Inspired by a 1975–76 Orchestra program cover
125 YEARS
OF MAGIC



President & CEO: Philip S. Birsh
Chief Financial Officer: Shamindra Jagnanan
Chief Operating Officer & SVP: Alex Birsh
Director of Manufacturing: Robert Cusanelli
Executive Assistant to CEO and COO: Dalconerys Reyes
Managing Editor, Classic Arts: Stephen Vrattos
Art Director: Kesler Thibert
Production Manager: Jenna Perrino
Prepress Manager: Sean Kenny
Prepress Specialist: Benjamin Hyacinthe
Creative Services Manager: Dean Greer
Managing Program Editor: Matt Bonanno
Program Editors: Amy Asch
Silvia Figueroa
Scott Hale
Dave Porello
Khadijah Rentas
Publisher: Jolie Schaffzin
Vice President of Sales: Joshua Stone
Senior Revenue Officer: Glenn Shaevitz
Head of Theatrical Sales: Nicholas Foster
National Sales Director: Clara Barragán
National Sales Director: Grace Simpson
Advertising Sales Associate: Katie Clooney-Gainey Franchesca Reese
Sales and Marketing Specialist: Chris Kateff
Advertising Sales 729 Seventh Avenue, 4th Floor New
(212) 557-5757
Chairman: Philip S. Birsh
Editor in Chief Emeritus: Joan Alleman
Secretary/Treasurer: Shamindra Jagnanan
From the President and CEO

Dear Friends:
I’m incredibly excited for The Philadelphia Orchestra’s newly announced 2026–27 season. Our next 125 years begins by reflecting so much of the musical journey we have been on together over the past several years—the repertoire we’ve been exploring, the kinds of projects we’ve been building toward, and the artistic questions that inspire us.
Yannick and the Orchestra will continue their exploration of Mahler’s symphonies, with the First, Third, Fifth, and Seventh. The Third Symphony also connects to another important thread of the season: choral music. We will present a number of monumental choral works, including Carmina burana, Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, and Bach’s Christmas Oratorio in its first complete Orchestra performances—a major highlight.
Perhaps the most ambitious undertaking will be Wagner’s complete opera Lohengrin, led by Yannick. In June 2025 we had the extraordinary experience of presenting Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde with the Orchestra on stage, allowing audiences to hear all of the musical nuances front and center. To bring that same approach to Lohengrin, one of Wagner’s great masterpieces, promises to be a defining moment and an event that will draw audiences from near and far.
We will also perform staples of the repertoire by Beethoven, Brahms, Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninoff— music for which this Orchestra is celebrated. There will be a number of premieres, including Composer-in-Residence Joe Hisaishi’s Piano Concerto, the first Philadelphia performances of John Williams’s new Piano Concerto, and Reena Esmail’s Concerto for Orchestra. There will also be a world premiere, led by Principal Guest Conductor Marin Alsop, of a fascinating project, a stopmotion animated film by American conceptual artist Alex Da Corte set to a score by Austin Fisher. I am especially excited that Yannick and the Orchestra will give the world premiere of Symphonic Rituals from Leonard Bernstein’s MASS. In collaboration with the Bernstein family, we’ve created a new orchestral suite of music from MASS, which is such an immense piece, it doesn’t get heard often. This new suite offers a wonderful opportunity to showcase that amazing music.
That project reflects the Orchestra’s commitment to amplifying voices and works that deserve greater attention. There will be more William Grant Still alongside pieces by Samuel ColeridgeTaylor, Josephine Amann-Weinlich, and Florence Price. We continue to have the best artists on our stages, including some of the world’s greatest pianists. And Simon Rattle will join us for the first time in 10 years.
You can read more about the 2026–27 season on page 10 of this Playbill And looking ahead, we will announce Ensemble Arts’s Broadway Series on March 16, with the Family and Jazz Series to follow later in the spring. There’s so much to look forward to.

Ryan Fleur President and CEO
The Philadelphia Orchestra
2025–2026 Season
Yannick Nézet-Séguin
Music and Artistic
Director
Walter and Leonore
Annenberg Chair
Marin Alsop
Principal Guest Conductor
Ralph and Beth Johnston
Muller Chair
Joe Hisaishi
Composer-in-Residence
Naomi Woo Assistant Conductor
Joseph Conyers
Education and Community Ambassador
Mark and Tobey Dichter Chair
Charlotte Blake Alston
Storyteller, Narrator, and Host
Osagie and Losenge
Imasogie Chair
First Violins
David Kim, Concertmaster
James and Agnes Kim Foundation Chair
Juliette Kang, First Associate Concertmaster
Joseph and Marie Field Chair
Christine Lim, Associate Concertmaster
Marc Rovetti, Assistant Concertmaster
Dr. James F. Dougherty Chair
Barbara Govatos
Robert E. Mortensen Chair
Jonathan Beiler
Hirono Oka
Richard Amoroso
Robert and Lynne Pollack Chair
Yayoi Numazawa
Jason DePue
Larry A. Grika Chair
Jennifer Haas
Miyo Curnow
Elina Kalendarova
Daniel Han
Julia Li
William Polk
Mei Ching Huang
Second Violins
Kimberly Fisher, Principal
Peter A. Benoliel Chair
Paul Roby, Associate Principal
Sandra and David
Marshall Chair
Dara Morales, Assistant Principal
Anne M. Buxton Chair
Philip Kates
Peter A. Benoliel Chair
Davyd Booth
Paul Arnold
Joseph Brodo Chair, given by Peter A.Benoliel
Amy Oshiro-Morales
Volunteer Committees Chair
Yu-Ting Chen
Jeoung-Yin Kim
Willa Finck
John Bian
MuChen Hsieh
Eliot Heaton
Violas
Choong-Jin Chang, Principal
Ruth and A. Morris Williams, Jr., Chair
Kirsten Johnson, Associate Principal
Kerri Ryan, Assistant Principal
Burchard Tang
Renard Edwards
Anna Marie Ahn
Petersen*
Piasecki Family Chair
David Nicastro
Che-Hung Chen
Rachel Ku
Marvin Moon
Meng Wang
Hsiang-Hsin Ching
Cellos
Hai-Ye Ni, Principal
Priscilla Lee, Associate Principal
Yumi Kendall, Assistant Principal
Elaine Woo Camarda and A. Morris Williams, Jr., Chair
Richard Harlow
Kathryn Picht Read
John Koen
Derek Barnes
Alex Veltman
Jiayin He
Michael Katz
Eugene Lin
Basses
Joseph Conyers, Principal
Carole and Emilio
Gravagno Chair
Gabriel Polinsky, Associate Principal
Tobias Vigneau, Assistant Principal
David Fay
Duane Rosengard
Nathaniel West
Michael Franz
Christian Gray
Some members of the string sections voluntarily rotate seating on a periodic basis.
Flutes
Jeffrey Khaner, Principal
Paul and Barbara Henkels Chair
Patrick Williams, Associate Principal
Rachelle and Ronald Kaiserman Chair
Olivia Staton
Erica Peel, Piccolo
Oboes
Philippe Tondre, Principal
Samuel S. Fels Chair
Peter Smith, Associate Principal
Jonathan Blumenfeld
Edwin Tuttle Chair
Elizabeth Starr
Masoudnia, English Horn
Joanne T. Greenspun Chair
Clarinets
Ricardo Morales, Principal
Leslie Miller and Richard Worley Chair
Samuel Caviezel, Associate Principal
Sarah and Frank Coulson Chair
Socrates Villegas
Paul R. Demers, Bass Clarinet
Peter M. Joseph and Susan Rittenhouse Joseph Chair
Bassoons
Daniel Matsukawa, Principal
Richard M. Klein Chair
Mark Gigliotti, Co-Principal
Angela Anderson Smith
Holly Blake, Contrabassoon
Horns
Jennifer Montone, Principal
Jeffrey Lang, Associate Principal
Hannah L. and J. Welles
Henderson Chair
Victoria Knudtson, Assistant Principal
Christopher Dwyer
Chelsea McFarland
Ernesto Tovar Torres
Trumpets (position vacant)
Principal
Marguerite and Gerry Lenfest Chair
Anthony Prisk
Sam Huss
Trombones
Nitzan Haroz, Principal
Neubauer Family Foundation Chair
Matthew Vaughn, Co-Principal
Jack Grimm
Blair Bollinger, Bass Trombone
Drs. Bong and Mi Wha Lee Chair
Tuba
Carol Jantsch, Principal
Lyn and George M. Ross Chair
Timpani
Don S. Liuzzi, Principal
Don S. Liuzzi Chair, given by Linda and David Glickstein
Angela Zator Nelson, Associate Principal
Percussion
Christopher Deviney, Principal
Charlie Rosmarin, Associate Principal
Angela Zator Nelson
Keyboards
Davyd Booth
Harp
Elizabeth Hainen, Principal
Librarians
Nicole Jordan, Principal
Holly Matthews
Stage Personnel
Dennis Moore, Jr., Manager
Francis “Chip” O’Shea III
Aaron Wilson
*On leave
Music and Artistic Director

Canadian-born conductor and pianist Yannick Nézet-Séguin is currently in his 14th season with The Philadelphia Orchestra, serving as music and artistic director. An inspired leader, Yannick is both an evolutionary and a revolutionary, developing the mighty “Philadelphia Sound” in new ways. His collaborative style, deeply rooted musical curiosity, and boundless enthusiasm have been heralded by critics and audiences alike. The Philadelphia Inquirer has said that under his baton the Orchestra is “at the top of its considerable form”; the Associated Press has called it “a premier orchestra at its peak”; and the New York Times wrote, “the ensemble, famous for its glowing strings and homogenous richness, has never sounded better.”
Yannick has established himself as a musical leader of the highest caliber and one of the most thrilling and sought-after talents of his generation. He became the third music director of New York’s Metropolitan Opera in 2018. In addition, he has been artistic director and principal conductor of Montreal’s Orchestre Métropolitain since 2000. In 2017 he became the third-ever honorary member of the Chamber Orchestra of Europe. He served as music director of the Rotterdam Philharmonic from 2008 to 2018 (he is now honorary conductor) and was principal guest conductor of the London Philharmonic from 2008 to 2014. He has made wildly successful appearances with the world’s most revered ensembles and at many of the leading opera houses.
Yannick has shown a deep commitment to expanding the repertoire by embracing an evergrowing and diverse group of today’s composers and by performing and recording the music of underappreciated composers of the past, including Florence Price, Clara Schumann, William Dawson, Lili Boulanger, Louise Farrenc, and William Grant Still. In 2018 he signed an exclusive recording contract with Deutsche Grammophon. Under his leadership The Philadelphia Orchestra returned to recording with 15 releases on that label, including Florence Price Symphonies Nos. 1 & 3, which won a GRAMMY® Award for Best Orchestral Performance in 2022.
A native of Montreal, Yannick studied piano, conducting, composition, and chamber music at Montreal’s Conservatory of Music and continued his studies with renowned conductors, most notably Carlo Maria Giulini; he also studied choral conducting with Joseph Flummerfelt at Westminster Choir College. Among Yannick’s honors are an appointment as Companion of the Order of Canada; Companion to the Order of Arts and Letters of Quebec; an Officer of the Order of Quebec; an Officer of the Order of Montreal; an Officier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres; Musical America’s 2016 Artist of the Year; ECHO KLASSIK’s 2014 Conductor of the Year; a Royal Philharmonic Society Award; Canada’s National Arts Centre Award; the Prix Denise-Pelletier; the Oskar Morawetz Award; and honorary doctorates from the University of Quebec, the Curtis Institute of Music, Westminster Choir College of Rider University, McGill University, the University of Montreal, the University of Pennsylvania, Laval University, and Drexel University.
To read Yannick’s full bio, please visit philorch.org/conductor.
Marian Anderson Hall

On June 8, 2024, Verizon Hall at the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts was officially rededicated as Marian Anderson Hall in honor of the legendary Black contralto, civil rights icon, and Philadelphian. The first major concert venue in the world to honor Marian Anderson—85 years after she was barred from performing at Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C., because of her race—the hall is a permanent monument to its namesake’s artistry and achievements, a reflection of the inclusive future she helped to engender, and an active testament to the intersection of music, art, and positive social impact. We look forward to honoring Marian Anderson in perpetuity with a venue that reflects the ideals by which she lived her life: equity, justice, freedom, and the belief that the arts are for everyone.
Marian Anderson Hall was named in her honor by a visionary $25-million philanthropic gift from Richard Worley and Leslie Miller. Worley has been a member of The Philadelphia Orchestra’s Board of Trustees since 1997 and served as board chair from 2009 to 2019. Miller is a former Kimmel Center trustee and previous acting president of the Kimmel Center. They are among the largest donors in Philadelphia Orchestra history. Additional generous support for Marian Anderson Hall was given by Sidney and Caroline Kimmel.
Philadelphia at the Forefront
The Philadelphia Orchestra introduces its 127th season
By Paul J. Horsley

The Philadelphia Orchestra’s 2026–27 season is full of epic musical events, bold artistic experiences, and new musical journeys. It strikes a balance between the innovative and the beloved, the bold and the affirming, and includes world premieres from five of today’s most dynamic composers, eight pieces by women, over a dozen works being performed by the Philadelphians for the first time, large-scale symphonic masterpieces including four Mahler symphonies, guest appearances by internationally renowned artists, and a thrilling concert performance of Wagner’s Lohengrin
The Orchestra’s long history of commissioning new works continues this season with Symphonic Rituals from MASS, an ingenious distillation of one of Leonard Bernstein’s greatest and most talked-about masterpieces. Composer and arranger Garth Edwin Sunderland, who is vice president for creative projects at the Leonard Bernstein Office in New York, has created an all-orchestral symphonic suite that reflects the full beauty and power of this music.
“MASS contains some of Bernstein’s absolutely best melodies and most imaginative writing,” said Jeremy Rothman, chief programming officer of The Philadelphia Orchestra and Ensemble Arts. “And it is almost never heard because the forces required to mount it are so massive.” He presented the idea of a suite to Bernstein’s heirs “and they loved it,” he added. Sunderland has arranged several of Bernstein’s
Music and Artistic Director
Yannick Nézet-Séguin and The Philadelphia Orchestra

works in the past, including the opera A Quiet Place and the ballet Fancy Free Symphonic Rituals from MASS is a 45-minute instrumental arrangement in the tradition of the composer’s own Symphonic Dances from West Side Story
In the second half of the season the Orchestra will introduce The Party, an inventive collaboration between the Venezuelan-American conceptual artist Alex Da Corte and composer Austin Fisher. Born in Camden, New Jersey, Da Corte is a celebrated animation artist, and he has created a visually stunning stop-motion film “to which the Orchestra and an all-Latinx cast of singers will perform in sync with the animated scenes projected on a screen above the stage,” Rothman said. The Party appears on a program led by Principal Guest Conductor Marin Alsop with Arthur Honegger’s Pacific 231, which also includes the film created especially to be performed with the piece by Jean Mitry as a tribute to the steam locomotive.
In March the Orchestra presents the world premiere of Composer-in-Residence Joe Hisaishi’s Piano Concerto, on a program devoted entirely to the music of this Philadelphia favorite, whose initial fame grew from his compelling scores for Studio Ghibli films. “The musicians love playing his music, which is full of complexity, detail, and is masterfully created. And audiences are incredibly drawn to it, too,” Rothman said. “We are fortunate to be building this relationship with a truly historic artist.”
Former Philadelphia Orchestra Music Director Leopold Stokowski with Nancy Shear at the Academy of Music in the 1960s

