The John Williams and Steven Spielberg benefit concert with The Phoenix Symphony

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WILLIAMS | SPIELBERG

A Benefit Concert for Education


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Dear Symphony Patrons, Welcome to the 2013/14 Season! The Phoenix Symphony is thrilled to present a season of big music and big names including Steven Spielberg and John Williams, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9, Verdi’s Requiem, Lang Lang, Emanuel Ax and more. Your orchestra offers something for everyone with awe-inspiring Classics and Pops, one-of-a-kind Specials and dynamic Family concerts. You can also experience the Symphony through a number of unique fundraising events such as Parties of Note, Savor the Symphony Women’s Luncheon and our collaborative TRIO Gala. We achieved a number of milestones during the highly successful 2012/13 Season such as: launching a multi-year Music Director Search; being featured at the 2012 League of American Orchestras conference as an industry benchmark for our turnaround efforts; producing a first-in-the-nation education program, Mind Over Music, a collaborative initiative that trains teachers to integrate music into STEM concepts, and so much more. We also launched the B-Sharp Music Wellness Initiative, a program in partnership with Scottsdale Healthcare Shea Medical Center, Circle the City and Lodestar Day Resource Center, using music as a catalyst for joy and self-expression for individuals who often feel powerless or silenced. We are proud to tell you that the Symphony has been able to retire all of the debt that the association carried, which represents the final step in the overall stabilization of the orchestra. This success is just the capstone to a two-year process that has seen many notable successes such as increased ticket sales and contributed revenue, record attendance numbers, and increased venue capacity utilization. The retirement of this debt, combined with continued operational and artistic success sets the stage for the long term health and growth of your Phoenix Symphony. We are excited to present the 2013/14 Season. With our improved financial stability, we have been able to line up some of the biggest names and biggest music in the orchestral world. None of this would be possible without the continued and generous support of patrons and donors like you. On behalf of The Phoenix Symphony Board of Directors, musicians and staff, thank you for joining us. You are making a valuable and positive difference in the quality of life in our community and an investment in a bright future for our state for generations to come. Please feel free to introduce yourself to our staff at any concert and give us your feedback. Again, thank you for your support and patronage and I look forward to meeting you at a concert this Season. See you at the Symphony,

Jim Ward, President & CEO

The Phoenix Symphony 2013/14 SeaSon

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Letter from the Publisher Welcome Friends, ON Media Publications grew up in the theater. Chapter One of our company’s story began with a handful of performing arts groups in Southern Arizona. The plot was simple. We would take on the financial responsibility of publishing their program books to allow them to direct their endless talent and limited resources to what they do best, create magic on the stage. During our nearly four decades in operation, we expanded from that original handful (still happily with us!) to serve as the publisher of more than 30 visitor guides, program books and golf spectator guides. A unique new partnership which launched this summer is with Eight, Arizona PBS, publishing the monthly Eight Magazine. We are thrilled to welcome Eight as our newest member of ON Media partners. Stay tuned for more exciting news as this friendship develops. With our roots in the theater, we have learned a lot about strong performances. While backstage, the ON Media team has picked up a number of lessons that help guide our company; speak clearly, hit your marks, keep your eye on the spotlight, don’t upstage your colleagues and you are only as good as your last performance. This is invaluable advice for all of us as we build ON Media’s reputation...one performance at a time. A noteworthy moment at this year’s Tony Awards was Cyndi Lauper’s win for Best Original Score, for her musical “Kinky Boots.” I have always admired her for her ability to make everything she does seem like fun. In her acceptance speech, my admiration increased as the show-biz veteran acknowledged the hard working ensemble behind the award, “My wonderful team, you guys inspire me.” I invite all of you to meet ON Media’s wonderful team by visiting our newly designed website, onmediaaz.com. Each work day, and more work nights than I like to admit, they do the hard work of making our publications possible while...enjoying the experience, and making it all look like fun!

Publisher: Linda “Mac” Perlich Chief Financial Officer: Mark Kochman Director of Sales & Marketing: Lesley Bennett Director of Operations: Richard Blankley Production Manager: Kendra Uchida Director of External Affairs: Colin Columna Account Exectives: Dee Anne Thomas Deidra Viberg Tracy Turner Printed By: Courier Graphics

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Please remember to KEEP THE BOOK. Take it home to read up on all the latest and greatest news occurring on and off stage. Enjoy.

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Re: Reinvent Performance From: Practice To: Perfect

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the phoenix

symphony

Founded in 1947, The Phoenix Symphony is Arizona’s largest performing arts organization. Whether in Symphony Hall, the Scottsdale Center for the Performing Arts, the Mesa Performing Arts Center or other venues across the state, we present over 200 of the highest quality and broadest range of live orchestral concerts: explosive classical works, world premieres, hits from Broadway and imaginative collaborative performances. The same high standards that we apply to our stage, we extend to our Education and Community Outreach programs. Thousands of parents and children attend our Sunday afternoon literacy-themed Family concerts. Through performances for students in Symphony Hall or at schools, discount tickets, and diverse, educational outreach programs like One Nation or Mind Over Music, each year we reach over 85,000 young people who might not otherwise experience live Symphonic music. Our community engagement extends to even more underserved populations like those living in homeless shelters or staying in hospitals where we provide the pleasures of music to those who need comfort. We are proud to continue our 67-year tradition of contributing to the culture, vibrancy and enrichment of the entire state. Most importantly, we are grateful to our subscribers, donors, volunteers and Board whose generous support makes our work possible.

