Program Book - CSO at Wheaton: Trifonov Plays Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No. 3

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FEBRUARY–MAY 2023

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a note from the chair and the president

Greetings, and welcome to Symphony Center, home of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, which recently returned from its seven-city, eight-concert North American tour. We are delighted to share the gifts of our extraordinary Orchestra with eager listeners in venues across the continent as well as at home in Chicago. The singular artistic collaboration of Zell Music Director Riccardo Muti and the CSO is to be treasured and celebrated, and we look forward to doing so in the weeks and months to come. To explore the Orchestra’s tour activities, which continue into March, please refer to page 6 of your program and visit cso.org/tour as well as our social media channels.

We are also pleased to have recently announced the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association’s 2023–24 season. Muti returns to open the season with three distinct programs, including the world premiere of a CSOcommissioned work by Philip Glass, The Triumph of the Octagon, and the annual Symphony Ball concert with violinist Leonidas Kavakos on September 23. Muti and the CSO also will undertake four weeks of touring activities in the United States and Europe next season with details to be announced at a later date.

In addition, a distinguished list of guest conductors from around the world will lead the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Chorus and renowned soloists in an impressive array of repertoire, including works receiving their world and U.S. premieres, three additional CSO commissions, and many first CSO performances. CSO Mead Composer-in-Residence Jessie Montgomery and CSO Artistin-Residence Hilary Hahn will continue to contribute their talents in ongoing projects with the Orchestra and the community.

Next season Symphony Center Presents continues its legacy of welcoming extraordinary artists across an array of ensembles, soloists, and genres, including the Staatskapelle Berlin conducted by Daniel Barenboim and the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra with Sir Simon Rattle. The Piano and Chamber Music series are equally brilliant, and details of the Jazz series will be announced this spring.

To learn more about this and next season’s offerings, visit cso.org or pick up a brochure available in the lobby. Subscribing allows you to take advantage of the best prices and seats as well as special benefits.

We look forward to seeing you often at Symphony Center.

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 3
PHOTOS BY TODD ROSENBERG

chicago symphony orchestra association board of trustees

OFFICERS

Mary Louise Gorno Chair

Chester A. Gougis Vice Chair

Steven Shebik Vice Chair

Helen Zell Vice Chair

Renée Metcalf Treasurer

Jeff Alexander President

Kristine Stassen Secretary of the Board

Stacie M. Frank

Assistant Treasurer

Dale Hedding Vice President for Development

HONORARY TRUSTEES

The Honorable Lori Lightfoot, Honorary Chair

The Honorable

Richard M. Daley

TRUSTEES

John Aalbregtse

Peter J. Barack

H. Rigel Barber

Randy Lamm Berlin

Roderick Branch

Kay Bucksbaum

Robert J. Buford

Leslie Henner Burns

Debra A. Cafaro

Marion A. Cameron-Gray

George P. Colis

Keith S. Crow

Stephen V. D’Amore

Timothy A. Duffy

Brian W. Duwe

Charles Emmons, Jr.*

Judith E. Feldman*

Graham C. Grady

Lori Julian

Neil T. Kawashima

Geraldine Keefe

Donna L. Kendall

Thomas G. Kilroy

Randall S. Kroszner

Patty Lane

Susan C. Levy

Renée Metcalf

Britt M. Miller

Mary Pivirotto Murley

Sylvia Neil

Gerald Pauling

Col. Jennifer N. Pritzker

Dr. Don M. Randel

Dr. Mohan Rao

Burton X. Rosenberg

Kristen C. Rossi

E. Scott Santi

Steven Shebik

Marlon R. Smith

Walter Snodell

Dr. Eugene Stark

Daniel E. Sullivan, Jr.

Scott Swanson

Nasrin Thierer

Liisa Thomas

Terrence J. Truax

Frederick H. Waddell

William Ward*

Paul S. Watford

Craig R. Williams

Robert Wislow

Helen Zell

Gifford R. Zimmerman

LIFE TRUSTEES

William Adams IV

Mrs. Robert A. Beatty

Arnold M. Berlin

Laurence O. Booth

William G. Brown

Dean L. Buntrock

Bruce E. Clinton

Richard Colburn

Richard H. Cooper

Anthony T. Dean

Debora de Hoyos

Charles Douglas

John A. Edwardson

Thomas J. Eyerman

James B. Fadim

David W. Fox, Sr.

Richard J. Franke †

Cyrus F. Freidheim, Jr.

H. Laurance Fuller

Mrs. Robert W. Galvin

Paul C. Gignilliat

Joseph B. Glossberg

Richard C. Godfrey

William A. Goldstein

Mary Louise Gorno

Howard L. Gottlieb

Chester A. Gougis

Mary Winton Green

Dietrich Gross

David P. Hackett

Joan W. Harris

John H. Hart

Thomas C. Heagy

Jay L. Henderson

Mrs. Roger B. Hull †

Judith A. Istock

William R. Jentes

Paul R. Judy

Richard B. Kapnick

Donald G. Kempf, Jr.

George D. Kennedy †

Mrs. John C. Kern

Robert Kohl

Josef Lakonishok

Charles Ashby Lewis

Eva F. Lichtenberg

John S. Lillard

Donald G. Lubin †

John F. Manley

Ling Z. Markovitz

R. Eden Martin

Arthur C. Martinez

Judith W. McCue

Lester H. McKeever

David E. McNeel

John D. Nichols

James J. O’Connor

William A. Osborn

Mrs. Albert Pawlick

Jane DiRenzo Pigott

John M. Pratt

Dr. Irwin Press

John W. Rogers, Jr.

Jerry Rose

Frank A. Rossi

Earl J. Rusnak, Jr.

Cynthia M. Sargent †

John R. Schmidt

Thomas C. Sheffield, Jr.

Robert C. Spoerri

Carl W. Stern

William H. Strong

Louis C. Sudler, Jr.

Richard L. Thomas

Richard P. Toft

Penny Van Horn

Paul R. Wiggin

* Ex-officio Trustee † Deceased List as of January 2023

4 CSO.ORG

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this page, clockwise from top left: On January 19, Riccardo Muti shares a smile with the Orchestra during an open rehearsal to prepare for the tour. The stage technicians work diligently behind the scenes to ensure the safe and efficient transport of all the musicians’ cases, which carry everything from something as large as a harp to as small as a bow tie, from venue to venue. At intermission during the concert in Mesa, Arizona, Principal Bass Alexander Hanna takes a moment to reconnect with his first music teacher, Kay Moore. Muti and the CSO acknowledge cheers and applause from the concertgoers at Koerner Hall after the first of two concerts in Toronto on February 1.

opposite page, clockwise from top left: Designed by César Pelli, the Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall in Costa Mesa is one of the foremost cultural centers in Orange County, California. A quartet of CSO members, including So Young Bae, Karen Basrak, Matous Michal, and Simon Michal, perform at John A. Murdy Elementary School in nearby Garden Grove. Riccardo Muti provides autographs and encouragement to a young fan following the performance in Costa Mesa.

6 CSO.ORG ALL PHOTOS
BY TODD ROSENBERG
“Muti touchingly acknowledged the tragic recent shootings in California . . . . It was a reminder that in addition to his musical gifts, Muti has been a tireless promoter of the healing power of culture over the course of his long career.”
—VOICE OF ORANGE COUNTY

Travelogue from the CSO’s Winter Tour

On January 21, Zell Music Director Riccardo Muti and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra embarked on a seven-city, eight-concert North American tour. This marked their first tour together since before the start of the pandemic. Sold-out concert halls and eager listeners greeted Muti and the Orchestra at each location. In addition, the Negaunee Music Institute at the CSO arranged multiple educational activities, allowing members of the Orchestra to work with young music students.

Muti conducted in his CSO debut at the Ravinia Festival in July 1973, all showcased the depth of their singular artistic partnership.

FOR

EXTENSIVE TOUR COVERAGE, VISIT

“It is good to be able to have the CSO out once again in the world as an important cultural ambassador for the city of Chicago and to witness the extremely positive impact on the communities in which it performs,” said Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association President Jeff Alexander.

tour

The CSO’s sixty-third international tour included debuts in three cities—Mesa, Arizona; Stanford, California; and Stillwater, Oklahoma— in addition to returns to Costa Mesa and Santa Barbara, California, and Iowa City. The tour culminated with two concerts at Toronto’s Koerner Hall, representing the Orchestra’s first appearances in Chicago’s sister city since 1914.

Muti carefully designed programs to showcase the Orchestra’s talents. Beethoven’s Seventh and Eighth symphonies and Coriolan Overture, Prokofiev’s Fifth Symphony, Liadov’s The Enchanted Lake, and Ravel’s orchestration of Mussorgsky’s Pictures from an Exhibition, which

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 7
cso.org/
The second part of the tour begins February 26 at the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts in Kansas City and continues with four concerts in Florida between February 28 and March 4, including the Orchestra’s first in Orlando, one in Sarasota, and two in Naples as part of its three-season residency that began in 2019 but was interrupted by the pandemic. (continued)
—SF CLASSICAL
“ The CSO remains a model of what an orchestra should sound like and stand for.”
VOICE
The Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s North American Tour was generously sponsored by the Zell Family Foundation. Sponsorship support for the CSO’s Florida performances are generously provided by the Lauter McDougal Charitable Fund, Zell Family Foundation, Judy and Verne Istock, The Clinton Family Fund, and The Regenstein Foundation.

“Inspirational music at its best. You couldn’t help but smile as the Chicago Symphony took on Modest Mussorgsky’s Pictures from an Exhibition and made it soar.”

—SANTA

“Deep and moving musicality”

“Lending added poignancy to the evening, and this season, is the matter of the maestro. Riccardo Muti, an eminent and energizing presence on the podium, . . . seemed to lack no intensity or subtlety at the helm, moving lithely and presiding with a wise hand over—and with—the musicians. His legend becomes him.”

—CLASSICAL VOICE, LA

8 CSO.ORG
clockwise from top left: The second stop of the CSO's winter tour, the Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall in Costa Mesa, California; the third, the Granada Theatre in Santa Barbara; at the fourth venue, Bing Concert Hall on the Stanford University campus (seen here in the last three photos), Riccardo Muti acknowledges Concertmaster Robert Chen
FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 9 CSO.ORG/SUBSCRIBE | 312-294-3000 OFFICIAL AIRLINE OF THE CSO 2023/24 SUBSCRIPTIONS NOW ON SALE! Explore the season at cso.org/subscribe Highlights include: BEETHOVEN Symphony No. 5 | HANDEL Messiah | STRAVINSKY The Rite of Spring HOLST The Planets | RAVEL Boléro | MAHLER Symphony No. 2 (Resurrection)
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clockwise from top: Riccardo Muti acknowledges violinist Simon Michal as the CSO receives enthusiastic applause at Koerner Hall in Toronto. Organized by the CSO’s Negaunee Music Institute, members of the CSO brass section, including CSO Principal Trumpet Esteban Batallán (seen here), lead master classes with students at Oklahoma State University. The CSO receives an ovation at the conclusion of its concert at Hancher Auditorium on the University of Iowa campus. On the observation deck of Toronto’s CN Tower, CSO musicians (from left, Susan Synnestvedt, Melanie Kupchynsky, and Yuan-Qing Yu, joined by her mother, Yiwen Mi) document the dramatic views of the city below. Muti speaks with musicians from the Glenn Gould School Orchestra at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto after leading them in a rehearsal of music by Beethoven and Giordano.

10 CSO.ORG
“ The return of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra to Iowa City on January 29 offered solace as well as celebration— the sort of healing that great art can help facilitate.”
—DON MCLEASE, CSO.ORG/EXPERIENCE
CLASSICAL
“Under its music director the orchestra is a musicmaking ensemble par excellence.”
VOICE NORTH AMERICA

Music’s Ambassador

Riccardo Muti has embraced the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s touring legacy and invigorated its reputation as a cultural ambassador during their numerous tours together since the beginning of his tenure as the CSO’s tenth music director in 2010. They have traveled to venues on both coasts of the United States and performed multiple times at Carnegie Hall and the Kennedy Center, in addition to eight European tours and two tours to Asia. As part of an ongoing series, members of the Orchestra share their reflections on performing around the world with Maestro Muti.

“Perhaps one of the greatest performances I will ever know happened in Moscow performing Shostakovich’s Symphony no. 5. The Italian portion of the tour felt like we were rock stars. The audiences were so supportive and ecstatic over their great conductor and countryman, Maestro Muti. We were truly witnessing a special time in history.”

“I remember the performance at La Scala some years ago, after Muti had not been back in a while. The audience went nuts. At one point, while addressing the audience, he mentioned that La Scala was the ‘house of Verdi,‘ to which someone in the audience shouted back, ‘No! This is the house of MUTI!‘ ”

“I remember the remarkable experience of playing the Verdi Requiem at the Musikverein in Vienna and feeling like we were going to tear the walls down!”

“I find playing concerts on tour a special experience. . . . It is great to see Maestro Muti react to the excitement of a new place and audience.”

“As a native of Iowa City, I remember the opening of the original Hancher Auditorium. I attended and performed in many concerts there, which played a part in inspiring my decision to become a professional musician. Having the opportunity to perform in the new Hancher with the CSO and Maestro Muti was a great pleasure.”

12 CSO.ORG
Riccardo Muti conducting the CSO; guest vocalists Krassimira Stoyanova (soprano), Daniela Barcellona (mezzo-soprano), Francesco Meli (tenor), and Riccardo Zanellato (bass); and the Wiener Singverein in Verdi’s Requiem at Vienna’s Musikverein during the 2020 European tour
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Bank of America is proud to continue its long-standing support of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Our partnership not only delivers artistic quality but also helps to create meaningful connections with a diverse audience base in Chicago and around the world.

United is pleased to serve the CSO as its official airline and proudly supports its remarkable contributions to the performing arts community here in Chicago and beyond. With the CSO, we celebrate the energy that performers and audiences alike bring to our hometown and to the global stage.

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra is rightly regarded as one of the greatest orchestras in the world. Northern Trust is committed to serving our communities and the arts, and we are proud to support—as we have for more than a half century—the CSO’s extraordinary tradition of musical excellence.

ITW is proud to support the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and its long tradition of excellence in providing extraordinary classical music performances for audiences here in Chicago and around the world.

From one Chicago tradition to another, Sidley Austin congratulates the Chicago Symphony Orchestra on a successful 2022–23 season. We are proud to support an organization that has contributed so much to the rich heritage of our city. May the music continue to transform and inspire us all.

Jenner & Block is proud to share the CSO’s passion for creativity, innovation, and the pursuit of excellence. As a longtime CSO supporter, the firm looks forward to continuing to participate in the symphony’s rich tradition of musical excitement and unfolding artistry in Chicago and the many communities it touches in the United States and around the world.

14 CSO.ORG
spotlight
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negaunee music institute at the cso

CSO-Connect

CSO-Connect, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s flagship school partnership program, brings Chicago Public Schools’ teachers together to develop arts integrated curriculum.

This season, teachers have attended workshops at Symphony Center, where they have explored the program’s theme and repertoire connected to the CSO for Kids concert In Pursuit of Dreams. During these gatherings, teachers have worked with their school colleagues to develop arts integrated curriculum that allows students to find inspiration and reasons to dream, both as individuals and as part of the classroom.

Using this curriculum, teachers were able to provide students the opportunity to discover the dreams of the musicians and composers spotlighted in the concert. In the spring, inspired by their experience at Orchestra Hall and their exploration at school, students will compose original music expressing their individual dreams, and those of their communities and their world.

The February 2023 concert featured the music of CSO Mead Composer-in-Residence Jessie Montgomery. This program, led by guest conductor Tania Miller, took students on a journey that showed that although life has many challenges, we all have the potential to find our own way to create the world we want to live in.

With the support of generous donors, the Negaunee Music Institute provides free tickets and transportation for students at Chicago Public Schools. Over 4,000 students attended the In Pursuit of Dreams concerts.

To support the work of the Negaunee Music Institute, visit cso.org/makeagift.

Youth Education Program Sponsor

CSO-Connect is generously sponsored by Polk Bros. Foundation and Lloyd A. Fry Foundation.

Additional support for the February performances of In Pursuit of Dreams has been provided by Catherine M. and Frederick H. Waddell in honor of their team at Northern Trust: Tyler Converso, Sally Nolan Giegerich, Kim Lewis, Teresa Michols, Aileen Wala, Daniella Shin, Dan Stephans, Anne Stevens, and Marisa Torres.

Support for Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association programming for children and families is provided by Abbott Fund, Archer Daniels Midland Company, John D. and Leslie Henner Burns, John Hart and Carol Prins, Kinder Morgan, PNC, Megan and Steve Shebik, Michael and Linda Simon, the Walter and Caroline Sueske Charitable Trust, and an anonymous family foundation.

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 15
PHOTOS BY TODD ROSENBERG

ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-SECOND SEASON CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

RICCARDO MUTI Zell Music Director

Friday, April 21, 2023, at 7:30

Edman Memorial Chapel, Wheaton College

Fabien Gabel Conductor

Daniil Trifonov Piano

liadov Kikimora, Op. 63

stravinsky Petrushka

The Shrovetide Fair

In Petrushka’s Room

The Moor’s Room

The Grand Carnival

intermission

rachmaninov Piano Concerto No. 3 in D Minor, Op. 30

Allegro ma non tanto

Intermezzo

Finale

daniil trifonov

CSO at Wheaton performances are generously sponsored by the JCS Arts, Health and Education Fund of DuPage Foundation.

Support for the CSO at Wheaton series is also provided by Megan and Steve Shebik. United Airlines is the Official Airline of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. This program is partially supported by a grant from the Illinois Arts Council Agency. This performance is presented in partnership with Wheaton College and the Wheaton College Artist Series.

