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CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA RICCARDO MUTI MAY 2018

CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA RICCARDO MUTI MAY 2018 · After rehearsals and in consultation with Muti, Ogonek said she made revisions on the fly as her 2017 work, All These Lighted

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Page 1: CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA RICCARDO MUTI MAY 2018 · After rehearsals and in consultation with Muti, Ogonek said she made revisions on the fly as her 2017 work, All These Lighted

CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

RICCARDO MUTI MAY 2018

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JOB: AL218

CLIENT: AbilityLab

MEDIA TYPE: Magazine

PUB: CSO

ISSUE: 5/3/18

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2

CONTENTSCONTENTS

CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

Program Book ProductionFrances Atkins

Content DirectorPhillip Huscher

Program AnnotatorGerald Virgil

Senior Content EditorLaura EmerickLaura Sauer

Content EditorsKristin Tobin

Designer

CRAIN’S CHICAGO BUSINESS

Founder and editor in chief:Rance Crain

Crain’s Custom Media, a division of Crain’s Chicago Business, serves as the publisher for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra program books. Crain’s Custom Media provides production, printing, and media sales services for the CSO program books. For more details or to secure advertising space in the programs, please contact:

CRAIN’S CUSTOM MEDIA

Director:Frank Sennett, [email protected]

Exclusive agent:Bryan Dowling, [email protected]

Project manager:Joanna Metzger, [email protected]

Crain’s Custom Media150 N. Michigan AvenueChicago, IL 60601

4 A Welcome Letter From Board of Trustees Chair Helen Zell and Chicago

Symphony Orchestra Association President Jeff Alexander

6 A Special Final Concert for the Twentieth Anniversary Season of MusicNOW

Nancy Malitz interviews Mead Composers-in-Residence, Samuel Adams and Elizabeth Ogonek for their unique insights on this May 21 program.

10 The World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893 Rosenthal Archives director Frank Villella commemorates

the 125th anniversary of the opening of Chicago’s first world’s fair

12 Negaunee Music Institute at the Chicago Symphony Orchestra

Learn more about the NMI’s Initiative for a More Peaceful Chicago

13 Meet the Musician: Chicago Symphony Orchestra The latest in a series of profiles featuring the renowned

members of the CSO

14 Meet the Musician: Chicago Symphony Chorus Profiles featuring members of the CSC in honor of its

sixtieth anniversary

16 Our Donors and Volunteers Profiles and lists of our generous donors and volunteers,

plus information on volunteer opportunities

23 THIS CONCERT Information about the program and the performers

for this concert

39 Upcoming Events Listings for many of the exciting concerts to be held at

Symphony Center in the weeks ahead. Learn more at cso.org and csosoundsandstories.org.

40 Our Donors and Volunteers, continued

PHOTOGRAPHY BY TODD ROSENBERG

Global Sponsor of the CSO

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66th Season

August 7-25, 2018

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Tickets Start at $35Students and Children

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ALL CONCERTS HELD IN THE DOOR COMMUNITY AUDITORIUM

Fish Creek - 7:30 PM - Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday

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LETTER FROM THE CHAIR AND THE PRESIDENT

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra welcomes internationally esteemed guest conductors to Symphony Center in May, including Semyon Bychkov, Emmanuel Krivine, and Esa-Pekka Salonen. Each presents exciting pro-grams that showcase the artistic depth and rich colors of the Orchestra.

We begin with Bychkov, who conducts Tchaikovsky’s Manfred Symphony and Bruch’s Concerto for Two Pianos, performed by sisters Katia and Marielle Labèque. Continuing with music from the romantic era, Krivine leads the Orchestra in Brahms’s Tragic Overture and Schumann’s Violin Concerto with Isabelle Faust in her CSO debut. The concert concludes with Saint-Saëns’s Symphony no. 3, featuring organist Paul Jacobs. Salonen returns to the CSO for two weeks of subscription concerts, beginning with Mahler’s powerful Symphony no. 9. In his second week, Salonen conducts Brahms’s Variations on a Theme by Haydn, Schoenberg’s pivotal Transfigured Night, and Bartók’s Piano Concerto no. 3 performed by Mitsuko Uchida.

Salonen also conducts the final concert of MusicNOW’s twentieth anni-versary season. This program, which takes place in Orchestra Hall, includes the world premieres of CSO commissions by Mead Composers-in-Residence Samuel Adams and Elizabeth Ogonek, who have curated the MusicNOW series for the past three seasons.

The Symphony Center Presents Piano series welcomes the return of Evgeny Kissin for a recital including Beethoven’s Hammerklavier Sonata and selected preludes by Rachmaninov, and Yefim Bronfman, in humoresques by Schumann and Widmann as well as Debussy’s Suite bergamasque and Prokofiev’s Sonata no. 7.

The SCP Jazz series welcomes Zakir Hussain and Dave Holland in Crosscurrents, a program that blends Indian jazz, pop, and traditional music with American jazz. Next, drummer Antonio Sánchez and his electro-acoustic band, Migration, perform in a double bill with trumpeter and composer Terence Blanchard and his quintet, The E-Collective. SCP Jazz recently announced its 2018–19 season, with subscriptions now available for sale at cso.org and the Box Office.

In addition to performances at Symphony Center, the Chicago Symphony and Civic orchestras present performances throughout Chicago and beyond. The CSO travels to the University of Iowa’s Hancher Auditorium, and MusicNOW presents a special evening of music at the Art Institute of Chicago. The CSO’s free All-Access Chamber Music series offers concerts in Orchestra Hall and at the South Shore Cultural Center, and the musicians of the Civic Orchestra perform chamber music at the National Museum of Mexican Art and at Indian Boundary Park. On May 3, the CSO’s African American Network presents Marianne Parker in a concert of Haitian piano music at Symphony Center.

We are very proud of the music programming and region-wide presence of the CSO, and thank you for being an important part of making these activities possible.

HELEN ZELLChairBoard of TrusteesChicago Symphony Orchestra Association

JEFF ALEXANDERPresidentChicago Symphony Orchestra Association

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WEALTH PLANNING \ BANKING \ TRUST & ESTATE SERVICES \ INVESTING \ FAMILY OFFICE

WE HAVE A REAL APPRECIATION FOR THINGS THAT ARE WELL ORCHESTRATED.Northern Trust is proud to support the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. For more than 125 years, we’ve been meeting our clients’ financial needs while nurturing a culture of caring and a commitment to invest in the communities we serve. Our goal is to help you find perfect harmony.

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C apping twenty years of high- energy new music and novel concert scenarios, the Chicago

Symphony Orchestra’s vital MusicNOW venture will take over Orchestra Hall’s Armour Stage on May 21 with world premieres by the Orchestra’s Mead Composers-in-Residence Samuel Adams and Elizabeth Ogonek. Both will be graduating out of their three-year residen-cies at the end of this season and headed for robust careers.

During their time in Chicago, it has been among the responsibilities of Adams, thirty-two, and Ogonek, twenty-eight, to curate MusicNOW events and help the program thrive. MusicNOW concerts typically take place at the Harris Theater for Music and Dance, atop Millennium Park, where postconcert parties of free food and drink cater to a youngish, openly curious crowd with a taste for the latest, from live improvisation to interdisciplinary theatrical creations to electro-acoustical experiments. For some of these MusicNOW aficionados, Orchestra Hall will be yet another new experience.

Adams and Ogonek liked the idea of taking an event back to the CSO’s home base as one way among several to make this

twentieth-anniversary MusicNOW season special. Both composers have written works for the full CSO that were premiered by Zell Music Director Riccardo Muti in Chicago and then featured on tour. Both have also written

Mead Composers-in-Residence Samuel Adams and Elizabeth Ogonek prepare for the final performance of the twentieth MusicNOW season

By Nancy Malitz

This page: (top) MusicNOW performance at Harris Theater, November 23, 2015

(bottom) Elizabeth Ogonek and Samuel Adams, Mead Composers-in-Residence

Opposite page, clockwise from top left: The world premiere of Samuel Adams’s Light Readings (CSO Commission), June 6, 2016

The recent world premiere of Amy Beth Kirsten’s Savior (CSO Commission), April 2, 2018

Past and present CSO composers-in-residence Augusta Read Thomas, Samuel Adams, Elizabeth Ogonek, John Corigliano, Shulamit Ran, and Mason Bates at the MusicNOW @ 20 Years concert on October 2, 2017

ALL PHOTOS BY TODD ROSENBERG UNLESS INDICATED OTHERWISE

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small-ensemble works first given at the Harris. This time around, the MusicNOW audience will be invited to experience the CSO’s primary space, as the latest works by Adams and Ogonek are premiered under the leadership of Finnish conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen, a composer him-self and a frequent guest with the CSO.

The Mead residency, which allows young composers to work closely with one of the best orchestras in the world, “certainly has made a huge difference in my life,” Ogonek said via telephone from the Oberlin College and Conservatory, where she began teaching about the same time she started with MusicNOW.

It has taught me the value of a real-world point of view, as opposed to existing in a musical vacuum. I now emphasize with students that the end goal is always perfor-mance. If that sounds like a ‘duh’ statement, believe it or not it is not common to be able to workshop your pieces with a group, and to have that group perform them, and to make revisions as a result. That practicality is essential to being a composer, and I am fortunate that I had that experience with the CSO.

After rehearsals and in consultation with Muti, Ogonek said she made revisions on the fly as her 2017 work, All These Lighted Things, headed toward its Chicago world premiere and the Orchestra’s subsequent West Coast tour. Adams had a similar opportunity to hear his latest orchestral work, many words of love, with Muti and the CSO in Chicago and along the East Coast, and subsequently with Miami’s preprofessional New World Symphony.

Ogonek’s and Adams’s final CSO commissions will be featured in the May 21 concert under Salonen at Orchestra Hall. That performance will match their new works with Ró (the title means serenity), an eleven-minute composi-tion from 2013 for eight players by prominent Icelandic composer Anna Thorvaldsdóttir. It has already been recorded by Deutsche Grammophon on an all-Thorvaldsdóttir album entitled Aerial.

“Elizabeth and I have long desired to do a piece of hers,” Adams said by telephone from his California studio. “Given the nature of her music and where it’s headed and the general excitement, we thought Orchestra Hall was the appropriate space for it.” The concert will feature only one “oldie,” from 1997—Related Rocks by Salonen’s Finnish compatriot Magnus Lindberg.

As a strong advocate for new music, Adams has worked with the CSO’s Negaunee Music Institute to nurture the development of a workshop and performance platform for younger composers. “We wanted to concentrate on people in their early to mid twenties,” Adams said. “We started with local-area candidates, and in the second year we expanded our scope to the Midwest; this season we went national with an application pool of almost 200 composers. It has grown exponentially.” Top-flight musicians

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from Chicago-based new-music groups such as Eighth Blackbird and ICE have come to help the composers try out their ideas.

The May 21 concert will showcase Adams’s new chamber violin concerto, his second for the instrument. “I know it’s a strange thing to say. I just finished my second violin concerto,” he said with a chuckle. “Composers like to separate their concertos by a healthy ten-year period, but I wrote one in 2012 for Anthony Marwood, and after it was performed, I sent it to some col-leagues and friends. It ended up in front of Karen Gomyo (Tokyo-born Canadian violinist), and she fell in love with it. We talked about doing it somewhere, but I knew I was going to write a piece for this concert with Esa-Pekka, and I wanted to make something densely compressed and very different from the slower, more lumi-nous concerto I wrote in the past. This one has a kind of preclassical baroque energy to it, and I think it’s possibly my most extroverted piece of music ever.”

Ogonek’s new work is called The Water Cantos [notes from quiet places]. “It’s for a very bizarre ensemble,” she said.

I wrote it for twelve players: a flute doubling on piccolo and alto flute, two clarinets dou-bling on bass clarinet, three percussionists, a pianist, four cellos, and double bass. It grew out of experiences I had with musicians in the Orchestra that I got to know on tour. So the piece is a series of portraits, in a way.

The whole four-cellos thing came out of hearing them play the beginning of Rossini’s Overture to William Tell what seemed like four hundred times (on tour), and the way the cellos played so exquisitely together. I had been planning to write a completely dif-ferent piece, but I sat there thinking, “I can’t believe I’m loving this so much.”

For more information on the upcoming MusicNOW concert, visit cso.org/musicnow.

Nancy Malitz is the founder of the arts websites Chicago On the Aisle and Classical Voice North America.

Clockwise from left: Conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen speaks to the audience from the Armour Stage before the premiere of his Cello Concerto, performed by cellist Yo-Yo Ma and the CSO on March 9, 2017.

Ogonek takes a bow at Orchestra Hall after the world premiere of All These Lighted Things on September 28, 2017.

Adams bows at the Kennedy Center after a performance of many words of love during the East Coast tour on February 7, 2018.

PH

OTO

BY

AN

NE

RYA

N

Major support for MusicNOW is generously provided by the Aaron Copland Fund for Music, Inc., the Irving Harris Foundation, the Sally Mead Hands Foundation, the Julian Family Foundation, Cindy Sargent, and the Zell Family Foundation. Additional support for the May 21 concert has been provided by Richard and Mary L. Gray, Jim and SuAnne Lopata, and Robert J. Buford.

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O n April 28, 1890, President Benjamin Harrison signed an act of Congress awarding Chicago the honor of hosting a world’s fair to celebrate

the 400th anniversary of Christopher Columbus’s arrival in the New World. Architect Daniel Burnham was charged with supervision of the design of a classical revival–themed city with grand boulevards and lush gardens complementing 200 new—but intentionally temporary—buildings that were mostly covered in plaster of Paris and painted a chalky white, giving the fairgrounds its nickname, the White City.

The fairgrounds stretched over nearly 700 acres in Jackson Park and officially opened to the public on May 1, 1893; over the next six months, nearly fifty countries would exhibit and close to twenty-eight million people would visit. Juicy Fruit chewing gum, Cream of Wheat, Quaker Oats, Shredded Wheat, Aunt Jemima pancake mix, and the Ferris Wheel were introduced, along with the first U.S. Post Office–issued picture postcards and commemorative stamps and U.S. Mint–issued commemorative quarter and half-dollar coins. Following its blue ribbon–win as “America’s Best” at the exposition, the Pabst Brewing

The World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893

C O M M E M O R AT I N G T H E 125 T H A N N I V E R S A R Y O F T H E O P E N I N G O F C H I C AG O ’ S F I R S T W O R L D ’ S FA I R

Bohemian Day concert program, August 12, 1893

Chicago World’s Fair 1893 by Harley Dewitt Nichols (1859–1939) Theodore Thomas

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Inaugural concert program page, May 2, 1893

Company officially changed the name of its signature beer.

One visitor was poet and author Katharine Lee Bates, who would later include “Thine alabaster cities gleam” in her poem America the Beautiful. Herman Webster Mudgett (a.k.a. Dr. Henry Howard Holmes) traveled to the fair with two of his eventual victims (later described by Erik Larson in his book The Devil in the White City). And natives bragging about the fair likely contributed to the popularity of Chicago’s nickname as the “Windy City.”

Soon after Theodore Thomas agreed to lead the new Chicago Orchestra, the exposition’s exec-utive committee also offered him the job of director of music for the fair. Inspired by Burnham’s imagination and drive (not to mention that the committee was prepared to spend nearly one million dollars on music and two performance halls), Thomas accepted shortly after his new orchestra’s inaugural concerts on October 16 and 17, 1891, in the Auditorium Theatre.

Thomas led the Exposition Orchestra (the Chicago Orchestra expanded to 114 play-ers) in the inaugural concert in Music Hall on May 2, 1893, with Ignace Paderewski as soloist in his Piano Concerto in A minor. “Those who sat beneath the potent spell [Paderewski’s] mighty genius weaves could but acknowledge his unrivaled great-ness and congratulate the exposi-tion upon having secured him for the assisting artist at the inaugu-ral concert,” reported the Chicago Tribune, praising the “surpassing beauty and matchless artistic greatness” of his performance.

Later that summer, on August 12, 1893, 8,000 people packed into Festival Hall to hear Antonín Dvořák lead the Orchestra in a “Bohemian Day”

concert that included his Eighth Symphony. “As Dvořák walked out upon the stage, a storm of applause greeted him,” reported the Tribune. “For nearly two minutes the old composer [age fifty- one!] stood beside the music rack, baton in hand, bowing his acknowledgements.” On the second half of the program, Dvořák conducted selections from his Slavonic Dances and closed the program with his overture My Country. Frank Villella is the director of the Rosenthal Archives. For more information, please visit csoarchives.wordpress.com.

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NEGAUNEE MUSIC INSTITUTE AT THE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

On Sunday, March 18, the Negaunee Music Institute at the CSO presented a concert of thirteen original songs written by parents participating in the Purpose Over Pain project at St. Sabina Church. The parents, each of whom lives in Chicago and has lost a child to gun violence, collaborated with musicians from the London-based Irene Taylor Trust, composer Josh Fink, musicians of the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, and singers Sarah Ponder and Takesha Meshé Kizart to create songs of love and peace in memory of their children.

This event was part of the recently estab-lished Initiative for a More Peaceful Chicago, a project—guided by the visionary leadership of Zell Music Director Riccardo Muti and Judson and Joyce Green Creative Consultant Yo-Yo Ma—that seeks to use the musical resources of the CSOA to create peace throughout the city.

The inaugural event for this initiative occurred in June 2017, when the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and St. Sabina Church collaborated on a Concert for Peace which drew a packed house,

as well as local and national media coverage. The concert, which raised over eighty thousand dol-lars for the South Side church’s Strong Futures employment program and brought together audience members from over 150 zip codes, featured Ma alongside musicians from the CSO, Civic Orchestra, Chicago Children’s Choir, and the St. Sabina house band. The concert was hosted by St. Sabina pastor Father Michael Pfleger, a champion for Chicago’s fight against gun violence.

This Initiative for a More Peaceful Chicago is as ambitious in scope as it is necessary in practice. The current season has already included numerous musical projects that have engaged young people incarcerated by the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice, teen parents as part of the Lullaby Project, and over two dozen parents affiliated with Purpose Over Pain.

A second Concert for Peace will take place at St. Sabina Church on Sunday, June 10, at 4:00 p.m. Tickets are available for purchase on cso.org.

Clockwise from top left: Parents of Purpose Over Pain, Father Michael Pfleger, Takesha Meshé Kizart, Journey Alison, Sarah Ponder, Sara Lee, and Rex Horan of the Irene Taylor Trust, musicians of the Civic Orchestra, and CSO staff members Jonathan McCormick and James Hall.

Takesha Meshé Kizart and Sarah Ponder perform “Sunshine of my Life” with help from its creator, Clara Allen.

Civic alumnus and CSOA staff member James Hall warms up before the concert.

St. Sabina Senior Pastor Father Michael Pfleger offers remarks to conclude the performance.

PHOTOS BY TODD ROSENBERG

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Meet the MUSICIANS

HOMETOWNElmhurst, Illinois

YEAR JOINED THE CSO1996

EDUCATION Eastman School of MusicWichita State University

John Hagstrom Trumpet

What work are you looking forward to performing this season?Mahler’s Ninth Symphony—it was his final completed sym-phony and one of the greatest pieces ever written. Mahler had heart problems and sensed somehow that the end was near. In this symphony, he’s taking a look at the finality of his life. You hear the compositional voice of a man who is looking at his own mortality, and I feel it’s the most beautiful hour of music you’ll ever hear. He has given us a narrative to look back, to look forward, and to find peace at the end.

In honor of the recent Music In Our Schools Month, what do you think makes a great teacher?The best teachers are those that pass on the skill of being a good student, but it’s a lesson that can only be taught when teachers remain good students themselves. When teachers share genuine excitement about their own learning, it helps students take ownership of their progress, too, and commit to something more. A constant recommitment to expect and find more detail and more excellence is also what great music making is all about—and

the spirit of what makes the CSO a great orchestra!

How would you describe what it’s like to be a CSO member?Having a job in the CSO is a great honor, but it’s also a tough job. It’s not like winning an Olympic medal, where once you get it you’re forever seen as a champion. As a CSO musi-cian, you have to keep demon-strating superlative skill every single week. Your commitment to excellence does not end after your audition—it’s a way of life.

PHO

TO B

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DD

RO

SEN

BERG

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Meet the MUSICIANS

HOMETOWNSeoul, South Korea and Garden Grove, California

YEAR JOINED THE CSC2015

EDUCATIONCalifornia State University, FullertonUniversity of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Profiles of members of the Chicago Symphony Chorus in honor of its sixtieth anniversary

Suzanne Ma-Ebersole Soprano

Offstage, I like to . . .I am a huge sports fan, and, even though I grew up in Southern California, I have been a Bulls fan most of my life. I also love football and box four to five times a week. I picked up crochet-ing recently, too. Officially obsessed, it has taken over my life and my second bedroom.

One of my favorite quotes:“Don’t let making a living pre-vent you from making a life.”

—John Wooden

My favorite non-classical music is . . .A Tribe Called Quest and old-school hip-hop. My favorite music while cleaning is ABBA.

My favorite composer is . . .Henri Duparc. His songs are beautiful, intimate, full of drama, and most of them are as demanding as arias. As much as I love to sing them, I personally love listening to them with just piano.

What is the most memo-rable CSC performance or experience?Prokofiev’s Ivan the Terrible in 2017. Being on stage with

Riccardo Muti, over 230 musicians, soloists, and Gérard Depardieu was surreal.

What advice would you give to someone who would like to learn more about classical music?I think classical music can be overwhelming and intimidating for many people, especially to those who weren’t exposed to it in childhood; it certainly was for me when I attended my first concert in high school. My advice would be to listen and explore all types of classical music. Classical music is for everyone, no matter where you come from or your background.

PHO

TO B

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DD

RO

SEN

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All former JGB members

are invited to a fiftieth

anniversary celebration

on Tuesday, June 26,

2018, 5:30 to 8:00 p.m.,

at Symphony Center.

If you are interested in

attending or can help

locate former JGB members,

contact event organizers

Denise Stauder or Alan

Cravitz at [email protected].

In December 1968, a group of young professionals became founding members of the new Junior Governing Board, whose purpose was “to increase the interest and participation of young Chicago-area residents in the activities of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.” The JGB was the forerunner of CSO Associates and the current Overture Council.

JGB volunteers were instrumental in the development and organization of numerous CSO programs and activities, many of which still thrive today: ensemble performances in schools, concerts for high school and university students, and many social events in conjunction with performances in Orchestra Hall and with the Orchestra on tour.

Clockwise from top: JGB members at the forty-fifth anniversary event in May 2013. PHOTO BY THOMAS H. KIEREN

Associate conductor Henry Mazer speaks with young audience members in the ballroom during a May 1977 JGB-sponsored Music Is the Message concert. PHOTO BY ROBERT M. LIGHTFOOT III

Founding JGB officers gather for their first meeting in December 1968. PHOTO BY TERRY’S

Junior Governing Board LO O K I N G B AC K AT T H E

15

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Spotlight on PHILANTHROPY

What inspires your love of music? How does music fit into and enrich your daily life?When I was young, I was convinced that I would grow up to be a famous singer, à la Olivia Newton John! Although I was not classically trained, I appreciated the rigorous process of what it takes to be a musician: the memorization, practice, and preparation for performance. As a young adult, I starting attending concerts at the Cleveland Orchestra, and then later, the Kansas City Symphony, and I fell in love with classical music. I really do love music of all genres. I listen to music almost every day, and when I’m at home, I will always choose to listen to music over watching TV.

As a new member of the CSOA Board of Trustees, how has your experience been so far, and what has been your favorite musical experience?My experience has been terrific. I am most impressed by the level of professionalism demonstrated by my fellow CSOA Trustees; each member conducts themselves with a sense of deep responsibility to an orchestra that is a great cultural treasure. It is clear that the board loves this orchestra and is committed to supporting the CSOA.

Recently, I attended the CSO concert that featured the world premiere of Jennifer Higdon’s Low Brass Concerto. It was amazing! It is a really special thing to have an orchestra

performing and presenting innovative contemporary music.

As an executive at Bank of America, and a CSOA trustee, can you speak to the importance of the “Global Sponsorship”?Bank of America’s partnership with the CSO represents an absolute connection to the community, and our commit-ment to the arts. The CSOA is a gem—a great cultural asset in the city of Chicago. By making this investment, we demon-strate our commitment to the arts and its ability to connect people across cultures. It’s a huge benefit to the CSOA, and the musicians, but it also helps to enrich the human experience of everyone that is touched by this music—not just in Chicago, but around the coun-try and the world—bringing beauty to millions of people.

Why do you think it is important for the corporate sector to support the arts?Corporations are made up of diverse people with diverse interests. I think it’s important that a corporation invest in the things that their clients, customers, and employees care about. When a company

pays attention and responds by investing thoughtfully in the community, everybody benefits. Individuals can be incredibly philanthropic. Corporations can bring a new level of sustainabil-ity in their support of the arts. In doing so, companies use their resources to elevate the arts for the benefit of everyone and send a great message about their commitment to the community.

What are you most looking forward to next season?I’m excited for the early October program next season with Maestro Muti con-ducting Beethoven’s Third Piano Concerto and Brahms’s Hungarian Dances. Outside of the classical repertoire, there’s lots to choose from, such as the CSO at the Movies Star Wars: A New Hope in Concert. There’s truly something for everyone. The CSOA does an amazing job of offering a broad range of programs that appeal to a wide audience, reaching across communities and sharing the joy of music.

Renée Metcalf, Senior Vice President and Illinois Market Executive for Global Commercial Banking at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, recently joined the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association Board of Trustees. Bank of America is the Global Sponsor of the CSO; a very significant partnership in the history of the CSOA.

For further information about joining the CSOA Board of Trustees, contact David Chambers, Vice President for Development at [email protected] or 312-294-3151.