The Phoenix Symphony’s Vision & Mission The vision of The Phoenix Symphony is to be the arts leader in the revitalization of a thriving Arizona. Our mission is to provide the joy of music as a catalyst in helping Arizona to become the best place in America to work and live. We will do this by creating high quality musical experiences to feed the souls of our residents, bolster the cultural economy, and educate and strengthen our next generation, resulting in a creative workforce.

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From Beethoven to Broadway. BMO Private Bank is proud to support The Phoenix Symphony. For more information, please contact: Matt H. Miller Senior Managing Director 480-348-7700 Tim K. Schultz Regional Director 480-348-7713

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The art of performance draws our eyes to the stage

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Message From The Chairman

It is with great excitement and enthusiasm that I welcome you to

this once-in-a-lifetime benefit concert conducted by John Williams with special guest Steven Spielberg. When John Williams and Steven Spielberg met in 1972, Williams had nearly 20 years of film and TV scoring behind him and Spielberg was a 25 year-old television director about to shoot his first theatrical feature. When they agreed to work together, arguably the most successful film music partnership in Hollywood history was born. Tonight, we’ll all get to experience that history together. This performance serves as a major fundraising opportunity for The Phoenix Symphony, with proceeds dedicated to our Education and Community Engagement programs. We are both humbled and honored that Maestro Williams and Steven Spielberg have generously donated their time and talent for tonight’s engagement. The Phoenix Symphony values and understands the critical importance of our next generation. As an arts leader in the revitalization of a thriving Arizona, the Symphony has dedicated itself to supporting a creative workforce by impacting students through exceptional music education programs and to feeding the souls of residents through meaningful community outreach. The Phoenix Symphony’s investment in education and our community results in the engagement of nearly 300,000 adults, children and families from across our state each year. Our heartfelt gratitude goes out to the musicians of The Phoenix Symphony. It is their constant dedication and commitment to our community that makes all that we do possible, both on and off the stage. On behalf of The Phoenix Symphony Board of Directors, musicians and staff, thank you for joining us this evening. It is because of the leadership and support from individuals like you that The Phoenix Symphony has been able to inspire, educate and entertain our community for the past 66 years. Sincerely, Chairman, Board of Directors

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Index TPS3-4 Board of Directors TPS5-6 The Phoenix Symphony Orchestra TPS7-8 Concert Program TPS9-11 John Williams Biography TPS11-13 Steven Spielberg Biography TPS14 A Special Thank You to Nan & C.A. Howlett TPS15-18 Education & Outreach Programs TPS19 A Special Thank You from the President & CEO TPS20-23 This Evening’s Supporters TPS24 The Phoenix Symphony Administrative Staff

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The Phoenix Symphony Association BOARD OF DIRECTORS C.A. Howlett Chair Gerald W. Murphy Chair Emeritus Jim Ward President & CEO David R. Bornemann Vice Chair John Graham Vice Chair Linda Hunt Secretary & Vice Chair Malcolm Jozoff Vice Chair Lee R. Nickloy Vice Chair Douglas Scheetz Treasurer & Vice Chair David J. Barnett Charles Berginc Cameron Black Donald E. Brandt Jaime Brennan Molly DeFilippis Mark Dix David E. Dodge Drake Duane, M.D. Max Fose

Eliot A. Minsker Nate Mitchell, Union Representative Ryan B. Opel Frederick M. Pakis Tim K. Schultz David A. Selden Councilman Tom Simplot Gena Trimble John C. Vryhof Melani Walton

HONORARY TRUSTEES Hugh Downs Roy A. Herberger, Jr., Ph.D. Richard B. Snell John O. Whiteman

As of September 2013

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The Phoenix Symphony Association CONTINUED LIFETIME DIRECTORS Arthur D. Ehrenreich Hazel Hare

Jeanne L. Herberger, Ph.D. K. David Lindner

E. Louis Werner Dr. Edwin H. Wolf

BOARD OF THE PHOENIX SYMPHONY SUPPORT FOUNDATION Gerald W. Murphy Chair Hugh Downs Gary K. Herberger

Neal Kurn William S. Levine Doug Scheetz

Jim Ward John D. Zicarelli

VOLUNTEER PRESIDENTS’ COUNCIL Margaret McQuarrie Phoenix Symphony Allegro Kristin Bloomquist Phoenix Symphony Board of Overseers

Paula Strano Phoenix Symphony Chorus Dr. James Kort Physicians for The Phoenix Symphony

Matt Engle Phoenix Symphony Young Professionals Board

Judy McCarthy Phoenix Symphony Friends

BOARD OF OVERSEERS Kristin Bloomquist Chair Bruce Cole Jane Cole Jim Copenhaver Virginia Counts Councilman Sal DiCiccio Kimberly Dorris Cheryl Hintzen-Gaines Mayor Phil Gordon Laura Grafman MaryAnn Guerra Dave Howell Keven Jones Thomas Jones

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Jane Jozoff Don Kredel Marilyn Kredel Chris Krygier John Lewis Dr. Kimberly Marshall Clarence McAllister Mim McClennen Troy McNemar Larry Miller Ron Mogel Dee Dee Nadler Michael O’Neil Gail Pletnick

Doris Elaine Pope Laura Porter Jaclyn Roessel Aaron Searles Dr. Amy Silverthorn Reece Stigler Suzanne Stigler Mary Louise Sunderland Dr. Mark Syms Jack Thomas Joseph C. Thompson David Tierney Mary Jo Wilmes

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The Phoenix Symphony Orchestra FIRST VIOLINS Steven Moeckel Concertmaster / The Herberger Foundation Music Director Laureate Chair Magdalena Martinic-Jercic Associate Concertmaster / John and Ellen Ford Chair Dian D’Avanzo Assistant Concertmaster Mary K. Yearley Chair by Douglas C. Yearley Cindy Rosin Berginc Nancy Livingston Chun-Yi Lu Dana Pasley Carter Pendell Lan Qiu Karen Sinclair Levon Zarasian Jing Zeng

