Face Time: Jocelyn Poplack

This story originally appeared in the fall/winter 2017 issue of Harker Magazine.

Jocelyn Poplack is no stranger to adventure. She uprooted five years ago when she moved from Texas to California to become a Harker Preschool lead teacher, she takes full advantage of the nature and culture of the Bay Area, and she loves escaping to wild places like Jackson, Wyo. Family is paramount, and she’s a proud aunt to a niece who lives in the Bay Area, and a nephew and niece in Texas. Spending quality time with them and enjoying her mom’s amazing home cooking in Houston are just two things that make her tick. Read on to learn a few more!

What makes you feel like a kid again?
Reading children’s books! I love being able to share some of my favorite childhood books with my students and also being exposed to the newer children’s literature.

Brag about something.
When I was 7 years old, I won the Massachusetts Saltwater Fishing Derby for the biggest fluke caught that year.

What are you doing when you feel most alive?
There is nothing that makes me feel more alive than being surrounded by the ocean. I love to snorkel, fish, sail and take boat rides!

What is your most treasured object and why?
My family cookbook. When I was a child, I started writing down recipes that my mom, grandmothers and other family members used, as I wanted to be able to recreate the recipes myself and keep the family traditions alive. To this day, I am still adding recipes to the book! 

What is the greatest accomplishment of your life?
Honestly, I believe this hasn’t happened yet! I look at each day as another chance to accomplish more and more.

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Face Time: Grace Wallace

This story originally appeared in the fall/winter 2017 issue of Harker Magazine.

Grace Wallace ’95, a grade 1 teacher, radiates happiness. Her love for family is paramount – she craves her mom’s lasagna, her late father is still her role model, and she is happiest when with her husband. Born and raised in Fremont (where she still lives), Wallace and her brother, Joe Sabeh Jr. ’93, attended Harker. She told Harker Magazine about her three dog (“If I could, I would have more!”) and some of her other favorite things.

Why do you do what you do?
I am so blessed to be doing what I do. I have been given the opportunity to mold these young children into inquisitive thinkers, who can apply what they have learned into real life experiences.

What is the one thing in the world you would fix if you could wave a magic wand?
I am always donating to homeless pet charities and I wish I could rescue all of these furry babies that need a place to live.

What one piece of advice you would offer anyone who asks?
If it is on your bucket list, you need to try it. You only have one life to live and you do not want to look back and have any regrets.

What is something interesting about you that almost no one knows?
Arabic was the first language I spoke at home. My dad was from Lebanon and my grandmother lived with us for 12 years.

What is your best technique for making someone smile?
Giving them a hug.

What are you obsessed with?
Three things: If I could go to Bikram yoga every day, I would. I love all coffee, but my favorite coffee stop is Philz. One of my favorite times of year is baseball season. If we are not going to a San Francisco Giants game, my husband and I are watching it at a restaurant or at home.

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Face Time: Grace Wallace

This story originally appeared in the fall/winter 2017 issue of Harker Magazine.

Grace Wallace ’95, a grade 1 teacher, radiates happiness. Her love for family is paramount – she craves her mom’s lasagna, her late father is still her role model, and she is happiest when with her husband. Born and raised in Fremont (where she still lives), Wallace and her brother, Joe Sabeh Jr. ’93, attended Harker. She told Harker Magazine about her three dog (“If I could, I would have more!”) and some of her other favorite things.

Why do you do what you do?
I am so blessed to be doing what I do. I have been given the opportunity to mold these young children into inquisitive thinkers, who can apply what they have learned into real life experiences.

What is the one thing in the world you would fix if you could wave a magic wand?
I am always donating to homeless pet charities and I wish I could rescue all of these furry babies that need a place to live.

What one piece of advice you would offer anyone who asks?
If it is on your bucket list, you need to try it. You only have one life to live and you do not want to look back and have any regrets.

What is something interesting about you that almost no one knows?
Arabic was the first language I spoke at home. My dad was from Lebanon and my grandmother lived with us for 12 years.

What is your best technique for making someone smile?
Giving them a hug.

What are you obsessed with?
Three things: If I could go to Bikram yoga every day, I would. I love all coffee, but my favorite coffee stop is Philz. One of my favorite times of year is baseball season. If we are not going to a San Francisco Giants game, my husband and I are watching it at a restaurant or at home.

Tags:

Face Time: Grace Wallace

This story originally appeared in the fall/winter 2017 issue of Harker Magazine.

