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Faculty Recital: Jonathan Noffsinger, Saxophone, with Jun Okada, Piano
Mar. 03
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UA Opera Theatre: Puccini's "Suor Angelica," with the Huxford Symphony Orchestra
Mar. 04
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Latin Tide
Mar. 05
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Faculty Recital: Moisés Molina, Cello with Minjung Seo, Piano
Mar. 05
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UA Opera Theatre: Puccini's "Suor Angelica," with the Huxford Symphony Orchestra
Mar. 06
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UA Opera Theatre: Françaix's "Le Diable boiteux" and Puccini's "Suor Angelica," with the Huxford Symphony Orchestra
Mar. 08
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UA Opera Theatre: Puccini's "Suor Angelica," with the Huxford Symphony Orchestra
Mar. 08
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Senior Recital: Ian Zalamea, trombone
Mar. 08
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Junior Recital: Andrew Braun, trombone
Mar. 08
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MM Recital: Matthew Scarcelli, oboe
Mar. 08
FREE ADMISSION ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ “Cox and Box” notes from Gilbert and Sullivan Archives DRAMATIS PERSONÆ James John Cox – BARITONE John James Box – TENOR Sergeant Bouncer – BASS SCENE – A room in a lodging house Sergeant Bouncer, an old soldier, has a scheme to get double rent from a single room. By day he lets it to Mr. Box (a printer who is out all night) and by night to Mr. Cox (a hatter who works all day). Whenever either of them asks any awkward questions he sings at length about his days in the militia. His plan works well until Mr. Cox is, unexpectedly, given a day’s holiday and the two lodgers meet. Left alone while Bouncer sorts out another room, they discover they share more than the same bed. Cox is engaged to the widow Penelope Ann Wiggins – a fate that Box escaped by pretending to commit suicide. They try gambling Penelope Ann away until news arrives that she has been lost at sea and has left her fortune to her ‘intended’. They then both try to claim her for themselves. Another letter arrives – she has been found and will arrive any minute. Now they both try to disclaim her! However, she doesn’t appear personally, instead leaving a letter to inform them that she intends to marry a Mr. Knox! Relieved, Cox and Box swear eternal friendship and discover, curiously enough, that they are long-lost brothers… ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ “The Beautiful Bridegroom” notes from danshoremusic.com Winner, National Opera Association Chamber Opera Competition, 2009 The Beautiful Bridegroom, a one-act comic opera for six women, has been hailed as “a little masterpiece” by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer David Del Tredici. Based on an 18th-century play by Ludvig Holberg, this Mozart pastiche tells the story of a widow who has been searching for a young husband – not for her two marriageable daughters, but for herself.