dodge falling objects in “choreography that view[s] the body as an emotional battlefield, and performance as a kind of extreme sport” (The Guardian, UK).

THE MOORE THEATER | $25/33/40 | DS $10 | 18&U $17/17/19

“ RAW, RISKY, FEROCIOUSLY HURTLING style of dance/physical theatre.” The Times (London)

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“ The four minds play upon each other, and upon the work, in PERFECT HARMONY; the players are in tune in all senses of the phrase.” The New Yorker

EMERSON STRING

QUARTETWED | APR 3 | 7 PM A Hop favorite, the Emerson Quartet’s award-winning recordings and incomparable performances over the past three decades have earned the ensemble the title of “America’s greatest quartet” (TIME). Combining soaring lyricism and bold virtuosity, they generate an explosive energy that makes every live performance fresh and exciting. The ensemble plays a Romantic program of string quartets by Dvorák, Schumann and Grieg.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $25/33/40 | DS $10 | 18&U $17/17/19Funded in part by the Frank L. Harrington 1924 Fund No. 3 and the Class of 1961 Legacy Fund.

ˆ

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THU | APR 4 | 7 PMSou do fado—I belong to fado—sings Ana Moura, and we belong to her. This slight, 20-something singer has emerged as one of Portugal’s finest interpreters of that incredibly soulful, uniquely Portuguese musical form, which she learned as a teen from fado “house” masters. Moura has a knack for finding the best musicians and repertoire, both traditional and new, for her burnished contralto. Fans worldwide—including Prince and The Rolling Stones—attest to the expressive power of this world music sensation.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM $25/33/40 | DS $10 | 18&U $17/17/19Funded in part by the Robert Grinnell Fund.

MOURAAna

“ EACH SONG GLIMMERS WITH HOPE, hints of sensuality, passages of melancholy, glints of determination.” New York Times

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FRI & SAT | APR 5 & 6 | 8 PMNikola Tesla (1856–1943) invented modern electrical distribution and the radio, yet died impoverished and alone, with a trove of unpublished inventions he hoped would create a better world. Long fascinated by the scientist, American film auteur Jarmusch (Down By Law, Stranger Than Paradise) collaborates with composer Kline, whose music ranges from sound installations to choral and orchestral works. Working with Phantom Limb—whose Hop-commissioned 69°S. premiered here in 2011—they present a work-in-progress “modern baroque opera” about one of the 20th century’s most remarkable and enigmatic people.

THE MOORE THEATER | $25/25/25 | DS $10 | 18&U $13/13/13

teslaAN OPERA BY JIM JARMUSCH & PHIL KLINE

“ One of AMERICA’S MOST IMPORTANT COMPOSITIONAL VOICES.” Philadelphia Inquirer on Phil Kline

HOP CO-COMMISSION/WORK-IN-PROGRESS

“ Fans, critics and actors…regard [Jarmusch] as a godhead of CINEMATIC COOL.” The Times (London) on Jim Jarmusch

Jim Jarmusch Phil Kline

IN NEW YORK

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WED | APR 10 | 7 PMThe Grammy-winning Drops return to the Hop with a repertoire refreshed with blues, jazz, folk balladry and a touch of hip hop—as well as the full-throated hollers and sizzling string-band tunes from the vital African-American Appalachian tradition. Along with new band member Hubby Jenkins, a Brooklyn-based guitarist, banjo player and singer, exclusively at the Hop the Drops are joined by one of their cherished mentors, Dr. G.B. Burt, a 76-year-old Alabamian with a haunting voice and otherworldly guitar playing.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $25/33/40 | DS $10 | 18&U $17/17/19

“ OLD-TIME MUSIC never sounded so current.” Los Angeles Times

Dr. G.B. Burt

ON MENTORSHIP: “ An amazing musician, singer and philosopher. His approach to music and life is something from which everyone could benefit.” Carolina Chocolate Drops’ Dom Flemons on Dr. G.B. Burt

drops

CAROLINACHOCOLATE

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MUSIC DEPARTMENT RESIDENCY “Each Orpheus musician is A VIRTUOSO.” Washington Post

OrpheusChamber

FRI | APR 19 | 8 PM The Grammy-winning Orpheus Chamber Orchestra integrates its musicians into

every facet of this conductorless ensemble, bringing music to life through the interactive collaboration of supremely talented individuals. The orchestra combines songwriting

and storytelling with Hugo Wolf’s playful Italian Serenade, Arnold Schoenberg’s dramatic Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night), and a new song cycle by young pop/

classical composer Gabriel Kahane inspired by Depression-era America.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $25/33/40 | DS $10 | 18&U $17/17/19Funded in part by the Frank L. Harrington 1924 Fund No. 3 and Hopkins Center Members.

Orchestra

Gabriel Kahane

CAROLINACHOCOLATE

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“ ONE OF THE MOST ORIGINAL KEYBOARD TALENTSto come out of Cuba since Chucho Valdés and Gonzalo Rubalcaba.” Boston Herald

ALFREDO RODRÍGUEZ

jazz piano

THU | APR 25 | 7 PM A “blazing piano prodigy” (New York Times), Rodríguez’ improvisatory ideas swirl with the idioms of jazz, pop and classical music as well as the surging rhythms of his native

Cuba. Since defecting to the US three years ago to work with legendary producer Quincy Jones, this

20-something has evoked comparisons to such greats as Art Tatum, Bill Evans, Thelonious

Monk and Keith Jarrett, winning over audiences worldwide as “a pianist so intense, so beautiful and so emotive

you never, ever want the music to stop” (Savvant Music).

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM $23/30/30 | DS $10 | 18&U $17/17/19

Funded in part by the Wetzel Family Fund.

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ON MENTORSHIP: “He has taught me to always be myself and

never compromise my artistic vision. Quincy

has become more than just a mentor, he has

become part of my family.”

Alfredo Rodríguez on Quincy Jones

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SUN | MAY 12 | 3 PMSo he huffed and he puffed and he blew their little house down…or did he? In this “catchy and clever” (Dallas Morning News) musical adaptation of Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith’s irreverent 1989 book, the Wolf finally tells his side of the story—and the audience decides his fate. Rated by TIME as one of the top five youth theaters in the nation, this company hams it up in rare style.