SECOND VIOLINS Anna Kim Kazepides Principal Dumitru Lazarescu Acting Associate Principal / Freda Levine Chair Leslie Frey Anderegg Acting Assistant Principal Cheryl Bintz Adrienne Geisler Tessa Gotman Melanie Levin Aaron Requiro Robert Strava Ron Whaley

VIOLAS Mark Deatherage Acting Principal Mathieu Page-Bouchard Acting Associate Principal Christopher McKay Acting Assistant Principal Karen Bea** Mark Dix Dan Dumitriu Yang Yu

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The Phoenix Symphony Orchestra CELLOS

CONTINUED

HORNS

Peter Anderegg Acting Principal / Elizabeth Shaw Chair Jan Simiz Acting Associate Principal Frederick Chao Michael D’Avanzo Florence Pool Laurie Stearns Selby

Gabriel Kovach Principal Stephen Aaron Cassie Walck Associate Principal Gregory Umber Nancy Dimond Assistant Principal

TRUMPETS

DOUBLE BASSES Michael Kazepides Acting Principal Jonathan Imsande Acting Associate Principal Steve Koscica Assistant Principal / Evelyn D. Barnard Chair John Ebinger Glenn Stallcop

FLUTES Viviana Cumplido Wilson Principal Brian Gordon Associate Principal & Piccolo

Charles Berginc Principal Emery Harvison Assistant Principal Ben Nguyen Associate Principal

TROMBONES Christopher Wolf Principal A. Michael Brown [Open Position] Bass Trombone / Mr. & Mrs. E. Louis Werner Jr. Chair

TUBA David Pack Principal

OBOES Marian Buswell Principal Damien Shindelman* Paula Engerer Associate Principal & English Horn Mr. & Mrs. Richard Snell Chair

TIMPANI Bruce Pulk Principal Steve Fitch Associate Principal

CLARINETS Alexander Laing Principal Richmond Johnson Steve Hanusofski Associate Principal & Bass Clarinet Sol and Esther Drescher Chair, by Susan and Mark Mulzet

PERCUSSION Steve Fitch Fred Marderness

PERSONNEL Orchestra Personnel Manager ** Assistant Orchestra Personnel Manager *

BASSOONS

LIBRARIANS

Bonnie Wolfgang Principal Marlene Mundwiler Mazzuca Associate Principal Erik Ludwig Bassoon & Contrabassoon John Jay and Sandra Day O’Connor Chair

Katelyn Smith Acting Head Librarian

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STAGE CREW Jason Lewis Production Stage Manager Eddie Rita Assistant Stage Manager

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A Benefit Concert Conducted by John Williams with Special Guest Steven Spielberg Saturday, September 28, 2013 at 7:30 pm Symphony Hall John Williams, conductor Steven Spielberg, special guest

Whiting (arr. Williams)

Hooray for Hollywood (with film)

Williams

Suite from Far and Away

Williams

Three Pieces from Harry Potter Hedwig’s Theme Nimbus 2000 Harry’s Wondrous World

Williams

Dartmoor, 1912 from War Horse

Williams

Main Title from Star Wars INTERMISSION

This Evening’s Performance Is Generously Sponsored By: Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arizona The Dorrance Family Foundation Arizona State University Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts Integrated Web Strategies Swift Transportation DMB Associates Northern Trust

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ONMedia Anonymous Eric Crown Hazel Hare Nan & C.A. Howlett Doug Scheetz Sheila Schwartz Craig & Connie Weatherup TPS7


A Benefit Concert Conducted by John Williams with Special Guest Steven Spielberg CONTINUED

INTERMISSION Presenting Steven Spielberg Williams

Excerpts from Close Encounters of the Third Kind (with film)

Williams

The Circus Train Chase from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (with film)

Williams

The Duel from The Adventures of Tintin (with film)

Williams

Theme from Schindler’s List

Williams

Adventures on Earth from E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial

VIDEO CREDITS Hooray for Hollywood and The Adventures of Tintin montages Video Producer: Laura Gibson Edited by Scott Draper Close Encounters of the Third Kind montage Video Producer: Laura Gibson Edited by Willie Castro

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John Williams

In a career that spans five decades, John Williams has become

one of America’s most accomplished and successful composers for film and for the concert stage. He has served as music director and laureate conductor of one of the country’s treasured musical institutions, the Boston Pops Orchestra, and he maintains thriving artistic relationships with many of the world’s great orchestras, including the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the New York Philharmonic, the Chicago Symphony and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Mr. Williams has received a variety of prestigious awards, including the National Medal of Arts, the Kennedy Center Honor, the Olympic Order, and numerous Academy Awards, Grammy Awards, Emmy Awards and Golden Globe Awards. He remains one of our nation’s most distinguished and contributive musical voices. Mr. Williams has composed the music and served as music director for more than one hundred films. His 40-year artistic partnership with director Steven Spielberg has resulted in many of Hollywood’s most acclaimed and successful films, including Schindler’s List, E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial, Jaws, Jurassic Park, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, the Indiana Jones films, Saving Private Ryan, Amistad, Munich, Hook, Catch Me If You Can, Minority Report, A.I. Artificial Intelligence, Empire of the Sun, The Adventures of TinTin and War Horse. Their latest collaboration, the critically acclaimed Lincoln, was released in November of 2012. Mr. Williams composed the scores for all six Star Wars films, the first three Harry Potter films, Superman, JFK, Born on the Fourth of July, Memoirs of a Geisha, Far and Away, The Accidental Tourist, Home Alone, Nixon, The Patriot, Angela’s Ashes, Seven Years in Tibet, The Witches of Eastwick, Rosewood, Sleepers, Sabrina, Presumed Innocent, The Cowboys, The Reivers and Goodbye, Mr. Chips among many others. He has worked with many legendary directors, including Alfred Hitchcock, William Wyler and Robert Altman. In 1971, he adapted the score for the film version of Fiddler on the Roof, for which he composed original violin

