The Noorda

 

2021-22 SEASON

A CELEBRATION OF
CONTEMPORARY DANCE

The Noorda

 

THE NOORDA CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS PRESENTS

A CELEBRATION OF CONTEMPORARY DANCE:

RIRIE‑WOODBURY DANCE COMPANY AND REPERTORY DANCE THEATRE WITH UVU DANCERS

November 5-6, 2021 | 7:30 PM

Smith Theatre

 
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Linda C. Smith
Artistic/Executive Director

Nicholas Cendese
Artistic Associate / Development Director

Lynne Larson
Artistic Associate / Education Director

DANCERS:
Trung “Daniel” Do, Dan Higgins, Lindsey Faber, Elle Johansen, Jonathan Kim, Lauren Lenning, Kareem Lewis, Ursula Perry, Megan O’Brien

Pilar I.
Production Manager

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Jena C. Woodbury
Executive Director

Daniel Charon
Artistic Director

Ai Fujii Nelson
Education Director

Juan Carlos Claudio
Outreach and Booking Director

DANCERS:
Peter Farrow, Corinne Lohner, Megan McCarthy, Alexander Pham, Fausto Rivera, Miche’ Smith

William Peterson
Technical Director

 

Ririe-Woodbury (Rī-rē Woŏd-bûr-ē) Dance Company and Repertory Dance Theatre (RDT) have independently toured the globe, performing works by acclaimed dance makers on some of the world's most renowned stages. Dually comprised of performers and educators, both companies often find the most important stages to be gymnasiums and cafeterias throughout Utah, when sparking joy and curiosity in the next generation of dance makers through dance education.

The Companies would like to graciously thank The Noorda at Utah Valley University for presenting this performance and the residents of the Wasatch Front for sustaining two very different modern and contemporary dance companies for over 50 years.

Program

Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company

On Being  (2021)

Choreography: Daniel Charon in collaboration with the dancers
Music: Edyís Evensen
Costume Design: Melissa Younker
Costume Construction: Courtney Andrews
Lighting Design: William Peterson

Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company dancers: Peter Farrow, Corinne Lohner, Megan McCarthy, Alexander Pham, Fausto Rivera, Miche’ Smith

Video of Martha Graham

Utah Valley University Department of Dance

Ekstasis  (1933 & 2017)

Premiere: May 4, 1933, Guild Theatre, New York City
Ekstasis  (reimagined): February 14, 2017, The Joyce Theater, New York City
Choreography: Martha Graham, reimagined by Virginie Mécène
Music: Original by Lehman Engel, Music for reimaginedEkstasis by Ramon Humet†
Lighting: Nick Hung, adapted by Pilar I.

Cast: Angela Banchero-Kelleher

Note: Ekstasis is thought to be the 37th creation by Graham. In a 1980 interview, Graham explained that the genesis of this dance came from a pelvic thrust gesture that she discovered one day. This led her to explore “a cycle of distortion” that she found deeply meaningful. “Before Ekstasis, I had been using a more static form, trying to find a ritualist working of the body,” she concluded. Virginie Mécène reimagined this version of Ekstasis based on the sparse documentation of this original solo, which included a few photos by Soichi Sunami and Barbara Morgan.

†"Interludi meditatiu VII" from Homenaje a Martha Graham, © Neu Records 2016, used by arrangement with the copyright owner.

This production is funded in part by support from the Office of Engaged Learning and the UVU School of the Arts Department of Dance.

