2017-2018 1718_arts_pr… · poetry, writing, and photography of some of southern maryland’s most...
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expectations
2017-2018
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Box Office Information:
Individual ticket prices and times vary by event. Tickets may be purchased online. Tickets can also be purchased at the door by cash or check at all three campuses. At the La Plata Campus, Visa, MasterCard, American Express, and Discover are also accepted. Performances, times, and locations are subject to change without notice. For more information, contact the Box Office or visit www.csmd.edu/Arts.
Box Office Hours:Monday–Friday: hours vary
The Box Office opens one (1) hour
prior to each performance.
Contactwww.csmd.edu/Arts
bxoffc@csmd.edu
301-934-7828
Sign up to receive arts-related
e-newsletters and mailings
at www.csmd.edu/Arts.Season Passes
A SEASON PASS is available for those who want to enjoy all that CSM ARTS has to offer. For an investment of $100, a season ticket holder receives a ticket to all events being offered this season—a savings of up to 50 percent over the separately purchased price.
Field Trip Opportunities
A number of productions will be offered as weekday matinee performances during the 2017-18 school year to provide cultural field trip opportunities for local schools, home schools, camps, and senior centers. Reservations are required. For a listing of weekday matinee productions and general guidelines, visit www.csmd.edu/community/the-arts/information-for-schools or contact the Box Office for more information.
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Welcome 4
Focus on the Arts 6
Connections Literary Series 12
Main Stage Theatre 20
Renaissance Festival 26
Children’s Theatre 30
Cause Theatre 36
Dance 42
Music 44
Benny C. Morgan Recital Series 52
Ward Virts Concert Series 56
Visual Arts 62
Arts Scholarships & Sponsorship Information 68
Acknowledgements
President, College of Southern Maryland, Dr. Maureen Murphy Vice President, Division of Academic Affairs, Dr. Eileen D. Abel Chair, Communication, Arts, and Humanities Division, and Professor, Dr. Stephen Johnson Administrative Assistant, Communication, Arts, and Humanities Division, Markia Simmonds Theatre Technical Director and Associate Professor, Keith Hight Curator of CSM’s Art Galleries and Associate Professor, Katherine Sifers Ticket and Event Sales Specialist, Erin Timmermann Box Office Assistant, Mel Ball
Special thanks to the CSM Community Relations and Marketing departments
CONTENTS
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WELCOME
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Fellow Fine Arts Patrons:
Welcome to the College of Southern Maryland’s 2017-2018 Fine Arts Season! This year’s fine arts offerings will carry on the tradition of exciting and thought-provoking concerts, plays, recitals, readings, and exhibits by acclaimed regional artists, community performers, and especially our own talented students, faculty, and staff.
The arts describe the human experience and provide an insight into the soul. Whether represented by a jazz concert, a dance recital, a ceramics exhibit, or the current hit musical, the arts engage people and allow them to see the world from different perspectives. This season’s stage offerings include the musical Ragtime, Molière’s The Impostures of Scapin, our fall and spring dance recitals, and several offerings in our popular Children’s Theatre and Cause Theatre series. Musical offerings include performances by all of CSM’s musical ensembles on all three campuses, including the second annual Pops Concert in April at the La Plata Campus, and honors recitals which showcase our talented student musicians. Calvert County residents can enjoy the 13th season of the Ward Virts Concert Series on our Prince Frederick Campus, while St. Mary’s County residents will see the return of the Benny C. Morgan Recital Series for its second season on our Leonardtown Campus. The visual artsfaculty will each be curating a show in the Tony Hungerford Memorial Art Gallery in La Plataduring the year on selected themes, and the year will end with the Annual Juried StudentExhibition. The literary arts will be well represented in the popular Connections Literary Seriesfeaturing renowned authors, poets, other writers, and photography.
Our various artistic events and exhibits are made possible through the generous donations of our community, civic, and business sponsors, and state and local arts councils. As a result, our fine arts admissions are affordable and sometimes even free. I hope you will consider making an impact by becoming a CSM Friend of the Arts general supporter or designate one of our flagship series for your support. (Complete details can be found on page 69 of this brochure.)
As a lover of the visual, performing, and literary arts, I invite you to join me in a celebration of the arts throughout this dynamic 2017-2018 season! I look forward to seeing you on campus!
Sincerely,
Dr. Maureen Murphy President College of Southern Maryland
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FOCUS ON THE ARTS
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CSM strives to provide entertaining and thought-
provoking arts experiences to both students and visitors.
Every year, the college puts the talent and creativity of its
students on display, as well as that of already-established
and well-known artists and musicians.
From the classroom, to the studio, to the stage, CSM students are the professional artists
and performers of tomorrow. CSM’s arts season mixes these students with the work of
professionals to offer the community a variety of creative expressions.
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Speaking About the Connections Literary Series
Experience some of the region’s most talented literary artists through the Connections Literary Series. The series blends a twice-yearly magazine with chances for the community to hear from and meet both established, as well as emerging, local writers. The magazine features poetry, writing, and photography of some of Southern Maryland’s most creative people. Connections was created in 1990 and has since featured National Book Award winners Tim O’Brien and Robert Stone; Pulitzer Prize winning poets Yusef Komunyakaa and Henry Taylor; and Maryland Poets Laureate Lucille Clifton, Michael Glaser, and Stanley Plumly.
Spotlight on Theatre
CSM’s theatre program is not just for students. Community members are invited to audition for productions, often involving collaboration with a number of CSM programs, including music, dance, and visual arts.
CSM’s theatre schedule is as diverse as its cast and crew. The program exposes students to all types of theatre, from full-length shows and a fall musical, to the outdoor Renaissance Festival with plays and music from that historic era.
CSM also offers the Children’s Theatre series, which brings storybook characters to life. Then, there’s Cause Theatre, a program that uses the stage to challenge every audience member to think deeply about social and health issues faced by young and old alike.
Lastly, the La Plata Campus features the popular Chautauqua series, where guest artists portray historical characters.
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Tap into Dance
See and learn dance styles from classical ballet to modern hip hop. Our dance program offers performance opportunities such as two dance ensembles and performance in collaboration with theatre and musical productions.
You don’t have to be a credit student to be a part of CSM’s dance program. Southern Maryland is full of talented and experienced dancers, so join us for classes in our continuing education program.
Segue into Music
Just about anyone can find the right tune at CSM. Singers, jazz lovers, or traditional band musicians can all find a place at the college, take classes, join an ensemble, or just learn from private lessons. Music ensembles are open to both students and community members. The college offers groups like the CSM Chorale and Chamber Choir, the Southern Mix Barbershop Chorus, the Solid Brass Jazz Ensemble, and more.
If you would rather sit back and enjoy the music, performances abound at all three CSM campuses! There are ensemble concerts throughout the year, including the Benny C. Morgan Recital Series at the Leonardtown Campus, and the Ward Virts Concert Series brings six concerts to the Prince Frederick Campus.
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Envision the Visual Arts
Our students learn from master artists, and the product of their labor is often incredible artwork. We revel in that talent and creativity by sharing it with you! CSM has a number of gallery exhibits each year. The Tony Hungerford Memorial Art Gallery in La Plata is a venue for a variety of media, and every exhibit will feature an artist reception, classroom visit, and demonstration by each regional and national artist displaying his/her work. A juried exhibition of student work is held at the end of each academic year. Student and faculty work is also on display in the Walter Grove II Memorial Art Gallery, where the public can view the best of student assignments as they are completed. The Larry Chappelear Memorial Gallery celebrates the legacy of former professor Larry Chappelear.
