Ovations Offstage archived events
These past events are presented here, most recent events first, for historical interest.
Archived Events
Strings Masterclass: Jennifer Koh
May 2012
Presented to accompany Jennifer Koh
For more information and to register, please contact Ovations Offstage at 207.773.3150 or .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
Pre-Performance Lecture: “Bach & Beyond”
May 3, 2012 6:30 pm
Hannaford Hall, USM, Portland, Maine
Presented to accompany Jennifer Koh
Director of String Studies and Orchestral Activities at USM School of Music, Dr. Robert Lehmann, will discuss the distillation process—the whole world on four strings.
Piano Masterclass: Imogen Cooper
April 26, 2012
USM School of Music, Gorham
Presented to accompany Imogen Cooper
For more information and to register, please contact Ovations Offstage at 207.773.3150 or .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
Pre-Performance Lecture: “Smoke and Mirrors: Making the Piano Sing”
April 25, 2012 6:30 pm
Merrill Auditorium Rehearsal Hall
Presented to accompany Imogen Cooper
Laura Kargul will discuss and demonstrate the ways in which pianists can create the illusion of a "singing line" on the piano.
Dance Masterclass : Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Portland Ballet Company
517 Forest Avenue Portland
Presented to accompany Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater
Members of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater company teach a modern dance masterclass.
For more information and to register, please contact Ovations Offstage at 207.773.3150 or .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
Life as an Ailey Dancer
April 24, 2012 6:30 pm
Merrill Auditorium Rehearsal Hall
Presented to accompany Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater
Join Ovations Executive Director Aimee Petrin in a conversation with a member of AAADT about the history of the company, repertoire, and life as an Ailey dancer.
Post-Performance Q&A with Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Merrill Auditorium, Portland, Maine
Presented to accompany Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater
In-School Workshop: Creating an Ensemble Performance Piece

Students will be inspired to create poems, monologues and basic dialogue. As an ensemble, students will write, devise and perform their own piece.
$350 for one-hour in-school workshop with visiting artist Paige Hernandez
In-School Workshop: Expression through Popular Culture

Students engage with poetry, dance, visual arts, and music and explore how Paige in Full uses hip-hop and popular culture as a way to tell her story.
$100 for one-hour in-school workshop with Ovations Offstage educators
School-Time Performance: "Paige in Full"

Recommended Grades: 5-12
Thursday, April 12, 2012 10 AM
Length: 60 Minutes
Hannaford Hall, USM, Portland, Maine
All Ticket: $7
Paige in Full is a visual mix-tape that blends poetry, dance, visual arts and live music to tell the tale of a multicultural girl growing up in Baltimore. The production explores how a young woman’s identity is shaped by her ethnicity and popular culture, telling a personal, yet universal, story through the lens of hip-hop.
Pre-Performance Lecture: “Cultural Context: Nomadic Life in the Sahara”
April 4, 2012 6:30 pm
Hannaford Hall, USM, Portland, Maine
Presented to accompany Bombino
Niger, West Africa, is the world’s poorest nation. However, it is rich in tradition and culture—to an extent not found in many other places on Earth. The Tuareg are a Berber people who have had a written language for thousands of years. The famed “Blue Men of the Desert” they controlled the Sahara trade routes for centuries. The Tuareg were famed warriors, protective of their desert home and their right to roam freely there. The Tuareg no know they must come to terms with ever changing politics, as well as climate change.
Music is integral to Tuareg life. Evenings by the campfire are often a time to play the inzad—a traditional one-stringed instrument—and sing of the desert, camels, love, and war. Bombino is not only an accomplished guitarist and singer-songwriter; he is the voice of a generation seeking peace and prosperity.
Bess Palmisciano will discuss the Niger, Tuareg culture, the place of the Tuareg within their country, as well as the work of Rain for the Sahel and Sahara in partnering with the Tuareg to develop livelihoods, water security and access to education.
In-School Workshop: Using Words & Movement to tell stories

Students investigate diverse ways to express and tell stories through words and movement.
$100 for one-hour in-school workshop with Ovations Offstage educators related to The Ugly Duckling & The Tortoise and The Hare
School-Time Performance: “The Ugly Duckling” & “The Tortoise and The Hare”