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 17

CSO at Wheaton performances are generously sponsored by the JCS Arts, Health and Education Fund of DuPage Foundation.

18 ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-SECOND SEASON

comments by phillip huscher

anatoly liadov

Born May 11, 1855; Saint Petersburg, Russia

Died August 28, 1914; Polïnovka, Novgorod District, Russia

Kikimora, Op. 63

Anatoly Liadov often surfaces in music histories not as the composer of a handful of exquisitely crafted orchestral pieces, including Kikimora, but as the man who blew his chance to write The Firebird, which of course turned out to be a careermaker for Igor Stravinsky. According to the most familiar—though unsubstantiated— version, Liadov had only just gotten around to buying his manuscript paper when the first installment of his Firebird score was due, forcing Sergei Diaghilev, who was staging the ballet, to fire him from the job. But in fact, Liadov wasn’t even Diaghilev’s first choice—the assignment had originally gone to Nikolai Tcherepnin, who withdrew—and he declined Diaghilev’s offer from the start, for reasons we may never adequately understand.

Early on, Liadov had earned a reputation as a slacker. He regularly cut classes at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory—“he simply could not be bothered,” said Rimsky-Korsakov, who was his teacher and found him “irresponsible.” Sergei Prokofiev, who later studied with Liadov and admired him greatly, admitted in his memoirs that “Laziness was [his] most remarkable feature.” But from the start of his career, Liadov also had drawn attention for the boldness and orchestral brilliance of his compositions. As early as 1873—the time of his first songs, eventually published as his op. 1—Mussorgsky described his talent as “new, unmistakable, original.”

Igor Stravinsky, who owed his overnight fame to Liadov’s withdrawing, later said he liked Liadov’s music, but that Liadov “could never have written a long and noisy ballet like The Firebird.” (“He was more relieved than offended, I suspect, when I accepted the commission,” Stravinsky said.) Throughout his life, Stravinsky was quick to defend Liadov, claiming that he was a charming and cultured man—“He always carried books under his arm—Maeterlinck, E.T.A. Hoffmann, Andersen: he liked tender, fantastical things”—and, above all, that he was “the most progressive of the musicians of his generation.”

composed

1909

first performance

December 1910; Saint Petersburg, Russia

instrumentation

two flutes and piccolo, two oboes and english horn, two clarinets and bass clarinet, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, timpani, percussion, celesta, strings

approximate performance time

7 minutes

first cso performances

November 24 and 25, 1911, Orchestra Hall. Frederick Stock conducting

August 9, 1947, Ravinia Festival. Pierre Monteux conducting

most recent cso performances

January 22, 1944, Orchestra Hall. Hans Lange conducting

July 19, 1997, Ravinia Festival. Yuri Temirkanov conducting

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 19
from top: Anatoly Liadov, portrait in oil by Ilya Repin (1844–1930), 1902 Kikimora, a sketch by illustrator and stage designer Ivan Bilibin (1876–1942), 1934

Liadov had championed Stravinsky’s own early works before others saw his genius, and once, in Stravinsky’s presence, he defended Scriabin, whose music had not yet found an audience. It’s hard to know what Stravinsky really thought of Liadov as a composer; he wrote admiringly of his sense of harmony and instrumental color, but he also called him “shortwinded”—that is to say, in words that Stravinsky could not bring himself to use, a master of the miniature. (This was, after all, the era of the Big Piece: Mahler’s Sixth, Seventh, and Eighth symphonies; Strauss’s Sinfonia domestica; and Schoenberg’s Pelleas and Melisande all date from the first decade of the twentieth century, the time of Liadov’s major works. Rachmaninov’s grand Third Piano Concerto, which concludes this week’s program, was composed the same year as Kikimora; Stravinsky began Petrushka a year later.)

Liadov’s catalog is slight: several songs and piano pieces, a handful of choral compositions, and less than a dozen small works for orchestra. His most successful compositions are the three brief descriptive orchestral pieces based on Russian fairy tales—Baba-Yaga, Kikimora, and

The Enchanted Lake—and they clearly demonstrate his mastery, precisely in an art form where Stravinsky made little headway.

Kikimora takes as its subject the legendary female house spirit of folklore who grew up in the mountains with a magician. As Liadov wrote, “from dawn to sunset, the magician’s cat regales Kikimora with fantastic tales of ancient times and faraway places as Kikimora rocks in a cradle made of crystal. It takes her seven years to reach maturity, by which time her head is no larger than a thimble and her body no wider than a strand of straw. Kikimora spins flax from dusk to dawn with evil intentions for the world.” Liadov begins simply, with shifting chords of deep darkness and a haunted melody in the english horn. Suddenly, with squealing winds and shuddering strings, the tale quickly rises to frantic heights, as Kikimora seeks vengeance on mankind. And then, just as suddenly, Kikimora disappears. It may not be the music of a composer ideally suited for the sweep of The Firebird, but as a short story of daring imagination, vivid character, and dark power, it is near perfection.

20 ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-SECOND SEASON COMMENTS
above: Postage stamp marking the hundredth anniversary of Liadov’s birth, issued in July 1955 and including a portrait of the composer and a fragment of his Eight Russian Folk Songs. Art by A. Zavyalov

igor stravinsky

Born June 17, 1882; Oranienbaum, Russia

Died April 6, 1971, New York City

Petrushka

The Firebird was Stravinsky’s first big hit, and it made him famous, almost literally overnight, at the age of twenty-eight. Petrushka is that most difficult of artistic creations—the follow-up. The Firebird had not only made Stravinsky the talk of Paris, then the capital of the international art world—capturing the attention of the city’s biggest names, including Debussy and Proust—but it also had scored a huge success for Sergei Diaghilev, who had taken a risk hiring the young, relatively unknown composer to write music for the Ballets Russes’ 1910 season. Naturally, both men wanted another sensation for the next year.

Stravinsky already had an idea. While he was finishing the orchestration of The Firebird, he had dreamed about “a solemn pagan rite: wise elders, seated in a circle, watching a young girl dance herself to death. They were sacrificing her to propitiate the god of spring.” These powerful images suggested music to Stravinsky, and he began to sketch almost at once. (Early in his career, most of Stravinsky’s initial musical ideas were inspired by visual imagery.) At first he thought of it as a symphony, but when he played parts of it at the piano for Diaghilev early that summer, the impresario immediately knew that this was music for dance. With Diaghilev’s urging, Stravinsky continued working on the score that would eventually become their biggest sensation, Le sacre du printemps The Rite of Spring. But, in the meantime, Stravinsky got sidetracked.

When Diaghilev visited Stravinsky in Switzerland at the end of the summer, he was stunned to discover that the composer had begun a completely different work instead. As Stravinsky recalled, Diaghilev “was much astonished when, instead of the sketches of the Sacre, I played him the piece which I had just composed and which later became the second scene of Petrushka.”

For the second time that year, one of Stravinsky’s landmark ballet scores started out not as music to be danced, but as an unnamed abstract symphonic score. But unlike The Rite of Spring, Petrushka moved from sketch to stage without serious interruption. What had begun as just a detour from The Rite

composed

August 1910–May 26, 1911

Reorchestrated, 1946

first performance

June 13, 1911; Paris, France.

Sergei Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes, Pierre Monteux conducting (complete ballet)

instrumentation

1947 version: three flutes with piccolo, two oboes and english horn, three clarinets with bass clarinet, two bassoons and contrabassoon, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, percussion, celesta, harp, piano, strings

approximate performance time

34 minutes

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 21 COMMENTS
from top: Igor Stravinsky, postcard photo, ca. 1910 Vaslav Nijinsky (1890–1950) in his role as Petrushka, photographed by Herman Mishkin (1871–1948), 1910–11

now became the main project of the year, and, at the same time, the score with which Stravinsky found his modernist voice— the voice that made The Rite possible. Musically, it had started innocently enough, almost as a kind of warm-up for The Rite. “I wanted to refresh myself,” Stravinsky later explained, “by composing an orchestral piece in which the piano would play the most important part.” The narrative and the title came later, although Stravinsky admitted that “in composing the music, I had in mind a distinct picture of a puppet, suddenly endowed with life.” (Petrushka is a Russian version of the male half of the Punch and Judy puppets.) As with The Rite of Spring, it was Diaghilev who immediately saw the potential in Stravinsky’s dazzling music for another dance classic:

[Diaghilev] was so much pleased with it that he would not leave it alone and began persuading me to develop the theme of the puppet’s sufferings and make it into a whole ballet. When he remained in Switzerland, we worked out together the general lines of the subject and the plot in accordance with ideas which I suggested . . . I began at once to compose the first scene of the ballet.

There were still a few details to be worked out, including Stravinsky’s fee (1,000 rubles) and the selection of the painter Alexandre Benois to polish the scenario and to provide costumes and scenery. (Michel Fokine soon signed on as choreographer and Pierre Monteux agreed to conduct the premiere.) With this extraordinary team lined up, Stravinsky and Diaghilev now had their sights set on surpassing the success of The Firebird. Aside from Stravinsky’s brush with nicotine poisoning in February 1911, work on Petrushka progressed smoothly. Rehearsals were a different story. The dancers and orchestral musicians, innocent of the terrors of The Rite of Spring, still no more than a pile of sketches, found the complexities of Stravinsky’s score almost unmanageable.

Opening night, however, was a great triumph, crowned by Vaslav Nijinsky’s brilliant dancing of the title role. Brash, bold, exciting, and in-your-face “modern,” Petrushka was another overnight hit with the public. For the next two years, until the legendary premiere of The Rite of Spring set Paris afire with fresh controversy, Petrushka was the latest word in musical modernism.

The scenario is in four scenes; the first and last are public, taking place on the Admiralty Square in Saint Petersburg, in the 1830s; the middle ones are set in private rooms and focus on individual characters. Petrushka opens with a busy

first cso performances

November 21 and 22, 1930, Orchestra Hall. Frederick Stock conducting (suite)

July 9, 1937, Ravinia Festival. Ernest Ansermet (suite)

January 5 and 6, 1961, Orchestra Hall. Pierre Monteux conducting

July 9, 1977, Ravinia Festival. James Levine conducting

cso performances, the composer conducting Between 1935 and 1964, Stravinsky conducted the CSO in selections from Petrushka on thirteen occasions at Orchestra Hall, the Pabst Theater in Milwaukee, and the Ravinia Festival.

most recent cso performances

August 14, 1982, Ravinia Festival. Edo de Waart conducting (suite)

March 9, 10, and 11, 2017, Orchestra Hall. Esa-Pekka Salonen conducting

cso recordings

1969. Carlo Maria Giulini conducting. Angel (suite)

1977. James Levine conducting. RCA

1993. Sir Georg Solti conducting. London

opposite page: Costume designs by Alexandre Benois (1870–1960) for the ballerina and Petrushka, 1910. Images as reproduced in Ballet Design: Past and Present by C.W. Beaumont (1946)

22 O NE HUNDRED THIRTY-SECOND SEASON COMMENTS

crowd scene, a kaleidoscopic panorama of street dancers, drummers, a magician playing a flute, a street musician with his hurdy-gurdy, and three puppets—Petrushka, a ballerina, and the Moor. Stravinsky shifts focus and shuffles events like a modern filmmaker: musical passages are cut and spliced, rhythmic patterns jostle one another. Finally the solo flute charms the three puppets to life and they join in a brilliant Russian dance.

The two middle scenes are more intimate, relying less on the full orchestra and built of more modestly scaled materials. In the first of these scenes, the spotlight falls on Petrushka, alone in his room, pondering his grotesque appearance and despairing over his inability to win the love of the ballerina. This is the music Stravinsky had first played for Diaghilev, with a piano solo “exasperating the patience of the orchestra with diabolical cascades of arpeggios. The orchestra in turn retaliates with menacing trumpet blasts. The outcome is a terrific noise, which reaches its climax and ends in the sorrowful and querulous collapse of the poor puppet.”

When he first began sketching Petrushka, Stravinsky was haunted by the image of a musician rolling two objects over the black and the white keys of the piano, which led him to the idea of a bitonal effect made by combining the white-note C major arpeggio with the blacknote F-sharp major arpeggio. This double-sided sonority dominates Petrushka’s scene (the first music Stravinsky wrote), and, as the work progressed, it came to represent the conflicting

sides of his character—the human versus the puppet.

The Moor’s scene builds to a romantic encounter with the ballerina (she enters to a dazzling high trumpet solo). The lovers dance to waltzes borrowed, without apparent apology, from Joseph Lanner, an Austrian composer who was a friend of Johann Strauss, Sr. They are interrupted by the jealous Petrushka.

The finale is another surging crowd scene, characterized by various kinds of music pushing and shoving against each other. Petrushka enters, pursued by the Moor, who strikes him with his saber. Petrushka falls and the crowd grows silent. But when the magician is summoned, he demonstrates that Petrushka is merely a puppet stuffed with sawdust. The square empties. Then, as the magician drags the puppet off, he sees Petrushka’s ghost on the roof of the set, thumbing his nose. This, according to Stravinsky, “is the real Petrushka, and his appearance at the end makes the Petrushka of the preceding play a mere doll.”

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 23 COMMENTS

sergei rachmaninov

Born April 1, 1873; Semyonovo, Russia

Died March 28, 1943; Beverly Hills, California

Piano Concerto No. 3 in D Minor, Op. 30

Although Rachmaninov’s music was once identified with the treacly romanticism of the Hollywood soundtracks it inspired, Rachmaninov himself was a serious and aristocratic artist. He was one of the greatest pianists in history—an astonishing virtuoso in the heroic tradition of Liszt— but there was nothing flashy about his stage manner. Rachmaninov was surprisingly somber and remote for a crowd-pleasing superstar. He rarely smiled or courted the audience, and even his closecropped haircut, of a kind that is ubiquitous today but was highly suspect at the time (like that of a convict, as the Russian bass Fyodor Chaliapin said), suggested a stern presence. (Chaliapin also scolded him for his curt, peremptory bows.) Much later, Stravinsky called him “a six-and-a-half-foottall scowl.”

Rachmaninov would have become famous if he had done nothing but concertize. But his true aspiration was to become a composer. At the Moscow Conservatory, his teacher Nikolai Zverev encouraged him to stick to the piano instead of writing music, but Rachmaninov tried his hand at composing some piano pieces and an orchestral scherzo, and he even started an opera, Esmeralda. Unable to choose between composition and performance, Rachmaninov ultimately decided to pursue both, eventually becoming a fine conductor as well. In 1889, the year he and Zverev parted ways, he sketched and abandoned a piano concerto, but the one he began the following year is his first major work—the one that became his op. 1. This is the score that made his name as a composer, and it was completed in a rush of passion and elation, with Rachmaninov working from five in the morning until eight in the evening and scoring the last two movements in just two and a half days. It would be ten years, however, before Rachmaninov finished his Second Piano Concerto, which quickly became his greatest hit and his calling card. He played it with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra when he made his debut in Orchestra Hall, on December 3, 1909—the first of his eight appearances with the Orchestra.

composed summer, 1909

first performance

November 28, 1909, New York City. The composer as soloist

instrumentation

solo piano, two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, side drum, cymbals, bass drum, strings

approximate performance time

44 minutes

first cso performances

January 23 and 24, 1920, Orchestra Hall. The composer as soloist, Frederick Stock conducting

July 24, 1947, Ravinia Festival. William Kapell as soloist, William Steinberg conducting

cso performances, the composer as soloist

January 14 and 15, 1932, Orchestra Hall. Frederick Stock conducting

most recent

cso performances

February 14, 16, and 17, 2019, Orchestra Hall. Simon Trpčeski as soloist, Pablo Heras-Casado conducting

August 7, 2019, Ravinia Festival. Denis Matsuev as soloist, Leonard Slatkin conducting

cso recording

1967. Alexis Weissenberg as soloist, Georges Prêtre conducting. RCA

24 O NE HUNDRED THIRTY-SECOND SEASON
COMMENTS
above: Sergei Rachmaninov, portrait, early 1900s

Although Chicago didn’t get to hear it, by then Rachmaninov had written a third piano concerto, tailor-made for his first North American tour in late 1909. Rachmaninov introduced the work in New York on November 28, with Walter Damrosch and the New York Symphony. He played it there again in January, with Gustav Mahler conducting the New York Philharmonic (only weeks after Mahler’s own First Symphony, in its American premiere, was a flop). Rachmaninov was bowled over by Mahler’s meticulous rehearsal method—“the accompaniment,” Rachmaninov recalled, “which is rather complicated, had been practiced to the point of perfection”—by his attention to detail, and by his refusal to stop working until he was satisfied (rehearsal ran an hour overtime). The New York Times thought Rachmaninov’s playing occasionally lacked brilliance, but that “the orchestral accompaniment was outstanding.” The New York Herald, somewhat half-heartedly, called the work one of the “most interesting piano concertos of recent years,” but noted that “its great length and extreme difficulties bar it from performances by any but pianists of exceptional technical powers”—an assessment that still holds today. (Rachmaninov played the concerto when he appeared with the Chicago Symphony for the second time, in January 1920.)

Although in 1909 Rachmaninov was known as one of the great piano virtuosos, he began his new concerto not with solo fireworks, but with something of almost Mozartean clarity and understatement—a discreet accompaniment to which the piano adds a quiet, simple melody in bare octaves. It’s as plain and haunting as chant, and although Rachmaninov told musicologist Joseph Yasser that the theme came to him “ready-made,” Yasser wasn’t surprised when he later discovered a strikingly similar Russian liturgical melody. Rachmaninov said that he thought of the piano theme as a kind of song, and he took pains to find an accompaniment “that would not muffle this singing.” (He was understandably delighted with the care Mahler lavished on the orchestral part.) As the movement progresses, both melody and accompaniment are explored

and developed at length, as is a lyrical second theme. The climax of the movement is the magnificent solo cadenza, as long and as tough as any in the repertoire, which takes the place of a formal recapitulation. (The piano writing is so symphonic, complex, and multifaceted that we barely notice that the orchestra has temporarily dropped out.)