Repertory Dance Theatre (RDT)

Steps in the Street (Devastation-Homelessness-Exile)
Excerpt from CHRONICLE

Premiere: December 20, 1936, Guild Theatre, New York City
Choreography: Martha Graham
Restaged by: Virginie Mécène
Music: Wallingford Reigger
Costumes: Martha Graham
Original Lighting: Jean Rosenthal, adapted by Pilar I.
Rehearsal Assistants: Angela Banchero-Kelleher, LeGrande Lolo

Repertory Dance Theatre dancers: Lauren Lenning, Lindsey Faber, Elle Johansen, Ursula Perry

UVU Guest Dancers: Camry Blackhurst, Kamryn Daughters, Ciera Erekson, Jaydn Nelms, Rachel Miller, Heather Morley, Holly Ward. Understudies: Lexie Johnson, Savannah Petersen

Note: Chronicle does not attempt to show the actualities of war; rather, by evoking war’s images, it sets forth the fateful prelude to war, portrays the devastation of spirit which it leaves in its wake, and suggests an answer. (Original program note, Guild Theater 1936.)

Steps in the Street reconstructed by Yuriko and Martha Graham from the Julien Bryan film.

Presented by arrangement with Martha Graham Resources, a division of the Martha Graham Center of Contemporary Dance, Inc. †Finale from New Dance, Opus 18B (Steps in the Street) orchestrated by Justin Dello Joio, used by arrangement with Associated Music Publishers, Inc., publisher and copyright owner; Additional orchestrations by Stanley Sussman.

This production is funded in part by support from the Office of Engaged Learning and the UVU School of the Arts Department of Dance.

[Intermission]

Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company

I can see myself  (2012)

Choreography: Andrea Miller
Music: Balkan Beat Box
Lighting Design: Vincent Vigilante
Lighting Reconstruction: William Peterson
Costume Design: Andrea Miller, Melissa Younker
Additional Costume Construction: Melissa Clark

Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company dancers: Peter Farrow, Corinne Lohner, Megan McCarthy, Alexander Pham, Fausto Rivera, Miche’ Smith

Performed to the contagious music of Israeli band Balkan Beat Box, I can see myself (formerly Pupil Suite) is an exuberant romp that plays with plurality, extravagance, and the imagination.

I can see myself is made possible by the generous support of the Sam and Diane Stewart Family Foundation.

Repertory Dance Theatre (RDT)

Marimba… a trance dance  (1976)

Choreography: Lar Lubovitch
Music: Steve Reich, “Music for Mallet Instruments, Voices and Organ”*
Lighting: Pilar I. (after original by Craig Miller)
Costumes: Christopher Larson
Restaging: Katarzyna Skarpetowska

Repertory Dance Theatre dancers: Trung “Daniel” Do, Lindsey Faber, Dan Higgins, Elle Johansen, Jonathan Kim, Lauren Lenning, Kareem Lewis, Megan O’Brien, Ursula Perry. Guest dancer: Brendan Rupp

Note: This is a classic trance dance. Both music and dance have a mesmerizing effect as they create unbroken loops of sound and motion, Continuous, unison, circular, it explores humanity and togetherness. “Marimba revealed nature’s machine, enduring and relentless as the ebb and flow of tides or the play of wind in the trees…

*By arrangement with Hendon Music, Inc., a Boosey & Hawkes company, publisher and copyright owner.

 

Dean's Message

Courtney Davis

Be prepared to be swept away. The arts possess the unparalleled power to inspire, educate, liberate, and transform. With roots stretching deep into the history of human culture, performances invite us to set aside the constant hum of our daily routines and gather together to envision, to imagine, and to be astonished.

After a period of reduced live performances, we are delighted to raise the curtains on an extraordinary season at The Noorda Center for the Performing Arts, the leading star of UVU’s campus and a hub for the arts in Utah County. There is a special energy in The Noorda, perhaps because it wasn’t long ago that a performing arts center was just a dream. Now in our third season (hopefully our first uninterrupted, in-person season), we are overjoyed to welcome you to our pristine and inspiring spaces.

The event you will experience tonight is the result of countless hours of practice, study, and rehearsal from acclaimed faculty, award-winning guest performers, talented students, and renowned guest artists. In the School of the Arts, we seek to educate and inspire audiences and communities through bold and compelling programming as well as world-class performances. All of this connects deeply to our academic mission.

On behalf of the performers and all those who worked so hard behind the scenes to make this event a reality, thank you for joining us. You are the reason we do what we do – your interest, your energy, your awe. Please enjoy the performance and don’t forget to allow yourself to be swept away.