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cadenzas for renowned virtuoso Isaac Stern. He has appeared on recordings as pianist and conductor with Itzhak Perlman, Joshua Bell, Jessye Norman, and others. Mr. Williams has received five Academy Awards and forty-eight Oscar nominations, making him the Academy’s most-nominated living person and the second-most nominated person in the history of the Oscars. He also has received seven British Academy Awards (BAFTA), twenty-one Grammys, four Golden Globes, five Emmys, and numerous gold and platinum records. Born and raised in New York, Mr. Williams moved to Los Angeles with his family in 1948, where he studied composition with Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco. After service in the Air Force, he returned to New York to attend the Juilliard School, where he studied piano with Madame Rosina Lhevinne. While in New York, he also worked as a jazz pianist, both in nightclubs and on recordings. He returned to Los Angeles and began his career in the film industry, working with a number of accomplished composers including Bernard Herrmann, Alfred Newman, and Franz Waxman. He went on to write music for more than 200 television films for the groundbreaking, early anthology series Alcoa Theatre, Kraft Television Theatre, Chrysler Theatre and Playhouse 90. His more recent contributions to television music include the well-known theme for NBC Nightly News (“The Mission”), the theme for what has become network television’s longest-running series, NBC’s Meet the Press, and a new theme for the prestigious PBS arts showcase Great Performances.

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In addition to his activity in film and television, Mr. Williams has composed numerous works for the concert stage, among them two symphonies, and concertos for flute, violin, clarinet, viola, oboe and tuba. His cello concerto was commissioned by the Boston Symphony Orchestra and premiered by YoYo Ma at Tanglewood in 1994. Mr. Williams also has filled commissions by several of the world’s leading orchestras, including a bassoon concerto for the New York Philharmonic entitled “The Five Sacred Trees,” a trumpet concerto for the Cleveland Orchestra, and a horn concerto for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. “Seven for Luck”, a seven-piece song cycle for soprano and orchestra based on the texts of former U.S. Poet Laureate Rita Dove, was premiered by the Boston Symphony at Tanglewood in 1998. At the opening concert of their 2009/2010 season, James Levine led the Boston Symphony in the premiere Mr. Williams’ “On Willows and Birches,” a new concerto for harp and orchestra. In January 1980, Mr. Williams was named nineteenth music director of the Boston Pops Orchestra, succeeding the legendary Arthur Fiedler. He currently holds the title of Boston Pops Laureate Conductor which he assumed following his retirement in December, 1993, after fourteen highly successful seasons. He also holds the title of Artist-in-Residence at Tanglewood. One of America’s best known and most distinctive artistic voices, Mr. Williams has composed music for many important cultural and commemorative events. “Liberty Fanfare”

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was composed for the rededication of the Statue of Liberty in 1986. “American Journey,” written to celebrate the new millennium and to accompany the retrospective film The Unfinished Journey by director Steven Spielberg, was premiered at the “America’s Millennium” concert in Washington, D.C. on New Year’s Eve, 1999. His orchestral work “Soundings” was performed at the celebratory opening of Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles. In the world of sport, he has contributed musical themes for the 1984, 1988, and 1996 Summer Olympic Games, the 2002 Winter Olympic Games, and the 1987 International Summer Games of the Special Olympics. In 2006, Mr. Williams composed the theme for NBC’s presentation of NFL Football. Mr. Williams holds honorary degrees from twenty-one American universities, including The Juilliard School, Boston College,

Northeastern University, Tufts University, Boston University, the New England Conservatory of Music, the University of Massachusetts at Boston, The Eastman School of Music, the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, and the University of Southern California. He is a recipient of the 2009 National Medal of Arts, the highest award given to artists by the United States Government. In 2003, he received the Olympic Order, the IOC’s highest honor, for his contributions to the Olympic movement. He served as the Grand Marshal of the 2004 Rose Parade in Pasadena, and was a recipient of the Kennedy Center Honor in December of 2004. Mr. Williams was inducted into the American Academy of Arts & Sciences in 2009, and in January of that same year he composed and arranged “Air and Simple Gifts” especially for the first inaugural ceremony of President Barack Obama.

Steven Spielberg

Steven Spielberg, one of the industry’s most successful and in-

fluential filmmakers, is a principal partner of DreamWorks Studios. Formed in 2009, Spielberg and Stacey Snider lead the motion picture company in partnership with The Reliance Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group. Spielberg is also, collectively, the top-grossing director of all time, having helmed such blockbusters as “Jaws,” “E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial,” the “Indiana Jones” franchise, and “Jurassic Park.” Among his myriad honors, he is a three-time Academy Award® winner. Spielberg took home his first two Oscars®, for Best Director and Best Picture, for the internationally lauded “Schindler’s List,” which