In the middle-movement intermezzo—a curiously “light” title for music so big and involved— the piano’s entrance is both unmistakable and disruptive, for it takes control with its first phrase and leads the music in new directions (eventually settling in D-flat, an unexpected destination for a concerto in D minor). A “new” waltz theme, introduced by the clarinet and bassoon, over fancy piano filigree, is a cleverly disguised version—almost note for note—of the concerto’s monastic opening melody.

The finale, which begins fully formed while the intermezzo is still finishing up, is the kind of virtuosic tour de force Rachmaninov’s fans expected in 1909 and courageous pianists still love delivering today. It’s also richly inventive, with a fantastic, playful scherzando (in E-flat!) as a mid-movement diversion. The ending, predictably, is designed to test the limits of virtuosity and bring down the house.

Throughout Rachmaninov’s life, it was fashionable—if not in fact honorable in progressive music circles—to disparage his music. Rachmaninov had always worried that by splitting his time among playing the piano, conducting, and composing, he had spread himself too thin. “I have chased three hares,” he once said. “Can I be certain that I have captured one?” For many years, Rachmaninov’s stature as a pianist was undisputed. But by the time of his death in 1943 (he appeared with the Chicago Symphony for the last time just six weeks before he died), he had been written off in many quarters as an old-fashioned composer—sentimental, out of touch, irrelevant. As Virgil Thomson told the young playwright Edward Albee in 1948, “It is really extraordinary, after all, that a composer so famous should have enjoyed so little the esteem

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 25 COMMENTS

of his fellow composers.” The sacrosanct Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, in its fifth edition, published in the 1950s, concluded its dismal appraisal of his output: “The enormous popular success some few of Rachmaninov’s works had in his lifetime is not likely to last, and musicians never regarded it with much favor.” But in recent years, his star has decidedly been on the rise. Now, as Rachmaninov always hoped, it is his music and not his piano playing that

keeps his name alive. Fittingly, for a composer who once inspired a generation of movie composers, Rachmaninov’s Third Piano Concerto even played a leading role in Shine, the 1996 film about the Australian pianist David Helfgott and his heroic struggles with “Rach 3,” the most formidable of all piano concertos.

26 O NE HUNDRED THIRTY-SECOND SEASON COMMENTS
Phillip Huscher has been the program annotator for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra since 1987. above: The program for Rachmaninov’s performance of his Third Piano Concerto as soloist with the New York Philharmonic on January 16, 1910, Gustav Mahler conducting. New York Philharmonic Leon Levy Digital Archives

THE SUPREME VIRTUOSO: “THERE IS NOTHING HE CANNOT DO AT THE KEYBOARD”

Sergei Rachmaninov made his first appearances with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra on December 3 and 4, 1909, conducting his Isle of the Dead and performing as soloist in his Second Piano Concerto with Frederick Stock conducting. For more than thirty years, he regularly appeared in Chicago, both as recitalist and with the Orchestra, performing as soloist in his four concertos and the Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini and conducting his Third Symphony and choral symphony The Bells.

He first performed his Third Piano Concerto, again with Stock on the podium, on January 23 and 24, 1920. Despite a nasty Chicago storm, Orchestra Hall was packed for the Friday matinee. “The concert of yesterday afternoon was an event,” wrote Karleton Hackett in the Evening Post. “I do not care what the verdict of twenty years from now may be regarding this concerto, for I have just listened to a performance of it that stirred me deeply. . . . It was a work of a man who understands the capacity of the instrument and can write for it in the fresh, vigorous idiom of our day such music as brings out its peculiar power and charm. What is quite as much to the point, he himself can play the instrument with a mastery that makes every phrase a delight. Rachmaninov has supreme virtuosity. There is nothing he cannot do at the keyboard, from the most exquisite delicacy of ornamentation to the downright stroke of elemental power. . . . The music was so vigorous, expressing so spontaneously the emotion of our own time that it seemed as though it were being struck out in the white heat of the creative impulse of the moment.”

In January 1932, the composer was again in Chicago for three concerts with Stock and the Orchestra. After a performance of the second concerto on January 12, Herman Devries in the American reported, “It was not Chicago . . . it was not Orchestra Hall . . . it was not Rachmaninov . . . to me it seemed Olympus, and we were all gods. Thus does music glorify when it is itself

glorious. It is not the first time that I have waxed passionately enthusiastic over the genius of Rachmaninov. After hearing Horowitz [in recital] on Sunday [January 10], we thought that the season’s thrills were nearly complete.”

Later that week, on January 14 and 15, Rachmaninov was soloist in his third concerto. “The most exciting event in the history of Orchestra Hall occurred last night,” wrote Glenn Dillard Gunn in the Herald and Examiner. “With one impulse, the audience rose and shouted its approval. Many eyes were wet and many throats were hoarse before the demonstration ended. For once on their feet, the listeners remained to cheering after the Orchestra had trumpeted and thundered its fanfare and long after the composer-pianist had brought Dr. Stock to the footlights to share his honors. Never have I witnessed such a tribute . . . and never, it is my sincere conviction, has such response been so richly deserved.”

Rachmaninov’s final appearances with the Orchestra were on February 11 and 12, 1943, in Beethoven’s First Piano Concerto and his Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, under the baton of associate conductor Hans Lange.

“Sergei Rachmaninov evoked a series of ovations when he appeared with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra at Orchestra Hall last night,” wrote Claudia Cassidy in the Chicago Tribune. “His entrance won standing tribute from orchestra and capacity audience, his Beethoven stirred a storm of grateful applause, and his own Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini ended the concert in a kind of avalanche of cumulative excitement.”

The following week, Rachmaninov traveled to Louisville and Knoxville for solo recitals on February 15 and 17, in what would be his final public performances. He died in Beverly Hills, California, on March 28, 1943.

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 27 COMMENTS
Frank Villella is the director of the Rosenthal Archives. For more information, please visit cso.org/archives above: Sergei Rachmaninov in 1921 (Kubey-Rembrandt Studio). Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs division Chicago American, January 15, 1932

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra thanks Megan and Steve Shebik for their generous support of CSO at Wheaton concerts.

28 O NE HUNDRED THIRTY-SECOND SEASON

Fabien Gabel Conductor

These concerts mark Fabien Gabel’s debut with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

Fabien Gabel has established an international career of the highest caliber, appearing with such orchestras as the London Philharmonic Orchestra, Orchestre de Paris, Minnesota Orchestra, NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, Tonkünstler Orchestra in Vienna, Oslo Philharmonic, Cleveland Orchestra, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra, and Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. Praised for his dynamic style, he is best known for his eclectic repertoire choices ranging from core symphonic works to new music to championing lesserknown composers of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Gabel’s 2022–23 season has included many highly anticipated debuts, beginning with the BBC Proms with the BBC Symphony Orchestra followed by the Vienna Symphony Orchestra and the Opéra de Paris leading Calixto Bieito’s production of Carmen, while in North America he makes debuts with the symphony orchestras of Pittsburgh, Indianapolis, and Baltimore. The season also includes return appearances with the Minnesota Orchestra, Toronto Symphony Orchestra, Tonkünstler Orchestra in Vienna, Deutsches Symphonie Orchester Berlin, City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Malmö Symphony Orchestra, Stavanger Symphony

Orchestra, Orchestre Philharmonique de MonteCarlo, and West Australian Symphony Orchestra. Also this season, in Paris, he embarks on a large-scale project to record the music for Abel Gance’s 1927 epic silent film Napoléon with the Orchestre National de France and Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France in a production presented in theaters, live performances, and for online streaming.

Fabien Gabel regularly performs with Emanuel Ax, Yefim Bronfman, Bertrand Chamayou, Seong-Jin Cho, Jean-Yves Thibaudet, Gidon Kremer, Augustin Hadelich, Simone Lamsma, Daniel Lozakovich, Christian Tetzlaff, Gautier Capuçon, Daniel Müller-Schott, Johannes Moser, Håkan Hardenberger, Emmanuel Pahud, Measha Brueggergosman, Natalie Dessay, Petra Lang, Jennifer Larmore, Marie-Nicole Lemieux, Danielle de Niese, and Michael Schade.

Having attracted international attention as the winner of the Donatella Flick Conducting Competition in 2004, Gabel was assistant conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra from 2004 to 2006 and music director of the Orchestre Symphonique de Québec from 2012 to 2021 and of the National Youth Orchestra of France from 2017 to 2021.

Born in Paris to a family of accomplished musicians, Fabien Gabel began playing the trumpet at the age of six and honed his skills at the Paris Conservatory and at the Hochschule für Musik Karlsruhe. He played with various Parisian orchestras under such prominent conductors as Pierre Boulez, Sir Colin Davis, Riccardo Muti, Seiji Ozawa, Sir Simon Rattle, and Bernard Haitink before embarking on his conducting career.

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 29 profiles
PHOTO © BY STÉPHANE BOURGEOIS

Daniil Trifonov Piano

first cso performances

November 14, 15, and 17, 2012, Orchestra Hall. Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto no. 1, Charles Dutoit conducting

most recent cso performances

October 18, 19, and 20, 2016, Orchestra Hall. Prokofiev’s Piano Concerto no. 3, Marin Alsop conducting

Grammy Award–winning pianist Daniil Trifonov, Musical America’s 2019 Artist of the Year, is a solo artist, champion of the concerto repertoire, chamber and vocal music collaborator, and composer, whose performances are a perpetual source of wonder to audiences and critics alike. With Transcendental, the Liszt collection that marked his third title as an exclusive Deutsche Grammophon artist, he won the 2017 Grammy Award for Best Classical Instrumental Solo.

In the fall of 2022, Trifonov headlined the season-opening galas of the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington (D.C.) and, with the Philadelphia Orchestra, New York’s Carnegie Hall. Over the course of the current season, he returns to that venue, first as the last stop of an extensive North American recital tour, then for the first of three high-profile collaborations with Joshua Bell, and finally with the National Symphony Orchestra. Other 2022–23 season highlights include concerts with the New York Philharmonic; season-long residencies with the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra and

Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France; tours with the Orchestre National de France and London’s Royal Philharmonic Orchestra; a chamber collaboration with Stefan Jackiw and Alisa Weilerstein at the 92nd Street Y in New York; and the release of Deutsche Grammophon’s new CD and Blu-ray edition of the best-selling, Grammy-nominated double album Bach: The Art of Life.

Trifonov’s DG discography also includes the Grammy-nominated live recording of his Carnegie Hall recital debut; Chopin Evocations; Silver Age, for which he received Opus Klassik’s Instrumentalist of the Year/Piano Award; and three volumes of works by Rachmaninov with the Philadelphia Orchestra and Yannick NézetSéguin, of which two received Grammy nominations and the third won BBC Music’s 2019 Concerto Recording of the Year. In 2016 Trifonov was named Gramophone’s Artist of the Year, and in 2021 he was made a Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters by the French government.

During the 2010–11 season, Daniil Trifonov won medals at three of the music world’s most prestigious competitions: third prize in in the Chopin Piano Competition in Warsaw, first prize in the Arthur Rubinstein International Piano Competition in Tel Aviv, and both first prize and grand prize in the International Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow.

He studied with Sergei Babayan at the Cleveland Institute of Music.

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30 ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-SECOND SEASON
PROFILES
PHOTO © BY DARIO ACOSTA

chicago symphony orchestra

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra is consistently hailed as one of the world’s leading orchestras, and in September 2010, renowned Italian conductor Riccardo Muti became its tenth music director. During his tenure, the Orchestra has deepened its engagement with the Chicago community, nurtured its legacy while supporting a new generation of musicians and composers, and collaborated with visionary artists.

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

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

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

Sir Georg Solti, the Orchestra’s eighth music director, served from 1969 until 1991. His arrival launched one of the most successful musical partnerships of our time, and the CSO made its first overseas tour to Europe in 1971 under his direction, along with numerous award-winning recordings. Solti then held

the title of music director laureate and returned to conduct the Orchestra for several weeks each season until his death in September 1997.

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

Pierre Boulez’s long-standing relationship with the Orchestra led to his appointment as principal guest conductor in 1995. He was named Helen Regenstein Conductor Emeritus in 2006, a position he held until his death in January 2016. Only two others have served as principal guest conductors: Carlo Maria Giulini, who appeared in Chicago regularly in the late 1950s, was named to the post in 1969, serving until 1972; Claudio Abbado held the position from 1982 to 1985. From 2006 to 2010, Bernard Haitink was the Orchestra’s first principal conductor. Cellist Yo-Yo Ma served as the CSO’s Judson and Joyce Green Creative Consultant from 2010 to 2019. Hilary Hahn became the CSO’s first Artist-in-Residence in 2021, a role that brings her to Chicago for multiple residencies each season.

Jessie Montgomery was appointed Mead Composer-in-Residence in 2021. She follows ten highly regarded composers in this role, including John Corigliano and Shulamit Ran—both winners of the Pulitzer Prize for Music. In addition to composing works for the CSO, Montgomery curates the contemporary MusicNOW series.

The Orchestra first performed at Ravinia Park in 1905 and appeared frequently through August 1931, after which the park was closed for most of the Great Depression. In August 1936, the Orchestra helped to inaugurate the first season of the Ravinia Festival, and it has been in residence nearly every summer since.

Since 1916, recording has been a significant part of the Orchestra’s activities. Releases on CSO Resound, the Orchestra’s independent recording label, include the Grammy Award–winning release of Verdi’s Requiem led by Riccardo Muti. Recordings by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Chorus have earned sixty-four Grammy awards from the Recording Academy.

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 31

Chicago Symphony Orchestra

Riccardo Muti Zell Music Director

Jessie Montgomery Mead Composer-in-Residence

Hilary Hahn Artist-in-Residence

violins

Robert Chen Concertmaster

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

Stephanie Jeong

Associate Concertmaster

The Cathy and Bill Osborn Chair

David Taylor*

Assistant Concertmaster

The Ling Z. and Michael C. Markovitz Chair

Yuan-Qing Yu*

Assistant Concertmaster

So Young Bae

Cornelius Chiu

Gina DiBello

Kozue Funakoshi

Russell Hershow

Qing Hou

Matous Michal

Simon Michal

Blair Milton §

Sando Shia

Susan Synnestvedt

Rong-Yan Tang ‡

Baird Dodge Principal

Lei Hou

Ni Mei

Hermine Gagné

Rachel Goldstein

Mihaela Ionescu

Sylvia Kim Kilcullen

Melanie Kupchynsky

Wendy Koons Meir

Joyce Noh

Nancy Park

Ronald Satkiewicz

Florence Schwartz

violas

Li-Kuo Chang ‡

Assistant Principal

Catherine Brubaker

Beatrice Chen

Youming Chen

Sunghee Choi

Wei-Ting Kuo

Danny Lai

Weijing Michal

Diane Mues

Lawrence Neuman

Max Raimi

cellos

John Sharp Principal

The Eloise W. Martin Chair

Kenneth Olsen

Assistant Principal

The Adele Gidwitz Chair

Karen Basrak

The Joseph A. and Cecile

Renaud Gorno Chair

Loren Brown

Richard Hirschl

Daniel Katz

Katinka Kleijn §

David Sanders

Gary Stucka

Brant Taylor

basses

Alexander Hanna Principal

The David and Mary Winton

Green Principal Bass Chair

Daniel Carson

Robert Kassinger ‡

Mark Kraemer

Stephen Lester

Bradley Opland

harp

Lynne Turner

flutes

Stefán Ragnar Höskuldsson

Principal

The Erika and Dietrich M.

Gross Principal Flute Chair

Yevgeny Faniuk

Assistant Principal

Emma Gerstein

Jennifer Gunn

piccolo

Jennifer Gunn

The Dora and John Aalbregtse Piccolo Chair

oboes

William Welter Principal

The Nancy and Larry Fuller

Principal Oboe Chair

Lora Schaefer

Assistant Principal

Scott Hostetler

english horn

Scott Hostetler

clarinets

Stephen Williamson Principal

John Bruce Yeh

Assistant Principal

Gregory Smith

e-flat clarinet

John Bruce Yeh

bassoons

Keith Buncke Principal

William Buchman

Assistant Principal

Miles Maner

contrabassoon

Miles Maner

horns

David Cooper Principal

Daniel Gingrich

Associate Principal

James Smelser

David Griffin

Oto Carrillo

Susanna Gaunt

trumpets

Esteban Batallán Principal

The Adolph Herseth Principal Trumpet Chair, endowed by an anonymous benefactor

Mark Ridenour

Assistant Principal

John Hagstrom

The Bleck Family Chair

Tage Larsen

The Pritzker Military Museum & Library Chair

trombones

Jay Friedman Principal

The Lisa and Paul Wiggin Principal Trombone Chair

Michael Mulcahy

Charles Vernon

bass trombone

Charles Vernon

tuba

Gene Pokorny Principal

The Arnold Jacobs Principal

Tuba Chair, endowed by Christine Querfeld

* Assistant concertmasters are listed by seniority. ‡ On sabbatical § On leave

timpani

David Herbert Principal

The Clinton Family Fund Chair

Vadim Karpinos

Assistant Principal

percussion

Cynthia Yeh Principal

Patricia Dash

Vadim Karpinos

James Ross

librarians

Peter Conover Principal

Carole Keller

Mark Swanson

cso fellow

Gabriela Lara Violin

orchestra personnel

John Deverman Director

Anne MacQuarrie Manager, CSO Auditions and Orchestra Personnel

stage technicians

Christopher Lewis Stage Manager

Blair Carlson

Paul Christopher

Ryan Hartge

Peter Landry

Joshua Mondie

Todd Snick

The Paul Hindemith Principal Viola, Gilchrist Foundation, and Louise H. Benton Wagner chairs currently are unoccupied. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra string sections utilize revolving seating. Players behind the first desk (first two desks in the violins) change seats systematically every two weeks and are listed alphabetically. Section percussionists also are listed alphabetically.