Recommended for ages 5 and up.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM $18/18/23 | DS $10 | 18&U $13/13/18

DALLAS CHILDREN’S THEATER

THE TRUE STORY OF “ LIGHT, FUN, FAST-PACED, full of puns for the grown-ups and silliness for the kids.” Pegasus News (TX)The Three

Little Pigs

WED | MAY 8 | 7 PMAn internationally renowned performer and teacher, the Hop’s pianist-in-residence

Sally Pinkas wins audiences with her virtuosity, expressive textures and acute insights. Pinkas presents an exploratory program with Mozart’s vividly emotional Sonata

in A minor, Berg’s tonally adventurous Piano Sonata, Shapero’s Sonata in F minor and the dreamlike sound worlds of Debussy’s Preludes.

SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $21/23/27 | DS $10 | $17/17/19

“ Pinkas’ playing can turn from EXQUISITE REFINEMENT to savage vehemence in a twinkling…she plays as if every measure were a new revelation.” Boston Globe

Sally Pinkas PIANO

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DartmouthSymphony

Dartmouth CollegeWind

FOUNDATIONS FOR WIND ENSEMBLETUE | OCT 23 | 7 PMSPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $16/16/20 | DS $5 | AOS $10/10/13Charles Gounod Petite SymphonieWolfgang Amadeus Mozart Excerpts from Don Giovanni (Harmonie Ensemble) Vocal Soloists TBA Gustav Holst A Mooreside SuiteMarco Putz Three Sketches for Fanfare Band Edward Green Symphony for Band (DCWE co-commission)

GLIMPSES OF LOVE with special guests HANDEL SOCIETY OF DARTMOUTH COLLEGE

SUN | FEB 24 | 2 PMSPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $16/16/20 | DS $5 | AOS $10/10/13Christopher Marshall Glimpses of Love (World Premiere)

MAXIMUM WINDS with special guests THE UNITED STATES MILITARY ACADEMY WEST POINT BAND

SAT | MAY 4 | 8 PMSPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $16/16/20 | DS $5 | AOS $10/10/13Hector Berlioz Grande Symphonie funebre et triomphale, Op. 15Christopher Theofanidis Concerto for Timpani and Wind Ensemble (DCWE co-commission) John Corigliano Symphony No. 3 “Circus Maximus” for Large Wind Ensemble

OrchestraANTHONY PRINCIOTTI conductor

MATTHEW M. MARSIT conductor

Ensemble

HOP ENSEMBLE

HOP ENSEMBLE

TAKING WIND MUSIC TO THE NEXT LEVEL OF ARTISTIC EXCELLENCE: MEET THE NEW DARTMOUTH COLLEGE WIND ENSEMBLE

SPECIAL FREE CONCERT SUN | SEP 30 | 4 PMSPAULDING AUDITORIUM | FREE, LIMIT OF 6 TICKETSJoseph Haydn Cello Concerto in C Major Avery Yen ‘13, cello Ludwig van Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 4 in G Major, Op. 58 Richard Fu ‘13, piano

SAT | NOV 3 | 8 PMSPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $20/23/29 | DS $5 Franz Krommer Concerto for 2 clarinets in E flat major, Op. 35 Shannon Draucker ‘13 and Matthew Boyas ‘13, clarinets Claude Debussy Petite SuiteAntonín Dvorák Symphony No. 8 in G Major, Op. 88

SAT | MAR 2 | 8 PM SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $20/23/29 | DS $5 Sergei Prokofiev Piano Concerto No. 3 in C Major, Op. 26 Cory Chang ‘13 Ludwig van Beethoven Symphony No. 7 in A Major, Op. 92

SAT | MAY 25 | 8 PM SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $20/23/29 | DS $5 Gustav Mahler Symphony No. 5

ˆ

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World MusicPercussion EnsembleTURN THE BEAT AROUND

WED | OCT 31 | 7 PMSPAULDING AUDITORIUM $16 | DS $5 | AOS $10 | GAA selection of traditional West African dance rhythms and songs, American R&B and hip hop grooves.

CARIBBEAN SUN FRI | FEB 22 | 8 PMSPAULDING AUDITORIUM $16 | DS $5 | AOS $10 | GAInstrumental versions of popular Caribbean reggae, soca and mambo songs.

SENIOR SEND-OFF WED | MAY 22 | 7 PMSPAULDING AUDITORIUM $16 | DS $5 | AOS $10 | GAFeaturing the talents of the graduating seniors.

CUBANOLA: MORE THAN THE SPANISH TINGE with special guests ARTURO O’FARRILL & DONALD HARRISON

SAT | NOV 10 | 8 PMSPAULDING AUDITORIUM $16 | DS $5 | AOS $10 | GASelections from O’Farrill’s acclaimed 2011 Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra program.

37TH ANNUAL DARTMOUTH

WINTER CARNIVAL CONCERT with special guest DR. LONNIE SMITH & THE DR. LONNIE SMITH TRIO KILLER B3

SAT | FEB 9 | 8 PMSPAULDING AUDITORIUM $16 | DS $5 | AOS $10 | GAComposer and Hammond B-3 Organ legend joins the Coast for music from his new CD.

SENIOR FEATURE CONCERT SAT | MAY 11 | 8 PMSPAULDING AUDITORIUM $16 | DS $5 | AOS $10 | GAThe Coast celebrates its graduating seniors in this high-energy concert.

Barbary CoastJazz EnsembleDON GLASGO director

HAFIZ SHABAZZ director

MATTHEW M. MARSIT conductor

HOP ENSEMBLE

HOP ENSEMBLE

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DartmouthGlee Club

Handel of Dartmouth College

AWAY FROM HOMETUE | NOV 13 | 7 PMSPAULDING AUDITORIUM $22/25/31 | DS $5 In preparation for its Italian tour, the Handel Society performs John Corigliano’s Fern Hill, Dartmouth alum Oliver Caplan’s Roots and Wings and music of Italy.

SAT | MAY 18 | 8 PMSUN | MAY 19 | 2 PMSPAULDING AUDITORIUM $20/22/29 | DS $5J.S. Bach’s St. Matthew Passion

ROBERT DUFF conductorSociety

College LOUIS BURKOT director

SUN | NOV 4 | 2 PMROLLINS CHAPEL | $18 | DS $5 | GA

CANDIDEFRI & SAT | FEB 15 & 16 | 8 PM SPAULDING AUDITORIUM | $18/18/22 | DS $5Fully staged production of Leonard Bernstein’s opera Candide, starring Amber Dewey ‘12, as Cunégonde.