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Spotlight on PHILANTHROPY

The important partnership between Bank of America and the CSOA is rooted in the longstanding service of Merrill Lynch executives on the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association’s Board of Trustees. Bank of America has been a corporate partner of the CSOA since 1988. Today, the CSOA benefits from the volunteer leadership of Trustee Renée Metcalf and Life Trustees John Pratt and Charles Ashby (Chuck) Lewis. The partnership between the CSOA and Bank of America evolved significantly in 2007–08, when Bank of America made key acquisitions and the CSOA made key artistic advancements: Bank of America acquired Chicago’s LaSalle Bank in 2007 and Merrill Lynch in 2008. All three had been corporate partners of the CSOA. The CSOA announced in 2009 that Riccardo Muti would become the CSO’s next music director. Bank of America first became the Global Sponsor of the CSO in Maestro Muti’s inaugural 2010–11 season.

Bank of America’s support has been instrumental in help-ing the CSOA share its music and mission with the people of Chicago and the world. As the Global Sponsor of the CSO, Bank of America’s contribution provides broad-based support for the concerts and programs of the CSO in Chicago and around the globe. This includes concerts in Chicago, national and international tours, as well as CSO Resound record-ings and CSO radio broad-casts (estimated 13 million

listeners annually). The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association is proud to con-tinue this historic partnership and is grateful for Bank of America’s generous support.

Global Sponsor of the CSO

Currently in its eighth year, the Bank of America Global Sponsorship of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra represents the largest annual corporate contribution to the CSOA, and one of the most prominent sponsorships in the world of arts and culture.

Riccardo Muti conducting the CSO at the Concert for Chicago in Millennium Park, September 19, 2010, and on tour at Carnegie Hall in New York City, February 9, 2018PHOTOS BY TODD ROSENBERG

To learn more about joining the CSOA as a corporate partner, please contact Katie Tuttle, Director of Corporate Development at [email protected] or 312-294-3153.

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SPONSORS

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association is grateful for the generous support of this season’s major corporate sponsors.

Global Sponsor of the CSO

O� cial Airline of the CSO

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EXECUTIVE Spotlight

RENÉE METCALF, MARKET EXECUTIVE, ILLINOIS GLOBAL COMMERCIAL BANKING

Bank of America Merrill LynchBank of America is proud to continue its long-standing support of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Our partnership not only delivers artistic quality but also helps to create meaningful connections

with a diverse audience base in Chicago and around the world.

CHRIS CRANE, PRESIDENT AND CEOExelon

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

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

MARCI EISENSTEIN, MANAGING PARTNERSchiff Hardin LLP

Schiff Hardin proudly supports the Chicago Symphony Orchestra for delivering musical excel-lence to Chicago and the Midwest. As partners, we are committed to bringing communities

together to celebrate and serve.

JIM KOLAR, CENTRAL MARKET MANAGING PARTNER PwC

PwC is proud to support the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, a vital and world-class artistic institu-tion that has enhanced Chicago’s cultural commu-nity since 1891. Th e CSO’s long-standing

tradition of excellence is legendary, and we applaud its eff orts during another exciting season.

DAVID R. CASPER, PRESIDENT AND CEOBMO Harris Bank

Th e Chicago Symphony Orchestra commands the admiration of music lovers worldwide. Its reputation across the world brings acclaim to our great city, and its programming and outreach connect audiences

through the bond of music. As a proud admirer and supporter, BMO Harris Bank is pleased to help play a role in strengthening the CSO. During a year in which BMO is celebrating its bicentennial, we are honored to continue our sponsorship of one of our city’s greatest cultural legacies.

STEVE SHEBIK, VICE CHAIRAllstate Insurance Company

Allstate applauds the CSO for its commitment to community and educa-tional programs that enrich our hometown of Chicago. We are a proud supporter of the Negaunee

Music Institute at the CSO, as we believe that good starts young.

Global Sponsor of the CSO

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FOUNDATION Spotlight

Paul M. Angell Family Foundation

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association is deeply grateful to the Paul M. Angell Family Foundation for seven years of generous support of Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Negaunee Music Institute programs. Grants from the Angell Foundation have underwritten scholarships for Civic Orchestra of Chicago pre-professional musicians, supported the Institute’s partnerships with Chicago Public Schools engaging both teachers and students, and supported the programs and performances of the Orchestra. During the 2015–16 season, the Angell Foundation generously granted the CSO a multi-year gift supporting general operations, celebrating the CSO’s 125th anniversary season.

The Paul M. Angell Family Foundation is a philanthropic leader supporting conservation, performing arts, and social causes through grants to organizations across the Greater Chicagoland area, nationally, and internationally. Honoring Paul M. Angell, the Foundation supports organizations and activities that are emblematic of Mr. Angell’s character and sensitive to his concerns in the certain knowledge that change for the better in society is best gained through the constructive involvement of its individual citizens.

The support of the Paul M. Angell Family Foundation reinforces the CSO’s cultural leadership in our city and our nation and its service as our greatest musical ambassador to the world. Through generous gifts such as these, the Orchestra continues to present the most outstanding concerts, meaning-ful education activities, and resonant community engagement programs to audiences at Symphony Center, across Chicago, and around the world. The CSOA remains deeply appreciative to the Paul M. Angell Foundation for their many years of support and generosity.

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VOLUNTEER LEADERSHIP & OPPORTUNITIES

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association is profoundly grateful to the leaders and volunteers listed here and invites you to consider these volunteer opportunities.Governing Members are leading individuals of the CSOA family and serve as its first established volunteer group, celebrating their 123rd year in the 2017–18 season. GMs provide elevated enthusiasm and support for the CSOA’s artistic excellence and educational innovation. Members receive opportunities to gain a deeper connection with CSO’s musicians and organization, as well as with fellow members through special access, ticketing services, events, and meetings. To learn more, call 312-294-3337.

Executive Committee—Chairman: Jared Kaplan, Immediate Past Chairman: Timothy A. Duffy, Vice Chairman of the Annual Fund: Charles Emmons Jr., Vice Chairman of Member Engagement: Eric Kalnins, Vice Chairman of Nominations and Membership: Michael A. Perlstein

The Women’s Board promotes the artistic excellence and exemplary education programs of the Orchestra by engaging women leaders in advocacy and fundraising efforts. The board supports annual fundraising events to benefit the Orchestra, including its signature event, Symphony Ball. To learn more, please call 312-294-3160.

Leadership—President: Elizabeth A. Parker, Immediate Past President: Elisabeth Adams, Communications/Governance Chair: Hyla Kallen, Community Engagement Chair: Judith E. Feldman, Membership Chair: Katie Barber

The League is a creative, vibrant, and dedicated group of over 250 members with over an eighty-year history of supporting the CSO. Members plan and produce fundraising and social events; implement outreach opportunities for adults and children, such as the Young Artists Competition and the Docent Program; and support audi-ence development. To learn more, please call 312-294-3170 or email [email protected].

Leadership and Executive Committee—President: Mimi Duginger, Vice President of Administration: Barbara Dwyer, Vice President of Areas: Mary Torres, Vice President of Education: Jennifer Bumbu, Vice President of Events: Marcia Lewis, Vice President of Finance: Claretta Meier, Vice President of Fund-raising: Barbara Zutovsky, Vice President of Membership: Mary Goodkind, Secretary: Christine Uhlig, Strategic Planning Chair: Cheryl Istvan, Members-at-Large: Eileen Conaghan, Jeffrey Ring

The Overture Council is a dynamic group of young professionals ages 21 to 45 who have a love of music and a desire to learn more about how to support the CSO. Members have many oppor-tunities to attend social activities and concert evenings together. Connect with new friends who share the same interests! Check out the Overture Council’s innovative event Soundpost—open to all! Learn more at cso.org/overturecouncil and cso.org/soundpost.

Executive Committee—President: Erika Knierim, Immediate Past President: BeLinda Mathie, Soundpost Co-Chairs: Elliot Callighan and Kristin Jaburek, Activities Chair: Haley Titus, Audience Development Chair: April Christensen, Communications Chair: Eric Rubio, Membership Chair: John Dunson, Social Media Chair: Jonathon Leik, Secretary: Danielle Flagg

The CSO Latino Alliance is a liaison and partner that connects the CSO with Chicago’s diverse community by creating awareness, sharing insights, and building relationships for generations to come. The group encourages individuals and their families to discover and experience timeless music with other enthusiasts in concerts, receptions, and educational events. To learn more, email [email protected], visit cso.org/latinoalliance, or join the CSO Latino Alliance Facebook group.

Leadership—Co-chairs: Ramiro J. Atristaín-Carrión and Loida Rosario

Auxiliary Volunteers provide invaluable administrative support in a variety of ways by working in the office during regular business hours. Occasional evening and weekend opportu-nities also are available. Please call 312-294-3160 to learn more.

The mission of the CSOA’s African American Network is to engage Chicago’s culturally rich African American community through the sharing and exchanging of unforgettable musical experiences. The AAN seeks to serve and encourage individuals and families, edu-cators and students, musicians and composers, and churches and businesses to experience the timeless beauty of music. To learn more how you can be involved, contact Sheila Jones, coor-dinator, at [email protected] or call 312-294-3045.The Volunteer Programs office is located at 67 East Adams, 6th Floor Phone 312-294-3160

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Jazz: May 18Terence Blanchard featuring The E-Collective -Antonio Sánchez & Migration

Chamber Music: May 20 south shore cultural center Meridian String Quartet Cornelius Chiu violinKozue Funakoshi violinDanny Lai violaDaniel Katz cello Works by Bartók & Brahms

Piano: May 20Yefim BronfmanWorks by Schumann, Widmann, Debussy & Prokofiev

MusicNOW: May 21Esa-Pekka Salonen ConductsMusicians from the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Esa-Pekka Salonen conductorKaren Gomyo violinSamuel Adams & Elizabeth Ogonek Mead Composers-in-Residence

CSO: May 24–26Salonen & Uchida Plays Bartók Piano Concerto No. 3 Esa-Pekka Salonen conductorMitsuko Uchida piano

CSO: May 31–June 3Beethoven 4 & Music from Wagner’s Tannhäuser & Die Meistersinger von NürnbergMarek Janowski conductor

Jazz: June 1Dee Dee Bridgewater's Memphis -The Legendary Count Basie Orchestra directed by Scotty Barnhart

Civic Orchestra: June 4Bernstein Symphony No. 1 & Holst The PlanetsFrancesco Lecce-Chong conductor Maya Lahyani mezzo-sopranoWomen of Bella Voce chorusAndrew Lewis artistic director

CSO: June 7–9Mandolin Masterpieces with Avi AvitalGiovanni Antonini conductor and flautinoAvi Avital mandolin

Chamber Music: June 10fullerton hall, art institute of chicago Trailblazing American ArtistsLincoln Quartet Lei Hou violinQing Hou violinLawrence Neuman viola Kenneth Olsen celloWorks by Haydn, Walker, Chihara & Schubert

Piano: June 10Martin HelmchenWorks by Schumann & Beethoven

CSO: June 11Gregory Porter sings Nat King Cole and Me with the CSO and Special Guest Marc-André Hamelin Performs Rhapsody in BlueEdwin Outwater conductor

CSO: June 14–16Shostakovich Cello Concerto No. 2 &Prokofiev Symphony No. 3 Riccardo Muti conductorYo-Yo Ma cello

CSO: June 21–24Muti Conducts Rossini Stabat materRiccardo Muti conductorKrassimira Stoyanova sopranoEkaterina Gubanova mezzo-sopranoDmitry Korchak tenorEnea Scala tenorEric Owens bass-baritoneChicago Symphony Chorus Duain Wolfe chorus director

Film: June 27–30Star Wars: A New Hope In ConcertChicago Symphony Orchestra Richard Kaufman conductor

For complete programming, visit cso.org.

May & June CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA RICCARDO MUTI Zell Music Director

SYMPHONY CENTER PRESENTS

Visit cso.org or call 312-294-3000 for more information or to order tickets.S Y M P H O N Y C E N T E R | 2 2 0 S O U T H M I C H I G A N A V E N U E | C H I C A G O , I L 6 0 6 0 4

Discover DVDs, CDs and BOOKS on the RMMUSIC STORE

Riccardo Muti in Rehearsal was awarded the Moige prize for the best TV programs 2016 for Education, Entertainment and Culture in Italy.

“[…] enlightening, intriguing, funny, amusing, rigorous and imaginative “report” about how Riccardo Muti works with musicians to get to the highest musical expression. Actually, all of these adjectives perfectly fit the conductor himself: it can’t be just by chance that anyone working with him regularly tells that he, more than other conductors, can open an unexpected semantic world behind every note, breath, accent, pause or phrase […]” - Amadeus Magazine

RMMUSIC STORE riccardomutimusic.com

RICCARDO MUTI IN REHEARSALwith subtitles in English, French and German

Box Set with 8 DVDs and Photo Booklet

AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE ON RICCARDOMUTIMUSIC.COM AND AT THE SYMPHONY STORE

Hector BerliozGiuseppe VerdiFranz SchubertDomenico CimarosaGiovanni PaisielloWolfgang Amadeus MozartAntonín Leopold Dvorák

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PROGRAM

ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-SEVENTH SEASON

Chicago Symphony OrchestraRiccardo Muti Zell Music Director Yo-Yo Ma Judson and Joyce Green Creative Consultant

Friday, May 11, 2018, at 8:00Saturday, May 12, 2018, at 8:00Tuesday, May 15, 2018, at 7:30

Emmanuel Krivine ConductorIsabelle Faust ViolinPaul Jacobs Organ

BrahmsTragic Overture, Op. 81

SchumannViolin Concerto in D MinorIn powerful motion, but not too fastSlow—Lively, but not fast

ISABELLE FAUST

First Chicago Symphony Orchestra subscription concert performances

INTERMISSION

Saint-SaënsSymphony No. 3 in C Minor, Op. 78 (Organ)Adagio—Allegro moderato—Poco adagioAllegro moderato—Presto—Maestoso—Allegro

PAUL JACOBS

These violin concerto performances have been enabled by the Paul Ricker Judy Fund.

United Airlines is the Official Airline of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra is grateful to WBBM Newsradio 780 and 105.9 FM for their generous support as media sponsor of the Tuesday series.

This program is partially supported by a grant from the Illinois Arts Council Agency.

Global Sponsor of the CSO

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The Chicago Symphony Orchestra is grateful to

UNITED AIRLINES

for its generous support as the

Official Airline of the CSO.

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COMMENTS by Phillip Huscher

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Johannes BrahmsBorn May 7, 1833; Hamburg, GermanyDied April 3, 1897; Vienna, Austria

Tragic Overture, Op. 81

COMPOSED1880

FIRST PERFORMANCEDecember 26, 1880; Vienna, Austria

INSTRUMENTATIONtwo flutes and piccolo, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, strings

APPROXIMATE PERFORMANCE TIME13 minutes

FIRST CSO PERFORMANCESMarch 2 and 3, 1894, Auditorium Theatre. Theodore Thomas conducting

July 2, 1944, Ravinia Festival. Pierre Monteux conducting

MOST RECENT CSO PERFORMANCESSeptember 17, 18, 19, and 22, 1992, Orchestra Hall. Daniel Barenboim conducting

June 27, 1995, Ravinia Festival. Zubin Mehta conducting

CSO RECORDINGS1941. Frederick Stock conducting. Columbia

1957. Fritz Reiner conducting. RCA

1978. Sir Georg Solti conducting. London

1992. Daniel Barenboim conducting. Erato

Many composers, unable to clear the sounds of music from their heads, have done their best work on summer holiday. The bulk of Mahler’s output was composed in various summer houses. Brahms also found life during the regular season too busy

to allow substantial composition; vacation brought the work he loved best. In the summer of 1880, he went to Bad Ischl, one of his favorite resorts. (A few summers later, Mahler would bicycle there from his retreat on the Steinberger See to meet Brahms for a cup of coffee and to compare notes and share comments—as well as a certain bewilderment—about each other’s music.) The weather at Bad Ischl was remarkably bad the summer of 1880, and even though Brahms missed the clear skies and the chance to take long daily walks, he found the inspiration to write two concert overtures—the only two of his career—those known as Academic Festival and Tragic. At summer’s end, Brahms and Clara Schumann played through the two overtures as piano duets; Clara found them both magnificent.

We know that Brahms wrote the cheerful Academic Festival Overture in gratitude for the honorary doctorate given him by the University of Breslau the previous year—his first word of thanks had been a perfunctory postcard; but he was vague about the origins of the Tragic Overture, telling his friend Fritz Simrock that he composed it simply to satisfy the melancholy side of his nature. Brahms never confirmed the popular story that the overture had been written years before, on a commission from Vienna’s Burgtheater for incidental music to Goethe’s Faust, though sketches later surfaced showing a substantial portion of the Tragic Overture (in a different key) mixed with drafts for the Liebeslieder Waltzes, op. 52, and the Alto Rhapsody—placing it more than a decade earlier.

O n several occasions, Brahms claimed he had no particular tragedy in mind; he was even indifferent to the title, telling

the conductor Bernhard Scholz that either tragic or dramatic would do. There is nothing half-hearted in the music, however—certainly not in the powerful opening, with its drama of major versus minor, nor in the glorious second theme, one of Brahms’s loveliest melodies. The orches-tration is imaginative and deft (though not so

Above: Brahms, cabinet photograph, ca. 1880, by Fritz Luckhardt (1843–1894)

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grand as in the Academic Festival, the most richly scored work of Brahms’s career); the horns play important roles throughout; and even the piccolo is indispensable to Brahms’s ear for orchestral color, though it plays for just fifteen of the overture’s 429 measures. There is a remarkable and beautiful moment when the music slows to half-time, and the first theme emerges, transformed, in the solo horn and trombone.

Robert SchumannBorn June 8, 1810; Zwickau, Saxony, GermanyDied July 29, 1856; Endenich, near Bonn, Germany

Violin Concerto in D Minor

COMPOSEDSeptember–October 1853

FIRST PERFORMANCENovember 26, 1937; Berlin, Germany

INSTRUMENTATIONsolo violin, two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, timpani, strings

APPROXIMATE PERFORMANCE TIME30 minutes

FIRST CSO PERFORMANCESJuly 19, 1996, Ravinia Festival. Christian Tetzlaff as soloist, Christoph Eschenbach conducting

These are the first Chicago Symphony Orchestra subscription concert performances.

On September 30, 1853, an unknown, twenty-year-old composer named Johannes Brahms showed up unannounced at the home of Robert and Clara Schumann. He came with an introduction from the great violinist Joseph Joachim, for whom

Robert was then writing a concerto. The follow-ing day, Schumann noted in his journal, “The Violin Concerto is finished. A visit from Brahms (a genius).” Brahms’s visit, and Schumann’s immediate publicizing of his extraordinary talent, is one of the most celebrated stories in

music. But the Violin Concerto remained unknown for more than eighty years.

There are few mysteries in music as odd as the neglect and eventual rediscovery of this violin concerto. To understand how a major work by an established composer came to be completely for-gotten, we must turn to the circumstances of its composition in 1853, a time that brings together all the players who had a role in determining its fate. (Schumann himself probably guessed that his score would eventually surface someday, for he was, after all, the one responsible for unearth-ing Schubert’s Great C major symphony in 1839 and overseeing its posthumous premiere.)

It was Joachim, the young superstar, who asked Schumann to write him a concerto.

Above: Schumann, daguerreotype, 1850. Johann Anton Völlner, Hamburg

View of Bad Ischl and the Kaiservilla, with the Dachstein in the background, ca. 1880s. Oil on canvas, Ferdinand Lepié (1824–1883)

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Schumann apparently agreed at once. He had been highly impressed with Joachim’s perfor-mance of Beethoven’s Violin Concerto in 1851, and he was even more enthusiastic after Joachim visited him in Düsseldorf in August 1853 and they spent two days together playing chamber music. Schumann began composing the new concerto on September 21 and completed it in just thirteen days, interrupted in the final stretch by Brahms’s visit. (Schumann’s journal indicates that the piece was finished on October 1, but it apparently took him two more days to complete the orchestration.) In January, when Robert and Clara went to Hanover, where Joachim had put together a weeklong Schumann festival, the violinist read through the new concerto at a rehearsal with orchestra. But he was ill-prepared and tired from his demanding concert schedule, and neither he nor the Schumanns were happy with the concerto’s dry run.

Over the next months, Robert’s mental state deteriorated rapidly, and on March 4, only days after he attempted suicide, he was institutional-ized at Endenich—an eight-hour carriage ride from Düsseldorf, where the Schumanns made their home. Joachim wrote to Schumann, saying that he now knew the concerto better—“I did it such injustice,” he said of the Hanover reading—and offered to come to Endenich and play it for him again. Joachim did visit Schumann in the asylum twice, but apparently the concerto was never mentioned. In September 1855, Joachim played the concerto again, this time privately

with Clara at the piano (the occasion, sadly, was her fifteenth wedding anniversary), but he never performed it in public. After Robert died in July 1856—Clara and Brahms were at his bedside—the Violin Concerto was all but forgotten.

Some two decades later, when Clara under-took the publication of a complete edition of Schumann’s music, she, along with Joachim and Brahms (they all had remained close friends), seriously considered including the Violin Concerto. But ultimately they agreed that it shouldn’t be published—that it was a painful reminder of the composer’s tragic decline and evidence of his failing creativity. Joachim kept the manuscript of the concerto until his death. When Andreas Moser, who was writing a biography of Schumann, contacted Joachim for information on the unperformed score, Joachim replied that while “certain pages (how could it be otherwise?) testify to the deep sensibility of the composer, this by contrast unhappily makes the weaker parts more evident.” (Moser reprinted Joachim’s letter in his book, only increasing spec-ulation about the validity of the violinist’s judg-ment.) After Joachim’s death in 1907, his son sold the manuscript to the Prussian State Library in Berlin on the condition that it not be published until 1956, a century after Schumann’s death.

In 1933, in a final twist of fate that today would merit front-page coverage in the National Enquirer, one of Joachim’s great-nieces, Jelly d’Arányi, herself a fine violinist, claimed she had been in touch with the spirit of Joachim, who told her about an unknown violin concerto that Schumann had composed eighty years earlier and asked her to track it down. In subsequent communications with Jelly, Joachim confessed that he had been “far too intolerant,” and gave his blessing to have the work performed. (He never explained why he hadn’t mentioned the concerto to her while he was still alive.) Willy Strecker, of the B. Schott Söhne publishing house, soon joined forces with d’Arányi and together they convinced Joachim’s son to release the concerto.

A copy of the manuscript was sent to Yehudi Menuhin, who immediately recognized the worth of the “discovery,” and agreed to give the premiere in San Francisco. But Germany’s highest musical official refused to relinquish the honor of an important Schumann premiere to a Jewish violinist in America, and so the first

Joseph Joachim and Clara Schumann, 1854. Pastel drawing by Adolph von Menzel (1815–1905)

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performance took place in Berlin, played by Georg Kulenkampff (Germany’s leading vio-linist at the time) in November 1937. A month later, Menuhin gave the American premiere, and d’Arányi herself gave the first performance in England in February 1938. Although the Schumanns’ youngest daughter, Eugenie, then in her late eighties, protested the performance and publication of the score, she could do nothing at this point to keep her father’s sole violin concerto from the public.

The Violin Concerto is Schumann’s last major completed piece. As a result, the work is still sometimes thoughtlessly dismissed as an example of Schumann’s diminished creativity at the end of his life, despite the evidence of the music itself. It also has taken time for musicians to overturn the professional judgment of Joachim, Brahms, and Clara Schumann—the three musicians who knew Robert Schumann best.

O f Schumann’s three concertos, the D minor violin concerto is the most classical in form. The opening move-

ment is a large, magnificent piece, launched by

one of Schumann’s most expansive and energetic themes. Even Joachim admitted the beauty of the lovely, lyrical second theme in the relative major. The solo violin writing is imaginative and deeply expressive, but it’s far from idiomatic, which apparently troubled even as fine a violinist as Joachim. For the premiere, Kulenkampff hired Paul Hindemith to rewrite the solo part to make it more conventional (and easier to play). Hindemith, already a champion of Schumann’s late works, probably agreed because he wanted to help promote the concerto as an important and brilliant score. (Subsequent performances, including Menuhin’s and d’Arányi’s, restored Schumann’s original solo part.)

The brief slow movement is one of Schumann’s most intimate creations—a subdued dialogue between the soloist and gently syncopated orchestral music. It moves directly into the finale, a stately polonaise that carries Schumann’s care-ful warning, “Lively, but not fast,” accompanied by a slow metronome marking. This is a joyous and festive movement, but Schumann wanted to make certain that it would lose none of its power and majesty.

Camille Saint-SaënsBorn October 9, 1835; Paris, FranceDied December 16, 1921; Algiers, Algeria

Symphony No. 3 in C Minor, Op. 78 (Organ)

Although Franz Liszt never heard this piece—it was premiered in London two months before his death—he had admired the score during his last visit to Paris, while Saint-Saëns was still working on it. In July 1886, when Saint-Saëns

learned that Liszt had died (in Bayreuth, where he had gone to visit his daughter Cosima Wagner and to attend Tristan and Isolde and Parsifal), he decided to publish this new

symphony with a dedication to the older composer’s memory.

Liszt’s music served as a model to Saint-Saëns throughout his career. The unconventional form of this C minor symphony, with two movements folded into each of its two main sections, and its use of a signature theme that is transformed as the work proceeds, are clearly indebted to the innovations of Liszt’s own scores. Saint-Saëns may even have taken the idea of including the organ in a piece of symphonic music from one of Liszt’s tone poems, The Battle of the Huns. (Saint-Saëns never misunderstood Liszt’s true importance to the history of music: “The world

Above: Saint-Saëns, cabinet photograph, ca. 1880, by Eugène Pirou (1841–1909), Paris

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COMPOSED1886

FIRST PERFORMANCEMay 19, 1886. The composer conducting

INSTRUMENTATIONthree flutes and piccolo, two oboes and english horn, two clarinets and bass clarinet, two bassoons and contrabassoon, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones and tuba, timpani, triangle, cymbals, bass drum, solo organ, piano, strings

APPROXIMATE PERFORMANCE TIME34 minutes

FIRST CSO PERFORMANCESOctober 30 and 31, 1891, Auditorium Theatre. Clarence Eddy as soloist, Theodore Thomas conducting

August 8, 1937, Ravinia Festival. Frederick Stock conducting

MOST RECENT CSO PERFORMANCESJuly 21, 2007, Ravinia Festival. Stephen Alltop as soloist, Andrew Litton conducting

March 6, 7, and 8, 2014, Orchestra Hall. Paul Jacobs as soloist, Charles Dutoit conducting

CSO RECORDINGS1975. Gaston Litaize as soloist, Daniel Barenboim conducting. Deutsche Grammophon

persisted to the end,” he wrote, “in calling him the greatest pianist in order to avoid the trouble of considering his claims as one of the most remarkable of composers.”)