Marisol Escobar’s The Party (1965), the sculptural installation reimagined by artist Alex Da Corte and composer Austin Fisher into a multidisciplinary operatic event led by Principal Guest Conductor Marin Alsop in February 2027
Reena Esmail, whose RE/Member made a very strong impression at Philadelphia Orchestra performances in 2023, has been commissioned to write a work to be performed in the spring. “The Concerto for Orchestra is a large-scale orchestral piece that has long been in her imagination and will now come to life on stage,” Rothman said. And the final program of the season features Florence Price’s “Rainbow Waltz,” originally for solo piano, in a world-premiere orchestration by composer Valerie Coleman.
The season also includes over a dozen Philadelphia Orchestra premieres, including new arrangements and hidden gems, among them the “Sirens Songs” Polka-Mazurka of Josephine Weinlich, proof that there were highly accomplished women composers in the Austria of Johann Strauss, Jr. The 2026–27 season also includes works that The Philadelphia Orchestra introduced to the world—such as Anton Webern’s Im Sommerwind and the revised version of Samuel Barber’s Symphony No. 1. “The highlighting of world and United States premieres is a reminder of the incredible achievements and history of The Philadelphia Orchestra, and of its broader impact on the history of music,” Rothman said.
The Symphony No. 3 (“The Sunday Symphony”) by William Grant Still—perhaps the most significant Black composer of the 20th century—will also be receiving its first Philadelphia Orchestra outing, after very successful performances of his Second and Fourth symphonies over the past few seasons. Among other local premieres are Anna Meredith’s Nautilus, Gabriela Ortiz’s Clara, Unsuk Chin’s Subito con forza, Erkki-Sven Tüür’s Aditus, Christopher Rouse’s Rapture, John Williams’s Piano Concerto, Julia Wolfe’s Liberty Bell, and Caroline Shaw’s The Observatory A recent and hugely popular album of Gabriela Ortiz’s works garnered three GRAMMY Awards. “She creates a sound world that is relatable and immersive,” Rothman said. “You can hear a range of influences from her cultural background—and an imaginative use of the orchestra that audiences connect with immediately.”
In addition to works by women composers, the line-up of prominent conductors includes Marin Alsop, Dalia Stasevska, and Jane Glover and soloists such as J’Nai Bridges, Yuja Wang, Alice Sara Ott, and Karen Cargill. There is no shortage of large-scale orchestral masterworks on the season, beginning with Mahler’s gigantic Third Symphony and including Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9; Carl Orff’s Carmina burana; Harmonielehre by the American composer John Adams, led by guest conductor Simon Rattle who is returning for the first time in a decade; and Gustav Holst’s The Planets, led by Yannick for the first time here. The Rattle performances are among his rare United States appearances. “Simon loves The Philadelphia
The Philadelphia Orchestra’s first commercial recording, Brahms’s Hungarian Dance No. 5
Orchestra,” Rothman said. “And any time he is coming to guest conduct in America, he always prioritizes collaborating with our amazing orchestra.”
During the holiday season the Orchestra presents, for the first time in its history, Bach’s complete Christmas Oratorio—“in addition to, not instead of, Handel’s Messiah,” Rothman said. Indeed, Messiah will still hold a prominent place in the season, in performances featuring guest conductor and Baroque music specialist Bernard Labadie. Also featured is the holiday favorite The Glorious Sound of Christmas and the New Year’s Eve Celebration.
Opera in concert has become a staple of the Orchestra’s recent seasons, and in the wake of the success of Wagner’s epic Tristan and Isolde last spring, Yannick and the Orchestra will corral forces for a semi-staged version of that composer’s Lohengrin These firstever complete Philadelphia Orchestra performances of Wagner’s masterpiece, first presented in Weimar in 1850, follow the Metropolitan Opera’s magnificent new production in 2022–23, which Yannick also led. The Teutonic legend tells the tale of a mysterious knight who arrives on a swandrawn boat and declares to his beloved Elsa that they can indeed be together—but only if she never asks who he is or where he’s from. Curiosity gets the better of her, and he reluctantly reveals he is Lohengrin, the son of King Parzival; thus the surly knight departs on the same boat, leaving a devastated Elsa. And let’s not forget that memorable single from this opera, the famous “Bridal Chorus.”
These concert operas generate an aural and dramatic spectacle that can hardly be experienced in the opera house. “You hear these amazing scores in every vivid detail, because the Orchestra is on stage and not in an opera pit,” Rothman said. “What The Philadelphia Orchestra is able to do with this music creates a concert experience like no other—there is a clarity and a color that you have never heard before.” The




renowned soloists for these performances include tenor Stanislas de Barbeyrac (Lohengrin), soprano Elza van den Heever (Elsa), soprano Rebecca Nash (Ortrud), baritone Brian Mulligan (Telramund), bass Soloman Howard (King Heinrich), and the Philadelphia Symphonic Choir.
The regular-season programming also includes, among others, favorites of Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Mendelssohn, Schumann, Brahms, Bruckner, Tchaikovsky, Dvořák, Prokofiev, Sibelius, Respighi, Ravel, Strauss, Rachmaninoff, and Stravinsky. And the Orchestra’s popular film series features Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban and Stars Wars: A New Hope in its 50th anniversary year. The Brodsky Star Spotlight Series continues, giving audiences the opportunity to hear the world’s greatest artists in recital. Next season’s offerings include Yo-Yo Ma and Emanuel Ax (The Philadelphia Orchestra’s 2026–27 artist of distinction), Yuja Wang, and Itzhak Perlman and Friends (Ax, Jean-Yves Thibaudet, and the Juilliard String Quartet).
In the 2026–27 season, the Orchestra explores music across borders and generations, weaving together rare works, daring artistic conversations, and moments of discovery—an extraordinary celebration of music performed by one of the world’s finest ensembles.
Paul J. Horsley is performing arts editor of The Independent in Kansas City. Previously he was music and dance critic for The Kansas City Star and program annotator and musicologist for The Philadelphia Orchestra. He holds a Ph.D. in musicology from Cornell University and has contributed to The New York Times, Symphony, Dance Magazine, Chamber Music, and many other publications.
The Philadelphia Orchestra’s first commercial recording, Brahms’s Hungarian Dance No. 5
Musicians Behind the Scenes
Paul Demers Bass Clarinet

Where were you born?
I was born in Portland, Maine.
What piece of music could you play over and over again? Any Mahler symphony.
What is your most treasured possession? The people I love and the home we create.
What’s your favorite food?
Italian food, with meatballs at the top of the list!
Tell us about your instrument.
I recently began performing on a Backun bass clarinet. Made in Canada by Morrie Backun, the instrument makes my job much easier, and I feel inspired every time I play it.
What’s in your instrument case?
Lots of reeds, a humidifier, a spare mouthpiece, screwdrivers, cork grease, mints.
What is the most challenging piece you have ever played? Osiris by Matthias Pintscher, for its demanding bass clarinet writing and extended virtuosic solos on contrabass clarinet.
When did you join the Orchestra? In 2006.
Do you play any other instruments?
In the orchestra, I play all members of the clarinet family (B-flat, A, C, E-flat, basset horn, bass clarinet, contrabass clarinet). In my earlier training, I also played saxophone, and I played mellophone with the Boston Crusaders Drum Corps.
What’s your favorite Philadelphia restaurant? Double Knot.
What do you love most about Philadelphia?
I love the food scene and the charm of Philadelphia’s diverse neighborhoods.
What’s your go-to karaoke song? Nope.
Other than Marian Anderson Hall, where is your favorite place to perform? Carnegie Hall, for its rich history and amazing acoustics
What is your favorite memory with the Orchestra?
My first day playing with the Orchestra. The same morning I left my position with “The President’s Own” United States Marine Band, I drove to Philadelphia and rehearsed for an Asian tour with the Orchestra and Wolfgang Sawallisch. I was excited, nervous, and in awe of the musicians around me!
2025–2026 | 126th Season
Marian Anderson Hall
The Philadelphia Orchestra
Friday, March 6, at 2:00
Saturday, March 7, at 8:00
Sunday, March 8, at 2:00
Yannick Nézet-Séguin Conductor
Ying Fang Soprano
Joyce DiDonato Mezzo-Soprano
Philadelphia Symphonic Choir
Joe Miller Director
Mahler Symphony No. 2 in C minor (“Resurrection”)
I. Allegro maestoso
II. Andante moderato
III. In ruhig fliessender Bewegung—
IV. “Urlicht”—
V. Finale
This program runs approximately 1 hour, 30 minutes, and will be performed without an intermission.
The March 6 concert is sponsored by Wayne Titerence and Vicki Mechner .
The March 7 concert is sponsored by Robert Pratter in memory of Gene E.K. Pratter .
The March 8 concert is sponsored by Allan Schimmel in memory of Reid Reames .
Philadelphia Orchestra concerts are broadcast on WRTI 90.1 FM on Sunday afternoons at 1 PM and are repeated on Monday evenings at 7 PM on WRTI HD 2. Visit www.wrti.org to listen live or for more details.

The Philadelphia Orchestra
The world-renowned Philadelphia Orchestra strives to share the transformative power of music with the widest possible audience, and to create joy, connection, and excitement through music in the Philadelphia region, across the country, and around the world. Through innovative programming, robust education initiatives, a commitment to its diverse communities, and the embrace of digital outreach, the ensemble is creating an expansive and inclusive future for classical music. In June 2021 the Orchestra and its home, the Kimmel Center, united. Today, The Philadelphia Orchestra and Ensemble Arts brings the greatest performances and most impactful education and community programs to audiences in Philadelphia and beyond.
Yannick Nézet-Séguin is now in his 14th season with The Philadelphia Orchestra, serving as music and artistic director. His connection to the ensemble’s musicians has been praised by both concertgoers and critics, and he is esteemed by the musicians of the Orchestra, audiences, and the community. In addition to expanding the repertoire by embracing an ever-growing and diverse group of today’s composers, Yannick and the Orchestra are committed to performing and recording the works of previously overlooked composers.
The Philadelphia Orchestra takes great pride in its hometown, performing for the people of Philadelphia year-round, at the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts, throughout the community, over the airwaves, and online. The Kimmel Center has been the ensemble’s home since 2001, and in 2024 Verizon Hall at the Kimmel Center was officially rededicated as
Marian Anderson Hall in honor of the legendary contralto, civil rights icon, and Philadelphian. The Orchestra’s award-winning education and community programs connect, uplift, and celebrate nearly 40,000 Philadelphians and 250 schools from diverse communities annually, through inclusive arts education and vibrant engagement that reflect our city’s voices and expand access to creative opportunities. Students, families, and other community members can enjoy free and discounted experiences with The Philadelphia Orchestra through programs such as the Jane H. Kesson School Concerts, Family Concerts, Open Rehearsals, PlayINs, and Our City, Your Orchestra community concerts.
Through concerts, tours, residencies, and recordings, the Orchestra is a global ambassador and one of our nation’s greatest exports. It performs annually at Carnegie Hall, the Mann Center, the Saratoga Performing Arts Center, and the Bravo! Vail Music Festival. The Orchestra also has a rich touring history, having first performed outside Philadelphia in its earliest days. In 1973 it became the first American orchestra to perform in the People’s Republic of China, launching a now-five-decade commitment of people-to-people exchange through music.
Under Yannick’s leadership, the Orchestra returned to recording with 15 celebrated releases on the Deutsche Grammophon label, including the GRAMMY® Award–winning Florence Price Symphonies Nos. 1 & 3. The Orchestra also reaches thousands of radio listeners with weekly broadcasts on WRTI-FM and SiriusXM. For more information, please visit www.philorch.org.
Soloist

This season Chinese soprano Ying Fang makes her debut at Houston Grand Opera in the United States premiere of Robert Wilson’s staged version of Mozart’s arrangement of Handel’s Messiah conducted by Patrick Summers; sings Ilia in Mozart’s Idomeneo with the Vienna State Opera; and joins the San Francisco Symphony and Manfred Honeck for Mozart’s Requiem. She also records Mahler’s Second Symphony with the Pittsburgh Symphony and Mr. Honeck and joins the Manchester Camerata and Gábor Takács-Nagy for an all-Mozart concert, which will be recorded and released by Chandos Records. Further highlights include Mahler’s Symphony No. 8 with the Vienna Philharmonic and Andris Nelsons and her return to the Aix-en-Provence Festival as Pamina in Simon McBurney’s production of Mozart’s The Magic Flute under conductor Raphaël Pichon, with whom she maintains a fruitful collaborative relationship. This past summer, she returned to the Baden-Baden Festival, where she joined Yannick Nézet-Séguin for performances of Mozart’s Mass in C minor and Requiem and a lieder recital, all recorded for release on Deutsche Grammophon. She also appeared at the Verbier Festival in Bach’s Mass in B minor and made her role debut as Lauretta in Puccini’s Gianni Schicchi alongside baritone Bryn Terfel. At the Salzburg Festival, she joined Riccardo Muti in Bruckner’s Mass No. 3. Last season Ms. Fang made her long-awaited debut at the Royal Opera, Covent Garden, as Susanna in Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro in a production by David McVicar, followed by a return to Lyric Opera of Chicago for the same role. She debuted at the Bavarian State Opera as Pamina in The Magic Flute and made her role debut as Marzelline in Beethoven’s Fidelio at the Metropolitan Opera, conducted by Susanna Mälkki and broadcast on the Met’s Live in HD series. She also sang Ilia in Idomeneo in her debut at San Francisco Opera. On the concert stage, she joined the Sydney Symphony and Donald Runnicles for Mahler’s Fourth Symphony and lieder of Richard Strauss; the Boston Symphony and Andris Nelsons as Mater Gloriosa in Mahler’s Eighth Symphony; Montreal’s Orchestre Métropolitain and Mr. Nézet-Séguin for her first Beethoven Ninth Symphony; and the Orchestra of St. Luke’s and Mr. Pichon at Carnegie Hall for a program of works by Schubert, Schumann, and Weber.
A native of Ningbo, China, Ms. Fang is the recipient of the Martin E. Segal Award, the Hildegard Behrens Foundation Award, the Rose Bampton Award of the Sullivan Foundation, the Opera Index Award, and the First Prize Award of the Gerda Lissner International Vocal Competition. In 2009 she became one of the youngest singers to win the China Golden Bell Award for Music, one of China’s most prestigious awards. She holds a master’s degree and an Artist Diploma in Opera Studies from the Juilliard School and a bachelor’s degree from the Shanghai Conservatory of Music. She was a member of the Metropolitan Opera’s Lindemann Young Artist Development Program and made her Philadelphia Orchestra debut in 2016.
Soloist