Grace Wallace ’95, a grade 1 teacher, radiates happiness. Her love for family is paramount – she craves her mom’s lasagna, her late father is still her role model, and she is happiest when with her husband. Born and raised in Fremont (where she still lives), Wallace and her brother, Joe Sabeh Jr. ’93, attended Harker. She told Harker Magazine about her three dog (“If I could, I would have more!”) and some of her other favorite things.

Why do you do what you do?
I am so blessed to be doing what I do. I have been given the opportunity to mold these young children into inquisitive thinkers, who can apply what they have learned into real life experiences.

What is the one thing in the world you would fix if you could wave a magic wand?
I am always donating to homeless pet charities and I wish I could rescue all of these furry babies that need a place to live.

What one piece of advice you would offer anyone who asks?
If it is on your bucket list, you need to try it. You only have one life to live and you do not want to look back and have any regrets.

What is something interesting about you that almost no one knows?
Arabic was the first language I spoke at home. My dad was from Lebanon and my grandmother lived with us for 12 years.

What is your best technique for making someone smile?
Giving them a hug.

What are you obsessed with?
Three things: If I could go to Bikram yoga every day, I would. I love all coffee, but my favorite coffee stop is Philz. One of my favorite times of year is baseball season. If we are not going to a San Francisco Giants game, my husband and I are watching it at a restaurant or at home.

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In the News: January 2018

The News & Advance (Lynchburg, Va.) – Jan. 28, 2018: Harker’s Timothy Chang, grade 12, is featured in a photo for this article about the U.S. Association for Young Physicists team.

New India Times – Jan. 25, 2018: Senior Rajiv Movva is mentioned in an article about finalists in the Regeneron Science Talent Search, sometimes called the “Junior Nobel Prizes.” http://www.newsindiatimes.com/17-indian-americans-make-it-to-regeneron-science-talent-search-finals/33134

San Jose Mercury News – Jan. 23, 2018: Seniors Rajiv Movva and Justin Xie are mentioned in an article about finalists in the Regeneron Science Talent Search. https://www.mercurynews.com/2018/01/23/five-south-bay-students-among-finalists-for-junior-nobel-prizes/

Student Science – Jan. 23, 2018: Seniors Rajiv Movva and Justin Xie are mentioned in a press release about finalists in the Regeneron Science Talent Search. https://student.societyforscience.org/regeneron-sts-2018-finalists

Optometry Times – Jan. 22, 2018: Harker is mentioned in an article about how artificial intelligence may transform optometry. http://optometrytimes.modernmedicine.com/optometrytimes/news/how-artificial-intelligence-may-transform-optometry

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Kudos: Grade 7 archer takes silver in 2017

Sarah Mohammed, grade 7, is now ranked second in the state in the bowman recurve women category by the State Archers of California, the California affiliate of USA Archery (USAA/NAA), the national governing body for Olympic archery. Mohammed earned the overall silver medalist award for 2017 based on her finishes. She competed consistently last year, and her final result is based on the best three results out of six possible tournaments. Her delighted and grateful mom said, “Thank you to Harker School and all the teachers for supporting Sarah in every way.” Congrats, Sarah!

Boys and girls soccer pick up big league wins

Boys Soccer

The boys soccer team continues its great season as it defeated Crystal Springs Uplands 5-3 and tied league rival Sacred Heart Prep 2-2. The Eagles are now 12-0-3 on the season and have cracked the top 10 in the Maxpreps CCS rankings. This week, the boys travel to Menlo on Wednesday and host Eastside College Prep on Friday.

Girls Soccer

The girls soccer team picked up two big wins last week. In a 3-2 win over Mercy SF, Julia Amick, grade 11, scored two goals, with Cameron Zell, graded 11, adding another. Later in the week, the girls defeated Pinewood 4-1 to bring their season record to 8-7. The Eagles travel to Notre Dame San Jose this Friday.

Boys Basketball

The boys basketball team dropped two league games last week. In a tight 59-62 loss to Woodside Priory, Brando Pakel, grade 12, led the offense with 16 points. Later in the week, the Eagles fell to Eastside College Prep 45-50 with Jack Connors, grade 10, scoring eight points. This week, the 9-11 Eagles look to get back to .500 as they host Menlo on Tuesday and The King’s Academy on Friday.

Girls Basketball

Falling to 6-11 on the season, the girls basketball team dropped two league games last week. The Eagles fell to Mercy SF 30-66 and Castilleja 37-45. This week, the Eagles host Mercy Burlingame on Tuesday.

Rothschild Performing Arts Center and its Patil Theater open to admiring crowd of nearly 700

The Rothschild Performing Arts Center opened tonight to an excited crowd of nearly 700 visitors. The state-of-the-art facility opened its doors at 6:30 p.m. to a throng of students, parents, faculty and staff, alumni, alumni parents and guests.

