Two-time Gramophone Award-winning orchestra to perform Mozart’s Overture to The Magic Flute and his Violin Concerto No. 5 with Pinchas Zukerman, plus the complete incidental music to Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Widely considered one of the world’s top ten orchestras, the Budapest Festival Orchestra returns to the Music Center at Strathmore on Friday, January 23 at 8pm as part of Washington Performing Arts’ 2014-15 celebration of “The Art of the Orchestra.” The award-winning ensemble will perform two works by Mozart plus the rarely performed, complete incidental music to Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
Who: Budapest Festival Orchestra
Iván Fischer, music director
Pinchas Zukerman, violin
Anna Lucia Richter, soprano
Barbara Kozelj, mezzo-soprano
Pro Musica Girls’ Choir (Nyíregyháza/Hungary)
Where: The Music Center at Strathmore
When: Friday, January 23, 2015 at 8pm
Program: Mozart Overture to The Magic Flute
Mozart Violin Concerto No. 5 in A Major, K.219
Mendelssohn A Midsummer Night’s Dream (complete incidental music)
Tickets: From $35, available at washingtonperformingarts.org or by calling (202) 785-9727.
About The Author
Editor-in-Chief/Entertainment Reporter
I knew early on that I wanted to take my place among the stars. One day, my mother saw me reading The Washington Post at a very young age. Who would have known that it would be the building blocks of my journey? Since that day, I dedicated my life to learn all that is learnable. I read everything from encyclopedias, to books, to dictionaries, to magazines. I’m also an avid consumer of television, with my favorite genre being game shows. If you’ve seen me on Who Wants to be a Millionaire or Wheel of Fortune, then you know that this interest has served me well!
My unique style of reporting began back in junior high school, when I started to chronicle the events that shaped my life. Whether it was the annual family vacation or the local science fiction convention, I shot numerous pictures and recorded my thoughts so I could truly appreciate the history. During my senior year at Friendly High, I wrote what was to be my first masterpiece, “Advanced Space Academy – A One Week Journey.” I sent the eleven-page article back to the U.S. Space Camp staff. The article was highly praised for being “one of the best written articles in the history of U.S. Space Camp.” From then on, I knew what I wanted to do for rest of my life — to be a reporter.
Since then, I have trained in Broadcast Journalism at Bowie State University (2008) in Bowie, MD earning a B.S. in Communications. I gained experience in news production and editing through field experiences with Bowie Community Media Corporation, Prince George’s Community Television, and Bowie State University Television. I also wrote scripts for a variety of quiz shows for over five years.
As a lifelong movie buff, I now see close to 100 films every year. I took this love of movies to the next step when I became a co-host for Eclipse Magazine TV in the fall of 2005. While at EMTV, I interviewed celebrities, worked red carpets, and attended a wide variety of movie screenings. In January 2009, I took a leap of faith and started my own entertainment news magazine, The Rogers Revue. Shortly afterward, my life-long journey of studying the silver screen and writing about what I learned finally earned me a place in the Washington Area Film Critics Association.
All of this has led me here, giving you the latest entertainment news for the DMV and the entire nation, and I am truly excited for whatever will come next.