Recommended Grades: preK-4
Monday, March 26, 2012 10 AM
Length: 60 Minutes
Merrill Auditorium, Portland, Maine
All Tickets: $7
Teased, chased and pushed aside by his friends and family, Ugly Duckling must run away from the pond and venture out on his own. Through the different seasons and new friends along the way, he continues his search for others who will love him for who he really is…an Ugly Duckling? The beloved story of the race between the tortoise and the hare is best known today for teaching the moral that “slow and steady wins the race.” From the creators of Darwin the Dinosaur, comes The Ugly Duckling & The Tortoise and The Hare: two classic tales championing the underdog brought to life through illumination, movement, and puppetry.
Post-Performance Q&A with Trey McIntyre Project
Thursday, March 22, 2012 Immediately following the performance
Onstage
Merrill Auditorium, Portland, Maine
Presented to accompany Trey McIntyre Project
Modern Masterclass–Advanced Beginner/Intermediate : Trey McIntyre Project
Wednesday, March 21 11 am–12:30 pm
Portland Arts and Technology High School (PATHS)
Presented to accompany Trey McIntyre Project
Join members of the Trey McIntyre Project for a modern dance masterclass that advances the form of contemporary movement in innovative and groundbreaking ways.
For more information and to register, please contact Ovations Offstage at 207.773.3150 or .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
Registration fee: $25
“Creative Conversations: Art and the City”
Wednesday, March 21 7–8:30 pm
ICA at MECA, 522 Congress Street, Portland
Presented to accompany Trey McIntyre Project
What role can arts and culture play in shaping Portland? What value can the arts community bring to how the city looks, feels, and operates? How can we get more involved in decisions that impact our city? John Michael Schert, TMP executive director, shares the story of how the company came to settle in Boise and how they have developed a partnership with the city that has garnered national attention. Invited arts leaders join the conversation discussing ways that Portland’s arts and cultural community can be more active.
In partnership with Portland Arts & Cultural Alliance
Pre-Performance Lecture: “Issues of Race in Musical Theater”
March 17, 2012 1 pm
Merrill Auditorium Rehearsal Hall
Presented to accompany South Pacific
Gretchen Berg, the director of Ovations Offstage, discusses questions of race raised in a range of Broadway musicals such as Showboat, Hairspray, South Pacific, and Avenue Q.
Pre-Performance Lecture: “Performing Irish Literature and Theater”
March 15, 2012 6:30 pm
Merrill Auditorium Rehearsal Hall
Presented to accompany Danu
Susan and Tony Reilly, founders of the American Irish Repertory Ensemble, will facilitate a discussion of the joys and challenges of presenting Irish theater to American audiences, featuring anecdotes and performance.
Film Screening: “Agadez, the Music and the Rebellion”
Wednesday, March 14, 2012 7 pm doors, 7:30 pm movie
SPACE Gallery
Tickets: $7
Portland Ovations and SPACE members: $5
Presented to accompany Bombino
"One of the overlooked gems of 2011! Stirring and unforgettable, 'Agadez - The Music And The Rebellion' is as remarkable as the people it documents”
—Richard Marcus, blogcritics.org
Portland Ovations and SPACE Gallery present “Agadez, the Music and the Rebellion” a documentary film by Ron Wyman about the Tuareg culture of the Sahara Desert that features the music of the extraordinary Tuareg musician, Omara Moctar, "Bombino" - one of the great guitar players and performers in the Sahara and Sahel regions of Africa. Click here to watch the trailer
In-School Workshop: Tradition and Cultural Context of Chinese Acrobats
Presented to accompany Golden Dragon Acrobats
Students engage in a variety of activities to highlight the tradition and cultural context of Chinese acrobatics.
$100 for one-hour in-school workshop with Ovations Offstage educators
School-Time Performance: Golden Dragon Acrobats
All Ages
Friday, March 9, 2012 10 AM
Length: 60 Minutes
School-Time Performance: Sold Out
Merrill Auditorium, Portland, Maine
All Tickets: $7
Presented to accompany Golden Dragon Acrobats
The performers of the Chinese Golden Dragon Acrobats are widely considered the best Chinese acrobats touring today. With over three decades of performance experience, they’ve earned a reputation for excellence and artistry unparalleled by any other troupe. Their performance style mixes award-winning acrobatics, traditional dance, spectacular costumes, ancient and contemporary theater and live music to present a show of breathtaking skill and spellbinding beauty.
Pre-Performance Lecture: “Considering Choral Arts”
March 4, 2012 2 pm
Merrill Auditorium Rehearsal Hall
Presented to accompany Vancouver Chamber Choir
Bob Russell, Musical Director of the Choral Arts Society, will discuss the expressive values inherent in Renaissance music and music of the modern era—the USM Chamber Singers will help Russell bring these ideas to life.
Pre-Performance Lecture: “New Perspectives on New-Folk Music”
February 16, 2012 6:30 pm
Hannaford Hall, USM, Portland, Maine
Presented to accompany Vasen
As a living tradition folk music is always “new”, embodying the spirit of its own time -- its political, economic and cultural setting. Today’s musicians renew Sweden’s folk legacy with skill and respect, in a spirit of invention and collaboration. Emerita professor of dance at Bowdoin College, June Vail presents an illustrated lecture that takes a look at changing forms in folk dance and music in Sweden over more than a century, representing (intentionally or not) shifting images and stereotypes of Swedish-ness.
Väsen: Live at Bull Moose
Thursday, February 16 12:30 pm
115 Middle Street, Portland
Presented to accompany Vasen
Come by Bull Moose on your lunch break and get a taste of Väsen. This free mini concert is followed by a CD signing with the ensemble.
“Old Maine’s Swedish Farms”
Saturday, February 11, 2012 1–5 pm (approx. every 30 min.)
Maine Historical Society
Presented to accompany Vasen
Adults: $8
Seniors, AAA, & Students: $7
Children: $2, under 6 free
free for Ovations & MHS members
This 30-minute documentary chronicles Maine’s unique Swedish history through interviews with six residents of Maine’s Swedish Colony. In 1870, Swedish settlers flocked to far northern Maine to farm, creating a unique colony where the Swedish language is still spoken today.
Dan Zanes Residency at King Middle School
Friday, February 3, 2012
Presented to accompany Dan Zanes & Friends
King Middle School serves the most racially, ethnically, and economically diverse neighborhoods in the state of Maine. More than 120 of King's approximately 500 students speak 28 languages and come from 17 countries. On Friday, February 3, 2012 Dan Zanes will spend the day with King Middle School students and families, sharing music and teaching workshops. That evening, King Middle School will host an international potluck supper and music jam. King students who worked with Zanes will be invited to join him on stage at Hannford Hall the next day during his concert. To learn more, contact Ovations Offstage at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) or 207.773.3150.
Circus Arts Workshop
February 2012
Merriconeag Waldorf School, Community Hall, 57 Desert Road, Freeport
Presented to accompany CiRCA
For more information and to register, please contact Ovations Offstage at 207.773.3150 or .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
In-School Workshop: An Ideal Community
Presented to accompany Warriors Don’t Cry
Students work with visiting artist to imagine and articulate an “ideal” community and develop understanding through conversation surrounding the experience of discrimination.
