Organization Foundation 3Arts, Inc
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more
Recommended publications
-
Theater Events: Body Image at Play in Clockwise's 'Impenetrable'
dailyherald.com http://www.dailyherald.com/article/20141010/entlife/141019986/ Theater events: Body image at play in Clockwise's 'Impenetrable' Barbara Vitello Body image A spa billboard showing a gorgeous, bikini-clad woman with arrows pointing to her imperfections and how they could be improved provokes outrage in a Chicago suburb in "Impenetrable" by Mia McCullough. Judy Blue directs Clockwise Theatre's production of the 2012 play about body image and perception and how this advertisement affects men and women in the community. Opens at 8 p.m. Friday, Oct. 10, at 221 N. Genesee St., Waukegan. $12, $20. See clockwisetheatre.org. A sneak peek The Actors Gymnasium offers a glimpse of new works as part of its Circus in Progress series showcasing circus arts. Featured artists include Striding Lion dance theater along with trapeze artist Camille Swift and Akemi Berry on silks. Next up is "A Circus Night's Dream," written and directed by The House Theatre's Chris Mathews. 4:30 and 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 11, at the Noyes Cultural Arts Center, 927 Noyes St., Evanston. $15. (847) 328-2795 or actorsgymnasium.org. Devil has his 'Day' Signal Ensemble Theatre opens its season with the world premiere of "Devil's Day Off" by Jon Steinhagen ("Blizzard '67," "Dating Walter Dante"). Set during a record-breaking heat wave that is accompanied by massive power outages, "Devil's Day Off" chronicles the fear, humor and heroism of the event through multiple vignettes. Co-artistic director Ronan Mara directs the premiere, which features 13 actors playing 100 characters. -
Theatre Facts 2017
THEATRE FACTS 2017 THEATRE COMMUNICATIONS GROUP’S REPORT ON THE FISCAL STATE OF THE U.S. PROFESSIONAL NOT-FOR-PROFIT THEATRE FIELD By Zannie Giraud Voss, Glenn B. Voss, and Lesley Warren, SMU DataArts and Ilana B. Rose and Laurie Baskin, Theatre Communications Group x,QWURGXFWLRQ x([HFXWLYH6XPPDU\ x7KH8QLYHUVH x7UHQG7KHDWUHV (DUQHG,QFRPH $WWHQGDQFH7LFNHWDQG3HUIRUPDQFH7UHQGV &RQWULEXWHG,QFRPH ([SHQVHVDQG&KDQJHLQ8QUHVWULFWHG1HW$VVHWV &81$ %DODQFH6KHHW 7HQ<HDU7UHQG7KHDWUHV x3URILOHG7KHDWUHV (DUQHG,QFRPH &RQWULEXWHG,QFRPH ([SHQVHVDQG&81$ %XGJHW*URXS6QDSVKRW(DUQHG,QFRPH %XGJHW*URXS6QDSVKRW$WWHQGDQFH7LFNHWVDQG3HUIRUPDQFHV %XGJHW*URXS6QDSVKRW&RQWULEXWHG,QFRPH %XGJHW*URXS6QDSVKRW([SHQVHVDQG&81$ %XGJHW*URXS6QDSVKRW%DODQFH6KHHW x&RQFOXVLRQ x0HWKRGRORJ\ x3URILOHG7KHDWUHV &RYHUSKRWRFUHGLWV Top row (left to right): Bottom right (left to right): x 7KHFDVWLQ.DUDPX+RXVH¶VSURGXFWLRQRIYou Can’t Take It x -DPHV'RKHUW\DQG.LD\OD5\DQQLQ6WHHS7KHDWUH¶VSURGXFWLRQRI With YouE\0RLVHVDQG.DXIPDQGLUHFWHGE\)UHG6WHUQIHOG3KRWR HookmanE\/DXUHQ<HHGLUHFWHGE\9DQHVVD6WDOOLQJ3KRWRE\/HH E\0DUN+RUQLQJ 0LOOHU x .DUWKLN6ULQLYDVDQ$QMDOL%KLPDQLDQG3LD6KDKLQ6RXWK&RDVW x (PLO\.XURGD :LOOLDP7KRPDV+RGJVRQLQWKH7KHDWUH:RUNV 5HSHUWRU\¶VSURGXFWLRQRIOrange E\$GLWL%UHQQDQ.DSLOGLUHFWHGE\ 6LOLFRQ9DOOH\¶VSURGXFWLRQRICalligraphy E\%\9HOLQD+DVX+RXVWRQ -HVVLFD.XE]DQVN\3KRWRE\'HERUD5RELQVRQ6&5 'LUHFWHGE\/HVOLH0DUWLQVRQ3KRWRE\.HYLQ%HUQH Second row (left to right): Bottom left (top to bottom): x -HVVLHH'DWLQRDQG-DVRQ.RORWRXURVLQ*HYD VZRUOGSUHPLHUH x 0DLQ6WUHHW7KHDWHU¶VSURGXFWLRQRIThe Grand ConcourseE\+HLGL -
(Apr '18) Kristin Idaszak Cloudgate Theatre Octagon