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CONNECTIONSLITERARY SERIES
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Meet established and emerging local writers at the
Connections Literary Series readings. Since 1990, the
series has featured National Book Award winners Tim
O’Brien and Robert Stone; Pulitzer Prize winning poets
Yusef Komunyakaa and Henry Taylor; and Maryland
Poets Laureate Lucille Clifton, Michael Glaser, and
Stanley Plumly.
“ Connections is a program that brings in nationally recognized writers who use their
literary artistry to shake up their audience just a little bit, niggle our conscience, ask
questions about uncomfortable social issues, or touch on difficult (and often unspoken)
human experiences and emotions,”
- Dr. Eileen Abel
CSM Vice President of Academic Affairs
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Making ConnectionsThe Connections Literary Series presents an opportunity for people to be inspired through the long-standing tradition of connecting established and emerging authors with the community. CSM’s Neal Dwyer, a languages and literature professor, as well as a coordinator of the series and editor of the literary magazine, explains that this is accomplished not only through the writers who are featured as guest speakers but also through the Connections Literary Magazine, published twice a year.
Connections Literary MagazineConnections, CSM’s regional literary magazine, features poems, stories, artwork, and photography of some of Southern Maryland’s most creative people. Often included in each issue is featured material from visiting writers. Publication readings take place in December and May each year.
For more information about Connections, visit www.csmd.edu/connections or view dozens of videos from past and recent literary events, available on the CSM’s official YouTube channel, CSMDTube.
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Fall 2017 Connections Literary SeriesPlaywright Jake Shore
October 13 | 7:30 p.m.
Leonardtown Campus, Building A, Auditorium
Tickets: $3 in advance; $5 at the event; or $3 with CSM Student ID
For advance tickets, please e-mail your request to connections@csmd.edu.
Jake Shore teaches courses in creative writing and literature at Wagner College. His short stories have appeared in Litro, Halfway Down the Stairs, The Pitkin Review, Calico Tiger, and Fiction365. He ghostwrote “The 87 Rules for College” for New Chapter Press. Shore’s play entitled Down the Mountain and Across the Stream won the New York International Fringe Festival’s Overall Excellence in Playwriting Award in 2013. Shore also wrote and directed Sick City Blues, which premiered at The Connelly Theater as part of the 2014 New York International Fringe Festival. Joseph Verlezza of Theatre Reviews Limited praised Sick City Blues by stating “The plot is clever and complicated…a novelty that rarely exists in today’s bombastic theatre world…It is interesting, intriguing, involved and…appears to be real.” Shore received his MFA in Creative Writing from Goddard College.
In summer, 2016, Shore released a play and a novel. Playbill’s news headline states “Off-Broadway’s Holy Moly Uniquely Connected to Real-Life Novel.” Broadwayworld says “The debut and simultaneous release of Holy Moly and A Country for Fibbing, an innovative multi-media experience, marks the first time a play with a correlating novel have been simultaneously released in the United States.”
This event is sponsored in part by a grant from the St. Mary’s Arts Council and Maryland State Arts Council.
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Poet Tim Seibles
November 10 | 7:30 p.m.
Prince Frederick Campus, Building A, Room 119
Tickets: $3 in advance; $5 at the event; or $3 with CSM Student ID
For advance tickets, please e-mail your request to connections@csmd.edu.
Poet Tim Seibles was born and raised in Philadelphia. He approaches themes of racial tension, class conflict, and intimacy from several directions at once in poems with plainspoken yet fast-turning language. In a 2010 statement he shared in From the Fishouse, Seibles states, “I think poetry, if it’s going to be really engaging and engaged, has to be able to come at the issues of our lives from all kinds of angles and all kinds of ways: loudly and quietly, angrily and soothingly, with comedy and with dead seriousness. […] Our lives are worth every risk, every manner of approach.”
Seibles is the author of several collections of poetry, including Body Moves (1988), Hurdy-Gurdy (1992), Hammerlock (1999), Buffalo Head Solos (2004), Fast Animal (2012), which won the Theodore Roethke Memorial Poetry Prize and was nominated for a 2012 National Book Award, and One Turn Around the Sun (2016). His work has also been featured in the anthologies In Search of Color Everywhere: A Collection of African American Poetry (1994, edited by E. Ethelbert Miller and Terrance Cummings), Black Nature: Four Centuries of African American Nature Poetry (2009, edited by Camille Dungy), and Best American Poetry (2010, edited by Amy Gerstler).
Seibles’ honors include fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center, as well as an Open Voice Award from the National Writers Voice Project. In 2013, he received the PEN Oakland Josephine Miles Award for poetry.
Seibles is Poet Laureate of Virginia. He teaches at Old Dominion University.
This event is sponsored in part by a grant from the Arts Council of Calvert County and Maryland State Arts Council.
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Fall 2017 Connections Literary Magazine Publication ReadingDecember 1 | 7:30 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Center for Business and Industry (BI Building),
Dr. John M. Sine Conference Room (Room 103)
This event is FREE; no tickets required.
Contributors to the Fall 2017 Connections Literary Magazine will read and discuss their published works.
Spring 2018 Connections Literary Series
Poet Fleda Brown
Friday, March 2, 2018 | 7:30 p.m. | Prince Frederick Campus
Tickets: $3 in advance; $5 at the event; or $3 with CSM Student ID
Poet Nickole Brown
Friday, April 6, 2018 | 7:30 p.m. | La Plata Campus
Tickets: $3 in advance; $5 at the event; or $3 with CSM Student ID
Spring 2018 Connections Literary Magazine Publication ReadingFriday, May 4, 2018 | 7:30 p.m. | La Plata Campus
This event is free and tickets are not needed.
For spring information, please visit www.csmd.edu/Connections.
Faculty Excellence Lecture SeriesFree Admission Follow CSM’s website for information on upcoming lectures in the spring semester!
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PROVOCATIONS
“ A Madman’s Deed, A Maniac’s Hand: Gender and Justice in Three Maryland Lynchings”Dr. Christine Arnold-Lourie, Professor of History
Friday, September 15, 2017 at 7 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Community Education Building (CE Building), Room 101
“ House, M.D.” and Indirect Communication: Provocation to ThoughtDr. Sheri Parmelee, Adjunct Instructor of Communication
Friday, October 13, 2017 at 7 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Learning Resource Center (LR Building), Room 102
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MAIN STAGETHEATRE
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From the classroom, to the studio, to the stage, CSM
students are the professional artists and performers
of tomorrow. CSM’s arts season mixes these students
with the work of professionals to offer the community a
variety of creative expressions.
This fall we look at stories that have helped change America. Voice of the Prairie explores
the time when the great little box brought the outside world into our houses. Every night,
families gathered to listen to the great box, as it brought in both great and tragic news.
The first broadcast was a violin solo followed by a scripture reading: Luke, Chapter 2. We
listened when the Titanic sank, and we heard the Hindenburg Disaster, War of the Worlds,
and Einstein talk about his theory.
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The Voice of the Prairieby John OliveThursdays, September 21 and 28 | 7:30 p.m.