Saint-Saëns’s own musical life had a Mozartean beginning. At the age of two, as he later recalled, he observed “the symphony of the kettle,” with “its slow crescendo so full of surprises, and the appear-ance of a microscopic oboe whose sound rose little by little until the water had reached a boiling point.” At four, he performed part of one of Beethoven’s violin sonatas in a Paris salon, and he began to compose at six. He made his public debut in the Salle Pleyel in Paris at ten, playing a piano concerto by Mozart and a movement from Beethoven’s C minor piano con-certo, and offering, as an encore, to perform from memory any one of Beethoven’s thirty-two sonatas the audience requested. “This young man knows everything, but he lacks inexperience,” Berlioz wrote.

Saint-Saëns quickly grew into an artist of maturity and taste, both as a performer and as a composer. Berlioz called him “an absolutely shattering master pianist,” and Proust wrote that his playing was free of the “writhings, shakings of the head, and tossing of hair that adulterate the purity of music with the sensuality of dance.” (Saint-Saëns played his Second Piano Concerto with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in November 1906.)

Saint-Saëns lived a full half century longer than Mozart, however, and he kept composing and performing to the very end. (He played in public for the last time just four months before his death.) His career is one of music’s longest and most productive. During his lifetime, composers as diverse as Mahler, Tchaikovsky,

and Debussy were born and died. When Saint-Saëns himself died, at eighty-six, he had made his mark as a writer of operas, symphonies, concertos, and a treasure trove of smaller miscellaneous pieces. Today the public knows but a mere sliver of this vast output—particularly the Carnival of the Animals he never took seriously and refused to publish; two or three of his concertos; Samson and Delilah (alone of his dozen operas); and this, the so-called Organ Symphony.

This symphony was popular from the start. After Saint-Saëns conducted the Paris premiere, Charles Gounod remarked “There

goes the French Beethoven!”—an indication more of Saint-Saëns’s status at the time rather than a true barometer of his musical vision or depth. Saint-Saëns himself recognized that his considerable gifts—including a genuine flair for sumptuous orchestral color, suave and unforget-table melody, and brilliant craftsmanship—while untouched by most of his contemporaries, were not those of a pioneer. “First among composers of the second rank,” was, reportedly, his own

Saint-Saëns, ca. 1846, around the age of ten

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surprisingly honest and self-effacing, if off-hand evaluation.

Neither a conventional symphony nor a true tone poem, the Organ Symphony borrows elements from both traditions. The form itself is unusual. “This symphony is divided into two parts,” Saint-Saëns wrote at the time of the premiere. “Nevertheless, it embraces in principle the four traditional movements, but the first is altered in its development to serve as the intro-duction to the Poco adagio, and the scherzo is connected by the same process to the finale.” In other words, more experimentation with the standard chapters of symphony and sonata—with the fusing of movements and the blurring of dividing lines—of the sort begun earlier in the nineteenth century and vigorously pursued by Liszt in particular.

T he score opens with a brief, slow introduction—just long enough to announce a rising four-note motif that

is Saint-Saëns’s main musical material. This theme is already changed, in character if not in content, by the first agitated measures of the main Allegro section that follows. A second, more lyrical melody eventually is combined with the main motif before the music loses momen-tum as it prepares the way for the Poco adagio, reached without pause. Here, an “extremely peaceful, contemplative theme,” as the composer described it, is presented low in the strings over soft organ chords. The calm and beauty are eventually disturbed, though not shattered, by the turbulence of the Allegro. The two dissimilar musical worlds coexist happily by the end of the

movement, when nervous pizzicato triplets from the Allegro accompany the Poco adagio’s serene and untroubled melody.

The second movement begins with a scherzo-like tempestuous transformation of the symphony’s main material, dispelled briefly by “arpeggios and scales, swift as lightning,” on the piano. (Saint-Saëns himself was a highly accomplished performer on the piano and organ, and this symphony includes substantial and prominent roles for both instruments, although it is the organ, so unexpected in a symphony, that has given the work its popular subtitle.) This peculiar combination of fury and “tricky gaiety” is later undercut by a powerful, “grave, austere” theme in the trombones, tuba, and basses. “There is a struggle for mastery,” Saint-Saëns writes, “which ends in the defeat of the restless, diabolical element.”

This solemn theme rises “and rests there as in the blue of a clear sky,” signaling a significant change in the symphony’s direction. A mighty chord from the full organ “announces the approaching triumph of calm and lofty thought.” The initial theme, now entirely transformed by the strings and shimmering piano chords, leads into a development of majesty, energy, and lyricism. There are several detours—including an unexpected pastoral episode for oboe, flute, english horn, and clarinet—and further transformations, but Saint-Saëns’s triumphant, heaven-storming destination is now in sight.

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

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PROFILES

Emmanuel Krivine Conductor

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Emmanuel Krivine is respected as one of the world’s most distin-guished conductors, whose elegant and colorful interpretations have made him a favorite with leading orchestras and soloists around the world.

Regarded as one of the foremost French musi-cians today, Krivine has held a number of important positions in France; in September 2017 he took up the post of music director of the Orchestre National de France, its first French music director in over forty years. He is a passionate educator who regularly conducts orchestras of young musicians, and in 2004 he created a period-instrument ensemble, La Chambre Philharmonique, now one of the most important groups of its kind.

Born in Grenoble, France, of Russian and Polish descent, Emmanuel Krivine began his career as a violinist. He was awarded first prize of the Paris Conservatory at the age of sixteen and became a scholar at the Queen Elisabeth Music Chapel in Belgium, studying with Henryk Szeryng and Yehudi Menuhin, and winning many prestigious awards. After a decisive meeting with Karl Böhm in 1965, he increasingly devoted himself to conducting. He was principal guest conductor of the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France from 1976 until 1983, and music director of the Orchestre National de Lyon from 1987 until 2000. He also served as music director of the Orchestre Français des Jeunes for eleven years between 1984 and 2004 and as music director of the Orchestre Philharmonique du Luxembourg from 2006 to 2014.

Emmanuel Krivine has conducted the world’s finest orchestras, including the Berlin Philharmonic, the Royal Concertgebouw–Amsterdam, the London Symphony and London Philharmonic orchestras, and the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra and Tonhalle-Orchester

Zürich. In North America, he has led the Cleveland and Philadelphia orchestras; the Boston and National symphony orchestras; the Los Angeles Philharmonic; and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, where he made his debut in 2016–17. He also has worked with the Sydney, Melbourne, and NHK–Tokyo symphony orchestras. A passion for working with chamber orchestras has led to tours with the Chamber Orchestra of Europe and the Mahler Chamber Orchestra; he became principal guest conductor of the Scottish Chamber Orchestra in 2015.

During the 2017–18 season, Krivine and the Orchestre National de France mark the 100th anniversary of the death of Claude Debussy in 2018 and perform in concerts around France and Switzerland, including the Aix-en-Provence Easter Festival, the Settimane Musicali of Ascona, and Les Grands Interprètes Toulouse; and work with top soloists including Martha Argerich, Jean-Yves Thibaudet, Renaud Capuçon, Francesco Piemontesi, and Maxim Vengerov. La Chambre Philharmonique has gained recognition with its award-winning recordings on Naïve, including most recently Beethoven’s complete symphonies, awarded Editor’s Choice by Gramophone magazine. His discography also includes recordings with the Orchestre Philharmonique du Luxembourg, Chamber Orchestra of Europe with Maria João Pires, London Symphony with Vadim Repin, and the Orchestre National de Lyon released on labels including Deutsche Grammophon, Erato, and Naïve.

FIRST CSO PERFORMANCESNovember 17 18, 19, and 22, 2016, Orchestra Hall. Liszt’s Les préludes, Prokofiev’s Piano Concerto no. 2 with Denis Kozhukhin, and Dvořák’s Symphony no. 8

MOST RECENT CSO PERFORMANCESMarch 8, 9, 10, and 11, 2018, Orchestra Hall. Rimsky- Korsakov’s orchestration of Mussorgsky’s Prelude to Khovanshchina, Shostakovich’s Violin Concerto no. 1 with Leonidas Kavakos, Berlioz’s Royal Hunt and Storm from Les Troyens, and Debussy’s La mer

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Isabelle Faust Violin

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Isabelle Faust capti-vates listeners with her outstanding interpre-tations based on the historical context of each work and faithful renditions based on current scholarship. Her repertoire encompasses music by

composers from Biber to Lachenmann.After winning the Leopold Mozart and

Paganini competitions at a very early age, Faust soon made regular guest appearances with the world’s major orchestras, including the Berlin Philharmonic, Boston Symphony Orchestra, NHK Symphony Orchestra–Tokyo, Chamber Orchestra of Europe, and Freiburg Baroque Orchestra. In addition, she has enjoyed collabo-rations with such conductors as Claudio Abbado, Giovanni Antonini, Frans Brüggen, Sir John Eliot Gardiner, Bernard Haitink, Daniel Harding, Philippe Herreweghe, Andris Nelsons, and Robin Ticciati.

Isabelle Faust’s artistic curiosity includes music from all eras. In addition to her concerto repertoire, she also plays such chamber works

as Schubert’s Octet on period instruments and Kurtág’s Kafka Fragments with Anna Prohaska or Stravinsky’s The Soldier’s Tale with Dominique Horwitz. Premieres of works by Péter Eötvös, Ondřej Adámek, Marco Stroppa, and Beat Furrer are in preparation for upcoming seasons.

Faust’s numerous recordings, unanimously praised by critics, have received the Diapason d’Or, ECHO Klassik Award, Gramophone Award, the Choc de l’Année, and other prizes. Her most recent include Mozart’s violin con-certos with the ensemble Il Giardino Armonico under the direction of Giovanni Antonini and the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra under Pablo Heras-Casado. Other recordings include Bach’s sonatas for unaccompanied violin as well as violin concertos by Beethoven and Berg under Abbado and Beethoven’s complete sonatas for violin and piano, among other pieces. She works closely with pianist Alexander Melnikov as a partner in chamber music.

This season, Isabelle Faust is artist-in-residence at the Wigmore Hall in London.

These concerts mark Isabelle Faust’s debut with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

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Paul Jacobs Organ

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The only organist to win a Grammy Award (for Messiaen’s Livre du Saint Sacrement), and an important influence in the revival of sym-phonic works featuring the organ, Paul Jacobs delights audiences, colleagues, and critics

alike with imaginative interpretations and charismatic stage presence. He is a true innovator in the advocacy of organ repertoire, performing and encouraging the composition of new works.

Prior to this week with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Paul Jacobs was the featured soloist at the final concert of the Cleveland Orchestra’s weeklong festival exploring ecstasy in music, playing Liszt’s Fantasy and Fugue on the chorale Ad nos, ad salutarem undam, having performed Stephen Paulus’s Grand Concerto for Organ and Orchestra with the Cleveland Orchestra earlier in the season. In the coming weeks, he joins the Philadelphia Orchestra and Yannick Nézet-Séguin on tour to Luxembourg and Brussels in addition to Hamburg’s recently opened Elbphilharmonie.

Paul Jacobs began the 2017–18 season with a performance of Lou Harrison’s Concerto for Organ and Percussion with Third Coast Percussion in a centennial celebration of the

composer at the Toledo Museum of Art followed by a week in Shanghai, where he was president of the jury for the first Shanghai International Organ Competition and presented a recital at the Shanghai Oriental Art Center. Other highlights of the season include recording Saint-Saëns’s Organ Symphony with the Utah Symphony; a solo recital presented by the San Francisco Symphony in Davies Symphony Hall; Sir James MacMillan’s Scotch Bestiary with the Philadelphia Orchestra; and a concert of three organ concertos at the historic Trinity Wall Street St. Paul Chapel in New York’s Lower Manhattan, celebrating the 250th year of the chapel and the installation of a new organ.

Last season, Jacobs premiered a new organ concerto by Christopher Rouse, which was dedicated to him and co-commissioned by the Philadelphia Orchestra conducted by Yannick Nézet-Séguin, the National Symphony Orchestra led by Gustavo Gimeno, and the Los Angeles Philharmonic under David Robertson.

FIRST CSO PERFORMANCESNovember 4, 5, and 6, 2010, Orchestra Hall. Copland’s Symphony for Organ and Orchestra, Michael Tilson Thomas conducting

MOST RECENT CSO PERFORMANCESMarch 5, 6, 7, and 8, 2014, Orchestra Hall. Saint-Saëns’s Symphony no. 3, Charles Dutoit conducting

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CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

Now celebrating its 127th season, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra is consistently hailed as one of the world’s leading orchestras. In September 2010, renowned Italian conductor Riccardo Muti became its tenth music director. His vision for the Orchestra—to deepen its engagement with the Chicago community, to nurture its legacy while supporting a new generation of musicians, and to collaborate with visionary artists—signals a new era for the institution.

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s distin-guished history began in 1889, when Theodore Thomas, then the leading conductor in America and a recognized music pioneer, was invited by Chicago businessman Charles Norman Fay to establish a symphony orchestra here. Thomas’s aim to establish a permanent orchestra with performance capabilities of the highest quality was realized at the first concerts in October 1891. Thomas served as music director until his death in 1905—just three weeks after the dedication of Orchestra Hall, the Orchestra’s permanent home designed by Daniel Burnham.

Frederick Stock, recruited by Thomas to the viola section in 1895, became assistant conductor in 1899, and succeeded the Orchestra’s founder. His tenure lasted thirty-seven years, from 1905 to 1942—the longest of the Orchestra’s music direc-tors. Dynamic and innovative, the Stock years saw the founding of the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, the first training orchestra in the United States affiliated with a major symphony orchestra, in 1919. He also established youth auditions, orga-nized the first subscription concerts especially for children, and began a series of popular concerts.

Three distinguished conductors headed the Orchestra during the following decade: Désiré Defauw was music director from 1943 to 1947; Artur Rodzinski assumed the post in 1947–48; and Rafael Kubelík led the ensemble for three seasons from 1950 to 1953. The next ten years belonged to Fritz Reiner, whose recordings with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra are still considered performance hallmarks. It was Reiner who invited Margaret Hillis to form the Chicago Symphony Chorus in 1957. For the five seasons from 1963 to 1968, Jean Martinon held the position of music director.

Sir Georg Solti, the Orchestra’s eighth music director, served from 1969 until 1991. He then held the title of music director laureate and returned to conduct the Orchestra for several

weeks each season until his death in September 1997. Solti’s arrival launched one of the most successful musical partnerships of our time, and the CSO made its first overseas tour to Europe in 1971 under his direction, along with numerous award-winning recordings.

Daniel Barenboim was named music director designate in January 1989, and he became the Orchestra’s ninth music director in September 1991, a position he held until June 2006. His tenure was distinguished by the opening of Symphony Center in 1997, highly praised oper-atic productions at Orchestra Hall, numerous appearances with the Orchestra in the dual role of pianist and conductor, twenty-one interna-tional tours, and the appointment of Duain Wolfe as the Chorus’s second director.

From 2006 to 2010, Bernard Haitink held the post of principal conductor, the first in CSO his-tory. Pierre Boulez’s long-standing relationship with the CSO led to his appointment as principal guest conductor in 1995. He was named Helen Regenstein Conductor Emeritus in 2006, a position he held until his death in January 2016. Only two others have served as principal guest conductors: Carlo Maria Giulini, who began to appear in Chicago regularly in the late 1950s, was named to the post in 1969, serving until 1972. Claudio Abbado held the position from 1982 to 1985.

In January 2010, Yo-Yo Ma was appointed the CSO’s Judson and Joyce Green Creative Consultant by Riccardo Muti. In this role, he partners with Muti, staff, and musicians to provide program development for the Negaunee Music Institute at the CSO.

Mead Composers-in-Residence Samuel Adams and Elizabeth Ogonek were appointed by Riccardo Muti and began their three-year terms in the fall of 2015. In addition to composing, they curate the contemporary MusicNOW series.

Since 1916, recording has been a significant part of the Orchestra’s activities. Current releases on CSO Resound, the Orchestra’s indepen-dent recording label, include the Grammy Award–winning release of Verdi’s Requiem led by Riccardo Muti. Recordings by the CSO have earned sixty-two Grammy awards from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences.

www.cso.org

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CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA RICCARDO MUTI zell music director

Yo-Yo Ma Judson and Joyce Green Creative ConsultantDuain Wolfe Chorus Director and ConductorSamuel Adams, Elizabeth Ogonek Mead Composers-in-Residence

VIOLINSRobert Chen

ConcertmasterThe Louis C. Sudler Chair, endowed by an anonymous benefactor

Stephanie JeongAssociate ConcertmasterThe Cathy and Bill Osborn Chair

David TaylorYuan-Qing Yu

Assistant Concertmasters*So Young BaeCornelius ChiuAlison DaltonGina DiBelloKozue FunakoshiRussell HershowQing HouBlair MiltonPaul Phillips, Jr.Sando ShiaSusan SynnestvedtRong-Yan TangBaird Dodge

PrincipalSylvia Kim Kilcullen

Assistant PrincipalLei HouNi MeiFox FehlingHermine GagnéRachel GoldsteinMihaela IonescuMelanie KupchynskyWendy Koons MeirMatous MichalSimon MichalAiko NodaJoyce NohNancy Park†Ronald SatkiewiczFlorence Schwartz

VIOLASLi-Kuo Chang

Acting PrincipalThe Paul Hindemith Principal Viola Chair, endowed by an anonymous benefactor

John BartholomewCatherine BrubakerYouming ChenSunghee ChoiWei-Ting KuoDanny LaiDiane MuesLawrence NeumanMax RaimiWeijing Wang

CELLOSJohn Sharp

PrincipalThe Eloise W. Martin Chair

Kenneth OlsenAssistant PrincipalThe Adele Gidwitz Chair

Karen BasrakLoren BrownRichard HirschlDaniel KatzKatinka Kleijn§Jonathan PegisDavid SandersGary StuckaBrant Taylor

BASSESAlexander Hanna

PrincipalThe David and Mary Winton Green Principal Bass Chair

Daniel ArmstrongRoger Cline†Joseph DiBelloMichael HovnanianRobert KassingerMark KraemerStephen LesterBradley Opland

HARPSSarah Bullen

PrincipalLynne Turner

FLUTESStefán Ragnar Höskuldsson

PrincipalThe Erika and Dietrich M. Gross Principal Flute Chair

Richard GraefAssistant Principal

Emma GersteinJennifer Gunn

PICCOLOJennifer Gunn

OBOESMichael Henoch

Assistant PrincipalThe Gilchrist Foundation Chair

Lora SchaeferScott Hostetler

ENGLISH HORNScott Hostetler

CLARINETSStephen Williamson

PrincipalJohn Bruce Yeh

Assistant PrincipalGregory SmithJ. Lawrie Bloom

E-FLAT CLARINETJohn Bruce Yeh

BASS CLARINETJ. Lawrie Bloom

BASSOONSKeith Buncke

PrincipalWilliam Buchman

Assistant PrincipalDennis MichelMiles Maner

CONTRABASSOONMiles Maner

HORNSDaniel Gingrich

Acting PrincipalJames SmelserDavid GriffinOto CarrilloSusanna Gaunt

TRUMPETSMark Ridenour

Assistant PrincipalJohn HagstromTage Larsen

TROMBONESJay Friedman

PrincipalThe Lisa and Paul Wiggin Principal Trombone Chair

Michael MulcahyCharles Vernon

BASS TROMBONECharles Vernon

TUBAGene Pokorny

PrincipalThe Arnold Jacobs Principal Tuba Chair, endowed by Christine Querfeld

TIMPANIDavid Herbert

PrincipalThe Clinton Family Fund Chair

Vadim KarpinosAssistant Principal

PERCUSSIONCynthia Yeh

PrincipalPatricia DashVadim KarpinosJames Ross

LIBRARIANSPeter Conover

PrincipalCarole KellerMark Swanson

ORCHESTRA PERSONNELJohn Deverman

DirectorAnne MacQuarrie

Manager, CSO Auditions and Orchestra Personnel

STAGE TECHNICIANSKelly Kerins

Stage ManagerBlair CarlsonDave HartgePeter LandryChristopher LewisTodd SnickJoe Tucker

* Assistant concertmasters are listed by seniority.

†On sabbatical

§On leave

The Louise H. Benton Wagner Chair currently is unoccupied.

The Nancy and Larry Fuller Principal Oboe Chair currently is unoccupied.

The Adolph Herseth Principal Trumpet Chair, endowed by an anonymous benefactor, currently is unoccupied.

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra string sections utilize revolving seating. Players behind the first desk (first two desks in the violins) change seats systematically every two weeks and are listed alphabeti-cally. Section percussionists also are listed alphabetically.

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Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association BOARD OF TRUSTEES

OFFICERS (2017–18)Helen Zell

ChairMary Louise Gorno

Vice ChairRobert A. Kohl

Vice ChairLiisa Thomas

Vice ChairJames W. Mabie

TreasurerJeff Alexander

PresidentKaren Rahn

Secretary of the BoardStacie M. Frank

Assistant TreasurerDavid A. Chambers

Vice President for DevelopmentThe Honorable Rahm Emanuel

Honorary ChairmanThe Honorable Bruce Rauner

Honorary Chairman

HONORARY TRUSTEESThe Honorable Richard M. DaleyLady Valerie Solti

TRUSTEESJohn AalbregtseM. Cherif Bassiouni†Randy Lamm BerlinLaurence O. BoothKay BucksbaumRobert J. BufordLeslie Henner BurnsDebra A. CafaroMarion A. CameronGregory C. CaseDavid CasperBruce E. ClintonGeorge P. ColisDr. Christopher L. CulpTimothy DuffyMimi Duginger*Brian W. DuweJ. Bradley FewellRichard C. GodfreyGraham C. GradyJoyce T. GreenDavid P. HackettLori JulianJared Kaplan*Donna L. KendallJames KolarJoseph A. KonenDr. Randall S. KrosznerJosef LakonishokPatty Lane

Beth ManninoMark G. McGrathChristopher MelvinRenée MetcalfMary Pivirotto MurleySylvia NeilElizabeth Parker*Gerald PaulingJose Luis PradoDr. Irwin PressCol. Jennifer N. PritzkerDr. Mohan RaoW. Robert Reum†Burton X. RosenbergKristen C. RossiEarl J. Rusnak, JrE. Scott SantiSteven E. ShebikAlejandro SilvaWalter SnodellScott SwansonNasrin ThiererLiisa ThomasTerrence J. TruaxFrederick H. WaddellPaul R. WigginRobert WislowHelen Zell

LIFE TRUSTEESWilliam Adams IVMrs. Robert A. BeattyMarshall BennettMelvyn Bergstein†Arnold M. BerlinWilliam G. BrownDean L. BuntrockRobert N. BurtRichard ColburnRichard H. CooperJames S. CrownAnthony T. DeanCharles DouglasJohn A. EdwardsonThomas J. EyermanJames B. FadimDavid W. Fox, Sr.Richard J. FrankeCyrus F. Freidheim, JrH. Laurance FullerMrs. Robert W. GalvinPaul C. GignilliatJoseph B. GlossbergWilliam A. GoldsteinMary Louise GornoHoward L. GottliebMrs. Richard H. GottliebChester A. GougisRichard Gray

Mary Winton GreenDietrich GrossJoan W. HarrisJohn H. HartThomas C. HeagyJay L. HendersonDebora de HoyosMrs. Roger B. HullJudith W. IstockWilliam R. JentesPaul R. JudyRichard B. KapnickDonald G. Kempf, JrGeorge D. KennedyMrs. John C. KernRobert KohlFred A. KrehbielCharles Ashby LewisEva F. LichtenbergJohn S. LillardDonald G. LubinJames W. MabieJohn F. ManleyLing Z. MarkovitzR. Eden MartinArthur C. MartinezJudith W. McCueLester H. McKeeverDavid E. McNeelNewton N. MinowJohn D. NicholsJames J. O’ConnorWilliam A. OsbornMrs. Albert PawlickJane DiRenzo PigottJohn M. PrattMrs. Neil K. QuinnJohn M. Richman†John W. Rogers, Jr.Jerry RoseFrank A. RossiCynthia M. SargentJohn R. SchmidtThomas C. Sheffield, Jr.Rita SimóRobert C. SpoerriCarl W. SternRoger W. StoneWilliam H. StrongLouis C. Sudler, Jr.Richard L. ThomasRichard P. ToftPenny Van Horn

*Ex Officio Trustee

†Deceased

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Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association GOVERNING MEMBERS

GOVERNING MEMBERS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE (2017–18)Jared Kaplan

ChairmanTimothy A. Duffy

Immediate Past ChairmanCharles Emmons, Jr.