SPRING CONCERT TO BE ANNOUNCED

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HOP ENSEMBLE

HOP ENSEMBLE

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ANGELS IN AMERICA: A GAY FANTASIA ON NATIONAL THEMES PART ONE: MILLENNIUM APPROACHES CAROL DUNNE director

FRI & SAT | NOV 2 & 3 | 8 PMTHU-SAT | NOV 8-10 | 8 PMSUN | NOV 4 & 11 | 2 PMTHE MOORE THEATER | $15/17/19 | DS $5 | AOS $10/10/13Tony Kushner’s 1983 Pulitzer Prize-winning play explores “the state of the nation”—the sexual, racial, religious, political and social issues confronting the country during the Reagan years, as the AIDS epidemic spreads.

THE LIAR BY DAVID IVES (adapted from comedy by Pierre Corneille)JAMIE HORTON director

FRI & SAT | FEB 15 & 16 | 8 PMTHU-SAT | FEB 21-23 | 8 PMSUN | FEB 17 & 24 | 2 PMTHE MOORE THEATER | $15/17/19 | DS $5 | AOS $10/10/13

DANCE THEATER IN THE SPRING

Watch for news of a new production that builds on the overwhelming success of past cross-disciplinary performances, Viscera: Echoes of War and Undue Influence.

Theater Department Dartmouth

LOUIS BURKOT director Gospel Choir Dartmouth College

WALT CUNNINGHAM director

SUN | OCT 21 | 4 & 7 PMSPAULDING AUDITORIUM $18 | DS $5 | AOS $10 | GA

SUN | APR 28 | 2 & 5 PM SPAULDING AUDITORIUM $18 | DS $5 | AOS $10 | GA

DARTMOUTH IDOL 2013SEMI FINALSFRI | FEB 1 | 8 PM SPAULDING AUDITORIUM $10 | DS $3 | GA

FINALSFRI | MAR 8 | 8 PM SPAULDING AUDITORIUM $19 | DS $5 | AOS $10 | GAVocal finalists perform with a live band. Vote for your favorite!

Dartmouth Idol 2012

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FILMBEST When the Hopkins Center was built in 1962, a film projection booth was deliberately included in Spaulding Auditorium—arguably one of the nation’s first in a college arts center. This inclusion sent an important message about the status and future of film in an academic setting by putting it on par with other arts offerings of the Hop. Presenting over 200 motion pictures a year, the program still delivers movie magic onto the big screen. In addition to acclaimed works and classic fare, Hop Film presents one-of-a-kind events such as tributes, silent movies with orchestras, sneak previews, local works and restored masterpieces.

To commemorate the Hopkins Center’s 50th anniversary, Hop Film mounts a yearlong celebration of the world’s greatest film festivals. “Best in Show” brings seven festival curators to campus to present new work. See adjoining page for more details.

While Spaulding remains the host for certain shows, the bulk of the Hop Film slate moves this fall to a wondrous new home: the Black Family Visual Arts Center. Located on Lebanon Street (adjacent to the Hop), this sparkling new building contains the “new” Loew Auditorium with 237 seats, state-of-the-art 35mm and digital cinema projection and full surround sound. Hop movies play primarily on the weekends, so check the Fall quarterly for the new days and times.

Each term, the Dartmouth Film Society presents a multi-faceted lineup based on a different theme. A DFS pass gains admittance to over 20 movies at a bargain price—the best entertainment deal in town! Passes are available for purchase at the beginning of each term.

For a current schedule of Hop Films visit hop.dartmouth.edu, or call the Film Office at 603.646.2576 or the Hop Box Office at 603.646.2422.

Busan International Film Festival 2011

Beasts of the Southern Wild

Life of Pi

Director Kevin Macdonald with Film Society students

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BEST IN SHOWTELLURIDE FILM FESTIVAL (Colorado, US)SEPTEMBER 14-20 at DartmouthTelluride is the undisputed gem of film festivals, standing off to one side, doing its own intricate thing, devoid of the usual deal-making fever, resisting buzz in favor of discovery.

THE NEW YORK FILM FESTIVAL (New York, US)NOVEMBER 2-4 at DartmouthCompared to the major festivals at Cannes, Berlin and Venice, the New York Film Festival has always seemed to be pure—devoted to art, good works and the sanctity of cinema.

OTTAWA INTERNATIONAL ANIMATION FESTIVAL (Canada)JANUARY 11-13 at DartmouthOIAF is the largest of its kind in North America and renowned internationally as a launching pad for many up-and-coming animators.

PORDENONE SILENT FILM FESTIVAL (Italy)FEBRUARY 1-3 at DartmouthThe gold standard for silent film presentation, Pordenone is the autumn destination for programmers, academics and enthusiasts from around the globe.

BUSAN INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL (South Korea)FEBRUARY 22-24 at DartmouthAsia’s dynamic and most prestigious festival, Busan promotes new artists and is a leading player on the world-festival stage.

FESPACO AFRICAN FILM FESTIVAL (Burkina Faso)APRIL 19-21 at DartmouthThe continent’s biggest cultural event aims to “contribute to the development of African cinema as a means of expression, education and awareness-raising.”

FULL FRAME DOCUMENTARY FILM FESTIVAL (Durham, North Carolina, US)MAY 10-12 at DartmouthDedicated to the theatrical exhibition of non-fiction film, Full Frame gives its audience new ways of looking at the world.

Long red carpets lit by glittering stars and paparazzi flashbulbs, back-room deals, lavish parties, star-studded premieres and audience darlings—today’s film festival conjures all manner of images. From restored classics to fringe indie work to burgeoning national cinemas and Hollywood staples, festivals have become the modern manifestation of the art form.

The film festival was born in Venice in 1932 when nine countries presented 25 films in an open-air cinema, with a strict dress code of formal evening attire. Today, several thousand festivals play an essential role in the global film industry. Whether hype- and awards-heavy (Cannes), politically charged (FESPACO), aesthetically rigorous (Telluride, New York), form-specific (Pordenone, Full Frame) or nationally focused (Busan), film festivals are unquestionably a phenomenon of our time. They bring together filmmakers, distributors, influential critics and fans of all stripes to celebrate their love of movies. In addition to this crucial exhibition aspect, specific curated festivals can and do influence the direction of the art form. By identifying and supporting new trends and films, festivals provide the first cut for critics and academics who will later write the history of cinema. The co-director of Toronto goes so far as to claim that festivals have become “the single most important arbiter of taste in cinema—more important than scholars, or critics, more important even than film schools.”

