'Einstein on the beach' is an opera in four acts by PHILIP GLASS--ROBERT WILSON. This production is dedicated to the memory of Ninon TaIIon Karlweis and Edwin I:>enby, who were an important part of the creation of this work in 1976.
'Einstein on the beach' is an opera in four acts by PHILIP GLASS--ROBERT WILSON. This production is dedicated to the memory of Ninon TaIIon Karlweis and Edwin I:>enby, who were an important part of the creation of this work in 1976.
'Einstein on the beach' is an opera in four acts by PHILIP GLASS--ROBERT WILSON. This production is dedicated to the memory of Ninon TaIIon Karlweis and Edwin I:>enby, who were an important part of the creation of this work in 1976.
'Einstein on the beach' is an opera in four acts by PHILIP GLASS--ROBERT WILSON. This production is dedicated to the memory of Ninon TaIIon Karlweis and Edwin I:>enby, who were an important part of the creation of this work in 1976.
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BROOKLYN ACADEMY OF MUSIC
EINSTEIN ON THE BEACH .... \> : : {" ...,... : ~ : ,. ; \, ..,. : "-- . ~ \e -:. ~ : ~ ~ \.i s.: . ' .. .r. ~ \.t ,. " yo: r ~ \0 J.. _. . ~ ~ ~ ~ f: ~ ..-: ~ ~ Opera House December 11.. 23, 1984 EINSTEIN ON THE BEACH An Opera in Four Acts By PHILIP GLASS--ROBERT WILSON Choreography by Lucinda Childs With Lucinda Childs Sherylj Sutton Lighting Design Beverly Emmons Musical Direction Michael Riesman Sound Design Kurt Munkacsi Spoken Text Christopher Knowles/Samuel M. Johnson/Lucinda Childs With The Lucinda Childs Dance Company Music Performed by The Philip Glass Ensemble Design/Direction ROBERT WILSON Music/Lyrics PHILIP GLASS These performances of Einstein On The Beach are dedicated to the memory of Ninon TaIIon Karlweis and Edwin I:>enby, who were an important part of the creation. of this work in 1976. 7 Eric Benson Steven Bromer* Rachel Brumer* Warren Campbell Lucinda Childs Timothy J. Conboy* Vincent de Cordova Nan Friedman* Mary Ann Hart Michael Ing* Jeff Johnson Samuel M. Johnson John Koch Raissa Lemer* Leslie McEwen Robert Mince Priscilla Newell* Charlae Olaker Gloria J. Parker Lute Ramblin' Garry Reigenbom* Marie Rice Sheryl L. Sutton Donna Wade John Gibson Martin Goldray Jack Kripl Dora Ohrenstein Richard E. Peck, Jr. Michael Riesman Kurt Munkacsi Bob Bielecki Dan Dryden EINSTEIN ON THE BEACH THE COMPANY (in alphabetical order) man in red shirt making calculations, jury member trial, prisoner, singer man in black suit, dancer, Steven Weed dancer on perpendiculars train, woman reading book, dancer jury member, singer character in kneeplay, character on diagonal train, witness in trial man with string, jury member, dancer, Steven Weed trial guard, jury member trial/prison, singer jury l1}ember trial, dancer, prisoner jury member, singer jury member trial, dancer, man on bench in trial/prison, dancer spacemachine man on bench in trial, jury member trial/prison, singer judge, bus driver jury member, singer, night duet woman with string, rear stenographer trial, dancer, woman on bench in trial Indian, jury member trial/prison, singer train engineer, man on night train, jurymember, singer front stenographer, dancer, woman in elevator '1]" jury member, singer, night train duet jury member, singer, alto voice with The Philip Glass Ensemble boy on tower, judge, boy in elevator man with string, man on bench, dancer, flying man spacemachine woman with shell, jury member, rear stenographer trial/prison, singer character in kneeplay, woman with newspaper, lawyer, woman on night train, woman withjlashlights spacemachine jury member with blond wig, woman in building, woman with telescope spacemachine, singer The Philip Glass Ensemble: soprano saxophone/flute keyboards piccolo/flute/bass clarinet soprano voice alto saxophone/flute keyboards/bass synthesizer sound mix sound mix sound mix and Tison Street violin *Members of The Lucinda Childs Dance Company As Einstein On The Beach is performed without intermission, the audience is invited to leave and reenter the auditorium quietly, as necessary. The food service in the lobby will remain open :during 8 E'NSTEIN ON THE te\1 Sc.' A
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ACT;' Sc.t& AtTJCI. - Sc. 3& 9 The music for Einstein On The Beach was written in the spring, summer and fall of1975. Bob Wilson and I worked directly from a series ofhis drawings which eventuallyformed the designs for the sets. Prior to that period, we had reached agreement on the general thematic content, the overall length, its division into 4 acts, 9 scenes and 5 connecting "knee We also determined the makeup ofthe company - 4 principal actors, 12 singers, doubling when possible as dancers and actors, a solo violinist, and the amplified ensemble of keyboards, winds and voices with which my music is usually associated. Einstein On The Beach is part ofan ongoing musical project begun with "Another Look at Harmony" in the spring of1975. This, in tum, is based on "Music in 12 Parts" (completed 1974) which developed a vocabulary oftechniques (additive processes, cyclic structure and combinations ofthe two) to apply to problems of rhythmic structure. With "Another Look at I have turned to problems of harmonic structure or, more accurately, structural harmony - a newsolutionto problems ofharmonic where the evolution of material can become the basis of an overall formal structure intrinsic to the music itself (and without the harmonic language giving up its moment-to-moment content and "flavor"). My main approach throughout Einstein On The Beach has been to link harmonic structure directly to rhythmic structure, using the latter as a base. Indoing so, easily perceptible "root movement" (chords or "changes") was chosen in order that the clarity.ofthis relationship could be easily heard. Melodic material is for the most part a function, or result, ofthe harmony, as is true in earlier periods ofWestern music. However, it is clear that some ofthe priorities of Western music (harmony/melody first, then rhythm) have been reversed. Here we have rhythmic structure first, then harmony/melody. Theresult has been a reintegration of rhythm, harmony and melody into an idiom which is, hopefully, acces- sible to a general public, although, admittedly, somewhat unusual at first hearing. The vocal texts used throughout the opera are based on numbers and solfege ("do, re, mi ...") syllables. When numbers are used, they represent the rhythmic structure of the music. When solfege is used, the syllables represent the pitch structure of the music. In either case, the text is not secondary or sup- plementary, but is a description ofthe music itself. Besides seeming appropriate for the subject of"Ein- Bob and I felt that a vocal text based on numbers would be easily understood by an international audience (Einstein On The Beach was premiered and toured widely in Europe before coming to the United States). The three main recurring visual themes of the opera (Train/Trial/Field with Spaceship) are linked to three main musical themes. However, the most important musical material appears in the "knee plays" and features the violin. Dramatically speaking, the violinist (dressed as Einstein, as are all the performers on stage) appears as a soloist as well as a character in the opera. His playing position- midway between the orchestra and the stage performers - offers a clue to his role. We see himthen, perhaps as Einstein himself, or simply as a witness to the stage events, but in any case, as a musical touchstone to the work as a whole. Philip Glass, 1976 Einstein On The Beach was produced originally in 1976 by the Byrd Hoffman Foundation, Inc. with the assistance of M. Michael Guy, former French Minister of Culture. Private sponsors ofthe original 1976 proouction included Christophe de Menil, Mr. and Mrs. Pierre Schlumberger and Paul F. Walter. Einstein On The Beach was performed in 1976 at Festival d'Avignon, Avignon, France; Deutsches Schauspielhaus, Hamburg, Germany; Festival d'Automne, Opera-Comique, Paris, France; BITEF, Belgrade, Yugoslavia; Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy; La Monie, Brussels, Belgium; Rotterdamse Schouwburg, Rotterdam, Holland; Metropolitan Opera House. Einstein On The Beach is available on CBS Masterworks Records and Cassettes. 10 PIDLIP GLASS composes music for opera, film; theater, dance, chorus and his own ensemble. A graduate of The Juilliard School, Mr. Glass has received numerous commissions and awards, including a composer-in-residence grant from the Ford Foundation, a Rockefeller Foundation fellow- ship, and a Fulbright which enabled him to study with Nadia Boulanger in Paris. His commissions include the opera Satyagraha (fromthe City ofRotterdam, 1980) which premiered in Holland and was subsequently performed at the Brooklyn Academy ofMusic in 1981. A newproduc- tion of Satyagraha, directed and designed by Achim Freyer, is part ofthe repertory at the Stuttgart Opera, West Germany. The 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Com- mittee commissioned Mr. Glass to compose music for the opening and closing ceremonies of the 1984 Summer Olympics held in Los Angeles. In June 1982, Mr. Glass' chamber opera, The Pho- tographer, debuted at the Royal Palace in Amster- dam for the Queen of Holland. A newly-staged production of The Photographer opened the Brook- lyn Academy's 1983 NEXT WAVE Festival. Philip Glass' most celebrated collaboration was with noted American stage director/designer, Robert Wtl- son, on the opera Einstein on the Beach, which premiered at the Avignon Festival in 1976, going on to tour throughout Europe and culminating in two sold-out performances at the Metropolitan Opera in New York. Mr. Glass recently collaborated with Mr. Wilson on the Koln and Rome sections of the CWIL warS: a tree is best measured it is down. The Rome section was cOnuIDssioned by Teatro dell'Opera and premiered on March 22, 1984: Akhnaten, Mr. Glass' third opera, commissioned by the Stuttgart Opera and directed and designed by AchimFreyer, had its world premiere on March 24, 1984 in Stuttgart, West Germany. On October 12, 1984 the work received its American premiere in Houston, Texas under the auspices ofthe Houston Grand Opera and the New York City Opera. This production was directed by David Freeman and designed by Bob Israel and Richard Riddell and opened in New York City at the State Theater on November 4, 1984. Einstein on the Beach, Satyagraha, and Akhnaten constitute Mr. Glass' portrait trilogy. On October 4, 1982, the film Koyaanisqatsi, with a full score by Mr. Glass, premiered at Radio City Music Hall as a New York Film Festival selection. His first film score was for North Star: Mark DiS- uvero, and he is the subject of a biographical film by British filmmaker Peter Greenaway (The Draughtsman's Contract) titled Four American Ctflnposers. During the course of his career, Philip Glass has composed music for numerous Mabou Mines theater productions, including Dressedlike an Egg, The Lost Ones, Dead End Kids, and Cold Harbor. Mr. Glass created a prelude for Beckett's Endgame which premiered on December 4, 1984 by Robert Brustein's American Repertory Theater. In 1979 Philip Glass collaborated with Lucinda Childs and 11 visual artist Sol LeWitt to create Dance, a work com- missioned by the Brooklyn Academy ofMusic. That spring NewYork City Ballet season was highlighted by the premiere of Glass Pieces choreographed by Jerome Robbins to music from Glassworks and Akhnaten. Philip Glass has performed worldwide with his own musical ensemble. The Philip Glass Ensemble, con- sisting of Mr. Glass, Kurt Munkasci, Michael Ries- man, Jon Gibson, Richard Peck, Jack Kripl, Martin Goldray and Dora Ohrenstein, has performed in such famous music halls as The Dorothy Chandler Pavilion (Los Angeles), Carnegie Hall, (New York City), the Dominion (London), Musikcentrum (Holland), and the Casino de Paris, to name only a few. Recently the Ensemble