Vice Chairman of the Annual Fund

Eric KalninsVice Chairman of Member Engagement

Michael A. PerlsteinVice Chairman of Nominations & Membership

GOVERNING MEMBERS (2017–18)Anonymous (8)Dora J. AalbregtseFloyd AbramsonSandra AllenRobert A. AlsakerMegan P. AndersonMrs. Ruth T. AndersonMychal P. AngelosDr. Edward L. ApplebaumDavid ArchDr. Robert ArensmanDr. Kent ArmbrusterVernon ArmourMrs. Donald L. AsherDr. Carey AugustMarta Holsman BabsonMr. Edgar BachrachPeter J. BarackMara Mills BarkerM. Z. BarnesSolomon BarnettPeter BarrettMrs. Harold BarronRoger S. BaskesRobert H. BaumMr. Robert A. BeattyMike BellEdward H. Bennett IIIMrs. Marshall BennettMrs. James F. BeréMeta S. BergerD. Theodore BerghorstAnn R. BerlinPhyllis BerlinRobert L. Berner, Jr.Ronald A. BevilWilliam E. BibleHelaine A. BillingsTomás BissonnetteDianne BlancoMrs. Judith BlauMr. Merrill BlauDr. Phyllis C. BleckAnn BlickensderferMrs. Ted C. BlochMs. Terry BodenMrs. Suzanne BorlandJames G. BorovskyJohn D. BramsenRoderick BranchJill BrennanBarbara BridgesBob BrinkAdrienne BrookstoneArnold BrookstoneMrs. Roger O. BrownMrs. William G. BrownJohn D. BrubakerMr. Robert Brumbaugh*

Patricia M. BryanGilda BuchbinderSamuel BuchsbaumLisa Dollar BuehlerMrs. Dean L. BuntrockLynn C. BurtElizabeth Nolan BuzardMs. Lutgart CalcoteThomas CampbellBryce CarmineJudy CastelliniMr. John CavanaughMrs. Hammond Chaffetz*Tina ChapekisLinton J. ChildsMrs. William C. ChildsFrank Cicero, Jr.Dana Green ClancyWes ClarkPatricia A. ClickenerMitchell CobeyJean M. CocozzaCarol CohenRobin Tennant ColburnLew CollensMrs. Jane B. ColmanMrs. Earle M. Combs, IIIMs. Cecilia ConradBeatrice G. CrainMrs. William A. CraneMari Hatzenbuehler CravenMr. Richard CremieuxMr. Jerry J. CritserRebecca E. CrownMrs. Robert J. DarnallDr. Tapas K. Das GuptaMr. Michael DawsonRoxanne DecykNancy DehmlowDuane M. DesParteJanet Wood DiederichsPaul DixMrs. William F. DooleySara L. DowneyMs. Ann DrakeDr. David DranoveDr. George DuneaMr. Frank A. Dusek, CPAMrs. Dorne EastwoodMrs. Larry EbertLouis M. Ebling IIIMrs. Arthur Edelstein*Mrs. Richard EldenMr. Richard EldenMrs. Samuel H. EllisMr. Charles Emmons, Jr.Joseph R. Ender*Mrs. Janice EngleScott EnloeCynthia G. EslerDr. Marilyn D. EzriMr. Tarek FadelMelissa Sage FadimPaul FahertyJeffrey FarbmanWilliam FarleySally S. FederJoe FeldmanMrs. Signe L. FergusonDr. Hector FerralHarve A. FerrillMrs. Wayne J. Fickinger*Ms. Constance FillingDaniel FischelKenneth M. FitzgeraldEileen T. FlynnMrs. Adrian Radmore FosterRhoda Lea Frank

Mrs. Zollie S. Frank*Mr. Paul E. FreehlingMrs. Cyrus F. Freidheim, Jr.Mr. Philip M. FriedmannMalcolm M. GaynorRobert D. GechtFrank GelberLynn GendlemanDr. Mark GendlemanRabbi Gary S. GersonIsak V. GersonDr. Bernardino GhettiMs. Karen GianfranciscoMrs. Willard GidwitzMrs. Paul C. GignilliatJerome GilsonMr. James J. GlasserJonathan W. GlossbergMrs. Madeleine GlossbergMrs. Judy GoldbergAlfred G. GoldsteinAnne GoldsteinJerry A. GoldstoneMarica GoltermannMary GoodkindMrs. William M. Goodyear, Jr.Dr. Alexia GordonMr. Michael D. GordonDonald J. GralenMary L. GrayJoyce GreeningDr. Jerri GreerJerome J. GroenJacalyn GronekMrs. John GrowdonJohn P. GrubeJames P. GruseckiDr. John W. Gustaitis, Jr.Gary GuttingLynne R. HaarlowMrs. Ernst A. HäberliJerry A. Hall, M.D.Joan M. HallDr. Howard HalpernMrs. Richard C. HalpernAnne Marcus HamadaJoel L. HandelmanJohn M. HardMrs. William A. HarkMrs. Caryn HarrisMr. King HarrisDr. Robert A. HarrisJames W. HaughThomas HaynesMrs. Joseph Andrew HaysJames HeckmanLynne Pettler Heckman*Mrs. Patricia Herrmann HeestandMary Mako HelbertDr. Scott W. HelmBob HelmanMarilyn P. HelmholzRichard H. HelmholzDr. Arthur L. HerbstMarlene Kovar HershSeymour I. “Sonny” HershJeffrey W. HesseMarjorie Friedman HeymanKonstanze L. HickeyMrs. Thea Flaum HillDavid D. HillerMrs. Mary P. HinesWilliam J. HokinWayne J. Holman IIIMr. Richard S. Holson IIIFred E. HolubowMr. James D. HolzhauerCarol Honigberg

Janice L. HonigbergMrs. H. Earl Hoover*Mrs. Nancy A. HornerFrances G. HorwichMrs. Peter H. HuizengaMichael L. IgoeCraig T. IngramVerne G. IstockDr. Peter IvanovichNancy Witte JacobsCynthia Jamison-MarcyTimothy JanowickDr. Todd JanusJohn D. JaworBenetta Park JensonJustine D. JentesMrs. William R. JentesBrian JohnsonGeorge E. JohnsonRonald B. JohnsonMrs. Shirley M. JohnsonStephanie D. JonesEdward T. JoyceEric KalninsMrs. Carol K. KaplanMs. Dolores Kohl KaplanJared KaplanClaudia Norris KapnickMr. John A. KarolyMrs. Byron C. KarzasBarry D. KaufmanJudy KaufmanKenneth KaufmanMarie KaufmanDon KaulMrs. Susie Forstmann KealyMarilyn M. KeilMs. Ellen KelleherMolly KellerJonathan KemperNancy KempfLinda J. Kenney, PhDGerould KernJohn C. KernElizabeth I. KeyserMary Ellen KeyserRichard L. KeyserEmmy KingSusan KiphartCarol KippermanDr. Jay KleimanCarol Evans KlenkJean KlingensteinMrs. Harriet B. KoehlerMr. Henry L. Kohn, Jr.Sanfred KoltunMrs. Judith KonenDr. Mark KozloffDr. Michael KrcoDavid KreismanMaryBeth KretzSusan KruppDr. Vinay KumarDr. Paul KurtinRubin KuznitskyMr. John LaBarberaArthur LadenburgerPatricia LeeMs. Sunhee LeeEleanor LeichenkoSheila Fields LeiterJeffrey LennardLaurence H. LevineMrs. Bernard LevitonDr. Edmund J. LewisDr. Gregory M. LewisDr. Philip R. LiebsonLing Liu

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37

Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association GOVERNING MEMBERS

GOVERNING MEMBERS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE (2017–18)Jared Kaplan

ChairmanTimothy A. Duffy

Immediate Past ChairmanCharles Emmons, Jr.

Vice Chairman of the Annual Fund

Eric KalninsVice Chairman of Member Engagement

Michael A. PerlsteinVice Chairman of Nominations & Membership

GOVERNING MEMBERS (2017–18)Anonymous (8)Dora J. AalbregtseFloyd AbramsonSandra AllenRobert A. AlsakerMegan P. AndersonMrs. Ruth T. AndersonMychal P. AngelosDr. Edward L. ApplebaumDavid ArchDr. Robert ArensmanDr. Kent ArmbrusterVernon ArmourMrs. Donald L. AsherDr. Carey AugustMarta Holsman BabsonMr. Edgar BachrachPeter J. BarackMara Mills BarkerM. Z. BarnesSolomon BarnettPeter BarrettMrs. Harold BarronRoger S. BaskesRobert H. BaumMr. Robert A. BeattyMike BellEdward H. Bennett IIIMrs. Marshall BennettMrs. James F. BeréMeta S. BergerD. Theodore BerghorstAnn R. BerlinPhyllis BerlinRobert L. Berner, Jr.Ronald A. BevilWilliam E. BibleHelaine A. BillingsTomás BissonnetteDianne BlancoMrs. Judith BlauMr. Merrill BlauDr. Phyllis C. BleckAnn BlickensderferMrs. Ted C. BlochMs. Terry BodenMrs. Suzanne BorlandJames G. BorovskyJohn D. BramsenRoderick BranchJill BrennanBarbara BridgesBob BrinkAdrienne BrookstoneArnold BrookstoneMrs. Roger O. BrownMrs. William G. BrownJohn D. BrubakerMr. Robert Brumbaugh*

Patricia M. BryanGilda BuchbinderSamuel BuchsbaumLisa Dollar BuehlerMrs. Dean L. BuntrockLynn C. BurtElizabeth Nolan BuzardMs. Lutgart CalcoteThomas CampbellBryce CarmineJudy CastelliniMr. John CavanaughMrs. Hammond Chaffetz*Tina ChapekisLinton J. ChildsMrs. William C. ChildsFrank Cicero, Jr.Dana Green ClancyWes ClarkPatricia A. ClickenerMitchell CobeyJean M. CocozzaCarol CohenRobin Tennant ColburnLew CollensMrs. Jane B. ColmanMrs. Earle M. Combs, IIIMs. Cecilia ConradBeatrice G. CrainMrs. William A. CraneMari Hatzenbuehler CravenMr. Richard CremieuxMr. Jerry J. CritserRebecca E. CrownMrs. Robert J. DarnallDr. Tapas K. Das GuptaMr. Michael DawsonRoxanne DecykNancy DehmlowDuane M. DesParteJanet Wood DiederichsPaul DixMrs. William F. DooleySara L. DowneyMs. Ann DrakeDr. David DranoveDr. George DuneaMr. Frank A. Dusek, CPAMrs. Dorne EastwoodMrs. Larry EbertLouis M. Ebling IIIMrs. Arthur Edelstein*Mrs. Richard EldenMr. Richard EldenMrs. Samuel H. EllisMr. Charles Emmons, Jr.Joseph R. Ender*Mrs. Janice EngleScott EnloeCynthia G. EslerDr. Marilyn D. EzriMr. Tarek FadelMelissa Sage FadimPaul FahertyJeffrey FarbmanWilliam FarleySally S. FederJoe FeldmanMrs. Signe L. FergusonDr. Hector FerralHarve A. FerrillMrs. Wayne J. Fickinger*Ms. Constance FillingDaniel FischelKenneth M. FitzgeraldEileen T. FlynnMrs. Adrian Radmore FosterRhoda Lea Frank

Mrs. Zollie S. Frank*Mr. Paul E. FreehlingMrs. Cyrus F. Freidheim, Jr.Mr. Philip M. FriedmannMalcolm M. GaynorRobert D. GechtFrank GelberLynn GendlemanDr. Mark GendlemanRabbi Gary S. GersonIsak V. GersonDr. Bernardino GhettiMs. Karen GianfranciscoMrs. Willard GidwitzMrs. Paul C. GignilliatJerome GilsonMr. James J. GlasserJonathan W. GlossbergMrs. Madeleine GlossbergMrs. Judy GoldbergAlfred G. GoldsteinAnne GoldsteinJerry A. GoldstoneMarica GoltermannMary GoodkindMrs. William M. Goodyear, Jr.Dr. Alexia GordonMr. Michael D. GordonDonald J. GralenMary L. GrayJoyce GreeningDr. Jerri GreerJerome J. GroenJacalyn GronekMrs. John GrowdonJohn P. GrubeJames P. GruseckiDr. John W. Gustaitis, Jr.Gary GuttingLynne R. HaarlowMrs. Ernst A. HäberliJerry A. Hall, M.D.Joan M. HallDr. Howard HalpernMrs. Richard C. HalpernAnne Marcus HamadaJoel L. HandelmanJohn M. HardMrs. William A. HarkMrs. Caryn HarrisMr. King HarrisDr. Robert A. HarrisJames W. HaughThomas HaynesMrs. Joseph Andrew HaysJames HeckmanLynne Pettler Heckman*Mrs. Patricia Herrmann HeestandMary Mako HelbertDr. Scott W. HelmBob HelmanMarilyn P. HelmholzRichard H. HelmholzDr. Arthur L. HerbstMarlene Kovar HershSeymour I. “Sonny” HershJeffrey W. HesseMarjorie Friedman HeymanKonstanze L. HickeyMrs. Thea Flaum HillDavid D. HillerMrs. Mary P. HinesWilliam J. HokinWayne J. Holman IIIMr. Richard S. Holson IIIFred E. HolubowMr. James D. HolzhauerCarol Honigberg

Janice L. HonigbergMrs. H. Earl Hoover*Mrs. Nancy A. HornerFrances G. HorwichMrs. Peter H. HuizengaMichael L. IgoeCraig T. IngramVerne G. IstockDr. Peter IvanovichNancy Witte JacobsCynthia Jamison-MarcyTimothy JanowickDr. Todd JanusJohn D. JaworBenetta Park JensonJustine D. JentesMrs. William R. JentesBrian JohnsonGeorge E. JohnsonRonald B. JohnsonMrs. Shirley M. JohnsonStephanie D. JonesEdward T. JoyceEric KalninsMrs. Carol K. KaplanMs. Dolores Kohl KaplanJared KaplanClaudia Norris KapnickMr. John A. KarolyMrs. Byron C. KarzasBarry D. KaufmanJudy KaufmanKenneth KaufmanMarie KaufmanDon KaulMrs. Susie Forstmann KealyMarilyn M. KeilMs. Ellen KelleherMolly KellerJonathan KemperNancy KempfLinda J. Kenney, PhDGerould KernJohn C. KernElizabeth I. KeyserMary Ellen KeyserRichard L. KeyserEmmy KingSusan KiphartCarol KippermanDr. Jay KleimanCarol Evans KlenkJean KlingensteinMrs. Harriet B. KoehlerMr. Henry L. Kohn, Jr.Sanfred KoltunMrs. Judith KonenDr. Mark KozloffDr. Michael KrcoDavid KreismanMaryBeth KretzSusan KruppDr. Vinay KumarDr. Paul KurtinRubin KuznitskyMr. John LaBarberaArthur LadenburgerPatricia LeeMs. Sunhee LeeEleanor LeichenkoSheila Fields LeiterJeffrey LennardLaurence H. LevineMrs. Bernard LevitonDr. Edmund J. LewisDr. Gregory M. LewisDr. Philip R. LiebsonLing Liu

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38

Patricia M. LivingstonMr. John S. Lizzadro, Sr.Jane LoebJames R. LoewenbergRenée LoganAmy LubinMrs. Duncan MacLeanMr. James MacLennanMr. Eric MakstenieksDr. Michael S. MalingMr. Daniel ManoogianGeorge Mariner* Nathaniel M. MarrsJudy MarthRobert L. Marth, Jr.*Patrick A. MartinBeLinda I. MathieJames MatsonMarianne C. MayerSteven D. McCormickHoward M. McCue IIIAnn Pickard McDermottDr. James L. McGeeDr. John P. McGee IIMrs. Lester H. McKeeverJohn A. McKennaMrs. Donna McKinneyMrs. C. Bruce McLaganMrs. James M. McMullanJames Edward McPhersonPaul A. MeisterMrs. Newton N. MinowMary L. MittlerDr. Toni-Marie MontgomeryDr. Emilie MorphewKate B. MorrisonMr. Herbert F. MunstermanDaniel R. MurrayEileen M. MurrayMr. Stuart C. NathanMrs. Ray E. Newton, Jr.Edward A. NieminenDr. Zehava L. NoahKenneth R. NorganSusan NoyesMartha C. NussbaumWilliam A. ObenshainShelley OchabMrs. James J. O’ConnorEric OesterleMrs. Norman L. OlsonJoy O’MalleyThomas B. OrlandoBeatrice F. OrzacMr. Gerald A. OstermannJames J. O’Sullivan, Jr.Bruce L. OttleyMrs. China I. OughtonMichael L. OwenMrs. Evelyn E. PadorrMr. Bruno A. PasquinelliMr. Timothy J. Patenode

Robert J. Patterson, Jr.Michael W. PayetteFrances PennMrs. Richard S. PepperKingsley PerkinsMs. Jean PerkinsMr. Michael A. PerlsteinDr. William PeruzziRobert C. PetersonSara PetersonEllard Pfaelzer, Jr.Mrs. Thomas F. PickStanley M. PillmanVirginia Johnson PillmanMrs. Sherri PincusBetsey N. PinkertMrs. Curt G. Pinnell, Jr.*Harvey R. PlonskerMr. John F. Podjasek, IIIJudy PomeranzMr. Michael PopeStephen N. PotterCarol PrinsMr. Leigh RabmanJames A. RaffDiana M. RaunerSusan RegensteinMari Yamamoto RegnierDr. Mark ReiterMary Thomson RennerMerle ReskinBurton R. RissmanJ. Timothy Ritchie*Charles T. RivkinCarol RobertsMr. John H. RobertsDavid RobinDr. Diana RobinBob RogersKevin M. RooneyHarry J. RoperMrs. Sheli Z. RosenbergDr. Ricardo RosenkranzLorelei RosenthalMr. Michael RosenthalBetsy RosenzweigH. Jay Rothenberg, M.D.Roberta H. RubinMrs. Susan B. RubnitzSandra K. RusnakDavid W. “Buzz” RuttenbergMary RyanMrs. Patrick G. RyanRichard O. RyanWilliam RyanMr. Norman K. SackarMr. Agustin G. SanzMs. Inez SaundersDavid SavnerTimothy SawyierKarla SchererDavid M. Schiffman

Judith Feigon SchiffmanJohn I. SchlossmanDouglas M. SchmidtMrs. Barbara SchmittJana SchreuderDr. Alan SchriesheimDonald L. SchwartzMs. Julie L. SchwertfegerDr. Penny Bender SebringDr. Ronald A. SemerdjianMrs. Richard J.L. SeniorIlene W. ShawMrs. Thomas C. Sheffield, Jr.James C. Sheinin, M.D.Richard W. SheproJessie ShihMrs. Elizabeth ShoemakerMorrell McK. Shoemaker, Jr.Stuart ShulruffMrs. Linda B. SimonCraig SirlesValerie SlotnickMrs. Jackson W. Smart, Jr.Nancy SmerzCharles F. SmithDiane W. SmithLouise K. SmithMary Ann SmithStanton Kinnie Smith Jr.Diane SnyderKimberly SnyderMrs. Joseph SondheimerO. J. SopranosMrs. James Cavanaugh SpainAudrey Spiegel*Mrs. William D. StaleyWilliam StaleyHelena StancikasDr. Eugene StarkLeonidas StefanosMomoko SteinerMrs. Richard J. SternBruce StevensLiz StiffelVirginia Lee StiglerLawrence E. StricklingHarvey J. Struthers, Jr.Patricia StudyCheryl SturmSean SusaninMrs. Robert SzalayPatrick C. Tagny DiesseMr. Gregory TaubeneckDavid A. ThomsonDr. Robert ThomsonScott ThomsonMs. Carla M. ThorpeJoan ThronMrs. Ray S. Tittle, Jr.William R. Tobey, Jr.John T. TraversC. Phillip Turner*

Robert W. TurnerHenry J. UnderwoodZalman UsiskinMrs. James D. Vail IIIMrs. Virginia C. ValeDr. Cynthia ValukasPenelope Van HornMrs. Peter E. Van NiceMrs. Herbert A. VanceWilliam C. VanceJulia Vander PloegMr. Peter Vardy*Dr. Douglas VaughanDr. Michael ViglioneMr. Christian VinyardMr. Theodore WachsMark A. WagnerMr. Erich WalchBernard T. WallNicholas WallaceMs. Carol WarshawskyGwenyth B. Warton*Paul S. WatfordDr. Catherine L. WebbMrs. Jacob WeglarzMrs. Joseph M. WeilDr. Jamie WeinerChickie WeisbardSamuel Weisbard*Mr. Robert G. WeissMrs. Bert L. WellerBarbara H. WestPenelope G. WestMrs. H. Blair WhiteMrs. Arnold R. WolffLaura WollDr. Hak Yui WongCourtenay R. WoodMichael H. WooleverMs. Debbie K. WrightOwen YoungmanDr. John P. ZarembaRichard E. ZieglerKaren Zupko

*Deceased

Italics indicate Governing Members who have served at least five terms (15 years or more).

The Governing Members are the CSOA’s oldest philanthropic society, supporting its artistic excellence and community engagement. In return, members enjoy exclusive benefits and recognition. For more information, please call 312-294-3337.

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Jazz: May 18Terence Blanchard featuring The E-Collective -Antonio Sánchez & Migration

Chamber Music: May 20 south shore cultural center Meridian String Quartet Cornelius Chiu violinKozue Funakoshi violinDanny Lai violaDaniel Katz cello Works by Bartók & Brahms

Piano: May 20Yefim BronfmanWorks by Schumann, Widmann, Debussy & Prokofiev

MusicNOW: May 21Esa-Pekka Salonen ConductsMusicians from the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Esa-Pekka Salonen conductorKaren Gomyo violinSamuel Adams & Elizabeth Ogonek Mead Composers-in-Residence

CSO: May 24–26Salonen & Uchida Plays Bartók Piano Concerto No. 3 Esa-Pekka Salonen conductorMitsuko Uchida piano

CSO: May 31–June 3Beethoven 4 & Music from Wagner’s Tannhäuser & Die Meistersinger von NürnbergMarek Janowski conductor

Jazz: June 1Dee Dee Bridgewater's Memphis -The Legendary Count Basie Orchestra directed by Scotty Barnhart

Civic Orchestra: June 4Bernstein Symphony No. 1 & Holst The PlanetsFrancesco Lecce-Chong conductor Maya Lahyani mezzo-sopranoWomen of Bella Voce chorusAndrew Lewis artistic director

CSO: June 7–9Mandolin Masterpieces with Avi AvitalGiovanni Antonini conductor and flautinoAvi Avital mandolin

Chamber Music: June 10fullerton hall, art institute of chicago Trailblazing American ArtistsLincoln Quartet Lei Hou violinQing Hou violinLawrence Neuman viola Kenneth Olsen celloWorks by Haydn, Walker, Chihara & Schubert

Piano: June 10Martin HelmchenWorks by Schumann & Beethoven

CSO: June 11Gregory Porter sings Nat King Cole and Me with the CSO and Special Guest Marc-André Hamelin Performs Rhapsody in BlueEdwin Outwater conductor

CSO: June 14–16Shostakovich Cello Concerto No. 2 &Prokofiev Symphony No. 3 Riccardo Muti conductorYo-Yo Ma cello

CSO: June 21–24Muti Conducts Rossini Stabat materRiccardo Muti conductorKrassimira Stoyanova sopranoEkaterina Gubanova mezzo-sopranoDmitry Korchak tenorEnea Scala tenorEric Owens bass-baritoneChicago Symphony Chorus Duain Wolfe chorus director

Film: June 27–30Star Wars: A New Hope In ConcertChicago Symphony Orchestra Richard Kaufman conductor

For complete programming, visit cso.org.

May & June CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA RICCARDO MUTI Zell Music Director

SYMPHONY CENTER PRESENTS

Visit cso.org or call 312-294-3000 for more information or to order tickets.S Y M P H O N Y C E N T E R | 2 2 0 S O U T H M I C H I G A N A V E N U E | C H I C A G O , I L 6 0 6 0 4

Discover DVDs, CDs and BOOKS on the RMMUSIC STORE

Riccardo Muti in Rehearsal was awarded the Moige prize for the best TV programs 2016 for Education, Entertainment and Culture in Italy.

“[…] enlightening, intriguing, funny, amusing, rigorous and imaginative “report” about how Riccardo Muti works with musicians to get to the highest musical expression. Actually, all of these adjectives perfectly fit the conductor himself: it can’t be just by chance that anyone working with him regularly tells that he, more than other conductors, can open an unexpected semantic world behind every note, breath, accent, pause or phrase […]” - Amadeus Magazine

RMMUSIC STORE riccardomutimusic.com

RICCARDO MUTI IN REHEARSALwith subtitles in English, French and German

Box Set with 8 DVDs and Photo Booklet

AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE ON RICCARDOMUTIMUSIC.COM AND AT THE SYMPHONY STORE

Hector BerliozGiuseppe VerdiFranz SchubertDomenico CimarosaGiovanni PaisielloWolfgang Amadeus MozartAntonín Leopold Dvorák

CSO_Wrap7_May18_d3.indd 39 4/17/18 2:59 PM

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Honor Roll of DONORS

Corporate PartnersThe Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association gratefully acknowledges the following corporate partners for their generous support.