$350 for one-hour workshop with Warriors Don’t Cry visiting artist
In-School Workshop: Historical Context in Creating a Solo Performance
Presented to accompany Warriors Don’t Cry
Students explore the historical context and the theatrical challenges in creating a solo performance, while asking participants to consider what it means to be a “warrior” in a contemporary and local sense.
$100 for one-hour in-school workshop with Ovations Offstage educators
School-Time Performance: "Warriors Don't Cry"
Recommended Grades: 6-12
Wednesday, January 18, 2012 10 AM
Length: 90 Minutes
School-Time Performance: Sold Out—please contact Ovations Offstage to join the waitlist at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) or (207) 773-3150
Hannaford Hall, USM, Portland, Maine
All Tickets: $7
Presented to accompany Warriors Don’t Cry
Warriors Don’t Cry is a one-woman play based on the searing civil rights memoir of the same name by Dr. Melba Patillo Beals. Warriors recounts the story of the fifteen-year-old Melba Pattillo who endures violence and discrimination as she and eight other African American students integrate Little Rock, Arkansas’ Central High School in 1957. The memoir by Dr. Beals received the American Library Association Award 1995 Nonfiction Book of the Year and the Robert F. Kennedy Book Award. Directed by Richard C. Aven, and performed by Almeria Campbell, Warriors Don’t Cry is an emotional, powerful, and riveting experience not to be missed.
Contains strong historically accurate language
Pre-Performance Lecture: “Struggles for Civil Rights: Local Stories”
January 18, 2012 6:30 pm
Hannaford Hall, USM, Portland, Maine
Presented to accompany Warriors Don’t Cry
A group of students from King Middle School will discuss their expedition “Small Acts of Courage: Memories of the Civil Rights Movement,” a project that involves students learning and telling important stories of local citizens. Julia Adams, a member of the Portland String Quartet, will join the students to discuss her experience during the Civil Rights Movement.
NAACP Breakfast: Warriors Don’t Cry Preview
Monday, January 16, 2012 8 am
Holiday Inn by the Bay, Portland
Presented to accompany Warriors Don’t Cry
Join the NAACP-Portland’s annual Martin Luther King, Jr. celebration breakfast and enjoy a brief excerpt from Warriors Don’t Cry. For tickets and more information contact the NAACP-Portland at (207) 253-5074 or visit www.naacpportland.org.
First Friday Mamma Mia Flash Concert
Friday, January 6, 2012 5:45 pm
Arts District, Portland
Presented to accompany Mamma Mia
Join Ovations Offstage during January’s First Friday Art Walk, when students from Wescustago Youth Chorale and Greely High School fill the heart of the Arts District with the sounds of ABBA.
Piano Masterclass with Christopher O’Riley
Friday, November 18, 2011 3:30–5 pm
Merrill Auditorium, Portland, Maine
Presented to accompany Matt Haimovitz & Christopher O’Riley
Local piano students will join Christopher O’Riley onstage at Merrill Auditorium for a piano masterclass. Observers welcome, please contact Ovations Offstage for more information 207.773.3150 or .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address).
Observation Fee: $10
Strings Workshop with Matt Haimovitz
Friday, November 18, 2011 3:30–5 pm
317 Main Street Community Music Center
Presented to accompany Matt Haimovitz & Christopher O’Riley
317 Main Street Music Center hosts Matt Haimovitz for a strings workshop. For more information, please contact 317 Main Street at 207.846.9559
$25 per person
“The Art of Collaboration: Communication + Clairvoyance!”
November 18, 2011 7 pm
Merrill Auditorium Green Room
Presented to accompany Matt Haimovitz & Christopher O’Riley
How do musicians really communicate with each other? The Lantz & Kargul Duo (violinist Ronald Lantz and pianist Laura Kargul) discuss the magic of musical collaboration. How does a team of musicians come to a unified view and play as one? How do they cultivate and maintain a musical rapport? They will demonstrate with some of their own (team-created) violin/piano transcriptions of songs by Mendelssohn, Liszt and Fauré.
Flash Concert with Matt Haimovitz
Thursday, November 17, 2011 5:30 pm
Presented to accompany Matt Haimovitz & Christopher O’Riley
Innovative and acclaimed cellist Matt Haimovitz stops in at SPACE for a 'flash' concert. Presented in collaboration with Space Gallery and 317 Main Street Community Music Center.
Back and Forth: An Evening with Dancers Pandit Chitresh Das and Jason Samuels Smith
November 15, 2011 6 pm, Free
Lecture will be held day prior to performance
Portland Museum of Art
Presented to accompany India Jazz Suites
Osher Foundation Auditorium
presented at and in collaboration with the Portland Museum of Art
This dynamic conversation between dancers Pandit Chitresh Das and Jason Samuels Smith explores how the unique collaboration of these exceptional artists transcends continents, generations, cultures, and communities. Together they create a new and distinct kind of dance. Individually in their home communities of India and the United States, each dancer works to preserve their individual dance traditions. Pandit Chitresh Das has received numerous awards and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Rockefeller Foundation, among others. He ultimately sees art as a service to society and devotes time to teaching children in the slums of India, the Blind Opera of Calcutta, and teaching empowerment and self-awareness through dance to the daughters of sex workers in Calcutta, India. Jason Samuels Smith has won both an Emmy and an American Choreography Award. In 2007 he was honored with the Gregory Hines Humanitarian Award for his work to promote dance for youth in south Los Angeles and throughout the country. Alicia Anstead, editor-in-chief of the national magazine Inside Arts will moderate the discussion.
Contemporary Connections: Back and Forth
Held in the Great Hall at Portland Museum of Art
Join the Portland Museum of Art and Portland Ovations for a special K-12 teacher workshop exploring how the visual arts and dance preserve and transform cultural traditions. Discover a thrilling collaboration between on of India’s foremost Kathak masters and one of the world’s fastest, most explosive tap dancers. Come for the teacher workshop and then stay for the special program featuring conversation with two of the world’s most dynamic dancers. Contemporary Connections is made possible by Margaret Coleman Brown Fund at the Portland Museum of Art and by Portland Ovations: Kennedy Center Partners in Education.
Mask Making Family Event
Saturday, November 12 10:30 am– 12:30 pm
Portland Public Library
Presented to accompany Masked Marvels & Wondertales
Sam L. Cohen Children’s Library
Get ready for Masked Marvels & Wondertales by making your own mask with Beth Wilbur from the Oak Street Studios. Sign-up at the Children’s Desk at the Portland Public Library, or contact Ovations Offstage for more information at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) or 773-3150.
Recommended for ages 4 and up.
“Young Maine Musical Stars”
November 4, 2011 7 pm
Merrill Auditorium Rehearsal Hall
Presented to accompany 101 Years of Broadway
A group of USM Musical Theater majors join Maine singer/actor/musical director Ed Reichert in an informal performance of their favorite selections from the Broadway songbook.
“Historic Instruments in Contemporary Culture”
October 29, 2011 2 pm
Hannaford Hall, USM, Portland, Maine
Presented to accompany Handel & Haydn Society
Ian Watson, Handel & Haydn Society's harpsichord player, discusses the role of historic instruments in contemporary music culture.
In-School Workshop: Storytelling through Words and Movement