made its debut in Tokyo, Japan. On June Zl, 1984, Mr. Glass and the Ensemble played in the Kool Jazz Festival at Car- negie Hall. Philip Glass is a CBS Masterworks recording artist, the first composer to be offered this distinguished contract since Aaron Copland. Glassworks was his first Masterworks release. The second recording, The Photographer, was released in March 1983. Ein- stein on the Beach was re-released by CBS Master- works in March 1984. Satyagraha will be released in May 1985. Philip Glass will be the 1985 composer-in-residence with the Philadelphia Orchestra at Saratoga Per- forming Arts Center in Saratoga Springs, New York. ROBERT WILSON has written, designed, and directed a wide range oftheater, opera, dance, film and video pieces since 1965. Perhaps best known to American audiences for Einstein on the Beach, his 1976 collaboration with composer Philip Glass, Wilson recently has been working on a major new opera, the CIVIL warS: a tree is best measuredwhen it is down. Sections ofthis international work have been performed in Rotterdam (1983), Cologne, Rome, and Minneapolis (1984). Act IV and Epilog of the CWIL warS will};>e presented by the Ameri- can Repertory Theater in a new American produc- tion under Mr. Wtlson's direction at the Loeb Drama Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts in February 1985. Most recently Robert Wilson designed and directed Medee by Marc-Antoine Charpentier and his own Medea, with music by Gavin Bryars, for the Opera de Lyon in France. These two works were given their world premiere performances in October 1984. Wilson's other recent works include The Golden Windows for the Munich Kammerspiele in Munich (1982); Great Day in the Morning with Jessye Nor- man for the Theatre des Champs-Elysees in Paris (1982); The Man in The Raincoat for the Theater der Welt in Cologne (1981); Death, Destruction, and Detroit for the Schaubuehne am Halleschen Dfer in Berlin (1979). Wilson, who has a B.F.A. from Pratt Institute and apprenticed with architect Paolo Soleri, brings a background in art and architecture to his work in theater and opera. The King Of Spain, presented in 1969 at New York's Anderson Theater, was Wil- son's first major work. This piece was then incor- porated into The Life And Times OfSigmund Freud and presented at the Brooklyn Academy of Music later that year. In 1970, Wilson, working-at the Iowa University Theater, created Deafman Glance, which was subsequently performed at the Brook- lyn Academy ofMusic (1971) and toured extensively in Europe. In 1972, Wilson created a piece for the Festival ofShiraz-Persepolis entitled Ka Mountain and Guardenia 1errace: A Story About A Family And Some People Changing, which was presented continuously over a seven-day period on Haft Tan Mountain in Shiraz, Iran. Upon his return to the United States, Wilson presented his 12-hour long work, The Life And TImes OfJoseph Stalin, at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and toured this piece in Europe and South America. Called "America's most important dramatist" by Eugene Ionesco, Robert Wtlsonhas received numer- ous awards, including the Drama Desk Award for Direction (Deafman Glance); Obie Special Cita- tion Award for Direction (The Life And TImes Of Joseph Stalin); a Tony nomination for Best Score and Lyrics (A LetterFor Queen Victoria); and West Germany's Der Rosenstrauss for Best Play (The Golden Windows). Mr. Wilson has received two GuggenheimFellowships and two Rockefeller Foun- dation Grants. His work has been supported by grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York State Council on the Arts, the Mas- sachusetts Council on the Arts and Humanities, the Japan U.S. Friendship Commission, and the National Film Institute. Many of his drawings and sculptures are held in both private and public col- lections, including the Museum of Modem Art, New York and the Museumof Modern Art, Paris. An exhibition of his drawings is presently on view at the Paula Cooper Gallery, New York City, December 4-22, 1984. LUCINDACmLDS began her career as a chore- ographer and dancer in 1963 as an original mem- ber of the Judson Church Dance Theatre in New York. In 1966 she participated in the legendary "Nine Evenings: Theatre and Engineering", present- ing a work in collaboration with engineers from Bell Laboratories. In 1973 she formed the Lucinda Childs Dance Company, for which she has choreographed a number oflarge-scale ensemble works and solos. The company has toured extensively in the United States and Europe. In 1976, Ms. Childs collaborated with Robert Wil- son and Philip Glass on Einstein on the Beach, par- ticipating as performer and choreographer, and contributing to the text ofthe opera. Einstein on the Beach toured Europe and was presented at the Metropolitan Opera in New York. Ms. Childs received a CAPS award, as well as as Village Voice Obie aweml for her performance. She also co-starred with Robert Wilson in his two-act play, I Kfls Sit- ting On My Patio AndThis Guy AppearedI Thought I Hbs Hallucinating, which toured the United States and Europe in 1'J77-78. In 1979 Lucinda Childs began preparing the first of her large-scale pnxiuctions, in support ofwhich she was awarded a "Guggenheim Fellowship. This was Dance, an evening-length work for the Lucinda Childs Dance Company, with music by Philip Glass and film/decor by visual artist Sol LeWitt. Dance 12 received its American premiere at the Opera House of the Brooklyn Academy of Music in the fall of 1979. In early 1981, Ms. Childs returned to Paris at the invitation of the Groupe Recherche Choreograp- hique de l'Opera de Paris for which she choreo- graphed Mad Rush, music by Philip Glass. This twenty-minute work, featuring Wtlfride Piollet and Michael Denard, principal dancers from the Paris Opera Ballet, was presented in Paris at the Theatre de la Ville in April, 1981. The second ofthe large-scale productions, Relative Calm, is an evening-length work with music by