28
201 GET YOUR HANDS DIRTY THINGS YOU DON’T WANT TO MISS LEARNING TO MAKE $ IN THE ARTS NCSU CENTER STAGE / THE CRAFTS CENTER / DANCE PROGRAM / GREGG MUSEUM OF ART & DESIGN / MUSIC @ NC STATE / UNIVERSITY THEATRE Fall 3 PROGRAM

ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

The Fall issue of the Arts NC State program book

Citation preview

Page 1: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

201 Get your hands dirty

thinGs you don’t want to miss

LearninG to make $ in the arts

N c s u c e N t e r s ta g e / t h e c r a f t s c e N t e r / D a N c e P r o g r a m / g r e g g m u s e u m o f a r t & D e s i g N / m u s i c @ N c s tat e / u N i v e r s i t y t h e at r e

Fall3program

Page 2: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

faculty staff ADMINISTRATIONN. Alexander Miller III, Vice Provost, Division of Academic & Student AffairsChristy Rain, Executive AssistantHolly M. Durham, Director of Business and Planning

NCSU CENTER STAGESharon H. Moore, DirectorMark K.S. Tulbert, Associate DirectorLori N. Jones, Community Engagement Coordinator

THE CRAFTS CENTERGeorge Thomas, DirectorJo Ellen Westmoreland, Assistant DirectorDusty Fletcher, Program AssistantJennifer Siegel, Clay Studio ManagerEvan Lightner, Wood Studio ManagerPhal Ngong Buntoum, Housekeeper

DANCE PROGRAMRobin Harris, Director & NCSU Dance Company Artistic DirectorTara Z. Mullins, Assistant Director & Panoramic Dance Project Director

GREGG MUSEUM OF ART & DESIGNRoger Manley, DirectorZoe Starling, Curator of EducationMary Hauser, Museum RegistrarMatthew Gay, Art PreparatorHilary Kinlaw, Museum Operations ManagerJanine LeBlanc, Collections Assistant

UNIVERSITY THEATREJohn C. McIlwee, DirectorAllison Bergman, Assistant Director, Acting/Directing/AcademicsJoshua Reaves, Assistant Director, Production/Lighting & Sound DesignerJayme Mellema, Scenic DesignerEmily Rossi, Costume Shop Manager/ Associate DesignerAdrienne McKenzie, Costume TechnicianDavid Jensen, Technical Director, Thompson HallAaron Bridgman, Assistant Technical Director, Thompson HallAndrew Korhonen, Operations and Events CoordinatorDavid Jones, Technical Director, Stewart TheatreKevin Wright, Assistant Technical Director/ Sound SpecialistRachel Klem, Acting Coach/InstructorNancy Breeding, Business/Marketing Program SpecialistRon Foreman, Special Projects/ Graphic DesignerPhal Ngong Buntoum, Housekeeper

MUSIC DEPARTMENTDr. Thomas Koch, Interim DirectorDr. Jack Fuller, Assistant Director, Outreach and AssessmentKathleen Laudate, Operations ManagerLogann Graham, Program CoordinatorRandall Rehfuss, Concert CoordinatorDr. Gary Beckman, Director of Entrepreneurial Studies in the Arts

Dr. Randolph Foy, Director of OrchestrasDr. Paul Garcia, Director of Bands & Percussion InstructorDr. Olga Kleiankina, Director of Piano StudiesDr. Jonathan Kramer, Teaching ProfessorDr. Nathan Leaf, Director of Choral ActivitiesDr. Wes Parker, Director of Jazz StudiesDr. Rodney Waschka, CHASS ProfessorDr. Alison Arnold, Adjunct FacultyJonathan Gangi, LecturerDr. Robert Petters, Adjunct FacultyDr. Kristen Turner, Adjunct FacultyAndy Beck, Adjunct InstructorMary Boone, Adjunct InstructorDon Eagle, Adjunct InstructorJason Foreman, Adjunct InstructorWayne Leechford, Adjunct InstructorDr. David Lewis, Adjunct InstructorDr. John Noel, Adjunct InstructorJennifer Seiger, Adjunct InstructorDarrell Thompson, Adjunct InstructorLin-Ti Wang, Adjunct Instructor

ARTS DEVELOPMENTNicole Peterson, DirectorAshley McKinstry, Assistant DirectorSara Seltzer, Development SpecialistVirginia Yopp, Gregg Museum Campaign Manager

TICKET CENTRALKatherine Fuller, DirectorTyrone Jenkins, Assistant Director

OFFICERSDavid S. Thompson, ChairBing Sizemore, Chair Elect

MEMbERSAnn-Cabell Baum AndersenPeaches G. BlankRichard BryantTom CabanissLauren Caddick, Student RepresentativeJoAnne DickinsonPaul Fomberg

Rebekah Givens, Student RepresentativeGary GreeneSamantha HatemKyle HeldDonna KanichVicky LangleyKimberly PrzybylMeredith RoseTom StaffordPatricia TectorNicole TyraCathy Ward

Helen WhiteDoug WitcherMartha Zaytoun

Ex-OFFICIOBernie Hyman, President, Friends of the GreggN. Alexander Miller III, Vice Provost, Division of Academic & Student AffairsNicole Peterson, Director of Development

frIENDs of arts Nc statEBoard of advisors

2 ticket central 919.515.1100 ncsu.edu/arts

Page 3: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

I will never forget my first visit to the North Carolina Museum of Art in 1975. It was a cold, blustery rainy day, and not much seemed to be happening on Morgan Street in downtown Raleigh. To be honest, while I was curious to see the collection, I was equally motivated to escape the awful weather whipping around me outside. How lucky I was. In one of those wonderful moments that we learn to treasure, I found myself in the company of Frederick Carl Frieseke’s The Garden Parasol, a painting that many of you can immediately see in your own mind’s eye. Within moments, I forgot the gloomy, dreary day outside and was emotionally transported to a lush, sun-dappled, efflorescent landscape where afternoons move at a leisurely, almost sensual pace. I was fascinated by French literature and music at the time, and I was

young enough to let myself imagine that the central figure, a beautiful young lady seated under a brilliantly-colored parasol, might be reading the poetry of Verlaine or possibly a novel by André Gide. Perhaps she would attend an evening concert featuring the music of Debussy or Ravel…

As you can tell, my encounter with this wonderful French-inspired, American painting transfixed and transported me from the rainy streets of Raleigh to the artist’s sun-splashed summer garden in Giverny. (Yes, the same Giverny made famous by Frieseke’s neighbor, Claude Monet.) Almost 40 years after that first visit, I am so thankful to generations of North Carolina legislators who understood the transforming power and fundamental importance of the arts, and who had the vision to create the first major state-supported, state-funded museum collection in the United States, and who also created the first state-supported symphony in the country. A dear friend of mine once observed how lucky she was to grow up in North Carolina, where the arts are valued and supported and whose citizens are proud to be “the people who guard and preserve these cultural treasures.”

On behalf of countless NC State students who have experienced the unique capacity the arts have to free our spirits and make our souls sing, thank you for preserving our rich artistic heritage and for supporting ARTS NC STATE!

N. Alexander Miller III, Vice Provost

“Art is the signature of civilizations.” – Jean Sibelius

Dear Friends of ARTS NC STATE:

On the cover: Grains of Time, photo by Becky Kirkland.Contents 4 schEDulE of EvENts

6 gEt your haNDs DIrty: shapINg arts & mINDs

8 fall hIghlIghts: thINgs you DoN’t waNt to mIss

16 makE moNEy IN thE arts: start It up

20 stuDENt spotlIght

21 ImportaNt INformatIoN

22 arts Nc statE DoNors

26 latE NIght DININg guIDE

ncsu.edu/arts 3

Page 4: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

sePtember I DID IT MY WAY: AN EXHIBITION OF WORKS BY THE TRIANGLE ART QUILTERS GUILD Exhibition: through Nov 3, The Crafts Center

ARTS NOW Thur, Sept 5, 7pm, Titmus Theatre

JOAN RUANE: COTTON IS KING – THE HISTORY OF SpINNING COTTON Sat, Sept 14, 7:30pm, The Crafts Center

MEASURE OF EARTH: TEXTILES AND TERRITORY IN WEST AFRICA Exhibition: through Dec 18, African American Cultural Center Gallery, Witherspoon Student Center

5TH ANNUAL pINHOLE CAMERA CHALLENGE Exhibition: Sept 25-Nov 1, The Crafts Center

ArcADIA Wed-Sun, Sept 25-29, Oct 2-6, Titmus Theatre (7:30pm Wed-Sat, 2pm Sun)

pMC LECTURE: DR. JONATHAN KRAMER Fri, Sept 27, 7pm, Kennedy-McIlwee Studio Theatre

octoberARTS NOW Tues, Oct 15, 7pm, Titmus Theatre

JAzz ENSEMBLE Thur, Oct 17, 7pm, Pullen Park

RALEIGH CIvIC CHAMBER ORCHESTRA Sun, Oct 20, 4pm, Titmus Theatre

The ADvenTures of AlvIn spuTnIk: Deep seA explorer Thur-Sun, Oct 24-27, Titmus Theatre (Thur, 8pm; Fri, 6pm & 8pm; Sat, 5pm & 8pm; Sun, 2pm)

CHORAL COLLAGE Fri, Oct 25, 7pm, Holy Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church

WIND ENSEMBLE Tues, Oct 29, 7pm, Titmus Theatre

TURTLE ISLAND QUARTET WITH NELLIE MCKAY Tues, Oct 29, 8pm, A.J. Fletcher Theater

pMC LECTURE: DR. MARK EvAN BONDS, UNC-CHApEL HILL DEpARTMENT OF MUSIC Wed, Oct 30, 7pm, Titmus Theatre