Guests included Jeff and Marieke Rothschild, for whom the facility is named, and Suhas and Jayashree Patil, daughter Dr. Teja Patil ’02, family members DJ and Devika Patil and their children, Veyd grade 6 and Samaara, grade 3, for whom the 450-seat theater is named. Other guests of honor included Diana Nichols, board of trustees chair, and members of the architectural and construction teams, as well as many of the major donors.

“It is a gorgeous building,” said Marieke Rothschild. “Harker has been known for its STEM students, and deservedly so, but the talent that is here in the arts – this gives them a home. It reminds me of the Bing Concert Hall (Stanford University) and the smaller theaters in New York. It is 450 seats, it is a good sized theater, but it is intimate.”

Diana Nichols, board chair, consultant to Harker and lifetime trustee, spoke eloquently on the passion the performing arts department faculty bring to their students: “Their talent their motivation, their ability to inspire students and move them to greater heights.” She went on to thank the donors along with the multitude of others, from architects to builders that helped make the 50,000-square-foot center possible, singling out Joe Rosenthal, executive director of advancement, for his years of work on the $45 million capital campaign for the performing arts center and the athletic center that opened in August. 

Head of School Brian Yager then conducted the ribbon cutting, done in three sections by donors, faculty and staff, and the architects and builders

“Our main program,” Yager noted, “is to prepare kids for success in college and life, as well as to take their place as global citizens – those are the two bookends of our mission. The arts and performing arts are essential to both elements. In terms of preparing them for success in their own lives, performing arts open incredible opportunities for kids, not just professionally, but in terms of exploring who they are, understanding themselves and the world around them. That blends into the second part, which is making a difference in the world. You have to have an appreciation for others, for beauty and for the creative process to make a difference and this building provides a great platform for gaining that appreciation.”

As the doors opened, the crowd flowed into the building, filling the theater for the very first time. In a moment that sent a chill down the spine, in a darkened house, the show began with Laura Lang-Ree, chair of the performing arts department rising up from the orchestra pit, singing a few lines from that old show tune, “There’s No Business Like Show Business.” Check out this video of the show!

Following opening remarks by Lang-Ree and Jeff Draper, drama teacher (and a delicious pass across the stage by Karl Kuehn, dance teacher!), the very first act performed on the new stage was by Suhas and Jayashree along with their grandchildren, Veyd and Samaara, dancing to “Never Knew Love Like This Before.”

Next, Dr. Teja Patil, who was in the first graduating class from Harker upper school and an original member of the Harker Conservatory who performed in many Harker shows, took the stage and delivered heartfelt remarks that dovetailed beautifully with Yager’s comment. She noted that Draper’s instructions to her as a performer were instrumental in her development. Following his insightful instructions to seek to move the audience while on stage one day, “I felt so powerful and confident and inspired,” she said. “So much of growing up is about gaining confidence, it is about learning how to express yourself and Harker theater did that for me.”

She went on to note that, “Theater … really helps you to understand other people. Theater builds empathy. When you ask a child to play a character, you are really asking them to think deeply about someone outside of them self. It is emotional. It is a different kind of learning. Through that kind of transformative experience, you build your emotional intelligence. You gain empathy.”

Patil noted that as a doctor at the Stanford Palo Alto Veterans Hospital, she deals with men aged 60 to 100, people quite different than herself. “They lived, sometimes, quite difficult lives. They have fought for our country. It is not just my job to care for them, but to connect to them. Everything I know about understanding other people, feeling empathy, my emotional intelligence, it was built here, not in biology class, but here, in the theater. This space is physical proof that Harker cares about raising the whole, caring, emotionally intelligent, well-rounded student.”

Three great performances followed Patil, showcasing the great acoustics of the auditorium. First was a piece by Mindy Truong, grade 4, rendering a truly incredible version of ”Fantaisie-Impromptu, Op. 66” by Frédéric Chopin on one of the features of the new center, a Bösendorfer piano. 

Two alumni working in performing arts took the stage in turn, starting with Michelle Holt ’11, a Harker vocal conservatory certificate graduate who went on to The Blair School of Music at Vanderbilt University in Nashville. Holt, who will be trying out for Opera San Jose this spring, sang “Regnava nel Silenzio,” from “Lucia di Lammermoor.”  

John Ammatuna ’11, a musical theater Conservatory certificate graduate who attended Marymount Manhattan College for musical theater, is currently working on Broadway as “Brother Bear.” Ammatuna reprised a tune from “Pippin,” the upper school musical he and Holt both played in in 2011, singing “Corner of the Sky.” 

