the ohio light opera 2016 season brochure
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Presenting the 2016 Summer Season of America's Premier Lyric Theater FestivalTRANSCRIPT
(1948)
Music and Lyrics by Cole Porter Book by Sam and Bella Spewack
“Another op’nin’, another show.” If ever a musical dispelled persistent rumors that its composer was “washed up,”
it was Cole Porter’s Kiss Me, Kate. Not only the crowning achievement of his remarkable Broadway career, but one of the supreme glories of American musical theater, the show bristles with captivating “Top 40” tunes in a dazzling variety of musical styles, all set, as an extra bonus, to Shakespeare’s comedy of the sexes The Taming of the Shrew. Stage stars Fred Graham and Lilli Vanessi are divorced, but nevertheless still working together in a Baltimore stage production of the Bard’s comedy. Complications arise when Fred hires a perky cabaret performer Lois Lane to perform the role of Bianca, Fred winds up on the wrong side of two gangsters trying to collect a gambling debt, and Lilli hits the ceiling when she is mistakenly delivered flowers from Fred that he intended for Lois. Virtually every song in the score became a hit: “So in Love,” “Why Can’t You Behave?” “Always True to You in My Fashion,” “I Hate Men,” and “Brush Up Your Shakespeare,” to name just a few. Join us in celebrating Cole Porter’s 125th birthday in the season-opening production of Kiss Me, Kate. Wunderbar!
Conductor: Steven Byess
Director: Stephen Carr
Cast includes: Ted Christopher, Brad Baron, Sarah Best, Tanya Roberts,
Hannah Kurth and Stephen Faulk
Premiere
(1946)
Music and Lyrics by Irving BerlinBook by Herbert and Dorothy Fields
“Irving Berlin has no place in American music. HE IS AMERICAN MUSIC.” With these words, penned in 1924, Broadway
composer Jerome Kern captured the essence of the Russian-born immigrant who wrote words and music to some of our most touchingly eloquent song classics, including “God Bless America,” “Always,” “Easter Parade,” and “White Christmas.” But he could let his hair down, too . . . and in 1946 Berlin wrote music and lyrics to a humorous, homespun tale—yet another battle of the sexes—of American folk hero Annie Oakley. Naïve as they come, but a whiz with a rifle, Annie wins a job with Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show and falls hard for its handsome shooting star, Frank Butler. When he feels upstaged by her shooting antics and higher marquee billing, he leaves the show and joins a rival company. Attempts at a merger fail and it remains for Chief Sitting Bull to give Annie a lesson on how to win herself an obstinate man. Berlin churned out one winsome song after another, including “Doin’ What Comes Natur’lly,” “You Can’t Get a Man with a Gun,” “The Girl that I Marry,” “Anything You Can Do,” and what became the unofficial entertainment anthem, “There’s No Business like Show Business.”
Conductor: J. Lynn Thompson
Director: Jacob Allen
Cast includes: Alexa Devlin, Nathan Brian, Emily Hagens, Brad Baron,
Julie Wright Costa
Premiere
(1885)
Music by Arthur Sullivan Libretto by William Gilbert
More than 130 years after its premiere, The Mikado—in the timelessness of its characters and situations, its witty
lyrics, and succession of engaging tunes—remains a wonder of lyric theater. Tailor Ko-Ko, condemned to death for flirting, is reprieved and appointed Lord High Executioner of Titipu. He is betrothed to his ward Yum-Yum, but she has fallen in love with the Mikado’s son Nanki-Poo. Displeased with the lack of executions in Titipu, the Mikado orders that the situation be rectified. Nanki-Poo, distraught because he cannot marry Yum-Yum, agrees to be executed in a month, provided that he can marry her in the meantime. When the Mikado sees Nanki-Poo’s name on Ko-Ko’s falsified execution affidavit, he condemns Ko-Ko to death for compassing the death of the heir-apparent. “A Wand’ring Minstrel I,” “I’ve Got a Little List,” “Three Little Maids from School,” “The Flowers that Bloom in the Spring,” and “Tit-Willow” are but a few of the song gems that have made this the most popular of the G&S shows.