HUNDRED THIRTY-SECOND SEASON

32 O NE

chicago symphony orchestra association governing members

The Governing Members are the CSOA’s first philanthropic society, which celebrated its 125th anniversary in the 2019–20 season. Its support funds the CSOA’s artistic excellence and community engagement. In return, members enjoy exclusive benefits and recognition. For more information, please contact 312-294-3337 or governingmembers@cso.org.

GOVERNING MEMBERS

EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

Charles Emmons, Jr. Chair

Michael Perlstein Immediate Past Chair

Merrill and Judy Blau Vice Chairs of Member Engagement

Dr. Phyllis C. Bleck Vice Chair of the Annual Fund

Lisa Ross Vice Chair of Nominations & Membership

GOVERNING MEMBERS

Anonymous (8)

Dora J. Aalbregtse

Floyd Abramson

Ms. Patti Acurio

Fraida Aland

Sandra Allen

Gary Allie

Robert Alsaker

Megan P. Anderson

Dr. Edward Applebaum

David Arch

Dr. Kent Armbruster

Dr. Andrew Aronson

Susan Baird

Ms. Judith Barnard

Merrill Barnes

Peter Barrett

Roberta Barron

Roger Baskes

Cynthia Bates

Robert H. Baum

Mrs. Robert A. Beatty

Kirsten Bedway

Gail Eisenhart Belytschko

Edward H. Bennett III

Meta S. Berger

D. Theodore Berghorst

Ann Berlin

Phyllis Berlin

Mr. William E. Bible

Mrs. Arthur A. Billings

Dianne Blanco

Judy Blau

Merrill Blau

Dr. Phyllis C. Bleck

Ann Blickensderfer

Terry Boden

Fred Boelter

Mrs. Suzanne Borland

James G. Borovsky

Adam Bossov

Janet S. Boyer

John D. Bramsen

† Deceased

Ms. Jill Brennan

Mrs. William Gardner Brown

Sue Brubaker

Mrs. Patricia M. Bryan

Gilda Buchbinder

Samuel Buchsbaum

Rosemarie Buntrock

Elizabeth Nolan Buzard

Ms. Lutgart Calcote

Thomas Campbell

Ms. Vera Capp

Wendy Alders Cartland

Mrs. William C. Childs

Linton J. Childs

Frank Cicero, Jr.

Patricia A. Clickener

Mitchell Cobey

Jean M. Cocozza

Robin Tennant Colburn

Dr. Edward A. Cole

Mrs. Jane B. Colman

Eileen Conaghan

Dr. Thomas H. Conner

Ms. Cecilia Conrad

Beverly Ann Conroy

Jenny L. Corley

Ms. Sarah Crane

Mari Hatzenbuehler Craven

Mr. Richard Cremieux

R. Bert Crossland

Rebecca E. Crown

Catherine Daniels

Mrs. Robert J. Darnall

Dr. Tapas K. Das Gupta

Roxanne Decyk

Ms. Nancy Dehmlow

Mrs. Suzanne Demirjian

Duane M. DesParte

Janet Wood Diederichs

Doug Donenfeld

Mrs. William F. Dooley

Sara L. Downey

Ms. Ann Drake

David Dranove

Robert Duggan

Mimi Duginger

Mr. Frank A. Dusek, CPA

Mrs. David P. Earle III

Judge Frank H. Easterbrook

Mrs. Dorne Eastwood

Mrs. Larry K. Ebert

Louis M. Ebling III

Jon Ekdahl

Kathleen H. Elliott

Charles Emmons, Jr.

Scott Enloe

Dr. James Ertle

William Escamilla

Dr. Marilyn D. Ezri

Neil Fackler

Melissa Sage Fadim

Jeffrey Farbman

Signe Ferguson

Hector Ferral, M.D.

Ms. Constance M. Filling

Mr. Daniel Fischel

Mrs. Dean Fischer

Henry Fogel

Mrs. John D. Foster

David and Janet Fox

Mr. Paul E. Freehling

Mitzi Freidheim

Marjorie Friedman Heyman

Mr. Agustin G. Sanz

Malcolm M. Gaynor

Robert D. Gecht

Frank Gelber

Mrs. Lynn Gendleman

Dr. Mark Gendleman

Rabbi Gary S. Gerson

Dr. Bernardino Ghetti

Karen Gianfrancisco

Ellen Gignilliat

Mr. James J. Glasser

Madeleine Glossberg

Mrs. Judy Goldberg

Mrs. Mary Anne Goldberg

Anne Goldstein

Jerry A. Goldstone

Mary Goodkind

Dr. Alexia Gordon

Mr. Michael D. Gordon

Donald J. Gralen

Ruth Grant

Mrs. Hanna H. Gray

Mary L. Gray

Dana Green Clancy

Freddi L. Greenberg

Delta A. Greene

Joyce Greening

Dr. Jerri Greer

Dr. Katherine L. Griem

Kendall Griffith

Jerome J. Groen

Jacalyn Gronek

John P. Grube

James P. Grusecki

Anastasia Gutting

Lynne R. Haarlow

Joan M. Hall

Dr. Howard Halpern

Mrs. Richard C. Halpern

Anne Marcus Hamada

Josephine Hammer

Joel L. Handelman

John Hard

Mrs. William A. Hark

Dr. Dane Hassani

James W. Haugh

Thomas Haynes

James Heckman

Mrs. Patricia Herrmann Heestand

Dr. Scott W. Helm

Marilyn. P. Helmholz

Richard H. Helmholz

Dr. Arthur L. Herbst

Jeffrey W. Hesse

Konstanze L. Hickey

Thea Flaum Hill

Dr. Richard Hirschmann

Suzanne Hoffman

Anne Hokin

Wayne J. Holman III

Fred E. Holubow

Mr. James Holzhauer

Carol Honigberg

Janice L. Honigberg

Mrs. Nancy A. Horner

Mrs. Arnold Horween

Frances G. Horwich

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

Dr. Mary L. Houston

Patricia J. Hurley

Michael Huston

Barbara Ann Huyler

Mr. Verne G. Istock

Mrs. Nancy Witte Jacobs

Dr. Todd Janus

John Jawor

Ms. Justine Jentes

Brian Johnson

George E. Johnson

Ronald B. Johnson

Dr. Patricia Collins Jones

Edward T. Joyce

Mrs. Carol K. Kaplan †

Claudia Norris Kapnick

Mrs. Lonny H. Karmin

Barry D. Kaufman

Kenneth Kaufman

Marie Kaufman

Don Kaul

Molly Keller

Jonathan Kemper

Nancy Kempf

Elizabeth I. Keyser

Leslie Kiesel

Emmy King

Susan Kiphart

Carol Kipperman

Dr. Elaine H. Klemen

Carol Evans Klenk

Mrs. Janet Knauff

Mr. Henry L. Kohn

Dr. Mark Kozloff

Dr. Michael Krco

Eldon Kreider

David Kreisman

MaryBeth Kretz

Dr. Vinay Kumar

Mr. John LaBarbera

Dr. Lynda Lane

Stephen Lans

William J. Lawlor III

Sunhee Lee

Jonathon Leik

Sheila Fields Leiter

Jeffrey Lennard

Zafra Lerman

Jerrold Levine

Laurence H. Levine

Mrs. Bernard Leviton

Gregory M. Lewis

Carolyn Lickerman

Mrs. Paul Lieberman

Dr. Philip R. Liebson

Patricia M. Livingston

Jane Loeb

Renée Logan

Amy Lubin

Anna Lysakowski

Carol MacArthur

Mrs. Duncan MacLean

Dr. Michael S. Maling

Sharon L. Manuel

David A. Marshall

Judy Marth

Patrick A. Martin

BeLinda I. Mathie

Scott McCue

Ann Pickard McDermott

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 33

Dr. James L. McGee

Dr. John P. McGee †

Mrs. Lester McKeever

John A. McKenna

Mrs. Peter McKinney

James Edward McPherson

Mr. Paul Meister

Dr. Ellen Mendelson

Mara Mills Barker

Dr. Toni-Marie Montgomery

John H. Mugge

Daniel R. Murray

Mr. Stuart C. Nathan

Mrs. Ray E. Newton, Jr.

Edward A. Nieminen

Dr. Zehava L. Noah

Kenneth R. Norgan

Martha C. Nussbaum

Mrs. James J. O’Connor

Joy O’Malley

James J. O’Sullivan, Jr.

William A. Obenshain

Shelley Ochab

Maria Ochs

Eric Oesterle

Mrs. Norman L. Olson

Michael Oman

Kathleen Field Orr

Mr. Gerald A. Ostermann

Bruce L. Ottley

Pamela Papas

Mr. Bruno A. Pasquinelli

Mr. Timothy J. Patenode

Robert J. Patterson, Jr.

Mr. Michael Payette

Mrs. Richard S. Pepper †

Jean E. Perkins

Mr. Michael A. Perlstein

Bonnie Perry

Dr. William Peruzzi

Robert C. Peterson

Ellard Pfaelzer, Jr.

Sue N. Pick

Stanley M. Pillman

Virginia Johnson Pillman

Betsey N. Pinkert

Ms. Emilysue Pinnell

Harvey R. Plonsker

Mr. John F. Podjasek, III

Andrew Porte

Charles H. Posner

Stephen Potter

Carol Prins

Liz Pritchard

Maridee Quanbeck

Mrs. Lynda Rahal

Diana Mendley Rauner

Susan Regenstein

Mari Yamamoto Regnier

Mary Thomson Renner

Burton R. Rissman

Charles T. Rivkin

Carol Roberts

Mr. John H. Roberts

William Roberts

David Robin

Dr. Diana Robin

Chauncey H. Robinson

Bob Rogers

Kevin M. Rooney

Harry J. Roper

Saul Rosen

Sheli Z. Rosenberg

Dr. Ricardo T. Rosenkranz

Michael Rosenthal

Doris Roskin

Lisa Ross

Maija Rothenberg

Roberta H. Rubin

Mrs. Susan B. Rubnitz

Sandra K. Rusnak

David W. “Buzz” Ruttenberg

Richard O. Ryan

Mrs. Patrick G. Ryan

Norman K. Sackar

Anthony Saineghi

Inez Saunders

Karla Scherer

David M. Schiffman

Judith Feigon Schiffman

Rosa Schloss

Al Schriesheim

Donald L. Schwartz

Susan H. Schwartz

Dr. Penny Bender Sebring

Chandra Sekhar

Mrs. Richard J.L. Senior

Ilene W. Shaw

Pam Sheffield

James C. Sheinin, M.D.

Richard W. Shepro

Jessie Shih

Mrs. Elizabeth Shoemaker

Caroline Orzac Shoenberger

Stuart Shulruff

Adele Simmons

Linda Simon

Mr. Larry Simpson

Craig Sirles

Miyam Slater

Valerie Slotnick

Mrs. Jackson W. Smart, Jr.

Charles F. Smith

Diane W. Smith

Louise K. Smith

Mary Ann Smith

Stephen R. Smith

Mrs. Ralph Smykal

Naomi Pollock and David Sneider

Diane Snyder

Kimberly Snyder

Kathleen Solaro

Ms. Elysia M. Solomon

Orli Staley

William D. Staley

Helena Stancikas

Grace Stanek

Ms. Denise M. Stauder

Leonidas Stefanos

Mrs. Richard J. Stern

Liz Stiffel

Mary Stowell

Lawrence E. Strickling

Patricia Study

Cheryl Sturm

BISCO Foundation

Mrs. Robert Szalay

Mr. Gregory Taubeneck

Chris Thomas

James E. Thompson

Dr. Robert Thomson

Ms. Carla M. Thorpe

Joan Thron

David Timm

Mrs. Ray S. Tittle, Jr.

William R. Tobey, Jr.

Bruce Tranen †

James M. (Mack) Trapp

John T. Travers

David Trushin

Dr. David A. Turner

Robert W. Turner

Zalman Usiskin

Mrs. James D. Vail III

John Van Horn

Mrs. Peter E. Van Nice

William C. Vance

Thomas D. Vander Veen

Jennifer Vianello

Dr. Michael Viglione

Catherine M. Villinski

Charles Vincent

Mr. Christian Vinyard

Theodore Wachs

Mark A. Wagner

Beth Ann Waite

Bernard T. Wall

Nicholas Wallace

Dr. Catherine L. Webb

Jeffrey J. Webb

Mrs. Jacob Weglarz

Chickie Weisbard

Richard Weiss

Robert G. Weiss

Dr. Marc Weissbluth

Rebecca West

Carmen Wheatcroft

Leah Williams

M.L. Winburn

Peter Wolf

Laura Woll

Dr. Hak Yui Wong

Courtenay R. Wood

Michael H. Woolever

Ms. Debbie Wright

Ronald Yonover

Owen Youngman

Priscilla Yu

David J. Zampa

Dr. John P. Zaremba

Karen Zupko

For complete donor listings, please visit the Richard and Helen Thomas Donor Gallery at cso.org/donorgallery.

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

34 CSO.ORG GOVERNING MEMBERS

honor roll of donors

Corporate Partners

MAESTRO RESIDENCY PRESENTER

Bank of America

OFFICIAL AIRLINE OF THE CSO

United Airlines

$100,000 AND ABOVE

Abbott

Allstate Insurance Company

CIBC Private Wealth

Citadel and Citadel Securities

ITW

Northern Trust

$50,000–$99,999

Anonymous (1)

Jenner & Block LLP

PNC Bank

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Sidley Austin LLP

Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP

$25,000–$49,999

Abbott Fund

Aon

Bulgari

Corrugated Supplies Company, LLC

Kinder Morgan

Mayer Brown LLP

S&C Electric Company Fund

$10,000–$24,999

Anonymous (1)

Advanced Technology Services

Archer Daniels Midland Company

Deloitte

Exelon

Fifth Third Bank

GCM Grosvenor

Goldman Sachs & Co.

HARIBO of America

Havi Group

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

King & Spalding

Latham & Watkins LLP

McDermott Will & Emery

McKinsey & Company

Oxford Bank

Readerlink LLC

UL, Inc.

Underwriters Laboratories

Walgreens

Winston & Strawn LLP

$5,000–$9,999

Accenture

ArentFox Schiff LLP

Baird

Burwood Group

Fellowes, Inc.

Grant Thornton LLP

The Hallstar Company

Italian Village Restaurants

Law Offices of Jonathan N. Sherwell

Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises, Inc.

Mesirow Financial

Segal Consulting

Starshak & Winzenburg

Steiner Electric Company

Supreme Lobster and Seafood Company

Ventas

Weiss Financial

$1,000–$4,999

American Agricultural Insurance Company

Amsted Industries Incorporated

Central Building & Preservation L.P.

Chapman and Cutler LLP

Columbia Capital Management

Etnyre International

Parkway Elevators

Readerlink

Sahara Enterprises, Inc.

Shetland Limited Partnership

Show Services

Shure Incorporated

Vienna Beef

Vomela

Foundations and Government Agencies

$100,000 AND ABOVE

Anonymous

Paul M. Angell Family Foundation

The Elizabeth F. Cheney Foundation

Julius N. Frankel Foundation

The Negaunee Foundation

Sargent Family Foundation

TAWANI Foundation

Zell Family Foundation

$50,000–$99,999

The Brinson Foundation

The Chicago Community Trust

The Clinton Family Fund

Robert and Joanne Crown Income Charitable Fund, in memory of Joanne Strauss Crown

Lloyd A. Fry Foundation

Sally Mead Hands Foundation

Illinois Arts Council Agency

National Endowment for the Arts

Polk Bros. Foundation

$25,000–$49,999

Crain-Maling Foundation

Crown Family Philanthropies

Dan J. Epstein Family Foundation

John R. Halligan Charitable Fund

Irving Harris Foundation

The Walter E. Heller/Alyce DeCosta Fund at The Chicago Community Trust

Kovler Family Foundation

Leslie Fund, Inc.

Bowman C. Lingle Trust

Hulda B. and Maurice L. Rothschild Foundation

$10,000–$24,999

Anonymous

Robert & Isabelle Bass Foundation

The Buchanan Family Foundation

Darling Family Foundation

The Maval Foundation

Pritzker Traubert Foundation

Roy and Irene Rettinger Foundation

Charles and M. R. Shapiro Foundation

The George L. Shields Foundation

$5,000–$9,999

The Aaron Copland Fund for Music

The Allyn Foundation, Inc.

Harry F. and Elaine Chaddick Foundation

Hoellen Family Foundation

Hunter Family Foundation

Mayer and Morris Kaplan

Family Foundation

Music Performance Trust Fund

E. Nakamichi Foundation

Benjamin J. Rosenthal Foundation

Dr. Scholl Foundation

$2,500–$4,999

Arts Midwest GIG Fund

Charles H. and Bertha L. Boothroyd Foundation

William M. Hales Foundation

$1,000–$2,499

Franklin Philanthropic Foundation

Geraldi Norton Foundation

Walter and Caroline Sueske Charitable Trust

Annual Support

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association gratefully acknowledges the following individuals for their annual gifts and commitments in support of the CSOA through January 2023. To learn more, please call Bobbie Rafferty, Director, Individual Giving and Affiliated Donor Groups, at 312-294-3165.