This year, in honor of the Hop’s 50th anniversary, Hopkins Center Film invites you to come celebrate the world’s best and most interesting film festivals. Much like the Telluride at Dartmouth tradition, new and/or important work from around the world will premiere here over the course of the year. Seven festivals will be spotlighted, each with a weekend full of films, guests, discussions and related events. The program/artistic director of each festival will come to campus with a specially curated series of new work and present their choices.

Over many years, these seven festivals have introduced the world to hundreds of cinema’s watershed moments: from the silent films of Walt Disney to Beauty and the Beast; from Metropolis to Solaris; from Seven Samurai to Crouching Tiger; from Napoleon to The Artist; from The Conversation to The King’s Speech. This year our visiting curators will bring their signature brands of movie excellence to Dartmouth. Join us on the red carpet for the Best in Show!

Titles, schedules and ticket information will be announced in mid-September. Visit hop.dartmouth.edu for more details.

DARTMOUTH SALUTES THE WORLD’S FILM FESTIVALS

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The Met: Live in HD, the Metropolitan Opera’s award-winning series of live transmissions to movie theaters around the world, presents 12 operas this 2012-13 season, including seven new productions and two Met premieres.

Met opera stars host the HD series, conducting live interviews with cast, crew and production teams, and introducing the popular behind-the-scenes features; altogether the worldwide HD audience is given an unprecedented look at what goes into staging an opera at one of the world’s great houses.

This fall, the Saturday live simulcasts move to their new home in the Black Family Visual Arts Center. The new Loew Auditorium (located on Lebanon Street next to the Hop) has 237 seats and state-of-the-art digital projection and sound.

With a few exceptions, indicated with an *, Sunday encores continue in Spaulding.

$29 | DS $10 | PASSES (ALL 12 SHOWS): MET PASS $319 | HOP MEMBER PASS $286

All simulcasts are general admission. Doors open 30 minutes before start time.

Hop Members (Advocate level and above) and Met members receive priority ticketing. See order form for details.

*In the new Loew Auditorium

L’ELISIR D’AMORE Donizetti - New ProductionSAT & SUN | OCT 13 & 14* | 1 PM

Anna Netrebko stars as the beautiful landowner Adina opposite Matthew Polenzani as Nemorino, the simple peasant who falls in love with her, in Bartlett Sher’s new production of one of the greatest comic gems of bel canto opera. Maurizio Benini conducts. Run time: 3:02

OTELLO VerdiSAT & SUN | OCT 27 & 28 | 1 PM

Verdi’s towering masterpiece, based on Shakespeare’s tragedy, returns to the Met. Semyon Bychkov conducts an extraordinary cast led by Johan Botha as Otello and acclaimed star soprano Renée Fleming in one of the greatest roles of her career as Desdemona. Run time: 3:27

THE TEMPEST Adès - Met PremiereSAT & SUN | NOV 10 & 11* | 1 PM

Composer Thomas Adès conducts the Met premiere of his own work, widely praised as a modern masterpiece. Director Robert Lepage recreates the interior of 18th-century La Scala in this inventive new staging. Baritone Simon Keenlyside stars as the exiled Prospero. Run time: 3:30

LA CLEMENZA DI TITO MozartSAT & SUN | DEC 1 & 2 | 1 PM

The virtuosic Elina Garanca sings Sesto in Mozart’s drama set in ancient Rome, in this handsome revival of one of the composer’s final masterpieces. Jean-Pierre Ponnelle’s stylized production is one of the legendary director’s most acclaimed stagings. Run time: 3:13

UN BALLO IN MASCHERA Verdi - New productionSAT & SUN | DEC 8 & 9 | 1 PM

Director David Alden’s dreamlike setting is the backdrop for Verdi’s dramatic story of jealousy and vengeance, starring Marcelo Álvarez as the conflicted king; Sondra Radvanovsky as Amelia; and Dmitri Hvorostovsky as her suspicious husband. Fabio Luisi conducts. Run time: 3:54

AIDA VerdiSAT & SUN | DEC 15 & 16* | 1 PM

The Met’s unforgettable production of Verdi’s ancient Egyptian drama stars Liudmyla Monastyrska as the enslaved Ethiopian princess. Roberto Alagna and Olga Borodina co-star as Radamès and Princess Amneris in this dazzling spectacle, with Fabio Luisi conducting. Run time: 3:54

ˆ-

L’Elisir d’Amore

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LES TROYENS BerliozSAT & SUN | JAN 5 & 6 | 12 PM

Deborah Voigt, Susan Graham, Marcello Giordani and Dwayne Croft star in Francesca Zambello’s highly acclaimed, rarely staged production of Berlioz’s grand opera about the Trojan War. Met Principal Conductor Fabio Luisi marshals this large-scale musical epic. Run time: 5:41

MARIA STUARDA Donizetti - Met premiereSAT & SUN | JAN 19 & 20 | 1 PM

Mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato takes on the virtuosic bel canto role of the doomed Mary, Queen of Scots. David McVicar, who directed last season’s Met premiere of Anna Bolena, turns to the second opera in Donizetti’s Tudor trilogy. Maurizio Benini conducts. Run time: 3:15

RIGOLETTO Verdi - New productionSAT & SUN | FEB 16 & 17 | 1 PM

This new production of Verdi’s powerful tragedy transports the story from 16th-century Italy to 1960s Las Vegas. Inspired by the antics of the Rat Pack, this fantastic production stars Piotr Beczala, Željko Lucic and Diana Damrau. Run time: 3:31

PARSIFAL Wagner - New productionSAT & SUN | MAR 2 & 3 | 12 PM

Jonas Kaufmann stars in the title role of Parsifal in François Girard’s new vision for Wagner’s final masterpiece. Fellow Wagnerian luminaries Katarina Dalayman, Peter Mattei, Evgeny Nikitin and René Pape round out a superb cast. Daniele Gatti conducts. Run time 5:40

FRANCESCA DA RIMINI ZandonaiSAT & SUN | MAR 16 & 17 | 12 PM

Zandonai’s unforgettable opera, inspired by an episode from Dante’s Inferno, returns to the Met in this ravishingly beautiful production. Dramatic soprano Eva-Maria Westbroek and tenor Marcello Giordani star as the doomed lovers, with Marco Armiliato at the podium. Run time 3:57

GIULIO CESARE Handel - New productionSAT & SUN | APR 27 & 28* | 12 PM

Director David McVicar’s dynamic staging incorporates elements of Baroque theater and 19th-century British imperialism in this exciting new production. The world’s leading countertenor, David Daniels, sings the title role opposite Natalie Dessay as an irresistibly exotic Cleopatra. Run time 4:31

Now in its fourth season, National Theatre Live (NT Live) continues to deliver the best of British theater to cinemas around the world. Stage performances are captured live in front of an audience at London’s National Theatre and its collaborating companies. The shows are then broadcast (live and time-delayed) in high definition across Europe and America.