November MARTHA REDBONE ROOTS pROJECT Sat, Nov 2, 5pm & 8pm, Titmus Theatre

OLGA KLEIANKINA FACULTY RECITAL Sun, Nov 3, 4pm, Titmus Theatre

FASHION SHOW OF CLOTHING CREATED BY GHANAIAN DESIGNER/DRESSMAKER ADELAIDE AFUA WOTORTSI Thur, Nov 7, 7pm, Room 126, Witherspoon Student Center

The GAMe's AfooT Fri-Sun, Nov 8-10, Wed-Sun, Nov 13-17, 20-24, Shows added! Nov 10, 7:30pm; Nov 16, 2pm; Nov 17, 7:30pm Kennedy-McIlwee Studio Theatre (7:30pm Wed-Sat, 2pm Sun)

pMC LECTURE Fri, Nov 8, 7pm, Titmus Theatre

DANCE pROGRAM FALL CONCERT Thur-Fri, Nov 14-15, 8pm, Titmus Theatre

JAzz ENSEMBLE Sat, Nov 16, 7pm, Titmus Theatre

TOTALLY BEETHOvEN: MUSIC @ NC STATE CELEBRATES 90 YEARS Sun, Nov 17, 4pm, Meymandi Concert Hall

AnD WITh ThIs shell, The seA: The cerAMIc ArT of sIGlInDA scArpA Nov 21-Jan 31, NC State’s Historic Chancellor’s Residence Opening Reception: Thur, Nov 21, 6-8pm

CAMERON CARpENTER Fri-Sat, Nov 22-23, Titmus Theatre (Fri at 8pm, Sat at 5pm & 8pm)

29TH ANNUAL HOLIDAY CRAFTS FAIR & SALE Sat, Nov 23, 10am-5pm, The Crafts Center

NCSU pIpES & DRUMS Sat, Nov 23, 4pm, Harris Field

REGISTRATION FOR SpRING 2014 CRAFTS CLASSES BEGINS FOR NC STATE STUDENTS Mon, Nov 25 (Mon, Dec 9 for everyone else)

JAzz COMBOS Mon, Nov 25, Titmus Theatre

December WIND ENSEMBLE Tues, Dec 3, 7pm, Titmus Theatre

GRAINS OF TIME Wed, Dec 4, 7pm, Jones Auditorium, Meredith College

CHORAL HOLIDAY CONCERT Thur, Dec 5, 7pm, Holy Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church

LADIES IN RED Fri-Sat, Dec 6-7, 7pm, Titmus Theatre

BRICKYARD BRASS QUINTET Sun, Dec 8, 4pm, Kennedy-McIlwee Studio Theatre

UNivErSiTy ThEaTrE | ThE CraFTS CENTEr | GrEGG MUSEUM OF arT & DESiGN | CENTEr STaGE | DaNCE PrOGraM | MUSiC @ NC STaTE

pErformaNcEs ExhIbItIoNs

4 ticket central 919.515.1100 ncsu.edu/arts

Page 5: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

ncsu.edu/arts 5

Page 6: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

arts minds

sh

ap i n g

by Orla Swift

&

Page 7: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

Sophomore Brian Haidet turns a glass bead over a flame, embellishing it with bands of color. Katie Allen saws a wooden shelf for a jewelry box she designed. A group of women talk quietly with instructor Naomi Profesorsky as they weave beaded pendants. Down the hall, the Twisted Thread Fiber Arts Guild holds its monthly meeting. And across the lobby, artist Kirk Adam’s students prepare canvases and paint with acrylics.

The Crafts Center is all about shaping – be it making a work of art or broadening the perspectives of those who come by to create. Even the center itself has morphed – from the $16 million 2008-09 renovation of its home base, Frank Thompson Hall, to revamped program offerings designed to serve today’s endlessly busy students.

It’s an exciting time for the center, and for those who use it.

Take Anne McLean. At 21 and in her senior year as a polymer and color chemistry major in the College of Textiles, McLean has tried her hand at a variety of crafts at the center, from jewelry wire-wrapping to metal-working and soldering, wood-turning and ceramics. She now teaches classes in several of these skills, as well as Coptic bookbinding, and she works at the front desk.

“I very quickly became attached. It’s a pretty inviting place,” says McLean, who first explored the center while on a tour with her Arts Village dorm-mates. Located on Jensen Drive on the lower level of Thompson Hall, the

Crafts Center may feel a little off the beaten path. Enter the doors, though, and you'll be amazed at the magnitude of activity occurring, McLean says.

The Thompson renovations made the Crafts Center even more of a vital resource for artists. From the new, cutting-edge torch system for lampwork and off-mandrel glass classes to new pottery kilns and wheels, new woodworking equipment, lighted window displays, 60” monitors to support instruction, and other technological upgrades, the center has taken a dramatic leap from its best-kept-secret past.

“It’s cool because when you walk down that little drive, you see the windows, you see the art in them, you see some people moving around in there,” McLean says. “But it’s not until you walk through that door that you really get a sense of how big it is and all the things that are happening inside. It’s pretty awesome.”

Allen, the woodworker, recently moved to Raleigh from the Chicago area precisely because of the Crafts Center. Her parents had a shop in their basement, where she made wooden dolls. She knew she’d miss it too much if she moved just anywhere. She liked North Carolina, so she Googled her woodworking desires, and up popped the Crafts Center.

Upon arriving, the 26-year-old promptly signed up for a woodworking class taught by Crafts Center director George Thomas and instructor Evan Lightner, and she spent one to two nights a week designing and building her jewelry box and learning as much as she could about the massive array of tools and machines in the spacious wood shop.

Thomas knows that hunger well. He discovered the Crafts Center in 1978, while majoring in technology education at NC State. He dove in full-force, heading to the wood shop four to five nights a week to practice woodcarving and learn to make furniture.

But it wasn’t just his woodworking knowledge that expanded in those heady days. Thomas says he also learned a lot about life from the people around him – most notably from his mentor, Doreen Underwood, who had worked with President Eisenhower’s Supreme Allied Command in Europe during World War II and had many a tale to tell.

“I was hooked from day one,” Thomas says of the center, which opened in 1964 and is now one of the largest university crafts centers in the nation. “I camped out by the door, hoping a job would come open.”

He served as a student volunteer during college and a community volunteer thereafter, while teaching wood shop full-time at East Garner Middle School. After Underwood retired in 1990, Thomas became assistant director and

then associate director. When longtime director Jim Pressley retired in 2007 (having started his own career there as a student volunteer 42 years earlier), Thomas became interim director, a position that became permanent as the center prepared for its grand reopening in 2009.

Now Thomas and his staff are on a mission to make sure that everyone in the local community – most notably NC State students – has the opportunity to be hooked just as he was, whether it’s for a weekend pinhole camera competition, a $5 intro class, a skateboard-making workshop, troubleshooting for an engineering class project or, like McLean, for years of multi-media exploration.

Haidet, the glass-worker, says he loves balancing his material science and physics studies with a night at the studio, turning out beads, marbles and other creations.

“Sometimes after a whole bunch of exams, I come in here and flame-work for hours,” he says. “If something goes wrong, you can always make another bead.”

Orla Swift was a theatre critic and arts reporter at the News & Observer and other newspapers for 20 years, and is now director of marketing and communications at Sarah P. Duke Gardens.

“I was hooked from day one… I camped out by the door, hoping a job would come open.”

It’s a quiet summer night at the N.C. State CraftS CeNter. School’s out. Locals are off on holidays. But in every corner of the center, thiNgS are takiNg Shape.

ncsu.edu/arts 7

Page 8: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

Please see the calendar on page 4 for a full list of ARTS NC STATE performances and exhibitions.

201Fall3hIghlIghts

Page 9: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

For 90 years, the music department has been an integral part of the student experience at nC state. with diverse vocal and instrumental ensembles ranging from the state Chorale to the “Power sound of the south” marching Band to the raleigh Civic symphony, the music department at nC state university offers something for every music lover. the music ensembles at nC state are open to all students, regardless of academic major.

the music department offers a variety of academic courses, many of which fulfill general education requirements. Five minors are available with emphases in Performance, Composition, history, Liberal arts, and arts entrepreneurship.

on sunday, november 17, music @ nC state (the performance arm of the music department) will celebrate the 90th anniversary with an all-Beethoven program, presented at meymandi Concert hall in downtown raleigh. this special concert, directed by dr. nathan Leaf, will feature performances by the raleigh Civic symphony, the combined nC state choirs, and several guest soloists.

90 yEars of makINg musIc

I DID It My Way: AN ExHIbITION OF wORK bY THE TRIANGLE ART QUILTERSExhibition: through novEmbEr 3 The Crafts Center

Art quilts combine traditional quilting techniques with imagery and ideas to create art objects that are usually intended to be hung or worn. Each month members of the Triangle Art Quilters decide on a theme and present their interpretation of that theme, examples of which are included in the exhibition.

THE 5TH ANNUAL PINHOLE CAMERA CHALLENGE ExHIbITIONExhibition: through novEmbEr 1 The Crafts Center

View the best photographs from the September 2013 competition and help select the People’s Choice winner by voting for your favorite. (Winner to be announced on Friday, October 25)

MEASURE OF EARTH: TExTILES AND TERRITORY IN wEST AFRICA Exhibition: through DEcEmbEr 18African American Cultural Center Gallery, Witherspoon Student Center

Drawing primarily from the rich holdings of African materials in the Gregg Museum’s permanent collections, Measure of Earth explores the intricate relationships and meanings behind the patterns and imagery of West African textiles.

arcaDIaWEDnEsDay-sunDay, sEptEmbEr 25-29 anD octobEr 2-6, EvEning shoWs at 7:30pm, sunDay matinEEs at 2pm Titmus Theatre

Arcadia takes us back and forth between the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, ranging over the nature of truth and time, the difference between the Classical and the Romantic temperament, and the disruptive influence of sex on our orbits in life. It focuses on the mysteries – romantic, scientific, literary – that engage the minds and hearts of characters whose passions and lives intersect across scientific planes and centuries. “Arcadia is Tom Stoppard’s richest, most ravishing comedy to date, a play of wit, intellect, language, brio and, new for him, emotion.” – New York Times

UNivErSiTy ThEaTrE ThE CraFTS CENTEr GrEGG MUSEUM OF arT & DESiGN CENTEr STaGE DaNCE PrOGraM MUSiC @ NC STaTE

ncsu.edu/arts 9

Page 10: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

EAST AFRICAN SACRED MUSIC TRADITIONS: ANCIENT AND MODERNFriDay, sEptEmbEr 27 at 7pm Kennedy-McIlwee Studio Theatre

Dr. Jonathan Kramer, Teaching Professor of Music and Arts Studies at NC State University, will share his experiences and insights gained this summer on an ambitious teaching and research trip to East Africa. In Uganda, Kramer researched new forms of Christian congregational singing rooted in North American gospel. In Ethiopia, he studied a thousand-year-old liturgy of the Coptic Christian church practiced in Lalibela, one of Africa’s most ancient and sacred sites. Join him for a fascinating multimedia presentation.