Students investigate diverse ways to express and tell stories through words and movement.
$100 for one-hour in-school workshop with Ovations Offstage educators based on “Sylvester & the Magic Pebble”.
School-Time Performance: "Sylvester & the Magic Pebble"

Recommended Grades: preK-4
Tuesday, October 18, 2011 • 10 am
Length: 60 Minutes
Merrill Auditorium, Portland, Maine
All Tickets: $7
Sylvester & the Magic Pebble is loved by readers young and old. When he transforms himself into a rock to escape a hungry lion, Sylvester learns that magic works very well sometimes but it can also work against him. In the Enchantment Theatre Company’s adaptation of William Steig’s Caldecott-winning book, puppets, masks, and an original music score all help bring the story to life.
In-School Workshop: Voice and Rhythm with Creole
Presented to accompany Creole Choir of Cuba
Students explore voice and rhythm with the artists of Creole Choir of Cuba.
$350 for one-hour in-school workshop with Creole Choir of Cuba
In-School Workshop: Cultures of Cuba
Presented to accompany Creole Choir of Cuba
Students explore the rich cultures and traditions of Haiti, Dominica, and Cuba and how they inform and influence the Creole Choir of Cuba through vocal, percussion, dance, and language.
$100 for one-hour in-school workshop with Ovations Offstage educators.
School-Time Performance: Creole Choir of Cuba
Recommended Grades: 3-12
Friday, October 14, 2011 10 AM
Length: 60 Minutes
Merrill Auditorium, Portland, Maine
All Tickets: $7
Presented to accompany Creole Choir of Cuba
Celebrating roots, resistance, and the irresistible rhythms of life, the Creole Choir of Cuba captivates audiences with their passionate melodies, richly textured harmonies and vibrant dancing. A vocal and percussion ensemble, the Choir sings in Creole—a blend of African, French, Spanish, and other languages—and fuses Caribbean tempos with Afro-Cuban beats. From laments and protests to celebrations of enduring love and freedom—each note evokes a powerful story handed down in song through the generations, promoting and preserving the rich cultures and traditions of Haiti, Dominica, and Cuba.
“Cuba Connections to Haiti, Domenica, and Maine”
October 14, 2011 7 pm
Merrill Auditorium Rehearsal Hall
Presented to accompany Creole Choir of Cuba
USM Professor of History David Carey discusses Portland and Southern Maine’s strong connection to Cuba that began in the early 19th century. As one of the Atlantic world’s most important pots in the nineteenth century, Portland Harbor hosted a vibrant trade with Cuba. Yet the impact wasn’t just economic. In addition to the ship captain and sailors who frequently traveled between Portland Harbor and Cuba, Cuban planters and their families studied and lived in southern Maine. Those who settled here helped to create a cosmopolitan city with their vision, entrepreneurial spirit, and labor. Although this relationship waned by the close of the nineteenth century, periodic migrations continue to infuse southern Maine with Cubans and their many contributions.
Sacred Story, Re-imagined through Musical Collaboration
Sunday, May 15, 2011 1:30 – 2:30 pm
Merrill Auditorium Green Room
FREE
Presented to accompany Phil Kline’s “John the Revelator” featuring Lionheart
USM professor and composer-in-residence Dan Sonenberg talks with composer Phil Kline about his adventurous masterwork John the Revelator, a powerful 21st century mass created for the early music vocal sextet Lionheart, string quartet, and pipe organ and inspired by early American hymns, the writings of Samuel Beckett and poet David Shapiro, shape-note singing, and the events of 9/11.
Precedes the performance of John the Revelator at 3 pm.
Composers & Commissions
Saturday, May 14, 2011 5 pm
Location TBD
Presented to accompany Phil Kline’s “John the Revelator” featuring Lionheart
Composers Phil Kline and Daniel Sonenberg discuss the nuances and importance of commissioning. Presented in collaboration with Portland Music Foundation.
Step Dancing Workshop
Saturday, May 7, 2011 2:30–4 pm
Hannaford Hall, USM, Portland, Maine
$25 per person
Presented to accompany Gadelle
Gadelle’s musician/dancers lead a workshop in authentic Canadian step dancing, a high energy improvisational foot percussion set to traditional Acadian music. All levels of dancers and musicians are invited to join in.
French-Celtic Crossroads in Maine Music and Dance
Saturday, May 7, 2011 6:30–7:30 pm
Hannaford Hall, USM, Portland, Maine
FREE
Presented to accompany De Temps Antan
In this lively lecture/demonstration, step-dancers/educators Cindy Larock and Laura Scott explore the interrelated French, Scottish, and Irish roots of De Temps Antan's distinctive Quebecois music and the dance it inspires. Fiddler Ed Pearlman provides the musical insight and accompaniment as Laura and Cindy expand our understanding of the role of traditional music and dance in Maine's Franco-American community and beyond.
Precedes the performance of De Temps Antan at 8 pm.
Creating the Mikado
Sunday, April 17, 2011 3:00 – 3:30 pm
Merrill Auditorium Rehearsal Hall
FREE
Presented to accompany New York Gilbert & Sullivan Players: “The Mikado”
Join the Managing Director of the New York Gilbert & Sullivan Players David Wannen (The Mikado himself) for an overview of Gilbert & Sullivan, their process of creating this work, and the company’s success in keeping The Mikado new and fresh for audiences of all ages.
Precedes the performance of The Mikado at 4 pm.
“Seeing with the Heart’s Ear”
Presented to accompany Universes: “Live From the Edge”
with Martin Steingesser from The Telling Room
Working with Portland’s first poet-laureate, students create poetry focused on the senses–creating and using imagery, simile, metaphor, associative thinking, repetition and variation, color and simplicity of style. Participants are encouraged to explore voice in their writing and the pleasures of speaking and hearing poems. (2 classroom periods)
Fee: $200 per classroom period
Artists’ Residency: “The Universe of Arts”
Presented to accompany Universes: “Live From the Edge”
Using the students’ own stories and experiences, the artists from Universes guide the crafting of spoken word poems celebrating students’ voices. The exciting and youth-resonating cultural form of hip-hop, poetry and music are brought together to create a singular, yet communal, theatrical moment. (1-2 classroom periods)
Fee: $350 per period
School-Time Performance: Universes' “Live from the Edge”
SUGGESTED FOR GRADES 6-12
Friday, April 8, 2011 10:30-11:30 am
Hannaford Hall, USM, Portland, Maine
$7 per person
Presented to accompany Universes: “Live From the Edge”
Bronx-based Universes is an international ensemble of writers and performers who fuse poetry, theater, jazz, hip-hop, politics, down home blues and Spanish boleros. In their new work, Live From the Edge, soaring song combines with fierce rhymes, and feet and hands stomp out enthralling beats as the troupe tracks the evolution of their language from childhood and community rituals, to poetry and theater, hip-hop and gospel. Redefining what theater is and to whom it speaks, Live From the Edge is a one of a kind performance event that transforms the poem into a communal act.