$23 | DS $10 All shows in the new Loew Auditorium in the Black Family Visual Art Center. All simulcasts are general admission. Doors open 30 minutes before showtime.

THE CURIOUS INCIDENT OF THE DOG IN THE NIGHT-TIME THU | SEP 27 | 7 PM

When his neighbor’s dog is killed, 15-year-old Christopher is on the case, even though he has never left his street. But his detective work takes him on a journey that upturns his world. Simon Stephens’ adaptation offers a richly theatrical exploration of the touching and bleakly humorous, award-winning novel by Mark Haddon.

THE LAST OF THE HAUSSMANS THU | OCT 25 | 7 PM

Julie Walters and the National’s Rory Kinnear (Hamlet) star in this new play: a funny, touching and sometimes savage family portrait. A maelstrom of infatuations, resentments, free love and failure is unleashed when siblings (Kinnear, Helen McCrory) visit their high society drop-out/’60s flower child mom (Walters).

William Shakespeare’s

TIMON OF ATHENS THU | NOV 1 | 7 PM

Simon Russell Beale has been described by the Independent as “the greatest stage actor of his generation.” Here he takes the title role in Shakespeare’s strange fable of consumption, betrayal and ruin. Wealthy and generous, Timon of Athens is surrounded by freeloaders and sycophants. When his coffers run dry, he finds himself abandoned and desperate.

Additional 2012-13 NT Live shows, including The Count of Monte Cristo and Othello, announced this fall.

The Last of the Haussmans

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OUTREACHBRINGING THE ARTS OFF STAGE, ON CAMPUS AND INTO THE COMMUNITYThe Hopkins Center’s Outreach & Arts Education Department embodies the Hop’s mission to “ignite and sustain a passion for the arts” on campus and in the community. Six programs provide meaningful connections with artists, building broad context for and deep conversations about the performing arts.

VISITING ARTIST RESIDENCY PROGRAM The anchor of our Outreach program, the Hop’s nationally acclaimed residencies provide personal interaction with—and individual mentorship by—some of the world’s most fascinating artists. Residencies include multiple points of entry for students, faculty and community members, including: class visits, residence hall events, meals, workshops, master classes, panels and lectures. Pre- and post-performance discussions engage artists and audiences in conversations on the artistic, social or political aspects of the work onstage.

CURRICULAR CONNECTIONS This resource guide for Dartmouth faculty and staff fosters innovative connections between Dartmouth classes and Hop performances and films. Partnerships with academic departments bring course curriculum to life and illuminate the arts’ role in experiential learning.

HOPSTOP FAMILY SERIES Fun, free programs introduce young audiences to the wonders of the performing arts. The interactive, hour-long performances by local artists and Hop student ensembles are offered one Saturday each month throughout the school year.

SCHOOL MATINEE SERIES This program offers the thrill of live theater, dance and music to pre-K–12 students through-

out New Hampshire and Vermont. With subsidized tickets and downloadable study guides, the series provides a rich and affordable educational opportunity.

START (STUDENTS TEACHING IN THE ARTS) Dartmouth student volunteers share their passion for the arts with local

school children, working with teachers to integrate arts programming into Grade 3-8 classroom curricula.

ASSEMBLY OUTREACH Thousands of Upper Valley students have discovered the unique treat of welcoming celebrated artists and talented Dartmouth students into their schools for mini-performances, workshops and clinics.

For more information, call 603.646.2010.

SamulNori master class

Post-show party with Reggie Watts

Tanglewood Marionettes HopStop

Creole Choir of Cuba School Matinee performance

Wu Man lecture/demonstration

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MEMBERS Through their ongoing and generous contributions, Hop Members play a leading role in the Hop’s mission to ignite a passion for the arts on campus, in our community and beyond. Your membership gift helps:

• Engage young children and families directly in the thrill of live performance through HopStops—free, fun, hands-on live events.

• Open doors to a greater understanding of the world and a life-long love of the arts for thousands of area pre-K–12 students through the School Matinee Series

• Support the presentation of three outstanding Visiting Artist performances at the Hop this year: cello virtuoso Yo-Yo Ma; the esteemed Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis and the internationally renowned Orpheus Chamber Orchestra.

MEMBER $100 • Priority ticket processing; up to 4 tickets per show* • Invitation to sneak preview of new season’s visiting

artist performances• Invitation to annual Hop Members’ event • Advance notice of new shows added to the season • Name listed in newsletter and select playbills • Waived ticket-processing fees • Ticket exchange privileges NEW!

ADVOCATE $250 All of the above, plus: **• Priority ticket processing; up to 6 tickets per show* • 15% discount for dining at the Hanover Inn and free

valet parking with dinner reservation (Value: $14.00 per individual Member**)

• Advance purchase priority for The Met Opera: Live in HD series (Met Pass only)

PARTNER $500 All of the above, plus: **• Parking validation at the Hanover Garage for each

show purchased• Invitations to Partner events like open rehearsals,

panel discussions and receptions

INVESTOR $1,000 All of the above, plus: ***• Invitation to a private event with a Hopkins Center

performing artist• CD in your genre choice of the season’s performances

(Value: $15.00***)

BENTLEY FELLOW $2,500 All of the above, plus: ****• Preferred season ticketing (early ordering deadline applies) • Personalized ticketing service • Name on plaque in Upper Jewett Corridor • Invitation to performing arts trip with the Hopkins Center’s

Howard Gilman Director

BACKSTAGE CIRCLE $5,000 All of the above, plus: ****• Invitation to Lunch with the Hopkins Center’s Howard

Gilman Director• Credit in printed program for sponsorship of one Hop

visiting performing artist event

TOP OF THE HOP $10,000 All of the above, plus: ****• Commissioning opportunities are available at this level.