$150,000 AND ABOVE

Anonymous (3)

Randy L. and Melvin R. † Berlin

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Glossberg

Kenneth C. Griffin Charitable Fund

Mr. & Mrs. Dietrich M. Gross

Mr. & Mrs. † William R. Jentes

The Julian Family Foundation

Margot and Josef Lakonishok

The Negaunee Foundation

COL (IL) Jennifer N. Pritzker, IL ARNG (Retired)

Megan and Steve Shebik

Zell Family Foundation

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 35

$100,000–$149,999

Anonymous (3)

James and Brenda Grusecki

Robert Kohl and Clark Pellett

Ling Z. and Michael C. Markovitz

Cathy and Bill Osborn

The Sargent Family Foundation

Catherine M. and Frederick H. Waddell

$75,000–$99,999

Chet Gougis and Shelley Ochab

John Hart and Carol Prins

Mr. & Mrs. Verne G. Istock

Judy and Scott McCue

Ms. Renee Metcalf

Sandra and Earl Rusnak, Jr.

Lisa and Paul Wiggin

$50,000–$74,999

Anonymous (3)

Dora J. and R. John Aalbregtse

Julie and Roger Baskes

Mrs. Janet R. Bauer

Robert H. Baum and MaryBeth Kretz

Kay Bucksbaum

SEMPRE ALWAYS: The Campaign for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra

This $175 million fundraising effort provides the secure footing needed to promote the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s preeminent role as a cultural icon showcasing musical brilliance, leadership, and innovation. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association gratefully acknowledges the generous donors who have shown tremendous support for this strategic initiative. These commitments make it possible for the CSO’s many facets to thrive today, tomorrow, and always. Contact Al Andreychuk at 312-294-3150 for more information.

$20,000,000 AND ABOVE

Zell Family Foundation

$10,000,000–$19,999,999

The Grainger Foundation

The Negaunee Foundation

$5,000,000–$9,999,999

Anonymous

Julian Family Foundation

Ling Z. and Michael C. Markovitz

$2,500,000–$4,999,999

Anonymous

Mary Louise Gorno

Estate of Esther G. Klatz

Dean L. and Rosemarie Buntrock Foundation

Ms. Marion A. Cameron-Gray

Bruce and Martha Clinton for The Clinton Family Fund

Ms. Sarah Crane

Ms. Nancy Dehmlow

Dr. Eugene F. and Mrs. SallyAnn D. Fama

Rhoda Lea † and Henry S. † Frank

Ms. Susan Goldschmidt

Susan Regenstein

Barbara and Barre Seid Foundation

Michael and Linda Simon

Dr. & Mrs. Eugene and Jean Stark

Mr. Irving Stenn, Jr.

Liz Stiffel

Ms. Liisa M. Thomas and Mr. Stephen L. Pratt

Helen G. and Richard L. Thomas

$35,000–$49,999

Sharon and Charles † Angell

Mr. Roderick Branch

Mr. & Dr. George Colis

Dan J. Epstein Family Foundation

Mary Winton Green

Robert Kohl and Clark Pellett

Megan and Steve Shebik

Richard and Helen Thomas

$1,000,000–$2,499,999

Anonymous

Dora J. and R. John Aalbregtse

Mr. & Mrs. William Adams IV

Dr. Phyllis C. Bleck

Mr. & Mrs. William Gardner Brown

Kay Bucksbaum

Rosemarie and Dean L. Buntrock

Michael and Kathleen Elliott

Jim † and Kay Mabie

Estate of Gloria Miner

Cathy and Bill Osborn

Catherine M. and Frederick H. Waddell

$500,000–$999,999

Patricia and Laurence Booth

John D. and Leslie Henner Burns

Ms. Marion A. Cameron-Gray

The Davee Foundation

Howard Gottlieb

ITW

Mr. & Mrs. † William R. Jentes

Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Murley

Sheli Z. and Burton X. Rosenberg

UP TO $500,000

Anonymous

Jeff and Keiko Alexander

Ruth and Roger Anderson

Family Foundation

Peter and Elise Barack

Merrill and Judy Blau

Roderick Branch and Brant Taylor

Dr. Joseph and Patricia Car

Mr. Collier Hands

Ms. Elizabeth Parker and Mr. Keith Crow

Walter and Kathleen Snodell

Terrence and Laura Truax

$25,000–$34,999

Anonymous (3)

Mr. & Mrs. William Adams IV

Peter and Elise Barack

Peter and Betsy Barrett

Patricia and Laurence Booth

Robert J. Buford

Mr. & Mrs. Johannes Burlin

Mr. & Mrs. Stephen V. D’Amore

Ms. Debora de Hoyos and Mr. Walter Carlson

Ms. Ann Drake

Timothy A. and Bette Anne Duffy

Mr. & Mrs. Brian Duwe

Mrs. Carol Evans, in memory of Henry Evans

Mr. & Mrs. James B. Fadim

Mr. Daniel Fischel and Ms. Sylvia Neil

Mr. & Mrs. David W. Fox, Sr.

Ellen and Paul Gignilliat

William A. and Anne Goldstein

George and Minou Colis

Mimi Duginger

Charles and Carol Emmons

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Glossberg

Alice and Richard Godfrey

William A. and Anne Goldstein

Chet Gougis and Shelley Ochab

Mr. Graham C. Grady

John Hart and Carol Prins

The Heestand Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. Jay L. Henderson

Mr. & Mrs. Paul R. Judy

Karen and Neil Kawashima

Ms. Geraldine Keefe

Anne Kern

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Kilroy

Randall S. Kroszner and David Nelson

Dr. Eva F. Lichtenberg

Judy and Scott McCue

Mr. David E. McNeel

Mr. Robert Meeker

James and Renée Metcalf

Mr. Daniel R. Murray

Mr. & Mrs. Michael A. Perlstein

Estate of Donald Powell

Andra and Irwin Press

Sage Foundation, Melissa Sage Fadim

Mr. John Schmidt and Dr. Janet Gilboy

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Sheffield, Jr.

Dr. & Mrs. Eugene and Jean Stark

Carl W. Stern and Holly Hayes-Stern

Thierer Family Foundation

Penny and John Van Horn

Craig and Bette Williams

Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Wislow

Mr. Gifford Zimmerman

Estate of Rita Zralek

36 CSO.ORG HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

Mary Louise Gorno

Howard L. Gottlieb and Barbara G. Greis

Mr. Graham C. Grady

Irving Harris Foundation, Joan W. Harris

Mr. & Mrs. Jay L. Henderson

Ronald B. Johnson

Mr. † & Mrs. Burton Kaplan

Mr. & Mrs. Neil Kawashima

Ms. Donna L. Kendall

Tom and Betsy Kilroy

Mr. & Mrs. James Kolar

Randall S. Kroszner

Susan and Rick Levy

Mr. Terrance Livingston and Ms. Debra Cafaro

The James and Madeleine McMullan Family Foundation

Ms. Britt Miller

Dr. Charles Morcom

Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Murley

Daniel R. Murray

John D. and Alexandra C. Nichols

Andra and Irwin Press

Dr. Mohan Rao

Diana and Bruce Rauner

Ann and Bob † Reiland, in memory of Arthur and Ruth Koch

Dr. Petra and Mr. Randy O. Rissman

Sheli Z. and Burton X. Rosenberg

Patrick G. and Shirley W. Ryan Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. Scott Santi

Mr. John Schmidt and Dr. Janet Gilboy

Ms. Courtney Shea

Bill and Orli Staley Foundation

Mary Stowell

Thierer Family Foundation

Craig and Bette Williams

Susan and Bob Wislow

Mr. Gifford Zimmerman

$20,000–$24,999

Arnie and Ann Berlin

John D. and Leslie Henner Burns

Elizabeth Crown and Bill Wallace

Nancy and Bernard Dunkel

Richard and Alice Godfrey

Mrs. Carolyn Hallman

Mr. & Mrs. Mark C. Hibbard

Barbara and Kenneth Kaufman

Anne and John † Kern

Richard P. and Susan Kiphart Family

Mr. Michael Leppen

Jim † and Kay Mabie

Mr. Donald W. Nelson

Margo and Michael Oberman

Mr. † & Mrs. Albert Pawlick

Ms. Emilysue Pinnell

LeAnn Pedersen Pope and Clyde F. McGregor

John and Merry Ann Pratt

Mr. & Mrs. Chandra Sekhar

The George L. Shields Foundation, Inc.

Marlon Smith and Dominique Brewer

Dr. Stuart Sondheimer

Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Toft

Rebecca West

Ronald and Geri Yonover Foundation

$15,000–$19,999

Anonymous (3)

Nancy A. Abshire

Carey and Brett August

Mr. & Mrs. William Gardner Brown

Henry and Gilda Buchbinder

Robert D. Carone

Ann and Richard Carr

Joyce Chelberg

Sue and Jim Colletti

John and Fran Edwardson

Constance M. Filling and Robert D. Hevey Jr.

Sue and Melvin Gray

Halasyamani/Davis Family

Mr. & Mrs. R. Helmholz

Mr. & Mrs. Wayne J. Holman III

Mr. Joel Horowitz

Mrs. Janet Kanter

Ms. Geraldine Keefe

The King Family Foundation

Dr. Lynda Lane

Ms. Betsy Levin

Dr. Eva Lichtenberg and Dr. Arnold Tobin

Mr. Philip Lumpkin

Mr. David E. McNeel

Mr. Frank Modruson and Ms. Lynne Shigley

Edward and Gayla Nieminen

Pasquinelli Family Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. † Andrew Porte

Jerry Rose

Mr. & Mrs. Jason and Kristen Rossi

Al Schriesheim and Kay Torshen

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Sheffield, Jr.

Dr. Dusan Stefoski, M.D. and Mr. Craig Savage

Carl W. Stern and Holly Hayes-Stern

Penny and John Van Horn

Mr. & Mrs. William C. Vance

Mr. Christian Vinyard

Theodore and Elisabeth Wachs

Dr. Marylou Witz

$11,500–$14,999

Anonymous

Mr. & Mrs. Stuart Applebaum

Cynthia Bates and Kevin Rock

Mrs. Gail Belytschko

Mr. † & Mrs. David A. Donovan

Mr. & Mrs. Michael R. Hassan

Stephen and Maria Lans

Mr. & Mrs. Michael Madigan

Dr. Maija Freimanis and David A. Marshall

Jim and Ginger Meyer

Charles A. Moore †

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Silverstein

Mr. & Mrs. Scott Swanson

Ksenia A. and Peter Turula

Mr. & Ms. Richard Williams

$7,500–$11,499

Anonymous (3)

Ms. Patti Acurio

Fraida and Bob Aland

Jeff and Keiko Alexander

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

Ms. Miah Armour

Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Baker

Mr. † & Mrs. Richard Benck

Mr. & Mrs. William E. Bible

Merrill and Judy Blau

Mr. & Mrs. Fred Boelter

Cassandra L. Book

Ms. Lutgart Calcote

Tom and Dianne Campbell

Patricia A. Clickener

Dr. Edward A. Cole and Dr. Christine A. Rydel

Dr. Thomas H. Conner

Mr. Lawrence Corry

Dr. Brenda A. Darrell and Mr. Paul S. Watford

Mr. & Mrs. Charles Demirjian

Mr. & Mrs. William Dooley

Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Douglas

Mr. & Mrs. † Allan Drebin

Mr. & Mrs. Timothy Earle

Mr. Eric Easterberg and Ms. Cindy Pan

Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Eastwood

Polly Eldringhoff

La and Philip Engel

William Escamilla

Mr. Fred Eychaner

Ms. Nancy Felton-Elkins and Larry Elkins

Rosemary Framburg

Dr. & Mrs. James Franklin

Dr. & Mrs. Mark Gendleman

Mr. & Mrs. Carl Gilmore

Jeannette and Jerry Goldstone

Mr. Gerald and Dr. Colette Gordon

Ann and John Grube

Lynne R. Haarlow

Joan M. Hall

Mrs. Richard C. Halpern

Anne Marcus Hamada

John and Sally Hard

Marguerite DeLany Hark †

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Heagy

Pati and O.J. † Heestand

Ms. Anna Hertsberg

Richard † and Joanne Hoffman

Fred and Sandra Holubow

Janice L. Honigberg

Mr. † & Mrs. Joel D. Honigberg

Tex and Susan Hull

Merle L. Jacob

Howard E. Jessen Family Trust

Mr. † & Mrs. † Howard Jessen

Mr. & Mrs. † George E. Johnson

Mr. & Mrs. Edward T. Joyce

Mr. James Kastenholz and Ms. Jennifer Steans

Mr. & Mrs. Jeff Keller

Kohn and Mitchell Family Foundation

Dr. June Koizumi

Dr. & Mrs. Mark Kozloff

Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Krueck

Mr. Craig Lancaster and Ms. Charlene T. Handler

Dr. † & Mrs. H. Leichenko

Mr. Jeffrey Lennard

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 37 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

Lewis-Sebring Family Foundation

Mr. † & Mrs. Paul Lieberman

Mr. & Mrs. John Lillard

Jane and Peter Loeb

Mr. Glen Madeja and Ms. Janet Steidl

Make It Better

Ms. Mirjana Martich and Mr. Zoran Lazarevic

Drs. Bill † and Elaine Moor

Emilie Morphew, M.D.

Mrs. Frank Morrissey

Drs. Robert and Marsha Mrtek

Ms. Susan Norvich

Ms. Martha Nussbaum

Mr. † & Mrs. Norman L. Olson

Kathleen Field Orr

Dr. Edward S. Orzac Foundation

The Osprey Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. James O’Sullivan, Jr.

Richard and Frances Penn

Sue N. Pick

D. Elizabeth Price

Mr. Duane Quaini †

Mr. & Mrs. † Neil K. Quinn

Dr. Diana Robin

Mr. Richard Ryan

Rita † and Norman Sackar

Ms. Cecelia Samans

Mr. Agustin G. Sanz

Mr. † & Mrs. David Savner

Karla Scherer

David and Judy Schiffman

Mr. & Mrs. Michael Scholl

Susan H. Schwartz

David and Judith L. Sensibar

The Earl and Brenda Shapiro Foundation

Jessie Shih and Johnson Ho

Mr. Jack Simpson

Dr. & Mrs. R. Solaro

Elysia M. Solomon

Cheryl Sturm

Mr. & Mrs. † Louis Sudler, Jr.

Ms. Bernadette Y. Tang

Mr. & Mrs. Gregory Taubeneck

Ms. Carla M. Thorpe

Tully Family Foundation in honor of Helen Zell

Frances S. Vandervoort

Ms. Caroline Wettersten

Peggy White

M.L. Winburn

Michael H. and Mary K. Woolever

Ms. Karen Zupko

$4,500–$7,499

Anonymous (14)

Elaine and Floyd Abramson

Sandra Allen and Jim Perlow

Mr. & Mrs. Gary Allie

Ms. Rene Alphonse

Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Alsaker

Geoffrey A. Anderson

Megan P. and John L. Anderson

Cushman L. and Pamela Andrews

Dr. Edward Applebaum and Dr. Eva Redei

David and Suzanne Arch

Dr. & Mrs. Kent Armbruster

Mr. & Mrs. Theodore M. Asner †

Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Baird

Ms. Judith Barnard

Mr. Merrill and Mr. N.M.K. Barnes

Roberta and Harold S. Barron

Joseph Bartush

Ms. Barbara Barzansky

Ms. Sandra Bass

Professor M. Cherif Bassiouni † and Elaine Klemen

Kirsten Bedway and Simon Peebler

Mr. Ken Belcher

Meta S. and Ronald † Berger Family Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. D. Theodore Berghorst

Dr. Leonard and Phyllis Berlin

Mrs. Arthur A. Billings

Jim † and Dianne Blanco

Ann Blickensderfer

Ms. Terry Boden

Mr. & Mrs. John Borland

Mr. & Mrs. James Borovsky

Adam Bossov

Janet S. Boyer

Mr. & Mrs. John D. Bramsen

Ms. Danolda Brennan

Ms. Jill Brennan

Ms. Dominique Brewer

Mrs. Sue Brubaker

Mr. & Mrs. Timothy Bryan

Butler Family Foundation

Elizabeth Nolan and Kevin Buzard

Ms. Vera Capp

Drs. Virginia and Stephen Carr

Wendy Alders Cartland

Mia Celano and Noel Dunn

Mr. & Mrs. Candelario Celio

Mr. James Chamberlain

Chicago Human Rhythm Project

Linton J. Childs

Harriett and Myron Cholden

Jan and Frank Cicero, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Clancy

John Clarke

Mr. & Ms. Keith Clayton

Mitchell Cobey and Janet Reali

Ms. Jean Cocozza

Jane and John C. Colman

E. and V. Combs Foundation

Mrs. Eileen Conaghan

Peter and Beverly Ann Conroy

Jenny L. Corley, in memory of Dr. W. Gene Corley

Nancy R. Corral

Mari Hatzenbuehler Craven

Mr. & Mrs. Richard Cremieux

R. Bert Crossland

Dancing Skies Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. C. Daniels

Dr. & Mrs. Tapas K. Das Gupta

Decyk Watts Charitable Foundation

Duane M. DesParte and John C. Schneider

Janet Wood Diederichs

Mr. Doug Donenfeld

David and Deborah Dranove

Mr. Robert R. Duggan

Mimi Duginger

Mr. & Mrs. Frank A. Dusek

Mr. & Mrs. David P. Earle III

Judge Frank Easterbrook

Mr. & Mrs. Larry K. Ebert

Mr. & Mrs. Louis M. Ebling III

Jon Ekdahl and Marcia Opp

Thomas Eller

Michael and Kathleen Elliott

Charles and Carol Emmons

Scott and Lenore Enloe

Dr. & Mrs. James Ertle

Marilyn D. Ezri, M.D.