GLOBAL SPONSOR OF THE CSOBank of America

OFFICIAL AIRLINE OF THE CSOUnited Airlines

$100,000 AND ABOVEAllstate Insurance CompanyBMO Harris BankExelonITWKirkland & Ellis LLPNorthern Trust

$50,000–$99,999AbbottAnonymous (1)AonCitadelDLA PiperJenner & Block LLPKPMG LLPMayer Brown LLPNuveenPNCPricewaterhouseCoopers LLPSidley Austin LLPSP Plus

$25,000–$49,999Abbott FundAmsted Industries IncorporatedBaker McKenzieThe Boston Consulting GroupFinancial Economics Consulting, Inc.S&C Electric Company FundSchiff Hardin LLPSkadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP

Walgreens

$15,000–$24,999CIBCE&J Gallo WineryEvans Food Group, LTDMcKinsey & CompanyMorgan StanleyWilliam Blair

$5,000–$14,999Ariel InvestmentsBairdBaxter International Inc.BlueCross BlueShield of IllinoisCDWChoose ChicagoDeloitteThe Edgewater FundsEvolve IPFederated Group, Inc.Fellowes, Inc.Italian Village RestaurantsMacLean-Fogg CompanyMolexThe Navarre Law FirmOxford Bank & TrustR. Crusoe & SonSahara EnterprisesThe Segal CompanySipi Metals CorporationStarshak Winzenburg & Co.Telephone & Data Systems, Inc.James and Minerva Weiss FoundationWunderman

$1,000–$4,999Anonymous (1)Advent Systems, Inc.AHEAD, LLCAmerican Agricultural Insurance Company

Building Consultants, Ltd.Burwood Group, Inc.Central Building & Preservation L.P.Chicago Classic Coach, LLCCisco Systems IncColumbia Capital Management, LLC

Davidson Kempner Capital Management LLC

Eagle Capital ManagementDentonsDraper and Kramer IncorporatedDS&P Insurance Services, Inc.Elk Grove GraphicsExchequerFifth Third BankGemini Graphics, Inc.Gofen and Glossberg LLCGoodSmith Gregg & Unruh LLPHyatt Hotels CorporationThe Law Offices of Jonathan N. Sherwell

Jones Lang LaSalleKimco ServicesKinder MorganLake Capital, LLC.Magellan Development Group, LLCThe Mail HouseMomentum WorldwideOdell Hicks & Company, LLCOld Republic International Corporation

Parkway ElevatorsShow ServicesShure IncorporatedTCB Mailing, Inc.Vienna BeefWinston & Strawn LLP

UP TO $1,000Allied UniversalArlington Resources Inc.Flooring Management Group, Inc.Global Water Technology, Inc.Kristy’s Audacious Interiors LLCNIR Roof CarePalmer Printing, Inc.Quinlan & Fabish Music CompanySchenk Annes Tepper Campbell Ltd.Shetland Limited PartnershipThe Taben GroupThe Ungar Group

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Foundations and Government Agencies

$100,000 AND ABOVEAnonymous (2)The Paul M. Angell Family FoundationElizabeth F. Cheney FoundationThe Davee FoundationJulius N. Frankel FoundationIrving Harris FoundationWalter E. Heller Foundation, in honor of Alyce DeCosta

JCS Fund of The DuPage FoundationThe John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

National Endowment for the ArtsThe Negaunee FoundationZell Family Foundation

$50,000–$99,999Alphawood FoundationThe Brinson FoundationThe Chicago Community TrustRobert and Joanne Crown Income Charitable Fund, in memory of Joanne Strauss Crown

Sally Mead Hands FoundationIllinois Arts Council AgencyPolk Bros. FoundationVirginia B. Toulmin Foundation

$25,000–$49,999The Clinton Family FundCrain-Maling FoundationLloyd A. Fry FoundationJohn R. Halligan Charitable FundJS Charitable TrustLeslie FundBowman C. Lingle TrustPoetry FoundationMichael G. Woll Fund at The Pauls Foundation

$10,000–$24,999Anonymous (1)Barker Welfare FoundationRobert & Isabelle Bass Foundation, Inc.

The Buchanan Family FoundationDarling Family FoundationDuchossois Family FoundationThe H B B FoundationAdam Mickiewicz InstitutePrince Charitable TrustsThe Rhoades FoundationThe Claire Rosen & Samuel Edes Foundation

Hulda B. and Maurice L. Rothschild Foundation

Charles and M.R. Shapiro FoundationThe George L. Shields FoundationRonald and Geri Yonover Foundation

$5,000–$9,999Harry F. and Elaine Chaddick Foundation

Aaron Copland Fund for MusicFranklin Philanthropic FoundationHunter Family FoundationKovler Family FoundationStanley and Lucy Lopata Charitable Foundation

The Mayer & Morris Kaplan Family Foundation

Lannan FoundationLyon Family FoundationMilne Family FoundationDr. Scholl FoundationThe Siragusa Foundation

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

Carl Forstmann Memorial FoundationWilliam M. Hales FoundationBenjamin J. Rosenthal FoundationArch W. Shaw FoundationStearns Charitable TrustWalter and Caroline Sueske Charitable Trust

Jack and Goldie Wolfe Miller Fund

$1,000–$2,499Geraldi Norton FoundationJosephine P. & John J. Louis Foundation

Pritzker Traubert Family Foundation

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The Chicago Symphony Orchestra SocietyThe Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association deeply appreciates the generous support of all its donors. To thank and acknowledge individual supporters, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Society recognizes annual gifts and lifetime, cumulative gifts and commitments in support of all areas and programs of the CSOA. The following list includes contributions to the Annual Fund; the Negaunee Music Institute at the Chicago Symphony Orchestra; employer matching gifts; donations as part of patron tours; and fundraising event support between August 15, 2017 and January 30, 2018.

Lifetime Support

HERITAGE CIRCLE $10,000,000 AND ABOVEAnonymous (1)Estate of Mrs. A. Watson ArmourDavid and Juli GraingerThe Negaunee FoundationHelen and Sam Zell

LEGACY CIRCLE $5,000,000–$9,999,999Estate of Mrs. Robert C. BorwellRosemarie and Dean L. BuntrockJudson and Joyce GreenMary Winton GreenMr. & Mrs. Dietrich M. GrossEstate of Eloise MartinThe Regenstein FoundationSage Foundation, Melissa Sage FadimIn Memory of Alice Welsh SkillingRichard and Helen Thomas

LEADERSHIP CIRCLE $2,500,000–$4,999,999Anonymous (2)Randy L. and Melvin R. BerlinThe Clinton Family FundEstate of Nelson D. CorneliusThe Crown FamilyThe Grainger FoundationRichard and Mary L. GrayMarguerite DeLany HarkThe Irving Harris Foundation, Joan W. Harris

The Kapnick FamilyMargot and Josef LakonishokJim and Kay MabieEstate of Claire Bastian MaynardThe Robert R. McCormick FoundationCathy and Bill OsbornEstate of Virginia H. RogersCynthia M. SargentEstate of Florence SewellEstate of Louise Benton Wagner

FOUNDERS CIRCLE $1,000,000–$2,499,999Anonymous (8)Mrs. Ruth T. AndersonMr. & Mrs. William Gardner BrownThe Buchanan Family FoundationCooper Family FoundationEstate of Alan GarberMrs. Zollie S. FrankEstate of Edmund FroehlichNancy and Larry FullerMrs. Willard GidwitzEllen and Paul GignilliatMr. & Mrs. Joseph B. GlossbergEstate of William B. Graham and William B. Graham Trust

Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth C. GriffinEstate of Lester and Betty GuttmanSally Mead Hands FoundationJohn Hart and Carol PrinsJudy and Verne IstockMr. & Mrs. William R. JentesMr.* & Mrs. Kenneth A. JulianThe Mayer & Morris Kaplan Family Foundation

Lewis-Sebring Family FoundationEstate of Marion J. LivingstonArthur Maling TrustJudy and Scott McCueThe James and Madeleine McMullan Family Foundation

Janet L. MelkAlexandra and John NicholsThe Pritzker FoundationEstate of Christine QuerfeldPriscilla and John* RichmanSandra and Earl Rusnak, Jr.Barbara and Barre Seid FoundationMr.* & Mrs. Ralph SmykalEstate of Bernard Williams

SUSTAINING MEMBER $500,000–$999,999Anonymous (4)The Paul M. Angell Family FoundationEstate of Wayne BalmerJulie and Roger BaskesArlene and Marshall BennettEstate of Norma Zuzanek BennettMr.* & Mrs. James F. Beré

Arnie and Ann BerlinKay BucksbaumEstate of Marie K. BurnsideRobert and Joanne Crown Income Charitable Fund

Tony and Lawrie DeanMrs. Arthur Edelstein*Mr.* & Mrs. Donald F. FlynnMr. & Mrs. David W. Fox, Sr.Rhoda Lea and Henry S. FrankMr. & Mrs. Richard J. FrankeRichard and Alice GodfreyRobin Tieken HadleyJulie* and Parker* HallMr. & Mrs. Thomas C. HeagyEstates of Benjamin W. and Natalie Heineman

Mr. & Mrs. Jay L. HendersonEstate of Elizabeth HoffmanPamela Kelley Hull / Roger B. HullMr. & Mrs. Paul JudyMr. & Mrs. George KennedyRichard P. and Susan Kiphart FamilyDr. David* and Mrs. Barbara KipperRobert Kohl and Clark PellettJoseph and Judith KonenKay and Fred KrehbielLing Z. and Michael C. MarkovitzOscar G. and Elsa S. Mayer Family Foundation

Nancy Lauter McDougal and Alfred L. McDougal*

Mr.* & Mrs. Albert PawlickEstate of Halina J. PresleyEstate of Harriet Cary RossPatrick G. and Shirley W. Ryan Foundation

Mr. John Schmidt and Dr. Janet GilboyMr.* & Mrs. Irving Seaman, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Sheffield, Jr.Estate of Berton E. SiegelMr. & Mrs. William C. SteinmetzRoger and Susan Stone Family Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. William H. StrongMr. & Mrs. Louis Sudler, Jr.Catherine M. and Frederick H. WaddellThe Helen F. Whitaker Fund

*Denotes deceased

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Annual SupportThe Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association gratefully acknowledges the following individuals for their annual gifts and commitments in support of the CSOA through January 30, 2018.

$150,000 AND ABOVEAnonymous (2)Randy L. and Melvin R. BerlinRosemarie and Dean L. BuntrockEstate of Marcia S. CohnJudson and Joyce GreenMr. & Mrs. Dietrich M. GrossThe Julian Family FoundationMargot and Josef LakonishokThe League of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association

Jim and Kay MabieNancy Lauter McDougal and Alfred L.* McDougal

The James and Madeleine McMullan Family Foundation

Cathy and Bill OsbornSandra and Earl Rusnak, Jr.Megan and Steve ShebikRichard and Helen ThomasPhil* and Paula TurnerWomen’s Board of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association

Helen and Sam Zell

$100,000–$149,999Anonymous (7)Enivar Charitable Fund, in memory of Mrs. Leonard S. Florsheim, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. GlossbergIrving Harris Foundation, Joan W. Harris

Richard P. and Susan Kiphart FamilySherry and Bob* Reum

$50,000–$99,999Anonymous (1)Dora J. and R. John AalbregtseMr. & Mrs. William Adams IVJulie and Roger BaskesKay BucksbaumRobert J. BufordAnn and Richard CarrDr. Christopher L. CulpMr. Eugene FamaRhoda Lea and Henry S. FrankEllen and Paul GignilliatChet Gougis and Shelley OchabRichard and Mary L. GrayJohn Hart and Carol PrinsPamela Kelley Hull / Roger B. HullMs. Patricia HydeMs. Donna L. Kendall

Robert Kohl and Clark PellettSidney Kohl Family FoundationJoseph and Judith KonenJim and SuAnne LopataLing Z. and Michael C. MarkovitzJudy and Scott McCueAlexandra and John NicholsCOL (IL) Jennifer N. Pritzker, IL ARNG (Retired)

Susan RegensteinCynthia M. SargentBarbara and Barre Seid FoundationMichael and Linda SimonLiz StiffelCatherine M. and Frederick H. Waddell

$25,000–$49,999Anonymous (4)Sharon and Charles AngellRobert H. Baum and MaryBeth KretzArnie and Ann BerlinMr. & Mrs. William Gardner BrownJohn D. and Leslie Henner BurnsMs. Marion A. CameronMr. & Mrs. David CasperBruce and Martha Clinton for The Clinton Family Fund

Mr. & Dr. George ColisThe Crown FamilyMembers of the CSOA StaffMs. Debora de Hoyos and Mr. Walter Carlson

Timothy A. and Bette Anne DuffyMr. & Mrs. Brian DuweJohn and Fran EdwardsonDan J. EpsteinDan J. Epstein Family FoundationMr. & Mrs. James B. FadimMr. Rajiv FernandoMr. Daniel Fischel and Ms. Sylvia NeilMr. & Mrs. David W. Fox, Sr.Mrs. Zollie S. Frank*Nancy and Larry FullerRichard and Alice GodfreyMs. Susan GoldschmidtWilliam A. and Anne GoldsteinMary Louise GornoMr. Collier HandsMr. & Mrs. Jay L. HendersonMr. & Mrs. Verne G. IstockMr. & Mrs. James KolarLewis-Sebring Family FoundationMr. Terrance Livingston and Ms. Debra Cafaro

Beth A. Mannino and Paul SchickPatty and Mark McGrathMr. David E. McNeelMr. & Mrs. Christopher MelvinDaniel R. MurrayJames J. and Ellen O’ConnorMr. & Mrs. Gerald L. Pauling II

Mr.* & Mrs. Albert PawlickAndra and Irwin PressDr. Mohan RaoDiana and Bruce RaunerMrs. John Shedd ReedSheli Z. and Burton X. RosenbergMr. & Mrs. Jason and Kristen RossiMr. & Mrs. Scott SantiMr. John Schmidt and Dr. Janet GilboyMr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Sheffield, Jr.Dr. & Mrs. Robert ShillmanWalter and Kathleen SnodellBill and Orli Staley FoundationCarl W. Stern and Holly Hayes-SternRoger and Susan Stone Family Foundation

Thierer Family FoundationMs. Liisa M. Thomas and Mr. Stephen L. Pratt

Terrence and Laura TruaxPenny and John Van HornMr. & Mrs. Robert A. Wislow

$10,000–$24,999Anonymous (9)Mrs. Rosa Acevedo and Mr. Jose Luis Prado

Jeff and Keiko AlexanderMrs. Ruth T. AndersonMr. & Mrs. Stuart ApplebaumMr.* & Mrs. Robert H. Bacon, Jr.Henry R. Berghoef and Leslie Lauer Berghoef

Merrill and Judy BlauPatricia and Laurence BoothMr. Roderick BranchMr. & Mrs. Roger O. BrownHenry and Gilda BuchbinderTom and Dianne CampbellJoyce ChelbergMembers of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra

Sue and Jim CollettiMari Hatzenbuehler CravenMr. Jerry J. CritserMs. Nancy DehmlowMs. Christina DonohueMr.* & Mrs. David A. DonovanMr. & Mrs. Charles W. DouglasDavid and Deborah DranoveSidney Epstein* and Sondra Berman Epstein

Henry and Frances FogelMr. & Mrs. Richard J. FrankeMr. & Mrs. Cyrus F. Freidheim, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Thomas M. GoldsteinMr. & Mrs. William M. Goodyear, Jr.Sue and Melvin GrayMary Winton GreenMr. & Mrs. John P. GrubeJames and Brenda Grusecki

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Lynne R. HaarlowMr. & Mrs. David HackettMarguerite DeLany HarkHarris Family FoundationMr. & Mrs. Thomas C. HeagyMr. & Mrs. R. HelmholzDavid Herro and Jay FrankeMr. & Mrs. Mark C. HibbardMr. & Mrs. Wayne J. Holman IIIFred and Sandra HolubowJanice L. Honigberg, in memory of Joel D. Honigberg

Mr. Sidney Jarrow*Mr. & Mrs. William R. JentesMr. & Mrs. George E. JohnsonBarbara and Kenneth KaufmanMr. & Mrs. George KennedyAnne and John KernJean KlingensteinFerdinand and Bernadette KorndorfDr. Michael KrcoMr. Leonard LavinDr.* & Mrs. H. LeichenkoMs. Betsy LevinDrs. Edmund & Julie LewisDr. Eva Lichtenberg and Dr. Arnold Tobin

Mr. & Mrs. John LillardMake It BetterMrs. Erma MedgyesyDr. Toni-Marie MontgomeryEmilie Morphew, M.D.David and Dolores NelsonEdward and Gayla NieminenSusan NoelMr. Neil OrtenbergPasquinelli Family FoundationMr. Robert PetersonMr.* & Mrs.* Curt G. PinnellMs. Emilysue PinnellLeAnn Pedersen Pope and Clyde F. McGregor

Mr. & Mrs. John PrattDr. Petra and Mr. Randy O. RissmanJerry RosePatrick G. and Shirley W. Ryan Foundation

Mr. Richard RyanMr. & Mrs. David SavnerKarla Scherer and Harve FerrillDavid and Judy SchiffmanMr. & Mrs. Albert SchlachtmeyerKimberly M. SnyderIda N. Sondheimer & Family, in memory of Joseph Sondheimer

Mr. & Mrs. William SteinmetzMr. Irving Stenn, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Louis Sudler, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Scott SwansonMr. & Mrs. Richard P. Toft

Dr. Cynthia M. Valukas and Mr. Joseph A. Kohl

Mr. & Mrs. William C. VanceMs. Nancy VoorheesMr.* & Mrs. H. Blair WhiteCraig and Bette WilliamsM.L. WinburnDr. Marylou WitzAnn S. WolffSarah R. Wolff and Joel L. Handelman

$3,500–$9,999Anonymous (17)Elaine and Floyd AbramsonSandra Allen and Jim PerlowMr. & Mrs. Robert A. AlsakerMr. Edward Amrein, Jr. and Mrs. Sara Jones-Amrein

Geoffrey A. AndersonMegan P. and John L. AndersonMr. & Mrs. Michael AndersonMs. Doris AngellMychal P. Angelos, in memory of Dorothy A. Angelos

Dr. Edward Applebaum and Dr. Eva Redei

David and Suzanne ArchDr. & Mrs. Robert ArensmanDr. & Mrs. Kent ArmbrusterDonald and Carol AsherCarey and Brett AugustMarta Holsman BabsonEd BachrachMr. Edward M. BakwinPeter and Elise BarackPaul and Robert Barker FoundationMr. Carroll BarnesMr. Merrill and Mr. N.M.K. BarnesMr. Solomon BarnettMr. Peter BarrettRoberta and Harold S. BarronJeff and Beth BauerDr. & Mrs. Robert A. BeattyDonna and Mike BellMr. Lawrence BellesMrs. James F. BeréMeta S. and Ronald Berger Family Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. D. Theodore BerghorstMr.* & Mrs. Melvyn BergsteinDr. Leonard & Phyllis BerlinMr. & Mrs. Robert L. Berner, Jr.Mr. Howard BernickCatherine & Ron BevilLois and Jerry BeznosMr. & Mrs. William E. BibleMrs. Arthur A. BillingsJim* and Dianne BlancoAnn BlickensderferMrs. Nancy BlumMs. Terry Boden

Mr. & Mrs. John BorlandMr. & Mrs. James BorovskyAdam BossovMr. Donald BousemanMr. & Mrs. John D. BramsenMr. & Mrs.* William BrauneisMs. Jill BrennanBarbara and Powell BridgesConnie and Bob BrinkMr. & Mrs. John BrubakerMr. & Mrs. Timothy BryanMr. & Mrs. Samuel BuchsbaumKay and Rhett ButlerElizabeth Nolan and Kevin BuzardMs. Lutgart CalcoteMr. & Mrs. Robert CalvinMs. Vera CappCarmine FoundationWendy Alders CartlandMr. & Mrs. Jerome CastelliniMs. Margaret CaswellMr. John CavanaughMia Celano and Noel DunnMrs. Sara Chaffetz*Mr. James ChamberlainTina and Fredrick ChapekisRobert and Laura ChenLinton J. ChildsJan and Frank Cicero, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. ClancyMr. & Mrs. Wesley M. ClarkPatricia A. ClickenerMitchell Cobey and Janet RealiMs. Jean CocozzaLewis CollensJane and John C. ColmanE. and V. Combs FoundationMrs. Frances ComerGarth J. and Martha H.* ConleyDr. Thomas H. ConnerMary Lynn CooneyMr. Lawrence CorryAnita J. Court, Ph.D.Patricia Cox and FamilyMrs. Beatrice G. CrainMr. & Mrs. William A. CraneMr. & Mrs. Richard CremieuxJohn and Cynthia CsernanskyMr. Ivo Daalder and Mrs. Elisa D. Harris

Dancing Skies FoundationMr. & Mrs. Robert J. DarnallDr. Brenda A. Darrell and Mr. Paul S. Watford

Dr. & Mrs. Tapas K. Das GuptaMuller Davis and Lynn StrausIn loving memory of Alice Furumoto-Dawson

Mr. Guy DeBoo and Ms. Susan Franzetti

Decyk Charitable Foundation

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Mr. & Mrs. Charles DemirjianDuane M. DesParte and John C. Schneider

Janet Wood DiederichsPaul and Nona DixMr. & Mrs. William DooleyDr. & Mrs. James L. DowneyMs. Ann DrakeDr. George Dunea and Dr. Sally DuneaMr. & Mrs. Bernard DunkelMr. & Mrs. Frank A. DusekWendy EagerMr. & Mrs. Timothy EarleMr. & Mrs. Stephen EastwoodMr. & Mrs. Larry K. EbertMr. & Mrs. Louis M. Ebling IIIMr. & Mrs. Richard EldenMichael and Kathleen ElliottMr. & Mrs. Samuel H. EllisCharles and Carol EmmonsMr. Joseph EnderMrs. Janice EngleScott and Lenore EnloeCynthia G. EslerAnne H. EvansMrs. Carol Evans, in memory of Henry Evans

Mr. Fred EychanerMarilyn D. Ezri, M.D.Mrs. Walter D. FacklerMr. Tarek FadelPaul and Clare FahertyJeffrey Farbman and Ann GreensteinMr. & Mrs. William F. FarleySally S. FederCathy and Joe FeldmanDonald and Signe FergusonHector Ferral, M.D.Ms. Sharon Ferrill*Constance M. FillingKenneth M. Fitzgerald and Ruby CarrEvelyn T. FitzpatrickEileen T. Flynn and Thomas J. InglisGinny and Peter ForemanMrs. John D. FosterMr. & Mrs. Willard FraumannGerald FreedmanSusan and Paul FreehlingMr. & Mrs. Philip FriedmannJudy and Mickey GaynorRobert D. GechtSandy and Frank GelberDr. & Mrs. Mark GendlemanRabbi Gary S. Gerson and Dr. Carol R. Gerson

Mr. & Mrs. Isak V. GersonBernardino and Caterina GhettiCamillo and Arlene GhironMs. Karen GianfranciscoMrs. Willard GidwitzMr. & Mrs. Jerome Gilson

Mr. & Mrs. James J. GlasserMr. Jonathan W. GlossbergMr. & Mrs. William GoldbergAlfred G. GoldsteinLyn GoldsteinJeannette and Jerry GoldstoneRobert and Marcia GoltermannMs. Alexia GordonMrs. Amy G. Gordon and Mr. Michael D. Gordon

Mr. Gerald and Dr. Colette GordonDonald J. GralenTimothy and Joyce GreeningDr. Jerri E. GreerMr. & Mrs. Byron GregorySusan* and Kendall GriffithMr. John Groccia and Mrs. Kirstie Steiner

Mr. & Mrs. Jerome GroenJacalyn GronekMr. & Mrs. John GrowdonDr. & Mrs. John W. Gustaitis, Jr.Anastasia and Gary GuttingMr. & Mrs. Ernst A. HäberliMr. & Mrs. John HalesJerry A. Hall, M.D.Joan M. HallMrs. Richard C. HalpernStephanie and Howard HalpernAnne Marcus HamadaRonald and Diane HamburgerJohn and Sally HardDr. Robert A. HarrisMr. & Mrs. Michael R. HassanJames W. HaughThomas and Connie Hsu HaynesMr. & Mrs. Joseph Andrew HaysJames B. Heaton IIIJames and Lynne* HeckmanPati and O.J. HeestandScott HelmJanet and Bob HelmanDr. & Mrs. Arthur L. HerbstSonny and Marlene HershMr. & Mrs. Jeffrey W. HesseMarjorie Friedman HeymanThe Hickey Family FoundationMr. Paul E. HicksRobert A. Hill and Thea Flaum HillMr. David HillerWilliam B. HinchliffMrs. Mary P. HinesMs. Joan R. HoatsonMrs. Edwin P. HoffmanRichard and Joanne HoffmanMr. William J. HokinMr. & Mrs. Richard S. Holson IIIJames and Eileen HolzhauerJoel* and Carol HonigbergMrs. H. Earl Hoover

The Horner Family FoundationMr. & Mrs. Geoffrey FelsenthalDr. & Mrs. Ira M. HananMrs. Nancy A. HornerMr. & Mrs. John G. LeviMr. & Mrs. Richard Perlstein

Frances and Franklin* HorwichJames and Mary HoustonCarter Howard and Sarah KreppMr. & Mrs. Peter HuizengaTex and Susan HullDr. Ronald L. HullingerThe Hunter FamilyLeland E. Hutchinson and Jean E. Perkins

Michael L. IgoeMr. Craig T. IngramMs. Frieda Ireland and Mr. Carroll Damron

Dr. Peter IvanovichMrs. Nancy Witte JacobsMr. & Mrs. Stan JakopinCynthia Jamison-MarcyTimothy and Jennifer JanowickDr. & Mrs. Todd and Peggy JanusJoseph and Rebecca JarabakMr. John JaworBenetta and Paul JensonMs. Justine Jentes and Mr. Dan KurunaMr. & Mrs. Edward Jepson, Jr.Mr. & Mrs.* Howard JessenJoni and Brian JohnsonMaryl Johnson, M.D.Ronald B. JohnsonDr. Patricia JonesMs. Stephanie JonesMr. & Mrs. Edward T. JoyceEric and Melanie KalninsDolores Kohl Kaplan and Morris A. Kaplan*

Mr. & Mrs. Edward Kaplan/Kaplan Foundation

Jared Kaplan and Maridee QuanbeckMr.* & Mrs. Kurt KarminJohn and Kerma KarolyMr. & Mrs. Byron C. KarzasBarry D. KaufmanJudy and Jerry KaufmanLarry and Marie KaufmanDon Kaul and Barbara Bluhm-KaulSusie Forstmann KealyMarilyn M. KeilMr. & Mrs. Michael KeiserMs. Ellen KelleherMr. & Mrs. Jeff KellerJonathan and Nancy Lee KemperGerould and Jewell KernMr. & Mrs. W. K. KetchumMrs. Elizabeth KeyserMr. & Mrs. Richard KeyserBen and Laura King