Courtney R. Davis, J.D., M.A.
Interim Dean, School of the Arts

 

CHOREOGRAPHERS

In Show Order

 

DANIEL CHARON
Artistic Director and Resident Choreographer

Daniel CharonArtistic Director of Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company since 2013, Daniel Charon has been active as a choreographer, teacher, and performer for over twenty-five years. While based in New York City, Daniel maintained a project-based company and primarily danced with Doug Varone and Dancers (1999-2010) and the Limón Dance Company (1997-1999). He is a BFA graduate of the North Carolina School of the Arts and an MFA graduate of the California Institute of the Arts in Choreography and Integrated Media.

As Ririe-Woodbury’s Artistic Director, Daniel has created numerous original works for the stage, gallery installations, and has designed video for his and other choreographers’ works. As an independent choreographer he has presented multiple full evening concerts in New York City, has been produced by various theaters, and has been commissioned to choreograph new works for many companies, universities, and festivals around the country. Daniel choreographed The Pearl Fishers, Aida, and Moby-Dick at the Utah Opera.

Daniel regularly teaches master classes and workshops nationally and internationally and has taught at the Metropolitan Opera, the Bates Dance Festival, Salt Dance Fest, North Carolina School of the Arts Summer Comprehensive, Varone Summer Dance Workshops, and Limón Summer Workshops. He has been a guest artist and adjunct professor at numerous universities Daniel has staged the works of José Limón, Jirí Kylián, and Doug Varone at schools and companies around the world.

MARTHA GRAHAM

Martha Graham (1894-1991) is recognized as a primal artistic force of the 20th Century.  She was named “Dancer of the Century” by Time and has been compared with other creative giants such as Picasso, Einstein, Stravinsky and Freud.  She created 181 ballets and a technique that revolutionized dance throughout the greater part of the past century.  Using the founding principles of contraction and release, she built a vocabulary of movement to “increase the emotional activity of the dancer’s body,” exploring the depth and diversity of human emotion.  Her ballets were inspired by a wide range of sources from the American frontier to Greek Mythology.  She created and portrayed prominent women, including Clytemnestra, Jocasta, Medea, Phaedra, Joan of Arc and Emily Dickenson.  During her 70 years of creating dance, she collaborated with other great artists – Isamu Noguchi, Aaron Copland, Samuel Barber and William Schuman, and her mentor Louis Horst among others, and is recognized for her groundbreaking work in all aspects of the theater – use of time, space, lighting, costumes, sets and music.  Her company was a training ground for many generations of choreographers including Merce Cunningham, Paul Taylor and Twyla Tharp.  At the Neighborhood Playhouse, she is said to have changed the course of American acting through students such as Bette Davis, Gregory Peck, Tony Randall and Orson Wells.  Her creative genius earned numerous honors and awards, including the Medal of Freedom and the National Medal of the Arts.  Martha Graham’s extraordinary legacy lives on in the work of the Martha Graham Dance Company, Graham 2 and Martha Graham School, and in the students worldwide studying her technique and performing her masterworks.

Virginie Mécène

Virginie Mécène is a former Principal Dancer with the Martha Graham Dance Company touring the world and performing many roles in the repertoire from 1994 to 2006. Director of the Martha Graham School, 2007-2015, Program Director since 2015, and Graham 2 Director since 2007, she has been maintaining and developing the school curriculum, sustaining the integrity of the Martha Graham technique, and nurturing the process that continues its development. Her direction has focused on training the next generations of dancers for companies worldwide and the next generations of Graham teachers through her pedagogic instructions. Additionally, she created the Graham Teacher Workshop for teachers of all backgrounds. She has re-staged, reconstructed, and directed numerous works of Martha Graham in Universities and dance companies and taught the Graham Technique™ at multiple national and international conferences.