A multiple GRAMMY-Award winner and winner of the 2018 Olivier Award for Outstanding Achievement in Opera, Kansasborn mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato entrances audiences across the globe. She has soared to the top of the industry both as a performer and a fierce advocate for the arts. With a repertoire spanning over four centuries, a varied and highly acclaimed discography, and industry-leading projects, her artistry has defined what it is to be a singer in the 21st century. She made her Philadelphia Orchestra debut in 2015 at Carnegie Hall.
Ms. DiDonato’s 2025–26 season includes season-opening concerts for both the Minnesota Orchestra and Montreal’s Orchestre Métropolitain, as well as with the St. Louis Symphony in the world premiere of Kevin Puts’s House of Tomorrow . She returns to Musikkollegium Winterthur for performances of Rachel Portman’s Another Eve and collaborates with Radio France for Mahler’s Rückert-Lieder in Paris and Dijon. She reunites with pianist Craig Terry for recitals at the Théâtre de Genève and Suntory Hall in Tokyo and embarks on her first major tour of Australasia with the Melbourne, Tasmania, and New Zealand symphonies. In the United States she makes her Lincoln Center Theater stage debut as the Mother in Menotti’s Amahl and the Night Visitors and her much-anticipated role debut at the Metropolitan Opera in Kaija Saariaho’s Innocence . Concert appearances include Mahler’s Symphony No. 3 with Yannick Nézet-Séguin and the Berlin Philharmonic. Recent highlights include Handel’s Theodora for the Teatro Real in Madrid; a highly acclaimed European recital tour with performances at the Teatro alla Scala, Staatsoper Berlin, the Athens Megaron, and the Palau de la Música de Valencia; and debut appearances with the Norwegian National Opera Orchestra and the London Philharmonic. In December 2024 she toured the United States with the Dallas-based a cappella group Kings Return with a festive program entitled “Kings Re-Joyce.”
Ms. DiDonato’s latest project, EDEN, completed a groundbreaking three years of global touring and anticipation is now building for her next album release and touring project. A newly commissioned song cycle written by Mr. Puts for her and the GRAMMY Award–winning string trio Time for Three, featuring the poetry of Emily Dickinson, had its world premiere at the Bregenz Festival in August 2025, with further performances across the United States, including Kansas City, Chicago, and Carnegie Hall. Her expansive discography also includes Berlioz’s Les Troyens (winner of Gramophone ’s coveted Recording of the Year) and Handel’s Agrippina ( Gramophone ’s Opera Recording of the Year). Other albums include Schubert’s Winterreise with Mr. Nézet-Séguin; the GRAMMY Award–winning Songplay; In War & Peace, which won Gramophone ’s 2017 Best Recital Award; Stella di Napoli; the GRAMMY Award–winning Diva, Divo; and Drama Queens . Other honors include Gramophone ’s Artist of the Year and Recital of the Year awards and an induction into the Gramophone Hall of Fame.
Choir

The Philadelphia Symphonic Choir made its debut in December 2016, performing in three programs with The Philadelphia Orchestra that season. Consisting of talented vocalists auditioned from around the country, the ensemble was created to marry gifted and unique voices of Philadelphia and beyond with the legendary “Philadelphia Sound.” Performance highlights with the Orchestra include the world premiere of the concert version of Kevin Puts’s opera The Hours and Beethoven’s Missa solemnis in Philadelphia and at Carnegie Hall. The ensemble has also sung in performances of Haydn’s The Seasons, Puccini’s Tosca, Bernstein’s Symphony No. 3 (“Kaddish”), Rossini’s Stabat Mater, Bruckner’s “Christus factus est” and Te Deum, Brahms’s A German Requiem, and Mozart’s Requiem, as well as holiday performances of Menotti’s Amahl and the Night Visitors and multiple season performances of Handel’s Messiah.
The Philadelphia Symphonic Choir is directed by Joe Miller, professor of conducting and director of choral studies at the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music (CCM). He has served as artistic director of choral activities for the Spoleto Festival USA in Charleston, South Carolina, a role he concluded in June 2025 after a 19-year tenure. This year marks his inaugural season as music director of the Vocal Arts Ensemble of Cincinnati. He has served as conductor of the Philadelphia Symphonic Choir since 2016 and made his conducting debut with The Philadelphia Orchestra in 2021 leading Messiah. In addition to these current performances, featured concerts with the Philadelphia Symphonic Choir in the 2025–26 season include Handel’s Messiah under the baton of Yanick Nézet-Séguin this past December and Mozart’s Requiem conducted by Jane Glover in April.
In the 2024–25 season, the Philadelphia Symphonic Choir joined The Philadelphia Orchestra for performances of Handel’s Messiah, Mahler’s Symphony No. 3, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9, and Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde with Yannick Nézet-Séguin; Verdi’s Requiem with Riccardo Muti; and Holst’s The Planets with Daniele Rustioni. The 2023–24 season marked the premiere of the film Maestro, a collaboration with Bradley Cooper and Netflix featuring the Philadelphia Symphonic Choir and the music of Leonard Bernstein. The movie received a Best Picture nomination for the Academy Awards. Music from the film has been released on Deutsche Grammophon. The American Guild of Musical Artists, AFL-CIO, the union of professional singers, dancers, and production personnel in opera, ballet, and concert, represents the choral artists in these performances.
The Philadelphia Symphonic Choir
Joe Miller Director
Sopranos
Leigha Amick
Laura Berman
Katharine Burns
Abigail Chapman
Lauren Cohen
Ryan Colbert
Maria Palombo Costa
Marisa Curcio
Natalie Esler
Laura Fishman
Alexandra Gilliam
Greta Groothuis
Jina Jang
Erica Johnson
Colleen Kinderman
Rachael Lipson
Jessica Moreno
Sophia Santiago
Rebecca Shimer
Emily Tiberi
Altos
Christine Browne-Munz
Marissa Chalker
Lori Cummines-Huck
Alyson Harvey
Jessica Kerler
Shannon Lally
Renee Macdonald
Megan McFadden
Meghan McGinty
Heather Mitchell
Catherine Moore
Natasha Nelson
Sam Rauch
Rebecca Roy
Sarah Sensenig
Cecelia Snow
Lisa Stein
Kaitlyn Tierney
Kaitlyn Waterson
Kathryn Whitaker
Tenors
Aldo A. Aranzulla
Sam Barge
Brendan Barker
Nathaniel Bear
Roberto Guevara, Jr.
Jonathan Hartwell
Bryan Umberto Hoyos
Joshua John
George Johnson III
Jordan Klotz
Tom Leighton
William Lim, Jr.
Joshua Lisner
Max Marques
Timothy Morrow
Jacob Nelson
Kev Schneider
Royce Strider
Daniel Taylor
Mike Williams
Basses
Christopher D. Aldrich
Graham Bier
Gordon Blodgett
Greg Boatman
Maxwell Brey
Peter Christian
Sam Duffey
Matthew Fisher
Connor Fluharty
Loren Greer
Robert James Lamb
Matthew Marinelli
Ian Martin
Bryan McClary
Alexander Nguyen
Carlos Pedroza
Erik Potteiger
Scott Purcell
John T.K. Scherch
Kirby Traylor
Framing the Program
Parallel Events
1894
Mahler
Symphony No. 2
Music
Debussy
Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun
Literature
Kipling
The Jungle Book
Art
Degas
Femme à sa toilette
History
Dreyfus Affair
Gustav Mahler, in his 20s and 30s, was a busy man on the rise. He spent most of his time building his career as a conductor, chiefly of opera, meteorically ascending from provincial theaters to the most prized position in Europe: music director of the Vienna Court Opera. This pace left little time for composing, most of which he did during the summer. At first he was conflicted about what kind of music to write and concentrated on songs and program music. What we now know as his Symphony No. 1 premiered as a “Symphonic Poem in Two Parts” and for some time he planned a sequel with a massive singlemovement piece called Todtenfeier —Funeral Rite—which became the first movement of the Second Symphony we hear today.
It is remarkable that the Second Symphony, composed over the span of nearly seven years (the longest gestation for any of Mahler’s works), should emerge as one of his most powerful and seemingly unified compositions. When he began it in 1888, at age 28, he had no idea where it would go, and the process of discovery—and self-discovery—addressed issues no less weighty than the meaning of life and death. How to conclude the work was a particular problem and the solution, when it came, proved a revelation: a choral finale setting a “Resurrection” poem by the 18th-century German writer Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock, which Mahler adapted with his own words.
What became known as the “Resurrection” Symphony is one of the longest, most ambitious, and profoundly moving orchestral works ever composed, its unusual impact and message have been celebrated ever since Mahler conducted the premiere in Berlin in 1895.
The Philadelphia Orchestra is the only orchestra in the world with three weekly broadcasts on SiriusXM’s Symphony Hall , Channel 76, on Mondays at 7 PM, Thursdays at 12 AM, and Saturdays at 4 PM.
The Music
Symphony No. 2 (“Resurrection”)
Gustav Mahler
Born in Kalischt (Kaliště), Bohemia, July 7, 1860
Died in Vienna, May 18, 1911