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received a total of seven Oscars®. The film was also named the Best Picture of 1993 by many of the major critics organizations, in addition to winning seven BAFTA Awards and three Golden Globe Awards, both including Best Picture and Director. Spielberg also won the Directors Guild of America (DGA) Award for his work on the film. Spielberg won his third Academy Award®, for Best Director, for the World War II drama “Saving Private Ryan,” which was the highest-grossing release (domestically) of 1998. It was also one of the year’s most honored films, earning four additional Oscars®, as well as two Golden Globe Awards, for Best Picture - Drama and Best Director, and numerous critics groups awards in the same categories. Spielberg also won another DGA Award, and shared a Producers Guild of America (PGA) Award with the film’s other producers. That same year, the PGA also presented Spielberg with the prestigious Milestone Award for his historic contribution to the motion picture industry. He has also earned Academy Award® nominations for Best Director for “Munich,” “E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial,” “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” and “Lincoln.” Additionally, he earned DGA Award nominations for those films, as well as “Jaws,” “The Color Purple,” “Empire of the Sun,” and “Amistad.” With eleven to date, Spielberg has been honored by his peers with more DGA Award nominations than any other director. In 2000, he received the DGA’s Lifetime Achievement Award. He is also the recipient of the Irving G. Thalberg Award from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and

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Sciences, the Hollywood Foreign Press’s Cecil B. DeMille Award, the Kennedy Center Honor, and numerous other career tributes. In 2012, Spielberg directed Academy Award winner Daniel Day-Lewis in “Lincoln,” based in part on Doris Kearns Goodwin’s “Team of Rivals,” with a screenplay by Tony Kushner. The DreamWorks Pictures/Twentieth Century Fox film, in association with Participant Media, garnered 12 Academy Award nominations and has earned $275 million worldwide. The film won two Oscars, including Daniel Day-Lewis’ third Oscar for Best Actor playing the iconic 16th President, as well as Best Production Design. Before “Lincoln,” Spielberg directed the 3D animated film “The Adventures of Tintin,” winner of the Golden Globe for Best Animated Feature Film. He also directed “War Horse,” based on an award-winning novel, which was adapted into a major stage hit in London and New York, winning the Tony Award for Broadway’s Best Play. “War Horse” was nominated for six Academy Awards including Best Picture. In 2011, he also produced the box-office success “Super 8” directed by JJ Abrams and executive produced the third “Transformers” film directed by Michael Bay which has grossed over $1 billion at the worldwide box office. Spielberg’s career began with the 1968 short film “Amblin,” which led to him becoming the youngest director ever signed to a long-term studio deal. He directed episodes of such TV shows as “Night Gallery,” “Marcus Welby, M.D.” and “Columbo,” and gained special attention for his 1971 telefilm “Duel.” Three years later, he

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We believe that a flourishing symphony orchestra benefits the community and our clients. That’s why Stinson Morrison Hecker is strongly committed to making a lasting contribution. We are proud to support the Phoenix Symphony and this innovative, diverse season. Play on! Michael C. Manning Managing Partner 60 2. 67 9.16 0 0 1850 N. Central Ave., Suite 2100, Phoenix AZ 85004 The choice of a lawyer is important and should not be based solely on advertisements.

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SuPPoRTing THe ARTS. Helping the Valley’s many communities thrive is at the heart of everything we do. After all, we live here too. For more than 100 years, SRP has supplied the Valley with water and energy. Besides being a steward of these crucial resources, SRP supports creative expression and access to performing arts to build a thriving community. Whether it’s the arts, the environment, human services, education or economic development, SRP is committed to helping our many communities prosper for generations to come. To learn more, visit srpnet.com/community.

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We can help you set the stage for success. Generations of legal knowledge and experience combined with fresh, new ideas to keep your business performing at its best.

J. Scott Rhodes Managing Attorney Jennings, Strouss & Salmon One East Washington Street Suite 1900 Phoenix, AZ 85004 602.262.5862

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made his feature film directorial debut on “The Sugarland Express,” from a screenplay he cowrote. His next film was “Jaws,” which was the first film to break the $100 million mark. In 1984, Spielberg formed his own production company, Amblin Entertainment. Under the Amblin banner, he served as producer or executive producer on such hits as “Gremlins,” “Goonies,” “Back to the Future I, II, and III,” “Who Framed Roger Rabbit?,” “An American Tail,” “Twister,” “The Mask of Zorro,” and the “Men in Black” films. In 1994, Spielberg partnered with Jeffrey Katzenberg and David Geffen to form the original DreamWorks Studios. The studio enjoyed both critical and commercial successes, including three consecutive Best Picture Academy Award® winners: “American Beauty,” “Gladiator,” and “A Beautiful Mind.” In its history, DreamWorks has also produced or co-produced a wide range of features, including the “Transformers” blockbusters, Clint Eastwood’s World War II dramas “Flags of Our Fathers” and “Letters from Iwo Jima,” the latter earning a Best Picture Oscar® nomination, “Meet the Parents” and “Meet the Fockers,” and “The Ring,” to name only a few. Under the DreamWorks banner, Spielberg also directed such films as “War of the Worlds,” “Minority Report,” “Catch Me If You Can,” and “A.I. Artificial Intelligence.”

Private Ryan,” he and Tom Hanks teamed to executive produce the 2001 HBO miniseries “Band of Brothers,” based on Stephen Ambrose’s book about a U.S. Army unit in Europe in World War II. Among its many awards, the project won both Emmy and Golden Globe Awards for Outstanding Miniseries. He and Hanks more recently reunited to executive produce the acclaimed 2010 HBO miniseries “The Pacific,” this time focusing on the Marines in WWII’s Pacific theatre. “The Pacific” won eight Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Miniseries. Among the shows Spielberg also executive produced were the Emmy-winning Sci-Fi Channel miniseries “Taken,” the TNT miniseries “Into the West,” the Showtime series “The United States of Tara,” and NBC’s “Smash.” He is currently an executive producer on TNT’s “Falling Skies” and CBS’“Under the Dome,” based on the novel by Stephen King.