Neil Fackler

Jeffrey Farbman and Ann Greenstein

Judith E. Feldman

Donald and Signe Ferguson

Hector Ferral, M.D.

Dr. & Mrs. Sanford Finkel, in honor of Robert Coad

Mr. Conrad Fischer

Mr. & Mrs. Dean Fischer

Ms. Hazel Fisher

Mrs. Roslyn K. Flegel

Mrs. John D. Foster

David and Janet Fox

Mr. & Mrs. Willard Fraumann

Susan and Paul Freehling

Mr. & Mrs. Cyrus F. Freidheim, Jr.

Nancy and Larry Fuller

James and Rebecca Gaebe

Judy and Mickey Gaynor

Robert D. Gecht

Sandy and Frank Gelber

Rabbi Gary S. Gerson and Dr. Carol R. Gerson

Bernardino and Caterina Ghetti

Camillo and Arlene Ghiron

Ms. Karen Gianfrancisco

Mr. & Mrs. James J. Glasser

Judy and Bill Goldberg

Lyn Goldstein

Robert and Marcia Goltermann

Mary and Michael Goodkind

Dr. Alexia Gordon

Mrs. Amy G. Gordon and Mr. Michael D. Gordon

Mr. Peter Gotsch and Dr. Jana French

Donald J. Gralen

Hanna H. Gray

Richard † and Mary L. Gray

Ms. Freddi Greenberg

Thomas † and Delta Greene

Timothy and Joyce Greening

Dr. Jerri E. Greer

Mr. & Mrs. Byron Gregory

Kendall Griffith

Mr. & Mrs. Jerome Groen

Jacalyn Gronek

Anastasia and Gary † Gutting

Stephanie and Howard Halpern

Ms. Josephine Hammer

Dr. Dane Hassani

James W. Haugh

38 CSO.ORG

Thomas and Connie Hsu Haynes

James and Lynne † Heckman

Mr. Dale C. Hedding

Scott Helm

Dr. & Mrs. Arthur L. Herbst

Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey W. Hesse

Marjorie Friedman Heyman

The Hickey Family Foundation

Robert A. Hill and Thea Flaum Hill

William B. Hinchliff

Dr. Richard Hirschmann

Ms. Gretchen Hoffmann and Mr. Joseph Doherty

Mr. William J. Hokin †

James and Eileen Holzhauer

Frances and Franklin † Horwich

James and Mary Houston

Pamela Kelley Hull † and Roger B. Hull †

Ms. Patricia Hurley

Frances and Phillip Huscher

Michael and Leigh Huston

Leland E. Hutchinson and Jean E. Perkins

Mrs. Nancy Witte Jacobs

Mr. & Mrs. Stan Jakopin

Dr. & Mrs. Todd and Peggy Janus

Mr. John Jawor

Ms. Justine Jentes and Mr. Dan Kuruna

Joni and Brian Johnson

Dr. Patricia Collins Jones

Mr. & Mrs. Edward Kaplan/ Kaplan Foundation

Jared Kaplan † and Maridee Quanbeck

Mrs. Lonny H. Karmin

Barry D. Kaufman

Larry † and Marie Kaufman

Don Kaul and Barbara Bluhm-Kaul

Mr. & Mrs. Michael Keiser

John and Judy Keller

Mrs. Elizabeth Keyser

Mr. & Mrs. Gene Kiesel

Carol Kipperman

Dr. Jay and Georgianna Kleiman

Mr. & Mrs. James Klenk

Mr. Thomas Kmetko

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Knauff

Cookie Anspach Kohn and Henry L. Kohn

Mr. & Mrs. Richard K. Komarek

Mr. Brian Kosek

Ms. Liesel Kossmann

Dr. Michael Krco

Eldon and Patricia Kreider

David and Susan Kreisman

Drs. Vinay and Raminder Kumar

Mr. & Mrs. Rubin P. Kuznitsky

Mr. John LaBarbera

Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Langrehr

Mr. William Lawlor, III

Sheila Fields Leiter

Ms. Zafra Lerman

Mr. Jerrold Levine

Mary and Laurence Levine

Averill and Bernard † Leviton

Gregory M. Lewis and Mary E. Strek

Mr. † and Mrs. Howard Lickerman

The Loewenthal Fund at The Chicago Community Trust

Mrs. Gabrielle Long

Dr. Anna Lysakowski

Carol MacArthur

Mr. & Mrs. Duncan MacLean

Eileen Madden

Dr. & Mrs. Michael S. Maling

F. Manilow

Sharon L. Manuel

Robert † and Judy Marth

Mr. & Mrs. Patrick A. Martin

Ms. BeLinda Mathie and Dr. Brian Haag

Igor and Olga Matlin

Ann Pickard McDermott

Dr. & Mrs. James McGee

Dr. † & Mrs. John McGee II

John and Etta McKenna

Dr. & Mrs. Peter McKinney

Ms. Carlette McMullan

James Edward McPherson and David Lee Murray †

Mr. & Mrs. Paul Meister

Mr. Gregory and Dr. Alice Melchor

Dr. Ellen Mendelson

Mr. Llewellyn Miller and Ms. Cecilia Conrad

Paul and Robert Barker Foundation

Dr. Anthony Montag † and Dr. Katherine Griem

Dr. Toni-Marie Montgomery

David H. Moscow

Catherine Mouly and LeRoy T. Carlson, Jr.

John H. Mugge

Jo Ann and Stuart Nathan

Mr. † & Mrs. William Neiman

David † and Dolores Nelson

Mrs. Ray E. Newton, Jr.

Dr. Zehava L. Noah

Mr. & Mrs. † Richard Nopar

Mark and Gloria Nusbaum

Bill and Penny Obenshain

Mr. & Mrs. Michael Ochs

Eric and Carolyn Oesterle

Sarah and Wallace Oliver

John and Joy O’Malley

Mr. Michael Oman and Mr. Ted Sigward

Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Ostermann

Ms. Lynne Ostfeld

Ms. Pamela Papas

Mr. Timothy J. Patenode

Dianne M. and Robert J. Patterson, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Gerald L. Pauling II

Mr. Michael Payette

Mr. & Mrs. Michael A. Perlstein

Bonnie Perry

Dr. William Peruzzi

Mr. Robert Peterson

Lorna and Ellard Pfaelzer, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Don Phillips

Richard Phillips

Mr. & Mrs. Dale R. Pinkert

Mary and Joseph Plauché

Harvey and Madeleine Plonsker

John F. Podjasek III Charitable Fund

Charlene H. Posner

Stephen and Ann Suker Potter

Mr. John Potts and Ms. Ann Nguyen

Barry and Elizabeth Pritchard

Mrs. Lynda Rahal

Mary K. Ring

Burton and Francine † Rissman

Charles and Marilynn Rivkin

Ms. Carol Roberts

William and Cheryl Roberts

David and Kathy Robin

Erik and Nelleke Roffelsen

Mr. & Mrs. Harry J. Roper

Dr. & Mrs. Melvin Roseman

Mr. & Mrs. Saul Rosen

Mr. & Mrs. Richard Rosenberg

Dr. & Mrs. Ricardo Rosenkranz

Michael Rosenthal

D.D. Roskin

Ms. Lisa Ross

Mr. & Mrs. Frank A. Rossi

Maija Rothenberg

Ms. Roberta H. Rubin

Mrs. Susan B. Rubnitz

Tina and Buzz Ruttenburg

William † and Mary † Ryan

Anthony Saineghi

Mr. David Sandfort

Raymond and Inez Saunders

Ms. Kay Schichtel and Mr. Barry Lesht

Mr. † & Mrs. Nathan Schloss

Donald L. and Susan J. Schwartz

Ruth Grant and Howard Schwartz

Diana and Richard Senior

Ms. Mary Beth Shea

Dr. & Mrs. James C. Sheinin

Richard W. Shepro and Lindsay E. Roberts

Dr. & Mrs. Mark C. Shields

Mr. & Ms. Alan Shoenberger

Stuart and Leslie Shulruff

Ms. Ann Silberman

Mr. † & Mrs. John Simmons

Julia M. Simpson

Mr. Larry Simpson

Craig Sirles

Valerie Slotnick

Mrs. Jackson W. Smart, Jr.

Charles F. Smith

Louise K. Smith

Mary Ann Smith

Mr. & Mrs. Stephen R. Smith

Naomi Pollock and David Sneider

James and Diane Snyder

Kimberly M. Snyder

Mrs. Linda Spain

Robert and Emily Spoerri

Helena Stancikas

Ms. Denise Stauder

Mr. & Mrs. Leonidas Stefanos

Roger † and Susan Stone

Family Foundation

Dr. Francis H. Straus II †

Lawrence E. Strickling and Sydney L. Hans

Mr. & Mrs. William H. Strong

Ms. Minsook Suh

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Szalay

Mr. Chris Thomas

Mr. James Thompson

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 39 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

Joan and Michael Thron

David and Beth Timm

Ray † and Mary Ann Tittle

Bill and Anne Tobey

Bruce † and Jan Tranen

James M. and Carol Trapp

John T. and Carrie M. Travers

Joan and David Trushin

Dr. & Mrs. David Turner

Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Turner

Mrs. Elizabeth Twede †

Henry † and Janet Underwood

Zalman and Karen Usiskin

Mr. Peter Vale

Jim and Cindy Valtman

Thomas D. Vander Veen, Ph.D.

Mr. & Mrs. Peter E. Van Nice

Mr. David J. Varnerin

Ms. Jennifer Vianello

Catherine M. Villinski

Ms. Raita Vilnins

Charles Vincent

Mr. & Mrs. Mark A. Wagner

Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Wall

Nicholas and Jessica Wallace

Dr. Catherine L. Webb

Mr. Jeffrey J. Webb and Ms. Catherine Yung

Mr. † & Mrs. Jacob Weglarz

Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Weiss

Marc Weissbluth, in memory of Linda Weissbluth

Carmen and Allen Wheatcroft

Mr. & Mrs. Floyd Whellan

Peter and Marlee Wolf

Ms. Lois Wolff

Sarah R. Wolff and Joel L. Handelman

Michael † and Laura Woll

Dr. Hak Wong

Courtenay R. Wood and H. Noel Jackson, Jr.

Ms. Debbie Wright

Dr. Nanajan Yakoub

Mari Yamamoto Regnier

Owen and Linda Youngman

Paul and Mary Yovovich

In memory of Anthony C. Yu

Mr. Laird Zacheis and Ms. Sunhee Lee

David and Eileen Zampa

Dr. & Mrs. John Zaremba

Gerald Zimmerman and Margarete Gross

$3,500–$4,499

Anonymous (4)

Ms. Rochelle Allen

Ms. Doris Angell

Mr. & Mrs. Edgar Bachrach

Prue and Frank Beidler

Dr. & Mrs. Gustavo Bermudez

Mr. Virgil Bogert

Mr. Donald Bouseman

Ms. Susan Bridge

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Brightfelt

Mr. Robert Clatanoff

Mr. † & Mrs. Robert J. Darnall

Mr. Guy DeBoo and Ms. Susan Franzetti

Mr. & Mrs. Dwight Decker

Dr. & Mrs. James L. Downey

Ingrid and Richard Dubberke

Mr. & Mrs. Estia Eichten

Dr. Gail Fahey

Fidelity Charitable Gift Funds

Mrs. Donna Fleming

Ms. Anita D. Flournoy

Arthur L. Frank, M.D.

Dr. Robert A. Harris

Ms. Dawn E. Helwig

Suzanne Hoffman and Dale Smith

Mr. Stephen Holmes

Dr. Ronald L. Hullinger

Dr. Ashley Jackson

Ian and Valerie Jacobs

Maryl Johnson, M.D.

Ms. JoAnn Joyce

Ms. Ethelle Katz

Jonathan and Nancy Lee Kemper

Ms. Mary Klyasheff

Joseph and Judith Konen

Eric Kuhlman

Mr. Thomas Lad

Mr. & Ms. Steven Marcus

Bill McIntosh

Dr. Leo and Catherine Miserendino

Sanford and Monica Morganstein

Mr. George Murphy

Mr. Bruce Ottley

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas D. Philipsborn

Mary Rafferty

Dorothy V. Ramm

Shirley and John † Schlossman

Dr. John Schneider

Drs. Deborah and Lawrence Segil

In memory of Timothy Soleiman

Joel and Beth Spenadel

Mr. Michael Sprinker

Mr. & Mrs. Wallace Stenhouse

Ms. Sara Szold

Mr. & Mrs. David Weber

Mr. Lawrence Wechter

Judge Eugene Wedoff

Samuel † and Chickie Weisbard

Barbara and Steven Wolf

David Woodhouse

Mike Zimmerman

$2,500–$3,499

Anonymous (6)

Mr. Frank Ackerman

Dr. & Mrs. Whitney Addington

Ms. Marlene Bach

Mr. & Mrs. Christopher Barber

James and Bartha Barrett

Paul Becker and Nancy Becker

Marjorie Benton

Mr. & Mrs. † Robert L. Berner, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Block

Mr. Edward Boehm III

Mr. & Mrs. Peter Borich

Mr. & Mrs. Fred P. Bosselman

Mr. Douglas Bragan

Chris Brezil

Linda S. Buckley

Mr. & Mrs. John Butler

Mr. Ray Capitanini

Ms. Margaret Chaplan

Ms. Melinda Cheung

Mr. Thomas Clewett

Ms. Juli Crabtree

Mr. Ivo Daalder and Mrs. Elisa D. Harris

Mary Dedinsky and William Carlisle Herbert

Mr. & Mrs. James W. DeYoung

Mr. & Mrs. Otto Doering III

Janet Duffy

Mr. Clinton J. Ecker and Ms. Jacqui Cheng

Ms. Paula Elliott

Sandra E. Fienberg

Henry and Frances Fogel

Ms. Irene Fox

Mr. & Mrs. Philip Friedmann

Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd A. Fry III

Drs. Henry and Susan Gault

Dr. & Mrs. Paul B. Glickman

Ms. Barbara Gold

Mr. Stanford Goldblatt

Isabelle Goossen

Mr. Jacques Gordon

Merle Gordon

Enid Goubeaux

Brooks and Wanza Grantier

Dr. Michael Greenwald

BHD Kozloff Family Fund

Mr. Adam Grymkowski

Mr. † & Mrs. Errol Halperin

Amber Halvorson

Hill and Cheryl Hammock

Dr. & Mrs. Chester Handelman

Mrs. John M. Hartigan

Ms. Kyle Harvey

Mr. Hirad Hedayat

Ms. Leigh Ann Herman

James and Megan Hinchsliff

Carter Howard and Sarah Krepp

Mr. Harry Hunderman and Ms. Deborah Slaton

Saul Juskaitis

Peter and Stephanie Keehn

Mr. Alfred Kelley

Anne G. Kimball and Peter Stern

Ms. Lilia Kiselev

Mr. & Mrs. Frank Klapperich, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. LeRoy Klemt

Mr. Wayne Koepke

Mr. & Mrs. Norman Koglin

Ms. Pamela Larsen

Ms. Leah Laurie

Dr. Gerald Lee

Mr. Jonathon Leik

Mr. Philip Lesser

Dr. & Mrs. Stuart Levin

Dr. & Mrs. Robert Levy

Robert † and Joan Lipsig

Sherry and Mel Lopata

Ms. Jean Lorenzen

Ms. Barbara Malott

Mr. Timothy Marshall

Arthur and Elizabeth Martinez

Robert and Doretta Marwin

40 CSO.ORG

Dr. & Mrs. Daniel Mass

Larry and Donna Mayer

Ms. Marilyn Mccoy

Ric D. McDonough

Mr. & Mrs. Lester McKeever

Sheila and Harvey Medvin

Mr. Zarin Mehta

Ms. Claretta Meier

Ian and Robyn Moncrief

Mr. Carl and Maria Moore

Mr. † & Mrs. Kenneth Nebenzahl

Mr. † & Mrs. Herbert Neil, Jr.

Noteable Notes Music Academy/ Wheaton, IL

Mrs. Janis Notz

Sharon and Lee Oberlander

Mr. Arne Olson

Beatrice F. Orzac †

Mr. Sebastian Patino

Roxy and Richard † Pepper

Kingsley Perkins †

Mr. & Mrs. Norman Perman

Dr. Joe Piszczor

Kenneth J. Poje

Ms. Constance Rajala

Ms. Ginevra R. Ralph

Dr. & Mrs. Don Randel

Mr. Jeffrey Rappin

Dr. & Mrs. Pradeep Rattan

Dr. Hilda Richards

Robert J. Richards and Barbara A. Richards

Patricia Richter

Mrs. Enid Rieser

Jerry and Carole Ringer

Thomas Roberts and Teresa Grosch

Mr. & Mrs. Rich Ryan

Bettylu and Paul Saltzman

Ms. Saslow

Susan Schaalman Youdovin and Charlie Shulkin

Mr. & Mrs. Richard H. Schnadig

Ms. Marcia Schneider

Gerald and Barbara Schultz

Stephen A. and Marilyn Scott

Joan and George Segal

Ms. Gail Seidel

Mr. James Selsor

Dr. Lemuel Shaffer

Mrs. Phyllis Shafron

Mary and Charles M. † Shea

Carolyn M. Short

Margaret and Alan Silberman

Jack and Barbara Simon

The Honorable John B. Simon and Millie Rosenbloom

Lynn B. Singer

Christine A. Slivon

Mr. & Mrs. Frederic Smies

Mrs. Diane W. Smith

Mr. & Mrs. George Spindler

Ms. Corinne Steede

Carol D. Stein

Laurence and Caryn Straus

Mr. & Mrs. Harvey J. Struthers, Jr.