Fridays, September 22 and 29 | 8 p.m.
Saturday, September 23 | 8 p.m.
Saturday, September 30 | 2 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center Theatre
$15 adults, $12 seniors/military with ID/youth of high school age and below
As the play begins, an old hobo, named Poppy by his avid companion, young Davey Quinn, is telling a tall tale. It is the early 1890s, and itinerant story tellers like Poppy are the voices of the prairie. Years later, Davey is discovered by a radio entrepreneur while he is telling stories about Poppy and Frankie, a blind girl he rescued from a cruel father. Quinn becomes famous on radio as the Voice of the Prairie. Frankie reenters his life and the FCC threatens them all for broadcasting without a license.
Originally commissioned and produced by Artreach, Minneapolis, MN.
Expanded version produced by Hartford Stage, Hartford, CT.
Produced by special arrangement with Samuel French, Inc.
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RagtimeBook by Terrence McNally Music by Stephen Flaherty Lyrics by Lynn AhrensBased on the novel, Ragtime, by E. L. Doctorow
Thursdays, November 2 and 9 | 7:30 p.m.
Fridays, November 3 and 10 | 8 p.m.
Saturday, November 4 | 8 p.m.
Saturday, November 11 | 2 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center Theatre
$15 adults, $12 seniors/military with ID/youth of high school age and below
At the dawn of a new century, everything is changing... and anything is possible. Set in the volatile melting pot of turn-of-the-century New York, three distinctly American tales are woven together – that of a stifled upper-class wife, a determined Jewish immigrant, and a daring young Harlem musician – united by their courage, compassion, and belief in the promise of the future. Together, they confront history’s timeless contradictions of wealth and poverty, freedom and prejudice, hope and despair... and what it means to live in America.
Ragtime is presented through special arrangement with Music Theatre International (MTI).
All authorized performance materials are also supplied by MTI. www.MTIShows.com.
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General AuditionsFaculty, staff, students, and the general public are invited to auditions in the Fine Arts Center (FA Building), Theatre, of the La Plata Campus. For more information, contact the Box Office at 301-934-7828.
November 13 and 14, 2017
6 p.m., Fine Arts Center Theatre
Open auditions for these productions:
• Lockdown (Cause Theatre)
• Amazing Grace (Children’s Theatre)
• Around the World in 8 Plays (Children’s Theatre)
Prepare a one-minute monologue. There are roles for performers age 8 and up.
January 22 and 23, 2018
6 p.m., Fine Arts Center Theatre
Open auditions for these productions:
• Journey’s End (Cause Theatre)
• The Impostures of Scapin (Renaissance Festival)
Prepare a one-minute monologue. There are roles for performers age 18 and up.
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RENAISSANCEFESTIVAL
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Travel back to a time when lords ruled and peasants
pleased, all in the language and costumes of Shakespeare,
at CSM’s sixth annual Renaissance Festival!
CSM’s festivities commence on Friday, April 20, 2018, at 7 p.m. in the Fine Arts Center
Theatre with The Impostures of Scapin by Molière. Come back Saturday, April 21, and
Sunday, April 22, for festival fun.
Festival activities will take place in two locations. In the FA Theatre, the CSM Theatre
Company will present repeat performances of The Impostures of Scapin. Tickets are
$10. All other activities, musical performances, face-painting, games, mock combat
demonstrations, etc., will be on the lawn in front of the FA lobby. Activities are either
free or priced by the vendor.
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The Impostures Of Scapinby MolièreFriday, April 20, 2018 | 7 p.m.
Saturday, April 21, 2018 | 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.
Sunday, April 22, 2018 | 3 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center Theatre
$10, all seats
In their fathers’ absence, Octave has secretly married Hyacinthe, and Léandre has secretly fallen in love with Zerbinette. But the fathers return from a trip with marriage plans for their respective sons. Scapin, after hearing many pleas for help, comes to their rescue. Thanks to many tricks and lies, Scapin manages to come up with enough money from the parents to make sure that the young couples get to stay married. But, no one knows who Hyacinthe and Zerbinette really are.
Art, crafts, food, weaponry demonstrations, and other vendorsFree admission; fees for food, purchases, and games, priced by vendor
Saturday, April 21, 2018 | 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Sunday, April 22, 2018 | 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center Theatre and Lawn
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CHILDREN’STHEATRE
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This is our seventh year of bringing children’s literature
to life. What more important time to bring these great
books to life?
My Children! My Africa! deals with a time of oppression and hate that controlled a
population. What an important book at this time!
Amazing Grace is about empowering our daughters in a time when our government, along
with society, is trying to keep women in a place that belongs to a time near prehistoric life.
This play is about hope and empowerment.
Around the World in 8 Plays looks at our past as we explore the myths and folk tales that
have shaped our views.
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My Children! My Africa!by Athol FugardFriday, October 6 | 7 p.m.
Saturday, October 7 | 2 and 7 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center Theatre
$7 adults and seniors, $5 youth of high school age and below
The great South African playwright confronts the tragedy of apartheid in his native land in this compelling tale about the efforts of a humble and humane black teacher in a segregated township to persuade just one young person that education, not violence, is the answer to South Africa’s problems.
Originally produced by The Market Theatre, Johanesburg, June, 1989.
Originally produced in New York by The New York Theatre Workshop.
Produced by special arrangement with Samuel French, Inc.
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Amazing Graceby Shay Youngblood Adapted from the book by Mary HoffmanFriday, February 16 | 7 p.m.
Saturday, February 17 | 2 and 7 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center Theatre
$7 adults and seniors, $5 youth of high school age and below
In the words of Ms. Youngblood, “Amazing Grace is about a little girl who loves acting out stories, those told and read to her by her grandmother, as well as ones she reads on her own. She also makes up her own stories, acting out the most exciting parts. When Grace is in her playworld everything to her is real. In her imagination, she becomes the characters: Anansi the Spider, Joan of Arc, Mowgli, Hiawatha. She’s a pirate with a peg leg and a parrot, an explorer, and a theater director of a production of ‘Cinderella’ in which she casts a boy in the title role. Grace’s mother is very practical and hopes that Grace will become a doctor, a lawyer or a professional person given the opportunities she herself didn’t have. Her grandmother, Nana, believes that Grace can be whatever she wants to be. Grace is told by two of her classmates that she can’t be Peter Pan in the school play because she is a girl and because she is black. In the end, Grace shows us that she can indeed do anything she sets her mind to. I selected the West African Anansi story and use traditional storytelling techniques such as songs, rhythm, and repetition to teach Grace and her friends a bit of folk wisdom.”
Produced by special arrangement with THE DRAMATIC PUBLISHING COMPANY of Woodstock, Illinois.
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Around the World in 8 PlaysA comedy by Patrick Greene and Jason PizzarelloFriday, March 2 | 7 p.m.
Saturday, March 3 | 2 and 7 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center Theatre
$7 adults and seniors, $5 youth of high school age and below
Travel around the world and explore forgotten myths and unusual legends in eight fast-paced and hilarious tales! Guided by a band of traveling Romani, the audience is transported from the ancient Far East, where a hero must kill a giant centipede to save a dragon king, to the Russian countryside, where a poor orphan must defeat three witches who stole his grandfather’s eyes. Always quirky, and sometimes bizarre, these eight tales are filled with magic, mystery, and morals.
