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ORCHESTRA CONCERTS

16

R A V I N I A F A M I L Y F U N G U I D E

5:00 p.m. Sunday, July 15

Pavilion

Chicago Symphony Orchestra

Andy Einhorn,

conductor

Audra McDonald,

vocalist

Sunday in the Park with Audra

There are a few styles of music that

were created right here in the United

States, and one of the most famous

and beloved around the world is

the “musical,” a combination of

spoken-word acting (like in movies

or plays) and songs that tell you the

most important parts of the story. In

New York City, there’s a street called

Broadway that has a lot of the the-

aters where musicals really became

popular, so people frequently call

musicals “Broadway shows,” and that’s

also where all the best shows get per-

formed.

Just like the Oscars are awards

for the best movies every year, the

Tony Awards are for the best musicals

and plays, and the person who has

won the most Tony Awards ever as

a performer is Audra McDonald, the

star of Ravinia’s annual gala concert.

This is a special concert where a lot

of people get extra dressed up, not

only because Audra McDonald is

such a big star—she’s also made a

lot of movies, TV shows, and CDs—

but also because it raises money for

Ravinia’s Reach*Teach*Play programs

that make music more available to

school kids and families all around the

Chicago area.

Audra McDonald is especially

famous for singing in musicals by

Stephen Sondheim, and she starred in

several of Ravinia’s productions of his

works 15 years ago, including

Passion

,

Anyone Can Whistle

, and

Sunday in

the Park with George

. So because this

concert is on a Sunday, we’re calling it

“Sunday in the Park with Audra”!

8:00 p.m. Wednesday, July 18

Pavilion

Chicago Symphony Orchestra

Gustavo Dudamel,

conductor

Yuja Wang,

piano

Ludwig van Beethoven:

Overture to

Egmont

Piano Concerto No. 1

Symphony No. 7

It may seem pretty common around

here for kids to have a chance to learn

an orchestra instrument at school,

but it’s becoming less common than

you’d think, not only in the United

States but around the world. That’s

where a program called “El Sistema”

comes in, making sure that children

all over have an opportunity to learn

music; not just textbook stuff like

how to read it, but how to play instru-

ments that they want to play. A few

years ago, Ravinia started a program