Jon Gibson, and lighting and decor by Robert Wilson. Relative Calm had its premiere in December, 1981 at the Opera House of the Brooklyn Academy of Music as part of the NEXT WAVE series. Available light, Ms. Childs most recent large-scale production, is an hour-long work with music by John Adams, set by architect Frank Gehry, and costumes by Ronaldus Shamask. Commissionedby the MuseumofContemporary Art in Los Angeles, Available light had its American premiere there in September, 1983 and was also presented in the Opera House of the Brooklyn Academy of Music as part of the NEXT WAVE Festival. In 1983, the Pacific Northwest Ballet commissioned Lucinda Childs to choreograph a new work for the company. Cascade, with music by Steve Reich, was premiered at the Seattle Opera House on March 1, 1984 and was also presented in the company's sea- son at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in April and at the Spoleto Festival U.S.A. in Charleston, South Carolina in June. In March, Childs performed a retrospective of her solo dances at the Whitney Museum. This program began with a solo from the 1960's, the popular Car- nation, and concluded with the world premiere of her new solo work, Outline, with music by the young British composer Gavin Bryars. In June of this year, the Asian Cultural Council awarded Ms. Childs a fellowship to survey art and culturatactivities in Japan. This fellowship was the first ever awarded to an American choreographer. At the request ofRudolf Nureyev, Ms. Childs cho- reographed her second ballet for the Paris Opera this fall. Premier Orage is set to music by Dmitri has decor and costumes by Roberto Plate, and stars two of the Paris Opera's principal dancers, Elizabeth Platel and Jean Guizerix. Pre- mier Orage had its premiere at the Paris Opera on November 2, 1984. For theirevival ofEinstein on the Beach, Childs cho- reographed the Field Dances for Acts nand ill and recreates the leading role, for which she won an Obie in 1'J76 when the opera was performed at the Metropolitan Opera House. For the Lucinda Childs Dance Company's 1985-86 New York City season, Childs will choreograph a new full-length work. The new work, in four parts, will have music for each section for amplified harp- sichord and violin, written by a different composer; Michael Galasso, Gyorgy Ligeti, Michael Nyman, and Allen Shawn. The decor will be created by pho- tographer Robert Mapplethorpe. SHERYLSUTTONis recreating the role she per- , formed in the original production ofEinstein on the Beach. She has worked with Robert Wilson since 1971, appearing in Deafman Glance, The Life and TImes ofJoseph Stalin, ALetterfor Queen Victoria, the CWIL warS, and The Murder, a video film for PBS. A native of New Orleans, Sheryl lived for several years in Paris where she worked extensively in televison and film. Miss Sutton_currently resides in Cologne, West Germany with her husband, Andreas Terhoeven, co-author of her one-woman show, People Who live in Hotels Get Eyes ofKillers, which has been performed this season in Paris, Geneva, and Brussels. ERIC BENSON, a native of Arlington, Virginia, is a graduate ofBrownandBostonUniversity School of Fine Arts, where he was assistant director of the Opera Theater. In New York he has appeared with the Bronx Opera, New York Lyric Opera, The Opera Ensemble of New York, Capricorn Theater Company, St. Luke's Chamber Ensemble, and fre- quently as a guest artist with the New York Renais- sance Band at Alice Thlly Hall. He has sung principal tenor roles in Don Giovanni, Le Nozze di Figaro, Cenerentola, AMidsummer Night's Dream, and Cosi Fan Tutte, and acted and danced Stravinsky's Devil in L'histoire du Soldat at Tangle- wood. Also a stage director,. he recently directed the world premiere of Edith Hemenway's The Twilight ofMagic in March with the Long Island Singers. STEVENBROMERgrewup in Indianapolis, Indi- ana and began dancing while pursuing a degree in education from EarlhamCollege. He studies ballet with Maggie Blackandthis is his second seasonwith the Lucinda Childs Dance Company. RACHEL BRUMERgrewup in Oakland, Califor- nia and began her dance career as a member of the Oakland Ballet Company. She.graduated from Mills College, taking t i ~ e off for a tour with Ringling Bros. & Barnum& Bailey Circus. After moving to Seattle, shejoined the Bill Evans Dance Company. She has taught for the Pacific Northwest Ballet and the University ofWashington. In NewYork she has performed with Mark Morris, and this fall joilled the Lucinda Childs Dance Company. WARREN CAMPBELL, a native of Kansas, recently performed with Operaworks in Figaro and The Martyrdom of St. Magnus. He has also per- formed with the NYU Summer Festival in Kirke Mecham's Tartuffe, Riverside Opera, Music Theatre ofWichita, Phoenix Bach & Madrigal Society, Ths- con Opera, Flagstaff Symphony and Music Academy of the West. Mr. Campbell's oratorio credits range from Jesus in St. MatthewPassion to Rossini's Stabat Mater. Frequently touring the coun- try in several Gilbert and Sullivan proouctions, he escaped TItipu to sing with the Charleston, SOuth Carolina Symphony as bass soloist in Mozart's Requiem. TIMOfHY J. CONBOY was born and raised in Rockville Centre, Long Island. He began a serious pursuit of dance as a career while attending the University of Colorado where he received his Bachelor's Degree in French. Dance brought him to New York to study with Lawrence Rhodes. He 13 received his M.A. from NYU's Tisch School ofthe Arts in 1984 where his instructors included Mr. Rhodes and Alba Calzada. Mr. Conboy has danced with the Mercury Ballet and worked with such choreographers as Cliff Keuter, Joan Finkelstein, Christopher Pilafian and now, Lucinda Childs. He currently studies with Maggie Black. VINCENT de CORDOVA is a graduate of the Oberlin Conservatory of Music and and the Mozarteumin Salzburg, Austria. After completion of his musical studies, he was invited to sing with the Metropolitan Opera Studio