Director 312.636.6783 * [email protected] Another Jungle* (Apr ’18) Kristin Idaszak Cloudgate Theatre Octagon (US Premiere) Kristiana Rae Colón Jackalope Theatre Devour Ensemble Devised Poetic Forum Collective good friday* Kristiana Rae Colón Oracle Theater Co-Production BARS and MEASURES* Idris Goodwin Prop Thtr (NNPN) Twisted Knots* Dale Danner Chicago Commercial Collective DUST* Rob Smith lower case theatre the old ball game* Kristiana Rae Colón First Floor Theater DisConnected Ensemble Devised Poetic Forum Collective good friday^ Kristiana Rae Colón Stage Left Theatre in your own backyard* Kristiana Rae Colón Chicago Home Theater Festival DeHuman* Ensemble Devised Poetic Forum Collective The Foreplay Play Mariah MacCarthy Realize Theatre Group Octagon^ Kristiana Rae Colón National New Play Network Cauldron of Morning* Kristiana Rae Colón Broken Nose Theatre Chicago Afterdark* Tate Geborkoff Chicago Fringe El Stories XVI* Devised/Adaptation The Waltzing Mechanics RAW Chris O’Connell Deluge Theatre Collective The BenchMark Richard A. Roberts Step Up Productions one week in spring^ Kristiana Rae Colón Halcyon Theatre Patria Libre* Zoe Miller-Lee Prologue Theatre Company The All-American Genderfuck Cabaret Mariah McCarthy Pride Films and Plays at Mary’s Attic The Last Daughter of Oedipus* Jennifer Mickelson Babes with Blades Assistant Director (Opera) La Traviata (May ’18) dir. Patricia Racette Opera Theater St. Louis The Consul dir. Andreas Mitisek Chicago Opera Theater The Consul dir. Andreas Mitisek Long Beach Opera Theater The Fairy Queen dir. Andreas Mitisek Chicago Opera Theater Le Vin Herbe (The Love Potion) dir. Andreas Mitisek Chicago Opera Theater La Voix Humaine dir. Andreas Mitisek Chicago Opera Theater Gianni Schicchi dir. -
Return of Organization Exempt from Income
efile GRAPHIC p rint - DO NOT PROCESS As Filed Data - DLN: 93493321035384 Return of Organization Exempt From Income Tax OMB No 1545-0047 Form 990 Under section 501 ( c), 527, or 4947 ( a)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code ( except private foundations) 2O1 3 Do not enter Social Security numbers on this form as it may be made public By law, the IRS Department of the Treasury Open generally cannot redact the information on the form Internal Revenue Service Inspection - Information about Form 990 and its instructions is at www.IRS.gov/form990 For the 2013 calendar year, or tax year beginning 06-01-2013 , 2013, and ending 05-31-2014 C Name of organization B Check if applicable D Employer identification number EQUITY LEAGUE HEALTH TRUST FUND f Address change 13-6092981 Doing Business As • Name change fl Initial return Number and street (or P 0 box if mail is not delivered to street address) Room/suite E Telephone number 165 WEST 46TH STREET 14TH FLOOR p Terminated (212)869-9380 (- Amended return City or town, state or province, country, and ZIP or foreign postal code NEW YORK, NY 10036 1 Application pending G Gross receipts $ 104,708,930 F Name and address of principal officer H(a) Is this a group return for Arthur Drechsler subordinates? 1 Yes F No H(b) Are all subordinates 1 Yes F No included? I Tax-exempt status F_ 501(c)(3) F 501(c) ( 9 I (insert no (- 4947(a)(1) or F_ 527 If "No," attach a list (see instructions) J Website : - www equityleague org H(c) Group exemption number 0- K Form of organization 1 Corporation 1 Trust F_ Association (- Other 0- L Year of formation 1960 M State of legal domicile NY Summary 1 Briefly describe the organization's mission or most significant activities TO PROVIDE HEALTH AND OTHER BENEFITS TO ELIGIBLE PARTICIPANTS w 2 Check this box Of- if the organization discontinued its operations or disposed of more than 25% of its net assets 3 Number of voting members of the governing body (Part VI, line 1a) . -
2016 IGNITION Festival Release 2016