Produced by special arrangement with Playscripts, Inc. (www.playscripts.com)
CAUSETHEATRE
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Cause Theatre is about more than the performance;
it’s about provoking thought and discussion on topics
that are crucial to everyone in society today, whether
young or old. These productions challenge the audience
to consider different perspectives, by highlighting how
attitudes and behaviors can affect experiences and
actions.
Cause Theatre’s touring shows address topics that range from health concerns like
substance abuse, sexual health, and body image to social issues like sexual orientation,
racism, women’s issues, sexual assault, and suicide. The performances are designed to be
informative and thought-provoking, and are often followed by a facilitated discussion.
Auditions and performances are open to the general public. Performances are held at all
three campuses and are also available for touring. Call the Box Office to purchase tickets or
to schedule a tour to your venue.
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Know Your RoleA one-act dramedy by Brandi OwensbyThursday, October 12 | 7:30 p.m.
Friday, October 13 | 8 p.m.
Saturday, October 14 | 2 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center Theatre
$5, all seats
This show contains some mature language and may not be suitable for all ages.
No sooner do we leave the womb than we’re bombarded by society’s expectations about gender. If you’re a boy, you’re like this. If you’re a girl, you’re like that. Through scenes and monologues that range from hilarious to heartbreaking, this one-act explores how these expectations affect teens’ daily lives. Whether it’s how they dress, the rules of dating, body image, parental pressures, or a host of other ways, the teens of this flexible ensemble reveal how gender expectations affect them and how they “role.”
Produced by special arrangement with YouthPLAYS (www.youthplays.com).
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LockdownA short drama by Douglas CravenThursday, February 1 | 7:30 p.m.
Friday, February 2 | 8 p.m.
Saturday, February 3 | 2 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center Theatre
$5, all seats
Due to mature content and heavy subject matter, this production may not be suitable
for all audiences.
In a dark classroom, eight students sit in an “official lockdown,” not knowing if it’s just a drill or an actual emergency. When a hysterical younger girl bolts from the room and the teacher follows, the remaining students are left alone to decide if it’s safer to stay or run.
Produced by special arrangement with Playscripts, Inc. (www.playscripts.com)
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Journey’s Endby R. C. SherriffThursday, March 15 | 7:30 p.m.
Friday, March 16 | 8 p.m.
Saturday, March 17 | 2 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center Theatre
$5, all seats
Due to mature subject matter, this production may not be suitable for all ages.
Set over the course of four days leading up to a massive German attack on the British trenches in 1917, Journey’s End charts the tension and claustrophobia as the new recruit to the company, Lieutenant Raleigh, discovers that Captain Stanhope, his former childhood friend and hero, has changed almost beyond recognition.
Produced by special arrangement with Samuel French, Inc.
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DANCE
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Whether it’s a Balanchine ballet, or breaking, locking,
and popping, CSM’s Dance Ensemble performs a variety
of pieces to appeal to all lovers of dance. Directed by
Joanne Lunsford, the dance ensemble presents two
performances each year, which may include traditional
ballet alongside modern styles such as hip hop,
contemporary, and jazz dance.
CSM’s dancers come from diverse backgrounds and experiences, ranging from credit students on
the path to professional dance careers to community members with strong regional experiences
in dance studios and theatres. In addition to their practical experiences in ensemble rehearsals,
CSM’s dancers receive intensive instruction in method classes in ballet and contemporary dance.
$7 adults, $5 seniors/military with ID/youth of high school age and below
Adult tickets are $5 when purchased before the day of the performance.
All dance performances take place at the La Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center, Theatre.
Winter PerformanceDecember 11, 2017 | 7:30 p.m.
Spring PerformanceMay 7, 2018 | 7:30 p.m.
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MUSIC
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Our musical ensembles include both students who are
earning college credit and community members who
want to be part of a team for their sheer enjoyment.
You can occasionally see our ensembles performing
in the community and in the region’s schools in public
outreach programs.
“ Spring Music Festivals are a main feature of the fine arts season at CSM. Two of the
college’s music ensembles, “Solid Brass” Jazz Ensemble and “Southern Mix” Barbershop
Chorus, put on a JazzFest and Barbershop Extravaganza, respectively, each spring. The
festivals feature renowned guest artists as well as the college ensemble and local high
school musicians. The festive atmosphere in the spring also includes an annual Pops
Concert in late April which features a rotation of CSM music ensembles each year,
providing a diverse evening of entertainment for all music lovers. Add to that the annual
Renaissance Festival, with its outdoor musical performers, a main stage play, and fun
activities for the family, and CSM becomes a major center of musical enjoyment for
southern Maryland each spring.”
- Dr. Stephen S. Johnson
Chair, Communication, Arts, and Humanities Division
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Southern Maryland Concert BandSaturday, October 21, 2017 | 8 p.m.
Saturday, May 12, 2018 | 8 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center Theatre
$7 adults, $5 seniors/military with ID/youth of high school age and below
Adult tickets are $5 when purchased before the day of the concert.
The Southern Maryland Concert Band (SMCB), under the direction of Michael Peerless, is a community-based concert band comprised of amateur and professional community musicians and CSM students. The SMCB is a popular fine arts fixture in the Southern Maryland music scene, performing concerts throughout the year in its community series and its two concerts on the La Plata Campus. Community members with woodwind, brass, or percussion experience are encouraged to contact the ensemble to inquire about available openings. CSM students may contact CSM’s performing arts coordinator to register for the band for credit. The SMCB puts on theme-based concerts; recent performances have included “What’s in a Name?: Music Composed, Arranged, or Performed by People Named Williams,” “Around the World in Eighty Minutes,” and “That’s Entertainment!: A History of Music Theater.”
Music Student Honors RecitalThursday, December 14, 2017 | 2:30 p.m.
Thursday, May 3, 2018 | 2:30 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center Theatre
This event is free and tickets are not needed.
Each semester, CSM’s private studio teachers recommend their most accomplished students for performance in this recital to celebrate their individual musical accomplishments. The recitals are free and open to the public and take place at the end of each semester. Any student taking a lesson for credit, who has been approved by his/her instructor, is eligible to perform. The recitals feature a diversity of musical styles ranging from classical instrumental and vocal music to popular and jazz renditions for piano, guitar, voice, or other instruments. The Honors Recitals represent the highest level of musicianship in the CSM music program. They take place during the afternoon activity period at the La Plata Campus Fine Arts Center.
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Chorale and Chamber ChoirSpecial concert with Southern Mix Barbershop Chorus
Friday, December 15, 2017 | 8 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center Theatre
$7 adults, $5 seniors/military with ID/youth of high school age and below
Adult tickets are $5 when purchased before the day of the concert.
CSM’s choirs, directed by Siobhan O’Brien, offer two different vocal experiences for students and community members. The Chorale is the college’s main choir. It is open to all students and community members without audition. The music it performs includes such diverse styles as traditional choir music, gospel music, modern choral music, and contemporary styles of popular music. The Chamber Choir is a small, select choir that is available through audition. It performs historic musical styles for small choir such as the madrigal and contemporary popular styles that focus on small ensemble singing. Chamber Choir members must register for Chorale for one semester previous to taking Chamber Choir or may register concurrently with Chorale. The Chorale and Chamber Choir will be joining forces with the Southern Mix Barbershop Chorus for a holiday concert at the end of the fall semester and will be two of the ensembles featured in the annual Pops Concert in the spring.
