Presented by the Lewis Center for the Arts’ Programs in Theater and Music Theater in collaboration with the Department of Music
Story Time
May 6, 2023
Wallace Theater, Lewis Arts complex
Directed by:
Solon Snider Sway
Student Conductor:
Halle Mitchell
Student Choreographers:
Aaron Ventresca, Clara McNatt, and Kate Stewart
Featured Program
Princess and the Frog Medley
from Princess and the Frog (2009)
Randy Newman
arr. Jerome Walker
Caution to the Wind
from Striking 12 (2004)
Val Vigoda ’87
arr. Halle Mitchell ’23
Love Will Find a Way
from Shuffle Along (1921)
Eubie Blake & Noble Sissle
arr. Kenyon Duncan
My Story
World Premiere (2023)
Jim Papoulis and the ’22-23 Playhouse Choir
No One is Alone
from Into the Woods (1987)
Stephen Sondheim
arr. Daniel Rudin
Te Quiero
from Gaucho (2023)
Aaron Ventresca ’24
What You’re Looking For
from Three Loves (2023)
Halle Mitchell ’23
Our Time (ft. Playhouse Seniors)
from Merrily We Roll Along (1981)
Stephen Sondheim
arr. Mac Huff
You Will Be Found
from Dear Evan Hansen (2016)
Benj Pasek & Justin Paul
arr. Michael McElroy
In the Wind
World Premiere (2023)
Kenyon Duncan and the ’22-23 Playhouse Choir
A Playhouse Farewell
Songs from 1931-1938
Sammy Fain/Irving Kahal, George/Ira Gershwin, and Herman Hupfeld
arr. Solon Snider Sway
Director’s Note
Thank you for joining us for Story Time—a concert focused on celebrating new work by members of the Princeton community. Featuring compositions and arrangements by current members of the ensemble, a Princeton alum, and two world premieres composed collaboratively through workshops held this spring, it’s sure to be a special evening!
— Solon Snider Sway
Program Notes
Princess and the Frog Medley
Arranged by Jerome Walker
Choreography by Aaron Ventresca ’24
Soloists: Carrington Symone Johnson, Matthew Weatherhead, Aaron Ventresca, Laura Reyes, Madeleine LeBeau, Charlie Roth, Halle Mitchell, Christina Kim, and Kate Stewart
After our Studio Ghibli medley in the fall, many students were interested in the continued performance of songs from movies. One of the most requested was 2009’s Princess and the Frog, so we are thrilled to present this new arrangement of songs from that movie!
Caution to the Wind
Arranged by Halle Mitchell ’23, written by Val Vigoda ’87
from the musical Striking 12 (2004)
Conducted by Halle Mitchell ’23
Love Will Find a Way
Arranged by Kenyon Duncan
Choreography by Aaron Ventresca ’24
Featured Dancers: Kimberlynn Bjurstrom, Aaron Ventresca, Carrington Symone Johnson, & Kate Stewart
“Love Will Find a Way” is from Eubie Blake and Noble Sissle’s landmark 1921 show Shuffle Along. Credited by Langston Hughes as starting the Harlem Renaissance, the show was the first all-Black hit on Broadway and paved the way for black theatre of the 20th century. The song is an affirmation of love’s endurance, a declaration that, at the time, was risky to make. “On opening night in New York this song had us more worried than anything else in the show,” Sissle recollected. The writers feared they might “be run out of town” by white audiences who, accustomed to minstrel mockery, might feel threatened by a sincere black love song.
Through revivals and intentional re-imaginations, the song and the show remain beautiful articulations of a kind of black love — a fierce and fugitive creativity that finds a way to flourish even within the most suffocating confines. Even now, over a hundred years since the song was first penned, the text is still pushing on our boundaries. Love will find a way, has not yet found a way, is finding a way…The song has always been aspirational and oriented towards a future not yet here. It seems always to be asking us: what part will you play in creating the possibility for love?