Ms. Mécène’s choreographic work, including the reimagined Graham’s lost solo, Ekstasis, for the Martha Graham Dance Company, a commission from Buglisi Dance, a commission from American composer Thomas Hormel, and a commission from Neu Records for full-evening-length work, has been presented in venues such as Kaatsbaan International Dance Center, in Tivoli, New York, New York City Center, in New York City, The Palais Garnier, in Paris, France, and L’Auditori in Barcelona.

A native of France, she holds an L.P. Licence Professionnelle in Artistic and Cultural Management from the University of Bourgogne. Ms. Mécène has also served as a Lecturer at Barnard College, NY, in 2004 and served as the president of EFSD (Emergency Fund For Student Dancers).  www.virginiemecene.com

Andrea Miller

Andrea Miller is the founder and artistic director of GALLIM a movement-based production company out of New York, creating work for stage, film, sites and the visual arts. Guggenheim Fellow and the first woman to be named Artist in Residence at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Miller has consistently challenged and invited dialogue of where dance can exist and for whom it is created. She has received fellowships from Sadler's Wells, New York City Center, and the Princess Grace Foundation and has been featured in Forbes as an entrepreneur and leader in the dance world. Over a decade, Miller has codified a creative methodology that is at the center of her creative praxis and exchange with students, dancers, collaborators, and presenters. She has been a guest teacher and lecturer at Harvard, The Juilliard School, NYU, Barnard, Sara Lawrence, Wesleyan, Marymount Manhattan, University of the Arts, among others. Throughout the pandemic Miller has zeroed in on the creative and professional development needs within the dance community through GALLIM programs such as Build Your Creative Practice Workshop: Meeting Creatives Around the World, Dancing with The Camera: Fundamentals of Dance Filmmaking, Dancing with the Camera: From Concept to Delivery, SITE: Fundamentals in Site Specific Work, MovingWomen Residencies at GALLIM Studio, Jam and Toast: Free Morning Class on InstagramLIVE, HAPPY HOUR: Conversations with Thought Leaders over Drinks as well as free streaming of repertory works and films. Miller is a graduate of The Juilliard School, currently teaches at Marymount Manhattan College, and is the mother of two.

Lar Lubovitch

Lar Lubovitch is one of America’s most versatile, popular and widely seen choreographers. Based in New York City, Lubovitch’s company founded in 1968 has performed throughout the world, and his dances have also been performed by many other major companies, including American Ballet Theater, Joffrey Ballet, New York City Ballet, Paris Opera Ballet, Royal Danish Ballet, San Francisco Ballet, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, and many others. His work on Broadway includes Into the Woods (Tony Award nomination), The Red Shoes (Astaire Award) and the Tony Award-winning revival of The King and I. Lubovitch has also made a notable contribution to choreography in the field of ice-dancing, having created concert dances for Olympic skaters John Curry, Dorothy Hamill, Peggy Fleming, Brian Orser, JoJo Starbuck and Paul Wylie. In 2013, the American Dance Guild honored him for lifetime achievement, and in 2014 he was awarded an honorary doctorate by The Juilliard School in New York City. In 2016, he received the Scripps/American Dance Festival Award for lifetime achievement and the Dance Magazine Award; he was named one of America’s Irreplaceable Dance Treasures by the Dance Heritage Coalition; and he was appointed a Distinguished Professor of Dance at UC/Irvine.

 
 

RDT

 

ABOUT REPERTORY DANCE THEATRE

Repertory Dance Theatre (RDT), founded in 1966 in Salt Lake City, Utah, is a professional modern dance repertory company dedicated to the creation, performance, perpetuation and appreciation of modern dance. For over 55 years, RDT has pushed the boundaries of modern dance, while preserving and celebrating its legacy.

Known worldwide for its collection of dance treasures, RDT is both a museum and contemporary gallery representing the scope and diversity of modern dance, past and present. From the early pioneers of the art form to today’s cutting-edge choreographers, the company maintains one of the largest collections of modern dance classics in the world. As a repository for this rich heritage, RDT is a resource center and laboratory for contemporary dancers, choreographers, visual artists, writers and composers.