Spielberg has not limited his success to the big screen. He was an executive producer on the long-running Emmy-winning TV drama “E.R.” produced by his Amblin Entertainment company and Warner Bros. Television for NBC. On the heels of their experience on “Saving

Apart from his filmmaking work, Spielberg has also devoted his time and resources to many philanthropic causes. He established The Righteous Persons Foundation using all his profits from “Schindler’s List.” He also founded the Survivors of the Shoah Visual History Foundation, which in 2006 became the USC Shoah Foundation - The Institute for Visual History and Education. The Institute has recorded more than 52,000 interviews with survivors and other witnesses of the Holocaust and other genocides and is dedicated to making the testimonies a compelling voice for education and action. Additionally, Spielberg is the Chairman Emeritus of the Starlight Children’s Foundation.

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Bravo! The Phoenix Symphony Board of Directors, Musicians and Staff thank

Nan & C.A. Howlett for their many years of devoted leadership and support

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The Phoenix Symphony In Your Community

The mission of The Phoenix Symphony is to provide the joy of music as a catalyst in helping Arizona become the best place in America to work and live.

We’re accomplishing this mission through innovative and exceptional Education and Community Engagement programs. Our programs for schools impact 85,000 youth in 290 schools in 35 cities statewide and educate and strengthen our next generation resulting in a creative workforce. Our programs for adults make a difference to nearly 25,000 senior and homeless citizens through adult learning programs and feed the souls of our residents through high-quality music experiences both on and beyond the stage. Our programs for families serve nearly 15,000 parents and children each year and foster a shared sense of community around the joy of music with fun-filled Sunday afternoon Family Concerts.

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MIND OVER MUSIC

The Phoenix Symphony is the first in the nation to create a comprehensive, school-wide model that integrates music into STE[+a]M – science, technology, engineering and math – concepts with the addition of an “a” for the arts. With year one of this program complete, we have already seen an 18% increase in test scores for children who participated in Mind Over Music. SYMPHONY FOR THE SCHOOLS

This program provides thousands of K-12 students with an introductory concert experience in Symphony Hall while connecting the elements of music to core classroom subjects like science, literature and math.

CLASSROOM CONCERT SERIES

An extraordinary opportunity where K-8 students experience orchestral music in an intimate setting at their own school. Programs feature a 20-member String ensemble or one of the Symphony’s Woodwind, Percussion or Brass ensembles.

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ONE NATION

This music education residency program provides private and group lessons, workshops and recital coaching taught by Symphony musicians to students residing in the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community.

SYMPHONY CONNECTIONS

A unique partnership with Maricopa Community Colleges, this touring program features The Phoenix Symphony String Ensemble performing on community college campuses throughout the Valley. Students also receive tickets for several concerts throughout the Symphony Season. ¡ABRAZE LA MÚSICA! (EMBRACE THE MUSIC)

This partnership between The Phoenix Symphony and Rosie’s House is a free music academy for inner city youth. The Phoenix Symphony brings a variety of guest artists, musicians and conductors to Rosie’s House for clinics and discussions about music.

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FAMILY CONCERTS

Each Season, nearly 15,000 children and adults enjoy a funfilled day with the Symphony’s family-friendly concerts, connecting music with literacy, health and wellness, cultural awareness, dance and theatre. B-SHARP, A W.O.N.D.E.R. PROJECT

This program goes beyond the traditional concert stage to bring live, interactive performances presented by Symphony musicians to those in need. B-Sharp, a W.O.N.D.E.R Project serves the Scottsdale Healthcare Shea Medical Center’s patients, family members and hospital staff, those suffering from homelessness at Circle the City and Lodestar Day Resource Center, and seniors suffering from Alzheimer’s and other dementias and their care partners.

The Phoenix Symphony gratefully acknowledges the Melani and Rob Walton Fund of The Walton Family Foundation and the Ann and Gordon Getty Foundation and the League of American Orchestras for their generous support of this program.

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Thank You I extend my deepest thanks and gratitude on behalf of The Phoenix Symphony Board of Directors, Musicians and Staff to:

John Williams Steven Spielberg Michael Gorfaine & Jamie Richardson, The Gorfaine/Schwartz Agency

Jim Ward President & CEO of The Phoenix Symphony

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A Special Thanks to This Evening’s Sponsors Golden Globe Level $25,000 & Above

THE DORRANCE FAMILY FOUNDATION

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A Special Thanks to This Evening’s Sponsors People’s Choice Level $10,000 & Above

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A Special Thanks to This Evening’s Sponsors AFI Level $5,000 & Above

Anonymous Eric Crown Hazel Hare Nan & C.A. Howlett Doug Scheetz Sheila Schwartz

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A Special Thanks to This Evening’s Sponsors Underwriting Sponsor

Craig & Connie Weatherup

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The Phoenix Symphony Administration PRESIDENT’S OFFICE Jim Ward President & CEO Katie Cobb Vice President of External Affairs Joan Hosey Assistant to the President

SYMPHONY OPERATIONS Andrew T. Kipe General Manager Jordan Drum Interim Director of Education & Community Engagement Jenene Cherney Operations Manager Jason Lewis Production Manager Katelyn Smith Acting Head Librarian Damien Shindelman Orchestra Personnel Manager Alan J. Tomasetti Artistic Planning Associate Karen Bea Assistant Orchestra Personnel Manager Andrew Clark Assistant Stage Manager Eddie Rita Assistant Stage Manager

DEVELOPMENT Loren Bouchard, CFRE Director of Development Karen Thorn Sr. Manager of Major Gifts and Special Events Alexis Smith-Schallenberger Grant Writer Lauren Stephenson Annual Fund Manager

MARKETING & PUBLIC RELATIONS Todd Vigil Director of Marketing Mary McCauley Assistant Director of Marketing Melanie Mulvihill Sales & Marketing Assistant

FINANCE & ADMINISTRATION Pam Logan Director of Finance and Administration Jennifer Wu Accounting Manager Kathy Surleta Accounting Assistant Randall Mitchell Director of Information Systems

PATRON SERVICES Debbie Damon Patron Services Manager Shereen Marino Data Analysis Manager Jennifer Dulik Patron Services Assistant Manager Alfred Maldonado Patron Services Representative Eric Thorn Patron Services Representative Katie Valadez Patron Services Representative Elias Vaughn Patron Services Representative

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The NuTcracker December 6 – 24, 2013 with The Phoenix Symphony at Symphony Hall Dancing toys, mischievous mice and sparkling snowflakes bring the magic of the holidays to life.