HOP MEMBERSHIP CATEGORIES AND BENEFITS (JULY 1, 2012-JUNE 30, 2013)

SUPPORT THE VITALITY OF THE

ARTS IN THE UPPER VALLEY:

BECOME A HOP MEMBER TODAY

* Priority ticket processing includes all Visiting Performing Artists and Hop Performance Ensembles

** At the Advocate ($250) and Partner ($500) levels, if you accept the Hanover Inn’s 15% dining discount and free valet parking benefit your tax receipt will reflect a deduction of $14 per individual member.

*** At the Investor ($1,000) level, if you accept ONLY the Hanover Inn benefit, your tax receipt will reflect a deduction of $14 per individual member. If you accept BOTH the Hanover Inn benefit and the CD benefit, your tax receipt will reflect a deduction of $14 per individual member plus $15 for the CD. If you accept ONLY the Hanover Inn benefit and your membership is for one person, there is no deduction from your tax receipt. If you accept ONLY the CD benefit, there is no deduction from your tax receipt.

**** At the Bentley Fellow ($2,500) level and above, there is no deduction from your tax receipt for any of the benefits associated with this level or any level higher than $2,500.

IN APPRECIATION OF THEIR VITAL SUPPORT, MEMBERS RECEIVE VALUABLE BENEFITS THAT ENRICH THEIR EXPERIENCE OF THE ARTS AND DEEPEN THEIR ENGAGEMENT WITH THE HOP

BE THE FIRST TO PURCHASE TICKETS All Members receive advance season ticket processing, advance notice of newly added shows and priority ticketing for up to 4 tickets per show*. Members who give $250 or more also receive advance purchase priority for The Met Opera: Live in HD series when buying a MetPass, and priority ticketing for up to 6 tickets per show*.

INTERACT WITH ARTISTS Members are invited to special events such as dress rehearsals, pre- and post-show receptions and discussions with visiting artists. Members who give $1,000 or more are invited to a private event with a Hopkins Center performing artist.

CONNECT TO YOUR COMMUNITY All Hop Members are invited to attend a private sneak preview of the new season’s visiting artist performances and an annual Hop Members’ celebration. By becoming a Member, you join a vibrant community of arts enthusiasts who share your passion for the arts and your commitment to exceptional cultural opportunities for our region.

Please consider becoming a Hopkins Center Member today. If your membership has expired, we invite you to renew now—to continue your tradition of support for the Hop and your engagement in the performing arts.

For more information, contact Membership Coordinator Linda Lewis at 603.646.2006 or [email protected].

Orpheus Chamber Orchestra

MAKE IT HAPPEN!

For questions about the specific benefits regarding Bentley Fellow, Backstage Circle, or Top of the Hop levels, please contact Sherry Fiore, Donor Relations Officer at 603.646.2005 or [email protected]. Please note, if you pay for your membership by Donor-Advised Fund, Fidelity Investments and most Donor-Advised Funds require that all of the monies be tax-deductible and no goods or services be provided. This means that your membership would not be eligible for benefits marked with a monetary value.

603.646.2422 | 39

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Round out your cultural experience at the Hop with visual art exhibitions in the Jaffe-Friede and Strauss Galleries, Upper and Lower Jewett Exhibition Corridors and Barrows Rotunda. Rotating approximately every six weeks, these curated shows offer a wide variety of recent work by selected guest artists, artists-in-residence, and Studio Art faculty and students. Exhibitions often feature opening receptions and lectures by artists. Hours are Tuesday-Saturday, 12:30-10 pm and Sunday, 12:30-5:30 pm. For more information, call the Exhibition Program at 603.646.3651.

Galleries & Exhibitions

PHOTO CREDITS: Cover: Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater by Andrew Eccles, Yo-Yo Ma courtesy of the artist, Cirque Mechanics courtesy of the artists, Ana Moura by Paulo Segadaes. Insert: Cirque Mechanics courtesy of the artists. P. 1: Wynton Marsalis by Clay McBride. P. 2: Yo-Yo Ma by Todd Rosenberg. P. 3: Kidd Pivot by Jorg Baumann. P. 4: Handspring Puppet Company by Kent Woyzeck. P. 5: Fatoumata Diawara by Youri Lenquette, The Capitol Steps courtesy of the artists. P. 6: Aisha Tyler, Ross Ashton Installation, Ken Burns and Pilobolus courtesy of the artists. P. 6: John Lithgow by J. Marcus. P. 8: Ensemble Basiani of Georgia by George Demetrashvili, Harlem String Quartet courtesy of the artists. P. 9: Chick Corea and Gary Burton courtesy of the artists. P. 10: Adam Matta courtesy of the artist, TheatreworksUSA by Susan Meddaugh. P. 11: Cirque Mechanics courtesy of the artists. P. 12: Brooklyn Rider by Sarah Small. P. 13: Back to Back Theatre courtesy of the artists. P. 14: Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis by Patrick McBride, Jared Grimes by Ernest Gregory. P. 15: Leila Josefowicz by Henry Fair. P. 16: Venice Baroque Orchestra by Harold Hoffmann. P. 17: Canzoniere Grecanico Salentino courtesy of the artists. P. 18: TheatreworksUSA courtesy of the artists, Sally Pinkas and Evan Hirsch by Rob Strong. P. 19: New Sounds from the Arab Lands by Mohamed Radwan and Aga Khan Trust for Culture. P. 20: Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater by Andrew Eccles. P. 21: Mermaid Theare of Nova Scotia by Margo Gesser. P. 22: Ultima Vez by Matthias Zölle. P. 23: Emerson String Quartet by Lisa-Marie Mazzucco. P. 24: Ana Moura by Paulo Segadaes. P. 25: Tesla courtesy of the artists. P. 26: Carolina Chocolate Drops courtesy of the artists, Dr. G.B. Burt courtesy of the artist. P. 27: Orpheus Chamber Orchestra courtesy of the artists, Gabriel Kahane by Jen Snow. P. 28: Alfredo Rodríguez courtesy of the artist. P. 29: Sally Pinkas by Rob Strong, Dallas Children’s Theater courtesy of the artists. P. 30: Dartmouth Symphony Orchestra by Andy Mai ’11, Dartmouth College Wind Ensemble by Andy Mai ’11. P. 31: Barbary Coast Jazz Ensemble by Rob Strong, World Music Percussion Ensemble courtesy of the artists. P. 32: Dartmouth College Glee Club by Michael Seamans, Handel Society of Dartmouth College by Andy Mai ’11. P. 33: Dartmouth College Gospel Choir by courtesy of the artists, Dartmouth Theater Department by Milton Glaser. P. 34: Beasts of the Southern Wild courtesy of Fox Searchlight, Life of Pi 20th Century Fox, Kevin MacDonald by Maggie Rowland ’14, Busan Film Festival courtesy of the artists. P. 35: All Best in Show images courtesy of the individual Film Festivals. P. 36: The Met Opera courtesy of the artists. P. 37: National Theatre Live courtesy of the artists. P. 38: SamulNori, Reggie Watts, Wu Man and Creole Choir of Cuba by Rob Strong, Tanglewood Marionettes by Zach Ingbretsen ‘11. P. 39: Hop Membership by Rob Strong and Zach Ingbretsen ‘11, Orpheus Chamber Orchestra by Larry Fink. P. 40: Yo-Yo Ma by Michael O’Neill, Galleries and Exhibitions by Andy Mai ’11, The Capitol Steps courtesy of the artists, Leila Josefowicz by Deborah O’Grady, Canzoniere Grecanico Salentino courtesy of the artists.P. 41: Fatoumata Diawara by Phil Sharp. Order Form: Kidd Pivot by Jorg Baumann, Handspring Puppet Company and Adam Matta courtesy of the artists.