Hip – Hop: Creative Cultural Discourse
Friday, April 8, 2011 6:30–7:30 pm
Hannaford Hall, USM, Portland, Maine
FREE
Presented to accompany Universes: “Live From the Edge”
A scholar joins Portland hip-hop artist Sontiago in a conversation about the evolution and significance of hip-hop theater, and helps us understand its powerful new poly-cultural performance language.
Precedes performance of Universes: Live From the Edge at 8 pm.
Universes Workshop
Wednesday, April 6, 2011 6:30–8:00 pm
The Telling Room, Commercial Street, Portland
Presented to accompany Universes: “Live From the Edge”
The extraordinary language artists of Universes lead an action packed workshop in using real life stories and experiences to create dynamic spoken word poems.
“Puppets, Shadows, & Light” Residency or In-school Workshop with Figures of Speech Theatre of Maine
Presented to accompany Imago Theatre: “ZooZoo”
Students work with artist-educator puppeteers to design and create shadow puppets and then produce a performance based on animal poems either selected by the students or the teachers.
One-week Residency Fee: $2100 – for four classroom groups, one period a day for five days
“Mime, Movement, and Masks”
Presented to accompany Imago Theatre: “ZooZoo”
Mime artists from Imago Theatre present two interactive in-school classroom workshops that lead students through movement and theater exercises designed to make their own stories come alive. (1-2 classroom periods)
Fee: $350 per period
School-Time Performance: Imago Theatre’s “ZooZoo”
SUGGESTED FOR GRADES PRE-K THROUGH 2
Friday, April 1, 2011 10:30-11:30 am
Merrill Auditorium, Portland, Maine
$7 per person
Presented to accompany Imago Theatre: “ZooZoo”
A whimsical concoction of vaudeville, cirque and the zoo, Imago Theatre’s newly hatched ZooZoo uses elaborate costumes, mime and physical finesse to animate larger-than-life creatures, including the most intriguing animal of all: the human. Veteran puppeteers and actors help caterpillars to cavort, hippos to hop, penguins to play and rabbits to romp in this genre-defying production that piques the imagination and mesmerizes the mind.


Mime, Mask and Physical Theatre
Friday, April 1, 2011 5:30 – 6:30 pm
Merrill Auditorium Rehearsal Hall
FREE
Presented to accompany Imago Theatre: “ZooZoo”
Performance artist/educator Davis Robinson from Bowdoin College discusses the Maine connection to mime, mask, and physical theatre in his lecture focusing on the legacy of two of his mentors, Maine’s Tony Montanaro and the legendary Jacques Lecoq, whose teachings also inspire Imago’s work.
Precedes Imago Theatre’s “Zoozoo” in Merrill Auditorium at 7 pm.
How do Pianists Decide How?
Saturday, March 26, 2011 1:30–2:30 pm
Merrill Auditorium Green Room
FREE
Presented to accompany Nikolai Lugansky Piano
Pianist Laura Kargul presents a lecture/demonstration focusing on how pianists make interpretive decisions. How does a musician prepare? What are the idiomatic approaches to different composers and works? She is joined by student pianists from USM’s School of Music.
Precedes the performance by Nicolai Luganski at 3 pm.
A History of Puppetry
Thursday, March 24, 2011 6:00–7:00 pm
Merrill Auditorium Rehearsal Hall
FREE
Presented to accompany National Broadway Tour: “Avenue Q”
Carol and John Farrell from Maine’s renowned Figures of Speech Theatre explore the art form of puppetry with an overview of its different styles and cultural forms, including the emergence of puppets on Broadway and in film. Is the art of puppetry threatened by the business of entertainment?
Precedes the performance of the Broadway National Tour of Avenue Q at 7:30 pm.
“Puppets & Poems” In-school Workshop with Figures of Speech Theatre of Maine
Presented to accompany “Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Musical”
In this hands-on workshop, students assemble pre-designed puppets and create their own shadow puppet theater inspired by animal poems. From learning theater cues to creating their own animal puppet parade, students engage in the creative process and use their imagination while gaining a better understanding of poetry, puppets and animals.
(1-2 classroom periods)
Fee: $460 for the day
School-Time Performance: “Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Musical”
SUGGESTED FOR GRADES PRE-K THROUGH 2
Monday, March 14, 2011 10:30-11:30 am
Merrill Auditorium, Portland, Maine
$7 per person
Presented to accompany “Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Musical”
Based on Mo Willem’s beloved Caldecott Honor-winning picture book, Knuffle Bunny is a hilarious musical tale of firsts: a stuffed animal’s first trip in the laundromat, a little girl’s first words, and a Daddy’s first time dealing with his child going “boneless.” Newly commissioned by the Kennedy Center, it’s a celebration of family, friendship, baby steps and memories that last a lifetime. Keep an eye out for a cameo by everyone’s favorite bus-driving pigeon...

