nov 23
Venue: Overture Hall
Saturday, Nov. 23, 2024
4:30-6:20 p.m Free Pre-Concert Activities in Overture Lobby
6:30-7:00 p.m. Prelude Discussion in Overture Hall
7:30-9:40 p.m. Concert
Kyle Knox, Conductor
Tickets: $20-$90
Kyle Knox, Conductor
Your Madison Symphony Orchestra’s first MSO at the Movies of the season presents Disney and Pixar’s Coco in Concert featuring a screening of the complete film with Oscar® and Grammy®-winning composer Michael Giacchino’s musical score performed live to the film. In addition to the original score by Giacchino, “Coco” also features the Oscar®-winning song “Remember Me” by Oscar-winning songwriters Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez, and additional songs co-written by Germaine Franco and co-director and screenwriter Adrian Molina.
Concert Run Time: 1 hour and 50 minutes, plus 20 minute intermission
Free Pre-Concert Activities!
Overture Lobby, 4:30-6:20 p.m.
Enjoy music and dance from the Latino Arts String Program and Cumbia Cachaca, plus enter a book giveaway hosted by Madison Reading Project and the Madison Public Library. These pre-concert activities are free and open to the public! Discover more.
Prelude Discussion
Overture Hall, 6:30-7:00
Attend a 30-minute discussion with conductor Kyle Knox in Overture Hall. Free to all ticket-holders.
Take Note: Drinks Allowed in Overture Hall
Please take note that drinks are allowed inside Overture Hall during all Madison Symphony Orchestra concerts. You may pre-order food and drink to be picked up in the lobby, or order at bars and concession stands located around the Overture Hall lobby before each concert and during intermission. Please enjoy food in the lobby and unwrap any candy or cough drops before the performance begins. Thank you!
Despite his family’s baffling generations-old ban on music, Miguel (voice of Anthony Gonzalez) dreams of becoming an accomplished musician like his idol, Ernesto de la Cruz (voice of Benjamin Bratt). Desperate to prove his talent, Miguel finds himself in the stunning and colorful Land of the Dead following a mysterious chain of events. Along the way, he meets charming trickster Héctor (voice of Gael García Bernal), and together, they set off on an extraordinary journey to unlock the real story behind Miguel’s family history.
Gavin Lawrence has performed with American Players Theatre for six seasons, and was recently seen in Katori Hall’s The Mountaintop – APT’s first show back with a live audience. He has worked at Steppenwolf, Woolly Mammoth, the Goodman, Arena Stage, Baltimore Centerstage, Alabama Shakespeare Festival, Denver Center Theatre Company, Actors Theatre of Louisville, Mixed Blood, the Guthrie, Children’s Theatre Company, Indiana Repertory Theatre, First Stage, Skylight Music Theatre, Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, Kansas City Rep., Florida Studio Theatre, and the City Theatre. Film and TV work include, Joe Somebody, Justice, and Chicago PD.
His plays have been produced in Minneapolis, Washington, DC, and Chicago. Cut Flowers, first produced by Mixed Blood Theatre, garnered five Black Theatre Alliance awards in Chicago including the Lorraine Hansberry award for Best Writing Of A Play. His play, Salt Fish and Bakes, was named Best New Script by the Minneapolis Star Tribune. His plays and musicals for young people have been produced at Universities and High Schools across the country as well as China.
As a director and composer, his work has been seen at the Kennedy Center, Mixed Blood Theatre, LatiNegro Theatre Collective, and Penumbra Theatre where he wrote and arranged the original music for Waiting In Vain, by the late Rebecca Rice. Gavin is an AUDELCO AWARD winner for Outstanding Performance By A Lead Actor for his Off-Broadway performance in Pure Confidence by Carlyle Brown and has been honored twice with the Distinguished Alumnus Award from Howard University. He has received grants from the National Endowment For The Arts, the Minnesota State Arts Board, and the Playwrights Center where he worked as a Many Voices Fellow. Most recently Gavin was awarded with the Fox/TCG Resident Actor Fellowship for Distinguished Achievement. His fellowship allowed him a three-year residency at Baltimore Centerstage following the death of Freddie Gray and the ensuing uprisings in Baltimore and around the country. His solo show – Dear Son (The Black Body) was born out of his time at Centerstage where, under the artistic leadership of Kwame Kwei- Armah, the piece was workshopped and developed.
Praised for her “spicy and rich lyric soprano,” Wisconsin native Emily Secor enjoys performing on and off the operatic stage. She recently completed her tenure as Studio Artist with Madison Opera for the 2019-2020 season, where she performed the role of Annina and covered the role of Violetta in La Traviata, and performed the role of Miss Lightfoot in Fellow Travelers.
In conjunction with the Madison Symphony Orchestra, Emily was a featured soloist for “A Virtual Madison Symphony Christmas,” a pre-recorded Christmas program that aired during the month of December 2020. Described as “a sheer delight,” her performance received glowing accolades: “She sparkles on an aria from ‘Messiah’ (“He Shall Feed His Flock”) and brings loads of charm to ‘It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year.’ Thanks to the virtual format, I can listen to her shimmery rendition of ‘O Holy Night’ three times.” (Lindsay Christians, The Capital Times).
Emily’s recent performances with Madison Opera as a Studio Artist during the 2018-2019 season included covering the role of Nedda in I Pagliacci, performing the role of Mrs. Nordstrom and covering Anne Egerman in A Little Night Music, and performing the role of First Woodsprite and covering the title role in Rusalka.
Holding piano performance degrees from DePaul University and a doctoral performance degree from UW-Madison, Daniel Lyons is the Principal Pianist of the Madison Symphony Orchestra and has performed in solo, chamber and concerto performances throughout the Midwest. His teachers include Dmitry Paperno, Howard Karp and Mary Sauer. While completing his doctoral program, he researched and performed piano compositions of Russian composer Rodion Shchedrin. He was also the founder of Madison Academy of Music, a private music studio in Madison that provides private instrumental instruction along with one of the country’s largest and most successful Kindermusik programs. In addition to maintaining a private teaching studio, he serves on the faculty of the UW-Whitewater Summer Piano Clinic and continues to perform as a soloist and accompanist. He lives in Madison with his wife, Monica, and three children, Kenny, Tatiana and Alexander.