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MAC's Streamed Programming for Winter/Spring 2021

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Mon, 01/18/2021 - 2:25pm by laughingcat

The McAninch Arts Center (MAC) has announced its Winter/Spring 2021 programming.  Selections include a one-night-only engagement of The Texas Tenors, streamed live from the MAC’s Belushi Performance Hall, the international hit “Piaf! The Show” and the debut of three New Philharmonic concerts. Tickets are now on sale at www.AtTheMAC.org.

“We’re thrilled to have the Emmy Award-winning Texas Tenors back on our stage on Sunday, April 11,” says MAC Director Diana Martinez. “This live-streamed, one-night-only concert is as close to an in-person MAC experience as you can get. They were a huge hit when we first presented them in March 2019 and we are excited to replicate this experience virtually. I personally am looking forward to presenting the pre-recorded smash hit, ‘Piaf! The Show.’ It’s been performed in more than 50 countries and even at Carnegie Hall. I fell in love with this musical celebration of the life and music of the legendary French chanteuse when I saw it, and I know our audience will too.”

New Philharmonic, under the baton of Kirk Muspratt, presents three streamed concerts, all pre-recorded exclusively for MAC audiences. The concerts include “A Night of Broadway & Opera” (premiering Jan. 23 and available until Feb. 28); “Rachmaninoff Piano Concertos” (premiering April 17) and “A Salute to Frida” (premiering May 15). The “Rachmaninoff Piano Concertos”  and “A Salute to Frida” concerts will be viewable on demand from their premiere date through June 15.

By popular demand, the live-streamed magic show, Dennis Watkins: “The Magic Parlor At Home,” has been extended a third time, with dates now extending through Jan. 30.

2021 also marks the grand opening of the Cleve Carney Museum of Art (CCMA) with  “Frida Kahlo: Timeless” exhibition June 5 – Sept. 6, 2021. “The College and the MAC are closely following all CDC and state regulations. It is our hope that public health officials will deem cultural institutions safe to re-open in time for us to have the Kahlo exhibition in the summer of 2021. In anticipation of the exhibition, CCMA and the MAC have created a series of events through May. In addition, in collaboration with the College of DuPage Foundation, the MAC will host its ‘For The Love of Frida – Bringing It Home’ Virtual Gala March 20.” For more information visit www.frida2.givesmart.com.

Additional Winter/Spring 2021 programming is being offered by the College of DuPage (COD). Building on the success of streamed performances during the fall 2020 season, COD College Theater presents virtual stagings of two works, “Under Milk Wood” (streaming Feb. 25 – March 7) and “War of the Worlds: The Panic Broadcast (streaming April 15 – 25). The public is also invited to enjoy concerts by DuPage Community Jazz Ensemble (May 6) and COD College Music Jazz/Pop Ensemble (May 7), Chamber Orchestra (May 11) and Chamber Singers (May 13), as well as Free Music Friday concerts, Jan. 29 – May 14 at noon. 

MAC’s Winter/Spring 2021 schedule is included below and is subject to change. Tickets are on sale now at www.AtTheMAC.org.

Tickets are currently on sale for “Frida Kahlo: Timeless” (June 5 – Sept. 6, 2021). Tickets are $18 (timed) and $35 (untimed). For tickets and more information visit www.TheCCMA.org.

The MAC encourages everyone enjoying the Winter/Spring programming to consider making a donation to support the MAC’s ongoing ability to continue to provide fun, creative and thought-provoking programming.

About the MAC

The McAninch Arts Center at College of DuPage is located at 425 Fawell Blvd., 25 miles west of Chicago near I-88 and I-355. It houses three indoor performance spaces (the 780-seat proscenium Belushi Performance Hall; the 236-seat soft-thrust Playhouse Theatre; and the versatile black box Studio Theatre), the outdoor Lakeside Pavilion, plus the Cleve Carney Museum of Art and classrooms for the college’s academic programming. The MAC has presented theater, music, dance and visual art to more than 1.5 million people since its opening in 1986 and typically welcomes more than 100,000 patrons from the greater Chicago area to more than 230 performances each season.