Barry and Winnifred Fallers Sullivan

Mr. † & Mrs. Richard Taft

Mr. Jerome Taxy

Henrietta Vepstas

Robert J. Walker

Ms. Joni Wall

Ms. Mary Walsh

The Acorn Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. William A. Ward

Alexander J. Wayne

Abby and Glen Weisberg

Mr. & Mrs. Joel Weisman

Mr. Kenneth Witkowski

Mr. & Mrs. John Wulfers

Ms. Janice Young

Ms. Camille Zientek

Negaunee Music Institute at the Chicago Symphony Orchestra

The Negaunee Music Institute connects individuals and communities to the extraordinary musical resources of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. The following donors are gratefully acknowledged for making a gift in support of these educational and engagement programs. To make a gift or learn more, please contact Kevin Gupana, Associate Director of Giving, Educational and Engagement Programs, 312-294-3156.

$150,000 AND ABOVE

The Julian Family Foundation

The Negaunee Foundation

$100,000–$149,999

Anonymous

Allstate Insurance Company

The Elizabeth F. Cheney Foundation

$75,000–$99,999

John Hart and Carol Prins

Megan and Steve Shebik

$50,000–$74,999

Anonymous

Robert and Joanne Crown Income Charitable Fund

Lloyd A. Fry Foundation

Judy and Scott McCue

Nancy Lauter McDougal and Alfred L. McDougal †

Polk Bros. Foundation

Barbara and Barre Seid Foundation

Shure Charitable Trust

Michael and Linda Simon

Mr. Irving Stenn, Jr.

$35,000–$49,999

Kinder Morgan

Bowman C. Lingle Trust

National Endowment for the Arts

$25,000–$34,999

Anonymous

Abbott Fund

Crain-Maling Foundation

Leslie Fund, Inc.

The James and Madeleine McMullan Family Foundation

Dr. & Mrs. Eugene and Jean Stark

Lisa and Paul Wiggin

$20,000–$24,999

Anonymous

Mary Winton Green

Richard P. and Susan Kiphart Family

PNC

Charles and M. R. Shapiro Foundation

The George L. Shields Foundation, Inc.

$15,000–$19,999

Carey and Brett August

Robert and Isabelle Bass Foundation, Inc.

The Buchanan Family Foundation

Bruce and Martha Clinton for The Clinton Family Fund

Sue and Jim Colletti

Ellen and Paul Gignilliat

Illinois Arts Council Agency

The League of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association

Mr. Philip Lumpkin

The Maval Foundation

Sandra and Earl Rusnak, Jr.

Ms. Liisa M. Thomas and Mr. Stephen L. Pratt

Dr. Marylou Witz

$11,500–$14,999

Nancy A. Abshire

Mr. † & Mrs. David A. Donovan

Mrs. Carol Evans, in memory of Henry Evans

Jim and Ginger Meyer

Margo and Michael Oberman

Ksenia A. and Peter Turula

Theodore and Elisabeth Wachs

$7,500–$11,499

Anonymous

Robert H. Baum and MaryBeth Kretz

John D. and Leslie Henner Burns

Mr. Lawrence Corry

Mr. & Mrs. † Allan Drebin

Nancy and Bernard Dunkel

Ms. Nancy Felton-Elkins and Larry Elkins

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Glossberg

Chet Gougis and Shelley Ochab

Halasyamani and Davis Family

Robert Kohl and Clark Pellett

Mr. Glen Madeja and Ms. Janet Steidl

Ling Z. and Michael C. Markovitz

Drs. Robert and Marsha Mrtek

Ms. Susan Norvich

Ms. Emilysue Pinnell

D. Elizabeth Price

COL (IL) Jennifer N. Pritzker, IL ARNG (Retired)

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 41 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

Robert E. † and Cynthia M. † Sargent TAWANI Foundation

$4,500–$7,499

Anonymous

Joseph Bartush

Ms. Marion A. Cameron-Gray

Ann and Richard Carr

Harry F. and Elaine Chaddick Foundation

Constance M. Filling and Robert D. Hevey Jr.

Italian Village Restaurants

Mr. & Mrs. Stan Jakopin

Dr. June Koizumi

Dr. Lynda Lane

The Osprey Foundation

Benjamin J. Rosenthal Foundation

Dr. Scholl Foundation

Jessie Shih and Johnson Ho

Dr. Nanajan Yakoub

$3,500–$4,499

Arts Midwest GIG Fund

Charles H. and Bertha L. Boothroyd Foundation

Mr. & Ms. Keith Clayton

Dr. Edward A. Cole and Dr. Christine A. Rydel

Mr. & Mrs. Dwight Decker

Dr. Ronald L. Hullinger

Ms. Ethelle Katz

Dr. Leo and Catherine Miserendino

$2,500–$3,499

Ms. Sandra Bass

Mr. Douglas Bragan

Patricia A. Clickener

Mr. Clinton J. Ecker and Ms. Jacqui Cheng

Ms. Paula Elliott

Brooks and Wanza Grantier

William B. Hinchliff

Mrs. Gabrielle Long

Mr. Zarin Mehta

Mrs. Frank Morrissey

David † and Dolores Nelson

Mr. David Sandfort

David and Judith L. Sensibar

Margaret and Alan Silberman

Mr. Larry Simpson

Dr. & Mrs. R. Solaro

Ms. Mary Walsh

Mr. Kenneth Witkowski

$1,500–$2,499

Dora J. and R. John Aalbregtse

Richard J. Abram and Paul Chandler

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

Ms. Marlene Bach

Mr. Carroll Barnes

Mr. & Mrs. William E. Bible

Cassandra L. Book

Mr. James Borkman

Adam Bossov

Ms. Danolda Brennan

Mr. Lee M. Brown and Ms. Pixie Newman

Bradley Cohn

Elk Grove Graphics

Charles and Carol Emmons

Dr. & Mrs. Sanford Finkel, in honor of the Civic horn section

Mr. Conrad Fischer

Mrs. Roslyn K. Flegel

David and Janet Fox

Camillo and Arlene Ghiron

Amber Halvorson

James and Megan Hinchsliff

Clifford Hollander and Sharon Flynn Hollander

Michael and Leigh Huston

Cantor Aviva Katzman and Dr. Morris Mauer

Bob and Marian Kurz

Dona Le Blanc

Dr. Herbert and Francine Lippitz

Ms. Molly Martin

Mr. Aaron Mills

Mr. & Mrs. Dennis Moffat

Edward and Gayla Nieminen

Dianne M. and Robert J. Patterson, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Jeffery Piper

Erik and Nelleke Roffelsen

Ms. Cecelia Samans

Mr. David Samson

Jane A. Shapiro

Ms. Denise Stauder

Mr. & Mrs. Salme Steinberg

Walter and Caroline Sueske

Charitable Trust

Mr. Peter Vale

Abby and Glen Weisberg

M.L. Winburn

$1,000–$1,499

Anonymous (5)

Ms. Margaret Amato

David and Suzanne Arch

Jon W. and Diane Balke

Mr. & Mrs. John Barnes

Howard and Donna Bass

Marjorie Benton

Ann Blickensderfer

Mr. Thomas Bookey

Mr. Donald Bouseman

Ms. Jeanne Busch

Darren Cahr

Robert and Darden Carr

Drs. Virginia and Stephen Carr

Mr. Rowland Chang

Lisa Chessare

Mr. Ricardo Cifuentes

Mr. & Mrs. Bill Cottle

Constance Cwiok

Mr. Adam Davis

Mr. & Mrs. Barnaby Dinges

Tom Draski

DS&P Insurance Services, Inc.

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Dulski

Judith E. Feldman

Ms. Lola Flamm

Arthur L. Frank, M.D.

Mr. Robert Frisch

Peter Gallanis

Eunice and Perry Goldberg

Enid Goubeaux

Mr. & Mrs. John Hales

Dr. Robert A. Harris

Dr. & Mrs. Jerome Hoeksema

Mr. Matt James

Mr. Randolph T. Kohler

Mr. Steven Kukalis

Ms. Foo Choo Lee

Dr. & Mrs. Stuart Levin

Diane and William F. Lloyd

Mr. † & Mrs. Gerald F. Loftus

Sharon L. Manuel

Mr. & Mrs. William McNally

Mr. Robert Middleton

Stephen W. and Kathleen J. Miller

Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Morales

Mrs. Mary Louise Morrison

Catherine Mouly and LeRoy T. Carlson, Jr.

Mr. George Murphy

Mr. Bruce Oltman

Ms. Joan Pantsios

Mr. & Mrs. Gerald L. Pauling II

Kirsten Bedway and Simon Peebler

Ms. Dona Perry

Quinlan & Fabish

Susan Rabe

Dr. Hilda Richards

Dr. Edward Riley

Mary K. Ring

Christina Romero and Rama Kumanduri

Mr. Nicholas Russell †

Ms. Mary Sauer

Mr. & Mrs. Steve Schuette

Gerald and Barbara Schultz

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Scorza

Stephen A. and Marilyn Scott

Mr. & Mrs. James Shapiro

Richard Sikes

Dr. Sabine Sobek

Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Stepansky

Sharon Swanson

Ms. Joanne Tarazi

Ms. Joanne C. Tremulis

Mr. & Ms. Terrence Walsh

Mr. & Mrs. Joel Weisman

Ms. Zita Wheeler

In memory of Ira G. Woll

William Zeng

Irene Ziaya and Paul Chaitkin

ENDOWED FUNDS

Anonymous (3)

Cyrus H. Adams Memorial Youth Concert Fund

Dr. & Mrs. Bernard H. Adelson Fund

Marjorie Blum-Kovler Youth Concert Fund

CNA

The Davee Foundation

Frank Family Fund

Kelli Gardner Youth Education Endowment Fund

Mary Winton Green

William Randolph Hearst Foundation Fund for Community Engagement

42 CSO.ORG
ROLL OF DONORS
HONOR

Richard A. Heise

Peter Paul Herbert Endowment Fund

Julian Family Foundation Fund

The Kapnick Family

Lester B. Knight Charitable Trust

The Malott Family School Concerts Fund

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

The Negaunee Foundation

Nancy Ranney and Family and Friends

Shebik Community Engagement Programs Fund

Toyota Endowed Fund

The Wallace Foundation

Zell Family Foundation

Theodore Thomas Society

Mary Louise Gorno Chair

Listed below are generous donors who have made commitments to the Chicago Symphony Orchestra through their wills, trusts, and other estate plans, including life-income arrangements. The Society honors their generosity, which helps to ensure the long-term financial stability and artistic excellence of the CSOA. To learn more, please contact Al Andreychuk, Director of Endowment Gifts and Planned Giving, at 312-294-3150.

STRADIVARIAN ASSOCIATES

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra is pleased to recognize the following individuals for generously creating a revocable bequest of $100,000 or more, or an irrevocable life-income trust or annuity of $50,000 or more, to benefit the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association, as of January 2023.

Anonymous (9)

Dora J. and R. John Aalbregtse

Lisa J. Adelstein

Jeff and Keiko Alexander

Evy Johansen Alsaker

Robert A. Alsaker

Geoffrey A. Anderson

Louise E. Anderson

Brett and Carey August

Marlene Bach

Dr. Jeff Bale

Mr. Neal Ball

Sally J. Becker

Marlys A. Beider

Dr. C. Bekerman

Martha Bell

Mike and Donna Bell

Julie Ann Benson

K. Richard and Patricia M. Berlet

Merrill and Judy Blau

Ann Blickensderfer

Danolda Brennan

Mr. Leon Brenner, Jr.

Mitchell J. Brown

Marion A. Cameron-Gray

Charles Capwell and Isabel Wong

Mr. Frank and Dr. Vera Clark

Patricia A. Clickener

Judith and Stephen F. Condren

Anita Crocus

Mimi Duginger

Harry and Jean Eisenman

Michael and Kathleen Elliott

Dr. Marilyn Ezri

Mrs. William M. Flory

Mr. & Mrs. David W. Fox, Sr.

Rhoda Lea Frank

Mary J. and Ronald P. Frelk

Penny and John Freund

Mr. & Mrs. Paul C. Gignilliat

Merle Gordon

Mary Louise Gorno

Dr. & Mrs. David Granato

Mary L. Gray

Mary Winton Green

Dr. Jon Brian Greis

John and Patricia Hamilton

John Hart and Carol Prins

Mr. William P. Hauworth II

Thomas and Linda Heagy

Mr. R.H. Helmholz

Stephanie and Allen Hochfelder

Concordia Hoffmann

Stephen D. and Catherine N. Holmes

Frank and Helen Holt

Mark and Elizabeth Hurley

Frances and Phillip Huscher

Ms. Darlene Johnson

Ronald B. Johnson

Roy A. and Sarah C. Johnson

Mr. & Mrs. Paul R. Judy

Lori Julian

Wayne S. and Lenore M. Kaplan

Howard Kaspin

James Kemmerer

Robert Kohl and Clark Pellett

Edwin and Karen Kramer

Mr. & Mrs. Alan Kubicka

Jonathon Leik

Charles Ashby Lewis and Penny

Bender Sebring

Robert Alan Lewis

Dr. Valerie Lober

Glen J. Madeja and Janet Steidl

Sheldon H. Marcus

James Edward McPherson

Janet L. Melk

Dr. Frederick K. Merkel

Dr. Leo and Catherine Miserendino

Drs. Elaine and Bill † Moor

Craig and Rose Moore

Mrs. Mario A. Munoz

John H. Nelson

Muriel Nerad

Edward A. and Gayla S. Nieminen

Ms. Kathy Nordmeyer

Diane Ososke

Dr. Joan E. Patterson

Mary T. † and David R. Pfleger

Mrs. Thomas D. Philipsborn

Judy Pomeranz

Maridee Quanbeck

Neil K. Quinn

Randall and Cara Rademaker

Constance A Rajala

Al and Lynn Reichle

Ann and Bob † Reiland

Wendy Reynes

Dr. Edward O. Riley

Charles and Marilynn Rivkin

David and Kathy Robin

Jerry Rose

Mr. James S. Rostenberg

Richard O. Ryan

John A. Salkowski

Cecelia Samans

A. Wm. Samuel

Franklin Schmidt

Joanne Silver

Mr. Craig Sirles

Betty W. Smykal

Annette and Richard Steinke

Mrs. Deborah Sterling

Mr. & Mrs. William H. Strong

Mrs. Gloria B. Telander

Karin and Alfred Tenny

Richard and Helen Thomas

Ms. Carla M. Thorpe

Dr. Richard Tresley

Paula Turner

Robert W. Turner and Gloria B. Turner

Mr. & Mrs. John E. Van Horn

Mr. Christian Vinyard

Craig and Bette Williams

Florence Winters

Stephen R. Winters and Don D. Curtis

Dr. Robert G. Zadylak

Helen Zell

MEMBERS

Anonymous (33)

Valerie and Joseph Abel

Louise Abrahams

Patrick Alden

Richard and Elynne Aleskow

Judy L. Allen

Ann S. Alpert

Ms. Judith L. Anderson

Steven Andes, Ph.D.

Catherine Aranyi

Dr. Susan Arjmand

Mr. & Mrs. Randy Barba

Mara Mills Barker

Shirley Baron

Dr. & Mrs. Robert Beatty

Joan I. Berger

Robert M. Berger

Mr. & Mrs. James Borovsky

John L. Browar

Catherine Brubaker

Joseph Buc

Edward J. Buckbee

Michelle Miller Burns

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 43 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

Mr. Robert J. Callahan

Dr. & Mrs. Joseph R. Car

Mr. & Mrs. William P. Carmichael

Dr. Marlene E. Casiano

Beverly Ann and Peter Conroy

Sharon Conway

Mr. Jerry J. Critser

Ron and Dolores Daly

Mr. & Mrs. John Daniels

Mr. & Mrs. Clyde H. Dawson

Sylvia Samuels Delman

Mrs. David A. DeMar

Ms. Phyllis Diamond

Mrs. William Dooley

Mr. Richard L. Eastline

Nancy Schroeder Ebert

Robert J. Elisberg

Richard Elledge

Charles and Carol Emmons

Lu and Philip Engel

Tarek and Ann Fadel

James B. Fadim

Leslie Farrell

Donna Feldman

Frances and Henry Fogel

Allen J. Frantzen

Nancy and Larry Fuller

Dileep Gangolli

Miss Elizabeth Gatz

Dr. & Mrs. Mark Gendleman

Steve and Lauran Gilbreath

Mr. Daniel Gilmour, III

Mr. Joseph Glossberg

Ms. Georgean Goldenberg

Adele Goldsmith

Douglas Ross Gortner

Chet Gougis and Shelley Ochab

Ms. Elizabeth A. Gray

Delta A. Greene

Mrs. Barbara Gundrum

Lynne R. Haarlow

Mrs. Robin Tieken Hadley

Mr. Tom Hall

Mr. & Mrs. Tom Hallett

Dr. Donald Heinrich

William B. Hinchliff

Marcia M. Hochberg

Mr. Thomas Hochman

Jack and Colleen Holmbeck

Mrs. Walter Horban

James and Mary Houston

Mr. James Humphrey

Merle L. Jacob

Ms. Jessica Jagielnik

Joseph and Rebecca † Jarabak

Mrs. Marian Johnson

Ms. Janet Jones

Nathan Kahn, in memory of Zave H. Gussin and in honor of Robert Gussin

Marshall Keltz

Valerie Kennedy

Anne Kern

Paul Keske

Mr. & Mrs. Frank L. Klapperich, Jr.