—Kenyon Duncan
My Story
Choreography by Kate Stewart ’25
Featuring the Playhouse Chamber Orchestra
This piece was written as part of a collaborative workshop between Jim Papoulis and the Playhouse Choir in February 2023. Jim Papoulis composes in many genres and is known for work that combines contemporary, classical, and world sounds. Papoulis has made significant contributions to choral music by revitalizing the choral repertoire with songs whose roots are classical and world, with voicing that incorporates lead vocalists with choirs, vocal percussion, and world rhythms. He has worked with artists ranging from Aretha Franklin, Celine Dion, Idina Menzel, Billy Porter, Beyonce, the New York Philharmonic, Chicago Symphony, Patti Labelle, Snoop Dogg, Jason Mraz, Natalie Cole, Faith Hill, The Portland Symphony, and more, and his music has been featured at events ranging from the Beijing Olympics to the 2008 Presidential Inauguration to the 2010 World Cup. Jim’s choral work often is sung from the perspective of the singer, and is constantly inspired by the work he does through his “Foundation for Small Voices.” He firmly believes that music can heal, educate, celebrate, and empower the lives of children. A cornerstone of his work is Foundation for Small Voices Songwriting workshops with youth from over 60 countries, both in person and virtual.
No One is Alone
Arranged and orchestrated by Daniel Rudin
Soloists: Rachel Edelstein, Madeleine LeBeau, Charlie Roth, Kevin Yeung, Yinshan Shang, Clara McNatt, Lana Utley, Drew Comstock, and Kate Stewart
Staging by Aaron Ventresca; featuring the Playhouse Chamber Orchestra
From Stephen Sondheim’s 1987 Into the Woods, recently revived once again on Broadway (2022). Dedicated to Stephen Sondheim (1930-2021).
Te Quiero
From Gaucho, a new musical in development!
Music by Aaron Ventresca ’24
Performed by Carrington Symone Johnson ’24 and Aaron Ventresca ’24
What You’re Looking For
From Three Loves, a new musical by Halle Mitchell ’23
Performed by Matthew Weatherhead ’23
Piano: Halle Mitchell ’23
Our Time
Arranged by Mac Huff
Featuring Playhouse Seniors: Juliana Wojtenko, Neyci Estefenía Gutiérrez Valencia, Kate Short, Jenni Lawson, Sophie Gerchikov, Parker Blumenberg, Rosemary Paulson, Annette Lee, AJ Lonski, Kevin Yeung, and Tommy Kim
Conducted by Halle Mitchell ’23; featuring the Playhouse Chamber Orchestra
You Will Be Found
Arranged by Michael McElroy, orchestrated by Isaac Harlan)
Featuring the Playhouse Chamber Orchestra
This Spring, The Playhouse Choir was lucky to be able to work with Michael McElroy, the TONY-winning and GRAMMY-nominated founder of The Broadway Inspirational Voices, a group that has helped form the vision for The Playhouse Ensembles. Michael worked with soloists from Playhouse on musical theater performance skills and led the group in a workshop rehearsal of this arrangement that he did for the Broadway Inspirational Voices. We are excited to share some of that work with you through Michael’s deeply imaginative arrangement of the closing number from Act 1 of the Broadway hit Dear Evan Hansen.