ChamberWorks is an annual series of free Sunday concerts in Rollins Chapel, presented by the Hop and the Dartmouth Music Department. Discover the diverse talents of faculty and guest musicians in the intimate setting of Rollins. For more information, call 603.646.3531 or visit dartmouth.edu/~music.

ChamberWorks

WETZEL FAMILY FUND FOR THE ARTS Handspring Puppet Company New Sounds from the Arab Lands Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater (co-commission) Alfredo Rodríguez

FRANK L. HARRINGTON 1924 FUND NO. 3 Brooklyn Rider Venice Baroque Orchestra Emerson String Quartet Orpheus Chamber Orchestra

MARION AND FREDERICK B. WHITTEMORE ’53, T’54 DISTINGUISHED ARTIST SERIES FUND Yo-Yo Ma Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater

CLASS OF 1961 LEGACY: THE AMERICAN TRADITION IN PERFORMANCE FUND Chick Corea & Gary Burton with Harlem String Quartet Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater Emerson String Quartet

ROBERT GRINNELL FUND FOR THE HOPKINS CENTER Kidd Pivot: The Tempest Replica Leila Josefowicz Ana Moura

NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE ARTS CHALLENGE FUND Supports virtually all Visiting Performing Artists events

*Gifts and pledges of $500,000 and above

ADDITIONAL SUPPORT

MEDIA SPONSOR

Hands On Pianos (July 2012)

HOPFest (July 2012)

THE HOP THANKS...The following major endowment funds* provided by generous donors to the Hopkins Center help make possible many of this season’s performances. Numerous other endowments contributed by Dartmouth alumni, family and friends are critically important in funding the season, as ticket sales only cover approximately 40% of the cost of performances.

Yo-Yo Ma

The Capitol Steps

Leila Josefowicz

Canzoniere Grecanico Salentino

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Page 43: 2012.2013 Hopkins Center Season Brochure

FALL 2012YO-YO MATHU | SEP 13 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $45/70/85 | DS $10 18&U $33/33/33

KIDD PIVOTTHE TEMPEST REPLICAFRI & SAT | SEP 14 & 15 | 8 PM MOORE | $25/33/40 | DS $10

HANDSPRING PUPPET COMPANYWOYZECK ON THE HIGHVELDFRI & SAT | SEP 21 & 22 | 8 PM MOORE | $25/33/40 | DS $10 18&U $17/17/19

FATOUMATA DIAWARASAT | SEP 29 | 8 PM SPAULDING | $23/30/30 | DS $10 18&U $17/17/19

DARTMOUTH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRASUN | SEP 30 | 4 PM SPAULDING | FREE

THE CAPITOL STEPSTUE | OCT 2 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $23/30/30 | DS $10

IGNITING IMAGINATION—A SALUTE TO THE HOP’S 50 YEARS! FRI | OCT 12 | 7:30 PM SPAULDING | PRICES TBA

JOHN LITHGOWSTORIES BY HEARTSAT | OCT 13 | 8 PM SPAULDING | PRICES TBA

ENSEMBLE BASIANI OF GEORGIAWED | OCT 17 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $25/33/40 | DS $10 18&U 17/17/19

CHICK COREA AND GARY BURTON WITH HARLEM STRING QUARTETTHU | OCT 18 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $28/43/55 | DS $10

DARTMOUTH COLLEGE GOSPEL CHOIRSUN | OCT 21 | 4 & 7 PM SPAULDING | $18 | DS $5 AOS $10 | GA

DARTMOUTH COLLEGE WIND ENSEMBLETUE | OCT 23 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $16/16/20 | DS $5 AOS $10/10/13

ADAM MATTA & FRIENDSTHU | OCT 25 | 7 & 9:30 PM BENTLEY | $25 | DS $10 | GA

WORLD MUSIC PERCUSSION ENSEMBLEWED | OCT 31 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $16 | DS $5 AOS $10 | GA

DARTMOUTH THEATER DEPARTMENT ANGELS IN AMERICA (PART ONE: MILLENNIUM APPROACHES)FRI & SAT | NOV 2 & 3 | 8 PM THU-SAT | NOV 8–10 | 8 PM SUN | NOV 4 & 11 | 2 PM MOORE | $15/17/19 | DS $5 AOS $10/10/13

DARTMOUTH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRASAT | NOV 3 | 8 PM SPAULDING | $20/23/29 | DS $5