“On-stage with Knuffle Bunny”
Merrill Auditorium, Portland, Maine
Presented to accompany “Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Musical”
Actors from Knuffle Bunny give a lecture-demonstration on-stage at Merrill Auditorium highlighting the process of making this award-winning book come to life and giving students a behind-the-scenes peek at a live production. (1 classroom period)
Fee: $350
Knuffle Bunny Family Event
March 5, 2011 10:30-11:30 am
Children's Room
Portland Public Library
Presented to accompany “Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Musical”
Bring your Knuffle Bunny for a story-time, art project, and chance to win tickets to see Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Musical!
String Music Traditions and Teaching Techniques
Friday, March 4, 2011 6:30–7:30 pm
Merrill Auditorium Rehearsal Hall
FREE
Presented to accompany Mark O’Connor Quartet: An Evening of Strings
Our collaborators from 317 Main Street Community Music Center in Yarmouth present a lecture/demonstration of techniques for learning string instruments in classical or folk/traditional music genres. Their presentation includes a discussion of Mark O’Connor’s influence on the new American school of string playing.
Precedes the performance of the Mark O’Connor Quartet at 8 pm.
O'Connor Method Teacher Training Workshop
Friday–Sunday, March 4–6, 2011
USM School of Music, Gorham
$150 Workshop fee per person (Includes text and tickets to Mark O'Connor Quartet).
Presented to accompany Mark O’Connor Quartet: An Evening of Strings
Led by Pamela Wiley. Presented in association with MSTPA (Maine String Teachers and Players Association) and the University of Southern Maine. Features a Friday afternoon visit by Mark O'Connor.
For more information and to register, contact Rob Lehmann at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address).
Lecture/Demonstration: Fiddle vs. Violin
Thursday, March 3 , 2011 7:00 pm
North Yarmouth Academy, 148 Main Street Yarmouth
Presented to accompany Mark O’Connor Quartet: An Evening of Strings
Mark O’Connor’s lively and informal Fiddle vs. Violin lecture/demonstration
(Professional Development and Certification in the O’Connor Method)
Making Music & Making Violins
Wednesday, March 2, 2011 7:00 pm
Rines Auditorium, Portland Public Library
Presented to accompany Mark O’Connor Quartet: An Evening of Strings
A musical conversation between two friends: Mark O'Connor and Maine violin maker Jonathan Cooper discuss and demonstrate how and why different violins create diverse sounds. Hosted by our partner, Portland Music Foundation.
Post Performance Q&A with artists of Doug Varone and Dancers
Wednesday, February 16, 2011 Immediately following the performance
Merrill Auditorium, Portland, Maine
FREE
Presented to accompany Doug Varone and Dancers
Doug Varone and Dancers Masterclass
Tuesday, February 15, 2011 2–3:30 pm
Portland Ballet Company
517 Forest Avenue Portland
Presented to accompany Doug Varone and Dancers
High school and college age intermediate and advanced dancers explore Doug Varone’s style of moving with an emphasis on breath, strength, action, and musicality.
$25 per person • To register call 207.773.3150
Creating Modern Dance in Maine
Wednesday, February 16, 2011 6:00–7:00 pm
Merrill Auditorium Green Room
FREE
Presented to accompany Doug Varone and Dancers
Dance educator and choreographer Nancy Salmon explores Doug Varone’s work and creative process. Her discussion of Chapters from a Broken Novel, his newest work which was developed in Maine through a co-commission by Portland Ovations and the Bates Dance Festival, includes an overview of the history of modern and post modern dance in Maine.
Precedes the performance of Doug Varone & Dancers in Merrill Auditorium at 7:30.
Investigating Fiddler on the Roof
Saturday, January 22, 2011 5:30–6:30 pm
Room 24, City Hall (enter on Myrtle Street, to the left of Merrill Aud/PortTix)
FREE
Presented to accompany National Broadway Tour: “Fiddler on the Roof”
Professor Marilyn Reizbaum from Bowdoin College asks: how did this adaptation of a Sholom Aleichem story set in revolutionary Russia became so wildly popular? Is it a post holocaust fable? Did setting this story to music create a precursor to the controversial Holocaust “comedy”? Who (or what) is the fiddler?
Precedes the performance of Fiddler on the Roof in Merrill Auditorium at 7:00 pm.
“Cultural Immersion: Music, Movement, and Martial Arts”
Presented to accompany Balé Folclórico da Bahia
Capoeira Mestre Joao Cascao from Portland’s Capoeira Senzala de Santos brings to students the rich cultural Afro-Brazilian background of capoeira: its movement, music, history, instruments, and forms. Students will be up and moving, and listening to or playing music that accompanies this intense and beautiful martial art. (1 classroom period)
Fee: $125 per classroom period
School-Time Performance: Balé Folclórico da Bahia
SUGGESTED FOR GRADES 6-12
Wednesday, January 19, 2011 10:30-11:30 am
Merrill Auditorium, Portland, Maine
$7 per person
Presented to accompany Balé Folclórico da Bahia
Thrilling choreography, joyous rhythms, vibrant costuming, and a feisty exuberance emanate from a 38-member troupe of dancers, instrumentalists, and singers hailing from the Bahian region of northern Brazil. Performing a lush repertory of carnival and slave dances, samba and capoeira – an explosive Afro-Brazilian artform that combines martial arts, music and dance – Balé Folclórico da Bahia provides a truly authentic global experience.