List-making figures among the diverting games many music lovers enjoy playing: lists of unforgettable performances one has heard, of great recordings collected, of favorite composers, pieces, performers, and so forth. Gustav Mahler’s Second Symphony often ranks high in such reckonings, especially when musicians and audiences remember transformative experiences with the work.
Testimonials to the power of this particular symphony began with its premiere in Berlin under Mahler’s direction in December 1895. His sister Justine recalled: “The triumph grew after every movement. Such enthusiasm is seen only once in a lifetime! Afterward I saw grown men weeping and youths falling all over one another.” The composer Ernest Bloch heard a performance a few years later and wrote: “For me the impression will never be effaced, nor will it be for anyone fortunate enough to have shared in it. The excited audience, transported and oblivious to its surroundings, gave the composer an enthusiastic ovation; it sensed the presence of an independent work, a work coming from the heart which spoke directly to their hearts.”
The effect on the younger generation of composers in Vienna, Mahler’s greatest admirers, was profound. Arnold Schoenberg stated that he was “overwhelmed, completely overwhelmed” by the piece: “I remember distinctly that the first time I heard Mahler’s Second Symphony I was seized, especially in certain passages, with an excitement which expressed itself even physically in the violent throbbing of my heart.” Alban Berg said that his initial encounter with the piece was so intimate he felt the need to confess “infidelity” to his fiancée.
“A Special Place Among My Works” The Second Symphony seems to have held a special place for Mahler as well. He chose it as the first of his symphonies that he conducted in Vienna and also as his farewell there in 1907. It was likewise the first one he presented in Munich, New York, and Paris. According to her memoirs, he told his confidant Natalie Bauer-Lechner:
Never again will I attain such depths and heights, as Ulysses only once in his life returned from Tartarus. One can create only once or twice in a lifetime works on such a great subject. Beethoven in his C minor (Fifth Symphony) and his Ninth, Goethe with Faust, Dante with the Divine Comedy, etc. Without putting myself on their level,
or comparing myself to them, I am amazed that I was able to write this that summer in Steinbach! It was only thanks to the long interruption that had been forced on me, after which the waters gushed forth, as they do from any obstructed pipe.
In many ways the overwhelming impact of the Second Symphony is hardly surprising. It projects a powerful narrative of Life over Death that resonates with philosophical issues Mahler explored throughout his career. It is a monumental piece written for an enormous orchestra and capped off by a magnificent chorus that is reserved until the end of the final movement. After completing the work, Mahler remarked: “What effect I could have achieved if I had used the chorus and organ earlier, but I wanted to save them for the climax and would rather relinquish its effect in other places.”
As a great conductor, especially of opera, Mahler certainly knew how to gauge effects; he was well aware of what was compelling dramatically and knew how to build to a shattering conclusion. Mahler came to expect the success of the work with audiences. After performing it in Paris the year before his death in 1911, he told a friend: “My Second Symphony occupies a special place among my works: If it is successful anywhere, this means nothing for my other works!”
A Protracted Genesis And yet the effect, power, and success of the Symphony might not have been predicted given its unusually protracted genesis. The work gave Mahler a lot of trouble over the course of the nearly seven years he took to write it, a longer period than for any other piece. Moreover, when he began composing the Symphony early in 1888, he had no central vision of its content or structure nor did he know how it would all end.
In November 1889 Mahler conducted the premiere of his “Symphonic Poem in Two Parts” in Budapest, where he served at the time as director of the Royal Hungarian Opera. This five-movement work would later lose its second movement entirely and be retitled “Symphony in D major,” what we now know as his First. The year before he had already begun composing a new Symphony in C minor, of which he drafted an enormous opening movement. Somewhat later he decided to name it Todtenfeier (Funeral Rite, more literally: Celebration of the Dead) and promote it as an independent piece, which he tried to get published as such in 1891. The title most likely derives from a ballad called Dziady (Forefathers’ Eve) by the celebrated Polish poet Adam Mickiewicz, which had recently been translated as Todtenfeier by Mahler’s close friend Siegfried Lipiner Mahler wrote to the journalist Max Marschalk in 1896 about the movement, saying “if you would like to know, I am interring the hero of my D-major (First) Symphony, whose life I capture in a pure reflection from a higher vantage point.”
Todtenfeier remained unperformed and unpublished as the larger symphonic project stalled for some five years. During this hiatus, Mahler played the movement on the piano for the eminent conductor Hans von Bülow, who had led the premieres of Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde and Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg . But when Mahler looked up from the keyboard, he saw Bülow covering his ears; afterwards his mentor stated that the work made Tristan sound like a Haydn symphony. This discouraging response to Todtenfeier, compounded by his taxing conducting duties and the deaths of his parents and a sister, led to even further
delays in what would eventually become the five-movement Second Symphony.
Songs Within a Symphony
The “long interruption”—the “obstructed pipe” that Mahler mentioned to Bauer-Lechner—ended in 1893, when he resumed work on the Symphony. That year he also orchestrated two songs that would become two of the middle movements. Once again he called upon poetry from the early-19th-century folk collection Des Knaben Wunderhorn (The Youth’s Magic Horn), poems that obsessed him for more than a decade. In addition to some two dozen vocal settings with piano and/or orchestra, he also used the collection in his early symphonies.
The two Wunderhorn songs employed for the third and fourth movements of the Second Symphony were originally written for piano and voice but joined the second movement Andante to provide a three-movement interlude leading to the finale. The third movement is a purely instrumental version, much expanded, of the ironic song “Des Antonius von Padua Fischpredigt” (St. Anthony of Padua’s Sermon to the Fishes.) The fourth movement, “Urlicht” (Primal Light), retains the vocal part, sung by a mezzo-soprano.
Yet Mahler was still baffled about how to end the Symphony. The breakthrough came in March 1894 while attending a memorial service in the same Hamburg church where he would himself be baptized three years later. The occasion—a “Todtenfeier,” in fact— honored Bülow, who had died in Cairo the previous month. “The way in which I received inspiration for the Finale is deeply indicative of the essence of musical creation,” Mahler would later tell critic Arthur Seidl:
I had long considered the idea of employing a chorus for the last movement, and only the fear that this might be seen as a superficial imitation of Beethoven made me hesitate time and again. Then Bülow died, and I went to his funeral. My mood as I sat there thinking of the man who had died was wholly in tune with the work that was growing in my mind. Suddenly the choir chanted from the organ-loft the Klopstock chorale “Aufersteh’n!” It was as if I had been struck by lightning—the whole work now stood clearly before me! Such is the flash for which the creator waits, such is sacred inspiration!
After that I had to create in sound what I had just experienced. Nonetheless, if I had not already been carrying the work within me, how could I have experienced this moment? Weren’t thousands of other people with me in the church? That’s how it always is with me. I only compose when I truly experience something, and I only experience it when I create!
And so Mahler crafted the finale of the Second Symphony using a poem by the 18thcentury German writer Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock, which he heavily edited and vastly expanded with his own words. The final movement begins with a cataclysmic dissonance, looking back to the “cry of despair” of the Scherzo, that is comparable to the famous “terror fanfare” (as Wagner called it) with which Beethoven opened the finale of his Ninth Symphony. And indeed, it was Beethoven’s final symphony that served as a model in other respects as well. For example, Mahler brings back themes from the earlier movements at
the opening of the finale, thus lending unity to the disparate work he composed over so many years.
He worked on this last movement in the summer of 1894 in Steinbach, in Austria’s majestic Salzkammergut region. The Symphony was completed in December and Mahler conducted the first three movements with the Berlin Philharmonic in March 1895. He presented the premiere of the complete Symphony with the same orchestra in December and although the critical response was tepid, the general audience response was apparently enthusiastic.
Possible Programs If the preceding narrative gives something of the story behind the lengthy creation of the Second Symphony, there is also a story, perhaps several of them, within the work itself. Over the course of his career Mahler vacillated concerning “programs,” one of the most important aesthetic issues in 19th-century music. To what extent should a composer connect a piece to extra-musical ideas or stories and how much should then be disclosed to audiences? Mahler at first embraced a programmatic approach, which meant bestowing titles to his works and engaging with the genre of the symphonic poem—hence the early idea of Todtenfeier as a standalone piece. Over time he grew increasingly reluctant to say much about his music, at least publicly. This may have been in part to distance himself from the works of his friend and rival Richard Strauss. Mahler withdrew programs he had devised for his early symphonies but then would on occasion divulge information again. And so back and forth he went.
About the Second Mahler gave various accounts, some in private as well as at least one for public consumption. All of them sketch a fairly similar scheme for the piece. Not long after finishing the Symphony, he told Marschalk that it grapples with the question: “‘Why did you live? Why did you suffer? Is it all nothing but a huge, frightful joke?’ We must answer these questions in some way, if we want to go on living—indeed, if we are to go on dying! He into whose life this call has once sounded must give an answer; and it is his answer I give in the final movement.” The explanation Mahler gave for public consumption in 1900 was originally intended for a Munich performance but was suppressed in the end. It was printed, however, for a presentation the next year in Dresden. Somewhat less well known than his earlier private accounts, it is excerpted here:
First Movement: We are standing near the grave of a beloved man. His whole life, his struggles, his sufferings and accomplishments on earth pass before us. And now, in this solemn and deeply stirring moment, when the confusion and distractions of everyday life are lifted like a hood from our eyes, a voice of awe-inspiring solemnity chills our heart, a voice that, blinded by the mirage of everyday life, we usually ignore: “What next?” it says. “What is life and what is death? Will we live on eternally? Is it all an empty dream or do our life and death have a meaning?” And we must answer this question, if we are to go on living.
The next three movements are conceived as intermezzos.
Second Movement, Andante: A blissful moment in the dear departed’s life and a sad recollection of his youth and lost innocence.
Third Movement, Scherzo: A spirit of disbelief and negation has seized him. … He loses his perception of childhood and the profound strength that love can give. He despairs both of himself and of God. The world and life begin to seem unreal. Utter disgust for every form of existence and evolution seizes him in an iron grasp, torments him until he utters a cry of despair.
Fourth Movement: “Urlicht” (Primeval Light) from the Knaben Wunderhorn. The stirring words of simple faith sound in his ears: “I come from God and I will return to God!”
Fifth Movement: Once more we must confront terrifying questions, and the atmosphere is the same as at the end of the third movement. The voice of the Caller is heard. The end of every living thing has come, the last judgment is at hand, and the horror of the day of days has come upon us. The earth trembles, the graves burst open, the dead arise and march forth in endless procession. The great and the small of this earth, the kings and the beggars, the just and the godless, all press forward. … The last trumpet sounds. … In the eerie silence that follows we can just barely make out a distant nightingale, a last tremulous echo of earthly life. The gentle sound of a chorus of saints and heavenly hosts is then heard: “Rise again, yes, rise again thou wilt!” The God in all His glory comes into sight. A wondrous light strikes us to the heart. All is quiet and blissful. Lo and behold: There is no judgment, no sinners, no just men, no great and small; there is no punishment and no reward. A feeling of overwhelming love fills us with blissful knowledge and illuminates our existence.
—Christopher H. Gibbs
Christopher H. Gibbs is James H. Ottaway Jr. Professor of Music at Bard College and has been the program annotator for The Philadelphia Orchestra since 2000. He is the author of several books on Schubert and Liszt, and the co-author, with Richard Taruskin, of The Oxford History of Western Music, College Edition.
Mahler composed his Second Symphony from 1888 to 1894.
Leopold Stokowski conducted the first Philadelphia Orchestra performances of Mahler’s Second, in May 1921, with soprano May Peterson, contralto Merle Alcock, and the Philadelphia Orchestra Chorus. The last subscription performances were in October/November 2014, conducted by Yannick Nézet-Séguin with soprano Angela Meade, mezzo-soprano Sarah Connolly, and the Westminster Symphonic Choir.
The Orchestra recorded the “Resurrection” in 1970 for RCA, with Eugene Ormandy, soprano Evelyn Mandac, mezzosoprano Birgit Finnila, and Singing City Choir.
The work is scored for four flutes (all doubling piccolo), four oboes (III and IV doubling English horn), four clarinets (IV doubling E-flat clarinet II), E-flat clarinet, four bassoons (III and IV doubling contrabassoon), 10 horns (VII–X doubling offstage horns), 10 trumpets (VII–X doubling offstage trumpets), four trombones, tuba, timpani (one offstage), onstage percussion (bass drum, cymbals, glockenspiel, high and low tam-tams, orchestra bells, rute, snare drum, triangle), offstage percussion (bass drum, cymbals, triangle), two harps, organ, strings, soprano and mezzosoprano soloists, and mixed choir.
Performance time is approximately 80 minutes.
IV. “Urlicht” (Mezzo-Soprano)
(from Des Knaben Wunderhorn )
O Röschen rot!
Der Mensch liegt in grösster Not!
Der Mensch liegt in grösster Pein! Je lieber möcht’ ich im Himmel sein!
Da kam ich auf einen breiten Weg; da kam ein Engelein und wollt’ mich abweisen.
Ach nein! Ich liess mich nicht abweisen! Ich bin von Gott und will wieder zu Gott!
Der liebe Gott wird mir ein Lichtchen geben, wird leuchten mir bis in das ewig selig Leben!
V. “Aufersteh’n” (Chorus, Soprano, and Mezzo-Soprano)
(Friedrich Klopstock)
Aufersteh’n, ja aufersteh’n wirst du, mein Staub, nach kurzer Ruh!
Unsterblich Leben! Unsterblich Leben wird der dich rief dir geben.
Wieder aufzublüh’n wirst du gesät!
Der Herr der Ernte geht und sammelt Garben uns ein, die starben!
(Mezzo-Soprano)
O glaube, mein Herz, o glaube: es geht dir nichts verloren!
Dein ist, ja dein, was du gesehnt, dein, was du geliebt, was du gestritten!
(Soprano)
O glaube: du wardst nicht umsonst geboren! Hast nicht umsonst gelebt, gelitten!
IV. “Primal Light” (Mezzo-Soprano)
(from The Youth’s Magic Horn )
Oh little red rose!
Mankind lies in greatest need!
Mankind lies in greatest pain! How I would rather be in heaven!
I came upon a broad path: A little angel came and wanted to turn me away.
Ah no! I would not be sent away! I am from God and will return to God! Dear God will give me a little light, will light my way to eternal, blessed life!
V. Resurrection (Chorus, Soprano, and Mezzo-Soprano)
Rise again, yes you will rise again, my dust, after a short rest!
Immortal life! Immortal life will be given to you by Him who called you.
You are sown in order to bloom again! The Lord of the harvest goes and gathers the sheaves of us who have died.
(Mezzo-Soprano)
Oh believe, my heart, believe: You have lost nothing!
Yours, yes, yours is what you have longed for, yours, what you loved, what you fought for!
(Soprano)
Oh believe:
You were not born in vain!
You have not lived and suffered in vain!
(Please turn the page quietly.)
(Chorus and Mezzo-Soprano)
Was entstanden ist, das muss vergehen! Was vergangen, auferstehen!
Hör’ auf zu beben!
Bereite dich zu leben!
(Soprano and Mezzo-Soprano)
O Schmerz! Du Alldurchdringer!
Dir bin ich entrungen!
O Tod! Du Allbezwinger!
Nun bist du bezwungen!
Mit Flügeln, die ich mir errungen, in heissem Liebesstreben werd’ ich entschweben zum Licht, zu dem kein Aug’ gedrungen!
(Chorus)
Mit Flügeln, die ich mir errungen, werde ich entschweben!
Sterben werd’ ich, um zu leben!
Aufersteh’n, ja aufersteh’n wirst du, mein Herz, in einem Nu!
Was du geschlagen, zu Gott wird es dich tragen!
(Chorus and Mezzo-Soprano) What was created must perish! What has perished must rise again! Cease trembling! Prepare yourself to live!
(Soprano and Mezzo-Soprano)
Oh pain, all-pervading, from you have I been wrested! Oh death, all-conquering, now are you conquered!
With wings that I have earned in fervent, loving aspiration, will I soar to the light that no eye has penetrated!
(Chorus)
With wings that I have earned will I soar!
I shall die, that I may live!
Rise again, yes you will rise again, my heart, in an instant! What you have fought for, will carry you to God!
English translation by Darrin T. Britting
Program notes © 202 6. All rights reserved. Program notes may not be reprinted without written permission from The Philadelphia Orchestra Association.
Musical Terms
Cadence: The conclusion to a phrase, movement, or piece based on a recognizable melodic formula, harmonic progression, or dissonance resolution
Chorale: A hymn tune of the German Protestant Church, or one similar in style. Chorale settings are vocal, instrumental, or both.
Chord: The simultaneous sounding of three or more tones
Chromatic: Relating to tones foreign to a given key (scale) or chord
Dissonance: A combination of two or more tones requiring resolution
Dynamics: The varying and contrasting degrees of loudness
Harmonic: Pertaining to chords and to the theory and practice of harmony
Harmony: The combination of simultaneously sounded musical notes to produce chords and chord progressions
Intermezzo: A short connecting instrumental movement in an opera or other musical work
Intonation: The treatment of musical pitch in performance
Legato: Smooth, even, without any break between notes
Meter: The symmetrical grouping of musical rhythms
Polyphony: A term used to designate music in more than one part and the style in which all or several of the musical parts move to some extent independently
Scale: The series of tones which form (a) any major or minor key or (b) the chromatic scale of successive semi-tonic steps
Scherzo: Literally “a joke.” Usually the third movement of symphonies and quartets that was introduced by Beethoven to replace the minuet. The scherzo is followed by a gentler section called a trio, after which the scherzo is repeated. Its characteristics are a rapid tempo, vigorous rhythm, and humorous contrasts. Also an instrumental piece of a light, piquant, humorous character.
Tempo: The speed of music
Timbre: Tone color or tone quality
Tonality: The orientation of melodies and harmonies toward a specific pitch or pitches
Tonic: The keynote of a scale
THE SPEED OF MUSIC (Tempo)
Allegro: Bright, fast
Andante: Walking speed
Maestoso: Majestic
Moderato: A moderate tempo, neither fast nor slow
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Late Seating: Late seating breaks usually occur after the first piece on the program or at intermission in order to minimize disturbances to other audience members. If you arrive after the concert begins, you will be seated only when appropriate breaks in the program allow.
Accessible Seating: Accessible seating is available for every performance. Please visit philorch.org/patron-services/plan-your-visit/ accessibility for more information.
Assistive Listening: With the deposit of a current ID, hearing enhancement devices are available at no cost from the House Management Office in Commonwealth Plaza. Hearing devices are available on a first-come, first-served basis.
Large-Print Programs: Large-print programs for every subscription concert are available in the House Management Office in Commonwealth Plaza. Please ask an usher for assistance.
Fire Notice: The exit indicated by a red light nearest your seat is the shortest route to the street. In the event of fire or other emergency, please do not run. Walk to that exit.
No Smoking: All public space in Ensemble Arts Philly venues is smoke-free.
Cameras and Recorders: The taking of photographs or the recording of Philadelphia Orchestra concerts is strictly prohibited, but photographs are allowed before and after concerts and during bows. By attending this Philadelphia Orchestra concert you consent to be photographed, filmed, and/or otherwise recorded for any purpose in connection with The Philadelphia Orchestra.
Electronic Devices: All watch alarms should be turned off while in the concert hall and all cellular phones should be switched to silent mode.
Board of Trustees
The Philadelphia Orchestra and Ensemble Arts
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Ralph W. Muller, Chair
Ryan Fleur, President and Chief Executive Officer
Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Music and Artistic Director, The Philadelphia Orchestra
James P. Brandau
Patrick J. Brennan, M.D.
Jeffrey Brown
Karen Dougherty Buchholz
Elaine Woo Camarda
Joseph Ciresi
Michael M. Cone
Joseph Conyers*
Robert R. Corrato, M.D.
Sarah Miller Coulson
Robert Curley
Robert J. Delany, Sr.
Mark S. Dichter
Jeff Dittus
Carl E. Dranoff
Joseph M. Field
Ryan Fleur*
Mark J. Foley
John Fry
Lauren Gilchrist
Donald A. Goldsmith
Amy Gutmann, Ph.D.
Julia Haller, M.D.
Robert C. Heim
Nina Henderson
Osagie O. Imasogie
Patricia Harron Imbesi
Philip P. Jaurigue
Kenyatta Johnson*
Bennett Keiser
Christopher M. Keith
David Kim*
Neal W. Krouse
Lauren Lambrugo*
Joan Lau
Brook J. Lenfest
Jeffrey A. Leonard
Bruce G. Leto
Tod J. MacKenzie
Joseph M. Manko, Sr.
John H. McFadden
Jami Wintz McKeon
Stan Middleman
Dara Morales*
Ralph W. Muller
Yannick Nezet-Seguin*
Amy Oshiro-Morales*
Benjamin Persofsky
Richelle Rabenou*
Jon Michael Richter
Caroline B. Rogers
Charles E. Ryan
Kerri Ryan*
Adele K. Schaeffer
Peter L. Shaw
Adrienne Simpson
Matthew A. Taylor
Jennifer F. Terry
Tiffany Thurman*
Michael R. Vennera
Rev. Dr. Alyn Waller
Robert Wilson
Richard B. Worley
Joseph Zebrowitz, M.D.
Bin Zhang
* Ex officio
THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA AND ENSEMBLE ARTS
PRESIDENT’S LEADERSHIP COUNCIL
Robert Bogle
Sheldon M. Bonovitz
Willo Carey
Kathleen P. Chimicles
Gerard P. Cuddy
Peter Dachowski
Kenneth E. Davis
Rodney D. Day III
Peter J. Dean, Co-Chair
Thomas A. Decker
James F. Dougherty, V.M.D., Co-Chair
Stacy M. Dutton
Carole Haas Gravagno
William P. Hankowsky
H. Edward Hanway
Martin A. Heckscher, Esq.
David F. Hoffman
Joseph H. Jacovini
Lisa D. Kabnick
Ronald L. Kaiserman, Esq.
Susan Y. Kim
Frederick W. Kyle
Larry Magid
Elizabeth M. Mahoney
David G. Marshall
Sandra G. Marshall
Joseph J. McLaughlin, Jr.
Edward A. Montgomery, Jr.
Hilarie L. Morgan
Henry N. Nassau
Charles P. Pizzi
Robert Pollack
Robert L. Pratter
Hon. Marjorie O. Rendell
Lyn M. Ross
David B. Rubenstein
John F. Salveson
Molly D. Shepard, Co-Chair
Richard L. Smoot
Leonard A. Sylk
Sheldon L. Thompson
Brian P. Tierney
Charles K. Valutas
Ramona Vosbikian
James W. Zug
As of December 2025
THEN: The Philadelphia Orchestra with Stokowski, 1936

MAKE A GIFT MAKE HISTORY
CELEBRATE 125 YEARS OF MUSIC

NOW: The Philadelphia Orchestra with Nézet-Séguin, 2024
Since 1900, The Philadelphia Orchestra has relied on support from patrons like you to create a legacy of exceptional music. The generosity of our donors makes it possible to present hundreds of performances each season, including free community and education events for audiences of all ages. Make a gift and be a part of the next 125 years of music history.

