I Am Harvey Milk
World
premiere performances of Lippa’s revised tribute to American icon Harvey Milk
WHEN: June
23 & 24; companion events on June 17 and June 23
WHERE: Morven Museum and Garden
TICKETS: $42 - $125; youths 5-17 receive a 50% discount with an adult
purchase. Visit the Princeton Symphony Orchestra webpage at princetonsymphony.org or call (609) 497-0020.
The Princeton Festival presents I Am Harvey Milk, a musical theater oratorio by acclaimed Broadway composer and lyricist Andrew Lippa (Big Fish, The Addams Family). The show celebrates the legacy of Harvey Milk, an American icon and the first openly gay man to hold office in California. Lippa’s oratorio is part choral work and part theater piece, taking audience members through Milk’s life, from his childhood to his assassination.
Conducted by Andrew Lippa himself, these performances serve as the world premiere of a revised version of the original work, and take place in the tented performance pavilion on the grounds of beautiful Morven Museum and Garden.
The work is directed by Noah Himmelstein, a New York based theater director and associate art director of Everyman Theatre. The show features Benjamin Pajak as young Harvey, who most recently played the title role in Oliver!, for Encores! at NY City Center. Adam Kantor, portraying Harvey Milk, most notably played Mark Cohen in the closing cast of Rent on Broadway. Broadway and West End actress Scarlett Strallen and Family Equality’s CEO Stacey Stevenson perform as Soprano and Speaker, respectively. Andrew Lippa conducts the cast with the Princeton Festival Men’s Chorus and the Princeton Symphony Orchestra.
Andrew Lippa (words/music/conductor) is an award-winning artist whose work spans the worlds of theater, film, television, and the concert stage. His musicals include The Addams Family; Big Fish; The Wild Party; new songs for You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown; A Little Princess; and John & Jen. In addition to I Am Harvey Milk, his concert works include I Am Anne Hutchinson; Unbreakable; a world-premiere for pianist Lang Lang titled Rising Tide; as well as his hit song for Kristin Chenoweth in Disney’s Descendants titled “Evil Like Me” (gold record) and songs for Renée Fleming, Idina Menzel, Vanessa Williams, and others. He wrote the score for Aaron Sorkin’s The Farnsworth Invention and has conducted the San Francisco, Chicago, and Cincinnati Symphony orchestras.
The Princeton Festival is hosting two companion events in conjunction with I Am Harvey Milk. On Saturday, June 17, at 2pm,
the Princeton Public Library offers a free screening of the 2008 film MILK, starring Sean Penn.
Penn won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of Harvey Milk. Andrew Reynolds,
author of Children of Harvey
Milk: How LGBTQ Politicians Changed the World (Oxford, 2018) will
open the screening with some brief remarks.
On Friday, June 23, at 4pm, the Princeton Festival is holding a panel discussion with composer and conductor Andrew Lippa. Lippa will speak with young musicians about his process in writing I Am Harvey Milk and the ways artists can create social change through their work. The event takes place at the Stockton Education Center and is free and open to the public.
Health and Safety
The Princeton Symphony Orchestra is closely monitoring and adhering to the
New Jersey Department of Health’s COVID-19 Requirements. Attendees will receive
information regarding safety procedures, entry, seating directions, etc. in
advance of their selected live performance(s).
Accessibility
The Princeton Symphony Orchestra is committed to ensuring all programming is
accessible for everyone, working with venues such as Richardson Auditorium to
provide needed services. Contact ADA Coordinator Kitanya Khateri for questions
about available services at kkhateri@princetonsymphony.org
or 609-905-0973. Note: some services require at least two weeks’ notice to
arrange.
About The Princeton Festival
The Princeton Festival is the Princeton Symphony Orchestra’s flagship summer
program showcasing the performing arts. Founded in 2004, the Princeton Festival
quickly established a reputation for artistic excellence and innovative
programming. Every year in June, thousands of people from the mid-Atlantic
region and beyond come to the Festival to enjoy the quality and variety of its
programs. Offerings include opera, musical theater, dance, orchestra and
chamber music, and a constantly evolving selection of other genres, including
jazz, world music, choral concerts, and country music. The Festival has
long-standing partnerships with public libraries and local churches, and
promotes life-long learning in the arts through free educational lectures
presented to a wide and diverse community.
About The Princeton
Symphony Orchestra
The Princeton Symphony Orchestra (PSO) is a cultural centerpiece of the
Princeton community and one of New Jersey’s finest music organizations, a
position established through performances of beloved masterworks, innovative
music by living composers, and an extensive network of educational programs
offered to area students free of charge. Led by Edward T. Cone Music Director
Rossen Milanov, the PSO presents orchestral, pops, and chamber music programs
of the highest artistic quality, supported by lectures and related events that
supplement the concert experience. Its flagship summer program the Princeton
Festival brings an array of performing arts and artists to Princeton during
multiple weeks in June. Through PSO BRAVO!, the orchestra produces
wide-reaching and impactful education programs in partnership with local
schools and arts organizations that culminate in students attending a live
orchestral performance. The PSO receives considerable support from the
Princeton community and the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, regularly
garnering NJSCA’s highest honor. Recognition of engaging residencies and
concerts has come from the National Endowment for the Arts, and the PSO’s
commitment to new music has been acknowledged with an ASCAP Award for
Adventurous Programming and a Copland Fund Award. The only independent,
professional orchestra to make its home in Princeton, the PSO performs at
historic Richardson Auditorium on the campus of Princeton University.
Find the PSO online at www.princeton symphony.org; on facebook at www.facebook.com/princetonsymphony;
on Twitter at www.twitter.com/psomusic
and on flickr at www.flickr.com/photos/princetonsymphony.