2002
Season: The curtain rises ...
Grand Opening Week
January
29: Doug Stone Country Concert, 7:30 p.m.
In 1990, Doug Stone’s debut single, “I’d Be Better Off (In a Pine Box)”
hurled the Newnan, Ga., native into country’s “top five” and forever etched
his poignant and vulnerable vocal style into the psyche of country fans
everywhere. Doug Stone is one of the pack of diverse artists, including
luminaries such as Clint Black, Alan Jackson, Trisha Yearwood, Garth Brooks,
and Travis Tritt, who have bulldozed country music's landscape and helped
redefine the genre. Combine Stone's own noteworthy songwriting, a penchant
for piercingly laconic material, innate working class sensibilities and
his supple country baritone voice, and you end up with recordings that
carry a uniquely powerful and direct emotional punch.
February
1: Branford Marsalis, 7:30 p.m.
“One of the premiere jazz saxophonists playing today, Branford Marsalis
plays with a subtlety of tone and phrasing only the finest interpreters
can attain,” writes the Chicago Tribune. Marsalis, is equally at
home on the stages of the world’s jazz clubs as well as its classical halls.
He weaves his way through genres from blues to pop to classical with a
musical scope and innovative spirit of daring proportions in a never-ending
effort to challenge perceived musical boundaries and limitations.
2002 Season
Louisiana
Philharmonic Orchestra
March 8: Casual Classics, 7:30 p.m.
September 22: Family Concert, 3 p.m.
December 6: Christmas Concert, 7:30 p.m.
The Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra, an orchestra that refused to
die and rose from the ashes through hard work, dedication and community
support, finds a home on the north shore in a theater that has undergone
an equally dramatic rags-to-riches rebirth.
March 16-17
Tennessee Williams Festival on the North Shore
The popular Tennessee Williams Festival, which Southeastern’s College
of Arts and Sciences sponsors, takes a trip across the Lake to bring special
performance of Suddenly Last Summer, directed by John Grimsley,
to the north shore for a 7:30 p.m. performance on Saturday night and a
3 p.m. Sunday matinee.
April 5
Big River: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, 7:30 p.m.
From the team that created the beauty and romance of The Secret Garden
comes a vibrant Broadway musical about the eternal search for freedom
and adventure.
Based on Mark Twain's classic The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn,
the musical Big River presents a whirlwind ride down the mighty Mississippi
River, where the next turn is always unexpected. Written by legendary "King
of Country Music" song-writer Roger Miller, Mark Twain’s unforgettable
characters are brought vividly to life by the musical flavors of ragtime,
blues, gospel, soul, folk and country.
May 9
Ballet Memphis, 7:30 p.m.
Ballet Memphis is an "excellent" company that received a "well-deserved"
$1-million Ford Foundation Challenge Grant with "dancers who exhibit a
joy that travels over the footlights to infect everyone in the audience."
These are just some of the accolades the company received from New York
critics in April 2001, when Ballet Memphis became the first Memphis arts
organization to perform on a New York City main stage. What New York critics
saw was a fresh, free, nimble professional company of 24 dancers performing
works created by world renowned choreographers. At the Columbia, Ballet
Memphis will present a spirited program performed to music ranging from
blues to classical to country.
July 3
Gatemouth Brown
With a distinguished career that has spanned more than half a century,
Grammy-winner Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown has established himself as a legendary
performer of breathtaking diversity and virtuosity. Not one to be pigeonholed,
has stubbornly avoided labels while demonstrating his command of blues,
jazz, cajun, country and swing. Gate has earned nine prestigious W.C. Handy
Awards, the Rhythm & Blues Foundation’s cherished Pioneer Award and
a Grammy in 1982 for his album “Alright Again!” In his most recent album,
“Back to Bogalusa,” the 77-year-old took his listeners back to his beloved
Louisiana, focusing on his native state’s rich musical sounds while illustrating
how effortlessly he jumps the boundaries of music and geographic regions.
October 15
North Carolina Dance Theatre, 7:30 p.m.
North Carolina Dance Theatre's impressive reputation is based on superb
dancers, high energy and a versatile repertoire ranging from full-length
classical ballets to innovative contemporary works. In choreographer Mark
Diamond’s A Streetcar Named Desire, a dark, intensely dramatic ballet
inspired by Tennessee Williams’ play, Blanche DuBois, a worn and vulnerable
beauty, tries to preserve her beautiful but dreamlike world of the past
in a brash and decadent atmosphere of 1950s New Orleans. Hot jazz, contemporary
and classical music heighten the experience of this dynamic production
by a company that The New York Times calls "unstinting in range
and thunder."
November 1
Aquila Theatre Company
A Midsummer Night's Dream
Innovative and dynamic, the Aquila Theatre Company has gained an international
reputation as one of the foremost producers of touring classical theatre.
Committed to a disciplined ensemble approach to classical texts designed
to free the spirit of the original using both British and American performers,
Aquila seeks to present fresh and inventive productions. For the 2002-2003
season, Aquila will bring to the Columbia Shakespeare’s A Midsummer
Night’s Dream, a timeless comedy that has delighted audiences for centuries.
Set against a classical Athenian backdrop, A Midsummer Night’s Dream
deals
with the universal theme of love, and with love’s complications: passion,
lust, frustration, depression, confusion, and, marriage. Through
its imaginative interpretation Aquila weaves a web of theatrical
magic that will take an audience to the heart of an enchanted forest, the
injustice of the Athenian court, and the political strife of the fairy
kingdom. will renews the magic of Shakespeare’s plot.
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