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The King Family FoundationCarol KippermanEsther G. KlatzDr. Jay and Georgianna KleimanMr. & Mrs. James KlenkMr. Thomas KmetkoMrs. Harriet B. KoehlerCookie Anspach Kohn and Henry L. KohnMs. June KoizumiNancy and Sanfred KoltunMr. & Mrs. Richard K. KomarekDr. & Mrs. Mark KozloffKay and Fred KrehbielEldon and Patricia KreiderDavid and Susan KreismanMr. & Mrs. Ronald KrueckPeter and Susan KruppDrs. Vinay and Raminder KumarPaul and Ruth Ann KurtinMr. & Mrs. Rubin P. KuznitskyMr. John LaBarberaArthur and Olga LadenburgerMr. Craig Lancaster and Ms. Charlene T. Handler

Mark J. and Susan S. LarsonPatricia LeeSheila Fields LeiterMr. Jeffrey LennardWally and Carol LennoxMary and Laurence LevineAverill and Bernard LevitonGregory M. Lewis and Mary E. StrekMr. Julius LewisMr.* & Mrs. Paul LiebermanPhilip R. Liebson, M.D.Stewart and Susan LiechtiDr. & Mrs. Herbert LippitzLing LiuPatricia M. LivingstonReva and John S. Lizzadro, Sr.Diane and William F. LloydJane and Peter LoebThe Loewenthal Fund at The Chicago Community Trust

Renée LoganMr. Russ LymanMr. & Mrs.* Barry MacLeanMr. & Mrs. Duncan MacLeanS. Stella MahMr. Eric MakstenieksDr. & Mrs. Michael S. MalingThe Malott Family FoundationMr. Daniel ManoogianNathaniel M. MarrsRobert* and Judy MarthMr. & Mrs. Patrick A. MartinArthur and Elizabeth MartinezMr. & Mrs. Robert MarwinMs. BeLinda Mathie and Dr. Brian HaagJames and Susan MatsonMarianne C. Mayer

Margaret H. and Steven D. McCormickAnn Pickard McDermottDr. & Mrs. James McGeeDr. & Mrs. John McGee IIJohn and Etta McKennaDr. & Mrs. Peter McKinneyIn memory of William and Carolyn McKittrick

Jane and Bruce McLaganJames Edward McPherson and David L. Murray

Mr. Zarin MehtaMr. & Mrs. Paul MeisterMr. Gregory and Dr. Alice MelchorMr. Llewellyn Miller and Ms. Cecilia Conrad

Edward & Lucy R. Minor Family Foundation

Ms. Mary MittlerMr. Frank Modruson and Ms. Lynne Shigley

Ms. Judith MoniakDr. Bill MoorMaria and Carl E. MooreCharles A. MooreMrs. Frank MorrisseyCatherine Mouly and LeRoy T. Carlson, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Herbert F. MunstermanMr. & Mrs. Michael MurphyEileen M. MurrayJo Ann and Stuart NathanMr.* & Mrs. William NeimanMrs. Ray E. Newton, Jr.Dr. Zehava L. NoahMr. & Mrs. Richard NoparKenneth R. NorganMs. Susan NorvichMs. Martha NussbaumBill and Penny ObenshainEric and Carolyn OesterleMichael and Kay O’HalleranMr. & Mrs. Norman L. OlsonMr. Bruce OltmanJohn and Joy O’MalleyMr. & Mrs. William J. O’NeillMr. Thomas OrlandoBeatrice F. OrzacThe Osprey FoundationMr. & Mrs. Gerald OstermannMr. & Mrs. James O’Sullivan, Jr.Mr. Tom O’TooleMr. Bruce OttleyMrs. China I. OughtonMichael and Rebecca OwenMrs. Evelyn E. PadorrMr. Timothy J. PatenodeMr. & Mrs. Charles R. Patten, Jr.Dianne M. and Robert J. Patterson, Jr.Eugene and Lois PavalonMr. Michael Payette

Richard and Frances PennMs. Shauna PeetGerald* and Mona PennerDr. & Mrs. Ray PensingerRoxy and Richard PepperKingsley PerkinsMr. & Mrs. Michael A. PerlsteinMr. & Mrs. Norman PermanDr. William PeruzziDavid and Sara PetersonLorna and Ellard Pfaelzer, Jr.Sue N. and Thomas F. PickMs. Kimberly PickenpaughStanley M. and Virginia Johnson PillmanMrs. Sherri PincusMr. & Mrs. Dale R. PinkertHarvey and Madeleine PlonskerJohn F. Podjasek III Charitable FundMs. Judy PomeranzChristine and Michael PopeStephen and Ann Suker PotterMr. Samuel PressMs. D. PriceMr. & Mrs. John PuthDrs. Joseph and Kimberly PyleMr. & Mrs. Leigh RabmanJames and Cheryll RaffDorothy V. RammMari Yamamoto RegnierAl and Lynn ReichleMark S. ReiterMr. & Mrs. John ReliasMerle ReskinMiles and Peggy RidgwayBurton and Francine RissmanJ. Timothy Ritchie*Charles and Marilynn RivkinMs. Carol RobertsDavid and Kathy RobinDr. Diana RobinErik and Nelleke RoffelsenBob Rogers TravelMr. John W. Rogers, Jr.Kevin M. Rooney and Daniel P. VicencioMr. & Mrs. Harry J. RoperLorelei RosenthalMichael RosenthalSharon and Louis F. RosenthalBetsy RosenzweigD.D. RoskinMr. & Mrs. Frank A. RossiMrs. Donald Roth*Jay and Maija RothenbergMs. Roberta H. RubinMrs. Susan B. RubnitzMs. Judy RungeTina and Buzz RuttenburgWilliam and Mary RyanRita* and Norman SackarCarol S. SadowMs. Cecelia Samans

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Mr. David SandfortMr. Agustin G. SanzMr. Muneer A. Satter and Ms. Kristen H. Hertel

Raymond and Inez SaundersMr. Timothy M. SawyierShirley and John SchlossmanDouglas M. SchmidtBarbara and Gene SchmittMr. & Mrs. Michael SchollThe Schreuder FamilyAl Schriesheim and Kay TorshenDonald L. and Susan J. SchwartzMr. & Mrs. Thomas ScorzaJoan and George SegalMr. & Mrs. Chandra SekharMr. & Mrs. George SelakRonald and Nancy SemerdjianMr. & Mrs. Richard J.L. SeniorDavid and Judith L. SensibarThe Earl and Brenda Shapiro Foundation

Ilene and Michael Shaw Charitable TrustDr. & Mrs. James C. SheininRichard W. Shepro and Lindsay E. Roberts

Jessie Shih and Johnson HoElizabeth and John ShoemakerMr. Morrell Shoemaker, Jr.Stuart and Leslie ShulruffMs. Ann SilbermanMr. & Mrs. Alejandro SilvaMr. & Mrs. John SimmonsJulia M. SimpsonMr. Larry SimpsonSinclair S. SiragusaCraig SirlesMitchell and Valerie SlotnickMrs. Jackson W. Smart, Jr.Mrs. Nancy SmerzMrs. Diane W. SmithLouise K. SmithMary Ann SmithMary Beth and Stanton K. Smith Jr.Melissa and Charles F. SmithJames and Diane SnyderIn memory of Timothy SoleimanMr. & Mrs. O. J. SopranosMr.* & Mrs. James Cavanaugh SpainMr. & Mrs. Michael SpainRobert and Emily SpoerriMs. Adena StabenHelena StancikasDr. & Mrs. Eugene and Jean StarkMr. & Mrs. Leonidas StefanosDusan Stefoski and Craig SavageMs. Momoko SteinerFay S. Stern, in memory of John N. Stern

Hon.* & Mrs.* John C. StetsonMr. Hal S.R. Stewart

Virginia Lee StiglerMary StowellLaurence and Caryn StrausLawrence E. Strickling and Sydney L. Hans

Mr. & Mrs. William H. StrongMr. & Mrs. Harvey J. Struthers, Jr.Cheryl SturmMs. Minsook SuhMr. Sean SusaninRuth Miner SwislowMr. & Mrs. Robert SzalayMr. Patrick Tagny DiesseMr. & Mrs. Gregory TaubeneckMrs. Vernon ThomasMr. James ThompsonMs. Carla M. ThorpeJoan and Michael ThronRay and Mary Ann TittleBill and Anne TobeyJohn T. and Carrie M. TraversHoward and Paula* TrienensMr. & Mrs. William and Joan Trukenbrod

Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. TurnerKsenia A. and Peter TurulaMrs. Elizabeth TwedeHenry and Janet UnderwoodZalman and Karen UsiskinVirginia C. ValeMr. & Mrs. Peter E. Van NiceMr. John Van PeltMrs. Dorothy VanceMs. Julia Vander PloegDr. Douglas VaughanDr. Michael ViglioneMr. Christian VinyardMr. William A. Von Hoene Jr.Theodore and Elisabeth WachsMr. & Mrs. Mark A. WagnerMr. Erich Walch, in memory of Diane Walch

Nicholas and Jessica WallaceMs. Carol WarshawskyDr. Catherine L. WebbMr. & Mrs. Jacob WeglarzMr. & Mrs. Joseph M. WeilDrs. Carolyn and Jamie WeinerHilary and Barry WeinsteinSamuel* and Chickie WeisbardAbby and Glen WeisbergMr. & Mrs. Robert G. WeissLinda and Marc WeissbluthBert and Barbara WellerMrs. Barbara H. WestMr. & Mrs. Peter WestMichael* and Laura WollDr. Hak WongCourtenay R. Wood and H. Noel Jackson, Jr.

Michael H. and Mary K. Woolever

Ms. Debbie WrightOwen and Linda YoungmanMr. Laird Zacheis and Ms. Sunhee LeeAlexander F. Zajczenko and Julie Schwertfeger

Dr. & Mrs. John ZarembaRichard E. ZieglerMs. Karen Zupko

$1,000–$3,499Anonymous (37)Mr. & Mrs. Sherwin AbramsMichael and Mary AbroeNancy A. AbshireMs. Patti AcurioMr. & Mrs. Stanley AdelmanIn memory of Martha and Bernie Adelson

Ms. Susan AdlerFraida and Bob AlandDr. & Mrs. Carl H. AlbrightMs. Judy AllenMs. Rochelle AllenMs. Mary T. AlrothMrs. Evelyn AlterDr. Diane AltkornDr. Ronald and Barbara AltmanDr. Charles and Marie Grass AmentaMs. Carol AndersonMs. Judith AndersonMr. Karl Anderson and Ms. Pamela Shu

Cushman L. and Pamela AndrewsJanet ArbesmanGregory Yuri AronoffDr. & Mrs. Andrew AronsonMrs. Jeanne B. AronsonMs. Marie AsburyMr. & Mrs. Peter AscoliMr. & Mrs. Robert H. AsherMr. & Mrs. Theodore M. AsnerMr. Sinan AtacJack S. AtenAthena FundMs. Frances AtkinsMr. Bhupat AtluriMs. Bernice AuslanderMrs. Dianne AvgerisMs. Marlene BachMr. Tom BachtellDr. Richard BaerThe Samuel Bailey FamilyCatherine Baker and Timothy KentJon Balke and G. BalkeEdith M. BallinMs. Barbara BallingerMr. & Mrs. Christopher BarberSarah BarberMr. & Mrs. William BardeenMr. Robert BarkeiMs. Judith Barnard

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Mr. & Mrs. John BarnesMr. Peter BarrettWilliam BartleyMs. Barbara BarzanskyMr. & Ms. John J. BasalayHoward and Donna BassMs. Sandra BassProfessor M. Cherif Bassiouni* and Elaine Klemen

Mrs. Janet R. BauerMichael Bauer to Michael & Gail Bauer

Mr. Ronald BauerRobert and Linda BaumMs. Elaine BaumannDr. Dharmesh BavdaMs. Patricia BayerleinMr. & Mrs. George BeamMs. Ellen BechtholdMs. Michele BeckerPaul Becker and Nancy BeckerDr. & Mrs. Enrique BeckmannKirsten Bedway and Simon PeeblerPrue and Frank BeidlerAugust Belauskas and Ray WebbMr. Ken BelcherMr. & Mrs. Richard BenckMichelle BennettArlene and Marshall BennettMr. Peter and Dr. Judith BensingerWilliam and Ellen BentsenDr. Rachel BergMr. Thomas BergMr. & Mrs. Charles S. BergenMr. Paul BerghoffGene and Natalie BernardoniMs. Catherine BerryMr. & Mrs. Loren Berry IIIMr. Jerry BiedemanMr. & Mrs. Harrington BischofMr. & Mrs. Charles BlackMr. & Mrs. Edward BlairIn memory of John R. BlairMr. & Mrs. Andrew BlockMr. & Mrs. David BlumbergNancy BodeenMr. Edward Boehm IIIMs. Virginia BoehmeMs. Jane BolkemaDr. H. Constance BonbrestTimothy and Karen BondyMs. Alison C. BonneyCassandra L. BookAmy and Brian Boonstra, in memory of Jung R. Lee and Ida Bychkov

Mr. & Mrs. Peter BorichMr. James BorkmanMr. & Mrs. Fred P. BosselmanMr. & Mrs. David BoydBetty and Bill BoydMs. Danolda Brennan

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph BreuMr. Michael BrewerMr. & Mrs. Robert BrightfeltMr. & Mrs. Arnold BrookstoneMr. Wesley BroquardMr. & Ms. Joel BroskMr. Lee M. Brown, Mr. John B. Newman, and Ms. Pixie Newman

Mrs. Dan BrusslanMs. Katherine BryanAnn M. BuckleyLinda S. BuckleyMr. & Mrs. Allen BuhlerDr. Mary Louise BurgerMr. & Mrs. Kenneth J. Burns, Jr.Mr. David BurrageMr. George BurrowsBob and Lynn BurtMs. Jeanne BuschMr. & Mrs. Mark BushmanMr. & Mrs. John ButlerGabriel and Jill BuzasMr. & Mrs. Wiley Caldwell, Jr.Mr. Robert CallahanMr. & Mrs. Dennis CalvaneseDr. & Mrs. Michael CarbonRobert and Kay CarlsonMr. Fairbank CarpenterDrs. Virginia and Stephen CarrDr. R. Cavallino and Mrs. Patricia Cavalino

Mr. & Mrs. Candelario CelioBeverly and Lawrence CentellaMs. Margaret ChaplanMr. & Mrs. John ChapmanMr. Jayson CheeverMembers of the Chicago Symphony Chorus

Harriett and Myron CholdenMr. George ChristakesMr. & Mrs. Stanley ChristiansonThe Clark Family FoundationMs. Kathleen ClarkStephen ClarkMs. Nancy ClawsonMr. & Ms. Keith ClaytonRobert Coen and Marjorie CoenMelanie R. CohenMr. & Mrs. Frank CohenMr. Harry N. CohenDr. Edward A. Cole and Dr. Christine A. Rydel

Ms. Kathryn CollierMr. Stan CollinsJames D. ComptonPeter Conover and Kristi SlonigerPeter and Beverly Ann ConroyMs. Renee ContrerasMs. Sharon ConwayMary Ellen Cooney and Ken Higgins

Mr. & Mrs. Richard CorradoNancy R. CorralJoe and Judy CosenzaMr. & Mrs. Bill CottleGayla W. CoxMs. Jane CoxMs. Juli CrabtreeElliott CriggerMr. Earle Cromer IIIMr. Bert CrosslandMr. & Mrs. Dan CroweConstance CwiokMrs. Marcia DamMr. & Mrs. C. DanielsMs. Eleanor DankMr. John D’ArcyMelissa and Gordon DavisNorma E. Davis WillisMr. & Mrs. Richard DavisonRomke de HaanMr. Eric C. DeanMary Dedinsky and William Carlisle Herbert

Delaney Delaney & Voorn LTDMrs. David DeMarMr. Adrian DemooyDr. & Mrs. Terrence DemosMartine DeromMs. Marcia DevlinMr. & Mrs. James W. DeYoungMr. & Mrs. Byram DickesMs. Amy Dickinson and Mr. James Futransky

Mr. Peter DiDonatoMr. William Dietz, Jr.Mr. Frank DileonardoMs. Crystal DippreMichael and Laurel DiPrimaKathleen Lockhart & James DixonZo K. DodgeMr. & Mrs. Otto Doering IIIShawn M. Donnelley and Christopher M. Kelly

Mr. Fred DonnerMs. Joan D. DonovanDr. & Mrs. Heratch DoumanianNatalie and Joshua DranoffMs. Rosanne DruianIngrid and Richard DubberkeMr. & Mrs. Craig DuchossoisMr. & Mrs. Andrew DudaMr. & Mrs. Eugene DudaMs. Marilyn DugingerMr. Ronald DukeMr. & Mrs. Robert DulskiMrs. Mary S. M. DuneaDr. Thomas DuricaMr. & Mrs. Warren EagleMr. & Mrs. David P. Earle IIIJudge Frank EasterbrookGary and Deborah Edidin

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Nancy EibeckEdward and Nancy EichelbergerMr. & Mrs. Estia EichtenSondra and Karl S. EisenbergRobert S. and Ardyth J. EisenbergMr. H.J. EisenmanMr. Ebrahim El KalzaMs. Paula ElliottMr. & Mrs. Victor Elting IIIMr. Vincent EmbserMs. Laura EmerickLa and Philip EngelMr. & Mrs. A. Gerald EricksonMs. Patricia EricksonDr. & Mrs. James ErtleKeith and Diane ErtnerDr. Ron EshlemanNancy EstradaDr. Robert A. Fajardo and Judith Marohn

Mr. Christopher FarisJudith Farquhar and James HeviaMr. & Mrs. Robert FeitlerJudith E. FeldmanSteven and Carol FelsenthalDr. & Mrs. William FeltenMr. & Mrs. Joel FenchelJoy FettSandra E. FienbergMr. Henry FinesilverDr. & Mrs. Sanford FinkelMr. Matthew FinknerMr. Conrad FischerStephen and Patricia FisherMr. Dale FitschenMs. Nora FitzgeraldMs. Lola FlammMrs. Roslyn FlegelMrs. Donna FlemingMr. Marvin FletcherMs. Anita D. FlournoyMrs. Susan FlynnMr. Paul FongMr. Michael FordneyMr. Mark FossMrs. Judith FoxArthur L. Frank, M.D.Lawrence and Pamela FrankelDr. & Mrs. James FranklinAllen J. Frantzen and George R. Paterson

Dr.* & Mrs. Uwe FreeseMr. George Frerichs and Ms. Cheryl D. McIntyre

Ms. Diane Tkach and Mr. James F. Freundt

Ms. Elizabeth FriedgutMr. & Mrs. Timothy FriedmanDr. & Mrs. Gary J. FriendMr. & Mrs. Lloyd A. Fry IIIMr. & Mrs. James Gaebe

Ms. Cecile GaganJan Gaines and Andrew S. KenoeMrs. Joan M GalinskiDr. & Mrs. Ronald GanellenMr. John GardnerMr. & Mrs. Robert J. GareisMs. Ginger GasselDrs. Henry and Susan GaultNancy GavlinLouis and Judith GenesenMr. & Mrs. John E. GepsonMs. Sharon GibsonMs. Gloria GierkeMr. Ben Gierl and Ms. Karla HayterMr. & Mrs. Alan GilbertMargaret GillingMr. Lyle GillmanLawrence and Amy GillumSteven Ginsberg and Lizzie Kaplan-Ginsberg

Dr. & Mrs. Paul B. GlickmanWilliam and Ethel GofenNorman* and Barbara GoldMr. & Mrs. Perry GoldbergMr.* & Mrs. Samuel GoldenDr. & Mrs. Marshall D. Goldin, in memory of Dr. William Warren

Mr. Robert GoldmanAdele and Marvin GoldsmithMs. Lisa GomezMs. Maria GoncaloMs. Sarah GoodMary and Michael GoodkindDr. Melvin* and Edith T. GoodmanGordon and Nancy GoodmanIsabelle GoossenMichelle and Gerald GordonMr. Jacques GordonMiss Merle GordonMr. & Mrs. James GorterMr. Peter Gotsch and Dr. Jana FrenchIn memory of DeannaDavid and Elizabeth GrahamCarol R. GrantMr. Ellsworth GrantMr. & Mrs. Delmon GrapesMs. Freddi GreenbergThomas* and Delta GreeneRochelle and Michael GreenfieldMr. & Mrs. David GreensteinDr. Michael GreenwaldMr. David GriffinMs. Jacquelyne GrimshawCharles Grode and Heidi LukasMr. & Mrs. Jim GrotelueschenMr. Robert GrundstadMrs. Marguerite GuidoRichard Gunther and Kathleen McLaughlin

George F. and Catherine S. HaberMrs. Anne C. Haffner*Halasmani/Davis Family

Julie and Parker* HallMs. Nancy HallerMrs. Mary HallmanJohn and Patricia HamiltonHill and Cheryl HammockMs. Agnes HamosDr. & Mrs. Chester HandelmanMr. & Mrs. Stuart HandlerStuart and Shelly HanflingMr. Michael Hansen and Ms. Nancy Randa

Mr. Charles HanusinMary E. HarlandMrs. John M. HartiganMs. Kyle HarveyRobert and Margot HaselkornDr. & Mrs. James HaughtonDr. & Mrs. Paul J. HauserMr. William P. Hauworth IIBridgette Hayes and Eric HayesMrs. Nancy HeilRoss and Andrea HeimMr. & Mrs. M. Theodore HeineckenDr. Joseph HeineyMr. Steven HeiseMr. Preston HelgrenMr. David HelversonMs. Dawn E. HelwigDr. Leo HenikoffMr. Thomas C. HennigerMr. & Mrs. Thomas HentschelMr. David HerbertMs. Leigh Ann HermanMr.* & Mrs. Peter HerrBarbara and Jim HerstMr. & Mrs. David KistenbrokerHarriet E. HeydaMr. & Mrs. David HilliardJames and Margot HinchliffMr. & Mrs. James C. HinchsliffThe Rev. Melinda Hinners-Waldie and Mr. Benjamin Waldie

Ms. Judith HirschDr. Richard HirschmannMrs. Mary HoeyMr. Christian HoffmanDavid Glenn HoffmanMr. Karl HoffmanSuzanne Hoffman and Dale SmithMs. Gretchen Hoffmann and Mr. Joseph Doherty

Eugene HollandMr. Jim HollandMs. Sharon Flynn HollanderMr. Todd HollemanMrs. J. HolmbeckDr. George Honig and Ms. Olga WeissVicki and Thomas Horwich FoundationMs. Roberta M. HorwitzMr. Scott HostetterDavid R. Houck, Ph.D.