In appreciation, donors receive a variety of benefits, including:
• Access to Open Rehearsals and other members-only events
• Advance purchase opportunities for the best seats in the house
• Discounts on concessions, Curtain Call Cafe and Lounge, and Leo Restaurant and Bar
• And more exclusive opportunities that bring you closer to the art you love
Explore our membership levels, benefits, and flexible payment options at philorch.org/membership.

Annual Fund
Philanthropic support inspires and sustains Your Philadelphia Orchestra’s work on stage, in our local communities, and around the world. We are proud to recognize our generous Annual Fund donors by name on this and subsequent pages. We extend our deepest gratitude to every donor, including those listed anonymously and at levels not included in this program.
For more information about donating to the Annual Fund at any level, please contact us at 215.893.3151 or development@ philorch.org, or visit philorch.org/donate.
Contributions listed were received between March 1, 2024, and December 17, 2025. Please contact us if your name has been omitted in error or if you would like to update your recognition name.
Artistic Council
$500,000 and above
Estate of M.J. Fischer
Estate of Robert T. Foley
Otto Haas Charitable Trust
Innisfree Foundation
James and Agnes Kim Foundation
Neal Krouse and Karl Fong
Leslie A. Miller and Richard B. Worley
Elizabeth Wiegers
Constance and Sankey Williams
Anonymous (3)
Artistic Council
$125,000 to $499,999
Lois and Julian Brodsky
Elaine W. Camarda and A. Morris Williams, Jr.
The CHG Charitable Trust
Dr. Alan R. Cohen and Michele Langer
Constance and Michael Cone
Sarah Miller Coulson
Tobey and Mark Dichter
Dr. James F. Dougherty
Susan and Jonas Ellenberg
Robert Heim and Eileen Kennedy
Osagie and Losenge Imasogie
Gretchen and M. Roy Jackson
Bennett Keiser and Joy Wilf Keiser
Dr. Richard M. Klein
Estate of Winifred Mayes
John H. McFadden and Lisa D. Kabnick
Ralph and Beth Johnston Muller
Estate of Dr. Betty T. Richards
Caroline B. Rogers
Peter and Mari Shaw
Dr. Cecilia Segawa Seigle Tannenbaum*
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Townsend
Waterman Trust
Estates of Dr. and Mrs. Robert Williams
Presenters Circle
$75,000 to $124,999
Estate of Sherrin H. Baky-Nessler
Estate of Dr. Barbara Comins
Jerome L. and Thao Dodson
Joseph and Marie Field
Mrs. Penelope P. Harris
Sandy and David G. Marshall
Joe Neubauer and Jeanette Lerman-Neubauer
Carol Tyler
Presenters Circle
$50,000 to $74,999
Dean S. Adler and Susanna Lachs Adler
Dr. and Mrs. Robert R. Corrato
Christos Coutifaris and Deborah Driscoll
Estate of Thomas and Floramae Force
Linda and David Glickstein
Juliet J. Goodfriend and Marc R. Moreau
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Keith
Marguerite and Gerry* Lenfest
Joseph M. Manko, i n loving memory of Lynn Manko
Estate of Ron North
Mr. Charles Ryan
Salkind Family Foundation
Diane Schneider
Mr. Oscar Tang and Dr. Agnes Hsu-Tang
Anonymous
Presenters Circle
$25,000 to $49,999
Vijay and Susan Aggarwal
Dr. James R. Anderson
Donald E. Barb, Esq., and the Rev. Bruce H. Davidson
Peter A. Benoliel* and Willo Carey
James and Micaela Brandau
Judith Broudy
Karen Dougherty Buchholz
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher B. Chandor
Mr. and Mrs. John Fry
Irina and Patrick Gage
Barbara and Jerome Glickman
Amy Gutmann and Michael O’Doyle
Julia A. Haller, M.D.
Nancy S. Halpern
Ed and Ellen Hanway
Ann S. and Steven B. Hutton
Patricia and John Imbesi
Rachelle and Ronald Kaiserman
Gay and Donald Kimelman
In honor of Katherine O. Leone
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Leto
Chris and Jeffrey Libson
Mrs. Catharine Maxey
Susan and Frank Mechura
Dr. and Mrs. John L. Neigh
Estates of Adolf and Geraldine Paier
Ameline Pappas*
Claudio Pasquinelli and Kyong-Mi Chang
Robert and Lynne Pollack
Robert L. Pratter
Red Moose Charitable Trust
Jon and Karen Richter
Beth L. Rogers
Lyn Ross
Vincent N. and Lila Russo
Allan Schimmel and Reid Reames*
Kate Groark Shields
Constance Smukler, Trustee, Smukler-Lasch Family Trust
Mr. Wayne Titerence and Ms. Vicki Mechner
Michael and Renee Vennera
Thomas and Patricia Vernon
Jennifer and Ralph Watts
Zisman Family Foundation
Anonymous
Presenters Circle
$15,000 to $24,999
M. Therese and Barry Bentley
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bickford
Estate of Mark J. Bojanowski
Carol W. Buettger
Drew Camarda
Alice Chen-Plotkin and Joshua Plotkin
Joslyn G. Ewart
Mr. and Mrs. Moses Feldman
Claudia and Richard Fischer
Ryan Fleur and Laura Banchero
Drs. Peter and Pamela Freyd
Ken and Sue Greathouse
Peter Grove and Nancy Greene
Joseph and Bette Hirsch
Terry and Ann Marie Horner
Toba and Lawrence Kerson
Mr. Kevin King and Mrs. Susan West King
Drs. Joan and Brook Lau
Lurie Family Foundation
Tom and Linda McCarthy
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce McKittrick
Miriam Ort and Lawrence Hirsch
Jane G. Pepper
The Estate of Miss E. Irene Reymann
Dianne and Jeffrey Rotwitt
Joan N. Stern
Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Lee Thompson
Dr. Bettyruth Walter
Steve and Mary Beth Young
Anonymous (7)
Presenters Circle
$10,000 to $14,999
John R. Alchin and Hal Marryatt
Mr. and Mrs. James Allison
Charles Arnao and Rosemary Watt
Barbara B. and Theodore R. Aronson
Jim and Janet Averill
Drs. Robert and Jean Belasco
Jill and Sheldon Bonovitz
Dr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Brennan
Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Broder
Judy and Mark Brodsky
James and Doris Brogan
Dr. Eugenio* and Giuliana Calabi
Dr. Rosemary Cook
John Cornell
Joyce Creamer
Richard and Patricia Cummines
Mr.* and Mrs. Edward C. Dearden
Edith R. Dixon
Alex J. Ettl Foundation
Eph and Pat Fithian
Mr. and Mrs. David M. Friedman
Donald Goldsmith
In memory of Rena and Morton C. Grad and John de Lancie
Vivian and Mark Greenberg
Gni Grossman and Christopher Murray
Leon and Miriam Hamui
Fred and Michelle Harde
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Harris
Hannah L. Henderson
Richard H. Holzer Memorial Foundation
Ms. Lisa R. Jacobs
Andrew Jacobson and Carol Overvold
Erika James
Lyn Kratz and Pamela French
Dr. Peter Langmuir and Dr. Colette Desrochers
Nestor Llorente and Don Jones
Sally and Tod MacKenzie
Nicholas Maiale*
Dr. Ann Elizabeth Mayer
Paul H. McKelvie
Estate of Mary and David Meese
Dr. Jill Mortensen
Yannick Nézet-Séguin and Pierre Tourville
Mrs. Sarah Peterson
Mrs. Vivian W. Piasecki*
Dr. and Mrs. Joel and Bobbie Porter
Susan and David Rattner
Marney Roia
Dr. Marta Rozans and Prof. Ilan Peleg
Xiaomei Shao
Lee F. Shlifer
Edward and Shelley Sigman
Kathleen and Roger Smith
Richard and Amanda Smoot
Samuel and Rosanne Spear
Mary Ann Stehr
Mr. and Mrs. William Stone
Walter and Alice Strine, Esqs.
Charles and Suzanne Valutas
The Vert Charitable Trust
Penelope and Thomas Watkins
Mary E. Webb
Carol A. Westfall
Martin Zeldin and Bill Brinkman
James W. and Debora C. Zug
Anonymous (5)
Ambassadors Circle
$5,000 to $9,999
Erika Aaron and Marc Fliegelman
Mrs. Neysa Adams
Peter J. Allen
Larry and Dr. Marcia Arem
Drs. Janine and Barry Arkles
Lynn Axelroth and Cricket Handsaker
Richard and Jane Baron
William And Sylvia Barone
Carol Beam
John D. Benson, Esq.
Isabelle Benton and Aileen White
Ms. Donna Brennan and Dr. James Bergey
Andrea Biondo and Kenneth Hartzell
Allen D. Black and R. Randolph Apgar
Jeff Benoliel and Amy Branch
Ms. Linda Bross
Alfred Anthony Brown and Hai-Ye Ni
Dr. and Mrs. I. Stephen Brown
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Buck III
Estate of James Buttenwieser
Malcolm and Carla Cain
Jennifer and David Cardy
Robert Carmichael
Kathleen and Nicholas Chimicles
Kristine Christensen
Celia Mendes Chumaceiro
Georgette P. Ciukurescu
Earl* and Margaret Clime
Mrs. Marlynne Clothier
Dr. Robert Cody
Stephen Cohen and John McNett
Ruth M. and Tristram* C. Colket, Jr.
Peggy Cooke
Jeffrey Cooper and Nancy Klaus
Kenneth and Nancy Davis
Stephen and Rhoda Davis
Evelyn S.* and Rodney D. Day III
Mr.* and Mrs. Willem K. Dikland
Dr. and Ms. James Doghramji
Cynthia Tehan and Ed Dougherty
Ellason Downs
Perpetual Charitable Trust
MaryAnn Edwards
Ms. Carol S. Eicher
Dr. Bruce Eisenstein, in memory of Dr. Toby Eisenstein
Audrey Escoll
Andrew E. Faust and Ann Russavage-Faust
Mary Felley
Allen R. and Judy Brick Freedman
John R. and Karen S. Fulton III
John and Beth Gamel
The Gant Family Foundation
Patsy and Ed Garno
Jim and Kay Gately
Ms. Phyllis S. Gitlin
Howard and Norah Goldfine
$5,000 to $9,999 cont.
Mary L. Goldman
David and Bonnie Goldmann
Charles and Alison Graham
Lyn and Harry Groome
Diana and Robert Harding
Katherine Hatton and Richard Bilotti
Hope and Stephen Heaney
Martin and Cynthia Heckscher
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Henkels, in memory of Paul M. Henkels
Ms. Rhoda K. Herrold, in memory of Deenie and Yale Evelev
Maria Hoek-Smit
Eric and Lenora Hume
Stockton Illoway and Mac K. Griswold
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Jacovini
Mr. and Mrs. Scott M. Jenkins
Susan E. Kane
Arthur M. Kaplan and R. Duane Perry
Leroy E. Kean
Estate of Robert Michael Kelly
Dr. Stephanie and Mr. Andrew Kirk
Ms. Gabrielle Kissling
Dr. and Mrs. Anton J. Kleiner
Dr. Mel Kohn
William Lake Leonard
Jeff Lewis and Mary Ann Rossi
Mr. James P. MacElderry* and Ms. Marilyn S. Fishman
Drs. Leon and Elsa Malmud
Mary L.C. McAdoo
Susan and Graham McDonald
Mr. and Mrs. James M. McGrath
Robert and Claire McLear
Missy and Bob McQuiston
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Meacham
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Meyer
Madelyn Mignatti
Mr. Mladen Milic and Dr. Barbara Wolf
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Miller
Mr. and Mrs. H. Laddie Montague, Jr.
Virginia Montgomery
Mr. and Mrs. Rodman W. Moorhead III
Mr. and Mrs. David J. Morgan
Mrs. Robert Morris
Ms. Susan Mucciarone and Mr. David Moore
Dr. Robert and Carla Myerson
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin R. Neilson
Dick and Mimi Nenno
Arthur E. Newbold IV
Alexander Nikas and Dr. Marianne Ruhl Nikas
Marie O’Donnell and Bruce Satalof
Norman Olson
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Palmer
Lili Perski
Marjorie M. and Irwin Nat Pincus Fund
Susan C. Porcino and Peter R. Porcino
Dr. Carol A. Raviola
Nancy J. Remy
Maria and Eric Rieders
Mr.* and Mrs. Richard Rizzo
Sevgi B. Rodan, Ph.D.
Mrs. Debbie Rodgers
Mrs. Willa Rosenbloom
Dr. Louis and Mrs. Val Rossman
Linda S. Rothermel
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schelke
Mrs. Carole L. Schultz
Valerie and Will Schwartz
Fredda L. Segal
Dr. and Mrs. Hass Shafia
Christine J. Shamborsky
Elizabeth Stokes and Lynne Brown
Ms. Nancy L. Tindall
Rebecca Wells and John Tobias
Nancy and Bruce Urbschat
Mr. and Mrs. Archbold D. van Beuren
Richard and Carolyn Veith
Maria Parisi Vickers
Nina Robinson Vitow
Laurie Wagman
Dr. R.J. Wallner
Alan and Leni Windle
Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Yoh III
Stephen Zeller
Anonymous (11)
Ambassadors Circle
$3,500 to $4,999
Amaranth Foundation, Joan M. Moran, Trustee
Gary and Mary Ammon
Dr. Ronald and Mrs. Catherine Anderson
Mary Jo Ashenfelter and Thomas S. Heckman
Myrna and Howard* Asher
Theodore H. Ashford
Sarah Batchelor and Kirk Schneider
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Beier
Narinder and Tracy Bhalla
Jan R. Birsch
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Bleyer
Samuel A. Bobrow and Maxine Blum
The Bohan and Fox Family
Ira Brind and Stacey Spector
Nancy Carey and DeWitt Brown
The Clarke Family Fund
Barbara R. Cobb for the Hamilton Family Foundation
Ms. Eileen Courtney
Ana V. Diez Roux and Jose Tapia
Ray Dombroski and Colleen DeMorat
Henry and Katherine Donner
Mr. Jay M. Donner
Dr. Andrew F. Drake
Stacy Maria Dutton and Charles McMahon
Barbara Eberlein and Jerry Wind
Dr. Pamela Edmonds and Mr. David Chianese
Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Ervin, Jr.
Helen and Phillip Escaravage
Nina Maria Fite
Debbie and Bob Fleischman
Ms. Jane Foster and Mr. Arthur Willson
Mr. and Mrs. William W. Fox, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Fridkis
Dr. Deborah Gaspar and Mr. Mark Gaspar
Robert Gelsher
Anna Marie and Michael Gewirtz
Eduardo Glandt and George Ritchie
Susan Kohn Gleeksman
Joseph and Jane Goldblum
Robert Graff
Rekha and Jon Hagen
Mrs. Jane M. Hastings
Mr. Charles Head, Jr., and Mr. John Faggotti
Archibald C. Hewes
Kathy Hirsh-Pasek and Jeffrey Pasek
Lois Horgan
Dr. and Mrs. Leonid Hrebien
Ralph Johanson
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Jones
Clare Kahn
Donald and Dorothy Kardon
Dr. Maureen Kelly
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Kline
Kenneth Klothen and Eve Biskind Klothen
Timothy E. Koehler
Mrs. Beth Ann Wahl Kolpen and Mr. Jack Kolpen
Shira Kramer and Leon Josowitz
Sanford and Carol Levy
Mrs. H. Gates Lloyd
William A. Loeb
Robert Logemann
Drs. W.B. and Sarah S. Long
Dr. and Mrs. Michael B. Love
Robert and Lynn V.D. Luft
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lukens
Joseph Manko, Jr., and Jennifer Porges
Dr. Bernard A. Mason and Jane R. Mason
Denise McCleary and Paul von Behren
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. McLaughlin, Jr.
Russell L. McTague
Michael and Anna Minkovich
Margarita Montanaro
Mr. Edward A. Montgomery, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. A.H. Nishikawa
Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Ockman
Ellen J. Odoner and Edward W. Kerson
Mr. Frederick Oster and Ms. Catherine Jacobs
Linda and David Paskin
Barbara L. Phillips
Mrs. Vivian W. Piasecki*
Dr. Leo Podolsky and Ms. Debra Ross
Anonymous in memory of Jan Popper
Allan Rayfield
David Rhody
David Richman and Janet Perry
Dr. Elizabeth and Mr. Hershel Richman
Gretchen and Jay Riley
Pamela and Gresham Riley
Mr. and Mrs. Mark E. Rubenstein
John Salveson