RALEIGH CIVIC CHAMbER ORCHESTRAsunDay, octobEr 20 at 4pm Titmus Theatre

Dr. J. Mark Scearce will be the guest conductor for a program that includes two well-known works that are also personal favorites of his: Stravinsky’s Pulcinella Suite and J.S. Bach’s Suite No. 3 in D, BWV 1068. The concert will feature the 20th anniversary performance of Benediction, which Scearce wrote in response to the tragic death two years previous of the son of his colleague, Soloana Ingram.

the aDventures of alvIn sputnIk: Deep sea explorerthursDay-sunDay, octobEr 24-27 Titmus Theatre thursDay at 8pm, FriDay at 6pm & 8pm, saturDay at 5pm & 8pm, sunDay at 2pm

Produced by Perth Theatre Company of Australia, and winner of best solo show at the New York International Fringe Festival, this micro-epic puppet spectacle melds mime, puppetry, music and animation into a touching story about love, loss, and heroism in a post-apocalyptic world. While this show was created for adult audiences, it is appropriate for older children.

TURTLE ISLAND QUARTET wITH NELLIE MCKAYtuEsDay, octobEr 29 at 8pm A.J. Fletcher Theater, Duke Energy Center for the Performing Arts

Nellie McKay – a witty singer-songwriter, actress (The Threepenny Opera on Broadway and P.S. I Love You on film), pianist, comedienne and ukulele player – joins forces with the two-time Grammy Award-winning Turtle Island Quartet to present a kaleidoscopic view of the music of Billie Holiday, Billy Strayhorn, and the Weimar cabaret of the 1920s. Pre-show discussion with members of the Turtle Island Quartet, 7pm.

Fall hIghlIghts continued

Turtle Island Quartet with Nellie McKay

10 ticket central 919.515.1100 ncsu.edu/arts

Page 11: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

MARTHA REDbONE ROOTS PROjECTsaturDay, novEmbEr 2 at 5pm & 8pm Titmus Theatre

Martha Redbone’s most recent album (The Garden of Love, produced by the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band’s John McEuen) takes the immortal words of poet William Blake, the great Romantic visionary from 18th century England, and sets them in the Appalachian Mountains, bringing her soulful voice to hollered melodies, lullabies, ancient chants and inspired hymns.

FASHION SHOw OF wEST AFRICAN CLOTHINGthursDay, novEmbEr 7 at 7pm Room 126, Witherspoon Student Center

In conjunction with the Measure of Earth exhibition, the Gregg Museum presents a student-participatory fashion show of clothing created by Ghanaian designer/dressmaker Adelaide Afua Wotortsi.

the GaMe’s afootFriDay-sunDay, novEmbEr 8-10, WEDnEsDay-sunDay, novEmbEr 13-17, anD 20-24 ShowS added! nov 10, 7:30pm; nov 16, 2pm; nov 17, 7:30pm EvEning shoWs at 7:30pm, sunDay matinEEs at 2pm Kennedy-McIlwee Studio Theatre

It is December 1936 and Broadway star William Gillette, admired the world over for his leading role in the play Sherlock Holmes, has invited his fellow cast members to his Connecticut castle for a weekend of revelry. The festivities in this isolated house of tricks and mirrors quickly turn dangerous, and it’s up to Gillette himself – assuming the persona of his beloved Holmes – to track down the killer before the next victim appears. The danger and hilarity are nonstop in this glittering holiday whodunit.

DANCE PROGRAM FALL CONCERTthursDay & FriDay, novEmbEr 14 & 15 at 8pm Titmus Theatre

The Fall Concert features the choreography of current students who create work through independent study and through teacher-guided, student-choreographed collaborative projects (the Movement Studies Project and the Identity Project); choreography by alumni; and special projects. Both the NCSU Dance Company and the Panoramic Dance Project perform on the Fall Concert.

Martha Redboneuniversity theatre, An Inspector Calls, spring 2013

ncsu.edu/arts 11

Page 12: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

TOTALLY bEETHOVEN: MUSIC @ NC STATE CELEbRATES 90 YEARSsunDay, novEmbEr 17 at 4pm Meymandi Concert Hall, Duke Energy Center for the Performing Arts

In celebration of its 90th anniversary, the Music Department, in conjunction with the Raleigh Civic Symphony Association, will present an all-Beethoven concert. Under the direction of Dr. Nathan Leaf, the Raleigh Civic Symphony will perform three works: the Overture to Egmont, Op. 84; the Triple Concerto, Op. 56, with violinist Brian Reagin, cellist Dr. Jonathan Kramer, and pianist Dr. Olga Kleiankina; and the Choral Fantasy, Op. 80, with the combined NC State choirs and pianist Dr. Tom Koch.

AND wITH THIS SHELL, THE SEA: THE CERAMIC ART OF SIGLINDA SCARPAExhibition: novEmbEr 21-January 31, opEning rEcEption: thursDay, novEmbEr 21, 6-8pm Historic chancellor’s residence, 1903 Hillsborough Street

Siglinda Scarpa was born in northwestern Italy at the outset of World War II, and was still in her mid-teens when she left school to be apprenticed to a master ceramicist. This turned out to be a pivotal moment in a life that would later lead to studios in Rome and New York, and eventually to Pittsboro, North Carolina, where she founded her own small art pottery studio and has been making her clay art and sheltering abandoned cats ever since. Exhibition open by appointment (Monday-Friday, 9am-5pm); call 919.513.7244 or 919.515.3503, or email [email protected].

CAMERON CARPENTERFriDay, novEmbEr 22 at 8pm, saturDay, novEmbEr 23 at 5pm & 8pm Titmus Theatre

To call Cameron Carpenter a virtuoso seems wholly inadequate. Hypertalented and flamboyant, his approach to the organ is smashing the stereotypes of organists and organ music while generating an unprecedented level of acclaim and exposure. Now living in Berlin, he attended high school at the UNC School of the Arts before moving on to Juilliard. A staunch advocate of liberating organ music from musty cathedrals, Cameron Carpenter will be performing on his new international touring organ, custom built by digital organ pioneers Marshall & Ogletree.

HOLIDAY CRAFTS FAIR & SALEsaturDay, novEmbEr 23 From 10am-5pm The Crafts Center

Now in its 29th year, this very popular annual event features work by the Crafts Center’s own artists and craftspeople. Items available for sale include pottery, wood, jewelry, glass, painting, quilts, felting and photography.

Fall hIghlIghts continued

NC State Dance ProgramThe Ceramic Art of Siglinda Scarpa Cameron Carpenter

effective January 1, 2014, per changes in state law, a sales tax of 6.75% will be assessed on

tickets to cultural events. we encourage you to purchase your spring 2014 arts nC state tickets

by december 31 to avoid paying this tax.

12 ticket central 919.515.1100 ncsu.edu/arts

Page 13: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

ncsu.edu/arts 13

Page 14: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

fuND-raIsINg progrEssMajor Gifts More than 25 generous individuals and foundations have chosen to make a major commitment of $25,000 or more to the Gregg Museum Campaign. several have chosen to name spaces in the new Gregg and will be recognized with permanent donor plaques once the museum is complete. all of these visionary supporters believe in the future Gregg Museum of art & design, and we thank them for their support!

Nearly 40 households have joined the Founding Friends of the Gregg Museum Campaign! The campaign’s founding friends program recognizes donors of $5,000+. our goal is to recruit 200 founding friends and raise $1 million, nearly a quarter of our total private fund-raising goal. founding friends gifts (like all gifts to the campaign) may be paid over five years; therefore, you may contribute $1,000 each year for five years. founding friends will be acknowledged permanently on a comprehensive plaque that will be displayed prominently in the future museum. Together, the community can build the new Gregg!

As a reminder… all pledges to the Gregg Museum Campaign may be paid over a period of up to five years from the date of the original commitment. No gift is too large or small!

Check out the Gregg Campaign website! visit the Gregg Museum Campaign website at newgregg.ncsu.edu to see design renderings, to keep up with our fund-raising progress, to read about our donors, and to learn more about the Gregg Museum of art & design and its 26,000+ item collection!

Questions about the Gregg Museum Campaign? Contact Nicole Peterson, director of development for arTs NC sTaTE, at 919.513.1337 or [email protected]. You may also contact virginia Yopp, Gregg Campaign Manager, at 919.812.2355 or [email protected].

the Campaign for the Gregg museum of art & design is truly a campus and community effort, and you can be a part of it. Consider helping make the Gregg museum’s permanent home a reality!

$3.6 million in student and university support

+ $2.1 million raised privately as of september 2013

+ $1.8 million more given by supporters like you

= $7.5 million and a new Gregg Museum!

is closing the gap!

the campaign for the

of art & design

newgregg.ncsu.edu

Page 15: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

ncsu.edu/arts 15

Page 16: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

Energy to the Artsby Kate Dobbs Ariail

Students Bring start it up:

16 ticket central 919.515.1100 ncsu.edu/arts

Page 17: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

q: a:

What did you do at college today, dear?