Mrs. LeRoy Klemt

Sally Jo Knowles

Mrs. Russell V. Kohr

Ms. Barbara Kopsian

Liesel E. Kossmann

Eugene Kraus

John C and Carol Anderson Kunze

Thomas and Annelise Lawson

Dr. & Mrs. David J. Leehey

Ms. Nicole Lehman

Barbara W. Levin

Dr. & Mrs. Robert L. Levy

Ms. Sally Lewis

Dr. Eva F. Lichtenberg

Mr. Michael Licitra

Dr. & Mrs. Philip R. Liebson

Bonnie Glazier Lipe

Candace Loftus

Heidi Lukas & Mr. Charles Grode

Suzette and James Mahneke

Ann Chassin Mallow

Sharon L. Manuel

Mrs. John J. Markham

Judy and Scott McCue

John McFerrin

Mr. William McIntosh

Leoni Zverow McVey and Bill McVey

Dorothe Melamed

Marcia Melamed

Dr. Sharon D. Michalove

Dale and Susan Miller

Michael Miller and Sheila Naughten

Thomas R. Mullaney

Daniel R. Murray

Dolores D. Nelson

Franklin Nussbaum

Mr. & Mrs. Paul Oliver, Jr.

Wallace and Sarah Oliver

Lynn Orschel

Helen and Joseph Page

George R. Paterson

Dianne M. and Robert J. Patterson, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Michael A. Perlstein

Elizabeth Anne Peters

Mr. Lewis D. Petry

Judy C. Petty

Karen and Dick Pigott

Lois Polakoff

D. Elizabeth Price

Dorothy V. Ramm

Jeanne Reed

Ms. Oksana Revenko-Jones

Karen L. Rigotti

Don and Sally Roberts

Mrs. Ben J. Rosenthal

Dr. Virginia C. Saft

Craig Samuels

Sue and William Samuels

Paul and Kathleen Schaefer

Lawrence D. Schectman

Mrs. Milton Scheffler

Mr. Douglas M. Schmidt

David Shayne

Thomas C. Sheffield, Jr.

Anne Sibley

Larry Simpson

Thomas G. Sinkovic

Rosalee Slepian

Mary Soleiman

Jim Spiegel

Julie Stagliano

Denise M. Stauder

Karen Steil

Charles Steinberg

Timothy and Kathleen Stockdale

Mr. John Stokes

Richard and Lois Stuckey

Jeffrey and Linda Swoger

Mr. John C. Telander

Mr. & Mrs. Jerald Thorson

Karen Hletko Tiersky

Myron Tiersky

Jacqueline A. Tilles

Mr. James M. Trapp

Mr. Donn N. Trautman

Mike and Mary Valeanu

Gerrit Vanderwest

Frank Villella

Mr. Milan Vydareny

Dr. Malcolm Vye

Adam R. Walker and BettyAnn Mocek

Mr. Frank Walschlager

Louella Krueger Ward

Dr. Catherine L. Webb

Karl Wechter

Claude M. Weil

Joan Weiss

Mr. Thomas Weyland

Lisa and Paul Wiggin

Linda and Payson S. Wild

Joyce S. Wildman

Kayla Anne Wilson

Robert A. Wilson

Nora M. Winsberg

Mr. & Mrs. Stephen M. Wolf

Beth Wollar

Lev Yaroslavskiy

IN MEMORIAM

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

Anonymous (9)

Hope A. Abelson

Richard Abrahams

Ruth T. and Roger A. Anderson

Mychal P. and Dorothy A. Angelos

Elizabeth M. Ashton

Jacqueline and Frank Ball

Wayne Balmer

Paul Barker

Leland and Mary Bartholomew

Arlene and Marshall Bennett

Norma Zuzanek Bennett

Judith and Dennis Bober

Naomi T. Borwell

Kathryn Bowers

Howard Broecker

Claresa Forbes Meyer Brown

44 CSO.ORG

George and Jacqueline Brumlik

Dr. Mary Louise Hirsch Burger

Norma Cadieu

Wiley Caldwell

Nelson D. Cornelius

Anita J. Court, Ph.D.

Christopher L. Culp

Barbara DeCoster

Azile Dick

James F. Drennan

Robert L. Drinan, Jr.

Daisy Driss

William A. Dumbleton

Evelyn Dyba

Marian Edelstein

Estelle Edlis

Dr. Edward Elisberg

Kelli Gardner Emery

Joseph R. Ender

Shirley L. and Robert Ettelson

Leslie Fogel

Robert B. Fordham

Herbert and Betty Forman

Richard Foster

Elaine S. Frank

Henry S. Frank

Florence Ganja

Martin and Francey Gecht

Isak Gerson

Mrs. Willard Gidwitz

Lyle Gillman

Marvin Goldsmith

William B. Graham

Richard Gray

David Green

Nancy Griffin

Ann B. Grimes

Ernest A. Grunsfeld III

Betty and Lester Guttman

A. William Haarlow III

CAPT Martin P. Hanson, USN Ret.

Mrs. David J. Harris

Polly Heinrich

Mary Mako Helbert

Adolph “Bud” and Avis Herseth

Mary Jo Hertel

Allen H. Howard

Helen and Michael L. Igoe, Jr.

Barbara Isserman

Phyllis A. Jones

James Joseph

Joseph M. Kacena

Stuart Kane

Jared Kaplan

Morris A. Kaplan

Roberta Kapoun

George Kennedy

Esther G. Klatz

Russell V. Kohr

Karen Kuehner

Evelyn and Arnold Kupec

Robert B. Kyts and Jadwiga Roguska-Kyts

Rebecca Jarabak

Ruth Lucie Labitzke

Sadie Lapinsky

Caressa Y. Lauer

Arthur E. Leckner, Jr.

Patricia Lee

Christine D. Letchinger

William C. Lordan

Tula Lunsford

Iris Maiter

Arthur G. Maling

Bella Malis

June Betty and Herbert S. Manning

Kathleen W. Markiewicz

Walter L. Marr III and Marilyn G. Marr

Eloise Martin

Virginia Harvey McAnulty

Helen C. McDougal, Jr.

Eunice H. McGuire

Carolyn D. and William W. McKittrick

Lillian E. McLeod

Jack L. Melamed, M.D.

Hugo J. Melvoin

Richard Menaul

Susan Messinger

Phillip Migdal

Kathryn and Edward Miller

Micki Miller

Gloria Miner

Beth Ann Alberding Mohr

Bill Moor

Charles A. Moore

Kathryn Mueller

Marietta Munnis

Leota Ann Meyer Murray

David H. Nelson

Helen M. Nelson

Sydelle Nelson

John and Maynette Neundorf

Piri E. and Jaye S. Niefeld

Raymond and Eloise Niwa

Joan Ruck Nopola

Carol Rauner O’Donovan

T. Paul B. O’Donovan

Mary and Eric Oldberg

Bruce P. Olson

David G. Ostrow

Donald Peck

Mary Perlmutter

Charles J. Pollyea

Miriam Pollyea

Donald D. Powell

Samuel Press

Alfred and Maryann Putnam

Christine Querfeld

Ruth Ann Quinn

Walter Reed

Daniel Reichard

Bob Reiland

Paul H. Resnik

Sheila Taaffe Reynolds

Joan L. Richards

J. Timothy Ritchie

Dolores M. RixFanada

Virginia H. Rogers

Jill N. Rohde

Elaine Rosen

Ben J. Rosenthal

Anthony Ryerson

Richard Schieler

Beverly and Grover Schiltz

Erhardt Schmidt

Robert W. Schneider

Muriel Schnierow

Barbara and Irving Seaman, Jr.

Nancy Seyfried

Muriel Shaw

Mr. Morrell A. Shoemaker

Rose L. and Sidney N. Shure

Dr. & Mrs. Alfred L. Siegel

Joan H. and Berton E. Siegel

Rita Simó and Tomás Bissonnette

Allen R. Smart

Walter Chalmers Smith

Peggy E. Smith-Skarry

Karen A. Sorensen

Edward J. and Audrey M. Spiegel

Vito Stagliano

Mrs. Zelda Star

Charles J. Starcevich

Curtis D. Stensrud

Helmut and Irma Strauss

Franklin R. St. Lawrence

Robert Sychowski

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Swanson

Ruth Miner Swislow

Robert Sychowski

Andrew and Peggy Thomson

J. Ross Thomson

Sue Tice

Beatrice B. Tinsley

C. Phillip Turner

Ted Utchen

Robert L. Volz

Lois and James Vrhel

Louise Benton Wagner

Michael Jay Walanka

Nancy L. Wald

Josephine Wallace

Laurie Wallach

Ann Dow Weinberg

Marco Weiss

Barbara Huth West

The Whateley Trust, in memory of Baron Whateley

Max and Joyce Wildman

Joyce Hadley Williams

Arnold and Ann Wolff

Ronald R. Zierer

Rita A. Zralek

Tribute Program

The Tribute Program provides an opportunity to celebrate milestones such as birthdays, weddings, anniversaries, and graduations. It also can serve as a way to honor the memory of friends and family. An Honor or Memorial Gift enables you to express your feelings in a truly distinctive and memorable way. Contributions may be any amount and are placed in the Orchestra’s Endowment Fund. For more information regarding this program, please call 312-294-3100. Listed below are Honor and Memorial Gifts of $100 or more received from June 2022 through January 2023.

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 45 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

MEMORIAL GIFTS

In memory of Theodore Asner

Mrs. Barbara Asner

Ms. Barbara J. Dwyer

In memory of Alfred Balandis

Mr. Robert Callahan

In memory of Bud Beyer

Ms. Jean Flaherty

In memory of John R. Blair

Fidelity Charitable Gift Funds

In memory of Eric L. Brooker

Ralph Brooker

In memory of Dr. Cynthia Pryor Coad

Mr. & Mrs. Louis M. Ebling III

In memory of Dr. Thomas F. Coad

Mr. & Mrs. Louis M. Ebling III

In memory of Michael Cohen

Lisa Hack

Mr. Gregg Mandell

Mr. Mark Schechter

In memory of Henry Cohler

Mrs. Evelyn Alter

In memory of Professor

James D. Compton

Anonymous

In memory of Gary A. Davis

Dr. Steven Andes

In memory of Stephen Dtraus

Mal and Mickey Poland

In memory of David B. Ellis

In memory of Ira G. Woll

In memory of Lynn B. Evans

Mr. † & Mrs. Gershon Berg

In memory of Hazel S. Fackler

Neil Fackler

In memory of John D. Flakne

Willeen V. Smith

In memory of Patricia Grignet

Nott, Dean of Students, New World Symphony

Ms. Mary Walsh

In memory of Zave Gussin

Mr. Nathan Kahn

In memory of Carl A. Hedberg, M.D.

Anonymous

Fidelity Charitable Gift Funds

F. James Rybka

Dr. Susan M Solovy

Mr. James L. Waite

Mr. Eric Wicks and Ms. Linda Baker

In memory of Ed Hochman

Martyn Adelberg

Sherry Caro

Janet Ostrowski

Mrs. Lydia A. Ronning

Mr. & Mrs. Mark Stern

In memory of Joel Honigberg

Mrs. Carol S. Honigberg

In memory of Wayne Janda

Julia Janda

In memory of Howard E. Jessen and Susanne C. Jessen

Howard E. Jessen Family Trust

In memory of Alan Kaufman

Ms. Rosie Nassani

In memory of Mary Kaye

Mr. & Mrs. William F. Bogle Jr.

Ms. Josephine Hammer

Alexandra Thornton

In memory of George N. Kohler

Mr. David Curry

In memory of Joan Levy

Anonymous

Ms. Susan Adams

William and Mary Lee Attea

Elizabeth Copeland

Kelly Dibble

Dr. & Mrs. Henry J. Dold

Mr. & Mrs. Tom Garmisa

Janet and Patrick Graham

Illinois Association Of School Boards

Beth Loeb

Mrs. Joan Loeb

Mr. & Mrs. William Maher

Northern Trust

Lee Ann Raikes

Mr. Earl Rubinoff

Margaret A. Willens

In memory of Herbert A. Loeb III

Ms. Margot Wallace

In memory of Mr. George C. McKann

Mrs. Alice T. McKann

In memory of Lorraine T. McNally

Mr. & Mrs. William McNally

In memory of Richard Melson

Ms. Joyce H. Noh

In memory of Charles Moles

Ms. Kathleen Harrington

In memory of Anthony G. Montag

American Endowment Foundation

Dr. Katherine Griem

In memory of Dolores Nathanson

Lexy Gore

Lynne Gugenheim

Judith O. Roman

Marilyn Slodki

Kate A. Wealton

In memory of Jon Pegis

Mr. Daniel Katz

In memory of Dr. George Pepper

Mr. Tyson Bosier

Mr. Robert Lockner

Ms. Margaret Neff

Sara Poss

Julie Trost-Rekich

Beth Walker

In memory of George Pepper, M.D.

Mary D. Brawley

In memory of Charles Kingsley Perkins

Don and Martha Pollak

William A. Pollak

Ms. Susan Thomas

In memory of Ruth Ann Quinn

Mr. Neil K. Quinn

In memory of Bennett Reimer

Elizabeth A. Hebert

In memory of Al Rose

Mrs. Marian Rose

In memory of Robert Rosenman

Mrs. Harriet Rosenman

In memory of Norman S. Santos

Raquel Costa

Jerry and Janet Curto

In memory of Cynthia Sargent

Mr. David E. McNeel

COL (IL) Jennifer N. Pritzker, IL ARNG (Retired)

In memory of Lee I. Schlesinger

Joe Gordon and Mark Bauer

In memory of Devin Shafron

Mrs. Phyllis Shafron

In memory of Michael Silverstein

Ms. Mara Tapp

In memory of Joan Sims

Edith and Hakim Lys

Rex A. Marbach

Emily and Alec Sims

Aaron Weil

46 CSO.ORG HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

In memory of Frank S. So

Frank So † and Deborah Huggett

In memory of Deborah Sobol

Mr. Rowland Chang

In memory of Marjorie Stone

Stifel Charitable Inc.

In memory of Raymond A. Sutter

MaryAnne Himmes

Judy Vito

In memory of Lynne and Ron Wachowski, my beloved sister and her husband

Peggy Ryan

In memory of Dr. Alan J. Ward, Ph.D., ABPP

Ms. Louella Ward

In memory of Walter W. Whisler, M.D., Ph.D.

Laura Whisler

In memory of Novella Winston

Ms. Betty Henson

In memory of Dale E. Woolley

Regina Janes and Charles Woolley

In memory of Erna Yackel

Lisa Hack

In memory of Eugene and Marion Zajackowski

Anonymous

In memory of Edward T. Zasadil

Mr. Larry Simpson

In memory of Raymond Zielinski

Ms. Arden Handler

Christine M. Koza

Jeanne Mervine

HONOR GIFTS

In honor of Dora and John Aalbregtse

Ms. Sandra Morgan

In honor of Michael Adolph

Mrs. Ann Oros

In honor of Jeffrey Alexander

Mr. Dean Solomon

In honor of Esteban Batallán, Principal Trumpet

Mr. John Burson

In honor of Randy L. Berlin

Ms. Susan J. Moran

In honor of Dr. Patrick Brix

Dale Ann C. Kalvaitis

In honor of Robert Coad

Diana and Richard Senior

Mr. & Mrs. † David Shayne

Ms. Ann Silberman

Liz Stiffel

In honor of Bill Donaldson

Mr. David Oei

In honor of Eddie Druzinsky

Mr. & Mrs. Barnaby Dinges

In honor of Hazel S. Fackler

Neil Fackler

In honor of Judy Feldman, Women’s Board President

Mrs. Robert Glick

Ms. Lynda Gordon

Mr. & Mrs. Steven W. Scheibe

In honor of Kozoe Funakoshi

Mrs. Sharon I. Quigley

In honor of Karen Guerra

Anonymous

In honor of Mr. John Hagstrom

Ms. Susan Bridge

In honor of Terri Hemmert

Janet Duffy

In honor of Margie Heyman

Mrs. Doris Fine

In honor of Robert and Jane Hindsley

Anita Hindsley

In honor of Dr. C.T. Kang and Dr. Li-Yin Lin

Mrs. Doris Fine

In honor of Daniel Katz

Ms. Lois Wolff

In honor of Anne Kern for her 90th birthday

Dr. Mary Davidson

Mrs. David DeMar

Ms. Josephine Hammer

Dr. Eva Lichtenberg and Dr. Arnold Tobin

Mr. & Mrs. John Lopatka

Mr. † & Mrs. Mario Munoz

Louise K. Smith

In honor of Mark Kraemer

Ms. Lois Wolff

In honor of Danny Lai

Ms. Lois Wolff

In honor of Kordt Larsen

Ms. Fran Faller

In honor of Kathleen and Joseph Madden

Eileen Madden

In honor of Patricia E. Meyers

Mr. Thomas Meyers, Jr.

In honor of Matous Michal

Mary and Joseph Plauché

In honor of Dennis Michel and David Griffin

Ms. Polly Novak

In honor of CSO violist Diane Mues

Cynthia Kirk

In honor of Maestro Riccardo Muti

Anonymous

Ms. Kathryn Collier

Patrick G. and Shirley W. Ryan Foundation

In honor of Alex Niekamp

Jessica Pahl

In honor of Ron and Pat Niemaszyk

Tiffany Tocco

In honor of Aiko Noda

Fred Garzon

In honor of Mary Alma Noonan

Renaissance Charitable Foundation

In honor of Frances Penn

Brody Family Fund

In honor of Tom Philipsborn’s birthday

Betty Philipsborn

In honor of John Sharp

Ms. Jessica Jagielnik and Ms. Sam Kufta

In honor of the Shebik Family

Fidelity Charitable Gift Funds

Howard and Julie Hayes Family Fund

Mrs. Christina Hwang

Dr. “Jean” Eugene Stark

Anonymous

In honor of Gary Stucka

Ms. Lois Wolff

FEBRUARY–MAY 2023 47 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS
† Deceased
Italics indicate individual or family involvement as part of the Trustees or Governing Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association. Gifts listed as of January 2023

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