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An Evening with Ada
52nd St Project
New York, NY
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An Evening with Ada
As part of the world wide Ada Lovelace Day on Tuesday, October 14th, we are delighted to present an 'Evening with Ada', at the 52nd St Project in New York City!

Composer Kim Sherman, Librettist (and Senior Lecturer in English at Barnard College) Margaret Vandenburg and Princeton University Professor  Naomi Ehrich Leonard (Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering) will explore the close relationship between science and art, facilitated by Director Lisa Rothe. The evening will feature selections from a new opera, "Ada", sung by Sarah Chalfy and accompanied by Jocelyn Dueck.

This evening has been sculpted to explore the life and contributions of Ada Lovelace Byron, the inspiration for our opera in development. Supported by arias from the opera and a discussion about Ada's legacy as a mathematician, we will learn more about her passion for 'the poetry of numbers' and how her work connects to the world of technology today.

An Evening with Ada is presented by the Ada the Opera team; Kim Sherman, Margaret Vandenburg, Lisa Rothe and Louise Fagan.


More about the Participants:

COMPOSER Kim Sherman's music covers the spectrum of genres from opera to chamber and orchestral to musical theater.New works currently under construction are "Ada," an opera about Ada Lovelace, "Makeover" a musical about a pioneering cosmetics entrepreneur, and "Summer 1976" a song cycle for lyric baritone and string quartet. Her "Song of Songs," for strings, harp and soprano was premiered in 2004 by San José Chamber Orchestra, conducted by Barbara Day Turner.  "Graveside," her a cappella choral work, was recorded by Musica Sacra and has been performed throughout the US and Europe.  On Broadway, she wrote incidental music for "I Hate Hamlet." Other works include "A Prairie Diary" (song cycle,) "The Happiest and Unhappiest of Men" (chorus and orchestra, commissioned by The Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia,) "Karner Blue," (flute and piano, commissioned by The Pappoutsakis Foundation,) "The Vision" (guitar and oboe,) "Love's Comedy" (opera based on the play by Henrik Ibsen,) and several musicals, among them: "HeartLand," "O Pioneers!," "Honor Song for Crazy Horse" and "The Two Orphans."
Ms. Sherman studied piano and composition at Lawrence University, and composition and orchestration with composer Thea Musgrave. Her career started in Minneapolis, where she was awarded two Kudos Awards for her work in the theatre. A New Yorker since 1983, she is a regular volunteer composer and mentor for The 52nd Street Project.

LIBRETTIST Margaret Vandenburg's writing spans a wide range of genres, including novels, creative nonfiction, and literary criticism.  She is the author of works including The Home Front, a portrait of a family facing autism, and Weapons of Mass Destruction, an Iraq War novel, both of which are forthcoming from The Permanent Press.  Having completed her Ph.D. at Columbia University, she traveled across Broadway to Barnard College, where she is a Senior Lecturer in English. College training as an opera singer provided some of the impetus and much of the musical expertise necessary to write Ada, her first libretto.  For a writer accustomed to working alone, either in ivory towers or in the privacy of her own study, Ada constitutes a welcome foray into the world of collaborative creativity.  The process of writing the opera feels like a homecoming, the genre where all her creative impulses find common ground.

DIRECTOR/DRAMATURG Lisa Rothe was recently nominated for SDC's Joe A. Callaway Award for Direction of the Drama Desk nominated production of Hold These Truths by Jeanne Sakata, produced by Epic Theatre Ensemble in NYC (also produced at ACT Theatre in Seattle, Playmakers Reperetory Theatre in North Carolina, the Honolulu Theatre for Youth & the SoloNova Festival in NYC). Recent projects: Dear Elizabeth by Sarah Ruhl starring Ellen McLaughlin and Rinde Eckert (People's Light & Theatre Company); Penelope by Ellen McLaughlin & composer Sarah Kirkland Snider (Playmakers Repertory Company); Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (Chautauqua Theatre Company). Lisa has workshopped, developed and directed over one hundred new plays and musicals, working with many award-winning writers.  In NY, she has directed and/or developed work with Lark Play Development Center, New York Theatre Workshop, The Public Theater, Epic Theatre Ensemble, New Georges, The Women's Project, Primary Stages, The Foundry, Ensemble Studio Theatre, 52nd Street Project, Naked Angels, BAM, Summer Play Festival, NYMF, Midtown International Theatre Festival (Best Director), National Actors Theater, Keen Company (Keen Teens), Orchard Project, Voice & Vision, HERE, Dixon Place and more. Lisa has taught and directed at NYU's Graduate Acting Program, Yale School of Drama, The Juilliard School, Chautauqua Conservatory, the Einhorn School of Performing Arts (ESPA) at Primary Stages and many others. She is a graduate of NYU's Graduate Acting Program and Director's Lab, as well as a Drama League alum, Fox Fellow, alum of the Women's Project Director's Lab and is currently serving on the board of the League of Professional Theatre Women as the VP of Membership.  Lisa is also the director of Offsite Programs and Partnerships at the Lark Play Development Center.