Well, I started a company.

ncsu.edu/arts 17

Page 18: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

This kind of thing may be common among techno-geeks, but it’s not so common in the arts. Dr. Gary Beckman and his students in the NC State Arts Entrepreneurship Minor are changing that.

The idea of wedding entrepreneurship with the arts is a young one, but as old arts funding models collapse and new business models blossom in the 21st century, arts entrepreneurship programs are taking hold. Beckman is one of the leaders in this new academic field. Last year, he co-founded its only academic journal, artivate.org, and this summer he organized the first national roundtable, bringing together colleagues from across the country to discuss their programs and how to “mushroom” arts entrepreneurship education across the country. This resulted in the world’s first academic society for arts entrepreneurship educators.

Beckman has certainly “mushroomed” it at NC State, where he arrived in the fall of 2011, to manifest then Music Department director J. Mark Scearce’s vision of including this kind of education in the music program. Beckman spent a semester designing the minor (it requires 15 credit hours spread over four required courses and an advised elective), but colored way outside the lines, making the minor work for passionate students in all disciplines.

“I have students from archeology to zoology,” Beckman says. The minor fits neatly into the campus-wide entrepreneurial ethos, and, he says, it “provides a way for students who really want to be involved in the arts, but who are here for another program.” (Beckman knows something about that: he was a Renaissance German musicologist, but while working on his Ph.D., he realized he probably would not find a job in that micro-discipline – so he set about creating a new field.)

Energy to the Arts

Students Bring

What did you do at college today, dear? Well, I started a company.

18 ticket central 919.515.1100 ncsu.edu/arts

Page 19: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

The minor’s motto is “find your happy place,” but that doesn’t mean an easy place. Students read aesthetics, “to understand what art may be – and how it is not a refrigerator,” and discuss art’s relationship to the senses. They study the way the arts, both for-profit and non-profit, fit into the larger economic ecology. They produce feasibility studies, which, Beckman says, “help students apply the mechanics to their dream.”

And then there are the mechanics, which vary with the dreams. For students like Anne McLean, who makes jewelry and book arts, and wants to start a craft center; or John Miller, a dancer who would like to found a dance company with outreach programs; or Eric Engstrom, who dreams of a non-profit mobile music production studio for disabled musicians, the mechanics of making it so will be quite different from those of students who want to manufacture something of use to a specific art form. For Chayanne Scales, who’s working on a cultural magazine, there is an entirely different set of issues. Beckman gets excited by all of it and says, happily, “there’s a lot of nurturing in this program. My office door is always open.” A capstone experience completes the minor, and gives students the challenge of forming a team to consult with and advise a local non-profit arts organization, expanding their understanding of the difficulties while unleashing their collective creative problem-solving genius.

Students in the minor have access to the components of the campus-wide Entrepreneurship Initiative, and are encouraged to compete in the eGames, where they may win start-up funding, which can lead to more opportunities. The stories of two very different students, both now seniors who will graduate in May 2014, give a sense of the astounding possibilities.

Italo Levia, 25, launched Levia Strings (with two NCSU alum partners) in the summer of 2013. He’s a psychology major from Raleigh who plays guitar, and his experience learning a complicated musical score electrified his entrepreneurial lightbulb. Levia color-coded his score and his guitar strings to match, and now, “we’re trying to change the way people learn music.” His team entered the 2010 eGames and “won every division we entered,” which gave him some start-up funding; he has raised more from family and friends. In doing his patent research, he found someone who’d patented a very similar idea; Levia convinced him to license the patent. He tried mass production of the color-coded strings in China, be couldn’t get the quality control he wanted – so he had some robots built and programmed to paint

them in the corner of a Philadelphia factory. The strings are packaged in North Carolina, and sold locally in music stores and through distributors.

Whereas Levia immediately felt comfortable in the role of entrepreneur, 21-year-old English major Suzanne Matthews from Denver, NC, had some fears to overcome. “Had I not taken that class, I would never have known that entrepreneurship was for me. I was going to school for publishing. I never thought I had it in me to be a business woman.”

Matthews has registered Soutenu Dancewear as a limited liability corporation, and in July was finalizing her patent application for something she wished she’d had as a dancer: dance tights with ankle support invisibly engineered into the knit. “Soutenu” is a dance term, from the French, meaning “supported or sustained,” and Soutenu tights will help prevent dancer injury and relieve fatigue without restricting range of motion. She won an initial start-up grant in the eGames, and through that competition also was accepted in Durham start-up incubator Groundwork Labs in American Underground, where she was connected to a patent lawyer. To develop her product, she took her design to Fine Line Hosiery in Randleman (“I’m trying to keep it as NC-based as possible,” she noted), and they engineered it through many samples. “It was a collaboration,” says Matthews, “their skills and my knowledge of how it should feel.” As soon as she can stamp it “patent pending,” Fine Line Hosiery will manufacture to her order, and Matthews expects Soutenu Dancewear to hit the shelves before Christmas 2013.

As a land grant university, NC State has always been involved with improving individual lives, industries and economies in North Carolina. As a top-tier research university, it has become famous for its scientific and technological expertise, and lauded for its technology transfer programs that get information out where it can make money. With the Arts Entrepreneurship Minor, these streams merge.

“These students are leaving college with running businesses,” says Beckman. “We have freshmen starting businesses! 21-year-olds with patents! Our students impact the production of art. They are going to make products so that artists can make better art. And when they want to manufacture something, they want it to stay here. Their dedication to the state is truly remarkable.”

Kate Dobbs Ariail has written widely on the arts since 1988. The Five Points Star, her cultural criticism blog, can be found at www.thefivepointsstar.com.

we have freshmen starting businesses! 21-year-olds with patents! our students impact the production of art. they are going to make products so that artists can make better art. and when they want to manufacture something, they want it to stay here. their DEDICATION TO THE STATE is truly remarkable.

ncsu.edu/arts 19

Page 20: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

spotlIghtartists leading a discussion or workshop in the classroom, students being welcomed into the Gregg Museum’s permanent collection for a behind the scenes tour, and faculty encouraging students to attend performances or exhibitions for extra credit or writing assignments. To see a copy of this semester’s Guide go to the ARTS NC STATE website at ncsu.edu/arts.

thE arts vIllagE

The Arts Village is a Living and Learning Community on campus spon-sored by ARTS NC STATE and University Housing. Located in Turlington Residence Hall, the Arts Village is home to 160 students who consider the arts an important part of their lives. The Arts Village has students from every undergraduate college on campus.

Living and learning villages provide environments in which students can pursue their academic goals in close partnership with mentors, professors and others who share their same interests. In the Arts Village, students who share a passion for the arts have created a close-knit community of friends who encourage and support each other both academically and artistically. Just about any time of day (or night!), you can walk down the halls of Turlington and hear students running lines together for a play, rehearsing for a music ensemble, or eagerly planning to attend a performance or exhibition together. Contributing to the core arts experience for Arts Village students, ARTS NC STATE faculty and staff design unique educational programs for the students throughout the year.

For more information about the Arts Village, contact Sharon Moore at [email protected].

stuDENt art purchasESince 2001, ARTS NC STATE has purchased original artwork of NC State students for permanent display on campus. A committee comprised of faculty, staff, students and local artists review the submitted work and choose the art to be purchased. In the twelve years that the Student Art Purchase has taken place, over 120 pieces of student artwork have been purchased and are on display in the Crafts Center, Student Health Center, Peele Hall, Witherspoon Student Center, and the College of Veterinary Medicine. The Student Art Purchase is open to any currently enrolled, full-time NC State student.

StudentpErformINg arts awarDsThe Performing Artist Award honors student performers in music, dance and theatre. This award is open to any current full-time NC State student enrolled in an ARTS NC STATE music, dance or theatre course and/or involved in an ARTS NC STATE Music Department, Dance Program, or University Theatre production or performance. The Performing Artist Award is chosen by adjudicating faculty. The winning performing artists each receive a $500 award and acknowledgement in the following year’s ARTS NC STATE playbill. Grant funding for the Performing and Creative Artist Awards is provided by the NC State Foundation, Inc.

2012-13 Performing Artist Award RecipientsDance: Agee Taylor, Fashion and Textile Management Music: Nathan Schnoor, Computer Science Theatre: Andrew Enloe, Communication Media and Video Production Theatre: Brett Williams, Zoology

crEatIvE artIst awarDsThe Creative Artist Award recognizes original work in music, dance and theatre created by currently enrolled full-time NC State students. This award is not tied to enrollment or participation in the arts programs or courses at NC State. A committee of music, dance and theatre faculty reviews submissions made annually of original work and selects the Creative Artist(s). Each winning creative artist receives a $500 award and acknowledgement in the following year’s ARTS NC STATE playbill. A corresponding grant is given to the appropriate ARTS NC STATE department to assist in producing the selected work(s) in the next academic year.

2012-13 Creative Artist Award Recipient Music: Robert Zachary Howell, Sociology, with minors in Music Composition and Philosophy

Submission deadline for the 2013-2014 Creative Artist Award is 5pm on Wednesday, March 26, 2014. For more information, go to ncsu.edu/arts/students, or contact ARTS NC STATE at 919.513.1800 or [email protected].

currIcular coNNEctIoNs guIDEThe Curricular Connections Guide exists to integrate ARTS NC STATE programming into the university’s curriculum in appropriate and meaningful ways. The Arts Outreach staff produces this comprehensive guide each semester to identify specific course connections with all six ARTS NC STATE visual and performing arts programs. Started in 2004, the Curricular Connections Guide has served as a way for the arts programs to provide specific opportunities to faculty that allow for enhanced learning for their students. Examples of collaboration include

Pictured above are details from three works purchased during the 2013 Student Art Purchase (l-R): lady in red by Sonika Rawal, PhD, Architecture (oil on canvas); pearl fryar by Tyler Confrey-Maloney, junior, Materials Science & Engineering (black & white photography); freedom by Kristie Kim, junior, Design Studies (watercolor).