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Southern Mix Barbershop ChorusSpecial concert with CSM Chorale and Chamber Choir
Friday, December 15, 2017 | 8 p.m.
Saturday, April 14, 2018 | 4 p.m.
Fine Arts Center Theatre
$7 adults, $5 seniors/military with ID/youth of high school age and below
Adult tickets are $5 when purchased before the day of the concert.
Southern Mix, under the direction of Paul Douglass, is a men’s barbershop chorus consisting of community members and CSM students taking the ensemble for credit. Southern Mix maintains an active community outreach schedule throughout Southern Maryland at off-campus events such as county fairs, church functions, and regional competitions. It hosts an annual spring Barbershop Extravaganza at CSM featuring nationally and regionally recognized vocal quartets. The fall holiday concert will be presented in collaboration with the CSM Chorale and CSM Chamber Choir. Southern Mix will be returning as a participant in the annual spring Pops Concert. Male singers are encouraged to contact CSM’s performing arts coordinator or the ensemble for membership.
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Solid Brass Jazz Ensemble
Ensemble Concert
Saturday, December 16, 2017 | 8 p.m.
Fine Arts Center Theatre
15th Annual Jazz Festival
Friday, April 6, 2018 | 8 p.m.
Saturday, April 7, 2018 | 8 p.m.
Fine Arts Center Theatre
$7 adults, $5 seniors/military with ID/youth of high school age and below
Adult tickets are $5 when purchased before the day of the concert.
Solid Brass Jazz Ensemble, under the direction of Randy Runyon, is comprised of CSM students, local high school students, community members, and local professional musicians. The ensemble performs throughout the year at various venues in Southern Maryland and each semester at CSM. At the end of each fall semester, it performs an annual Big Band Holiday Concert. Each spring, it hosts its annual jazz festival which features a nationally known jazz artist as artist-in-residence for the weekend. Past performers have included Gregg Bissonette, currently with Ringo Starr’s All-Starr Band, and Phil Burlin of the U. S. Navy Band Commodores. The spring festival offers workshops for area high school musicians and ends with a concert featuring Solid Brass and the guest artist. Interested students and community members are encouraged to inquire with the director or CSM’s performing arts coordinator for available spots in the ensemble.
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Ritmo Caché Latin EnsembleSaturday, December 9, 2017 | 8 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center Theatre
$7 adults, $5 seniors/military with ID/youth of high school age and below
Adult tickets are $5 when purchased before the day of the concert.
CSM’s Latin Ensemble Ritmo Caché, directed by Dr. Stephen Johnson, performs in a variety of Latin-American styles such as salsa, Latin jazz, cha-cha-chá, merengue, and Latin versions of popular and rock music. With the acquisition of a steel drum, the ensemble will be exploring calypso and other steel band styles in the upcoming season. In addition to the main ensemble, small combos perform occasionally at off-campus and CSM events. The group is open to CSM students for college credit and community members for continuing education credit. Ritmo Caché will be one of the featured groups in the Annual Pops Concert in the spring. Membership is open to anyone with a love of Latin music! ¡Que viva la música!
CSM Spring Pops ConcertSaturday, May 5, 2018 | 7 p.m.
La Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center Theatre
$15 adults, $12 seniors/military with ID/youth of high school age and below
Now in its second year, the annual spring Pops Concert features several CSM musical ensembles. Each year, the roster of ensembles will rotate and include guest performers to provide an exciting program of popular music, jazz, blues, and other contemporary styles. The 2017 concert featured the Southern Mix Barbershop Chorus, the CSM Chorale and Chamber Choir, and the Ritmo Caché Latin Ensemble. The extravaganza will take place in the Center for Business and Industry (BI Building) on the La Plata Campus.
51bxoffc@csmd.edu or 301-934-7828
BENNY C. MORGANRECITAL SERIES
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53bxoffc@csmd.edu or 301-934-7828
Benny Carroll Morgan was a beloved music educator in
the St. Mary’s County schools for 30 years and served as
organist and choir director in several area churches.
In January of 2016, Mr. Morgan generously donated his prized Steinway grand piano to
the College of Southern Maryland’s Leonardtown Campus. Sadly, Mr. Morgan passed
away several weeks later, however, with the knowledge that his generosity will add to the
musical culture of CSM’s students as well as the Southern Maryland community for years to
come. The Benny C. Morgan Recital Series was instituted in his memory. Admission to the
recitals in the series is free due to the generosity of community sponsors. All performances
take place in the Auditorium of Building A on CSM’s Leonardtown Campus.
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Bruce Swaim Jazz QuartetSaturday, October 7, 2017 | 3 p.m.
The Bruce Swaim Quartet, which consists of Bruce Swaim on saxophone, Paul Langosch on bass, Jay Cooley on piano, and Dominic Smith on drums, is recognized as one of Washington, DC’s premier jazz quartets.
Swaim attended the University of North Carolina at Greensboro as a performance major in saxophone. Since moving to Washington, DC, he
has had the opportunity to work professionally with many notable musicians, including the Four Tops and the Temptations. Langosch began his college studies at Montgomery College’s School of Music in Rockville and then attended American University. He resides in the Washington, DC area and has worked with many leaders in the jazz world including Herb Ellis, Al Cohn, and Bud Shank.
Cooley studied music at Montgomery College’s School of Music as well as The Catholic University’s School of Theory and Composition. Cooley has appeared with Charlie Byrd, Chuck Redd, and Ethel Ennis and has been the musical director and guest accompanist for many musicians. Smith attended Towson University where he earned a bachelor’s degree in jazz performance. He has studied in New York City with musicians such as Kenny Washington, Ralph Peterson, and Kim Plainfield and has played with jazz musicians Buster Williams, Mark Elf, and Dennis Erwin.
In 2010, the quartet received Washington Area Music Association awards for Jazz Group of the Year as well as the Jazz Recording of the Year for “Winter’s Waltz,” repeating the honor the following year with its CD, “My Heart Stood Still.”
Michael LangloisSaturday, November 18, 2017 | 3 p.m.
Mike Langlois is a versatile pianist and collaborative artist active throughout the DMV region. He is director of music at St. John the Apostle Catholic Church (Leesburg, VA) and keyboard artist at Adas Israel Congregation and Northern Virginia Hebrew Congregation. Among the artists with whom he has appeared in concert are mezzo-soprano
Tanya Ruth Langlois, soprano Carmen Balthrop, violinist James Stern, and cellist Dariusz Skoraczewski. He has previously been a collaborative piano fellow at the Aspen Music Festival, apprentice coach for the Maryland Opera Studio, and a staff accompanist at the Indiana University School of Theatre and Drama. His formal training took place at Indiana University in Bloomington with Émile Naoumoff (BM) and at the University of Maryland (MM), where he is completing his DMA in Collaborative Piano with Rita Sloan.
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Antony ZwerdlingSaturday, February 17, 2018 | 3 p.m.