NAOMI EHRICH LEONARD is the Edwin S. Wilsey Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering and an associated faculty member of the Program in Applied and Computational Mathematics at Princeton University.  She is affiliated with the Princeton Neuroscience Institute and the Program in Quantitative and Computational Biology and she is co-leader of a new initiative at Princeton on Engineering and the Arts.  Leonard is also Director of Princeton's Council on Science and Technology, working to broaden science and engineering literacy across campus.

Leonard studies, publishes and teaches in a branch of engineering and applied mathematics called control theory.  The field involves designing and analyzing methods for influencing the behavior of complex, dynamical systems using feedback.  Feedback refers to (automatic) adjustments in actions taken by a system in response to measurements of the system's own state and environment; feedback is critical for robust self-regulation in engineered systems as well as in biological systems at every scale. In recent years, Leonard has been interested in the role of feedback and interconnection in collective motion and collective decision-making for multi-agent systems in engineering (design of robotic teams) and in nature (analysis of animal and human groups).   She led a large, collaborative, multidisciplinary project Adaptive Sampling and Prediction on the development and demonstration, in Monterey Bay, CA in 2006, of an automated and adaptive ocean observing system consisting of a coordinated network of underwater robotic vehicles that move about on their own and carry sensors to collect scientific data about the ocean.   In 2010 she collaborated with choreographer Susan Marshall to explore what happens when dancers carry out the mathematical rules for dynamic response used to model flocking birds and schooling fish.   The project Flock Logic culminated in two site-specific performance events that were part structured improvisation and part flash mob.  

Leonard is the recipient of a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Fellowship and is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.  She earned her BSE degree in mechanical engineering from Princeton University and her Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering from the University of Maryland.   Leonard is passionate about dance and has spent many years studying ballet.


SARAH CHALFY is an active performer on a variety of musical stages.  A specialist in premiering new works, she has performed the title role in ADA for a number of workshops, including presentations by the Ensemble Studio Theatre and the Center for Contemporary Opera. Other title roles she has premiered include Nellie Bly in David Friedman/Peter Kellogg's new musical Stunt Girl, and Madeleine X in Michael Gordon's opera What to Wear, conceived, designed, and directed by avant garde theatre legend Richard Foreman. She has collaborated with some of NYC's hottest new music ensembles, including Alarm Will Sound, Newspeak, and NOW, premiering works of composers such as Michael Gordon, David T. Little, Judd Greenstein, Missy Mazzoli, John Halle, Joel Derfner and Kim D. Sherman. On the pre-Baroque front, she is a frequent soloist with ARTEK, Early Music New York, and other members of GEMS NY. She has recorded on the Canteloupe, New Amsterdam, and Innova labels. Opera and musical theater credits include Helena (A Midsummer Night's Dream), Gretel (Hansel and Gretel), Adele (Die Fledermaus), Anne Sexton (Transformations), Vixen (The Cunning Little Vixen) Yum Yum (The Mikado), Guenevere (Camelot), Marian (The Music Man), Carrie (Carousel), and Hodel (Fiddler on the Roof).

Sarah did her MM studies at Manhattan School of Music and her BM at the Peabody Conservatory. She was a fellow at the Tanglewood Music Center, where she was soloist in Berio's Sinfonia with Robert Spano and Vivaldi's Gloria with Craig Smith and the Mark Morris Dance Company. Sarah is recipient of numerous awards, including top prizes in the Lotte Lenya, Rosa Ponselle, Canticum Dominum, and Bach Society of Baltimore competitions, and study grants to the Universität Mozarteum Salzburg and the Académie internationale d'été de Nice.

PIANIST Jocelyn Dueck is an inveterate new music interpreter on the New York City circuit, premiering operas and other works by composers Eve Beglarian, Lisa Bielawa, Tom Cipullo, Corey Dargel, John Glover, Judd Greenstein, John Glover, Daron Hagen, Stephen Hartke, Gabriel Kahane and Gilda Lyons, to name a few. Jocelyn was a collaborator on the Billboard Chart-topper Five Borough Songbook, a seminal collection of songs by New York City's most innovative composers. The New York Times called her performance of the works "solid and colorful." Jocelyn was a collaborator on 21C Liederabend at Galapagos, one of Time Out New York's "Best of 2009."