Conductor: J. Lynn Thompson
Director: Ted Christopher
Cast includes: Nathan Brian, Emily Nelson,
Emily Hagens, Benjamin Krumreig, Stephen Faulk, Gretchen Windt,
Alexa Devlin, Samus Haddad
(1917)
Music by Jerome KernBook and Lyrics by Guy Bolton
and P. G. Wodehouse
Following on the heels of The Cabaret Girl and Oh, Lady! Lady!!, the Ohio Light Opera continues its survey of Jerome
Kern’s early groundbreaking musicals with his 1917 Have a Heart. In addition to its predictably enchanting Kern score—one of his most tuneful—the show features book and lyrics by Guy Bolton and master British humorist P. G. Wodehouse (whose wit won over audiences last season in Gershwin’s Oh, Kay!), marking his Broadway full-score debut. The story centers on department store owner Ruddy Schoonmaker and his estranged wife Peggy, who try to salvage their marriage by spending a night at a Rhode Island beach resort. Their reconciliation efforts seem doomed by the appearance there of Ruddy’s recent paramour, movie actress Dolly Brabazon, and of Peggy’s recent wooer, the counterfeiter Capt. Charles Owen. Only at the intervention of elevator boy Henry—whose lines throughout the show, according to Wodehouse and Bolton, had the customers rolling in the aisles—do the romantic entanglements get resolved. Hit songs include the irresistibly catchy “You Said Something,” Henry’s comical “Napoleon,” and the sublime “And I Am All Alone.”
Conductor: J. Lynn Thompson
Director: Steven A. Daigle
Cast includes: Nathan Brian, Sarah Best,
Tanya Roberts, Kyle Yampiro, Stephen Faulk, Spencer Reese
Premiere
(1866)
Music by Jacques OffenbachOriginal French Libretto by Henri Meilhac
and Ludovic HalévyEnglish Translation by Richard Traubner
Few artists stand as tall above their field as does Jacques Offenbach above French operetta. Following his ground-
breaking Orpheus in the Underworld in 1858, he teamed in the mid-1860s with librettists Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halévy to produce six shows—La belle Hélène, Bluebeard, La vie parisienne, The Grand Duchess of Gerolstein, La Périchole, and The Brigands—that remain among the greatest of all French operettas. La vie parisienne, featuring Offenbach at his most effervescent, is the zany tale of a pair of Parisian wannabe bon vivants Gardefeu and Bobinet, who, having failed in their attempts to woo the cocotte Métella, turn their attentions to the visiting Swedish Baroness de Gondremarck. Her husband, the Baron, seeking a fun Parisian holiday, arrives with a letter of introduction to Métella. All wind up at a jolly party at Gardefeu’s home, which the naïve visiting royalty have been led to believe is a hotel. Offenbach’s first attempt at a full-length domestic operetta comedy, the score teems with waltzes, patter songs, ensembles, and a most recognizable can-can.
Conductor: Wilson Southerland
Director: Julie Wright Costa
Cast includes: Kyle Yampiro, Benjamin Krumreig, Gretchen Windt, Ted Christopher,
Meagan Sill, Tanya Roberts
(1939)
Music and Book by Ivor Novello Lyrics by Christopher Hassall
OLO has had request after request over the years . . . finally, here it is: the first American stage production in almost
70 years of Welsh-born Ivor Novello’s The Dancing Years. Novello had a remarkable career: as songwriter (“Keep the Home Fires Burning”), as silent film matinée idol (Alfred Hitchcock’s The Lodger), as Hollywood scriptwriter (credited with the lines “Me Tarzan, You Jane”), as playwright, and as a composer who virtually single-handedly brought romantic musicals (operettas . . . if you like!) back to life in Britain in the 1930s, 40s, and early 50s. The Dancing Years is the tear-jerking story of an opera diva, Maria Ziegler, who befriends and encourages aspiring operetta composer Rudi Kleber. When she misunderstandingly overhears Rudi making a mock marriage proposal to a young woman to whom, years before, he had playfully promised “right of first refusal,” Maria leaves her lover, marries her old admirer, Prince Metterling, and loses all touch with Rudi. Some 12 years later, Rudi and Maria meet again and passions flare . . . but she is accompanied by her 12-year-old son. Song gems include “I Can Give You the Starlight,” “My Dearest Dear,” “Primrose,” and “Waltz of My Heart.”