in NewYork. He has subsequently performed with the opera companies ofHouston, Lake George, Austin, Lake Placid, Vir- ginia, Frankfurt and appeared in the Civil warSby Philip Glass and directed by Robert,Wilson at the Teatro dell'Opera in Rome. He has also performed with the symphony orchestras ofVancouver, Miami, Boston, Cleveland, Cincinnati (under the baton of James Levine), as well as the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande. In February 1985 he will be making his debut With the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra. He can be heard on London Records with Lorin Maa- zel and the Cleveland Symphony Orchestra. NANFRIEDMANis from SkoIde, Illinois and has a B.F.A. from the Juilliard School. She has per- formed as a principal dancer in Diamond, Tanz Projekt Munchenand as a guest artist with Batsheva. In New York she has performed with choreographers Dianna McPherson, Andrew deGroat, Rosalind Newman, and Gina Buntz. Ms. Friedman can be seen in the filmPhi Beta Rockers and most recently in the music video Complication Shakedown by Japanese artist, Moto. Shejoinedthe Lucinda Childs Dance Company in the spring of 1983. MARY ANN HART, a native of Missouri, is a mezzo soprano and a 1983 winner of the Concert Guild Auditions and the first prize winner of the 1982 Minna Kaufmann Ruud Distinguished Perfor- mance Awards. She receiveda career development grant from the Martha Baird Rockefeller Fund for Music and was a semi-finalist in the Kennedy Center-Rockefeller Foundation' Competition for American Music, as well as a silver medalist in the Robert Shumann International Competition. Miss Hart has been a soloist at the Marlboro Music Fes- tival, with the Minnesota Orchestra, Musica Sacra, The Clarion Music Society, Concert Royal, and The Youth Symphony of New York. In addition to her 1983 debut recital at Carnegie Recital Hall, Miss Hart has made recital and oratorio appearances in Austria, Germany, Rumania, East Germany, Washington, D.C., and several states. MICHAELINGgrewup in Rockville, Maryland. He began his dance training at Washington Univer- sity in St. Louis, Missouri where he also received a B.A. in architecture. His teachers there included Claudia Gitelman and Satoru Shimazaki. Since moving to New York in 1983, Michael has studied modern dance with Merce Cunninghamand ballet with Janet Panetta and Rachel List. He has per- formed in works by choreographers Ellen Cornfield and Garry Reigenborn in:addition to working with the Lucinda Childs Dance Company, which he joined in August, 1983. JEFF JOHNSON has appeared on Broadway in The Three Musketeers, with the first national com- pany ofA Day in Hollywood/A Night in the Ukraine, and at the Spoleto in Italy with the NewYork Ensemble for Early Music. He has performed in pieces at LaMama E.T.C., Radio City Music Hall, the Augusta Opera Company, the Virginia Museum Theatre, and with the Gregg Smith Singers. Most recently he was Dustin Hoffman's assistant on the Broadway revival of Death ofa Salesman. SAMUELM. JOHNSONis recreating the role he performed in the original production ofEinstein on the Beach. He appeared in the CBS television ser- ies Beacon Hill and the films Shuttle Escapade, Vel- vet Smooth, and Times Square. JOHN KOCH, a graduate in music of Kent State University, holds the Master ofMusic in Voice from the University of Illinois. He has performed with the Lake George Opera Festival, Michigan Opera Theatre, I..ouisville Opera Association, and the Kansas City Lyric. Last fall he toured nationally for Columbia Artists Management, creating the role of Sir Arthur Sullivan in an original opera based on the lives of Gilbert and Sullivan. This past year he performed the duel roles of Larry and Matt in The Face on the Barroom Floor with the New York Center for Contemporary Opera and the role of Pedrillo with the Arkansas Opera Theatre in Mozart's Abduction from the Seraglio. RAISSA LERNER grew up in Connecticut and began performing with the American Youth Ballet, which annual summer tours to West Germany and Switzerland. After graduating from Amherst College in 1983, she moved to NewYork andjoined Colloquium Dance Co. She has been a member of the Lucinda Childs Dance Company since April 1984, and is studying ballet with Maggie Black. LESLIEMcEWENhas recently moved to the New York area from Seattle, where she was a Seattle Opera Company PreviewArtist and also sang with Seattle Civic Light Company and with the Peter Britt Music Festival in Oregon. Since arriving in New York, Leslie has sung with the Lubo Opera Company, The. Center for Contemporary Opera Company and was a recent winner in the Ameri- can Opera Auditions. She is also a past Metropoli- tan Opera Opera National Auditions and a San Francisco Merola Program finalist. ROBERT MINCE, a native Long Islander, has been active in opera and musical comedy for 11 years. His credits include a stint at Michigan Opera Theatre where he played Bob in The OldMaid and the Thief, David in Hand ofBridge and Marullo in Rigoletto. New York credits include Fiorello in Barber ofSeville (Brooklyn Opera Soci- ety) and Belcore in Elixir ofLove (Opera Ensem- ble of New York). This past summer Mr. Mince appeared in New Hampshire as the Pirate King in Pirates ofPenZ/lnce, Sir Harry in Once Upon a Mat- tress and Shem in Two by Two. PRISCILLA NEWELL was born in Louisville, Kentucky. After graduating from Sarah Lawrence College, she moved to New York City where she has performed with several choreographers, includ- ing David Gordon and Valda Setterfield, and Col- 14 leen Mulvihill. She has been with the Lucinda Childs Dance Company since 1981, and has taught in France and NewYork City. She currently studies ballet with Maggie Black and modern dance at the Cunningham studio, and likes to swim. CHARLAEOLAKERis a native ofChicago. She began early musical studies in piano at the Ameri- can Conservatory of Music, continuing as a vocalist at Howard University where she received her