The mission of the MAC is to foster enlightened educational and performance opportunities, which encourage artistic expression, establish a lasting relationship between people and art, and enrich the cultural vitality of the community. Visit www.AtTheMAC.org or www.facebook.com/AtTheMAC for more information.

The MAC’s 2020-2021 Season is made possible in part with support by DoubleTree by Hilton Lisle/Naperville,  WDCB 90.9 FM and the College of DuPage Foundation.

“Frida Kahlo: Timeless” is presented by Bank of America and made possible through support from Ball Horticultural Company, Nicor, Wight & Company.

Established as a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit charitable organization in 1967, the College of DuPage Foundation raises monetary and in-kind gifts to increase access to education and to enhance cultural opportunities for the surrounding community. For more information about the College of DuPage Foundation, visit www.foundation.cod.edu or call 630.942.2462.

Programs at the MAC are partially supported through a grant from the Illinois Arts Council Agency.

McAninch Arts Center Winter/Spring 2021

For tickets and more information visit www.AtTheMAC.org

Dennis Watkins: “The Magic Parlour At Home”

  • 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, through Jan. 30
  • $49 per household

Award-winning magician Dennis Watkins has created an all-new live virtual show that delivers world class interactive magic and mind reading directly to living room screens. Broadway World hails “The Magic Parlour at Home” as “a theatrical, mind-jazzing magical-hybrid show!”

New Philharmonic: “A Night of Broadway and Opera”

  • Premiering Saturday, Jan. 23, 7:30 p.m., then on demand through Feb. 28
  • Featuring Alisa Jordheim (soprano), Kate Tombaugh (mezzo-soprano), Jesse Donner (tenor) and Bill McMurray (bass/baritone)
  • $40 per household

Four acclaimed guest artists join New Philharmonic in a program of works from some of the best-loved Broadway musicals and operas. The first half of the program will feature selections from Bizet’s “Carmen,” Puccini’s “Gianni Schicchi,” Saint-Saëns’ “Samson and Delila,” Lehar’s “Merry Widow” and Herbert’s “Mlle. Modiste.” The second half will include works from Berlin’s “This is the Army,” Rogers and Hart’s “Allegro,” Herman’s “Hello, Dolly,” “I Have a Dream” from Schönberg’s “Les Misérables,” Webber’s “The Phantom of the Opera” and “Sunset Boulevard,” and Hamlisch’s “The Way We Were” and “A Chorus Line.” This concert is presented with the support of an anonymous Soloist Sponsor.

Frida Kahlo Event

Cesáreo Moreno, “Folk Art to Fine Art, Mercados a Museos”

  • 7 p.m., Friday, Feb. 5
  • Free

Cesáreo Moreno, Chief Curator at the National Museum of Mexican Art in Chicago, presents a talk about 20th Century Mexican art and its development from local markets to museums around the world. The presentation will reveal artistic movements that emerged from the Mexican Revolution, along with the role of nationalism and the visual arts. He will explore the didactic murals, prints and the iconography that ultimately inspired the 1960s Chicano murals in the U.S. and led to public art on the streets of the Pilsen neighborhood.

Frida Kahlo Event

Julie Rodrigues Widholm, “Contemporary Art after Frida Kahlo”

  • 3 p.m., Sunday, Feb. 21
  • Free

Julie Rodrigues Widholm, former DePaul Art Museum Director and current Director of the UC Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive, gives a presentation on Frida Kahlo’s lasting influences in the art historical canon and explores how this legacy can be seen even through the work of contemporary artists today.

“Piaf! The Show”

  • 7 p.m., Sunday, Feb. 28
  • $25 per household

More than half a million tickets have been sold internationally for this fitting tribute to the French singer-songwriter, cabaret performer and film actress Edith Piaf. Conceived and directed by Nice-based theater producer Gil Marsalla and starring Anne Carrere in the title role, this show is a compilation of Piaf’s memorable songs, such as “Padam…Padam,” “Hymne a l’Amour” and “Non, Je ne Regrette Rien,” arranged to reflect Piaf’s life, from street performer to international star.