Conductor: Steven Byess
Director: Steven A. Daigle
Cast includes: Nathan Brian, Sarah Best,
Ted Christopher, Julie Wright Costa, Emily Hagens, Hannah Kurth
Premiere
(1920)
Music by Emmerich KálmánOriginal German Libretto by Leo Stein
and Béla JenbachEnglish Translation by Steven A. Daigle
The year 2015 marked the 100th anni-versary of Hungarian-born Emmerich Kálmán’s operetta Die Csárdásfürstin
(The Gypsy Princess). With this work, the composer began a remarkable—and virtually unprecedented—string of eight consecutive operetta masterpieces for the Vienna stage, all achieving great international popularity. In the third of these, Das Hollandweibchen (The Little Dutch Girl), Kálmán set out to “scale back the . . . modern dance genre and . . . assign a larger role to the chorus . . . modeled on our grand classical operettas.” German Princess Jutta is stood up at her arranged royal wedding by groom Prince Paul, whom she has never met, but who prefers to spend the day sailing on a lake in Holland. Through the machinations of her prime minister, she is nevertheless married by proxy to the absent Prince. She seeks revenge and travels to Hol-land, disguises herself as “a little Dutch girl” Bella, and gets the unsuspecting Prince to fall hard for her—she then reveals her identity and dumps him. The lovesick Paul follows her back to Germany, but to no avail . . . or so it seems. Kálmán’s musical score is masterful, highlighted by a most fiery Hungarian quar-tet and frenzied dance sequence.
Conductor: Steven Byess
Director: Steven A. Daigle
Cast includes: Meagan Sill, Clark Sturdevant,
Jessamyn Anderson, Gretchen Windt, Samus Haddad
Premiere
9ohiolightopera.org
Steven A. Daigle Artistic Director
Julie Wright Costa Associate Artistic Director
J. Lynn Thompson Music Director
32 of the finest young instrumentalists in the country perform in The Ohio Light Opera Orchestra. In addition to accompanying
all productions in Freedlander Theatre, they will again be featured in a special holiday event.
The Company announces the sixteenth annual Pops Concert, to be performed on the evening of July 4th. This is a free concert on the public square in Downtown Wooster and has become a very well-attended annual event.
All production photography in this brochure by Matt Dilyard.
Steven Byess Associate Music Director
Artistic Director Executive Directore-mail: [email protected] e-mail: [email protected]
Laura NeillExecutive Director
THE 2016 SUMMER FESTIVAL SEASONDear Friends of Ohio Light Opera,
As America’s Premier Lyric Theater Festival, The Ohio Light Opera presents outstanding productions of classic operettas and musicals, including shows not staged for many years. Our summer season
for 2016 continues this unique company’s mission to offer its patrons the very best of the lyric theater tradition. The repertoire for our 38th season features famous composers of Golden Age musicals, renowned 19th-century operetta masters, and one of the most popular British composers and personalities of the 20th century. Ivor Novello’s The Dancing Years (1939), Jerome Kern’s Have a Heart (1917), Cole Porter’s Kiss Me, Kate (1948), Irving Berlin’s Annie Get Your Gun (1946), and Emmerich Kálmán’s The Little Dutch Girl (1920) will be OLO premieres. Rounding out the repertoire will be two famous operettas: La Vie Parisienne (1866) by Jacques Offenbach and The Mikado (1885) by Gilbert and Sullivan. Visit us online at ohiolightopera.org for more information and announcements about the upcoming season.
Building on the success of and enthusiastic response to the 2014 and 2015 events, there will be a Festival Symposium on the Lyric Theater Tradition in the 2016 season. It is scheduled for August 2nd through 5th and will feature new lectures, events, and guest speakers.
The works produced during the summer season offer our patrons high-level musical artistry (from both the performers and the orchestra) and visually engaging theatrical values (from sets, costumes, lights, and the actors themselves). Most importantly, through an historical musical journey, whimsical dialogue, satirical plots, memorable melodies, rousing choruses, lovable characters, and full orchestrations, our festival season offers a chance for patrons to escape, be entertained, be amused, and discover the intimate environment of Wooster and the Freedlander Theatre.
Thank you for your commitment to the mission of The Ohio Light Opera. We hope to see you in the inviting atmosphere of our 2016 festival celebration. Your generous and sustaining support makes each season possible.
With warmest regards,
10 Box Office: 330.263.2345
AMERICA’S PREMIER LYRIC THEATER FESTIVAL
For thirty-seven seasons, The Ohio Light Opera has dedicated itself to the exploration and production of the best
of traditional operetta and musical theater. Founded by James Stuart as a Gilbert and Sullivan repertory summer festival, the company has grown to encompass all forms in the light opera canon. This includes the complete Gilbert and Sullivan repertoire, as well as the recognized treasures from the Viennese, French, Hungarian, German, British, and American repertoire. Along with this unique mission, the company also reconstructs and produces those rare operetta titles of artistic value that were popular in their own times but have long since been forgotten. The historical performance practices of each work premiered are delicately balanced with the resources of a state-of-the-art theater and engaging and entertaining performance values. Each summer, between seven and nine titles are presented in a revolving format of approximately 60 performances over a seven-week period. Nearly 20,000 patrons each season see productions in The College of
Wooster’s intimate Freedlander Theatre. Over 100 company members from around the United States are selected each year to become a part of our residency program. The 38 performing artists who make up the vocal ensemble are chosen for their abilities to perform and work at the highest level in all disciplines demanded by the company’s specialized repertoire: singing, acting, and dancing. With over 125 titles produced, over 200 productions, and 575,000 patrons watching, The Ohio Light Opera has become the forerunner in promoting the light opera genre. The company’s contribution to the preservation and promotion of traditional lyric theater has received recognition in prominent national and international publications and its work is frequently cited by leading scholars of operetta and light opera. In residency on The College of Wooster campus, the summer festival offers a country setting with an inviting community that is proud of the unique service this company has given to its many patrons and to the art form.