Marilyn C. Sanborne and Richard J. Labowskie
William and Klare Scarborough
David Seidman
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Seminack
Dr. M. Lana Sheer, in memory of Dr. J. Peter Jesson
Janet A. Simon and Georg U. Simon
Joseph Sinkus and Christopher Labonte
Drs. Kobie A. Smith and Vincent H. Harris
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Stevens
Stacy Stone and Stephen McMillan
John and Sandra Stouffer
Mr. Brian A. Stumm
Dr. Norman L. Sykes and Mrs. Gabriella Sykes
Jack and Ramona Vosbikian
Peggy Wachs
Daniel V. Walls
Julie D. Williams
Ursule Phaeton Yates
Walter Zanchuk
James W. and Debora C. Zug
John Zurlo and Margaret Kreher
Anonymous (5)
Friends Circle
$2,500 to $3,499
Dr. Janice Asher
Ellen W. Baxter and Robert W. Kavash
Joel D. Beaver
Cathy and Saul Behar
Drs. Bruce and Carole Bogdanoff
Richard A. Brand
Ms. Marilyn A. Brown
Mrs. Linda Burke
Estate of Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Butler
Mark and Cindy Butler
Selden Cooper and Paige Edwards
Alice B. Cullen
Karen and John Cunningham
Dr. H.T. Dombrowski
Dr. and Mrs. William L. Elkins
Robert N. and Doris D. Fanelli
Paul and Judith Farber
Ellen W. Freeman
Charles and Judith Freyer
Michael Gealt and Maryjanet McNamara
Marybeth Henry
Mark and Sally Hurwitz
Eva R. Jackson
Richard and Gail Johnson
Lori Julian
Denise and Robert Keyser
David and Jane Kim
Mrs. Sylvia Kreithen
Dr. Leona Laskin
Sylvia and Norman Lieberman
Jay Lippincott
Lawrence and Nancy Ludgus
Elizabeth M. Mahoney
Dwight and Christina McCawley
Elizabeth McLean
Dr. Margaret Motl
Charles and Etta Nissman
Dr. and Mrs. R. Barrett Noone
Kay and Jerry* O’Grady
Mr. and Mrs. Lanny R. Patten
Jonathan Pearce
Judy and Jim Pohlman
Ms. Nancy Pontone
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rauch, Jr.
John and Claire Rodgers
David and Rowena Rosenbaum
Ms. Ann Rosewater and Mr. Robert Kronley
Joyce Seewald Sando
Catherine and Stephan Schifter
Henry and Yumi* Scott
Howard J. Sedran and Martha Levine
Irene Shabel
Paul and Susan Shaman
Ms. Katharine Sokoloff and William B. McLaughlin III
Dr. Christina A. Stasiuk and Mr. George M. Farion
Dr. Mary K. Stom and Ms. Dru E. Hammell
Dr. Alan E. Tasoff and Jacalyn Shelley-Tasoff
Mr. and Mrs. Luciano Virgili
Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas W. Wanck
Mr. and Mrs.* David R. Wilmerding, Jr.
Barbara Duby Wilson
Earl and Jackie Wolf
Anne Jeffrey Wright
Sherley Young
Ms. Margaret G. Zehner
Benjamin E. Zuckerman and Marian Robinson
Anonymous (2)
We are proud to recognize the following musicians, retired musicians, and staff who have generously contributed to the Annual Fund.
Davyd Booth and Carlos Perez*
Joseph H. Conyers
Helen and Phillip Escaravage
Ryan Fleur and Laura Banchero
Mr. and Ms. Randy Gardner
Andrea Gartner and Lee Clements
Anna Marie and Michael Gewirtz
Barbara S. Govatos
Ms. Jennifer Pratt Johnson and Dr. Fred Johnson
Ruth Kasow
Thomas Kerrigan
David and Jane Kim
Marjorie and Nolan* Miller
Kathleen Moran and Nicholas Smith
Yannick Nézet-Séguin and Pierre Tourville
Hai-Ye Ni and Alfred Anthony Brown
Samantha Noll
April and Brendan O’Brien
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Orlando
Ms. Catherine A. Pappas
Doris Parent
William B. and Anna Marie Ahn
Petersen
Harold Hall Robinson
Joseph Sinkus and Christopher Labonte
Drs. Kobie A. Smith and Vincent H. Harris
Tubas for Good, Inc.,
Carol Jantsch, President and Founder
Anonymous
*Deceased
Institutional Support
Generous support from corporations, foundations, and government agencies sustains
The Philadelphia Orchestra with vital funding for performances, education programs, and a variety of innovative projects. We are proud to acknowledge our current institutional donors.
For more information about institutional support for The Philadelphia Orchestra, please contact Ruth Auslander, managing director of institutional giving at 215.790.5829 or rauslander@ ensembleartsphilly.org.
Contributions listed were received between June 1, 2024, and November 30, 2025. Please contact us if your name has been omitted in error or if you would like to update your recognition name.
$500,000 and above
City of Philadelphia
Ford Foundation
The Hess Foundation
The Knight Foundation
William Penn Foundation
Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development
The Presser Foundation
$100,000 to $499,999
Bank of China
Bells Grocery Stores
Casamigos Tequila
CHG Charitable Trust
China National Tourist Office, New York
Jessie Ball duPont Fund
The Hearst Foundation
The History Channel
Independence Blue Cross
Merck & Co. Incorporated
MKM Foundation
PECO
The Pew Center for Arts and Heritage
PNC Arts Alive
TD Bank
U.S. Department of State
Wyncote Foundation
$50,000 to $99,999
Paul M. Angell Family Foundation
Chubb
KeyBank
Kind Insurance
KPK Development Co. LP
US-China Cultural Institute
Vault Communications
TN Ward Company Builders
Anonymous
$25,000 to $49,999
Abington Neurological Associates
Action Karate
Brotherston Homecare, Inc.
The Chamber of Commerce for Greater Philadelphia
China Center for International Communication Development
John Ciccone Playhouse
Comcast NBCUniversal
Drexel University
Eagles Autism Foundation
Faegre Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP
Amy P. Goldman Foundation
Gray Charitable Trust
Hamilton Family Charitable Trust
The Christian Humann Foundation
Katznelson Associates LP
Ollin, LLC
PHLCVB
Raynier Institute & Foundation
Rhubarb Hospitality Collection
Sun Cruiser
$15,000 to $24,999
Julius and Ray Charlestein Foundation in memory of Malvina and Morton Charlestein
The Connelly Foundation
Cozen O’Connor
Duane Morris LLP
Essential Utilities
The Anne M. and Philip H. Glatfelter III
Family Foundation
The Hassel Foundation
Independence Foundation
The Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation
Law Office of Ana Ferriera
Lyft
JPMorgan Chase & Co.
Philadelphia International Airport
Mrs. Ressler’s Food Products
SpotHero
Tito’s Handmade Vodka
Universal Health Services, Inc.
$10,000 to $14,999
Always Best Care Senior Services
Ardmore Toyota
Elliot’s Vending Company
Elliott-Lewis Corporation
HUB International
JKG Florida Business Corp.
Laudenbach Periodontics and Dental Implants
The Lincoln Financial Group Foundation
The McLean Contributionship
One Source Reps
Origlio Beverage
Power Marketing Group
Qlik
The H. Glenn Sample, Jr., M.D., Memorial Fund through the PNC Charitable Trusts Grant Review Committee
MJ Settelen Construction, LLC
Subbio Center for Plastic Surgery
Team Clean
Truist
White and Williams
$5,000 to $9,999
Corinne R. and Henry Bower
Memorial Trust
The Capital Grille
Dorothy V. Cassard Fund of the Philadelphia Foundation
The Aaron Copland Fund for Music
Dolfinger-McMahon Foundation
Four Seasons Hotel Philadelphia at Comcast Center
The Gitlin Family Foundation
Grant Thornton, LLP
Christian R. and Mary F. Lindback Foundation
M&T Charitable Foundation
M3 Printing
The McCausland Foundation
Leo Niessen, Jr., Charitable Trust
Ninja Transfers, LLC
Rush Order Tees
Rutgers University—Camden
Sarah West Real Estate PC
WSFS Bank
Wyatt Elevator Company
The Volunteer Committees for The Philadelphia Orchestra
The Volunteer Committees for The Philadelphia Orchestra are dedicated to supporting the Orchestra through audience development, educational programs, fundraising, community relations, and special events. The Committees were first formed in 1904 and have the distinction of being the oldest auxiliary volunteer organization associated with an orchestra in the United States. We are profoundly grateful for the Volunteers’ leadership and support throughout the years.
For more information about the Volunteer Committees for The Philadelphia Orchestra, please contact Samantha Noll, assistant director of development events and volunteer relations, at 215.893.1956 or snoll@philorch.org.
List complete as of December 17, 2025
Executive Committee Officers
Richelle Rabenou, President
Sara Cerato, Immediate Past President
Deborah Ledley, Vice President
Mrs. Diane Larzelere, Treasurer
Sheila Cox, Secretary
Governing Board Chairs
Central: Jean Park
Main Line: Jill Acker
New Jersey: Mrs. Diane Larzelere
Rittenhouse Square: Marlena Kleit and Fran Schwartz
Starlight Circle: Mrs. Anna Minkovich
Standing Committee Chairs
Annual Giving: Nancy Galloway
Education: Deborah Ledley*
Marketing: Kelsey Larzelere
Special Functions: Jennifer Porges
Volunteer Archives: Elizabeth A. Crowell
Volunteer Committee Members
Dennis Adams
Dr. Susan C. Aldridge
Pam Alles
Barbara A. Alleva
Rosana Anchondo-Issak
Mrs. Betsy Anderson
Dr. Marilyn H. Appel
Mrs. Daniel G. Bancroft
Mrs. Mercer B. Barrows
Mrs. Thomas E. Beach
Mrs. H. Binney Beale
Ms. Sandra Blumberg Beatty
Mrs. Nancy Belber
Isabelle Benton
Susan Segal Berrigan
Charlotte H. Biddle
Mrs. Thomas H. Bliss
Ann Young Bloom
Mrs. Peter Bodenheimer
Mrs. Eugene T. Borish, Jr.
Lois Boyce
Judith Bradley
Sibby Brasler
Anna Breyman
Leo Breyman
Mrs. Leanore Brookman
Judith Broudy
Ms. Carol Melman Brown
Mrs. Roland K. Bullard II
Mrs. Howard Butcher IV
Mrs. John P. Butler III
Mrs. Donald F. Cafiero
Mrs. Alfred M. Campbell III
Beverly Caplan-Freeman
Lorin Carlson-Healy
Nicole A. Cashman
Mrs. Thomas A.V. Cassel
Mrs. Kristine Christensen
DeAnn P. Clancy
Rebecca Clement
Marsha Cohen
Frances Connolly
Peggy Cooke
Sarah Miller Coulson
Mrs. James E. Crutchfield
Alice B. Cullen
Karen Cunningham
Chris D’Ascenzo
Mrs. J. David Davis
James F. Davis*
Mrs. Gerard de Lisser
Colleen DeMorat
Mimi Dimeling
Denise Dolan
Katherine Donner
Mrs. Virginia Dowd
Mrs. John G. Drosdick
Duc Duclos
Lynn Duclos
Roberta Epstein*
Mrs. William H. Eyre, Jr.
Mrs. Charles B. Fancher
Mrs. C. Richard Farmer
Kathleen Fitzgerald
Mrs. Timothy E. Foster
Mrs. Richard Freed
Katherine Garber
Ms. Janine Gardner
Judi Garst
Nancy J. Gellman
Robert Gelsher
Mrs. Kimberly Gerson
Mrs. Micki Ginsberg
Mrs. Jean Givey
Judy Glick
Paula Goldstein
Dr. Janice Taylor Gordon
Dr. Thelma B. Gosfield
Mrs. Richard B. Gould
Carole H. Gravagno
Grete Greenacre
Ms. Nancy V. Gulick
Kate Hall
Noel Butcher Hanley
Fred Harde
Michelle Harde*
Mrs. John S.C. Harvey III
Mrs. Jane M. Hastings
Mrs. Patricia Heidler
Marybeth Henry
Mrs. Frances Herr
Eileen Higgins
Mrs. Robert B. Hobbs, Jr.
Joan R. Holmes
Mrs. Stephen R. Holstad
Eric Hume
Lenora Hume
Ms. Adrienne Jacoby
Yardly R. Jenkins
Karen Jones
Mrs. Mary Anne Dutt Justice
Mrs. Wilma C. Katz
Ms. Phyllis Kauffman
Marie Kenkelen
Kris Kent
Gina Kernicky
John Kernicky
Liz Knudsen*
Ms. Ellen G. Kopeland
Mrs. Bernice J. Koplin
Laura Bender Koropey
Mrs. Anthony Lame
Mrs. MaryAnn Landmesser
Molly Lawrence
Matthew Ledley*
Sheila Leith
Mrs. Dana Thompson Lerch
Mrs. Roy Lerman
Anita Leto
Mrs. Bruce Leto
Mrs. Stephen Levin
Sofia Leybin
Liddy Lindsay
Ric Lipman
Mrs. Rosemary Livingston
Miss Phoebe Loh
Carol Love, M.D.
Mrs. Robert S. Lovett II
Robin Lowey
Rochelle Magarick
Elizabeth Mahoney
Joseph Manko, Sr.
Sandy Marshall
Linda Massey
Mary MacGregor Mather
Mrs. James McAdam
Susan McChesney
Mrs. Stella McSparran
Ms. Peg Mertz
Mrs. Barbara G. Miller
Mrs. Keiko Miller
Leslie A. Miller
Mrs. Philippus Miller, Jr.
Michael Minkovich
Mrs. Robert F. Morris, Jr.
Ingrid Morsman
Ms. Cathy Moss*
Joanne Muhr
Linda Mui
Mrs. J. Brien Murphy
Mrs. Albert B. Murphy III
Chuck Nagele
Patricia Nagele
Lana Nania
Carol Neiman*
Mrs. John J. Nesbitt III
Mrs. Patricia Ann Nogar
Mrs. R. Barrett Noone
Terry Norton-Wright
Mrs. Wilber W. Oaks, Jr.
Kay O’Grady
Diane Oliva
Mrs. Mimi O’Malley
Mrs. Eleanor Oxman*
Alice Pakman*
Mrs. Regina H. Pakradooni
Mrs. Sandra Pfaff
Mrs. John W. Piasecki
Linda Pizzi*
Elizabeth Pontillo
Mrs. Malcolm D. Pryor
Michelle Fella Przybylowski*
Mr. Kameron Rabenou
Mrs. Ellen Ragone
Jill Raich*
Mrs. Alfred Rauch, Jr.
Kate Brady Rauscher
Josephine Rees
Mrs. A. Gerald Renthal
Caroline B. Rogers
Mrs. Randy S. Ronning
Dr. Lucy B. Rorke-Adams
Miriam Rosenwasser
Mrs. Dianne Rotwitt
Mrs. John E. Royer, Jr.
Lynn Salvo
Joyce Seewald Sando
Mrs. Harold F. Scattergood, Jr.
Jason Schupback
Mrs. Michael P. Schwartz
Faye Senneca
Linda A. Serotta
Marla Share
Carol C. Sherman
Ms. Irina Sipe
Theresa Slater
Mrs. Carol Smith
Cyndee Solomon
Ann Sorgenti
Carol Spinelli
Joyce Stein
Robin Bender Stevens
Lois Stick*
Danielle Stoler
Mrs. Kathleen Stone
Stacy Stone
Dr. Judith Sills Swartz
Roberta R. Tanenbaum
Ms. Faith Tarangelo
Ms. Mary Tattersfield
Barbara Taylor
Ling Tran
Kathryn E. Tusler*
Mrs. Hope Ulrich
Mrs. Annegret Voparil
Mrs. Ramona Vosbikian
Mrs. Jeffrey Warzel
Mrs. Nancy Weiss
Janine Weller
Mrs. Henry Wendt
Dr. Erlis Wickersham
Mrs. Brooke N. Williams
Julie D. Williams
Mr. Alan Windle
Ms. Marian Wissman
Lisa Yakulis
Selina Yang
Bonnie Young
Mrs. Gilbert G. Young
Anonymous (5)
*Denotes current members of the Philadelphia Orchestra Docent Program
The Volunteer Committees for The Philadelphia Orchestra gratefully acknowledge the following benefactors for their generous support of the Main Line Committee’s 2025 Notable Kitchen Tour:
Bluebell Fine Cabinetry & Design
Devon Tile & Design Studio
Ferguson Home
High Swartz Attorneys at Law
Kountry Kraft
Main Line Kitchen Design
Period Architecture
Pinemar
The Hope and Tim Ulrich Fund
Lisa Yakulis Properties
Endowment
We proudly recognize our generous donors to The Philadelphia Orchestra’s endowment. Their leadership gifts support the Orchestra and its programs in perpetuity, helping to ensure the legacy of the ensemble for the next generation.
To learn how you and your family can be permanently associated with The Philadelphia Orchestra through an endowment gift, please contact Helen Escaravage, managing director of philanthropic engagement, at 215.893.1819 or hesca@philorch.org.
List complete as of December 17, 2025
Transformational Gifts
The Annenberg Foundation
Silicon Valley Community Foundation
$10,000,000
Leslie A. Miller and Richard B. Worley
The Neubauer Family Foundation
$1,000,000 to $9,999,999
The Acadia Fund