Press contact: Cathy Taylor/Kelsey Moorhouse Cathy Taylor Public Relations [email protected] [email protected] FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 773-564-9564 Victory Gardens Theater Announces Lineup for 2016 IGNITION Festival of New Plays 2016 Festival runs August 5–7, 2016 CHICAGO, IL – Victory Gardens Theater announces the lineup for the 2016 IGNITION Festival of New Plays, including The Wayward Bunny by Greg Kotis; BREACH: a manifesto on race in America through the eyes of a black girl recovering from self-hate by Antoinette Nwandu; EOM (end of message) by Laura Jacqmin; Kill Move Paradise by James Ijames; Gaza Rehearsal by Karen Hartman; and Girls In Cars Underwater by Tegan McLeod. The 2016 Festival runs August 5-7, 2016 at Victory Gardens Theater, located at 2433 N Lincoln Avenue. INGITION’s six selected plays will be presented in a festival of readings and will be directed by leading artists from Chicago. Following the readings, two of the plays may be selected for intensive workshops during Victory Gardens’ 2016-17 season, and Victory Gardens may produce one of these final scripts in an upcoming season. "At Victory Gardens Theater, we bridge Chicago communities through innovative and challenging new plays by giving established and emerging playwrights the time and space to develop their work. This year, we have invited some of the most thrilling playwrights to join our IGNITION Festival,” said Isaac Gomez, Victory Gardens Theater Literary Manager. “Their plays exemplify the current political and cultural zeitgeist of our city and country: the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, race and gender, the modern struggles of fatherhood, the insular world and morality of video gaming, and a woman’s journey to self-love. -
GRANTEE SPOTLIGHT Three Questions: Q&A with Myrna Salazar, Co-Founder & Executive Director, Chicago Latino Theater Alliance (CLATA)
Illinois Humanities | August 2020 GRANTEE SPOTLIGHT Three Questions: Q&A with Myrna Salazar, co-founder & executive director, Chicago Latino Theater Alliance (CLATA) Project “Destinos” 3 rd Annual Chicago International Latino Theater Festival Location Chicago, IL Organization Founded in 2016 through a new collaboration between the National Museum of Mexican Art, the International Latino Cultural Center, and the Puerto Rican Arts Alliance, CLATA aims to produce the country’s leading Latino theater festival (“Destinos”), to provide organizational and financial support for Chicago’s Latino theater groups, and to build a permanent home for Chicago’s Latino theater companies to thrive and grow. Project “Destinos” takes place at several venues throughout Chicago, with over 93 performances, 10 student matinees, 50 post-show discussions, 4 panel discussions, and 3 workshops. Last year the festival presented work by 5 local theatre companies, 3 national companies, and 3 international companies. Primary partnerships for last year’s festival included Aguijón Theatre Co., Repertorio Latino Theatre Co., Teatro Vista, Urban Theatre Co., and Water People Theatre, as well as Chicago Shakespeare Theatre, Goodman Theatre, and Steppenwolf Theatre. Q1 What is the most important thing people should know about your work? Myrna Salazar: The Chicago Latino Theater Alliance (CLATA) is unique, because for the first time in Chicago, three of the most prominent and long-standing Latino arts and culture organizations joined forces to increase awareness of Latino Theater. CLATA was co-founded in 2016 by Executive Director, Myrna Salazar, Carlos Tortolero, National Museum of Mexican Art (NMMA), Pepe Vargas, International Latino Cultural Center (ILCC) and Carlos Hernandez, Puerto Rican Arts Alliance (PRAA) who collectively bring over 75 years of arts programming in Chicago. -