—Steven A. Daigle
OUR MISSION
Brigadoon, OLO 2015
• Refreshed lobby & fitness facilities
• The Garden Grille & Bar
• Heated indoor pool, whirlpool
• Guestrooms feature microwave oven, refrigerator & Keurig® Brewer.
• Cloud Nine – the Hampton Bed experience• Guestrooms feature mini-refrigerator, microwave & coffeemaker• On the House® hot breakfast• Indoor pool & all new JumpStart® fitness center
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Everything. Right where you need it.®
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Wooster Country Club invites you to
visit and experience a rich tradition of fine service and
relaxing recreation.
Casual dining in a Country Club atmosphere.
Tues-Sun 11am-9pm
Come play golf during your stay!
Call ahead for tee times.
1251 Oak Hill Road330.263.1890
www.woostercountryclub.com
2015 Season Photos by Matt Dilyard
The Yeomen of the Guard
Oh, Kay!
Can-Can Friederike
One Touch of Venus Brigadoon Ruddigore
12 Box Office: 330.263.2345
Tuesday, August 2 - Friday, August 5
A FESTIVAL SYMPOSIUM ON THE LYRIC THEATER TRADITION
Taking Light Opera Seriously
PRESENTERS WILL INCLUDE: MARJAN KIEPURA AND JANE KNOX have devoted a significant part of their married life to preserving the legacy of Marjan’s parents, Marta Eggerth and Jan Kiepura, two of operetta’s most luminous superstars—on stage, on film, and on record. Marjan is an internationally acclaimed pianist, among whose concert appearances are many in which he accompanied his mother, whose last public performance was in 2011 at age 99. Australian-born Jane has spearheaded research and curating on the life and times of Marjan’s parents, and served as executive producer of the 2004 two-CD tribute to Marta.
DANIEL HIRSCHEL, from Weida, Germany, is the true epitome of an operetta factotum. Since finishing theatre history studies at the University of Leipzig, he has served as dramaturg, translator, producer, director, and performer for operettas and operas—both popular and those unjustly neglected. He has lectured and written extensively on Hungarian composer Paul Abraham and collaborated with ARTE TV on the documentary “Paris, Wien, Berlin: A Short History of Operetta.” He maintains one of the world’s largest archives of operetta recordings, and is currently working on a comprehensive encyclopedia of international operetta.
REXTON BUNNETT, from London, has written extensively on musical theater and revue, and is a co-author of London Musical Shows on Record and Collins Guide to Musicals. He has served as consultant at London’s Theatre Museum, is the chairman of the Bunnett-Muir Musical Theatre Archive Trust (known as Overtures), which will be housed at the Victoria and Albert Museum, has produced BBC radio series, including a six-part Harold Arlen appreciation, publishes regular historical profiles of British and American musicals, and is the author of numerous liner notes for CD releases of British musicals.
RICHARD NORTON is the co-author of American Musical Theatre: A Chronicle and the author of the three-volume A Chronology of American Musical Theatre, which reproduces complete playbill information for every musical that has played Broadway since 1866. He has contributed to numerous musical theater publications, including a German monograph devoted to White Horse Inn, and is currently authoring a book on Frederick Loewe.
MICHAEL MILLER is the chair of the Ohio Light Opera Board of Directors and the president of Operetta Foundation, which has produced staged versions of long-forgotten shows and released more than 30 CDs and DVDs of rare operetta and early musical comedy.