Peter A. Benoliel* and Willo Carey
Mr.* and Mrs.* J. Mahlon Buck, Jr.
Estate of Anne M. Buxton
Elaine Woo Camarda and A. Morris Williams, Jr.
Sarah and Frank* Coulson
Mark S. and Tobey Dichter
Dr. James F. Dougherty
Estate of Dwight V. Dowley
Samuel S. Fels Fund
Joseph and Marie Field
Linda and David Glickstein
Carole and Emilio* Gravagno
Joanne T. Greenspun*
Otto Haas Charitable Trust
Phoebe W. Haas Charitable Trust
“A” as recommended by Carole Haas Gravagno
Phoebe W. Haas Charitable Trust “B”
Robert Heim and Eileen Kennedy
Hannah L. and J. Welles* Henderson
Mr. Paul M.* and Mrs. Barbara B.* Henkels
Hess Foundation
Osagie and Losenge Imasogie
The Kaiserman Family
The James and Agnes Kim Foundation
Dr. Richard M. Klein
Drs. Bong and Mi-Wha* Lee
The Lenfest Foundation
Sandra and David Marshall
Robert E. Mortensen*
Ralph and Beth Johnston Muller
Caroline B. Rogers
Estate of Mary R. Romig-DeYoung
Constance and Joseph* Smukler
Estate of Edwin E. Tuttle
Raymond H.* and Joanne T. Welsh
Constance H. and Sankey Williams
Ruth W.* and A. Morris Williams, Jr.
Richard B. Worley Tribute Fund
Zisman Family Foundation
Anonymous (3)
$500,000 to $999,999
Lois G. and Julian A. Brodsky Foundation
J. Alexis* and Patricia M.* Burland
T. Norwood* and Doreene* Collins
Evelyn S.* and Rodney D. Day III
Mrs. F. Eugene Dixon, Jr.*
The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation
Gray Charitable Trust
The Hamilton Family Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Imbesi
Orton P.* and Noël* Jackson
Billy Joel Fund for Music Education
Peter M. Joseph* and Susan Rittenhouse Joseph*
Christian R. and Mary F. Lindback Foundation
Estate of Katharine S. Matthews
Vivian W. Piasecki*
Lyn and George* Ross
Gary and Ruthanne Schlarbaum
Scott and Cynthia Schumacker
Charlotte and Bob Watts
Anonymous (3)
$250,000 to $499,999
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Buck III
Peter Buttenwieser* and Terry Marek
Ruth M. and Tristram C.* Colket, Jr.
Michael and Constance Cone
Kenneth Conners*
L. Patrick Gage
Toni and Bob Garrison
Ed and Ellen Hanway
Mrs. Winnifred Howard*
Mr. and Mrs. Berton E. Korman
William A. Loeb*
Mr.* and Mrs. A. Bruce Mainwaring
Winifred Mayes*
Estate of Joseph F. McCrindle
Mrs. J. Maxwell Moran*
Mitchell and Hilarie Morgan
Wendy and Derek Pew Foundation
Robert and Lynne Pollack
Lorraine* and David* Popowich
Mrs. Eleanor K. Read*
Ronald* and Marcia Rubin
Peter and Mari Shaw
Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Slattery, Jr.
Ann and Harold* Sorgenti
Mr.* and Mrs. Bernard Spain
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson H. Taylor
The Wahl Endowment Fund for Music Education, established by Beth Ann Wahl Kolpen
Donors to the Allison Vulgamore Legacy Endowment Fund
Anonymous (4)
$100,000 to $249,999
Mr. and Mrs.* Leonard Abramson
Lorraine and Ben* Alexander
Mr. and Mrs. Sid R. Bass
Donna and Jon Boscia
Mr. Theodore A. Burtis*
Donald R. Caldwell
William B.* and Elizabeth* Chamberlin
Catherine R. and Anthony A. Clifton
Marie* and Peter* Dooner
Michael and Joan Emmi
Peter and Catherine Ernster
The Moses Feldman Family Foundation
Dr. Betty Gottlieb*
The Frederick and Colette B. Heldring Charitable Fund
Hirschberg-Goodfriend Fund established by Juliet J. Goodfriend
Lynn and Tony* Hitschler
David and Gale Hoffman
Estate of Howard Hornstein
The Hovey Foundation
Joseph and Ann Jacovini
Estate of Jane Kesson
Joseph K.* and Bernice J. Koplin
Neal W. Krouse
Elena and Frederick Kyle
Joanna M. Lewis
Lomax Family Foundation
Trust of Helen T. Madeira
Joseph and Lynn* Manko
Donors to the Lynn K. Manko Volunteer Endowment Fund
Gene and Linda Massey
The McCausland Foundation
Stephanie and Michael Naidoff
Jeffrey P. Orleans
Estates of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Ormandy
Francis H. Rasmus
Harold* and Frances* Rosenbluth
Dr. Harry Rosenthal
Frank Joseph Saul and Joseph Donald O’Keefe Endowment
Christa and Calvin Schmidt
Mr.* and Mrs.* John J.F. Sherrerd
Richard and Amanda Smoot
John and Sandra Stouffer
Sunoco
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Sylk
Robbi and Bruce Toll
Mrs. Joseph B. Townsend*
Mr. and Mrs. Archbold D. van Beuren
James W. and Debora C. Zug
Anonymous (4)
$50,000 to $99,999
Estate of Phyllis H. Bernstein
Mr. Frank Boni and Mrs. Julia Ann Gehman*
Richard P. Brown, Jr.*
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Buck
Mr. and Mrs. Roland K. Bullard II
John* and Helen* Christy
D. Walter Cohen* and Family
Stacy Maria Dutton
Deborah E. Glass
Mrs. William Gerstley II*
Martin A. and Cynthia P. Heckscher
Richard B. Kent, M.D.
Ken and Molly Lawrence
Doris and Joseph Levine
Mrs. Elsie H. Lisovitch*
The Malmud-Kravitz Foundation/ The Henrietta Varbalow Kravitz Fund
John H. McFadden and Lisa D. Kabnick
Frances C. Middleton*
The Helen Sewall Minton Memorial Fund
Janneke Seton Neilson*
Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah O’Grady
Louise and Alan* Reed
Mr.* and Mrs. Norman P. Robinson
Dr. and Mrs. Francis Schumann
Carol C. Sherman
Mr. Oliver I. Shoemaker*
The Sidewater Family Foundation
Mr.* and Mrs.* Lewis S. Somers III
Joseph and Joyce Stein— The Philibosian Foundation
Karen and Shel Thompson
James and Wendy Undercofler
Mrs. Francis L. Van Dusen*
Jack and Ramona Vosbikian
Anonymous (2)
$25,000 to $49,999
The Reba Bacharach Trust
Helen and Jack* Bershad
Stephen Breman
David E. Brinson*
Estate of Harold W. Brown
In memory of Richard P. Brown
Kathleen “Kit” Cafaro
Mr. Joseph L. Castle*
Cordelia E. Clement
Don* and Viki Denny
Charley* and Rogie Dickey
In memory of David P. Eastburn
Mr. David B. Ford
Joanne B. and Arthur Frank
Charles* and Beatriz Furr
The Eugene Garfield Foundation
Peter G. Gould and Robin M. Potter
Mr. and Mrs.* J. Barton Harrison
Joseph Kluger and Susan Lewis
In memory of John B. Leake
William Lake Leonard
Mrs. Anna Hayward Lisle*
Mr. and Mrs. David S. Loeb, Jr.
Dr.* and Mrs.* Francis R. Manlove
Charles and Etta Nissman
R. Steward Rauch*
Mr.* and Mrs. Richard Ravenscroft
Lois and Gerald Renthal
Dr. and Mrs. Yale Richmond
Robert and Caro Rock
The Rubenstein Foundation
Mr.* and Mrs. Samuel J. Savitz
Mr. Nathan Snader*
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Stevens
Harue and Gaisi Takeuti Memorial Fund
Bradford Wm. Voigt
Allison Vulgamore
Mary E. Webb
Elizabeth C. Wiegers
Richard C. Woodhams and Kiyoko Takeuti
Anonymous (5)
*Deceased
Academy of Music Restoration & Preservation Fund
We gratefully acknowledge the following individuals, foundations, and corporations for their generous support of the Academy of Music Restoration Fund. We extend our gratitude to all supporters of the Academy of Music, including those not listed below and event sponsors.
For more information about making a gift to the Academy Restoration Fund, please contact the Annual Fund office at 215.893.3151 or AcademyofMusic@philorch.org.
Gifts received between between September 1, 2024, and December 1, 2025.
Proscenium Circle
$25,000 and above
Joanna McNeil Lewis
Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development
Caroline B. Rogers
Mrs. Adele K. Schaeffer
Twenty Fifth Century Foundation
Anonymous
Directors Circle
$10,000 to $24,999
Mr. and Mrs. S. Matthews V. Hamilton, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Edward Hill III
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Leto
Ms. Jacqueline Badger Mars
Sandra and David Marshall
Presidents Circle
$5,000 to $9,999
Lois and Julian Brodsky
Gay and Donald Kimelman
Robert and Betsy Legnini
The Philadelphia Contributionship
Mr.* and Mrs. Bernard Spain
Penelope and Thomas Watkins
Benefactors and Patrons
$1,500 to $4,999
Barb and Clarke Blynn
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Buck III
Barbara R. Cobb
Ian and Marci Comisky
Penelope P. Harris
Robert and Margo Keith
The McCausland Foundation
Susan and Frank Mechura
John and Tammy Murabito
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin R. Neilson
Harold A.* and Ann R. Sorgenti
Mr. and Mrs. Archbold D. van Beuren
Janice and Jeff Yass
Friends
$1,000 to $1,499
Frank and Sandra Baldino
Sibby Brasler
Bob and Cheryl Carfagno
Dr. Joe and Yolanda Costabile
Ryan Fleur and Laura Banchero
Peter G. Gould and Robin M. Potter
Gail Howard
Ms. Rita W. Ingersoll
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Jones
Maxine de S. Lewis
William A. Loeb*
Ms. Stefanie W. Lucas and Mr. Christopher Thompson
Asuka and Karen Nakahara
Mrs. Bonnie Rocap, in memory of Richard S. Rocap
Catherine A. Worrall
*Deceased
The Frances Anne Wister Society
Individuals who have included The Philadelphia Orchestra in their estate plans are recognized through membership in the Frances Anne Wister Society. Miss Wister made a long-lasting mark on the Orchestra through decades of volunteerism and by leaving a major portion of her estate in support of its continued excellence. We gratefully acknowledge the generosity and foresight of those who have joined the Wister Society, and we welcome others to follow their example and make the Orchestra the beneficiary of a bequest or other form of planned gift.
If you would like more information about how to make a planned gift to the Orchestra, please contact Helen Escaravage, managing director of philanthropic engagement, at 215.893.1819 or hesca@philorch.org.
List complete as of December 17, 2025
Hon. Lynne Abraham
Joseph and Julia Anisko
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Balter
Dr. F. Joshua Barnett* and Dr. Heidi Kolberg
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford W. Baumbach, Jr.
Joel D. Beaver
Peter A. Benoliel* and Willo Carey
Ms. Jane Berryman
Jan R. Birsch
Jill and Sheldon Bonovitz
Dr. Elizabeth M. Bowden
Mrs. Frances Brenner
Beth* and Edward B. Brunswick
Dr. Robert A. Bubeck
Carol W. Buettger
Mrs. Laura T. Bullitt
Mrs. Carolyn S. Burger
Peter L. Buttenwieser* and Terry A. Marek
Ms. Kathleen Cafaro
Mr. Donald R. Caldwell
Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Campbell III
Beverly Caplan-Freeman
Lawrence Chanen
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony A. Clifton
Dr. Alan R. Cohen
Gianne Conard
Mrs. M. Todd Cooke
Joyce J. Creamer
Ann Csink
Malcolm and Seta Demurjian
Tobey and Mark Dichter
Lisa and Peter DiLullo
Norman E. Donoghue, Esq.
Mrs. Anne Dooley
Dr. James F. Dougherty
MaryAnn Edwards
Dr. David J. Eschelman
Dr. and Mrs. John Farmer
Gilbert Feinberg and Nadeen Van Tuyle
Anne S. Foote
George and Joan Forde
Mr. and Mrs. William W. Fox, Jr.
Joanne B. and Arthur Frank
Mr. Charles* and Mrs. Beatriz Furr
Rosalie K. Gerson
Dr. Alfred E. and Adele* Goldman
Betty and Gary Grunder
Nancy S. Halpern
Donna K. Hammaker, Esq., and Dr. Thomas M. Knadig
Nimmi Harisinghani
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hauptfuhrer
Martin A. Heckscher, Esq.
Robert Heim and Eileen Kennedy
Mrs. Rhoda Hershman
Dr. Archibald C. Hewes
Kris and Dick Hughey
Linda R. Jacobs
Jerome Kaplan, Esq.
Dr. Richard B. Kent
Robert E. Keppler
Carolyn Kidder
William E. Kindley
Dr. Richard M. Klein
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Kline
Dr. Charles L. Knecht III
Dr. Deborah Komins
Bernice J. Koplin and Joseph K. Koplin*
Ms. Deborah Krauss
Drs. Bong and Mi-Wha* Lee
Dr. Sherman Leis
William L. Leonard, Esq.
Doris and Joseph Levine
Denis Lohman and Ellen Feldman Lohman
Mrs. Robert S. Lovett II
Mr.* and Mrs. A. Bruce Mainwaring
Mr. Donald Malpass, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Meckelnburg
Carol R. Meister
Mrs. Philippus Miller, Jr.
Arlene Notoro Morgan
Stephanie and Michael Naidoff
Dr. and Mrs. Samuel K. Nash
Dr. and Mrs. John L. Neigh
Charles and Etta Nissman
Hon. Joseph D. O’Keefe
Mrs. Frank J. O’Malley
Mrs. Peter B. Pakradooni
John N. Park, Jr.
Claudio Pasquinelli and Kyong-Mi Chang
B.J. Phillips and Kath Howarth
Barbara L. Phillips
Robert and Lynne Pollack
Nancy D. Pontone
Roger T. Prichard and Astrid M. Caruso
Janet T. and Frank P.* Reiche
Mr. David Rhody
Dr. and Mrs. Yale Richmond
James. M. Roland
Mr. Edward Rorer
Dr. Harry Rosenthal
Lyn and George* Ross
Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Rothermel
Harold and Marianne* Sacks
Jeffrey and Kendell Saunders
Catherine and Steve Schifter
Allan Schimmel
Mr. and Mrs. Gary G. Schlarbaum
Dr. and Mrs. William Schwartz
Robert and Joan Shaffer
Mr. Richard J. Shaginaw
Edward and Shelley Sigman
Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Smoot
Yara Snylyk and Christina Snylyk
Dr. Norman Solomon and Dr. Merwin Geffen
Mr. and Mrs. Harold* A. Sorgenti
Marilyn and Dean R. Staats
Alyce and Howard F. Stick
John and Sandra Stouffer
Dr. Norman L. Sykes
Leonard and Barbara Sylk
Andrew J. Szabo
Peter H. and Elizabeth V. Talbot, in memory of Peter H. Talbot, Jr., and Frank A. Talbot
Dr. Cecilia Segawa Seigle Tannenbaum
Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon L. Thompson
John and Gina Torzolini
Mrs. Herman B. Wagner
Nicholas A. Walls
Ruth W.* and A. Morris Williams, Jr.
Jackie and Earl L. Wolf
Dr. and Mrs. Theodore V. Yuhas
Walter Zanchuk
Ms. Margaret G. Zehner
Benjamin Zuckerman, Esq., and Marian Robinson
Anonymous (9)
*Deceased
MAKE A PLANNED GIFT to The Philadelphia Orchestra
Ensure your legacy, benefit your loved ones, and support The Philadelphia Orchestra—today and for years to come—with a planned gift.
Planned giving can include a variety of deferred donations, such as bequests, IRA rollovers, and charitable gift annuities. Consider including The Philadelphia Orchestra in your estate plans.
To learn more about planned giving, or if you’ve already arranged for a legacy gift, visit philorchlegacy.org or contact:
Helen Escaravage
Managing Director of Philanthropic Engagement hesca@philorch.org 215.893.1819
I included The Philadelphia Orchestra in my estate plans because it is the cultural gem of Philadelphia, and I want to assure that future generations enjoy what I have been privileged to enjoy.”
— Joel Beaver, Wister Society member