Balé Folclórico Da Bahia Masterclass
Tuesday, January 18, 2011 11:30 am – 1 pm
Portland Arts and Technology High School (PATHS)
$25 per person
Presented to accompany Balé Folclórico da Bahia
Dancers from the internationally acclaimed Balé Folclórico Da Bahia lead a capoeira workshop designed for dancers of all levels and experience. Capoeira, a unique Afro-Brazilian improvisational form, combines martial arts, music, and movement.
Capoeira: From Africa to Brazil to Maine
Wednesday, January 19, 2011 6:00–7:00 pm
Merrill Auditorium Rehearsal Hall
FREE
Presented to accompany Balé Folclórico da Bahia
In his action packed lecture, Portland’s capoeira Mestre Joao Bordallo helps us understand the religious, historical, and contemporary vitality of capoeira, a martial art form created by African slaves in Brazil over 400 years ago.
Precedes the performance by Bale Folclorico Da Bahia in Merrill Auditorium at 7:30.
“Wired!” a play by Betty Quan from Canada’s Green Thumb Theatre

SUGGESTED FOR GRADES 3-5
Wednesday, December 1, 2010 10:30-11:30 am
NEW LOCATION
Westbrook Performing Arts Center, Westbrook Middle School
$7 per person
In a time of constantly being wired in with uploads and downloads from laptops to camera phones, and where conversations no longer take place face-to-face, Damian’s passport to friendship and popularity is his computer. This new play from Canada’s Green Thumb Theatre – who for over 30 years has used the emotional impact of live performance to educate and empower young people – examines the alarming rise of cyber-bullying as Damian quickly learns that cyberspace isn’t necessarily as friendly as he had thought, and that just because it’s virtual doesn’t make it less real.
Masterclass with Kirill Gerstein
Wednesday, November 17, 2010 9:00–11:00 am
USM School of Music, Gorham
$6 per person observation fee
Presented to accompany Kirill Gerstein Piano
Piano performance students at the University of Southern Maine recommended by faculty wishing to improve technique and understanding of their working repertoire are coached by an award-winning pianist.
Open to the public for observation.
The History and Future of Piano Recitals
Wednesday, November 17, 2010 6:00 – 7:00pm
Merrill Auditorium Green Room
FREE
Presented to accompany Kirill Gerstein Piano
Musicologist and manager of the Olin Arts Center at Bates College, Seth Warner looks at the piano recital as a unique and vital performance medium. How and why has the format of the piano recital developed? Where does the evening’s repertoire of pianist Kirill Gerstein fit in the history and future of this distinctive concert form?
Precedes the performance by Kirill Gerstein in Merrill Auditorium at 7:30pm.
Gypsy Guitar Masterclass
Location, date, & time TBD
Presented to accompany The Hot Club of San Francisco: “Silent Surrealism”
Masterclass with Paul Mehling, leader of Hot Club of San Francisco.
The Legacy of the Gypsy Jazz Guitarist
Tuesday, November 16, 2010 6:00–7:00 pm
Hannaford Hall, USM, Portland, Maine
FREE
Presented to accompany The Hot Club of San Francisco: “Silent Surrealism”
Composer/performer Dan Sonenberg discusses the story, music, and impact of legendary gypsy jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt in the 100th anniversary of his birth.
Precedes the performance of Hot Club of San Francisco in Hannaford Hall at 7:30.
Circus Arts Masterclass
Friday, November 12, 2010 6:00–7:30 pm
Merriconeag Waldorf School, Community Hall, 57 Desert Road, Freeport
$15 per person
Presented to accompany Jamie Adkins’ “Circus INcognitus”
Jamie Adkins works with intermediate and advanced circus artists to increase their skill with a focus on character and narrative development. (Ages 10 and up). Class limited to 20 students.
For more information and to register, contact Trace Salter at 207.756.9212 or .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
Musical Parody
Friday, November 5, 2010 6:30 – 7:30 pm
Merrill Auditorium Rehearsal Hall
FREE
Presented to accompany “Forbidden Broadway”
Students in the musical theater program in the School of Music at USM join Maine singer/actor/musical director Ed Reichert in an informal presentation of some of the original Broadway songs that are lampooned later in the evening in Forbidden Broadway’s raucous show. The presenters also explore the unique sound of Broadway’s greatest performers and discuss why they invite parody.
Precedes the performance of Forbidden Broadway in Merrill Auditorium at 8 pm.
Kronos Quartet: Thirty Years on the Cutting Edge
Thursday, November 4, 2010 6:00–7:00 pm
Merrill Auditorium Green Room
FREE
Presented to accompany Kronos Quartet
The Kronos Quartet has defined the cutting edge of contemporary musical performance for more than 30 years. Join Dr. Rob Lehmann, Director of the Strings Program at USM School of Music, as he explores how the Kronos Quartet’s status as one of the world’s leading advocates for new music has re-defined what string quartets can do.
Precedes the performance of Kronos Quartet in Merrill Auditorium at 7:30 pm.
Post-Performance Q&A with Artists of STREB Extreme Action
Wednesday, October 27, 2010 Immediately following the performance
Merrill Auditorium, Portland, Maine
Presented to accompany STREB Extreme Action: “Raw”
STREB Extreme Action Masterclass
Tuesday, October 26, 2010 3–4:30 pm
Portland Ballet Company
517 Forest Avenue Portland
$25 per person
Presented to accompany STREB Extreme Action: “Raw”
Developed by Elizabeth Streb over the last 20 years, Pop Action classes help student and professional dancers acquire new skills by posing unique challenges; the method suits all body types, ages, and level of experience.
Extreme Action: Points of Reference
Wednesday, October 27, 2010 5:30–6:30 pm
Merrill Auditorium Rehearsal Hall
FREE
Presented to accompany STREB Extreme Action: “Raw”
Elizabeth Streb’s choreography embodies values that appear throughout the history of 20th century dance and performance. Paul Sarvis, Senior Lecturer in Dance Performance at Bowdoin College shows video clips and discusses the work of other artists who have likewise staged extravagant displays of risk and effort and wrestled with the tension between vulnerability and mastery.
Precedes the performance of STREB Extreme Action in Merrill Auditorium at 7 pm.
“SmartArt” with artist-educators at CMTM