An devotee of language study through music, Jocelyn is the founder of The Center for Language in Song, an institute dedicated to the art of song performance. This past year, she taught German Diction to undergraduate and graduate students at the Manhattan School of Music and Italian Diction to students in Dawn Upshaw's acclaimed Vocal Arts Program. She was a professor for many years at NYU and Mannes College, where she imparted her love of German, English, Italian and French diction, and her passion for German Lieder, to singers and collaborative pianists. As a coach, Jocelyn has served on the music staffs at Glimmerglass Opera and Seattle Opera.  

Jocelyn received a DMA in Accompanying and Coaching under the tutelage of Margo Garrett and Karl Paulnack at the University of Minnesota in 2004. Her dissertation focused on the unpublished song cycles of Les Six composer Louis Durey. Jocelyn has written articles for Opera America's Perspectives book series as well as their magazine, and is a regular contributor to the ezine Sparks and Wiry Cries

www.jocelyndueck.com

CREATIVE PRODUCER Louise Fagan thrives on bringing an idea to its fullest creative expression. Working with a single writer, musician, artist or with a cast of hundreds for national organizations, her projects are as varied as their settings.Select credits include the National Museum of Women in the Arts (Washington DC  Producer/Director), Off Broadway Urban Stages (New York City Prod/Dir), Opening and Closing Ceremonies for the Canada Games (2001 Prod/Dir)) Under an African Sky in support of the Stephen Lewis Foundation (London, Ontario  Prod/Dir,). In the studio Louise produced the orchestral recording River, for Wellspring the Canadian cancer support centre, recorded Canadian singer/songwriter Donna Creighton's soon to be released Northern Daughter, arranged and produced Noted! which features extraordinarily talented women who live in rural Ontario, Canada and worked with acclaimed producer Jack Richardson on the soundtrack to the hit stage show Jazzabel. In the literary world Louise has worked with authors and poets such as Molly Peacock, Susan Swan and Alison Wearing. Louise' work has been featured in O the Oprah Magazine, the New York Times, NOW Magazine, Canada's daily National Newspapers, CBC Radio as well as CTV, CBC and Rogers Television networks. She is the Founding and Executive Producer of the Bach Music Festival of Canada, while also maintaining a busy guest speaking schedule. In the studio, on the stage, with a single artist or a cast of 100's, the heart of Louise' work remains in telling a story.

More about the Opera:

"Ada" is an opera about one of the most spectacular characters in computer history, Ada Byron, Countess of Lovelace (1815-1852,). The daughter of the poet Lord Byron and Annabella Milbanke, our heroine of the Romantic era is at last receiving her due - public attention and acclaim in our Modern era.

Our opera tells Ada's extraordinary story. Five weeks after Ada's birth, Annabella separated from Byron and was awarded sole custody. Fearing the detrimental influence Byron's well-known scandalous behavior would have on his daughter (among his many transgressions, he fathered a child with his half sister), Anna kept Ada from her father, rearing the young girl to be a mathematician and scientist. Yet, creativity would not be stifled, as Ada embarked on a Romantic quest very much at odds with the prevailing Victorian ethic of restraint. Though her medium was mathematics, she rejected the notion that virtue lies in conformity, believing instead in a higher ethic of knowledge and ambition. At the age of seventeen, Ada met the inventor Charles Babbage and became smitten with his new invention, The Difference Engine. Ada, the "Enchantress of Numbers," melded her father's Romantic visions with her mother's mathematical genius to develop the prototype of modern computer language. Ada is cited as the first computer programmer long before there were computers. Her story is inspiring, frustrating, dramatic, passionate and romantic.

In the creation of our opera we have taken our lead from Ada Lovelace by looking to numbers, finding the poetry within, rejecting conformity for the sake of a work that now is ready for a life on the world stage. "Ada" provides a nexus of old and new, traditional Romantic themes and contemporary digital vocabularies. The music is a hybrid of Romantic lyricism and modern dissonance. The libretto weaves tapestries of numbers and Byronic flights of fancy into a story that is simultaneously timeless and timely, the journey of a woman who defied Victorian constraints to usher the industrial age into the digital age. Ada was a brilliant imaginative pre-conceiver, a woman very much ahead of her time who valiantly wrestled with the constraints imposed upon her.

This is a unique opportunity to bring Ada Lovelace's story to life, using the intriguing math centered music and form of opera, in harmony with the  world of tech.

" Supposing, for instance, that the fundamental relations of pitched sounds in the science of harmony and of musical composition were susceptible of such expression and adaptations, the engine might compose elaborate and scientific pieces of music of any degree of complexity or extent."

Location

52nd St Project (View)
789 10th Ave
New York, NY 10019
United States
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Categories

Arts > Opera
Music > Classical
Other > Technology
Education

Kid Friendly: No
Dog Friendly: No
Non-Smoking: Yes!
Wheelchair Accessible: Yes!

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