In addition to public performances, RDT produces a variety of community-based programs and has a long-standing commitment to arts-in-education. Outreach activities include lectures, informal performances, teachers’ workshops, open rehearsals, annual summer workshops and year-round classes which all serve to train and ignite the creative voice in people of all ages. At its home in the Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center, the company contributes to the cultural, social, and economic vitality of the community. RDT remains committed to building bridges of understanding that de-mystify the art of dance, making it a meaningful part of the cultural environment regionally, nationally and internationally.

LINDA C. SMITH
Artistic Director

Linda Smith

A native of Utah, Linda began her career in dance at the age of four with Virginia Tanner's Children's Dance Theatre. In 1966 she became a founding member of Repertory Dance Theatre where she fulfilled her dream of becoming a performer, teacher, choreographer, writer, producer and eventually, in 1983, the Artistic Director for the company. Her pursuits have led to the development of the Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center, to the establishment of the RDT Community School, to providing commissions for established and emerging choreographers, and to the creation of multi-disciplinary activities that focus on the dance history, the environment, social issues, multi-ethnic history, sustainability and community. Linda's performing experience spans over 90 works. She has taught in over 1500 schools bringing the magic of dance to students and teachers with her unique demonstrations, lectures, classes and professional development workshops. She is most at home encouraging audiences of all ages to imagine, create and communicate with the language of movement.

Linda is a graduate and an Adjunct Associate Professor of dance at the University of Utah and is a certified Movement Specialist in the Utah Artists-in-Education Program. She has received numerous honors including "Honors in the Arts" awards from the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce, the "Outstanding Achievement Award in Art" from the YWCA, “Community Builders “Award from Utah Women’s Alliance for Building Community, Utah Business Magazine “One of 30 Utah Visionaries; The University of Utah’s College of Fine Arts 2016 Distinguished Alumni Award; One of Utah's 15, The State's Most Influential Artists Award from 15 Bytes; Utah Business Women of the Year; UNA Outstanding Nonprofit Leader of the year. UCA Lifetime Achievement Award in 2019; Madeleine Award for Distinguished Service to Arts and Humanities (2020).

About the re-staging of Martha Graham’s choreography

Since 1966, Repertory Dance Theatre has been dedicated to performing and preserving the “masterpieces” in modern dance history. Many of the treasures from the past require large casts of performers, and it gives RDT the opportunity to partner with community dancers as well as with university dance departments to re-stage “classic” works.

RDT and Utah Valley University have enjoyed many opportunities to collaborate on the restaging of important works such as Dance For Walt Whitman by Helen Tamiris, Commonplace by Susan Hadley, and Passacaglia and Fugue in C Minor by Doris Humphrey.

These valuable partnerships strengthen the ties between universities and professional dance companies, and provide mentoring opportunities and career development to students while building community.

This season, RDT is again working with the UVU Dance Department to restage and perform two masterworks choreographed in the 1930’s by Martha Graham…Steps in The Street and Ekstasis.

During a three week artistic residency at UVU, the RDT dancers and staff offered classes in technique, composition, improvisation and history. A select group of gifted students joined with RDT dancers to prepare a concert for the Noodra Center in Orem and also for RDT’s home season performances in Salt Lake City, Nov 17-20, 2021 This project was funded in part by support from the Office of Engaged Learning and the UVU School of the Arts Department of Dance. It could not have been possible without the vision of UVU’s outstanding dance department and one of their professors, Angela Banchero-Kelleher who also happens to be a former RDT dancer who continues to believe that… “You can’t know where you are going until you know where you have been.”