degrees. Miss Olaker is the recipient of numerous scholarships, prizes, and awards, including semi- finalist in the Concours Internationale de Paris, 1980; First Prize in the Y.M.C.A. Annual Vocal Competition, 1980; and the sole winner of Artist International's Voice Award, 1981, which was presented by the management at her New York rec- ital debut at Carnegie Recital Hall in 1982. As a member of the Wolf Trap Opera Company, The Children's Opera Theatre ofWashington, D.C. , and the Alexandria Lyric Opera, Miss Olaker has per- formed roles by Mozart, Menotti, Puccini, and Verdi. She has made guest appearances as a soloist with orchestras at Kennedy Center's Concert Hall, Lincoln Center's Damrosch Park, Central Park, and has made successful concert, recital, radio, televi- sion, and film appearances throughout the United States and Europe. Most recently she toured with the Philip Glass Ensemble in The Photographer and performed with Lukas Foss and the Brooklyn Phil- harmonic in Idomeneo, which was aired recently on WNCN Radio. GLORIA PARKER has been guest artist with several symphony orchestras in the United States, including Oklahoma City, St. Louis, Queens, and the St. Luke's Chamber Ensemble. She has also appeared with the Houston Grand Opera, Opera Theatre of St. Louis, Boston Opera, Children's Free Opera of N.Y. and Caramoor Festival, others. In 1983 she played the role ofJulie Laverne opposite Donald O'Connor in the national tour and Broadway revival of Showboat and will be appear- ing as Evvie in the comedy musical, Scrambled Feet, at Toronto's Strand Theatre in 1985. LUTERAMBLlN'lirst appeared as the final incar- nation in Jean Claude van Italie's Naropa at Yale in 1978. He played one of the manifestations of Ariel in The New York Shakespeare Festival's production of The 1empest in Central Park in 1981, as well as The. Child in Mabou Mines' production of Lee Breuer's Hajj, a piece for live and pre-recorded video that premiered at The Public Theater in 1983. He can be heard on National Public Radio in the ZBS Production of The Mist in which he plays Billy. Lute Ramblin' is nine years old. He attends Friends Seminary and plays on the travelling soccer team for The Manhattan Kickers. He is a visual artist and musician and has studied Ken-do in Japan. GARRY REIGENBORN, a native of Colorado, received a B.F.A. from the University of Utah, Salt Lake City. Beforejoining the Lucinda Childs Dance Company in 1981, he was a principal dancer with AndrewdeGroat and Dancers from 1977-79. He has performed with Meg Harper and David Gordon. He has collaborated with theater director Cindy Lubar and with Robert Wilson since 1980. He has conducted workshops throughout Europe, Canada and the U.S. and has been directing and choreographing for his own company, Garry Reigenborn: Company Dance since 1979. He is the recipient of a NEA Choreography Fellowship in 1982 and has been awarded an Artist in Residence by the Djerassi Foundation of California in 1986. He has studied professionally with Merce Cunnin- gham, Ann Halprin and currently studies ballet with Maggie Black. ~ RICE has been a part of Einstein on the Beach from the beginning. As a member ofthe cast of the original 1976 production, she performed throughout Europe and at the Met as well as par- ticipating in the recording of the complete opera. She has also appeared in Canadian Equity theatre and n u ~ e r o u s Off-Broadway and OftOffBroad- way productions. She received her B.F.A. in act- ing from Emerson College and is currently studying with William Esper. DONNA WADE, Maine born soprano, comes to New York City via extensive musical training in Nova Scotia where she recieved her B.M. and B.M. Ed. degrees on full scholarship. Her diverse talents run from singing lead roles in Cosi Fan Tutte and The Telephone and The Medium, to acting lead roles in Hamlet, On Baile's Strand, The Tempest and Can- dida. After appearing on various CBC Radio and Television shows, she moved back to the States ana attended Manhattan School of Music. Now a stu- dent of Sam Sakarian, this is Miss Wade's NYC operatic debut. JULIAGILLETTwas Production Stage Manager for the original Einstein on the Beach in 1976. She has worked with Mr. Wilson on other productions including ALetterfor Queen Victoria, The $ Value ofMan, Medea, and The Civil warS. Other high- lights include Andrei Serban's The Cherry Orchard,st Agamemnon, and Happy Days; Liviu Ciulei's Hamlet; Alan Schneider's A lmly From Dubuque; and The Greeks at the Williamstown Theatre Festival. She is currently Production Manager at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis. BEVERLY EMMONS (Lighting Designer) designed the lighting for the Merce Cunningham Dance Company from 1965 to 1968. She has also designed lighting for theater directors Joseph Chai- kin, Andrei Serban, and for Meredith Monk's and Ping Chong's The Games. Ms. Emmons has numer- ous Broadway credits including Tony nominations for The Elephant Man, ADay in Hollywood/A Night in the Ukraine, and last year's All's Well That Ends Well. Her dance credits include designs for the com- panies ofMartha Graham, Lucinda Childs, Trisha Brown, Lar Lubovitch, Dana Reitz, Viola Farber, and Alvin Ailey. Other collaborations with Robert Wilson have been I Nbs Sitting On My Patio This Guy Appeared I Thought I Was Hallucinating, Death, Destruction, and Detroit at the Berlin Schaubuhne, Great Day In The Morning in Paris, and the Rome Opera segment of the CWIL warS. In 1980 she received a Village Voice Obie and in 1984 was awarded a Bessie for distinguished light- ing design. 