Antony Zwerdling is an active performer in the DC area. He performs over twenty-five operatic roles, including Papageno in The Magic Flute, Figaro in Il Barbiere di Siviglia, Eisenstein and Falke in Die Fledermaus, Sid in Albert Herring, Marcello and Schaunard in La Bohème, Mama Agata in Le Convenienze Teatrali, and Pooh Bah in The Mikado. He appears with
numerous opera companies, including Washington National Opera, Opera Lafayette, Wolf Trap Opera, Boston Lyric Opera, Lake George Opera, and Washington Concert Opera. As an Oratorio soloist, his repertoire includes Handel’s Messiah, the Requiems of Brahms, Mozart and Fauré, and Bach’s St. Matthew Passion. He performs with Handel & Haydn Society, Washington Bach Consort, Washington Master Chorale, Baltimore Choral Arts Society, Concert Artists of Baltimore, and Philharmonia Baroque. Zwerdling has also presented solo recitals for Music at Penn Alps, Church of the Epiphany, and Ward Virts. He received his bachelor’s degree from Northwestern University and master’s from Boston University. In 2007, he earned his doctorate from Shenandoah Conservatory, writing about songs of Samuel Barber. Dr. Zwerdling is an active voice teacher, maintaining a studio at Hood College and College of Southern Maryland.
Calvert Chamber PlayersMarch 17, 2018 | 3 p.m.
In 1989, the Calvert Chamber Players (CCP) began as a group of musicians getting together to enjoy their love of performing classical music. In the 1990s, the Calvert Chamber Players were well established and the members included Benny C. Morgan, keyboard; Barbara Lorton, cello; Marlene Browne, violin; Beth Wagner, flute; and Janet Gross,
oboe. Marci Fleck is the current keyboard player for CCP. All members of CCP are current or retired educators.
The Calvert Chamber Players specializes in Baroque and Classical period chamber music, but also plays some Celtic, waltz, ragtime, and various other types of music. CCP has performed in the Southern Maryland area providing music for weddings, receptions, recognitions, arts festivals, school events, vocal groups, and churches. It is an honor to perform in the memory of our dear friend and mentor, Benny C. Morgan.
bxoffc@csmd.edu or 301-934-7828
WARD VIRTSCONCERT SERIES
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The Ward Virts Concert Series celebrates the life and talent
of Ward Virts, a talented Southern Maryland pianist who
passed away suddenly in 1993. A group of Ward’s friends
and classmates conceived the Ward Virts Piano Project in
order to bring the love of life, beauty, and music, that Ward
embodied, to a new generation of Southern Maryland
students, performers, and appreciative audiences.
The concerts are performed on a world-class handcrafted Bösendorfer Grand Piano, a
gift to the College of Southern Maryland’s Prince Frederick Campus from the Ward Virts
Piano Project. The Ward Virts Concert Series takes place in the Multipurpose Room 104
in Building B on the Prince Frederick Campus. The series will be inaugurated by perennial
Ward Virts Series favorite, pianist Brian Ganz, on October 8.
All performances begin at 3 p.m. Concerts are free with donations accepted with gratitude.
The doors will open at 2:30 p.m. No tickets or reservations are needed.
The Ward Virts Concert Series is presented and sponsored by the CSM Foundation and is
also sponsored by Dr. and Mrs. Henry Virts, Edward and Patricia Mehosky, Eric and Rané
Franklin, Nancy Powell Hempstead in memory of Roger Powell, and Stovy and Anne Brown.
Grants provided by the Arts Council of Calvert County and Maryland State Arts Council.
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Brian Ganz, pianoSunday, October 8, 2017 | 3 p.m.
Brian Ganz is widely regarded as one of the leading pianists of his generation. A laureate of the Marguerite Long-Jacques Thibaud and the Queen Elisabeth of Belgium International Piano Competitions, Ganz has appeared as soloist with such orchestras as the St. Louis Symphony, the St. Petersburg Philharmonic, the Baltimore Symphony, the National
Philharmonic, the National Symphony, and the City of London Sinfonia, and has performed with such conductors as Leonard Slatkin, Marin Alsop, Mstislav Rostropovich, and Piotr Gajewski.
Ganz is on the piano faculty of St. Mary’s College of Maryland, where he is artist-in-residence, and is a member of the piano faculty of the Peabody Conservatory. He is the artist-editor of the Schirmer Performance Edition of Chopin’s Preludes (2005).
Megan Jolley, violaSunday, November 12, 2017 | 3 p.m.
Megan Jolley is a professional violist living in Alexandria, Virginia. She enjoys performing 20th and 21st century chamber and orchestral music throughout the Washington, DC area and especially enjoys mentoring young violists in her private studio. Ms. Jolley is an outspoken proponent of the
viola as a solo instrument and for improvements in viola pedagogy. She received a Bachelor of Music in Viola Performance from the Blair School at Vanderbilt University and studied under John Kochanowski, Eugene Becker, and Peter Bertolino. She has performed at the Brevard Music Center, Meadowmount School of Music, and the Chautauqua Institute, and locally with The Choral Arts Society, The Washington National Cathedral Choir, and the Alexandria Symphony. Ms. Jolley plays an early modern Italian viola made by Puccini Eligio in 1933.
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Tanya Langlois, mezzo-sopranoSunday, February 11, 2018 | 3 p.m.
Praised for her “wonderfully rich and expressive voice” (DC Theater Scene), mezzo-soprano Tanya Ruth Langlois has appeared across the United States and in Europe singing in recitals, oratorio performances, and on the operatic stage. Tanya began her musical studies at the age of seven with the piano and cello. Upon acceptance to the Tanglewood Institute’s Young Artists
Vocal Program at the age of seventeen, she chose to pursue voice as her primary instrument, going on to obtain Bachelor and Master of Music degrees in voice from the University of Maryland (UMD), where she studied with soprano Carmen Balthrop. Tanya also minored in piano performance and continued to play cello with her string quartet during her time at UMD.
Tanya has been most recently seen on the operatic stage as Mrs. Grose in Benjamin Britten’s The Turn of the Screw with the Hub Opera Ensemble, Donna Elvira in Don Giovanni and Cherubino in Le nozze di Figaro with the Lyric Opera Studio of Weimar, Hermia in the Bay Area Summer OperaTheater Institute’s performance of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and Andromeda in the world premiere of A Fire in Water at the Capital Fringe Festival in Washington, DC.
Michael Kannen, celloSunday, March 11, 2018 | 3 p.m.
Cellist Michael Kannen has distinguished himself as a musician and educator of uncommon accomplishment who is comfortable in widely diverse musical situations and venues. He was a founding member of the Brentano String Quartet and for seven years performed with that group on concert stages around the world, on radio and television, and on recordings. During those
first seven years, the Brentano Quartet was awarded the first Cleveland Quartet Award, the Naumburg Chamber Music Award, the Martin E. Segal Award from Lincoln Center, and the Royal Philharmonic Society’s award for best debut recital in England for the 1997-1998 season. With the Brentano Quartet, Mr. Kannen appeared regularly in such venues as Alice Tully Hall in New York, the Library of Congress in Washington, DC, Wigmore Hall in London, the Amsterdam Concertgebouw, the Chatelet Theater in Paris, and the Sydney Opera House.
Mr. Kannen is a graduate of the Curtis Institute of Music, and pursued graduate studies at the New England Conservatory and Indiana University. Mr. Kannen is currently the director of Chamber Music at the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, where he holds the Sidney Friedberg Chair in Chamber Music.
Phot
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Kris
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Sher
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Holly Roadfeldt, pianoSunday, April 8, 2018 | 3 p.m.