DANCERS AND ARTISTIC STAFF

Daniel Trung

Trung “Daniel” Do
(since 2018)

Lindsey Faber

Lindsey Faber
(since 2021)

Dan Higgins

Dan Higgins
(since 2014)

Elle Johansen

Elle Johansen
(since 2017)

Lauren Lenning

Lauren Lenning
(since 2014)

Jonathan Kim

Jonathan Kim
(since 2019)

Kareem Lewis

Kareem Lewis
(since 2020)

Ursula Perry

Ursula Perry
(since 2013)

Megan O’Brien

Megan O’Brien
(since 2021)

Nicholas Cendese

Nicholas Cendese
Artistic Associate / Development Director

Lynne Larson

Lynne Larson
Artistic Associate / Education Director

 

RIRIE-WOODBURY

Dance Company

 

ABOUT RIRIE-WOODBURY DANCE COMPANY

Ririe-Woodbury (Rī-rē Woŏd-bûr-ē) Dance Company, founded in 1964, actively embraces and commissions the work of contemporary choreographers, tours worldwide, and develops dynamic education and community outreach programming. Through performance and educational undertakings, the Company pursues its mission to make dance a viable part of everyone’s life– whether it be as creators, performers, dance educators, critics, or as participating audience members. Over the 58 years of its history, Ririe-Woodbury has toured nationally and internationally, always advocating the philosophy that “dance is for everybody.”

Ririe-Woodbury was founded by two Utah women, Joan Woodbury and Shirley Ririe, who were both professors of dance at the University of Utah. Their passions included performance, choreography, and pedagogy. This focus was accompanied by a deep commitment to dance as a valuable art form and its importance as a component of a well-rounded education for children. Over the years, the Company has grown from its beginning as a local entity, into an internationally renowned contemporary dance company, having performed in every state in the United States, as well as in South Africa, Southeast Asia, the Caribbean, the British Isles, and throughout Europe.

In 1972, Ririe-Woodbury was selected as one of only 20 dance companies to participate in two prestigious national initiatives: the Dance Touring Program and the Artists in the Schools Program. This opportunity led to the creation of the Company’s education program, which became a national model that is still used for dance education in the schools today. Currently, Ririe-Woodbury has an education and an outreach director whose jobs are singularly focused on creating dance opportunities for a wide audience, including toddlers, schoolchildren, adults, and nursing home residents. To enable the fulfillment of its commitment to bring dance into everyone’s life, the Company trains its dancers as both performers and as educators, with special emphasis on kindergarten through high school dance education.

Located in downtown Salt Lake City, Ririe-Woodbury produces three unique productions annually, presenting new works created by the Company artistic director, along with new commissions from both emerging and established choreographers from all over the world. Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company curates a range of performances, from shows that appeal to the contemporary dance aficionado, to programs created for families to experience together. With educational offerings, community outreach, and performance adaptability, the Company extends its reach through national and international touring – with the goal of fostering interest and awareness in dance, and the engagement of performing arts audiences.

Under the direction of Executive Director Jena C. Woodbury, Artistic Director Daniel Charon, Education Director Ai Fujii Nelson, and Outreach Director Juan Carlos Claudio, Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company is committed to building upon the vision of its founders as it continues to evolve as an important voice for innovation in contemporary dance and dance education.


DANCERS AND DIRECTORS

Peter Farrow

Peter Farrow
(since 2021)

Corinne Lohner

Corinne Lohner
(since 2020)

Megan McCarthy

Megan McCarthy
(since 2017)

Alexander Pham

Alexander Pham
(since 2021)

Fausto Rivera

Fausto Rivera
(since 2020

Miche’ Smith

Miche’ Smith
(since 2021)

Jena C. Woodbury

Jena C. Woodbury
Executive Director

Daniel Charon

Daniel Charon
Artistic Director

Ai Fujii Nelson

Ai Fujii Nelson
Education Director

Ai Fujii Nelson

Juan Carlos Claudio
Outreach and Booking Director

 
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Land Acknowledgment

Utah Valley University acknowledges that we gather on land sacred to all Indigenous people who came before us in this vast crossroads region. The University is committed to working in partnership—as enacted through education and community activities—with Utah’s Native Nations comprising: the San Juan Southern Paiute, Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah, Uintah & Ouray Reservation of the Northern Ute, Skull Valley Goshute, Confederated Tribes of the Goshute Reservation, Northwestern Band of Shoshone Nation, Hopi Tribe, Navajo Nation, Ute Mountain Ute-White Mesa Community, and urban Indian communities. We recognize these Native Nations and their continued connections with traditional homelands, mountains, rivers, and lakes as well as their sovereign relationships with state and federal governments. We honor their collective memory and continued physical and spiritual presence. We revere their resilience and example in preserving their connections to the Creator and to all their relations, now and in the future.