SESSION AUGUST 2*/** AUGUST 3* AUGUST 4* AUGUST 5*
Morning Coffee
Session I Lyric Theater Roundtable 1 Lecture Lecture Concert: Operetta and Musical Comedy . . . A Century Ago (Part 1)***
Break
Session II Lecture Concert: Songs from the Cutting-Room Floor*** Lecture Concert: Operetta and Musical Comedy
. . . A Century Ago (Part 2)***
Lunch
Afternoon Session Lecture Lecture Lecture Lecture
Dinner
Evening Session Concert: Play Gypsies! Dance Gypsies!*** Lecture Lecture Lyric Theater Roundtable 2
LIVE CONCERTS: AUGUST 2—PLAY GYPSIES! DANCE GYPSIES! A MUSICAL TRIBUTE TO EMMERICH KÁLMÁN An intimate OLO ensemble takes us on a musical journey into the life of one of operetta’s most performed and revered composers. In this autobiographical entertainment, Kálmán discusses how family tragedies and political persecution led to his creation of some of the most haunting and uplifting melodies in the operetta repertoire. This gala evening, a revival of a program first produced at OLO in 2004, features songs from all 18 of Kálmán’s stage shows.
AUGUST 3—SONGS FROM THE CUTTING-ROOM FLOOR The path from conception to opening night of an operetta or musical was typically a long one, with songs reworked, reassigned, deleted, or added to fit the evolving demands of the show and its stars. This concert, presented by
members of the OLO cast, will feature discussion and performance of songs that were originally cut from the shows of this season’s repertoire.
AUGUST 5—THE LATEST IN OPERETTA AND MUSICAL COMEDY . . . A CENTURY AGO In its mission to promote the finest of lyric theater, OLO presents extended highlights from two shows that opened during the World War I years. Viktor Jacobi’s Sybil, which premiered in Budapest in 1914, is a romantic operetta about an opera diva who is mistaken for the grand duchess. In 1916, Broadway welcomed a musical comedy entitled Follow Me, whose plot centers on the romance of Parisian variety star Claire LaTour. Music was primarily by Harry Tierney, although, interestingly, Sigmund Romberg was credited as composer. The hit tune, “Oh, Johnny, Oh, Johnny, Oh!,” was interpolated into the show during its Broadway run.
*Boxed Lunches available**Cocktail Reception & Dinner. Shuttle service to and from off-site dinner is included
SYMPOSIUM TICKETS—$45/Day—$150/Week • ***Individual concert tickets available, $25/ticketSee page 23 for more detailed cost information
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Championing the cause to
Member SIPC
Dan FagertFinancial Advisor.
543 Riffel Road Suite BWooster, OH 44691330-262-3572
Dan FagertFinancial Advisor543 Riffel Road Suite BWooster, OH 44691330-262-3572
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14 Box Office: 330.263.2345
Jessamyn Anderson
Brad Baron Sarah Best Nathan Brian
Alexandra Camastro
Stephen Faulk Emily Hagens
Benjamin Krumreig
Hannah Kurth Emily Nelson
Royce Strider Clark Sturdevant
Gretchen Windt Kyle YampiroJulie Wright Costa
The 2016 Cast Will Include:
Spencer Reese
Spiro Matsos
Samus Haddad
Isaac Assor Matthew Brennan
Ted Christopher
Cameron Brownell
Tom Carle Jacob Clanton Bailey Cummings Alexa Devlin
Hannah Joy Gauthier
David Geist Matt Kelly Hilary Koolhoven
Audrey Lee Amy Livingston
Katherine Nunn Tanya Roberts Christopher Sapp
Meagan Sill
131 S. Market StreetWooster, Ohio 44691
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• Located in Downtown Wooster• Close to College of Wooster & Ohio Light Opera• Downtown Restaurants & Shopping• 100 Appointed Guest Rooms• Free Hot Breakfast, Wi-Fi, & USA Today • Modern Fitness Center, Massage Shop, Elevator, & Handicapped Room• Hotel Lounge Open Daily
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Reservations: 1-866-264-2057 Phone: 330-264-7750 Fax: 330-262-5840 www.bestwestern.com
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18 Box Office: 330.263.2345
STAY OVERNIGHTTHEATER AND INN PACKAGES
Experience the best of the Wooster area. With one phone call to your chosen lodging, you can arrange an incredible package—complete with gracious accommodations and great theater.
MARKET STREET INN—Bed, Breakfast & Bravo356 N. Market St., Wooster • 330-262-4085 • marketstreetinnwooster.com
A Short walk to the Theater and Downtown Restaurants
Inn and Opera Package—$185 (a $220 value) (valid Monday-Thursday) Ohio Light Opera Performance for 2 Overnight Stay Gourmet Breakfast for 2
Package excludes Suite
BLACK SQUIRREL INN OR MIRABELLE BED AND BREAKFAST 636 College Avenue, Wooster • 330-317-6627 1626 Beall Avenue, Wooster • 330-264-6006 blacksquirrelinn.com mirabellebedandbreakfast.com
Charming Places to Stay, Just a Short Stroll Away
Inn and Opera Package—$198 (a $240 value) Overnight stay at the Black Squirrel Inn OR The Mirabelle Bed and Breakfast with En Suite Bath
Lovely breakfast for 2 Ohio Light Opera Performance for 2 Gourmet Lunch for 2 at the renowned Pine Tree Barn.