20 ticket central 919.515.1100 ncsu.edu/arts

Page 21: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

Ticket Central919.515.1100Thompson Hall, 2241 Dunn Avenue 12-6pm, Mon-Fri

Ticket Central is your source for tickets to all ARTS NC STATE performances. Located in the main level lobby of Thompson Hall, Ticket Central is open weekdays from 12-6pm during fall and spring academic semesters. On the evening of shows, Ticket Central remains open until the performance begins. Ticket Central opens one hour before weekend performances. Hours vary during university holidays and over the summer. For your convenience, tickets may also be purchased online anytime at ncsu.edu/arts.

Discounts are available for current NC State students, faculty, staff, Centennial Campus affiliates and Encore members (current university ID required), FRIENDS of ARTS NC STATE ($100+ donation), members of the Parents & Families Association (Very Important Parent card required), and members of the NC State Alumni Association (membership card required). Discounts are also available for senior citizens, non-NC State students,

INformatIoNand groups. All discounts must be taken at time of purchase and may not be combined.

Exchanges are available as a special benefit to Center Stage Create Your Own Series subscribers and University Theatre season subscribers only. Exchanges must be handled in person at the Ticket Central office during normal business hours, no later than 48 hours in advance of the performance date printed on your ticket. Tickets must be exchanged for a performance within the same series.

Refunds are not offered, except in the case of a cancelled performance. All events are subject to change.

Seating PolicyDoors open approximately one-half hour before curtain time. As a courtesy to performers and audience members, latecomers will not be seated until a suitable pause in the performance. Please note that due to the configuration of the theatres in Thompson Hall, late seating for theatrical performances will not be available.

Electronic DevicesCameras and recorders of any kind are not allowed. Cell phones must be silenced or turned off. No text messaging please, as it is distracting to your fellow audience members.

A Note to ParentsParents should exercise discretion in deciding which events are appropriate for their children. Regardless of age, everyone must have a ticket. Please, no babes-in-arms.

AccessibilityARTS NC STATE performances, exhibitions and classes are accessible to people of all abilities. Ample wheelchair seating is available in all theatres. Large print programs, recorded playbill notes and sign-language interpreters are available on request (please provide Ticket Central with two weeks notice to allow time for an ASL interpreter to prepare). The Thompson Hall theatres are equipped with an infrared assistive listening system. An on-site wheelchair, courtesy of Arts Access, is also available. With advance notice, we are eager to provide any other assistance needed.

AcknowledgementsThe price of your ticket covers only a portion of the cost of presenting ARTS NC STATE programs. Our primary financial support comes from the students of NC State University. Additional support is provided by grants and our generous donors. Please refer to the list of our donors beginning on page 22.

AdvertisingThis book would not be possible without the advertisers who support it. The ARTS NC STATE programs are published and designed by Opus 1, inc., in cooperation with ARTS NC STATE. If you are interested in reaching our audience with your message in the ARTS NC STATE program book, please call or email Linda Simone at 919.834.9441 or [email protected].

This program book was not printed with state-appropriated funds.

PHoTo CREDiTS:

COVER: Becky Kirkland PG 3: roger Winstead PG 6: George Thomas (both images) PG 8: dan Jahn PGS 10-11 (L-R): (Turtle island Quartet with Nellie McKay) Ben reitzel, (University Theatre) aaron Bridgman, (Martha redbone) fabrice Trombert PG 12 (L-R): (Gregg Museum) siglinda scarpa artwork image courtesy of the artist, (Cameron Carpenter) Heiko Laschitzki, (dance) Ben scott Photography PGS 16-18: roger Winstead

Important

ncsu.edu/arts 21

Page 22: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

ARTS NC STATE is grateful to our FRIENDS of ARTS NC STATE for their generous support. This list represents charitable contributions made between July 1, 2012 and June 30, 2013. While we make every effort to be accurate and thorough, it is possible to accidentally omit or misspell a name. Please contact us at 919.515.6160 with any additions or corrections.

LEADER ($20,000 & above)Chip & Lyn Andrews ■Margaret P. CorcoranNorman & Gilda Greenberg ■The family of Nancy C. Gregg ■ Jerry & Nina Jackson ■Bob & Sarah Jordan ■Loomis FoundationBing & Carol Sizemore ■Douglas S. Witcher/Smart Choice ■

VISIONARY ($10,000-$19,999)Robert & Judy AbeeRichard & Suzy BryantMichael Busko & Joan Mills Busko/ Mills Family Foundation, Inc. ■Fenwick Foundation ■Fox Family FoundationCharles & Kathryn Green ■Jack & Amelia Hunter Thomas & Kimberly PrzybylDavid S. Thompson ■Titmus FoundationRandall & Susan Ward

bENEFACTOR ($5,000-$9,999)Hoyt Q. BaileyJon & Kathryn Bartley ■Henry & Sory BowersDavid & Laura Brody/ Brody Brothers Foundation ■Joan D. DeBruin ■Charles & JoAnne DickinsonLarry W. Ennis ■Bernard & Patricia Hyman ■Christopher Leazer & Heath RamseyMac & Lindsay Newsom ■Frank & Kaola Phoenix ■Stuart & Patricia Phoenix ■George Smedes Poyner FoundationCharles & Judith Proctor ■Michael Stoskopf & Suzanne Kennedy-StoskopfBanks & Louise Talley ■Kristopher & Nicole TyraWells Fargo Foundation ■Helen White ■G. Smedes & Rosemary York ■

CONNOISSEUR ($2,500-$4,999)Tom CabanissJames Trotter & Jaye Day-Trotter ■Deutsche Bank Americas FoundationCharles & Marian DowsettR. Merrill & Marilyn HunterRobert & Michelyn Masini, In memory of Toni Christine MasiniMcDonald-York Building Company ■Tom & Judy StaffordState Employees Combined CampaignStephen & Charlotte Wainwright ■Bud Whitmeyer & Rebecca Merrill ■George & Reba Worsley ■

PATRON ($1,000-$2,499)Arch T. Allen, III ■The Glenwood Agency/Ann-Cabell Baum Andersen & Bryan AndersenRichard & Cynthia BernhardCarson H. Boone ■Diane E. BooneRobert & Mary-Charles Boyette ■Bruce & Kelly BransonLeonard & Amy Bush ■Robert Cooper & Sharon Perry ■Shelley Crisp & Myles Standish ■Benjamin Edwards & Jennifer WestonGE FoundationGenworth FinancialCynthia M. Gregg, MD: Facial Plastic SurgeryLanny & Susanne Harer ■John & Joy HeitmannLouis & Dawn HuntLou Johanson ■Robert & Donna KanichJohn & Jane Kanipe ■Sara Lynn & K. D. KennedyGene & Vicky Langley ■Raymond & Betty MadryCaroline V. McCallMimi M. McKinney ■N. Alexander Miller III ■Morgan Stanley FoundationMu Beta PsiMichael & Deborah MullenEmily Mann PeckJames & Anne PedenCharles & Vicki PhaneufRichard & Mary PhillipsWade & Kathy Reece ■Stephen Reynolds & Susan OsborneWillard & Susan Ross ■William & Catherine Singer ■Milton A. SmithSampson & Mary Starling ■Patrick Steele & Mary Paula Zaytoun SteeleBrad & Anna SullivanKathlyn F. Sullivan ■John & Patricia Tector ■James & Cathy Ward ■Ashley T. WingateChancellor W. Randolph Woodson & Susan Woodson ■Robert Wright & Mary Brent Wright ■Henry & Martha Zaytoun

SPONSOR ($500-$999)Dorothy R. AdamsErnie & Beverly AlexanderBrent & Krista BarbeeRichard & Pamela Bostic ■R. A. Bryan Foundation, Inc.Ray & Jo Ann BryanDouglas & Mary BryantRobert & Lucinda Bunnen/ Lubo Fund, Inc. ■Johnny Burleson & Walter Clark ■C & L Graese FoundationJanice R. ChristensenMarvin & Mary ChaneyTerry & Nancy CoxStanley R. CrewsRoy Cromartie & Paul Fomberg

Lynn Daniel & Laura Roy DanielMichael & Terry DavisRonald G. EllisRichard & Alice Hardy ■William Holman & Stephanie BassBobby & Claudia KadisHaig Khachatoorian ■Thomas Lee & Hiller SpiresJohn & Lucinda MacKethan ■John & Alice MargesonGary & Sandi MasseyKatherine K. F. Mauney ■L. Dana McCall ■Daniel McLawhorn & Robert Hazelgrove ■Michael Merritt & Jayne FleenerMark & Tara MullinsJohn & Lynette ParkerRaleigh St. Patrick’s Day CommitteeDiane Sasson ■Bruce & Miriam Sauls ■Bill Savage & Mark LosikSteven Schuster & Mary Anne Howard ■Jennette C. SkinnerJohn & Emily SpragueSt. Mark’s Lutheran ChurchMark & Judith StricklandTarheel Gem & Mineral ClubSamuel & Joyce TerryFrank & Karen ToddEunice L. ToussaintJennifer L. VietsCody N. WilliamsChris Wilson & Heather Waddell

FRIEND ($250-$499)Alan & Maureen Aarons ■Jeff S. AldridgeCharlie & Sissy Ashby ■Richard & Elizabeth AxtellKim & Roselyn BatchellerAnna B. Bigelow ■Thomas & Linda BirkRobert & Carol BlackRichard Blanton & Candace HaiglerWanda BorrelliRobert & JoAnna BoyetteJeffery & Jill BradenWade & Brenda BrickhouseRaymond & Kymbra BrownLouis Cherry & Marsha GordonThomas & Frances CogginHerb & Kathryn Council ■Lucy C. DanielsAlexander & Linda De GrandJohn & Dawn EaglesonWilliam Ellenson & Kathleen Brown ■Risa S. EllovichRobert & Rosalyn EvansBlanton & Judith GodfreyRoy & Carole GoforthCharles C. & Kathryn Green ■Peter H. Green ■Wade & Sandra Hargrove ■Kerry S. HavnerChristine R. HodgdonRobert Irwin & Melissa PedenJonathan & Lisa JohnsonAaron & Laura KahnHans Kellner & Ruth Gross