2018 IGNITION Festival Release
Press contact: Cathy Taylor Cathy Taylor Public Relations, Inc. [email protected] 773-564-9564 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 13, 2018 Victory Gardens Theater Announces Lineup for 10th Anniversary IGNITION Festival of New Plays 2018 Festival runs August 3 - 5, 2018 CHICAGO, IL – Victory Gardens Theater Artistic Director Chay Yew, Managing Director Erica Daniels and Director of New Play Development Skyler Gray announce the lineup for the 10th Anniversary IGNITION Festival of New Plays, including Prosthesis by Robert Askins; Untitled Road Trip Play by Lauren Yee; White History by Dave Harris; How to Defend Yourself by Lily Padilla; Seeing Eye by Nick Malakhow; and The First Deep Breath by Lee Edward Colston II. The 2018 Festival runs August 3 -5, 2018 at Victory Gardens Theater, located at 2433 N Lincoln Avenue. All readings are free and open to the public, though a reservation is strongly encouraged. For more information or to RSVP, visit www.victorygardens.org/ignition or call the Victory Gardens Box Office at 773.871.3000. IGNITION’s six selected plays will be presented in a festival of readings and will be directed by leading artists from Chicago, including Halena Kays, Marti Lyons, Jess McLeod, Ron OJ Parson, Vanessa Stalling and Chay Yew. "We're proud to celebrate the tenth anniversary of Victory Gardens' IGNITION Festival of New Plays. Since its inception in 2008, we have given world premiere productions to a new generation of American playwrights from Branden Jacobs-Jenkins to Lauren Yee, from Jackie Sibblies Drury to Kristoffer Diaz. We're thrilled to have shared these plays with Chicagoans and the world," says Artistic Director Chay Yew. -
2014 Cityarts Program Grant
2014 CityArts Organizational Grant Program Panelists Julie Adrianopoli Christopher Audain Baraka de Soleil Meg Duguid Ilesa Duncan Joyce Fernandes Cayenne Harris Sarai Hoffman Andrew Micheli Troy Peters Nicole Reyna Jenny Shanks Willa Taylor Grantees 826CHI INC NFP Albany Park Theater Project American Indian Center American Theater Company Antibody Dance archi-treasures Arts & Business Council of Chicago Audience Architects Barrel of Monkeys Black Ensemble Theater Blair Thomas & Company Changing Worlds Chicago a cappella Chicago Access Corporation Chicago Artists Coalition Chicago Arts Partnerships in Education Chicago Children’s Choir Chicago Children's Theatre Chicago Cultural Alliance Chicago Dance Crash Chicago Film Archives Chicago Filmmakers Chicago Human Rhythm Project Chicago Humanities Festival Chicago Independent Radio Project (CHIRP) Chicago International Film Festival Chicago Public Art Group Chicago Sinfonietta Chicago West Community Music Center Chicago Writers Conference Chicago Youth Symphony Orchestras Child's Play Touring Theatre Chinese Fine Arts Society Clinard Dance Theater Community TV Network Congo Square Theatre Company Court Theatre Culture Shock Chicago, NFP Dance in the Parks, NFP DanceWorks Chicago DFBRL8R DuSable Museum of African American History eighth blackbird Performing Arts Association Elevarte Ensemble Español Spanish Dance Theater Erasing the Distance Fifth House Ensemble Free Spirit Media Fund for Innovative TV DBA Media Burn Archive Garfield Park Conservatory Alliance Gene Siskel Film Center Gilloury Institute Global Girls Inc. Grant Park Orchestral Association Griffin Theatre Company Groundswell Educational Films, NFP Gus Giordano's Jazz Dance Chicago, Inc. Heaven Gallery Hedwig Dances Hyde Park Art Center Hyde Park School of Dance InFusion Theatre Company Inner-City Muslim Action Network Institute of Puerto Rican Arts & Culture Instituto Cervantes of Chicago, Inc. -