Administrative Staff
The Philadelphia Orchestra and Ensemble Arts
EXECUTIVE OFFICE
Ryan Fleur, President and Chief Executive Officer
Crystal Brewe, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Doris Parent, Chief Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, and Access Strategies (IDEAS) Officer
Kristen Chun, Manager, Civic Affairs
Colleen Coffey-Snyder, Manager, Office of the President and Chief Executive Officer
Sophia Konopelsky, Administrative Manager, Governance
Christine Lauer, Administrative Coordinator
ARTISTIC
PLANNING
Jeremy Rothman, Chief Programming Officer
Shannon Walsh, Master Scheduler
Education and Community
Eliza Bailey, Director, Theater and Dance
Maya Jacobs, Director, Instrumental Music
Joshua Lawrence, Manager, Jazz Education Programs
Adrian Rosas, Manager, Orchestral Music Programs
Mark Wong, Manager, Theater and Dance Education Programs
Nadine Choucri, Coordinator Orchestral Programming
Makiko Freeman, Artistic Administrator
Andrew Mellor, Audio Producer and Engineer
Stephen Alston, Assistant to the Music and Artistic Director and Artist Liaison
Christa Bean, Manager, Artist Services
Carolyn Hupalowsky, Manager, Artistic Administration
Theatrical Programming and Presentations
Frances Egler, Vice President
Napoleon Gladney, Director
Tyler Daddario, Manager
Stacey Ferraro, Programming Operations and Events Manager
Laura McClatchy, Programming Artist Relations Manager
Annika Jorgensen, Coordinator
ARTISTIC PRODUCTION
Tanya Derksen, Chief Artistic Production Officer
Joanna Scorese, Administrative Manager
Orchestra Production
Kimberly Barna, Director
Ashley Stonebraker, Director, Orchestra Personnel
Michelle Zwi, Director, Orchestra Operations and Touring
Joseph Scriva, Manager, Orchestra Personnel
Ashley Vogler, Administrative Coordinator, Orchestra Operations and Touring
Production
Andre Barette, Director
King Rogers, Senior Production Manager, Academy of Music
Eric Hagenbarth, Production Manager, Miller Theater
Eileen Harris, Production Manager, Marian Anderson Hall and Special Projects
Chris Nelson, Production Manager, Ancillary Spaces
Travis Roberts, Performance Manager
Adam Steinbauer, Production Manager, Perelman Theater and Education
Alison McLeod, Associate Production Manager
Augusta Zuerker, Administrative Assistant Academy of Music
Kevin McEntee, Head Props
Paul Myers, Head Electrician
Beverly Nolan, Head Wardrobe
William Ringland, Head Carpenter
Greg Canzanese, Flyman
Jim McPeak, Assistant Head
Carpenter
Scott Smith, Assistant Head Electrician
Michael Troncone, Assistant Head Props
Steve Weber, Assistant Head Utility
Kimmel Center
Suzan Cerceo, Head Wardrobe
Christopher Hanes, Head Carpenter
Ryan Morris, Head Electrician
Kenneth Nash, Head Audio
Walter Bass, Assistant Head Audio
Walter Brown, Sr., Assistant Head Audio
Michael Cobb-Durkin, Assistant Head Electrician
Amber Faulhaber, Assistant Head Electrician
Kristen Klumpp, Assistant Head Carpenter
Miller Theater
Bridget Brennan, Head Wardrobe
Christine Gaydos, Head Props
Jay Madara, Head Electrician
Pete Mohan, Head Carpenter
Joseph Schramm, Head Audio
Dave Cushing, Flyman
Kyle Hanahan, Assistant Head Utility
Stephen Hungerford, Assistant Head Carpenter
Joey Narducci, Assistant Head Electrician
AUDIENCE EXPERIENCE / SERVICES
Matt Cooper, Vice President, Audience Services
Lindsay Berckman, Director, Audience Experience
Meg Hackney, Director, Ticketing and Audience Services
Conner Lucas, Director, Food and Beverage Business
Kyleigh Taylor, Associate Director, Audience Services
Katie Masterson, Senior Manager, Events Services
Julie Bernard, Manager, Operations Support
Delaney Burke, Manager, Guest Services
Keith Donaghue, House Manager
Rose Farrell, House Manager
Emily Grove, Training Manager
Korey Jones, Venue Manager, Kimmel Center
Thomas J. Kerrigan, House Manager
Todd Kunze, Venue Manager, Academy of Music and Miller Theater
Erin Lunsford, Administrative Manager
Catherine Pappas, Subscription Project Manager
Devin Randall, Manager, Guest Services
Tyshawn Burrell, Operations Support
Joshua Goldstein, Operations Support
Andrew Hight, Operations Support
Zapheir Johnson, Operations Support
Chrisla Dor, Priority Services Coordinator, The Philadelphia Orchestra
Chris Eklund, Priority Services Coordinator, Ensemble Arts Philly
Matthew Enters, Quality Assurance Coordinator
Elijah Doss, Group Sales Representative
Rob Lawlor, Group Sales Representative
Nicola Scicchitano, Lead Audience Services Representative
Danielle Woolis, Lead Audience Services Representative
Damarise Johnson, Audience Services Representative
Andy Svarczkopf, Audience Services Representative
Tristan Berrien, Audience Services Associate
Alicia Katz, Ticketing Operations Associate
Evan Mulhern, Audience Services Associate
Benji Childs, Tickets Operations Coordinator
Box Office
Dan Ahearn, Jr., Manager
Michelle Messa, Assistant Manager
Tad Dynakowski, Assistant Treasurer
Marie McCarthy, Assistant Treasurer
William Qualls, Assistant Treasurer
Thomas Sharkey, Assistant Treasurer
Mike Walsh, Assistant Treasurer
DEVELOPMENT
Kobie Smith, Chief Philanthropy Officer
Anna Marie Gewirtz, Vice President, Philanthropy
Liz Saccardi, Vice President, Philanthropy
Rachel Messeck, Director, Development Communications
Megan Gow, Administrative Assistant
Annual Fund
Anne Henry, Senior Director
Jennifer Pratt Johnson, Director
April O’Brien, Director
Kathleen Moran, Membership Manager
Juan Carlos Mata, Development Coordinator
Development Services
Andrea Gartner, Managing Director
Lisalotte Crampton, Manager
Emiline Homan, Manager, Donor Research and Strategy
Wesley Hershner, Data and Research Analyst
Donor Relations and Stewardship
Jennifer Monahan, Director, Development Events
Joseph Sinkus, Director, Donor Relations
Samantha Noll, Assistant Director, Development Events and Volunteer Relations
Institutional Giving
Ruth Auslander, Managing Director
Rob Ruzanic, Senior Grants Manager
Rachel Holder, Manager
Gabrielle Lantieri, Grants Manager
Philanthropic Engagement
Helen Escaravage, Managing Director
Jen Beatty, Senior Officer
Neva Kelly, Senior Officer
Natalie Sandstrom, Officer
Olivia Schultz, Manager
FACILITIES
James Pecora, Vice President
Jennifer Stark, Director, Capital Projects
Scott Derkacz, Assistant Director
Kevin Quinn, Chief Engineer
Derrick Johnson, Lead Maintenance Mechanic
Jonathan McCarthy, Maintenance Mechanic
Gary Stanford, Maintenance Mechanic
Kevin Hamilton, Dockmaster
Trondell Hill, Project Manager, Housekeeping
Evani Outerbridge, Business Manager, Housekeeping
Angela Schiavo, Painter
Donna Cloman, Administrative Assistant
Brea Kelley, Administrative Assistant
Office Services
Kathie Cronk, Senior Manager, Office and Volunteer Services
Nahema Rivers, Administrative Services Manager
Safety and Security
John Gallagher, Director
Euronn McCloud-Armstrong, Assistant Director, Security
Matthew Lally, Security Manager
Henri Byrd, Security Supervisor
Mia Lowry, Security Supervisor
Anthony Williams, Security Supervisor
Roland Carbonetta, Jr., Security Officer
Clifford Cook, Security Officer
Clarence Cottman, Security Officer
Kenneth L. Gilliard, Security Officer
Taebreya Lewis, Security Officer
Sara Mahan, Security Officer
Mian Mason, Security Officer
Gregory Meek, Security Officer
Leon Middleton, Security Officer
Randall Monte, Security Officer
Thomas Pierce, Security Officer
Kenneth Reaves, Security Officer
Timothy Ryan, Security Officer
David Sisco, Security Officer
FACILITY SALES
Carrie Reynolds, Director
Shawn Cotugno, Senior Manager
Audrey Gildea, Senior Sales Manager
FINANCE
Mario Mestichelli, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Ruth Kasow, Vice President and Director
Kevin Pearce, Controller
Kathleen Curtis, Director, Budget and Planning
Ashley Willcox, Senior Accounting Manager
Laura DiGiambattista, Accounting Manager
Jennifer Walker, Payroll Manager
Kristoffer Domingo, Senior Accountant
Jonelle Kelly, Senior Accountant, Payroll and Benefits
Bridget Morgan, Senior Accountant
Jennifer Munster, Senior Accountant
Lauren Tighe, Senior Accountant
Jessica Kerler, Staff Accountant, Budget
Mona Song, Staff Accountant
Matthew Demetrides, Accounts Payable Accountant
Jamie Zorrilla-Gray, Staff Accountant/Accounts Payable
Julrena Outen, Payroll Coordinator
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
Jamie Shover, Vice President
John Callinan, Director, Technology Infrastructure
Pari Dasmuth, Director, Business Applications and Project Management
Tristian Gay, Director
John Jardel, Senior Network Engineer
Mohammed Djaballah, Manager, Business Intelligence
Khalil Et Tkhyly, Business Intelligence Developer
Mark Macalanda, Quality Assurance/ Testing Analyst
Leo Konkel, IT Support Engineer
Mpho Reed, IT Support Engineer
MARKETING AND COMMUNICATIONS
Elizabeth Hess, Vice President, Marketing
Leslie Patterson-Tyler, Vice President, Program Communications and Partnerships
Geoff Cohen, Associate Vice President, Marketing, Philadelphia Orchestra
Karina Kacala, Senior Director, Marketing
Ashley Ryan, Senior Director, Marketing, Ensemble Arts Presentations
Darrin T. Britting, Director, Publications and Content Development
Lauren Hall, Director, Program Public Relations, Ensemble Arts Presentations
Victoria McCabe, Director, Marketing, Philadelphia Orchestra
Travis Wurges, Video Producer
Roberta Gorin-Paracka, Associate Director, Digital Asset Management
Carrie Williams, Associate Director, Marketing, Ensemble Arts Presentations
Erica Barry, Manager, Marketing, Philadelphia Orchestra
Kacy Hofstetter, Manager, Marketing
Taylor Martin, Manager, Marketing
Manisha Modi-Davis, Manager, Audience Development, Ensemble Arts Presentations
Alec Newell, Manager, Audience Development, Philadelphia Orchestra
Matthew Nicolosi, Senior Data Analyst
Zoe King, Data Analyst
Doménica Castro, Marketing Content Associate
Alison Hopkins, Marketing Associate
Emma Noel, Marketing Associate
Erin Witman, Marketing Associate
Rachel Bennett, Graphic Designer
Remy Perez, Graphic Designer
Jake Rogan, Coordinator, Communications
Digital Marketing
Daniel Christiansen, Senior Director, Digital Marketing Strategy and Web
Shakerra Grays, Director, Digital Marketing—Web
Sarah Biddle, Manager
Brooke Grant, Manager, Web Content and UX Manager
Rachael Micucci, Marketing Manager, Customer Journey
Lindsay Goldschmidt, Digital Marketing Associate
PEOPLE AND CULTURE
Jessica Rivera, Director, Compensation and Benefits
Christopher Shaw, Director, Talent and Culture
Indonesia Young, Talent Management Specialist
Ashley Colston, Coordinator
ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICES
300 South Broad Street Philadelphia, PA 19102
Phone: 215.893.1900 www: philorch.org