Stephen & Mary KetoRon & Herta KirkThomas Lambeth & Donna Irving Lambeth ■Ross LampeChristopher & Margaret LaPlanteCharles & Wanda LefflerCalvin & Jaquelyn LewisSam & Judy LovelaceAdrian & Marcia LundChuck & Greer LysaghtFrank & Jo Ann MadrenRichard & Carole MarcotteCharles & Marie MartinJoseph & Mary MatzaDouglas & Victoria McCreaBrian & Konni McMurrayCarlton MidyetteDavid & Karen MontgomeryMatthew C. MooreWendell & Linda MurphyAnne R. PackerDaniel & Elizabeth PageHayne & Barbara Palmour ■Jonathan & Lingyun ParatiJames & Susan Parrott ■Stephen B. PopsonEarl Pulliam & Susan J. HoltonDan & Lillie RaganCarol H. RahmaniMichael & Kathleen Rieder ■Frank and Dudley SargentRoby & Amber Sawyers ■J. Mark & Leda ScearceStephen & Nancy SchecterAnthony Irwin SeltonLeon Shargel & Janet ChristensonThomas Smith & Mary Lyon-SmithThomas Spleth & Jean McLaughlin ■William & LaRose Spooner ■Phillip & Elise StilesRodney Swink & Juanita Shearer-SwinkPaul & Holly TesarGeorge & Christina ThomasBeth S. Traynham ■Marilyn J. VanderLugtDavid & Josie WalkerJohn & Terry WallCharles & Joann Warner ■Lane & Linda Wharton Deborah C. WhiteShannon E. WhiteRichard WiersmaDavid & Judi WilkinsonKenneth & June Winston

CONTRIbUTOR ($100-$249)Bernard & Carla AbramczykJ. Allen & Betty AdamsEllen B. AdelmanLynn & Mary AikenJames S. AllisonAndrew & Jeanette AmmonsDudley & Lisa AndersonAndrew & Elizabeth ArrowoodGarland & Charlene Askew ■Robert Auman ■Bank of America Foundation ■Norman & Carolyn BanksDonald & Linda BarkerWilliam & Ruth Barnett

DoNors ■ Gregg Museum Campaign

22 ticket central 919.515.1100 ncsu.edu/arts

Page 23: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

Andrew & Sheila BealRichard Bean & Annette OvertonRichard & Julie BensonHarold & Anita Berry ■Jeremy & Alexandria BlackJohn & Pamela BlondinDavid & Rita BodenheimerMark & Dawn BoettigerAlbert & Elizabeth BordenSusan BowersDennis M. BowieVester & Mary BrantleyCynthia Bringle/ Cynthia Bringle Pottery Studio ■Bruce & Wanda BrownAmber C. BrukRichard & Julia BryantWilfred & Barbara BuffaloeRebecca S. BumgardnerMichael & Regina CarpenterGabriel & Jean Carr ■Sean M. CassidyEllen C. CassillyRobert Chapman & Mary LovelockMarion L. J. ChurchCarol D. ClarkChris D. ClineJoseph & Sharon ColsonJohn S. Coman/ Coman Publishing Company, Inc.Victor L. CononiGus & Judy CottrosHurt CovingtonGregory & Martha Crampton ■Daniel & Sarah CrawfordCherry CraytonCharles & Pamela CrumThomas & Mary CunninghamRichard & Emily CurrinJudy CurryPhillip & Sara DailDennis M. DaleyPhyllis C. DanbyRalph W. DanielBill & Betty DanielS. Lawrence & Sarah DavenportMike Davis & Alice GarlandJames & Kathryn DealRobert & Elizabeth DeanWilliam R. DeansMark B. DearmonStuart & Mary Deibel ■William & Catherine DiggsAllen & Martha Dobson Wesley & Leonor DoggettGail S. DuncanGlen & Sherrill DuncanHolly Marie DurhamLouis Early & Eleanor JohnsonRobert Ebendorf & Aleta Braun■Donald Ellison & Martha BairdKenneth Esbenshade & Betty BryumLora E. EvansJames & Peggy FainSteven & Lisa Feierstein ■Patrick & Amy FitzGerald ■Jeff & Grace FranklinCurtis & Barbara FreezeJack & Jennifer FullerLeonard & Margaret GayleLeonard Gettes & Ann Caldwell-GettesForrest & Evangeline GetzenJohn & Susan GilbertCharles J. GivansMatthew & Betty GoodmanRaymond & Susan GoodmonChristopher & Odile GouldPaul & Evelyn GreenShelton & Courtenay GriffinJohn & Shannon GriffinMatt GrzebienWayne & Susan HarrisRobert & Beverly HartgroveAwatif E. HassanPatricia Inlow-HatcherKyle HeldMary J. Herr

Bill Hickman & Patricia HallJoe & Anna Ball Hodge ■Christopher & Mirna HoinaMarc & Fay HoitDouglas R. HolbrookDavid Hopp & Susan StrawJason Horne & Eva FeuchtFrederick & Ginger HortonRobert & Caralyn HouseJames W. HowardLeta F. HuntsingerIBM CorporationGary Jacobsohn & Elizabeth MichaelsEverette James & Nancy Farmer ■John & Virginia JerniganGeorge & Debora KaiserLynne K. KaneJohn & Laura KentThomas R. KendigMartha N. KeravuoriJames & Deborah KesslerNevin E. KesslerJonathan & Chatham KildosherGary King & Joyce Watkins KingSusan W. KleinThomas D. KochEmily F. Lambeth ■John & Linda LappWilliam & Colleen LeeGordon & Cathy LehmanWilliam & Deanna LinebackIssac T. LittletonDorothy B. LoveDonald & Norma LundyMary R. LynnCharlotte M. MartinJack & Marty MartinLouis & Emed Martin-VegaBob & Carol MattocksRobert & Luann McCainAmy E. McDonaldCraig McDuffie & Linda NobleHal & Gilda McKinneySpencer & Ashley McKinstryMichael J. McLendonMark B. McNeillDavid & Renee MetschMicrosoft CorporationLloyd & Joan MillsteinBurley & Mary Lou MitchellBetty B. MittagRobert & Patricia MohnalSteven & Beverly MosleyPaul & Rebecca NagyDavid C. NoltePatricia Oakley ■Thomas & Jennifer O’BrienMary E. O’NeilMichael & Mary OvercashJames & Shirley OvercashBarbara M. ParramoreMaurice W. Partin Eugene & Phyllis PateRichard & Nell PattyGregory Paul & Mary Hart-PaulIrvin & Ann PearceKenneth Peters & Michael DawsonLarry E. PetersonRobert & Joanne PilotOfer Plotnik & Laurie Reinhardt-PlotnikDavid & Sarah PolstonMichael Robert PoteralaDavid & Luisa PriceDalton & Ruby ProctorGal & Naomi ProfesorskyTrent & Mary RaglandRandall & Tiffany RamseySylvia N. RedwineAllen Reep ■Robert & Wren RehmPatrick & Anya ReidKatharine L. ReidKent & Debra ReidRandolph Reid & Betty MintonJerry & Carole RhodesArthur & Cynthia RiceGarson & Catherine Rice

Richard L. RiceWalter & Jean RichardsonGerry RiverosRussell & Ruth RobersonMary P. RobertsSurry P. Roberts ■Frank & Andrea RoedigerMichael & Elizabeth Ross ■Ronald & Gail RunyanRichard Saleeby & Jackie Newlin-SaleebyJoseph & Diane SandersDavid & Beatrice SanfordGene & Maryann SchroederSarah SchrothKevin & Nancy SchultzErnest & Barbara Seely ■Robert M. SextonPhilip SheltonRichard & Ann ShirkScott Shore & Rebecca BostonSteven & Mandi ShrumBarrett & Irene SilversteinJerry W. SimpsonDana L. SmithRandolph & Helen SnyderJohn & Laurie SorgeDavid & Adelaide StallingsScotty Steele ■John & Wanda Stein ■Warren & Debbie StephensonMichael Stevenson & Kimberly ThrowerJames & Catherine StuartSuresh & Phoola SusJanice C. SwabEdward & Christina TerrellJoseph & Rebekah ThompsonRebecca S. ThompsonHugh & Judith Tilson ■Alan & Sara TonelliScott & Roslyn TroutmanWilliam & Marian TroxlerGerald & Kimberly TullyHarry & Delores TuneJames & Linda TurlingtonJohn & Connie TurlingtonLawrence & Frances TwisdaleTwisted Threads Fiber Arts Guild ■Robert W. UpchurchCaroline Hickman Vaughan ■Dexter C. VaughanVerizon FoundationDouglas & Genevieve WalkerGeorge & Patricia WallaceRebecca Ann WalshEleania B. WardBilly Warden & Lucy Inman ■Robert & Marilyn WarnerSteve & Jane WarrenCharles & Virginia WebbTom & Lisa Weber

John F. WeedonJeffrey & Elizabeth WeingartenAdam & Zoe WhitesellMary P. WhitleyHarold & Kathryn WiebuschErwin & Mary WilliamsGrant & Laura WillardMark & Robyn WilsonWilliam Winner & Terri LomaxTroy & Leigh WojcikLouise J. WurstK. Leslie Young ■Xerox CorporationJames & Carol Zuiches