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Roger and Nadeane HrubyMr. & Mrs. Samuel HuberBruce and Carol HuckMichael and Beverly HuckmanDavid and Marcia HulanMark and Peg HumphreyMr. Harry Hunderman and Ms. Deborah Slaton

Ms. Patricia HurleyMichael and Leigh HustonMr. Laurence HymanDr. Victoria Ingram and Dr. Paul Navin

Mr. & Mrs. Jorge IorgulescuCheryl IstvanMiss Merle JacobMr. & Mrs. Loren JahnMr. Matt JamesMr. & Mrs.* Edgar D. Jannotta, Sr.Jeong-YoonMr. Edward T. Jeske and Mr. John F. Hern

Mr.* & Ms. Robert JillsonMr. Matthew JohnsonMr. Michael JohnsonMr. & Mrs. Bruce JohnstonMrs. Mary Johnston, Ph.D.Jean and Cynthia JohoMr. Charles JonesMs. Robin JonesMr. Thomas JonesMs. Kathleen JordanMs. Leah KaddenRuth and David V. KahnMs. Hyla KallenMr.* & Mrs. Tom KallenThomas and Reseda KalowskiWayne S. and Lenore M. KaplanRoula and George KarcazesDr. Laleh KarimiMrs. Marion KarrasMrs. Louise KaschDouglas and Dana KaslFaye Katt and Ganesh NatarajanMs. Ethelle KatzMr. Neil KatzMr. Tyrus KaufmanMs. Carole KellerJohn and Judy KellerNancy and Donald KempfMs. Linda KenneyMr. & Mrs. Algimantas KezelisMr. & Mrs. Thomas KichlerMr. Howard KiddMr. & Mrs. Gene KieselAnne G. Kimball and Peter SternMr. & Mrs. John E. KirkpatrickKathy Kirn and David LevinsonDarlene Kittredge and Lloyd KittredgeMr. & Mrs. LeRoy KlemtAnna Z. Kleymenova

Janice KlichMs. Mary KlyasheffMr. & Mrs. Thomas KnauffRobert and Andrea KnightMr. & Mrs. Thomas KoelblMr. & Mrs. Norman KoglinKoldyke Family FundDr. Jason KopinskiMr. Edward KossMr. Fred KotoskeMr. & Mrs. Jack KozikMr. Mark KraemerMr. & Mrs. Barry KreiterMrs. Leona KrompartRabbi and Mrs. Harold L. KudanMr. & Mrs. Walfrid KujalaMr. Steven KukalisDr. & Mrs. Ken KuoMs. Michele KurlanderBob and Marian KurzMr. Matthew KusekMr. & Mrs. Gary KussowDr. Marina and Andrey KuznetsovMr. & Mrs. Mark LabkonMr. Thomas LadMarvin & Carol LaderElisabeth and William LandesRichard Landgraff and Bernadette Foley

Mr. & Mrs. Gerald R. LanzMiss Ellyn LanzDJ and Natalie LaRocqueMs. Pamela LarsenMs. Leah LaurieSharon and Bill LearMr. & Mrs. Peter LedererMr. Mark LedogarMr. & Mrs. Bruce LeepLefkovitz FoundationMolly Lemeris and Carl FoltaJohn and Jill LeviMrs. Richard LeviDr. & Mrs. Stuart LevinAbby and Jonathan LevineDr. & Mrs. Robert LevyBrian LiCara LichtensteinMr. & Mrs. Myron LiebermanBrian LightyMrs. Peggy LimRobert* and Joan LipsigMs. Anne LittleDr. Peter LittlewoodMs. Alma LizcanoMr. Robert LockeMr. Melvin LoebMr.* & Ms. Gerald F. LoftusMrs. Gabrielle LongMrs. Harriett LongMr. & Ms. Matthew LoPrestiMs. Jean Lorenzen

Donna and Richard LoundyMaggie and Tom LovaasJennifer and Dan LubyRonald and Carlotta LucchesiMr. Aaron MaciasMr. Edward MackMr. Daniel Macken and Mr. Merlyn Harbold

Chuck and Jan MackieBetty Mackune-CarrerMr. Todd MacMillanMr. Glen J. Madeja and Ms. Janet Steidl

Dr. Allan MaierDaniel and Karen MakiMs. Jeanne MalkinMr. & Mrs. Jeffry MallowMs. Margaret A. MaloneMr. Gary L. Mandell and Mrs. Diana Kohn

Miles ManerIn honor of Miles ManerMs. Amy B. Manning and Mr. Paul C. Ziebert

Mr. George MannosMr. & Mrs. Mark MantoMs. Sharon ManuelDan and Lynne Mapes-RiordanBarbara and Larry MargolisMr. Robert MarksMr. Timothy MarshallMr. & Mrs. Roland MartelMs. Mirjana MartichMs. Marjorie MartinSharon and Eden MartinDrs. Annette and John MartiniDaniel and Lenore MassDr. & Mrs. Walter MasseyMs. Catherine MastersDr. Ann B. MatasarMarilyn and Myron MaurerMs. Adele MayerLarry and Donna MayerMrs. Robert MayerJohn McCartneyMs. Marilyn MccoyDr. & Mrs. James McCrearyRosa and Peter McCullaghMr. & Mrs. William McDowell, Jr.Bonnie McGrathMs. Patricia McGuireBill McIntoshMr. & Mrs. George C. McKannMr. Charles McKeeMrs. Jill McLaughlinDr. & Mrs. Bruce McleodMs. Florence McMillanDr. William McMillerDennis and Elyse McWherterHeather McWilliamsSheila and Harvey Medvin

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Mrs. Helen MehlerMs. Claretta MeierMr. Ernst MelchiorDr. Hebert and Sharon MeltzerDr. Janis MendelsohnMrs. Robert MendelsonJim and Ginger MeyerMr. & Mrs. Thomas Meyers, Jr.Mr. Robert O. MiddletonMs. Melinda MilenkovichMrs. Edward MillerFloyd and Elizabeth MillerMrs. Mary MillerMs. Vlasta MinarichDr. & Mrs. Robert MinkusMr. & Mrs. Newton MinowMs. Helen MinskerMs. Annet MirandaDr. Leo and Catherine MiserendinoKathleen MitchellMr. Fred MittelstaedtMr. Hiroshi and Mrs. Chika MiyamoriMr. Roger ModderMr. & Mrs. Robert MoellerMr. Sanford MoltzDr. Anthony Montag and Dr. Katherine Griem

Hugh and Della Rae MooreLloyd and Donna MorganSanford and Monica MorgansteinAnn T. MoroneyWayne L. Mory and Marcia SnyderDavid MoscowMr. Vijai MosesMs. Vanessa MossAllison MoultonZane and Phyllis MuhlMrs. Sue MullinsLuigi H. MumfordMr. & Mrs. Robert S. MurleyMr. George MurphyJim and Marion MyersMr. Mark NaborMs. Kay C. NalbachMs. Chitra NandwaniMr. Robert NapierMr. & Mrs. Kenneth NebenzahlMs. Victoria NeeMr. & Mrs. Herbert Neil, Jr.Dr. Ben NelsonDeborah J. NelsonKay A. NelsonPaul Nelson and Shobha SinhaMr. Wayne NelsonMr. Albert A. Nemcek, Jr.Thomas NeujahrDr. & Ms. Richard NewcombMr. John NewmanRichard NiMr. Richard NichollsJeff Nichols

William H. NicholsMs. Sylvette NicoliniMr. John NighMr. & Ms. Hiroyoshi NotoMrs. Janis NotzMr. William NovshekMrs. Susan NutsonMr. Douglas NygaardMr. & Mrs. Delano O’BanionSharon and Lee OberlanderMargo and Michael ObermanMr. Álvaro R. ObregónMarjory OlikerBarbara and Larry OlinSarah and Wallace OliverMr. Arne OlsonLarry and Karen OlsonMr. Thomas O’Neill IIIMr. & Mrs. Paul OppenheimDr. Michael OrenMr. Michael OrenKathleen Field OrrMr. Ronald OrzelGarry and Joanne OwensMr. Gerald PadburyRichard and Carolyn PalasMs. Joan PantsiosMs. Elizabeth Parker and Mr. Keith Crow

Mr. & Mrs. Todd ParkhurstMs. Susan PayneMs. Marilyn PearsonKarl and Sandra PedersenHarold E.* and Marcia A. Pendexter, Jr.

Richard and Frances PennMs. Ana Luz Perez DuranRobert & Barbara PerkausMs. Bertha PerlowDr. Rebecca JosefsonElizabeth Anne PetersMr. & Mrs.* James PetersMr. Charles PetersonMrs. Victorina PetersonMs. Lynn PetrelliMs. Sara PfaffMrs. Jana PharissGenevieve PhelpsStephen Philibosian FoundationMr. & Mrs. Thomas D. PhilipsbornMr. & Mrs. Robert G. PierceMr. & Mrs. Robert L. PierceDr. & Mrs. V.K.G. PillayMary and Joseph PlauchéMr. & Mrs. Joel PokornyTerrence PolichDon and Martha PollakMr. Charles PolskyDr. William PorterCharlene H. PosnerSusan and Joseph A. Power, Jr.

Allan and Carla PriceMr. & Mrs. Brad PriceJean & Preston PriceChris and Elizabeth QuiggLee and Al RabinMr. Robert RadaMs. Bobbie RaffertyMary RaffertyKaren and Thomas RafterJohn and Mary* RaittAnna Rappaport and Peter W. PlumleyMr. Jeffrey RappinMs. Susan RashidMark & Nancy RatnerDr. & Mrs. Pradeep RattanMs. Kathleen RattereeMs. Polly RattnerMs. Carol RechMs. Muriel Reder*Mrs. Caroline ReedHarper ReedMr. & Mrs. Jeffrey ReedMrs. Thomas K. Rees, Sr.Jack W. ReevesMr. & Mrs. Paul C. ReillyMr. James RhoadsBenjamin and Florence M. RhodesMae Svoboda RhodesMr. & Mrs. Evan RichardsDr. Hilda RichardsRobert J. Richards and Barbara A. Richards

Ms. Evelyn R. RicherPriscilla and John* RichmanLyn RidgewayDrs. Rodney and Patricia RiegerElaine Lebhoff-Ries, MD, and Michael Ries, MD

Mr. & Mrs. Richard Rieser, Jr.Dr. & Mrs. Shelby RifkinMs. Karen RigottiRing Family FoundationMary K. RingJerry and Carole RingerMr. Alexander RipleyDr. Anita RobbinsRoberts Family FoundationThomas Roberts and Teresa GroschWilliam and Cheryl RobertsMs. Cristina RoccaMs. Gabriela RodilMr. Steven RoessMr. & Mrs. Kenneth RooneyAl and Mimi RoseMr. Edgar RoseMs. Roberta RosellDr. & Mrs. Melvin RosemanMs. Elaine RosenMr. & Mrs. Saul RosenMr.* & Mrs. Sherman RosenLeona Z. Rosenberg

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Mr. & Mrs. Richard RosenbergMr. & Mrs. John RosenheimMrs. Babette RosenthalDr. & Mrs. Robert RosnerJoan and Ashley RossMr. & Mrs. Jeffrey RossMs. Eugenie Ross-Leming and Mr. Robert Singer

Ms. Sharon RothsteinSusan Rowley and Alexander WeissPeter and Monique RubHelen and Marc RubensteinMr. & Ms. Kevin A. RussellPriscilla E. Ryan and Frank BattleMr. & Mrs. Rich RyanMrs. Martha SabranskyDr. Virginia C. Saft, M.D.Drs. David and Karen SagerAnna Salman and Brian DeRosaJane SalonenDr.* & Mrs. Edwin SalterBettylu and Paul SaltzmanMr. Alfred SalvinoMr. & Mrs. Richard SamuelsMr. & Mrs. Lawrence SauterMr. Laurence SaviersSusan Schaalman Youdovin and Charlie Shulkin

Anthony and Kathleen SchaefferRobert P. SchaibleMr. & Mrs. Steven W. ScheibeMrs. Rebecca ScheweMr. & Mrs. John SchladweilerMr. & Mrs. Michael SchlesingerDr. Nathan SchlessingerMr. Robert SchmidtMr. & Mrs. Richard H. SchnadigMrs. Gary SchneiderMr. & Mrs. Lewis M. SchneiderMs. Marcia SchneiderJohn J. and Barbara L. SchornackMr. & Mrs. Steve SchuetteGerald and Barbara SchultzSusan and Charles SchwartzDr. Howard Schwartz and Dr. Ruth Grant

John SchwartzStephen A. and Marilyn ScottThomas and Maryellen ScottMs. Marilyn SebastianDrs. Deborah and Lawrence SegilMr. & Mrs. Richard SeidMs. Gail SeidelDavid and Christine SeidmanMr. Joseph SeminettaMs. Marsha SerlinMr. Mark SexauerDr. & Mrs. Charles ShapiroDr. Jerry and Eunice ShapiroMs. Courtney SheaMary and Charles M. Shea

Ms. Mary Beth SheaMr. Christopher SheahenMr. & Mrs. Mitsuzo ShidaDr. & Mrs. Mark C. ShieldsSusan Shimmin and David TeklerMr. & Mrs. Jim ShimotaMs. Carolyn ShortEllen and Richard ShubartMs. Nailah SiddiqueMs. Debra SiegelMargaret and Alan SilbermanMr. & Mrs. Thomas SilbermanDr. Laurel O. SillerudDr. Rita Simó and Mr. Tomás BissonnetteJack and Barbara SimonThe Honorable John B. Simon and Mrs. Millie Rosenbloom Simon

In memory of Carolyn A. SimonsMr. Alan Singer and Ms. Beth BronnerMr. Alvin SingerMr. & Mrs. Robert SingerThomas G. SinkovicChristine A. SlivonMr. & Mrs. Frederic SmiesMs. Caroline SmithDavid Y. and Barbara J. SmithPat and J. Clarke SmithMs. Patricia SmytheMs. Melanie SniderMr. & Mrs. Paul SnopkoFrank So and Deborah HuggettDr. Sabine SobekDr. & Mrs. R. SolaroMr. Ethan SolomonJudith SommersDr. Stuart SondheimerMrs. Hugo SonnenscheinMr. Alexander SozdatelevMr. George SpeckMr. Daniel SpeesJoel and Beth SpenadelMr. Michael SprinkerAnne-Marie St. GermaineMrs. Julie StaglianoCharles and Joan StaplesMs. Denise StauderMs. Corinne SteedeMr. & Mrs. Eric SteeleSylvia SteenGeorge and Julie SteffenCarol D. SteinMr. Michael Stein and Ms. Laurie Butler

Mr. Andrew SteinwoldMr. George StenitzerMr. & Mrs. Ronald StepanskyMr. & Mrs. Mark SternCharles and Catherine StichDr. & Mrs. Ralph StollMs. Carole StoneIn memory of Marjorie Stone

Ellen Stone-BelicSteve and Ann StranahanMr. & Mrs. John StreitMr. & Mrs. Alfred Stresen-Reuter, Jr.Dr. & Mrs. Frank StuartMr. Frederick Sturm and Ms. Deborah Gillaspie

Barry and Winnifred SullivanMrs. Jeanne SullivanMr.* & Mrs. Michael Supera, in honor of Helen Zell

Mr. Gregory SurufkaMr. & Mrs. Mark SutherlandSharon SwansonDr. John SwansonMs. Jeannette SwitzerMr. & Mrs. Richard TaftMs. Claudine TambuatcoLaurel and Dan TancrediMr. Frank TenBrinkEleanor Hurtak TengZelda* and Marvin TetenbaumThachana ThanakitcharuMr. & Mrs. Theodore TheophilosDrs. Karl and Sarah TichoMr. & Mrs. Myron TierskyMr. & Mrs. Edward TichenerMs. Michelle A. TolliverMr. Steve TomashefskyMs. Mary TorresMs. Tatia TorreyBruce and Jan TranenJames M. and Carol TrappDr. Carol Ann TrautMrs. Sally TreKellMs. Joanne TremulisMrs. Robert TrotterDr. Sabrina S. TsaoMr. Jay TunneyLori L. and John R. TwomblyMr. & Mrs. Sye UnellEllen and Jerry UptonMr. Theodore UtchenMrs. James D. Vail IIIMr. Peter ValentinoJim and Cindy ValtmanMs. Betty VandenboschFrances and Peter VandervoortJose VargasMr. David J. VarnerinMr. & Mrs. Todd ViereggFrank VillellaMiss Raita VilninsMs. Linda VincentMs. Carol VixMr. & Mrs. Richard & Emily VoitMs. Darla VollrathDr. Malcolm V. Vye and Ms. Sherie Stein

LuluRobert J. Walker

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Mr. Les WallingaMr. Frank WalschlagerThe Acorn FoundationMr. & Mrs. William A. WardMrs. Sally WarnerMorrison C. WarrenDr. David Wasserman, in memory of Abby S. Magdovitz-Wasserman

Ms. Vanessa J. WeathersbyMs. Elissa WeaverMr.* & Mrs. William Weaver, Jr.Diane WebbSusan A. WeberMr. Tom WedellJudge Eugene WedoffMr. Brian WeisbartMiss Genevieve WeissenselMr. Michael Welsh and Ms. Linda Brummer-Welsh

Drs. Anne and Dennis WentzMs. Patricia WerhaneMrs. Walter WesleyMr. John WheelerMs. Zita WheelerFrank White and Sierra KellyDr. Wesley WhiteMr. & Mrs.* William WhiteMrs. William WhiteMs. Susan WhitingMr. & Mrs. William WhitneyDr. & Mrs. Lawrence WickMrs. Abra WilkinMr. David WilliamsScott R. Williamson and Susanna E. Krentz

Peter and Michele WillmottMs. Christine WilsonMr. Robert WilsonMartha WiltsieTed Windsor & Associates Consulting Actuaries

Dr. Doris Wineman, Ph.D.Caroline WinnMs. Ann WinshipHerbert and Ruth Winter FoundationMs. Florence WintersMr. Stephen WintersDan and Paula WiseDr. Kathryn Occhipinti and Jerome Wojciechowshi

Barbara and Steven WolfDuain WolfePeggy and Ted WolffMr. Joseph Wolnski and Mrs. Jane Christino

Dr. Christopher and Julie WoodMrs. Randi WoodworthCheryl B. and James T. WormleyMr. & Mrs. Donald WoulfeElizabeth WrightMrs. Jane Stroud WrightMs. Jodi Wu

Chris W. WurthIn memory of Anthony C. YuDr. Robert G. ZadylakMrs. IdaLynn ZahourDavid and Eileen ZampaMolly Ziegler and Karen WhittKarl and Joan C. ZeislerMs. Mary ZeltmannMrs. Barbara ZennerDavid and Suzanne ZesmerIrene Ziaya and Paul ChaitkinMs. Susan ZickMs. Camille ZientekThe Charles A. Zika FamilyDrs. Donald Zimmerman and Susan Pearlson

Gifford ZimmermanDr. & Mrs. Larry ZollingerMs. Barbara ZutovskyDr. & Mrs. Michael Zygmunt

Negaunee Music Institute at the Chicago Symphony Orchestra

$100,000 AND ABOVEAnonymous (1)Allstate Insurance CompanyElizabeth F. Cheney FoundationJudson and Joyce GreenITWThe Julian Family FoundationThe James and Madeleine McMullan Family Foundation

The Negaunee Foundation

$50,000–$99,999Anonymous (1)Alphawood FoundationAnn and Richard CarrRobert and Joanne Crown Income Charitable Fund

Lloyd A. Fry FoundationJohn Hart and Carol PrinsRichard P. and Susan Kiphart FamilyJudy and Scott McCueNational Endowment for the ArtsPolk Bros. FoundationBarbara and Barre Seid FoundationMichael and Linda Simon

$25,000–$49,999Anonymous (2)Abbott FundBMO Harris BankCrain-Maling FoundationJohn and Fran EdwardsonEllen and Paul GignilliatPeter G. Horton Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust

Robert Kohl and Clark PellettLeslie Fund, Inc.Bowman C. Lingle TrustMazza FoundationNancy Lauter McDougal and Alfred L.* McDougal

PNCMegan and Steve ShebikUnited AirlinesMichael G. Woll Fund at the Pauls Foundation

$10,000–$24,999Anonymous (1)Dora J. and R. John AalbregtseMr.* & Mrs. Robert H. Bacon, Jr.Barker Welfare FoundationRobert & Isabelle Bass Foundation, Inc.

Baxter International Inc.The Buchanan Family FoundationSue and Jim CollettiMr. Jerry J. CritserMr.* & Mrs. David A. DonovanDuchossois Family FoundationAnn and Gordon Getty FoundationMary Winton GreenIllinois Arts Council AgencyMs. June KoizumiLing Z. and Michael C. MarkovitzMrs. Erma MedgyesyPrince Charitable TrustsThe Claire Rosen & Samuel Edes Foundation

Sandra and Earl Rusnak, Jr.Charles and M. R. Shapiro FoundationGeorge L. Shields FoundationMr. & Mrs. William SteinmetzMr. Irving Stenn, Jr.Ms. Liisa M. Thomas and Mr. Stephen L. Pratt

Dr. Marylou Witz

$5,000–$9,999Robert H. Baum and MaryBeth KretzMr. Lawrence BellesMs. Marion A. CameronHarry F. and Elaine Chaddick Foundation

Patricia A. ClickenerMr. Lawrence CorryMari Hatzenbuehler CravenAnne H. EvansMr. & Mrs. Robert GeraghtyMr. & Mrs. Joseph B. GlossbergRichard and Alice GodfreyChet Gougis and Shelley OchabThe League of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association

Lyon Family FoundationMilne Family FoundationDavid and Dolores Nelson

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Ms. Susan NorvichGerald* and Mona PennerMrs. John Shedd ReedAl and Lynn ReichleSherry and Bob* ReumThe Rhoades FoundationMs. Cecelia SamansDr. Scholl FoundationSegal ConsultingThe Siragusa FoundationSiragusa Family FoundationPenny and John Van Horn

$2,500–$4,999Anonymous (1)Arts Midwest Touring FundProfessor M. Cherif Bassiouni* and Elaine Klemen

Daniel and Michele BeckerCharles H. and Bertha L. Boothroyd Foundation

Mr. Donald BousemanMr. & Mrs.* William BrauneisMary Ellen Cooney and Ken HigginsAnita J. Court, Ph.D.Ms. Jane CoxMr. & Mrs. Bernard DunkelMs. Alexia GordonJames B. Heaton IIIMr. Paul E. HicksWilliam B. HinchliffItalian Village RestaurantsMr. & Mrs. Loren JahnSusie Forstmann KealyJean KlingensteinMr. John LaBarberaAnne E. Leibowitz FundMr. Gregory and Dr. Alice MelchorEdward & Lucy R. Minor Family Foundation

Maria and Carl E. MooreMichael and Kay O’HalleranMr. & Mrs. William J. O’NeillMs. Kimberly PickenpaughMs. D. PriceBenjamin J. Rosenthal FoundationMs. Judy RungeDavid and Judith L. SensibarJessie Shih and Johnson HoMr. Larry SimpsonMs. Adena StabenWalter and Caroline Sueske Charitable Trust

Ruth Miner SwislowMr. Peter ValeLulu

$1,000–$2,499Anonymous (8)Ms. Patti AcurioDr. Diane Altkorn

Mr. Edward Amrein, Jr. and Mrs. Sara Jones-Amrein

Geoffrey A. AndersonDr. Smiljana AntonijevicDr. & Mrs. Kent ArmbrusterGregory Yuri AronoffMr. & Mrs. Robert H. AsherMr. Sinan AtacJack S. AtenJon Balke and G. BalkeMr. Carroll BarnesMr. & Mrs. John BarnesMr. Peter BarrettWilliam BartleyHoward and Donna BassMichael and Gail BauerDr. Dharmesh BavdaMichelle BennettMr. Peter and Dr. Judith BensingerMr. & Mrs. William E. BibleAnn BlickensderferMs. Jane BolkemaCassandra L. BookMr. James BorkmanAdam BossovMr. & Mrs. Samuel BuchsbaumMr. & Mrs. Kenneth J. Burns, Jr.Mr. David BurrageMr. & Mrs. Candelario CelioThe Clark Family FoundationMr. & Mrs. Wesley M. ClarkMr. & Ms. Keith ClaytonDr. Edward A. Cole and Dr. Christine A. Rydel

Garth J. and Martha H.* ConleyMr. & Mrs. Bill CottleMelissa and Gordon DavisRomke de HaanMr. Frank DileonardoMs. Crystal DippreMs. Joan D. DonovanMr. & Mrs. Andrew DudaMr. & Mrs. Timothy EarleNancy EibeckRobert S. and Ardyth J. EisenbergMr. Carl EkbergElk Grove GraphicsMs. Paula ElliottCharles and Carol EmmonsMs. Patricia EricksonDr. Ron EshlemanMrs. Carol Evans, in memory of Henry Evans

Mrs. Walter D. FacklerMr. Tarek FadelJoy FettDr. & Mrs. Sanford Finkel, in honor of Katinka Kleijn

Mr. Matthew FinknerEvelyn T. FitzpatrickMs. Lola Flamm

Mrs. Roslyn FlegelMrs. Susan FlynnGerald FreedmanMr. George Frerichs and Ms. Cheryl D. McIntyre

Dr. & Mrs. Ronald GanellenCamillo and Arlene GhironMrs. Amy G. Gordon and Mr. Michael D. Gordon

Halasmani/Davis FamilyMr. & Mrs. John HalesJohn and Patricia HamiltonBarbara and Jim HerstMr. & Mrs. Mark C. HibbardSuzanne Hoffman and Dale SmithMr. Karl HoffmanMs. Sharon Flynn HollanderRoger and Nadeane HrubyDavid and Marcia HulanMr. Matthew JohnsonMs. Robin JonesThomas and Reseda KalowskiMr. Howard KiddKinder MorganBen and Laura KingEsther G. KlatzAnna Z. KleymenovaJanice KlichMr. & Mrs. Thomas KnauffMs. Leah LaurieSharon and Bill LearMolly Lemeris and Carl FoltaMr. & Mrs. Stewart LiechtiDr. & Mrs. Herbert LippitzMs. Anne LittleMr.* & Ms. Gerald F. LoftusMr. Russ LymanMr. Edward MackMr. Glen J. Madeja and Ms. Janet Steidl

Ms. Jeanne MalkinMs. Margaret A. MaloneMs. Amy B. Manning and Mr. Paul C. Ziebert

Mr. & Mrs. Robert MarwinMs. Catherine MastersMs. Adele MayerJim and Ginger MeyerMr. Robert MiddletonMs. Annet MirandaDr. Leo and Catherine MiserendinoMr. Roger ModderMs. Judith MoniakAnn T. MoroneyMrs. Frank MorrisseyWayne L. Mory and Marcia SnyderCatherine Mouly and LeRoy T. Carlson, Jr.

The Navarre Law FirmDeborah J. NelsonMr. Albert A. Nemcek, Jr.Thomas Neujahr

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Mrs. Susan NutsonMr. Álvaro R. ObregónMarjory OlikerDr. Michael OrenThe Osprey FoundationDianne M. and Robert J. Patterson, Jr.Eugene and Lois PavalonMs. Susan PayneKirsten Bedway and Simon PeeblerMs. Shauna PeetMs. Ana Luz Perez DuranStephen Philibosian FoundationMr. & Mrs. Thomas D. PhilipsbornMr. & Mrs. Robert G. PiercePoetry FoundationMr. John PorterSusan and Joseph A. Power, Jr.Mark & Nancy RatnerDr. & Mrs. Pradeep RattanHarper ReedMrs. Thomas K. Rees, Sr.Jack W. ReevesMs. Evelyn R. RicherMiles and Peggy RidgwayMary K. RingMr. Alexander RipleyMs. Sharon RothsteinSusan Rowley and Alexander WeissMrs. Martha SabranskyDrs. David and Karen SagerMr. David SandfortRobert E.* and Cynthia M. SargentMr. Laurence SaviersMrs. Rebecca ScheweMr. & Mrs. Albert SchlachtmeyerMr. Robert SchmidtGerald and Barbara SchultzMr. & Mrs. Thomas ScorzaStephen A. and Marilyn ScottMs. Marilyn SebastianThe Honorable John B. Simon and Mrs. Millie Rosenbloom Simon

Pat and J. Clarke SmithDr. Sabine SobekMr. Alexander SozdatelevMrs. Julie StaglianoCharles and Joan StaplesMr. &rew SteinwoldMr. Hal StewartDr. & Mrs. Ralph StollMary StowellLaurence and Caryn StrausMr. Frederick Sturm and Ms. Deborah Gillaspie

Sharon SwansonMs. Tatia TorreyMr. & Mrs. William and Joan Trukenbrod

The Rev. Melinda Hinners-Waldie and Mr. Benjamin Waldie

Ms. Carol WarshawskyMs. Vanessa J. Weathersby

Mr. Brian WeisbartAbby and Glen WeisbergMs. Zita WheelerFrank White and Sierra KellyMs. Susan WhitingScott R. Williamson and Susanna E. Krentz

Ms. Christine WilsonM.L. WinburnTed Windsor & Associates Consulting Actuaries

Ms. Ann WinshipDan and Paula WiseMrs. Randi WoodworthElizabeth WrightMs. Jodi WuAlexander F. Zajczenko and Julie Schwertfeger

David and Eileen ZampaMolly Ziegler and Karen WhittIrene Ziaya and Paul Chaitkin

ENDOWED FUNDSAnonymous (3)Cyrus H. Adams Memorial Youth Concert Fund

Dr.* & Mrs.* Bernard H. AdelsonMarjorie Blum-Kovler Youth Concert Fund

CNAKelli Gardner Youth Education Endowment Fund

Mary Winton GreenWilliam Randolph Hearst Foundation Fund for Community Engagement

Richard A. HeisePeter Paul Herbert Endowment FundThe Kapnick FamilyLester B. Knight Charitable TrustThe Malott Family Very Special Promenades Fund

The Eloise W. Martin Endowed Fund in support of the Negaunee Music Institute at the Chicago Symphony Orchestra

The Negaunee FoundationNancy Ranney and Family and FriendsDolores M. Rix Endowment FundToyota Endowed FundThe Wallace FoundationZell Family Foundation

CIVIC ORCHESTRA OF CHICAGO SCHOLARSHIPSMembers of the Civic Orchestra receive an annual stipend to help offset some of their living expenses during their training in Civic. The following donors have generously underwritten a Civic musician(s) for the 2017–18 season.