2021 Cityarts Grantees
2021 CITYARTS GRANTEES 2nd Story Chicago Jazz Philharmonic 3Arts, Inc. Chicago Kids Company 6018North Chicago Maritime Arts Center A.B.L.E. - Artists Breaking Limits & Expectations Chicago Media Project a.pe.ri.od.ic Chicago Public Art Group About Face Theatre Collective Chicago Shakespeare Theater Access Contemporary Music Chicago Sinfonietta Africa International House USA Chicago Tap Theatre Aguijon Theater Company Chicago West Community Music Center American Indian Center Chicago Youth Shakespeare Apparel Industry Board, Inc. Cinema/Chicago Art on Sedgwick Clinard Dance Arts Alliance Illinois Collaboraction Theatre Company Arts & Business Council of Chicago Collaborative Arts Institute of Chicago Arts of Life, Inc. Community Film Workshop of Chicago Asian Improv aRts: Midwest Community Television Network Avalanche Theatre Constellation Men's Ensemble Balzekas Museum of Lithuanian Culture Contextos Beverly Arts Center Court Theatre Beyond This Point Performing Arts Association Crossing Borders Music Black Alphabet Dance in the Parks, NFP Black Ensemble Theatre DanceWorks Chicago Black Lunch Table D-Composed Gives Cedille Chicago, NFP Definition Theatre Company Cerqua Rivera Dance Theatre Design Museum of Chicago Changing Worlds Erasing the Distance Chicago a cappella Fifth House Ensemble Chicago Architecture Foundation Filament Theatre Ensemble Chicago Art Department Forward Momentum Chicago Chicago Arts and Music Project Free Lunch Academy Chicago Arts Partnerships in Education Free Spirit Media Chicago Balinese Gamelan Free Street Theater Chicago Blues Revival FreshLens Chicago Chicago Cabaret Professionals Fulcrum Point New Music Project Chicago Childrens Choir Garfield Park Conservatory Alliance Chicago Composers Orchestra Global Girls Inc. Chicago Dance Crash Goodman Theatre Chicago Dancemakers Forum Guild Literary Complex Chicago Filmmakers Gus Giordano's Jazz Dance Chicago, Inc. -
2019 Cityarts Grantees �
2019 CITYARTS GRANTEES � Gen Op Large Organizations Black Ensemble Theater Kartemquin Educational Films Chicago Childrens Choir Merit School of Music Chicago Humanities Festival Old Town School of Folk Music Chicago Sinfonietta Steppenwolf Theatre Company Hubbard Street Dance Chicago Victory Gardens Theater Hyde Park Art Center Gen Op Small Organizations 2nd Story Chicago Gay Men's Chorus 3Arts, Inc. Chicago Human Rhythm Project A Red Orchid Theatre Chicago Industrial Arts & Design Center A.B.L.E. Chicago Jazz Philharmonic About Face Theatre Collective Chicago Kids Company Adventure Stage Chicago Chicago Metamorphosis Orchestra Project African American Arts Alliance Chicago Moving Company Aguijon Theater Company Chicago Public Art Group Albany Park Theater Project Chicago Youth Shakespeare American Blues Theater Chicago Youth Symphony Orchestras Architreasures Cinema/Chicago ArtReach Chicago CircEsteem Arts & Business Council of Chicago City Lit Theater Awakenings Art Collaboraction Theatre Company Ballet Folklorico de Chicago Comfort Station Balzekas Museum of Lithuanian Culture Community Film Workshop of Chicago Barrel of Monkeys Productions Congo Square Theatre Company Beverly Arts Center Creative Chicago Reuse Exchange (CCRX) Blair Thomas & Company Crossing Borders Music Broken Nose Theatre Deeply Rooted Dance Theater Chicago a cappella Design Museum of Chicago Chicago Artists Coalition Eighth Blackbird Performing Arts Association Chicago Arts Partnerships in Education Enrich Chicago Chicago Center for Music Education Ensemble Español -
Annual Report