SUPPORTER ($50-$99)Robert & Marilyn AldridgeLaura J. AllredPaul W. AllredKristine Markovich AlpiAmerican Airlines, Inc.George Auman & Kathryn Browne Auman ■Steven L. BackerCharlotte E. BakerRobert & Shirley BarnhardtJames & Lisa BattsThomas & Patricia BaucomCandy M. BealBurton BeamesClarence & Barbara BeaverEdwin & Marva BelkMatthew & Sarah BiddleJennie W. Bireline ■Bryan & Janice BlackBarrett & Betsy BlatzM. Webb Bostic ■Jean C. BowenW. A. “Sonny” BrantleyDenis & Brenda BrokkeDavid Brooks & Nancy PenroseDawson R. BruckmanJeffrey & Nancy BurgessG. Hadley Callaway & Cameron Smith CallawayBrian E. CampellDonald & Belinda CampbellScott & MaryBeth Carpenter ■Hubert & Mary CarrCurtis & Maria ChiF. Gordon ChristianRenee N. ClarkGerald & Sandra CobbJon & Ellie CookeThomas & Dawn DanielCharles & Barbara DardenWilliam Robert DavisJeremy & Lauren DeeseDan DiGregorio & Joseph TooleyWilliam & Jeanette Dove

R. Stanhope Pullen SocietyThe R. Stanhope Pullen Society was created in 1993 and recognizes alumni and friends who invest in the future of the university through any type of deferred gifts. ARTS NC STATE would like to recognize Pullen Society members who have designated support for our arts programs:

Ronald G. EllisNancy C. Gregg*Norman & Gilda GreenbergGlenn S. HarmanMichael J. HollandJack M. HunterBernard & Patricia HymanMartha N. KeravuoriJames* & Eileen Lecce

Sheila Lund*N. Alexander Miller IIIMac & Lindsay NewsomLew & Billie RentelBanks & Louise TalleyCaroline Hickman VaughanDavid & Judi Wilkinson

*deceased

ncsu.edu/arts 23

Page 24: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

John T. DuncanWilliam M. DunlapGretel Z. EasterEcolab, Inc.Tom Emmel & Lisa GrableJohn & Carolyn EnglandLarry & Cindy EnglishAnthony & Marjorie EvansMarvin & Gail EverettGonzalo & Teresa FernandezSteven Foster & Anne MarchandTom & Janet FosterBradley & Cheryl FrancisJimmy & Doris GarlichRobert & Brenda GarnerMatthew & Kelly GayMaurice & Karen Gifford ■Andrew H. Glasgow ■John & Gisela GraceDavid B. GreeneJohn & Noel GriffinDonald & Joyce GunterPatrick Gurgel & Gisele Passador-GurgelMary GuyettWilliam & Jane HamlinElizabeth F. HansenLoren & Susan HarrellHosni Hassan & Doris Betanocurt-MarcanoGerald & Barbara HawkinsGeorge Scott HeathDennis & Susan HightWalter & Joyce HinklemanBruce & Cecilia HodginHal & Patsy HopfenbergLarry & Kimberly HovisJames E. HudginsMelanie A. HudsonJohn & Amy HussMartin & Sarah HyattGeorge & Nancy JacksonAnton & Maria JettenDavid & Keni JohnsonAdrian & Avis JonesMerritt & Susan JonesLori N. JonesRosemary M. JonesGeorge & Valerie JustinKimberly S. KalteneckerCyrus B. KingGary & Suzanne KrillKenneth & Betsy KukorowskiJohn & Lisa LafrattaLucie Lee M. Lanoux ■Joe Layton & Sarah RoholtMichael & Jackie LewisWilliam & Laura LindsaySteve & Emily LoftisKevin & Chiyoko LordJames & Flora LoudenTim & Deborah LuckadooLundy Fetterman Family FoundationKent H. LyleKevin & Candace MacNaughtonAlan Maloney & Jere ConfreyJames & Debbie ManessRoger Manley & Theadora BrackHoward & Elizabeth Manning ■Sara Jo Manning ■Joel & Julia McCulloughCharles & Judy McEwanJoseph H. MeadowsPatricia H. MichaelsHerbert & Jeanne MillerKim & Wendy MinorJo B. MooreKenneth F. MooreRobert & Debbie Moore

James & Elizabeth MostromWilliam D. MoxleySonja NielsenThomas W. O’BrienDonald Palmer & Leila MayKnowles R. ParkerLaura-Nelle ParnellHugh & Linda PassinghamRobert & Julie PfundThomas A. PhillipsCharles & Patricia PoeWilliam & Teresa PownallBarbara A. PrillamanChristy L. RainRaytheon CompanyRichard & Marie ReedKeri L. RehmKaren M. RhemTimothy & Donna RhyneEric & Nancy RitchieRichard L. RitzHarry M. RosenbergAlan & Sherrill RouseWilliam & Layla Santa RosaBill & Debra SchaeferMary Ann ScherrNancy H. ScheunemannCarol G. SchroederLeon & Lois SemkeCarol J. ShannonBrian ShawcroftMarc Sherman & Anita BakerMichael J. ShiverChris & Molly Simmons ■William & Elizabeth SimmonsMax & Dorothy SinkSkip Sizemore & Erica Leigh Jevons SizemoreCheryl A. SmithRonald & Heather SpiveyStanley & Doris StagerStephen & Anita StallingsMargaret SteedIrwin SternAmy Lynn StricklandWayne & Mary TaylorAnne Wall ThomasJoan ThompsonJames & Jennifer TooleJeffrey Trawick & Ksenija MitrovichTriangle Basket WeaversPaul J. TurinskyHenry & Elizabeth TurlingtonJohn & Cynthia VadenHugh & Janet VincentSteven Robert WattRobert & Jennifer WilliamsDeborah M. WilsonRichard A. WoyniczGregory K. ZiglarCharles G. Zug, III ■

Gifts In KindbENEFACTOR ($5,000-$9,999)Juanita BryantAlexander & Linda De GrandDaniel Ellison & James Richard DenneyArthur & Anya GordonMyles Standish & Shelley CrispBanks & Louise TalleyAnn Walker

CONNOISSEUR ($2,500-$4,999)Kim & Roselyn BatchellerRoger & Rhoda BerkowitzJohn Henry, Jr.Bernard & Patricia HymanMichael & Linda KeefeMartin & Alice LancasterKathlyn SullivanMichiko Uyemura

PATRON ($1,000-$2,499)Max AllenChristian CobbSas ColbyRoy Cromartie & Paul FombergFrances & Jewel HoogstoelCraig & Leatha KoeflerThomas & Shirley LesterEron Orion & Margaret Earley-ThieleBrenda ShearmanJames Trotter & Jaye Day-TrotterThomas Wentworth & Linda RuddWilliam & Candy BealMorene BerkovskyMichael & Joan Mills BuskoRonald & Mary FalcianiAlda JonesJohn & Gretchen MacNair, IIIJames & Seiko ShieldsRobert SuddabyLynne Taylor-CorbettStephen & Charlotte Wainwright

FRIEND ($250-$499)Worth AycockFlorence BoushallJohn CoffeyPhyllis DanbyNorman & Gilda GreenbergRoger Manley & Theadora BrackGranger & Carolynn MarleyRonald & Christine RadtkeKaren ThorsenCaroline Hickman Vaughan Whole Foods Market

CONTRIbUTOR ($100-$249)Jon & Ellie CookeJohn Crawford & Jeana AquadroCharles & Kathryn GreenSusie JonesDouglas & Caroline KellyJohn & Barbara McGreachyHarriet PageDavid & Mary RendlemanJennette C. SkinnerSharon Walker

SUPPORTER ($50-$99)Steven Degroof & M. Eve CunningJ. Keith & Katherine KeenerJohn Marvill & Diane FigeuroaMary Russell RobersonMichael R. SearleAnton & Clara Lee Shreiner

Auction Donors3 Guys Tree FarmACE Adventure ResortBetty B. Adams

Alexia’s Bridal BoutiqueAmerican Dance FestivalAnn-Cabell Baum AndersenThe Angus BarnAnonymous (3)Claire AshbyAnne AtkinsonAtlantic MulchKristen Aubut/Fresh Coat DesignsAviator Brewing CompanyDonna BarnackSusan Dahlin BashfordBB&T Insurance ServicesBeleza, A Fair Trade BoutiqueBlazin’ Buddy/Brent BookerRichard BryantJohnny Burleson & Walter ClarkBurning Coal Theatre CompanyCraig BurtHenry & Ellen CampenCarolina BalletCarolina HurricanesSarah CawnNCSU Center StageCHANEL - Belk CrabtreeChapel Hill Restaurant GroupAllen ClappThe Crafts CenterThe Cupcake ShoppeDavenport@FiveDeep Dish Theater CompanyDuplin WineryThe Durham Bulls/Jim GoodmonBob EbendorfSue EdmonsonJP EdwardsEmpire EatsMary Beth EpperlyEschelon HospitalityLisa EverdykePatrick FitzGeraldAmy Flynn DesignsFoster Lake & Pond ManagementTracy FreemanFRIENDS of ARTS NC STATE Board of AdvisorsEdward FunkhouserGrains of TimeDanene GroenkeAbie HarrisMary HauserAl HeadenKyle HeldAnna Ball HodgePatsy & Hal HopfenbergJerry JacksonNina JacksonEva JohannesDonna KanichCathy KeithLinda KimballJoyce Watkins KingMeredith KittrellVicky LangleyJanine LeBlancCharles LefflerLittle Green Pig Theatrical ConcernLM RestaurantsLonnie Poole Golf CourseMarbles Kids MuseumMassage Wallah/Emily AlexanderCaroline V. McCallRichelle Carter MilesN. Alexander Miller IIIKay & Lynda MoweryMark MullinsNasher Museum of ArtNC State AthleticsNC State University Pipes and Drums

DoNors continued ■ Gregg Museum Campaign

24 ticket central 919.515.1100 ncsu.edu/arts

Page 25: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

your gift will…

introduCe the arts to thousands of NC State students

enriCh the cultural landscape of your community

suPPort all six visual and performing arts programs

OR the program(s) of your choice

Neomonde Bakery & DeliNorth Carolina Brewers GuildNorth Carolina OperaNorth Carolina SymphonyNorth Carolina TheatreO2 FitnessJulie OlsonSys OppenlanderBen Owen PotteryAnne PedenSherri PekksFrank PentaCharlene PoiselPong Research/Blake JacobsHeath RamseyRapid FitnessRed Light ChocolatesWade & Kathy ReeceKathy Myers ReeceRocky Top HospitalityRoundabout Art CollectiveRowdy & LacyBeatrice T. SanfordMary Ann ScherrMary H. Schweitzer

Sharon SharoJennifer SiegelCarol & Bing SizemoreSkyBound DesignsSpariansSuzanne SpencerHiller SpiresTom & Judy StaffordMartin StankusThe State ClubBert SultYuko Nogami TaylorS. Tector Metals/Sarah TectorTheatre Raleigh/Hot Summer NightsDavid S. ThompsonTriangle’s Other WomanThe Umstead Hotel and SpaUniversity TheatreCheryl L. WeiszJo Ellen WestmorelandAdam Whitesell, CFP®Bud Whitmeyer & Rebecca MerrillJack WilliamsDouglas S. WitcherSusan Woodson

Named Scholarships & EndowmentsEndowments may be established with a minimum commitment of $25,000 and may honor or memorialize an individual or family member while supporting arts initiatives such as student scholarships, programmatic support, and collections.