Tickets 602.381.1096 balletaz.org ticketmaster.com presented by

Rochelle Marks, The Nutcracker, photo by Rosalie O’Connor

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Investing in arts and culture offers economic benefits. In fact, when we support arts and culture, we not only enhance our quality of life, we also invest in our economic well-being.* Total Direct Expenditures.........................................$301 million Full-Time Equivalent Jobs...................................................9,623 Local Government Revenue ...................................$13.9 million Total Attendance to Cultural Events ...........................5.1 million Average Event-Related Spending Per Person....................$26.53

For more information, visit phoenix.gov/arts *The 2011 Economic Impact Study of Phoenix Nonprofit Arts and Culture Organizations and Their Audiences

ARIZONAMUSICFEST2014 Jan 30 Feb 3 Feb 7 Feb 9 Feb 11 Feb 13 Feb 15 Feb 16

ABBA, The Concert Judy Collins – The Legend – LIVE! A Celebration of Dave Brubeck Bryant Park Quartet Pianist Jonathan Biss The Jeff Hamilton Trio Bob Moody & Friends Organ Virtuosi Perform Masterworks

Arizona Musicfest Orchestra Week Feb 18 Feb 20 Feb 21 Feb 23

A British Orchestral Odyssey Symphonic Russian Sketches Ukulele Phenom Jake Shimabukuro A German Requiem

Feb 27 Mar 1

The Very Best of John Denver 50’s Dance Party

azmusicfest.org | 480.488.0806

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Robert Moody Artistic Director


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accompany us! We love that you love the Symphony—now help us make the magic of music come alive for thousands of others! Enhance your experience and volunteer for The Phoenix Symphony. Whether you join us as a music enthusiast on our Young Professionals Board or help organize fundraising events, the Symphony has a place for you in our family. No musical experience necessary—just a passion for sharing the arts with our community.

The Phoenix Symphony allegro

Is one of the fundraising arms of the Symphony, dedicated to promoting music education and visibility of the Symphony in our community. Members attend and host a variety of exciting events throughout the season that help support the Symphony’s education mission.

The Phoenix Symphony Chorus

Join us onstage and sing with the professional-level performing partner of The Phoenix Symphony! These talented individuals double as active volunteers for the Symphony. Auditions are held twice a year in August and January.

The Phoenix Symphony Friends

This passionate and committed group are ambassadors for the Symphony, helping to create the greatest overall concert experience for our patrons. The Phoenix Symphony Friends also operate the Gift Shop in the lobby of Symphony Hall before concerts and during intermission. Various social activities are scheduled throughout the year.

Phoenix Symphony Young Professionals

These leaders encourage and cultivate younger audience members’ interest in and commitment to the Symphony. The Phoenix Symphony Young Professionals create social events tied to a series of concerts throughout the year and generate opportunities to mingle with peers while experiencing an array of classical and popular music.

The Phoenix Symphony Board of overseers

Is a coalition of political and municipal leaders, nonprofit representatives, former and potential board members and business professionals that provide guidance and direction relating to The Phoenix Symphony’s impact on and relationship with the community.

For more information about any of these exciting volunteer opportunities and to Accompany Us in our dedication to arts and education in the community, please contact Lauren Stephenson at 602-452-0422 or lstephenson@phoenixsymphony.org.

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Dr. David G. Lott

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NTHE RECORD

ON Media Publications – A resource for great performances on and off stage

Signature Sound The human voice. In our personal lives and professional careers we depend on our voice to work on our behalf. It is one of the most powerful tools for communicating thought and evoking emotion, whether through soaring song, dramatic dialogue or in private conversation. However, a number of medical and psychological problems can interfere with its proper function, causing frustration and worry for people who use their voices professionally – teachers, lawyers and especially performers. The Voice Program within the Department of Otorhinolaryngology (ear, nose and throat) at Mayo Clinic in Arizona provides immediate and expert care for people facing these vocal complications. Understanding the unique and time-sensitive needs of professional performers, Mayo Clinic Voice Program medical experts are always on call, available to provide 24/7 diagnosis and treatment in urgent situations. “Just as the human voice is capable of a rich and diverse vocal range, our Mayo Clinic specialists work with each patient to create an individualized treatment plan to address their specific need,” said Dr. David G. Lott, Director of the Voice Program. “Our physicians, voice therapists, and singing specialists are skilled and continually trained in the latest medical, surgical, and behavioral techniques needed to get your voice back to where it should be: on stage, in perfect pitch and in your signature sound.”

If you rely on your voice, you can rely on Mayo Clinic Voice problems can be caused by a number of factors, disease, nodules, cysts, muscle tension and anxiety caused by a stage performance or other psychological concerns. Diagnosing the source poses unique challenges. Mayo Clinic’s Voice Program physicians engage (removed "s") in specialized diagnostic techniques such as vocal acoustic measures and stroboscopy, which reveals the vocal folds at work in slow motion and allows the physician to check the tissue for internal damage that obstructs natural movement. Mayo Clinic's mission is to keep looking for new and better ways of doing things. The Voice Program is the latest innovation and is the only such center in the southwest region. Mayo Clinic consistently shows up at or near the top in a variety of quality measures.