Students examine the relationship between their left and right brains to explore the world through arts and science. Topics include perspective and optics, color and chemistry, and patterns and designs found in nature. (1 classroom period)
Fee: $125 plus mileage
“Simple Machines” with artist-educators from The Children’s Museum & Theatre of Maine (CMTM)

Students explore the mechanics and physics of simple machines and discover how simple machines used in daily life make work easier and then design/build their own simple machines. (1 classroom period)
Fee: $125 plus mileage
School-Time Performance: Doktor Kaboom

SUGGESTED FOR GRADES 3-5
Tuesday, October 19, 2010 10:30-11:30 am
Merrill Auditorium, Portland, Maine
$7 per person
With masterful improvisational skills and comic interactive experiments, Doktor Kaboom — a German scientist with a penchant for bangs and blasts – keeps his audiences riveted AND rolling in the aisles. The brainchild of actor/educator David Epley, Doktor Kaboom! strives to make science accessible to all by leading students on a sidesplitting journey of increasingly spectacular (and usually successful) science experiments designed to involve, excite, educate, and entertain.
West Africa & Maine: Highlife!
Friday, October 8, 2010 6:30-7:30 pm
Hannaford Hall, USM, Portland, Maine
FREE
Presented to accompany Occidental Brothers Dance Band International
Join the director of Portland’s Museum of African Culture as he explores the high energy dance music of the Occidental Brothers Dance Band International. Chief Oscar Mokeme makes personal connections between the band’s infectious music, the traditions of his native Nigeria, and the contemporary cultural life of Maine’s growing African community.
Precedes the Occidental Brothers Dance Band International performance at 8 pm.
African Dinner
Thursday October 7, 2010 5:30 – 7:30 pm
King Middle School
No admission, open to all.
Presented to accompany Occidental Brothers Dance Band International
African families, musicians, dancers and cooks will serve African food and entertainment to local families from the greater Portland community. Special African cooks will present their favorite dishes and families are encouraged to bring a dish. Children should be accompanied by an adult.
Post-performance Q & A with Aspen Santa Fe Ballet
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Details to be announced
Presented to accompany Aspen Santa Fe Ballet
Pre-curtain Lecture: Commissioning from the Best, Preserving Cultural Tradition
Wednesday, May 5, 2010 6-7 pm
Merrill Auditorium Green Room
FREE
Presented to accompany Aspen Santa Fe Ballet
Dance scholar Eugenia O’Brien of the Portland Ballet Company discusses the evening’s program featuring an National Endowment for the Arts/American Masterpiece Dance work by Twyla Tharp, “Sue’s Leg.” Precedes the 7:30 pm performance by Aspen Santa Fe Ballet.
Ovations Offstage pre-curtain lectures
are funded in part by the Maine Humanities Council
Masterclass with Aspen Santa Fe Ballet
Wednesday, May 5, 2010 3-4:30 pm
THIS MASTERCLASS IS NOW FULL
Portland Ballet Company
517 Forest Avenue Portland
Presented to accompany Aspen Santa Fe Ballet
$25 per person
Explore Aspen Santa Fe Ballet and its signature contemporary ballet style and technique with a rigorous class extending the skills of intermediate or advanced dancers with Jean-Philippe Malaty.
Jean-Philippe Malaty, Executive Director, has been instrumental in building Aspen Santa Fe Ballet from the ground up. He was born in the Basque region of France, and recently became a United States citizen. After receiving his degree in dance, he accepted scholarships to train at Europe’s prestigious Mudra (Maurice Béjart’s school in Brussels), and John Cranko’s ballet school in Stuttgart. At the invitation of David Howard, Jean-Philippe traveled to America to study at the David Howard Dance Center in New York City. He then performed soloist roles as guest artist with various companies throughout the U.S., including Joffrey II, Los Angeles Classical Ballet, Ballet Hispanico of New York, and the Lyric Opera of Chicago. He is in great demand as a guest teacher and has taught at schools and universities throughout the country. Jean-Philippe is dedicated to asserting the prominence of the arts in the West, spearheading initiatives to bring dance into the community, and fostering programs that introduce children to the arts. He continues to provide invaluable creative assistance in all facets of the company’s operations. Jean-Philippe is equally proud to have forged a company based on an American ideal of energy, invention, popularity, eclecticism, and precision in what’s been called the “all star, no star” system.
“Dance is a celebration of the human spirit, and not a celebration of steps. Here at Aspen Santa Fe Ballet, we foster the spirit and the love of dance.” – Jean-Philippe Malaty
Click here to download a registration form.
Post-performance Q & A with Philip Hamilton's Voices
Friday, April 16, 2010
Details to be announced
Presented to accompany Philip Hamilton’s “Voices”