ABB Inc. Arts Outreach EndowmentJudy C. Abee Marching Band EndowmentPatricia H. Adams Scholarship Donald & Maryann Bitzer Theater Achievement Awards EndowmentCarey & Neita Bostian Music EndowmentHenry & Sory Bowers Arts EndowmentBruce T. Brown Marching Band EndowmentCharlotte V. Brown Museum EndowmentRaymond A. Bryan, Jr. Jazz EndowmentCurtis R. Craver Clarinet ScholarshipDr. Eloise A. Cofer Arts EndowmentMargaret Price Corcoran Marching Band ScholarshipMildred J. Davis Museum EndowmentRonald G. Ellis & Earl Lynn Roberson Scholarship Annabelle Lundy Fetterman Symphony Concertmaster EndowmentFox Family Foundation Crafts Center EndowmentJohn N. & Nancy C. Gregg Museum EndowmentDewey M. Griffith Marching Band EndowmentDr. Frank M. Hammond Endowment for Musicianship & Outstanding Leadership

Glenn S. Harman & Miriam Bailey Gardner Choral Accompanist Scholarship EndowmentGlenn S. Harman & Kay Crawford Johnson Double-Reed Scholarship EndowmentAmelia E. Hunter Choral Leadership EndowmentITG Norma Ausley Memorial EndowmentThe Lattice Endowment for the Performing ArtsJames & Eileen Lecce Ethnic Art Collection EndowmentSheila Margaret Lund EndowmentJim Marchman Marching Band EndowmentToni Christine Masini Memorial ScholarshipJohn C. McIlwee Theatre EndowmentJohn Menapace Photography EndowmentN. Alexander Miller III Arts EndowmentSharon Herr Moore Center Stage EndowmentNCSU Pipes & Drums Scholarship Barbara G. & Hayne Palmour III Museum EndowmentJames M. Poyner Visiting Artist EndowmentKimberly Titmus Przybyl Music EndowmentLew & Billie Rentel ARTS NC STATE Scholarship

Lew & Billie Rentel Museum Enhancement EndowmentLew & Billie Rentel Thompson Building EndowmentReynolds Music Performance ScholarshipAlby Rose Marching Band Scholarship Stafford Endowment for ARTS NC STATE Student TravelBanks & Louise Talley Arts EndowmentBanks C. Talley Jr. Arts Endowment for the Frank Thompson BuildingBrita M. Tate Memorial EndowmentMartha Emerson Upchurch Performing Arts EndowmentWachovia Endowment for the Visual & Performing ArtsRandall & Susan Ward ARTS NC STATE ScholarshipRandall & Susan Ward Museum EndowmentDr. Elmer R. White Trumpet ScholarshipMary Lib Wood Endowment for the Visual & Performing Artsts

Art Outside the Box Donors8 Miles Apart18 SeaboardAce Hardware/WeberAppetite 4 ArtAra Leigh Studios/Leigh GriffinLaura AzziHannah BerryCafé Carolina & BakeryGene BrownCafé CaturraCaffé LunaCapital QuartetCary Creative Center/ Carolyn MitkowskiChick-Fil-AThe ChromaZones Abstract ArtistsThe Coca-Cola CompanyNC State College of Design/ Advanced Media LabNC State College of TextilesThe Crafts CenterDavid’s Dumpling and Noodle BarDoubleTree HotelEidolon DesignsJeff and Grace FranklinGrains of TimeAbie Harris

Anna Ball HodgeHowling Cow CreameryIrregardless CaféLadies in RedMoe’s Southwest GrillMt. Olive Pickle CompanyONJUKAIRAVE! CateringRavenscroft SchoolReverb NationRoundabout Art CollectiveSanderson High SchoolSecond Empire Restaurant and Tavern St. Michael’s Episcopal ChurchStevens MeatsBruce StevensonTaiko DrummingTenta/Tony Hankerson, Jr.The Midlife Crisis BandThomas Taylor TrioTin Roof TeasTipping Paint Gallery & Artists Touch in Real Time/Holly HanassianUNC Department of Linguistics/ Chunmeng WangWhole Foods MarketWoodturners Guild of NC

Give Today! Call 919.515.6160 or visit ncsu.edu/arts

Friends of arts nC state

Become a Friend!

ncsu.edu/arts 25

Page 26: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

Carolina Meadows | www.carolinameadows.org ............................ 15

Dr. Cynthia Gregg | www.cynthiagreggmd.com ................................ 5

Edible Art | www.edibleartnc.com ..................................................... 21

Emerge Fine Art | www.emergefineart.com .................................... 13

Glenwood Agency | www.glenwoodagency.com ............................ 15

Irregardless Café | www.irregardless.com ........................................ 27

NC State University | www.ncsu.edu ................................ Back Cover

NC State bookstores | www.ncsu.edu/bookstore ............................ 15

Our State Magazine | www.ourstate.com ........................................ 13

Ruggero Piano | www.ruggeropiano.com .......................................... 5

Springmoor | www.springmoor.org .................................................... 5

The Village at brookwood | www.villageatbrookwood.org ............ 13

42nd Street Oyster bar 508 West Jones St | 831.2811 Mon-Thur 11pm, Fri-Sat 1am

beasley’s Chicken+Honey 200 South Wilmington St 322.0127 Thur-Sat 12am

The borough 317 West Morgan St 832.8433 Daily until 2am

busy bee Café 225 South Wilmington St 424.7817 Daily until 2am

Café Caturra 432 Woodburn Rd | 835.9463 Fri-Sat 11pm

Cameron bar & Grill 2018 Clark Ave | 755.2231 Thur-Sat 12am

Cantina 18 433 Daniels St | 835.9911 Fri-Sat 11pm

Capital Club 16 16 West Martin St | 747.9345 Thur-Sat 11pm

C. Grace Cocktail bar 407 Glenwood Ave 899.3675 Tues-Sun 2am

Chuck’s 237 South Wilmington St 322.0216 Thur-Sat 12am

David’s Dumpling & Noodle bar 1900 Hillsborough St 239.4536 Fri-Sat 11pm

Dos Taquitos xoco 410 Glenwood Ave 835.9010 Sun-Wed 11pm, Thur-Sat 2am

Fiction Kitchen 428 South Dawson St 831.4177 Fri-Sat 11pm

Five Star Restaurant 511 West Hargett St 833.3311 Daily until 12am

Flying Saucer 328 West Morgan St 821.7468 Daily until 2am

Gravy 135 South Wilmington St 896.8513 Fri-Sat 11pm

Humble Pie 317 South Harrington St 829.9222 Fri-Sat 12am

Irregardless Café 901 West Morgan St 833.8898 Sat, 11pm

Krispy Kreme 549 North Person St 833.3682 Daily until 12am drive-thru 24/7

Mitch’s Tavern 2426 Hillsborough St 821.7771 Mon-Wed 12am Thur-Sat 2am, Sun 11pm

Mojoe’s burger joint 620 Glenwood Ave 832.6799 Mon-Sat 1:30am, Sun 12am

Natty Greene’s 505 West Jones St | 232.2477 Sun-Wed 12am, Thur-Sat 2am

The Oxford 319 Fayetteville St | 832.6622 Mon-Wed 12am, Thur-Sun 2am

The Pit 328 West Davie St | 890.4500 Fri-Sat 11pm

Players Retreat 105 Oberlin Rd | 755.9589 Daily until 2am

Poole’s Downtown Diner 426 South McDowell St 832.4477 Daily until 12am

The Raleigh Times bar 14 East Hargett St 833.0999 Daily until 2am

The Remedy Diner 137 East Hargett St 835.3553 Fri-Sat 12am

Sitti 137 South Wilmington St 239.4070 Fri-Sat 12am

Sugarland 2031 Cameron St | 835.2100 Fri-Sat 11pm

Sullivan’s Steakhouse 414 Glenwood Ave | 833.2888 Daily until 2am

Tobacco Road Sports Café 222 Glenwood Ave | 832.3688 Sun-Thur 12am, Fri-Sat 2am

Trophy brewing Company 827 West Morgan St 803.4849 Sun-Wed 12am, Thur-Sat 2am

Village Draft House 428 Daniels St | 833.1373 Sun-Tues 12am, Wed-Sat 2am

■ Near Campus ■ Cameron Village ■ Downtown ■ Glenwood South

late nightas a service to our patrons, we offer these suggestions of local restaurants with late night hours. NOTE: the only nights listed are those for when the establishment is open until at least 11pm. these are published hours as of august 2013; we encourage you to call ahead to confirm.

aDvErtIsINg index

26 ticket central 919.515.1100 ncsu.edu/arts

Page 27: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013

ncsu.edu/arts 27

Page 28: ARTS NC STATE Fall Program Book 2013