Since making her orchestral debut with the Toledo Symphony Orchestra at the age of 13, Holly Roadfeldt has continued to be an active solo pianist and chamber musician performing standard and eclectic recital programs
in the United States, Europe, and Asia. Holly’s mission is to inspire and advocate for piano music of the highest caliber, and she regularly mixes newly composed music with established masterpieces. With her most recent endeavor “The Preludes Project”, she commissioned 16 composers to write preludes to be performed alongside works from the standard repertoire. Holly premiered 64 preludes in16 states as a guest artist at multiple venues including Oklahoma State University, Wichita State University, the Peabody Institute, University of Nebraska-Kearney, Western Carolina University, Carson-Newman University, the College of Southern Maryland, Westminster College, the University at Albany, Manchester University, and Lafayette College.
Holly currently teaches at Lafayette College and serves as artist faculty at The Music School of Delaware. Previously, she taught at the University of Delaware, Susquehanna University, Gettysburg College, the University of Colorado-Boulder, and Indiana University. Holly received performance degrees from the Eastman School of Music (BM), Indiana University (MM) and the University of Colorado in Boulder (DMA).
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Antony Zwerdling, baritoneSunday, May 13, 2018 | 3 p.m.
Antony Zwerdling is an active performer in the DC area. He performs over twenty-five operatic roles, including Papageno in The Magic Flute, Figaro in Il Barbiere di Siviglia, Eisenstein and Falke in Die Fledermaus, Sid in Albert Herring, Marcello and Schaunard in La Bohème, Mama Agata in Le Convenienze Teatrali, and Pooh Bah in The Mikado. He appears with
numerous opera companies, including Washington National Opera, Opera Lafayette, Wolf Trap Opera, Boston Lyric Opera, Lake George Opera, and Washington Concert Opera. As an Oratorio soloist, his repertoire includes Handel’s Messiah, the Requiems of Brahms, Mozart and Fauré, and Bach’s St. Matthew Passion. He performs with Handel & Haydn Society, Washington Bach Consort, Washington Master Chorale, Baltimore Choral Arts Society, Concert Artists of Baltimore, and Philharmonia Baroque. Zwerdling has also presented solo recitals for Music at Penn Alps, Church of the Epiphany, and Ward Virts. He received his bachelor’s degree from Northwestern University and master’s from Boston University. In 2007, he earned his doctorate from Shenandoah Conservatory, writing about songs of Samuel Barber. Dr. Zwerdling is an active voice teacher, maintaining a studio at Hood College and College of Southern Maryland.
VISUALARTS
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Our beautiful galleries allow us to showcase the work of
our talented students and members of the community.
The galleries are open to the public and feature work
from oil paintings to hand-thrown pottery.
The Tony Hungerford Memorial Art Gallery is located at the La Plata Campus, Fine Art Center
and is open Monday - Friday from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Please
call 301-934-7828 to arrange for other hours if necessary. Artist receptions are free and open
to the public.
The Walter Grove II Memorial Art Gallery features art works by exceptional CSM students
working in visual mediums. Established in 2001, the gallery honors Jane and Walter Grove’s
son, Walter B. Grove II, who died in 1999. Grove earned an associate’s degree from CSM with
an emphasis in studio art.
The Larry Chappelear Memorial Gallery celebrates the legacy of former CSM professor Larry
Chappelear, described as an inspiration from students and community members alike over his
40 years of teaching. The gallery showcases 13 of his many artistic pieces of drawings, mixed
media, and paintings, reflecting what is described as an artist’s courage to transition and try
new things.
Within the John E. Harms Academic Center of the Prince Frederick Campus, student art and
photography of the Calvert Photography Club is displayed throughout the building.
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Un-easment: Recent works by Rachel SchechtmanCurated by Katherine Sifers
September 5 – 28, 2017
Tony Hungerford Memorial Art Gallery Exhibit
Rachel Schechtman’s work explores the body and its associated anxieties through the lens of commonplace material explorations. Through the use of small scale experiments, she is able to uncover the sometimes hidden possibilities and meaning inherent within an object or substance. She most commonly uses materials that change
over time. These elements crystallize, grow, wither, etc. The dynamic behavior of the materials allow her the room to both collaborate with the materials as well as be surprised by them.
Rachel Schechtman is an interdisciplinary artist who lives and works in Washington, DC. She received her Bachelor of Arts degree from The George Washington University in 2012. Her mixed media assemblages, installations, and videos investigate issues tied to the body, health, and gender.
Painters Be Like Curated by Yikui Gu
featuring works by Jason Stopa, Adam Lovitz,
and Madeline Seely
October 9 – November 2, 2017
Tony Hungerford Memorial Art Gallery Exhibit
“ It is what it is, ‘cept it ain’t what it used to be That’s news to me, Choose to be free, musically “
-MF Doom
The Tony Hungerford Memorial Art Gallery at the College of Southern Maryland is pleased to present Painters Be Like, a group exhibit featuring the works of Jason Stopa, Adam Lovitz, and Madeline Seely. These three artists are all based in the Mid-Atlantic and are approaching the venerable medium of painting through a range of tactics, both affirming and subverting painting’s long tradition. Their works run the gamut from representation to abstraction, often straddling and blurring the line between both, and incorporates elements of humor, sincerity, and at times a casual indifference. All three are at different career stages and will provide students at the College of Southern Maryland great examples of what their next steps may be.
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Expansion: Recent works by Daniel KaufmannCurated by George Bedell
November 14 – December 7, 2017
Tony Hungerford Memorial Art Gallery Exhibit
Expansion is a series of photographic works that explores the relationship between photographs of the American West, the history of the American West, and the popular
romanticized narrative of that history. The images recreate historic photographs of the American West as a means to examine the ways historic, cinematic, and vernacular images have constructed the myth of the West through the creation of a visual language that promotes ideologies inherent to Manifest Destiny and westward expansion.
The final images are digital constructions made from photographs of dirt piles that are a result of present-day urban expansion and new home construction. The photographic works are meant to create a dialogue with their historic counterparts by mimicking the compositional conventions of the originals, such as expansive vistas and sprawling mountain ranges, as a means to reference the expanding archive of photographs of the Western landscape that sustain the illusion of wild, untouched spaces.
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Baltimore Clayworks Resident Artists ExhibitionCurated by Lindsay Pichaske
February 5 – March 1, 2018
Tony Hungerford Memorial Art Gallery Exhibit
This exhibition showcases contemporary ceramic works made by the resident artists at Baltimore Clayworks. From figure sculpture to functional pottery, the work in this exhibition represents the range of possibilities in the field of ceramics. Baltimore Clayworks is a highly reputable residency with
national and international artists who show their work regularly. By bringing the artists from Baltimore Clayworks to the College of Southern Maryland, the hope is to create a bridge between our ceramics department and the larger local ceramics community.
Masters of the UniverseCurated by Andrew Wodzianski
featuring works by Chris Bishop, Bonner Sale, and Andrew
Wodzianski
March 12 – April 4, 2018
Tony Hungerford Memorial Art Gallery Exhibit
Artwork celebrating the myth, magic, and marketing of a Mattel Toy masterpiece.