With this statement comes responsibility and accountability. We resolve to follow up with actionable items to make the School of the Arts at UVU and The Noorda Center for the Performing Arts an inclusive, equitable, and just space for all. There is much work to be done, and we are committed to putting these words into practice.

DoTERRA a proud Season Sponsor

 

Coming Soon

 

Noorda Series

UVU School of the Arts Presents

 

The Circle

 

The Circle is an elite group of arts supporters at The Noorda. Our goal is simple: create a sphere of influence that unites those who wish to have a significant impact upon the performers, patrons, and students who are transformed in our center for true artistic collaboration. Your contribution and support will make this impact by enabling The Noorda to bring the greatest talent from across the world through its doors. While here, these performers and artists will collaborate with students, the community, and our youth. Many will set aside time to visit with Circle Members at exclusive VIP events.

Join The Circle today. Call 801-863-5760 or email Traci Monson for more information.

 

The Circle Members

LIFETIME CIRCLE MEMBERS:

Mr. & Mrs. Alan and Karen Ashton
Mr. Bruce Bastian
Mr. & Mrs. Darren and Lisa Bastian
Mr. & Mrs. Jeff and Cristi Bastian
Mr. & Mrs. Rick and Heather Bastian
Mr. & Mrs. Robbie and Amy Bastian
The Church Of Jesus Christ Of Latter-day Saints
Dōterra
Mr. & Mrs. Kem and Carolyn Gardner
Barbara Barrington Jones Family Foundation
Richard E. and Nancy Peery Marriott
The Ray and Tye Noorda Family Foundation
Nu Skin
Oc Tanner
Mr. & Mrs. Scott and Karen Smith
Utah County Government
Mr. Kim Wilson and Mrs. Gail Miller Wilson
Zions Bank

ONYX LEVEL CIRCLE MEMBERS:

Clyde Companies

PLATINUM LEVEL CIRCLE MEMBERS:

Mr. and Mrs. Paul and Jeanette Clyde

GOLD LEVEL CIRCLE MEMBERS:

Mayor & Mrs. Guy and Paula Fugal

Ron and Kaye Gunnell Family Foundation

SILVER LEVEL CIRCLE MEMBERS:

Mr. & Mrs. Duane and Erlyn Madsen
Mr. & Mrs. Jeff and Nancy Flamm

BRONZE LEVEL CIRCLE MEMBERS:

Mr. & Mrs. Brent and Cheri Andrus
Ms. Mary Crafts
Mr. & Mrs. Brad and Becky Caldwell
Dr. Carolyn Rasmus

Clyde, Inc.
 

Season Tickets

 

Purchase your season tickets now and receive the following discounts:

  • Purchase 3-4 shows and get 20% off the regular single-ticket price. That’s a savings of up to $48.
  • Purchase 4-9 shows and get 25% off of the single-ticket price. That’s a savings of up to $86.
  • Purchase 10+ shows and get 30% off the single-ticket price. That’s a savings of up to $127.50 if you buy 10 shows and up to $190.50 if you buy the entire season.

In addition to your discount, as a season ticket holder you’ll also receive:

  • Free exchanges up to 36 hours before the show (just call the Blair Box Office).
  • Advance notice of added shows and special events throughout the season.

Last day to purchase season tickets is Friday, November 12.

 

For tickets, please contact:

THE NOORDA
Blair Box Office
801.863.PLAY (7529)

uvu.edu/thenoorda