(Package available Sunday through Thursday during the OLO season, subject to availability.)
THE WOOSTER INN 801 E. Wayne Ave., Wooster
330-263-2660 • thewoosterinn.com
15% Discount Offer: Valid June 18, 2016 through July 2, 2016 15% Discount for Overnight stay at The Wooster Inn for guests attending an Ohio Light Opera performance.
10% Discount Offer: Valid July 3, 2016 through July 23, 2016 10% Discount for Overnight stay at The Wooster Inn for guests attending an Ohio Light Opera performance.
Each couple will receive a $10 gift card (one per room) when they check in which can be used in either the Pub or Dining Room anytime over the next two years.
Bakery ~ Breakfast ~ Lunch 4776 Kidron Rd ~ Kidron OH 44636www.quincebakeryandcafe.com 330-816-0233
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BROKEN ROCKS CAFÉ & BAKERY123 E. Liberty, Wooster330-263-2949 • brokenrockscafe.com Casual dining with an upscale appeal
Dining and Opera Package—$113 (a $130 value) Ohio Light Opera matinee or evening performance
for 2 $100 Ticket Value for only $88 $30 Gift Card Value for only $25 Valid anytime; good for 1 year from purchase
Open every day except Sunday
THE CITY SQUARE STEAKHOUSE148 S. Market St., Wooster330-262-2489 • citysquaresteakhouse.com A truly exceptional dining experience in a traditional Chicago-style steakhouse
Dining and Opera Package—$153 (a $175 value) Ohio Light Opera matinee or evening performance
for 2 $100 Ticket Value for only $88 $75 Gift Card Value for only $65 Valid anytime
OAK GROVE EATERY151 South Market St., Wooster330-264-3663 • oakgroveeatery.com Innovative seasonal cuisine
Dining and Opera Package— $153 (a $175 value) Ohio Light Opera matinee or evening performance
for 2 $100 Ticket Value for only $88 $50 Gift Card Value for only $40 Valid anytime
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TJ’S RESTAURANT359 W. Liberty, Wooster330-264-6263 • tjsrestaurants.comAffordable, contemporary dining in 3 settings under one roof.
Dining and Opera Package—$113 (a $130 value) Ohio Light Opera matinee or evening performance
for 2 $100 Ticket Value for only $88 $30 Gift Card Value for only $25 Valid anytime; good for 1 year from purchase
Open every day except Sunday
STAY FOR THE DAYTHEATER AND DINING PACKAGES*
Combine great dining with superb Ohio Light Opera performances —convenient, fun and an unbeatable value.
*Call the Box Office at The Ohio Light Opera, 330-263-2345, to purchase your package. Theater tickets and restaurant gift card will be sent to you upon confirmation of purchase.
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OPEN SUNDAYS
330.262.2489 We serve gourmet breakfast and lunch!
Mon. - Thur. 7:30 am - 5 pmFri. - Sat. 7:30 am - 7 pm • Sun. 11 am - 4 pm
122 South Market St.,Wooster, Oh 44691330-264-8092
The Home of Old World Pastries and World Class Coffees
122 South Market St., Wooster, Oh 44691330-264-8092
We serve gourmet breakfast and lunch!
The Home of Old World Pastriesand World Class Coffees
Open Mon. - Sat. 7:30 am - 6 pmSun. 11 am - 4 pm
21ohiolightopera.org
Season Subscriptions: Subscribe for the Season! Choose four, five, six, or seven performances at a dis-count from individual ticket prices.
Individual Ticket Pricing (Musicals/Operettas) Single Tickets .........................................................$52/$48 Students (ages: 16-23) ................................................. $20 Children (ages: 3-15) ...................................................... $10
Subscription Rates (Musicals/Operettas—Price Per Ticket)
7 Different Performances ...................................$45/$41 6 Different Performances .................................. $47/$43 5 Different Performances ................................. $48/$44 4 Different Performances ................................. $50/$46
Ordering Tickets: The Ohio Light Opera accepts Visa, MasterCard, and Discover Card. You may call 330-263-2345, order tickets online at ohiolightopera.org, or mail your order to the box office at:
The Ohio Light Opera The College of Wooster 1189 Beall Avenue Wooster, OH 44691
If you have requested your tickets to be mailed, you will receive them at least one month prior to the per-formance. No refunds. No cancellations.