Annual Juried Student Exhibition
April 23 – May 11, 2018
Paintings in broad brush strokes, photos in captivating focus, and sculptures molded with playfulness are among the types of artwork showcased each spring as part of the College of Southern Maryland Annual Juried Student Exhibition presented in the Tony Hungerford Memorial Art Gallery, Fine Arts Center, La Plata Campus. The 2018 Annual Juried Student Exhibition takes place April 23–May 11, with an awards presentation and reception to be announced.
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Larry Chappelear Memorial GalleryLa Plata Campus, Fine Arts Center
Made possible through the generous contributions of:
Jane and Walter Grove • The Chappelear Family • Marti and Ron Brown • Sue Gregg • Henry and Janice Nicowski, in memory of Rebecca Chappelear • CSM Faculty Senate
United in making the Arts a part of our community.
Supporting at the College of Southern Maryland
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CSMFOUNDATION
Make an impact. Become a Friend of the Arts
The Arts are alive at the College of Southern Maryland. In addition to providing the region
with entertaining and educational performances that attract diverse audiences, from families
to school groups to working professionals, CSM is the home to Southern Maryland’s most
talented and creative students pursuing their dreams in music, theatre, dance, and visual arts.
Walter and Jane Grove with their 2017-2018 scholarship recipients, top row from left to right: Arisa Alston, Charles Furby, Krista Ayers, and Lucas Snyder at the 2017 Student Juried Art Show.
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The CSM Foundation believes in the arts and is continually raising money through
sponsorships and scholarships for the Arts. Below is a listing of scholarships through the CSM
Foundation that provide Southern Maryland residents with the opportunity to excel in the Arts.
Bernice Gottfried Memorial Art Scholarship
C. Emmitt Woodey Theatre Scholarship
Dennis Lake Smith Memorial Art Scholarship
Jerome Zanelotti, Sr. Memorial Scholarship
Joseph Rice & Mae Irene Fauth Memorial Scholarship
Matthew William Hancock Memorial Music Scholarship
Tony Hungerford Memorial Art Scholarship
Walter B. Grove II Memorial Scholarship
or, establish a scholarship of your own at Impact.csmd.edu.
Students can apply for these and more scholarships at www.csmd.edu/Scholarships.
The CSM Foundation has many opportunities for you to show your appreciation for the Arts.
Establish a named scholarship: $1,000
Theatre Chair Nameplate (located in the Fine Arts Center): $200
Benny C. Morgan Recital Series Sponsor: $500–$1,000
Connections Literary Series Sponsor: $500–$1,500
Ward Virts Concert Series Sponsor: $500–$2,000
Allow us to work with you in supporting student success by investing in the Arts at CSM. If you are interested in learning more about any of these opportunities, contact the Development Department, 301-934-7649.
College of Southern Maryland Foundation 8730 Mitchell Road, PO Box 910, La Plata, MD 20646-0910 301-934-7635 • 301-934-7649 • Impact.csmd.edu
Follow us on CSM Alumni and Friends
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The College of Southern Maryland Foundation Your contribution will provide the college with vital resources and will make an immediate
difference to our students and faculty. You may make a tax deductible gift online at
donate.csmd.edu, by phone at 301-934-7649, by fax at 301-934-7603, or by mail. The CSM
Foundation is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization.
I would like to make an ongoing pledge of $ per year for the next years.
I have enclosed a check in the amount of $ (Please make check payable to CSM Foundation)
Charge my Visa / MasterCard / Discover / Amex $ Account #: Exp. date: Signature:
My company will match my gift (please contact your Human Resources Department for matching gift form). Company name:
I prefer my gift remain anonymous.
I wish to make this gift in memory of: Please notify:
Please direct my gift to support:
Additional ways to support:
I would like to establish a named scholarship
I would like to leave a Legacy Gift to CSM
Name:
Address:
Phone: E-mail:
Signature: Date:
College of Southern Maryland Foundation 8730 Mitchell Road, PO Box 910, La Plata, MD 20646-0910 301-934-7635 • 301-934-7649 • Impact.csmd.edu
Follow us on CSM Alumni and Friends
Benny C. Morgan Recital Series
Celebration of the Arts Fund
Connections Literary Series
Wart Virts Concert Series
Theatre Chair Nameplate
Other:
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CSM Fine Arts Theatre NameplatesThese nameplates were generously donated in honor or in memory of friends and loved ones
In Loving Memory of G.M. Bowling Jr.
Marti Brown
Ronald Brown
CSM Theater Rocks! From PRIN Campus
The Daniel Busch Family
Duane DeMello
Meredith Mason Elrod Class of 1993
In gratitude for C. Emmitt, The Hupps
Ruth Ann Ferrell Class of 2000
Dr. Sue Gregg
Vickie Grow Community Education
Jenn Hamilton, M.Ed., Ed.S.
In memory of Jeannette Kite
Robert and Nancy Ingwalson
Toni Zanelotti Kruszka
Anna (Babysitter Extraordinaire) Lahman
Ron & Beverley Lahman Love CSM
Jerome Sr., Jehnell, Jerome and Jehnae Linkins
Tracy Michelle Mason
Dan Mosser CEWD
Karen O’Connor
Jamie Robertson Many Happy Memories Here!
Joe Slater Class of 1974
Linda A. Smith 20 great years at CSM
In memory of Guffrie and Parthenia Smith
Brian Wathen our Hero!
George, Andrea, and Clara Watkins
Karen Zuza
Leonard Zuza
Sponsors and Grants:
2017-2018 Ward Virts Concert Series
Sponsors: CSM Foundation Dr. and Mrs. Henry Virts Edward and Patricia Mehosky Eric and Rané Franklin Nancy Powell Hempstead in memory of Roger Powell Stovy and Anne Brown
Grants:Arts Council of Calvert County Maryland State Arts Council
2017-2018 Connections Literary Series
Sponsor: CSM Foundation
Grants:Arts Council of Calvert County St. Mary’s County Arts Council Maryland State Arts Council
2017 Summer Concert Series
Sponsors: CSM Foundation Taylor Gas Company
Grants:Maryland State Arts Council St. Mary’s County Arts Council
Contact
www.csmd.edu/Arts
bxoffc@csmd.edu
301-934-7828
College of Southern Maryland Performing Arts
@CSMDArts
Sign up for the Arts Mailing List at www.csmd.edu/Arts
Purchasing Tickets And Box Office Information
The Box Office for all campuses of the College of Southern Maryland is located in the Fine Arts Center (FA Building) on the La Plata Campus. All reservations for arts events are handled through this single Box Office.
Individual ticket prices and times vary by event. Tickets can be purchased online. Tickets can also be purchased at the door by cash or check at all campus locations where performances are being held. At the La Plata Campus, Visa, MasterCard, American Express, and Discover are also accepted. Performances, times, and locations are subject to change without notice. For more information, directions, and tickets, contact the Box Office or visit www.csmd.edu/Arts.
Box Office Hours
Monday - Friday: hours vary
The Box Office opens one (1) hour prior to each performance.
Performance Locations
La Plata Campus
Fine Arts Center (FA Building) 8730 Mitchell Road PO Box 910 La Plata, MD 20646-0910
Leonardtown Campus
Building A, Auditorium 22950 Hollywood Road Leonardtown, MD 20650-4700
Prince Frederick Campus
Building B, Multipurpose Room 115 J.W. Williams Road Prince Frederick, MD 20678
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