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www.mayoclinic.com 800-446-2279 or 480-301-8000


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Expanding Horizons for Youth through Music since 1952. Grades 5-12: Strings | Brass | Woodwinds | Percussion | www.phoenixyouthsymphony.org

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Savor Every Moment Everyone is entitled to their perfect goodbye. Comprehensive Hospice empowers your loved one to live every day to the fullest, in the comfort of their own home. Hospice is about living, too.

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Catering & Cafe

www.BenedictsCaterers.com The art of making exceptional food

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ARTS CIRCLE Curious about what goes on backstage? In an art studio? During a dress rehearsal? SUPPORTING Arizona Opera Ballet Arizona Phoenix Art Museum The Phoenix Symphony Scottsdale Cultural Council

5 A RTS CI R CLE CAN TAK E YOU TH E R E Call 480.281.1524 for your invitation to one of our exclusive events. Visit www.fiveartscircle.org for a schedule.

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Arts education enhances critical thinking, creativity and civic engagement. Funding for educational field trips is frequently cut from school budgets. Act One Foundation’s mission is to provide quality arts educational field trips to students in underserved schools. Since launching two years ago, over 25,000 Arizona school children have attended arts educational field trips.

HELP A STUDENT Yellow Bus

Fie ld Tr ip

Study Guide Classroom Workshop Help Act One double that number. $25 will fund one student to ride on the bus and sit in your seat. Make a memory, make a difference. Go to www.act1az.org to donate and learn more. TPS Preprints 28


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Psalm Requiem

The Arizona Bach Festival

for Harp & Choir by Dutch composer Daan Manneke November 10, 2013 Requiem Service begins at 7pm

January 11-26, 2014

The Choirs of All Saints’

Episcopal Church

The Most Heavenly Music On Earth 6300 North Central Avenue Phoenix, AZ 85012

For Information & Tickets: www.ArizonaBachFestival.org

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DENNIS ROWLAND Benefit Concert A high-energy evening of music by national and local artists Wednesday, November 6th 7:30 p.m. Herberger Theater | Downtown Phoenix Tickets: 602.252.8497 | herbergertheater.org To learn how you can support Dennis as he recovers from a stroke, visit dennisrowland.com. Photo: Loren Anderson Photography

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Q: What is the value of art? A: In Phoenix, cultural audiences put a value of $136 million on their arts experiences. That’s money audiences spent on everything related to a cultural experience---meals, shopping, hotels, drinks, transportation— everything except the cost of the event ticket. Q: Art is where you find it. Tell us the most unusual location. A: At “The Gallery @ City Hall,” a small gallery in the Atrium of City Hall that features works from the City’s 100 year old municipal art collection. In fact, you can find City-owned art work throughout public areas in all City of Phoenix buildings.

DWIGHT WALTH

Q: “If it was my money, I would buy….” A: A vast collection of the most interesting instruments from all over the world! Or….a ticket to the Musical Instrument Museum. Q: Worth the trip: Best artwork seen from Light Rail. A: The Performance Art by fellow passengers ON the light rail.

Please say hello to Dr. Dwight Walth, Director of Grants Services and Community Initiatives for the City of Phoenix’s Office of Arts and Culture. Established in 1985, the office works on behalf of residents and visitors to foster a sense of cultural identity, celebrate diversity and ensure an outstanding quality of community life. The Arizona State University graduate, Doctor of Musical Arts in Vocal Performance, is frequently asked to share his expertise adding his mellow baritone to panels for the National Endowment for the Arts, the Arizona Commission on the Arts and the Indianapolis Arts Council. The former song and dance man has sung, promoted, praised and at times pleaded on behalf of our state capitol’s cultural capital. And like a modern-day Gene Kelly he performs the role with graceful precision, impeccable balance and always smartly turned out. Q: What are the dividends of cultural capital investments? A: A study by the Phoenix Office of Arts and Culture in 2011, found that the economic impact of Phoenix nonprofit arts and cultural organizations and their audiences was $301 million dollars. There are also intangible dividends that are difficult to measure, but no less important, like the role of cultural capital in attracting and retaining business, a highly-educated, creative workforce, and enhancing the quality of life in our community.

Q: You were a radio dj in high school and college. Name the hits on your turntables. A: It’s the late 70’s, early 80’s, so the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack is in heavy rotation. That and pretty much all the artists/songs featured during a typical current PBS fund drive. Q: Book read in school that influenced your life? A: The Call of the Wild by Jack London. I try to read it every year. Q: It’s Monday morning, on the way to work; windows are up, what show tune are you singing? A: If it’s a morning, I’m doing vocal warm-ups, but once warmed-up it’s probably, “Oh What a Beautiful Morning.” Especially on Mondays! Q: In high school I was voted/awarded “Most.....” A: Talented Q: Talent you wish you possessed? A: I wish I could dance like Gene Kelly Q: Character from a musical you most resemble? A: I’ve played Curly in Oklahoma!, Billy in Carousel, Sky in Guys and Dolls, Horace in Hello Dolly! and Wild Bill Hickok in Calamity Jane. I most resemble Curly—“I’ve got a beautiful feeling everything’s goin’ my way”. Dr. Walth declined to answer the last question, The role you were born to play? Perhaps because for over 17 years he is living the answer.

Q: Put a price tag on culture. A: In Phoenix, the price tag on culture is $164.5 million! That’s what Phoenix nonprofit arts and cultural organizations spent to produce or present cultural programming in 2011.

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