Box Office Location & Hours: (Please note the locations of our winter & summer offices)
January 13-May 20, 2016: The Ohio Light Opera The College of Wooster Westminster Church House (Corner of College and E. Pine) Wooster, OH 44691
May 23-August 13, 2016: Freedlander Theatre 329 East University Street Wooster, OH 44691
Monday-Friday 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Saturday* 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Sunday* 12 noon-3 p.m. *Weekend hours begin June 11, 2016
24-Hour Order Online: Visit our secure web site, ohiolightopera.org, to view available seats, order, and pay for your tickets. Subscription rates are available for phone, fax, and mail order only.
Group Discounts: Last year, more than 2,000 people saw Ohio Light Opera performances with our group discount plan. (Musicals/Operettas)
20-46 people ..................................... $49/$45 per ticket 47-100 people ...................... $48.50/$44.50 per ticket over 100 people ................................$48/$44 per ticket
Put together a group of people and come to Wooster for an afternoon or evening of operetta—a joy for all at wonderful savings! Call the Box Office at 330-263-2345 or 330-263-2329 to order tickets for your group. Our group sales coordinator will be glad to assist you with your plans.
Ticket Exchanges: You have the privilege of exchanging tickets, subject to availability, within the 2016 season.
Tickets being exchanged must be RECEIVED in the ticket office no later than 48 hours prior to the per-formance date on the original tickets. Exchanges may be made in person or by mail. There is a $2.00 PER TICKET charge for exchanges. No other exchanges are possible.
Unused Tickets: Ticket holders unable to use or ex-change their tickets may notify the ticket office so that those tickets can be resold. These “turnbacks” make seats available to other music lovers and can provide additional income to the Opera.
Lost Tickets: If you lose your original tickets, dupli-cates can be made for you.
Student Tickets: Patrons may purchase tickets for stu-dents. Babes in arms will not be admitted to perfor-mances.
Air Conditioning: Freedlander Theatre is air condi-tioned. Some Ohio Light Opera patrons might like to bring a sweater or jacket to wear during the perfor-mance.
Decorum Reminder: Freedlander Theatre is an inti-mate space. Please keep in mind that talking during the overture and/or throughout the performance is dis-tracting to fellow audience members as well as to the performing company. Also, please refrain from opening noisy candy or gum wrappers during the show. Please turn off all noise-emitting devices before entering the theater. Photography and recordings of any kind are prohibited.
Late Seating: All performances begin promptly at 2 p.m. for matinees and 7:30 p.m. for evening shows. In deference to the comfort and listening pleasure of the audience in the house, late-arriving patrons will not be seated while the performance is in progress. Latecom-ers are asked to wait quietly until the first convenient break in the program, when ushers will assist you into the theatre. These arrangements are at the discretion of the House Manager in consultation with the artistic director and performing artists. Thank you for your co-operation.
Pre-Performance Talks Friday and Saturday Evenings at 6:30 p.m.: Enhance your enjoyment of the evening’s performance by learning lesser-known facts about the show’s history and tips to recognize the unique special pleasures of each show. We feature lecturers seasoned in the experience and study of op-eretta. No reservations are necessary. Lectures begin promptly at 6:30 p.m. and are held in the Lean Lecture Room, down the hall from Freedlander Theatre Lobby. Check for signs in the lobby for the location of these informative and free gatherings!
A Festival Symposium on the Lyric Theater Tradition: Daily Price .......................................................................$45 4 Day Price ................................................................... $150 See page 12 for details and schedule
TICKET INFORMATION & PRICES
22 Box Office: 330.263.2345
OLO 2016 Festival Special Events JUNE 18 Opening Night Gala The audience is invited to celebrate the opening of our 38th Summer Season by attending our Opening Reception in Freedlander lobby following the 7:30 p.m. performance of Kiss Me, Kate.
JULY 4 Pops Concert 7-8 p.m. Downtown Wooster
JULY 12 “Children’s Introduction to Theater” 1-2 p.m. Freedlander Theatre Lobby
AUGUST 2-5 A Festival Symposium on The Lyric Theater Tradition Individual tickets available for Symposium Concert Series, $25/ticket• 8/2 Play Gypsies! Dance Gypsies!—$25/ticket• 8/3 Songs from The Cutting-Room Floor—$25/ticket• 8/5 Operetta & Musical Comedy Part I & II—$25/ticket
THE OHIO LIGHT OPERA 2016 PERFORMANCE CALENDARAll Performances at Freedlander Theatre, 329 East University Street, Wooster, OH 44691
★Indicates an Opening Performance* Indicates a Pre-Performance Talk at 6:30 p.m. prior to Friday & Saturday evening performances.