Fourteen Civic members participate in the Civic Fellowship program, a rigorous artistic and professional development curriculum that supplements their membership in the full orchestra. Major funding for this program is generously provided by The Julian Family Foundation with additional funding from Prince Charitable Trusts.

The 2017–18 Civic season is sponsored by the Elizabeth F. Cheney Foundation.

Dora J. and R. John AalbregtseSiyoon Park†, oboeDr.* & Mrs.* Bernard H. AdelsonRebecca Boelzner, violaMr.* & Mrs. Robert Bacon Jr.Yoojin Baek, violinAnnija Kerno, violaRobert H. Baum and MaryBeth KretzPei-yeh Tsai†, keyboardMr. Lawrence Belles and Elizabeth F. Cheney FoundationAriel Patkin, violaSue and Jim CollettiLaura Pitkin†, hornLawrence CorryKevin Lin, violaMr. Jerry J. CritserNicky Swett†, celloRobert and Joanne Crown Income Charitable FundMiguel Aguirre, violinKayla Burggraf, fluteQuinn Delaney, bassoonRachel Peters, violinVincent Trautwein, bassTong Yu, violinMr.* & Mrs. David A. Donovan and Lloyd A. Fry FoundationAllison Chambers, celloAleksa Kuzma, violaMr. & Mrs. Allan Drebin and Elizabeth F. Cheney FoundationGreg Heintz, bassMr. and Mrs. Robert Geraghty and Elizabeth F. Cheney FoundationGeirþrúður Anna Guðmundsdóttir, cello

Mr. & Mrs. Paul C. GignilliatAdam Ayers, celloMathew Burri, bassArthur Masyuk, violinLiaht Slobodkin, violinSeung-mi Sun, violin

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Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. GlossbergEnrique Olvera, violaRichard and Alice GodfreyDiane Chou, celloChet Gougis and Shelley OchabChristy Kim†, fluteMary Winton GreenDaniel Meyers, bassThe Julian Family FoundationRoslyn Green†, violaJoseph LeFevre, tubaLester B. Knight Charitable TrustChris DeMarco, bassStephanie Diebel, hornJames Perez, tromboneRobert Kohl and Clark PellettGordon Daole-Wellman†, clarinetLeague of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra AssociationJordan W. Thomas, harpLeslie Fund Inc.Midori Samson†, bassoonDenielle Wilson†, celloJudy and Scott McCue and Elizabeth F. Cheney FoundationAnna Piotrowski, violinNancy Lauter McDougal and Alfred L.* McDougalNicholas Adams, bassGabriel Fridkis, fluteMrs. Mona Penner, in memory of Gerald PennerSarah Bowen, violinPrince Charitable TrustsMaria Arrua†, violinMrs. John Shedd ReedAlex Norris, violinAl and Lynn ReichleNicholas Brown, clarinetSandra and Earl J. Rusnak JrSusan Bengtson, violaBarbara and Barre Seid FoundationMatthew Kibort, timpaniKelly Quesada, celloThe George L. Shields Foundation Inc.Eva María Barbado Gutiérrez, celloSeth Pae, violaBen Roidl-Ward, bassoonRuth Miner SwislowAlexander Giger, violinCally Laughlin, clarinetLois and James Vrhel Endowment FundVincent Gawan, bassDr. Marylou WitzCarmen Abelson†, violin

Michael G.* and Laura WollKelsey Williams, hornMichael G. Woll Fund at the Pauls FoundationDevin Gossett, hornBryant Millet, trumpetPatrick Speranza, percussionLucas Steidinger, tromboneRenée Vogen, hornAnonymousAlexander Schwarz†, trumpetAnonymousNatalie Lee, violinRobinson Schulze†, bass tromboneAnonymousNomin Zolzaya, cello

*Denotes deceased

†Denotes Civic Fellow

FRIENDS OF THE CIVIC ORCHESTRAThe following donors have aligned themselves as Friends of the Civic Orchestra by directing a gift of $1,500 or more toward the stipend Civic musicians receive each season.

Ms. Patti AcurioMr. & Mrs. Bernard DunkelCharles and Carol EmmonsAnne H. EvansJames B. Heaton IIIEsther G. KlatzMs. June KoizumiMr. Russ LymanJim and Ginger MeyerDr. Leo and Catherine MiserendinoMs. Susan NorvichMr. & Mrs. William J. O’NeillMr. & Mrs. Robert G. PierceThe Rhoades FoundationMs. Cecelia SamansMr. Larry SimpsonMs. Belle Waldfogel

Theodore Thomas SocietyListed below are generous donors who have made commitments to the Chicago Symphony Orchestra through their wills, trusts, and other estate plans, including life-income arrangements. The Society honors their generosity, which helps to ensure the long-term financial stability and artistic excellence of the CSO. To learn more, please call Al Andreychuk, director of planned giving, at 312-294-3150.

STRADIVARIAN ASSOCIATESThe Chicago Symphony Orchestra is pleased to recognize the following individuals for generously creating a revocable bequest of $100,000 or more, or an irrevocable life-income trust or annuity of $50,000 or more, to benefit the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association, as of January 2018.

Anonymous (9)Dora J. and R. John AalbregtseEvy Johansen AlsakerRobert A. AlsakerGeoffrey A. AndersonRuth T. AndersonMychal P. Angelos, in memory of Dorothy A. Angelos

Dr. Jeff BaleLeland and Mary BartholomewMarlys A. BeiderDr. C. BekermanMike and Donna BellCeline BendyJulie Ann BensonK. Richard and Patricia M. BerletMerrill and Judy BlauAnn BlickensderferDanolda BrennanMr. Leon Brenner, Jr.Dr. Mary Louise Hirsh BurgerMr. Frank and Dr. Vera ClarkPatricia A. ClickenerJudith and Stephen F. CondrenRobert L. Drinan, Jr. and Mitchell J. Brown

Dr. Marilyn EzriMrs. William M. FloryMr. & Mrs. David W. Fox, Sr.Rhoda Lea and Henry S. FrankMrs. Zollie S. FrankMary J. and Ronald P. FrelkPenny and John FreundMr. & Mrs. Paul C. GignilliatLyle GillmanMary Louise GornoDr. & Mrs. David GranatoRichard and Mary L. GrayMary Winton GreenDr. Jon Brian GreisJohn and Patricia HamiltonJohn Hart and Carol PrinsMr. William P. Hauworth IIThomas and Linda HeagyMr. R.H. HelmholzStephanie and Allen HochfelderConcordia HoffmannFrank and Helen HoltMark and Elizabeth HurleyMichael L. Igoe, Jr.Ms. Darlene Johnson

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Ronald B. JohnsonRoy A. and Sarah C. JohnsonMr. & Mrs. Paul R. JudyLori JulianJared Kaplan and Maridee QuanbeckWayne S. and Lenore M. KaplanHoward KaspinJames KemmererEsther G. KlatzRobert Kohl and Clark PellettMr. & Mrs. Alan KubickaRobert B. Kyts Memorial FundCharles Ashby Lewis and Penny Bender Sebring

Robert Alan LewisSheldon H. MarcusMr. Robert C. MarksMarilyn G. MarrJames Edward McPhersonMarcia and Jack L. Melamed, M.D.Janet L. MelkDrs. Bill and Elaine MoorCharles MooreMr. & Mrs. Mario A. MunozJohn H. NelsonMuriel NeradEdward A. and Gayla S. NieminenDr. Joan E. PattersonDonald PeckMrs. Thomas D. PhilipsbornJudy PomeranzMr. & Mrs. Neil K. QuinnRandall and Cara RademakerAl and Lynn ReichleAnn and Bob ReilandWendy ReynesDr. Edward O. RileyCharles and Marilynn RivkinDolores M. RixJerry RoseJohn and Nancy RutledgeRichard O. RyanJohn A. SalkowskiCecelia SamansFranklin SchmidtJoanne SilverMr. Craig SirlesBetty W. SmykalAnnette and Richard SteinkeMrs. Deborah SterlingMr. & Mrs. William H. StrongMr. & Mrs. John C. TelanderKarin and Alfred TennyRichard and Helen ThomasMs. Carla M. ThorpeMr. & Mrs. Richard P. ToftDr. Richard TresleyPaula TurnerRobert W. Turner and Gloria B. TurnerMr. & Mrs. John E. Van HornMr. Christian VinyardMr. Robert Volz

Joan and Marco WeissDr. Robert G. ZadylakHelen Zell

MEMBERSAnonymous (31)Valerie and Joseph AbelLouise AbrahamsJudy L. AllenAnn S. AlpertMs. Judith L. AndersonSteven Andes, Ph.D.Catherine AranyiMr. Neal BallMara Mills BarkerDr. & Mrs. Robert BeattyArlene and Marshall BennettSally J. BensonWilliam and Ellen BentsenJoan I. BergerHarriet H. BernbaumCandace BroeckerMrs. Lucille BrouseJohn L. BrowarCatherine BrubakerJoseph BucEdward J. BuckbeeMichelle Miller BurnsMr. Robert J. CallahanDr. & Mrs. Joseph R. CarMr. & Mrs. William P. CarmichaelDr. Marlene E. CasianoBill and Betsy ClineBeverly Ann and Peter ConroySharon ConwayMr. Robert L. CrawfordMr. Jerry J. CritserAnita CrocusRon and Dolores DalyMr. & Mrs. John DanielsMr. & Mrs. Clyde H. DawsonSylvia Samuels DelmanMrs. David A. DeMarMs. Phyllis DiamondMr. Francis T. DombrowskiMr. Richard L. EastlineNancy Schroeder EbertMs. Estelle EdlisRobert J. ElisbergRichard ElledgeCharles and Carol EmmonsJoseph R. EnderJames B. FadimLeslie FarrellDonna FeldmanFrances and Henry FogelAllen J. FrantzenGustave D. FriesemNancy and Larry FullerDileep GangolliMr. & Mrs. William E. GardnerMiss Elizabeth Gatz

Mrs. Willard GidwitzMr. Joseph GlossbergAdele and Marvin GoldsmithJoan E. GordonDouglas Ross GortnerChet Gougis and Shelley OchabMr. & Mrs. George GrahamMs. Elizabeth A. GrayDelta A. GreeneNancy P. GriffinMrs. Ann B. GrimesMrs. Barbara GundrumLynne R. HaarlowMrs. Robin Tieken HadleyMr. Tom HallMr. & Mrs. Tom HallettMrs. David J. HarrisDr. & Mrs. Donald HeinrichJohn and Linda HillmanMrs. Morris H. HirshMr. Thomas HochmanMrs. Walter HorbanMrs. Marian JohnsonMs. Janet JonesMarshall KeltzValerie and George KennedyPaul KeskeMr. & Mrs. Frank L. Klapperich, Jr.Mrs. LeRoy KlemtSally Jo KnowlesMrs. Russell V. KohrMs. Barbara KopsianLiesel E. KossmannRichard J. KostThomas and Annelise LawsonPatricia LeeDr. & Mrs. David J. LeeheyDr. & Mrs. Robert L. LevyMs. Sally LewisDr. Eva F. LichtenbergMr. Michael LicitraDr. & Mrs. Philip R. LiebsonBonnie Glazier LipeGlen J. Madeja and Janet SteidlAnn Chassin MallowMrs. John J. MarkhamKathleen W. MarkiewiczJudith W. McCue and Howard M. McCue III

Mr. William McIntoshMrs. Leoni McVeyMrs. Harmon MeigsDale and Susan MillerKathryn MillerDr. Leo and Catherine MiserendinoThomas R. MullaneyDavid J. and Dolores D. NelsonFranklin NussbaumJames F. OatesDiana J. and Gerald L. OgrenMr. & Mrs. Paul Oliver, Jr.Wallace and Sarah Oliver

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Lynn OrschelDr. David G. Ostrow and Mr. Rafael Gomez

Helen and Joseph PageGeorge R. PatersonDianne M. and Robert J. Patterson, Jr.Mary PerlmutterElizabeth Anne PetersMrs. Lewis D. PetryJudy C. PettyKaren and Dick PigottLois PolakoffJeanne ReedDr. Merrell ReissMs. Oksana Revenko-JonesDon and Sally RobertsMs. Rosemary RobertsMs. Elaine RosenMrs. Ben J. RosenthalCraig SamuelsSue and William SamuelsMr. Douglas M. SchmidtDavid ShayneMr. Morrell A. ShoemakerAnne SibleyLarry SimpsonMr. Allen R. SmartMary SoleimanJim SpiegelJulie StaglianoMrs. Zelda StarMr. Charles J. StarcevichKaren SteilTimothy and Kathleen StockdaleMr. John StokesMr. & Mrs. Robert SwansonRuth Miner SwislowJeffrey and Linda SwogerMr. & Mrs. Jerald ThorsonKaren Hletko TierskyMyron TierskyMr. James M. TrappMr. Donn N. TrautmanMs. Rose Gray TynanVirginia C. ValeFrank VillellaMr. Milan VydarenyDr. Malcolm VyeAdam R. Walker and BettyAnn MocekMr. Frank WalschlagerLouella Krueger WardDr. Catherine L. WebbKarl WechterClaude M. WeilMr. Thomas WeylandLinda and Payson S. WildMrs. Albert D. Williams, Jr.Kayla Anne WilsonNora M. WinsbergMr. & Mrs. Stephen M. WolfAnn WolffBeth Wollar

IN MEMORIAMListed below are individuals who were Theodore Thomas Society members and patrons who made exceptional commitments to the Chicago Symphony Orchestra through their estates. They are remembered with gratitude for their generosity and visionary support.

Anonymous (7)Hope A. AbelsonElizabeth E. AblerRichard AbrahamsFrances B. AbrahamsonDonald AldermanRoger A. AndersonFaye AngellIrwin AskowJames E.S. BakerJacqueline and Frank BallWayne BalmerPaul BarkerPatricia Anne BartonBarbara Burt BaumannHortense K. BeckerNorma Zuzanek BennettHarry H. BernbaumLenore M. BernerNaomi T. BorwellHarriet B. BradyMarjorie L. BredehornPatricia W. and Kenneth A. BroHoward BroeckerMarie Kraemer BurnsideElizabeth R. CapilupoRose Mary CarterCharles R. CasperMargaret G. ChamalesMarcia S. CohnMilton ColmanRobert CookeNelson D. CorneliusBillie Dale DelevittRobert L. DevittEdison and Jane Warner DickHoward M. DonaldsonWilliam B. DrewryWilliam A. DumbletonEvelyn DybaMarian EdelsteinDr. Edward ElisbergKelli Gardner EmeryShirley L. and Robert EttelsonShirley Mae EvansMildred F. FanslauDr. James D. FentersNatalie N. FerryRobert B. FordhamEtha Beatrice FoxHerbert B. FriedDr. Muriel S. FriedmanHynda and Maurice Gamze

Florence GanjaAlan J. GarberMartin and Francey GechtBetsy N. and James R. GetzJeanne Brown GordonBarbara L. GouldElizabeth S. GraettingerWilliam B. GrahamDavid GreenAllen J. GreenbergerDr. Robert A. GreendaleErnest A. Grunsfeld IIIElizabeth and Paul GuenzelCecile GuthmanBetty and Lester GuttmanA. William Haarlow IIIGrace and Vernon HajeckClarine and James HallParker HallRichard HalvorsenChalkley J. HambletonLeah C. and Robert J. HammanCAPT Martin P. Hanson, USN Ret.Allan E. HarrisMelville D. HartmanLawrence J. HelsternAdolph “Bud” and Avis HersethMarriane Deson HersteinMary Jo HertelHelen HoaglandRichard J. HofemannBlanche HoheiselAllen H. HowardHugh Johnston HubbardJoseph H. HuebnerMrs. Henry IshamPhyllis A. JonesJoseph M. KacenaMorris A. KaplanRussell V. KohrJeffrey W. KormanSarah H. and Bertram D. KribbenWilliam KruppenbacherEvelyn and Arnold KupecRuth Lucie LabitzkeLouise H. LandauAlice M. La PertH. Elizabeth and Earl D. LarsenCaressa Y. LauerRobert A. LeadyArthur E. Leckner, Jr.Lena T. LevinsonBeryl M. LewisRichard Alan LivingstonMrs. Richard Q. LivingstonMarion M. and Glen A. LloydMary LongbrakeArthur G. MalingJune Betty and Herbert S. ManningMrs. Robert C. MarksIrl and Barbara MarshallEloise MartinVirginia Harvey McAnulty

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Helen C. McDougal, Jr.Eunice H. McGuireCarolyn D. and William W. McKittrick

Hugo J. MelvoinShirley R. MesirowBeth Ann Alberding MohrEdward MillerMicki MillerKathryn MuellerMarietta MunnisDavid H. NelsonHelen M. NelsonOtto NeradJohn and Maynette NeundorfPiri E. and Jaye S. NiefeldJoan Ruck NopolaCarol Rauner O’DonovanT. Paul B. O’DonovanMary and Eric OldbergBruce P. OlsonSuzanne and Brace PattouDorothy and William G. Paulick, Jr.Bette G. PetersenHelen J. PetersenMadge and Neil PetersenMaxine R. PhilipsbornWalter PlackoElaine and Harold H. PlautCharles J. PollyeaMiriam PollyeaVirginia and Eugene PomeranceHalina J. PresleyChristine QuerfeldMuriel F. RederWalter ReedJoan L. RichardsDavid M. RobertsRosemary RobertsVirginia H. RogersJill N. RohckIrmgard Hess RosenbergerBen J. RosenthalHarriet Cary RossEdith S. RuettingerAnthony RyersonMargaret R. SagersBeverly and Grover SchiltzErhardt SchmidtMuriel SchnierowDonald R. SchreiberMargaret and Edwin SeeboeckDenise SelzJoseph J. SemrowIngeborg Haupt SennotHerman ShapiroSoretta and Henry ShapiroMuriel ShawRose L. and Sidney N. ShureMr. William F. SibleyDr. & Mrs. Alfred L. SiegelJoan H. and Berton E. SiegelPeter E. Sincox

David SlesurJean H. SmithWillis B. SnellKaren A. SorensenGeorgette Grosz SpertusEdward J. and Audrey M. SpiegelVito StaglianoDavid W. StotterDr. Gerald SunkoAndrew and Peggy ThomsonJ. Ross ThomsonBeatrice B. TinsleyC. Phillip TurnerPaul D. UrnesLois and James VrhelCecilia Sue and Burton J. WadeLouise Benton WagnerMichael Jay WalankaNancy L. WaldEsther H. WaldmanJeanne WalkerLaurie WallachJean Angus and Ferre C. WatkinsVirginia O. WeaverJames M. WellsArnold WolffRonald R. Zierer

Tribute ProgramThe Tribute Program provides an opportunity to celebrate milestones such as birthdays, weddings, anniversaries, and graduations. It also can serve as a way to honor the memory of friends and family. An Honor or Memorial Gift enables you to express your feelings in a truly distinctive and memorable way. Contributions may be any amount and are placed in the Orchestra’s Endowment Fund. For more information regarding this program, please call 312-294-3100. Listed below are Honor and Memorial Gifts of $100 or more received between August 21, 2017 and February 1, 2018.

MEMORIAL GIFTSIn memory of Judith ArmbrusterCatherine HoranIn memory of M. Cherif BassiouniPaul J. DaveyEileen B. LandauPMI ImpactDr. & Mrs. Sateh ShafikWilderness Dunes Property Association

In memory of John R. BlairBarbara BlairIn memory of Marlene BowenGilbert Bowen

In memory of Roger CarlsonCatherine GrochowskiIn memory of Robert C. ClarkJanet ArbesmanIn memory of Robert CookeMary MulierIn memory of Gary A. DavisSteven AndesIn memory of Rev. David A. DonovanGeoffrey A. AndersonJoan M. HallGary and Krista KaplanMargaret and John KemperLois A. KlimstraKaren V. MaurerWilliam V. PorterRobert R. WatsonLisa and Paul WigginIn memory of Norman GoldWender Family FoundationIn memory of Cecile Renaud GornoLynne R. HaarlowIn memory of Harriet HirshDonald F. and Alice P. GoldsmithArnold and Nina HarrisHarriet and Ernest KarminNancy R. LeviHerbert and Joan LoebRita LovePeter and Robin MarksBetty and Thomas PhilipsbornJennifer RosenKurt RosenBlossom WohlIn memory of Ed KoleskeDorothy EricksonIn memory of Robert MarthCIBCIn memory of Barbara P. MillarK. KennedyIn memory of Albert NagyAndrea StammIn memory of Rosalie Aaron OvsonRichard W. AaronIn memory of William A. PollakKara HughesKathryn JohnsonJohn MalusaJulie MolinaScott MuenchDon PollakIn memory of Virginia H. Rogers and Arthur E. Leckner, Jr.Robert WilsonIn memory of Dolores SavinAnonymous (1)Linda KaplanPam and Charles Meyerson

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In memory of Fred SpectorChicago Symphony Orchestra Alumni Association

Catherine HoranRuth Ann and Tom WatkinsIn memory of Dr. William WarrenMartine Derom

HONOR GIFTSIn honor of Dr. Edward L. Applebaum and Dr. Eva E. RedeiFrieda ApplebaumIn honor of Leslie Henner BurnsSteven and Lauren ScheibeIn honor of Robert CoadAlfred GoldsteinJoanne SilverIn honor of Robert Kohl and Clark PelletLynn and Louis PhilipsonHappy birthday to our mom Sue Lerch Leibowitzfrom your children and grandchildrenIn honor of Helen ZellMr. & Mrs. Stephen Kaufman

LEAGUE OF THE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ASSOCIATION TRIBUTE PROGRAMIn memory of Laura CollinsMary Ann AndersonWally and Carol LennoxPenny Van HornIn memory of Helene GardnerPenny Van HornIn memory of Clarine HallPenny Van HornIn honor of Pam Andrews and Marguerite Guido, Co-chairs of Fall in Love with MusicPenny Van HornIn honor of Linda BlumbergCarol SadowIn honor of William Buchman and Lee LichamerSharon GibsonIn honor of Robert CoadElizabeth BeckmannWilma DooleyHazel A FacklerGlenn and Marjorie Friedman HeymanJanet JentesLori JulianBonnie LipeNancy M. WoulfeIn honor of Jessica EricksonPenny Van Horn

In honor of Lori JulianSonya DoumanianJanice MatzNancy WoulfeIn honor of the League of the CSOAKathy DugingerIn honor of Michael and Margo ObermanThe North Shore Areas of the CSOAIn honor of the 80th Birthday of Mitchell J WietJessica Jagielnik

Contributed Gifts and ServicesThe Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association is grateful to Steinway & Sons for its generous support.

Allium String QuartetAmpersand Wine BarAplandBaker & McKenzieBanfiBBJ LinenBetsy BeckmannBelmont Yacht ClubBig Foot MediaBlue Plate CateringBoleoBooth HansenBoston Consulting GroupBridges Mavrakakis LLPWilliam BuchmanSarah BullenElliot Callighan, Ramova MusicCapstone Financial AdvisorsOto CarrilloLi-Kuo ChangChicago BearsChicago Cultural CenterChicago MagazineChicago Tribune Companyde Quay RestaurantDLA Piper LLP (US)E&J Gallo WineryMrs. Walter D. FacklerFour Seasons Hotel ChicagoFrederick C. Robie HouseSusanna GauntGemini Graphics, Inc.Gentleman’s CooperativeDaniel GingrichGoose Island Beer Co.Greenwich StudiosDavid GriffinHewitt AssociatesHillshire SnackingHispanicProIron Galaxy StudiosIwan Ries & Co.

Jet’s PizzaRobb Jibson, So MidwestGabrielle JohnsonKathy JordanNicholas JosephLori JulianCarole KellerKimpton Gray HotelBen and Laura KingLincoln Park ZooYo-Yo MaMayer Brown LLPTammy McCannMcKinsey & CompanyMetrograph CommissaryMetropolitan BrewingNational Hispanic Sales NetworkNicado Publishing / NegociosNowPaul Rehder SalonJonathan PegisPianoFortePricewaterhouseCoopers LLPR. Crusoe & SonLora SchaeferShow ServicesSlover Linett StrategiesJames SmelserMike Smith, Photographic Services International

Kathy SolaroSoldier FieldThe Sound Co-Op, LLCSteinway Piano Gallery ChicagoSusan SynnestvedtBrant TaylorDavid TaylorBenjamin TeichmanTeslaTesoriTheatrical Lighting ConnectionThink-cellTimeOutTootsie RollUnion StationUnited AirlinesVancouver Symphony OrchestraVirtue CiderWalgreensWBBMWBEZWFMTWheaton CollegeWrigley FieldWTMXCynthia YehYuan-Qing Yu

*Denotes deceased

Italics indicate Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association.

Gifts listed as of January 30, 2018

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