15 THEPIDLIPGLASS ENSEMBLE,is a virtuoso group of musicians performing on both electronic and acoustical instruments. Mr. Glass created the Ensemble over a decade ago to capture his unique instrumental sonorities and his hypnotic melodies with their compelling, ever-ehanging rhythmic pat- terns. Comprised of outstanding musicians and composers in their own right, the Ensemble is the only group in the world devoted exclusively to Mr. Glass'music. The group has performed in many of the world's most prestigious halls, including Car- negie Hall in New York and the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles. MICHAEL RIESMAN is acomposer and per- former whose activities encompass a broad spec- trum of music. He studied at the Mannes College ofMusic and Harvard University where he received a Ph.D. in composition, and has taught at Harvard and at SUNY/Purchase. He has received a Fulbright grant and commissions from the Ford Foundation and the Fromm Music Foundation, and has also received supp<,>rt from the National Endowment for the Arts and Meet the Composer. In addition to con- cert works, Mr Riesman has composed music for the theatre, dance, and for films and television. He wrote music for Robert WIlson's Edison, which was seen in New York, Paris and Milan. Lucinda Childs recently commissioned a work entitled Formal Abandon, which was premiered in Paris. His most recent work is a ballet called The City, which was commissioned by the Spoleto Festival, and was per- formed in bothItaly and South Carolina. Mr. Reis- man is noted as the conductor of numerous recordings including Einstein on the Beach, Glass- works, The Photographer, and Koyaanis,qatsi. He has conducted and performed on albums by Paul Simon, Mike Oldfield, Ray Manzarek, and Phil Ochs. KURT MUNKACSI returns to this production of Einstein On The Beach to re-create his original sound design. A long time member of the Philip Glass Ensemble, he was perhaps the first sound mixer to be treated as an equal member of a group of musicians. Over the past several years he has turned his attention to recorded music and is best known at this time for his productions, which include the original recording of Einstein on the Beach, re-released by CBS Masterworks; The Pho- tographer, Gmmmy nominee 1983; Glassworks for CBS Records; The Waitresses first albumfor Poly- gram; and the music for the Koyaanisqatsi, winner of the 1983 Golden Globe Award for best sound- track. During his somewhat adventurous musical career he has worked with such varied artists as Ornette Coleman, Don Cherry, John Lennon, Brian Eno, Mike Oldfield, Ray Manzarek and Polyrock. The recording ofGlass' opera Satyagraha, produced by Munkacsi, will be released early next year by CBS Masterworks. It is especially interesting because of its unique recording approach to tradi- tional orchestration. He is also producing Glass' score for the soundtrack to Paul Schrader's upcom- ing film Mishima, produced by George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola, which will be available on Elektra-Nonesuch Records. JONGIBSON, as composer and performer of his own music, has given many solo and ensemble con- certs throughout Europe and North America. Two recordings of his music, Visitations and Two Solo Pieces, appear on ChathamSquare Records. In lCJ77 he was commissioned by the Merce Cunningham Dance Company to compose and performthe music for Fractions, a dance for video and live perfor- mance. Subsequently, Mr. Gibson was commis- sioned by choreographer Lucinda Childs to compose music for Relative Calm, which toured widely in Europe and received its American premiere at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in December 1981. He is currently working on an opera with director JoAnne Akalaitis, based upon Charles Darwin's book, J.byage ofthe Beagle. Mr. Gibson has performed with Philip Glass since 1968. MARTIN GOLDRAY is the pianist for the New Music Consort and appears regularly with the Con- temporary Chamber Ensemble. He has also per- formed with the Group for Contemporary Music, the Orchestra ofthe Twentieth Century, and on the Guild of Composers series. After receiving the D.M.A. from the Yale School of Music he was awarded a Fulbright to study with Yvonne Loriod in Paris. He has also been the recipient of Tangle- wood and Yale-in-Norfolk Fellowships. He received his B.A. from Cornell University, where he studied with MalcolmBilson, and his earlier studies were with Carlos Buhler and at the Dalcroze School of Music in New York City. JACKKRIPL, winner ofthe Geneva International Competition for Musical Performers, has toured extensively as a soloist and performer with orches- tras and bands. He is regarded as one of the lead- ing exponents of the classical saxophone. As a recipient oftwo successive Fulbright Scholarships to Paris, he studied saxophone with Marcel Mule and musical style with Nadia Boulanger. It WdS dur- ing this period that his professional relationship with Philip Glass began. A widely sought-after per- former, Mr. Kripl works frequently on Broadway and in New York recording studios. Most recently, he WdS the lead woodwind player in the original cast ofBarnum. His interest in new music led himto be a founding member of the American Saxophone Quartet, dedicated to new music from American composers. DORA OHRENSTEIN has an active career in a broad repertoire. She has been soloist at the Wit- ten Festival of New Music in West Germany and has participated in the premieres of compositions by Philip Glass, John Cage and many others. As soloist with the SEM Ensemble, she traveled widely in South America. She has been heard as soloist at the Waterloo Music Festival, the Aspen Music fes- tival and with the Manticore Orchestra, the Solaire Ensemble, Queens College Choral Society, New- band, the Western Wind, the NewCalliope Singers, John Biggs Consort, Schola Antigua and at the New- port Festival. Ms. Ohrestein has recorded with CBS, Nonesuch and Labor Records. RICHARD E. PECK, JR., saxophonist, com- poser and visual artist, came to New York City from Louisiana in lCJ71. While in the South, he performed with rhythm and blues bands and attended the University of Southwestern Louisiana. Upon arriv- 16 ing in New York, he joined the Philip Glass Ensem- ble and furthered his studies in music and art at Hunter College. In