Informative & Free!
SUNDAY MON TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY
2PM 2PM 2PM 7:30PM 2PM 7:30PM 2PM 7:30PM 2PM 7:30PM
June 18
★Kiss Me Kate*
June 19 June 20 June 21 June 22 June 23 June 24 June 25
Kiss Me Kate
★Annie Get Your Gun
Annie Get Your Gun
Kiss Me Kate*
June 26 June 27 June 28 June 29 June 30 July 1 July 2
Kiss Me Kate
Annie Get Your Gun
★The
Mikado
Kiss Me Kate
The Mikado
Annie Get Your Gun*
July 3 July 4 July 5 July 6 July 7 July 8 July 9
POPS CONCERT
Kiss Me Kate
★Have A Heart
The Mikado
Annie Get Your Gun
Have A Heart*
July 10 July 11 July 12 July 13 July 14 July 15 July 16
Annie Get Your Gun
★La Vie
Parisienne
Kiss Me Kate
Have A Heart
Annie Get Your Gun*
La Vie Parisienne
The Mikado*
July 17 July 18 July 19 July 20 July 21 July 22 July 23
★ The Dancing
Years
Kiss Me Kate
The Mikado
The Dancing
Years
La Vie Parisienne*
Have A Heart
Annie Get Your Gun*
July 24 July 25 July 26 July 27 July 28 July 29 July 30
Annie Get Your Gun
Kiss Me Kate
★The LittleDutch Girl
The Dancing
Years
La Vie Parisienne
Annie Get Your Gun
Have A Heart*
Kiss Me Kate
The Mikado*
July 31 Aug 1 August 2 August 3 August 4 August 5 August 6
The LittleDutch Girl
The LittleDutch Girl
The Mikado
Kiss Me Kate
La Vie Parisienne
The Dancing
Years
Have A Heart
Annie Get Your Gun* The Little
Dutch GirlKiss Me Kate*
Festival Symposium On The Lyric Theater Tradition, August 2-5
August 7 Aug 8 August 9 August 10 August 11 August 12 August 13
Kiss Me Kate
Annie Get Your Gun
La Vie Parisienne
The Dancing
Years
The LittleDutch Girl
Kiss Me Kate
Have A Heart*
Annie Get Your Gun
The Mikado*
For more detailed information regarding our events, please log on to ohiolightopera.org or call The Ohio Light Opera box office at 330-263-2345.
23ohiolightopera.org
Please list alternate dates, when possible, to allow for sold-out performances.
Kiss Me, KateMUSICAL
Annie Get Your GunMUSICAL
The MikadoOPERETTA
Have a HeartMUSICAL
La Vie ParisienneOPERETTA
The Dancing YearsOPERETTA
The Little Dutch GirlOPERETTA
TOTAL
Number Individual Shows of Tickets Date Price* TOTAL
*Single Tickets: Musicals $52/Operettas $48 Students $20 (ages 16-23) • Children $10 (ages 3-15)
*Subscription pricing can be found on page 21.
Please include my tax-deductible contribution in the amount of
TOTAL ENCLOSED
( )
Name
Address
City
State Zip
Phone with answering service
❑My check # in the amount of $ is enclosed and made payable to The Ohio Light Opera.
Please charge my
❑VISA ❑MasterCard ❑Discover
Card No.
Expiration Date
Signature
❑Please check this box ONLY IF you wish to have your tickets held at the Box Office.
❑Please send me information about The College of Wooster.
❑Please send me The Ohio Light Opera Gift Shop price list.
❑My employer, , has matching funds available for my contribution.
❑Send a brochure to:
THE OHIO LIGHT OPERA TICKET ORDER FORM
Mail to: The Ohio Light Opera
The College of Wooster1189 Beall Avenue, Wooster, Ohio 44691
Phone: 330-263-2345
Individual Tickets Available Online at ohiolightopera.org
Symposium Tickets—$45/Day $150/4 daysIndividual tickets available for Symposium Concert Series, $25/ticket Boxed Lunches—$12/day $40/4 days Aug. 2 Cocktail Reception & Dinner—$55.
Symposium Tickets
8/2 8/3 8/4 8/5
Boxed Lunches 8/2 8/3 8/4 8/5
Reception & Dinner*/** 8/2
Number of Tickets Total
Please check for vegetarian option
Circle Dates
*limited availability
** Cocktail Reception & Dinner off site. Shuttle service to and from dinner is included.
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