DARTMOUTH COLLEGE GLEE CLUB SUN | NOV 4 | 2 PM ROLLINS | $18 | DS $5 | GA

BARBARY COAST JAZZ ENSEMBLE SAT | NOV 10 | 8 PM SPAULDING | $16 | DS $5 AOS $10 | GA

HANDEL SOCIETY OF DARTMOUTH COLLEGETUE | NOV 13 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $22/25/31 | DS $5

THEATREWORKS USA MARTHA SPEAKS SAT | DEC 1 | 3 PM MOORE | $18/18/23 | DS $10 18&U $13/13/18

WINTER 2013CIRQUE MECHANICS BIRDHOUSE FACTORY TUE & WED | JAN 8 & 9 | 7 PM MOORE | $25/40/40 | DS $10 18&U $15/23/23

BROOKLYN RIDERFRI | JAN 18 | 8 PM SPAULDING | $25/33/40 | DS $10 18&U $17/17/19

BACK TO BACK THEATREGANESH VERSUS THE THIRD REICHFRI & SAT | JAN 18 & 19 | 8 PM MOORE | $25/33/40 | DS $10

JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER ORCHESTRA WITH WYNTON MARSALISTHU | JAN 24 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $38/53/63 | DS $10 18&U $25

LEILA JOSEFOWICZ, VIOLIN WITH JOHN NOVACEK, PIANOSAT | JAN 26 | 8 PM SPAULDING | $25/33/40 | DS $10 18&U $17/17/19

DARTMOUTH IDOL SEMI-FINALSFRI | FEB 1 | 8 PM SPAULDING | $10 | DS $3 | GA

VENICE BAROQUE ORCHESTRATUE | FEB 5 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $25/33/40 | DS $1018&U $17/17/19

CANZONIERE GRECANICO SALENTINOWED | FEB 6 | 7 PM SPAULDING | 23/30/30 | DS $10 18&U $17/17/19

BARBARY COAST JAZZ ENSEMBLESAT | FEB 9 | 8 PM SPAULDING | $16 | DS $5 AOS $10 | GA

THEATREWORKS USATHE CIVIL WARSUN | FEB 10 | 3 PM SPAULDING | $18/18/23 | DS $10 18&U $13/13/18

SALLY PINKAS AND EVAN HIRSCHTUE | FEB 12 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $21/23/27 | DS $10 18&U $17/17/19

DARTMOUTH COLLEGE GLEE CLUBCANDIDE FRI & SAT | FEB 15 & 16 | 8 PM SPAULDING | $18/18/22 | DS $5

DARTMOUTH THEATER DEPARTMENT TBAFRI & SAT | FEB 15 & 16 | 8 PM THU-SAT | FEB 21-23 | 8 PM SUN | FEB 17 & 24 | 2 PM MOORE | $15/17/19 | DS $5 AOS $10/10/13

WORLD MUSIC PERCUSSION ENSEMBLEFRI | FEB 22 | 8 PM SPAULDING | $16 | DS $5 AOS $10 | GA

DARTMOUTH COLLEGE WIND ENSEMBLESUN | FEB 24 | 2 PM SPAULDING | $16/16/20 | DS $5 AOS $10/10/13

NEW SOUNDS FROM THE ARAB LANDSTUE | FEB 26 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $23/30/30 | DS $10 18&U $17/17/19

ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATERFRI & SAT | MAR 1 & 2 | 8 PM SUN | MAR 3 | 2 PM MOORE | $25/57/67 | DS $10

DARTMOUTH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRASAT | MAR 2 | 8 PM SPAULDING | $20/23/29 | DS $5

DARTMOUTH IDOL FINALSFRI | MAR 8 | 8 PM SPAULDING | $19 | DS $5 AOS $10 | GA

SPRING 2013MERMAID THEATRE OF NOVA SCOTIAGUESS HOW MUCH I LOVE YOU SAT | MAR 23 | 3 PM MOORE | $18/18/23 | DS $10 18&U $13/13/18

ULTIMA VEZTUE & WED | MAR 26 & 27 | 7 PM MOORE | $25/33/40 | DS $10 18&U $17/17/19

EMERSON STRING QUARTETWED | APR 3 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $25/33/40 | DS $10 18&U $17/17/19

ANA MOURATHU | APR 4 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $25/33/40 | DS $10 18&U $17/17/19

TESLA IN NEW YORK (WORK-IN-PROGRESS)FRI & SAT | APR 5 & 6 | 8 PM MOORE | $25/25/25 | DS $10 18&U $13/13/13

CAROLINA CHOCOLATE DROPS WED | APR 10 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $25/33/40 | DS $10 18&U $17/17/19

ORPHEUS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA FRI | APR 19 | 8 PM SPAULDING | $25/33/40 | DS $10 18&U $17/17/19

ALFREDO RODRÍGUEZTHU | APR 25 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $23/30/30 | DS $10 18&U $17/17/19

DARTMOUTH COLLEGE GOSPEL CHOIRSUN | APR 28 | 2 & 5 PM SPAULDING | $18 | DS $5 AOS $10 | GA

DARTMOUTH COLLEGE WIND ENSEMBLESAT | MAY 4 | 8 PM SPAULDING | $16/16/20 | DS $5 AOS $10/10/13

SALLY PINKAS, PIANOWED | MAY 8 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $21/23/27 | DS $10 18&U $17/17/19

BARBARY COAST JAZZ ENSEMBLESAT | MAY 11 | 8 PM SPAULDING | $16 | DS $5 AOS $10 | GA

DALLAS CHILDREN’S THEATER THE TRUE STORY OF THE THREE LITTLE PIGSSUN | MAY 12 | 3 PM SPAULDING | $18/18/23 | DS $10 18&U $13/13/18

HANDEL SOCIETY OF DARTMOUTH COLLEGE SAT | MAY 18 | 8 PM SUN | MAY 19 | 2 PMSPAULDING | $20/22/29 | DS $5

WORLD MUSIC PERCUSSION ENSEMBLEWED | MAY 22 | 7 PM SPAULDING | $16 | DS $5 AOS $10 | GA

DARTMOUTH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRASAT | MAY 25 | 8 PM SPAULDING | $20/23/29 | DS $5

Fatoumata Diawara

DS = DARTMOUTH STUDENTS AOS = ALL OTHER STUDENTS

18&U = 18 AND UNDERGA = GENERAL ADMISSION 603.646.2422 | 41

Page 44: 2012.2013 Hopkins Center Season Brochure

Non-Profit Organization US Postage

PAIDDartmouth

College

6241 Hinman Dartmouth College Hanover, NH 03755

hop.dartmouth.edu 603.646.2422

Deliver to current resident

2012 | 2013 VISITING ARTIST SEASON PREVIEW

THU | JUL 26 | 5:30 PMTHE MOORE THEATER | FREE

HOPKINS CENTER FOR THE ARTS

BE PART OF THE CELEBRATION! Watch hop.dartmouth.edu for anniversary information all year long

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Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis


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