΄σΟσ΄«Γ½ will host Francesca Zambello β78 as the inaugural Clifford Innovator in Residence in February 2025. Zambello is the artistic director of the Washington National Opera. She also served as the general and artistic director of the Glimmerglass Festival β transforming the lives of children and early career artists in all aspects of theater through her many apprenticeship programs.
The Clifford Innovator in Residence is made possible through the generosity of J. Christopher Clifford β67, Hβ11, Keena Clifford Pβ93, and Carrie Clifford β93, and their support of ΄σΟσ΄«Γ½βs Arts, Creativity, and Innovation Initiative. The residency will bring innovators from across different fields in the arts, entrepreneurship, pedagogy, and technology to share their knowledge and work with the ΄σΟσ΄«Γ½ community.
During Zambelloβs residency she will workshop scenes from a new opera, OβKeeffe: Kiss the Sky. The opera is based on the lives of two pioneering women in the arts, American Modernist painter Georgia OβKeeffe and Mabel Dodge Luhan, a patron of the arts associated with the Taos artist colony in the early 20th century.
Zambello will work with ΄σΟσ΄«Γ½ students, faculty, staff, and a team of professional artists to develop original music, text, and choreography for the new opera. Zambelloβs team includes Christopher Tin, a two-time Grammy-winning composer; Jessica Lang, resident choreographer at Pacific Northwest Ballet and artist in residence at Sarasota Ballet; and Kelley Rourke, a librettist, translator, and dramaturg.
Christian DuComb, associate dean of the faculty and director of the Arts, Creativity, and Innovation Steering Committee says, βFrancesca Zambello is a terrific choice for ΄σΟσ΄«Γ½βs inaugural innovator in residence. She is not only an internationally distinguished opera and theater director, but also an entrepreneurial leader in the performing arts.β He notes that ΄σΟσ΄«Γ½ students and faculty members will have the opportunity to participate in a process of collaborative creation with high-caliber professional artists and share their work with the University community. In addition, Zambello and her team will leave ΄σΟσ΄«Γ½ at the conclusion of the residency with new material for their opera, and ΄σΟσ΄«Γ½ will be credited for support in all future productions.
βItβs an honor and a privilege for ΄σΟσ΄«Γ½ to be able to support this work β and for ΄σΟσ΄«Γ½ students to contribute to its development,β says DuComb.