Frida Kahlo Event

David Ouellette, “Animals Not Only Companions But Markers of Identity of the Artist”

  • 7 p.m., Thursday, March 4
  • Free

College of DuPage Art History Professor David Ouellette explores the dominating theme of animals in Kahlo’s work. Kahlo was known for her love of animals, giving a home to many at the Casa Azul, and they also took on symbolic meaning in her paintings.

Frida Kahlo Event

Adriana Zavala, “Frida Kahlo’s Creativity: Staging Art, Staging Life”

  • 3 p.m., Sunday, March 7
  • $10 per household

Adriana Zavala, curator of “Frida Kahlo: Art Garden Life,” the 2015 exhibition at the New York Botanical Garden, discusses Kahlo’s keen appreciation for the beauty and variety of the natural world, as evidenced by her home and garden as well as the complex use of plant imagery in her artwork.

Frida Kahlo Gala

For The Love of Frida – Bringing It Home

  • 6 p.m. Saturday, March 20
  • $50-$250

For information, visit www.frida2.givesmart.com

The Texas Tenors

  • 7 p.m. Sunday, April 11
  • $50 per household

By popular demand, The Texas Tenors return to the MAC for a live streamed performance. Broadway World says, “I think what I enjoyed most about the concert was the down-home-come-pull-up-a-chair-and-hang-out genuineness of the men. Despite accolades, Emmy awards, top Billboard recognition, and tours across the world that could make anyone pompous, they are still as friendly and down-to-earth as they appeared in their first interview for America’s Got Talent.”

New Philharmonic: “Rachmaninoff Piano Concertos”

  • 7:30 p.m., Saturday, April 17, then on demand through June 15
  • Featuring Guest Pianist Wael Farouk
  • $40 per household

This concert features Rachmaninoff’s Concerto 1 in F-sharp minor, Concerto 2 in C minor and Concerto 3 in D-minor. Concerto 2 is one of Rachmaninoff’s most enduring works while Concerto 1 was actually Rachmaninoff's second attempt at a piano concerto and is very different from his later works.  Rachmaninoff’s Concerto 3 in D minor builds to what has been described as the Everest of piano concertos. Featured pianist  Dr. Wael Farouk has performed on five continents in such venues as the White Hall in St. Petersburg, Schumann's house in Leipzig, and Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall in New York, where his solo debut performance in 2013 was described as "absolutely masterful." He was last seen at the MAC in “Beethoven: Five Piano Concertos | One Pianist” (2018).

Frida Kahlo Event

John Paris, “Frida Kahlo and the Mexican Revolution”

  • 7 p.m., Wednesday, April 21
  • Free

John Paris, COD Professor of History and Latin American Studies, covers the social and political consequences of the Mexican Revolution, how it sparked the Constitution of 1917, and its impact on members of Mexico’s art community, including Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera.

Frida Kahlo Event

Celia Stahr, “Frida Kahlo, America, and the Impact of Place”

  • 3 p.m., Sunday, April 25
  • $10 per household

The author of “Frida in America: The Creative Awakening of a Great Artist” details Kahlo’s early days in San Francisco, New York and Detroit in the 1930s during the early days of her marriage with Diego Rivera. This period saw major steps towards Kahlo’s creative awakening, which Stahr will explore in this fascinating lecture.

New Philharmonic: “A Salute to Frida”

Featuring Jesse Donner (tenor)

  • 7:30 p.m., Saturday, May 15, then on demand through June 15
  • $40 per household

In anticipation of the summer 2021’s “Frida Kahlo: Timeless” exhibition, New Philharmonic presents a concert celebrating the Hispanic heritage of Frida Kahlo. Selections will include Mexican composer Agustín Lara’s “Granada,” a work that has been covered by everyone from acclaimed Mexican tenor Néstor Mesta Cháyres to Frank Sinatra to Placido Domingo; Danzón No. 2 by Mexican composer Arturo Márquez and “La Virgen de la macarena” by popular Mexican trumperter, Rafael Méndez; plus "Tico-Tico no fubá," a Brazilian choro song written by Zequinha de Abreu; “Castilla” and “Tango” by Spanish composer Isaac Manuel Francisco Albéniz y Pascual; "Malagueña," a song by Cuban composer Ernesto Lecuona and “Bolero” by French composer Maurice Ravel.