addition, he has recorded his music with the jazz band, Roux. His visual work has been shown at P.S. 1 and the Holly Solomon Gallery in New York and at the Contemporary Art Center in New Orleans. TISON STREET has pursued a duel career as violist and composer. From 1968 to lCJ78, he worked as a freelance violinist in Boston where'he played in the Boston Philharmonic, Boston Opera, Boston Ballet Orchestra, Boston Pops, Boston Symphony, appeared in solo and chamber recitals, and taught chamber music classes at Harvard University. In recent years he has concentrated mostly on com- position. His works have beenplayed by such groups as the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, the New York and Los Angeles Philharmonics and the Concord String Quartet. THE LUCINDACIDLDS DANCE COMPANY was founded in 1973 and performed its first concert at the Whitney Museum in New York that year. From 1973-78, Lucinda Childs choreographed a number ofworks for the company including: Calico Mingling (1973), Particular Reel (1973), Duplicate Suite (1CJ75), RecliningRondo (1CJ75), Radial Courses (1CJ76), Interior Drama (1CJ77), and Katema (lCJ78). All of these pieces were performed without music and secured Childs's reputation as one ofthe impor- tant and influential contemporary choreographers. In 1979 the company began to perform large-scale works created by Childs in collaboration with artists from other mediums. These works have been acclaimed by critics in Europe and America for the beauty of their choreography and for their innova- tive use of music and decor. The first ofthese works, Dance (1979), is an evening-length piece for an ensemble and solo dancer with music by Philip Glass and a film-decor by Sol LeWitt. Dance toured extensively in Europe and had its American premiere at the Brooklyn Academy ofMusic. Rela- tive Calm (1981) was created in collaboration with composer Jon Gibson and has lighting and decor by Robert Wtlson. Following a tour ofFrance, it had its American premiere at the Brooklyn Academy of Music's NEXT WAVE Festival. Available Light (1983) was commissioned by the Museum of Con- temporary Art in Los Angeles to inaugurate its "Temporary Contemporary" exhibition space. This hour-long work has music by John Adams, decor by Frank Gehry, and costumes by Ronaldus Sha- mask. Available Light was also performed in Chateauvallon, France and at the 1983 NEXT WAVE Festival. In December, 1983, the company appeared in a one-week season at the Theatre de la Ville in Paris. The company has also performed at the Washington Society for the Performing Arts, the Walker Art Center, Harvard University, Zellerbach Hall and thoughout Europe. In June, 1985, the com- pany will perform a retrospective of Childs' works at the Holland Festival. The Lucinda Childs Dance Company is supported in part by the Dance and Inter-Arts programs of the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York State Council on the Arts, the Daniel W. Dietrich Foundation, Exxon Corporation, the Jerome Rob.,. bins Foundation and many generous friends. STAFF FOR EINSTEINONTHE BEACH ASSISTANT DIRECTOR Company Manager Production Stage Manager Stage Managers Set Coordinator Costume Coordinator Assistant to the Lighting Designer Assistant to the Choreographer Assistant Musical Director Assistant to Robert Wilson Production Assistants Lighting Production Assistant Hair and Makeup Casting Consultants Rehearsal Pianist/Standby Keyboard Rehearsal Pianist Legal Counsel Production Manager for The Philip Glass Ensemble JULIA GILLETT Ellen Dennis Don Judge James Grant Charles Otte Michael Deegan Don Newcomb Ken Tabachnick Garry Reigenbom Martin Goldray Ann-Christin Rommen Peter J. Downing Nina Stachenfeld Maidie O. Greer Ethyl Eichelberger Margery Simkin Donna Newton Michael Ward Nurit Tilles Ron Feiner, Esq. Colton, Weissberg, Hartnick, Yamin and Sheresky Kristina Kinet choreography copyright 1984 Lucinda Childs CREDITS Scenery constructed by Broggi Brothers, Milan, Italy. Scenery refurbished by Nolan Scenery Studios, Inc. and Metro Scenic Studios. Lighting equipment by Bash Theatrical Lighting, Inc. and Produc- tion Arts Lighting, Inc. Mini-striplight courtesyof Lighting and Electronics, Inc. based on a design by Jules Fisher. Sound equipment by Maryland Sound Industries, Inc. and Masque Sound and Record- ing Corp. Projection equipment by Charlie Spataro's Audio Visual Workshop, Inc. Original scenic supervision by'A. Christina Giannini. Original costumes by D'Arcangelo-Mayer, Paris. Additional costumes by Annamarie Hollander. Special thanks to FOTOFOUO The music of many composers featured in the NEXT WAVB FESTIVAL is available from the New Music Distribution Service, the only non-profit organization specializing in the marketing and pro- motion of new music recording. 17 Exclusive Representation of Philip Glass by IPA/Intemational Production Associates 853 Broadway New York, NY 10003 212 505-1688 Telex: 821238 For information regarding Robert Wilson: Byrd Hoffman Foundation, Inc. 325 Spring Street New York, NY 10013 212 620-0220 Telex: 383773 BHF NYK UD Exclu,sive Representation of The Lucinda Childs Dance Company by Lucinda Childs Dance Foundation, Ltd. 541 Broadway New York, NY 10012 212431-7599 Worldwide Representation of The Philip Glass Ensemble by IPA/Intemational Production Associates 853 Broadway New York, NY 10003 212505-1688 Telex: 821238 EINSTEIN ON THE BEACH SPECIAL EVENTS December 4-22, 1984 ROBERT WILSON: DRAWINGS 1974-1984 Paula Cooper Gallery 155 Wooster New York, New York (212) 674-0766 December 16, 1984 THE EINSTEIN DINNER EIlntemacional For ticket information and reservations call Ms. Carol Willis at (718) 636-4193. Proceeds will directly benefit this Next Wave production. December 23, 1984 12:3Opm BAGEL BRUNCH AND 'SYMPOSIUM Dr. Roger Oliver, Humanities Director, Next Wave Festival will chair a panel discussion about Einstein On The Bagels, coffee, and orange juice will be served. Brooklyn Academy of Music 18