In the Wind
Words by members of the ’22-’23 Playhouse Choir, music by Kenyon Duncan
Featuring Playhouse Chamber Orchestra; Spoken word by Destine Harrison-Williams ’26
Last semester, the Playhouse Ensembles performed, purely by coincidence, a number of pieces related to the wind. Embracing this, as we brainstormed topics for our first collaborative composition with our amazing collaborator Kenyon Duncan, we settled on the theme of the wind. Kenyon led multiple group discussions and workshops to collect poetry, images, memories, and other ideas from students. This piece is the next step in that ongoing process, which we hope to continue with a studio recording next year! Kenyon Duncan is a composer-performer, conductor, and producer from Northern California. Grounded in the sonic traditions of the Black diaspora, Kenyon’s creative practice engages questions of embodiment and placemaking. Recent commissions include works for iSing Silicon Valley Girlchoir, Touch of Blue: New American Vocal Ensemble, and the Yale Undergraduate Chamber Orchestra. His sound installation Music for Strangers was featured at the Yale Center for Collaborative Arts and Media. Kenyon is currently an artist-citizen-in-residence with the Gabriela Lena Frank Creative Academy of Music in Mendocino County, CA. Kenyon’s experience as an ensemble leader has led to the production of 3 award-winning albums, bringing him around the world to lead workshops on vocal performance and ensemble technique. He spent a year directing The Whiffenpoofs, programming over 200 concerts across 25 states and 26 countries. Kenyon holds a B.A. in Computing & The Arts from Yale University, where he studied composition, computer music, and conducting.
A Playhouse Farewell
Arranged by Solon Snider Sway
Conducted by Halle Mitchell ’23
Choreography by Aaron Ventresca ’24
Please enjoy this short mashup of the jazz/music theater standards “I’ll Be Seeing You,” (Sammy Fain and Irving Kahn, 1938) “As Time Goes By,” (Herman Hupfeld, 1931) and “They Can’t Take that Away from Me” (George and Ira Gershwin, 1937).
The Playhouse Officer Team
President: Juliana Wojtenko ’23
Manager: Carrington Symone Johnson ’24
Social Media and Publicity Coordinator: Kate Stewart ’25
Social Chairs: Sydney Hwang ’24 and George Tidmore ’26
Student Conductor: Halle Mitchell ’23
Student Choreographer: Aaron Ventresca ’24
The Playhouse Choir
Aaron Ventresca
AJ Lonski
Amala Akkiraju
Annette Lee
Ariel Blumenberg
Ash Jackson
Austria Merritt
Carla Crucianelli
Carrington Symone Johnson
Charlie Roth
Christina Kim
Clara McNatt
Cynthia Jacobson
Destine Harrison-Williams
Drew Comstock
Fatmagül Katmer
George Tidmore
Halle Mitchell
Jenni Lawson
Jessica Wang
Josie Wender
Juliana Wojtenko
Juliette Carbonnier
Karlo Ascue
Kate Stewart
Kate Short
Kevin Yeung
Kimberlynn Bjurstrom
Lana Utley
Laura Reyes
Liam Wang
Madeleine LeBeau
Michelle Tang
Michelle Thurber
Nada Elfarazy
Neyci Estefenía Gutiérrez Valencia
Rachel Edelstein
Rosemary Paulson
Sophie Gerchikov
Sydney Hwang
Tharuka Gamage
Tommy Kim
Yinshan Shang
The Playhouse Chamber Orchestra
Violin: Isabella Khan & Emma Hathaway Sway
Viola: Michael Fording
Cello: Nati Solano
Bass: Jay White
Flute: Kate Park
Clarinet: Jacob Neis
Clarinet 2/Tenor Sax: Jacob Jackson
Bassoon: Conner Kim
Horn: Maya Jaaskelainen
Trumpet: Gabe Chalick
Piano: Miles Walter
Drums: Tommy Kim
Percussion: Rachel Edelstein
Special Thanks
Nancy Agosto, Shariffa Ali, Jacqueline Appleby, Elena Araoz, Katie Baltrush, Carmelita Becnel, Dan Benevento, Chloe Brown, Ronald Cappon, Lou Chen, Collin Costa, Jane Cox, Gabriel Crouch, Danielle Dennis, Vince di Mura, Carlos Dias, Torrey Drum, Milan Eldridge, Martha Elliott, Rochelle Ellis, Joe Fonseca, Will Han, Isaac Harlan, Brian Herrera, Sara Hong, Jacqueline Horner-Kwiatek, Tess James, David Kellett, Deborah Koenigsberg, Mike Langley, Jingjing Lin, Michael McElroy, Mary O’Connor, Matthew Parrish, Tracy Patterson, Matt Pilsner, Barbara Rearick, Kay Richardson,
Steven Runk, Beth Schupsky, Greg Smith, Chesney Snow, Jaclyn Sweet, Olivier Tarpaga, Dan Trueman, Darryl Waskow, Kim Wassall, Stacy Wolf, Codi Yhap, Inkyung Yi, and Marion Friedman Young.