Frida Kahlo Event

Karen Cordero, “Frida Kahlo: A Politics of Subjectivity and Self-Representation”

  • 3 p.m., Sunday, May 23
  • $10 per household

Frida Kahlo’s work, little known and appreciated during her lifetime, acquired importance and preeminence in the light of second-wave feminism, precisely because of its distinctive qualities that relate it to the feminist motto, "The personal is political,” that underlies the social, theoretical and cultural contributions of that movement. This talk will examine and contextualize specific works by Kahlo in order to illuminate the relevance of her work to contemporary issues of subjectivity, performativity and self-representation, suggesting a reading of the “Frida Kahlo: Timeless” exhibition through this lens. 

COD College Performances

College Music

Music Fridays @ Noon

  • Noon, Jan. 29 – May 14
  • Free

The COD music faculty created Music Fridays @ Noon to showcase student, faculty, alumni and guest artists in a free, accessible daytime series of music performances and related events. The series is open to the entire COD community as a place where a broad spectrum of music is on display. Concerts are approximately one hour in length.

College Theater

“Under Milk Wood”

  • By Dylan Thomas
  • Directed by Connie Canaday Howard
  • Filmed and produced on Zoom
  • 7 p.m. Feb. 25, then on demand through March 7
  • $16 per household

A narrator invites the audience to listen to the dreams and innermost thoughts of the inhabitants of the fictional small Welsh fishing village this “radio play for voices” Thomas finished just before his death in 1953. First commissioned by the BBC it had its initial broadcast 1954, it has been performed and celebrated by Anthony Hopkins, Richard Burton, Elton John, Catherine Zeta Jones, Elizabeth Taylor, Peter O’Toole, and many others.

College Theater

“War of the Worlds: The Panic Broadcast”

  • Adapted by Joe Landry
  • Directed by Amelia Barrett
  • Filmed and produced on Zoom
  • 7 p.m. April 15, then on demand through April 25
  • $16 per household

In the classic sci-fi novel “The War of the Worlds,” an alien invasion throws humanity into chaos, but it was real-life panic in the streets when listeners mistook Orson Welles's 1938 radio adaptation for news. Complete with vintage commercials and live sound effects, this radio-play-within-a-radio-play is a thrilling homage to the form's golden age and timely reminder of what fear can do to a society.

College Music

DuPage Community Jazz Ensemble

  • Director Matt Shevitz
  • 7:30 p.m., Thursday, May 6
  • $7 per household

This ensemble, under the direction of Matt Shevitz, performs dances and concert programs during the academic year as well as numerous off-campus performances. Its repertoire spans more than a century of large jazz ensemble compositions, including original work from members of the ensemble. The ensemble is a frequent presence at the Elmhurst College Jazz Festival, has performance at the Jazz Showcase in Chicago, and in 2004 was recognized by the United States House of Representatives for its work on behalf of the Armed Forces Children’s Education Fund.

College Music

COD Jazz/Pop Combos

  • Director Matt Shevitz
  • 7:30 p.m. Friday, May 7
  • $7 per household

The Jazz/Pop Combos are designed to address the fundamental concepts of jazz performance. Includes reading a jazz lead sheet, improvising over various forms common in jazz, and constructing small-group arrangements.

College Music

Chamber Orchestra

  • Director Philip Bauman
  • 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, May 11
  • $7 per household

The Chamber Orchestra, under the direction of Philip Bauman, is a mixed group of instrumentalists consisting of student and community members. The ensemble performs both traditional literature for small orchestra/chamber music from the 1600s through the 21st century as well as less traditional chamber orchestra styles such as jazz, contemporary classical, theater and film music.

College Music

Chamber Singers: “Songs For These Times: Music Of Loss, Alienation, Doubt & Hope”

  • Director Lee R. Kesselman
  • 7:30 p.m., Thursday, May 13
  • $7 per household

Chamber Singers specialize in vocal chamber music of all periods with particular emphasis on Renaissance madrigal and motets, music of the 20th century, and the music of many cultures. Contemporary music includes major composers, avant-garde music and arrangements of folk, ethnic and popular music.

 

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