18 ANNUAL REPORT 19 MISSION VISION • We will educate enterprising artists, thinkers, innovators, leaders, and globally conscious citizens who transform The Theatre School trains students communities across DePaul, Chicago, the nation, and the world. • We will support an expert, passionate faculty and staff to the highest level of professional committed to advancing the vibrancy of live theatre and performance while continually adapting to a broadening skill and artistry in an inclusive and changing profession. • We will become a model of diversity and inclusion for the University and the field. and diverse conservatory setting. • We will produce public programs and performances that challenge, entertain, and stimulate the imagination. • We will foster cross-disciplinary collaboration to further student understanding and appreciation of every aspect of theatre work. VALUES EDUCATION We advance intellectual development and ethical consciousness. We foster moral, spiritual, social, political, and artistic growth. We promote participation in civic life. RESPECT We inspire respect for self, for others, for the profession, and for humanity. We embrace the Vincentian model of service. FREEDOM We build a community founded on the principles of creativity and freedom of expression. We value initiative, innovation, exploration, and risk-taking. IMAGINATION We celebrate the primacy of imagination in our work. SPIRITUALITY We believe theatre is a place for reflection, awakening, and the development of moral awareness. Welcome to The Theatre School’s 2018-19 Annual Report. This year we auditioned and admitted students in our new Comedy Arts and Projection Design majors. We also received approval for a new BFA degree in Wig and Makeup Design & Technology, which will greet its first class in Fall 2020. -
ORGANIZATIONS EVOLUTIONARY JOURNEYS ONGOING DIALOGUE EXPLORATION TESTING IDEAS ENDURING COLLABORATIONS SHARING KNOWLEDGE EDUCATION PROSPERITY and HOPE Annual Report
LLOYD A. FRY FOUNDATION 35YEARS HUNDREDS OF ORGANIZATIONS EVOLUTIONARY JOURNEYS ONGOING DIALOGUE EXPLORATION TESTING IDEAS ENDURING COLLABORATIONS SHARING KNOWLEDGE EDUCATION PROSPERITY AND HOPE Annual Report FOR 2018 ALL CHICAGO For the past 35 years, the Fry Foundation has supported hundreds of organizations that improve the lives of low-income, underserved Chicagoans. This year’s Annual Report highlights 15 of the Foundation’s longest-term grantees across our four funding areas: Arts Learning, Education, Employment and Health. The organizations within these pages share more than longevity. They share an ability to evolve. While they all have served more and more individuals over time, they not only have gotten bigger, they also have gotten better. They thoughtfully adjust their strategies to respond to new information and new challenges, whether that’s an increase in demand or a decrease in public funding. They strengthen the services they provide, continually addressing the complex, changing needs of Chicago students, workers and patients. As a result, these 15 grantees have become exemplars within their fields. Others now look to them and learn. The Fry Foundation has long supported these grantees on their evolutionary journeys. The Foundation has been in ongoing dialogue with them, helping them to expand, to partner with other organizations, to explore cutting-edge methods and technologies, and to identify new opportunities and take advantage of them. “We have had many conversations with the program officers at the Fry Foundation not just about the grants but about the work in our field. We value the Fry Foundation as a partner,” says Christina Warden of Women Employed—echoing the ways that the Fry Foundation’s grantees often speak of its enduring collaborations with them.