About the Playhouse Ensembles
The Princeton Playhouse Choir is a new ensemble, founded in 2021, housed jointly with the Lewis Center’s Programs in Theater and Music Theater and the Music Department, and focusing on repertoire beginning in a broad range of theatrical traditions and expanding into a realm of experimental and innovative music-making. The core of the group’s repertoire is music connected to theater and reimagined for creative ensemble configurations through new arrangements and interdisciplinary collaborations. Playhouse incorporates large and small ensemble singing, a cappella and accompanied singing, vocal solos, dance, spoken word, new music commissions, and collaborative projects with artists across departments to facilitate a vibrant and inclusive rehearsal environment.
The Princeton Playhouse Orchestra is a new instrumental chamber ensemble specializing in the performance of new music commissions, music theater repertoire, popular song, and film music.
The Playhouse Ensembles were formed in an effort to celebrate music theater repertoire, build community, foster new arrangements and compositions, facilitate student leadership opportunities, and connect the Music Department and Lewis Center for the Art’s Programs in Theater and Music Theater through collaborative, co-curricular ensembles.
Learn more about the Lewis Center for the Arts
Learn more about the Department of Music
Land Acknowledgement
An estimated 10 million Native Americans lived in North America before the arrival of European colonizers. Many thousands lived in Lenapehoking, the vast homeland of the Lenni-Lenape, who were the first inhabitants of what is now called eastern Pennsylvania and parts of New York, New Jersey, Maryland, and Delaware.
Princeton stands on part of the ancient homeland and traditional territory of the Lenape people. In 1756, the College of New Jersey erected Nassau Hall with no recorded consultation with the Lenni-Lenape peoples.
Treaties and forced relocation dispersed Lenape-Delaware to Ohio, Kansas, and Oklahoma. We acknowledge the violence of settler colonialism and pay respect to Lenape peoples past, present, and future and their continuing presence in the homeland and throughout the Lenape diaspora.
Current Princeton student activists and alumni are advocating for Indigenous students and studies at the University. For more information, see the websites of Natives at Princeton and Princeton Indigenous Advocacy Coalition.
Lewis Center for the Arts
Chair: Judith Hamera
Executive Director: Marion Friedman Young
Director of Program in Music Theater: Stacy Wolf
Director of Program in Theater: Jane Cox
Producing Artistic Director, Theater And Music Theater Season: Elena Araoz
View a full list of the Program in Theater Faculty & Guest Artists
For a look at all the people working behind the scenes to bring you this event, view a full list of LCA staff members »
The programs of the Peter B. Lewis Center for the Arts are made possible through the generous support of many alumni and other donors. View a full list of LCA Supporters »
Music Department
Scheide Professor of Music History and Chair, Department of Music: Wendy Heller
Director of Administration and Operations: Jacqueline Appleby
Director, Princeton University Concerts/Department of Music Concert Office: Marna Seltzer
Associate Professor of Music and Director of Undergraduate Studies: Gavin Steingo
Professor of Music; Director of Graduate Studies (Musicology): Elizabeth Hellmuth Margulis
William Shubael Conant Professor of Music and Director of Graduate Studies (Composition): Steven Mackey
Conductor, Princeton University Orchestra and Director, Program in Music: Michael Pratt
Anthony H.P. Lee ’79 Director of Jazz: Rudresh Mahanthappa
Director of Choral Activities: Gabriel Crouch
View the full directory of the Department of Music staff and faculty »