Both singers were accompanied by Catherine Snider of the performing arts department, an accomplished pianist and musical director, on the Bösendorfer.

During the evening, the audience was treated to a trio of videos showing a time lapse of the RPAC being built and student reactions (wild!) to theater and dressing rooms, showing the spaces visitors can’t get to like catwalks, and showing the various Harker venues, from Blackford Theater to De Anza Performing Arts Center that the new facility supersedes.

The audience was enthralled, and applauded each act and video in turn.

Marieke Rothschild had some inspiring words for those thinking of trying a performing art: “Don’t be afraid to fail, go out there and fail, go out there and carry that tune, just do it! And if you don’t want to be on stage, then be behind the scenes. The arts have so much to offer, there is so much there! You don’t have to be a star, just try it!”

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Rothschild Performing Arts Center and its Patil Theater open to admiring crowd of nearly 700

The Rothschild Performing Arts Center opened tonight to an excited crowd of nearly 700 visitors. The state-of-the-art facility opened its doors at 6:30 p.m. to a throng of students, parents, faculty and staff, alumni, alumni parents and guests.

Guests included Jeff and Marieke Rothschild, for whom the facility is named, and Suhas and Jayashree Patil, daughter Dr. Teja Patil ’02, family members DJ and Devika Patil and their children, Veyd grade 6 and Samaara, grade 3, for whom the 450-seat theater is named. Other guests of honor included Diana Nichols, board of trustees chair, and members of the architectural and construction teams, as well as many of the major donors.

“It is a gorgeous building,” said Marieke Rothschild. “Harker has been known for its STEM students, and deservedly so, but the talent that is here in the arts – this gives them a home. It reminds me of the Bing Concert Hall (Stanford University) and the smaller theaters in New York. It is 450 seats, it is a good sized theater, but it is intimate.”

Diana Nichols, board chair, consultant to Harker and lifetime trustee, spoke eloquently on the passion the performing arts department faculty bring to their students: “Their talent their motivation, their ability to inspire students and move them to greater heights.” She went on to thank the donors along with the multitude of others, from architects to builders that helped make the 50,000-square-foot center possible, singling out Joe Rosenthal, executive director of advancement, for his years of work on the $45 million capital campaign for the performing arts center and the athletic center that opened in August. 

Head of School Brian Yager then conducted the ribbon cutting, done in three sections by donors, faculty and staff, and the architects and builders

“Our main program,” Yager noted, “is to prepare kids for success in college and life, as well as to take their place as global citizens – those are the two bookends of our mission. The arts and performing arts are essential to both elements. In terms of preparing them for success in their own lives, performing arts open incredible opportunities for kids, not just professionally, but in terms of exploring who they are, understanding themselves and the world around them. That blends into the second part, which is making a difference in the world. You have to have an appreciation for others, for beauty and for the creative process to make a difference and this building provides a great platform for gaining that appreciation.”

As the doors opened, the crowd flowed into the building, filling the theater for the very first time. In a moment that sent a chill down the spine, in a darkened house, the show began with Laura Lang-Ree, chair of the performing arts department rising up from the orchestra pit, singing a few lines from that old show tune, “There’s No Business Like Show Business.” Check out this video of the show!

Following opening remarks by Lang-Ree and Jeff Draper, drama teacher (and a delicious pass across the stage by Karl Kuehn, dance teacher!), the very first act performed on the new stage was by Suhas and Jayashree along with their grandchildren, Veyd and Samaara, dancing to “Never Knew Love Like This Before.”

Next, Dr. Teja Patil, who was in the first graduating class from Harker upper school and an original member of the Harker Conservatory who performed in many Harker shows, took the stage and delivered heartfelt remarks that dovetailed beautifully with Yager’s comment. She noted that Draper’s instructions to her as a performer were instrumental in her development. Following his insightful instructions to seek to move the audience while on stage one day, “I felt so powerful and confident and inspired,” she said. “So much of growing up is about gaining confidence, it is about learning how to express yourself and Harker theater did that for me.”

She went on to note that, “Theater … really helps you to understand other people. Theater builds empathy. When you ask a child to play a character, you are really asking them to think deeply about someone outside of them self. It is emotional. It is a different kind of learning. Through that kind of transformative experience, you build your emotional intelligence. You gain empathy.”

Patil noted that as a doctor at the Stanford Palo Alto Veterans Hospital, she deals with men aged 60 to 100, people quite different than herself. “They lived, sometimes, quite difficult lives. They have fought for our country. It is not just my job to care for them, but to connect to them. Everything I know about understanding other people, feeling empathy, my emotional intelligence, it was built here, not in biology class, but here, in the theater. This space is physical proof that Harker cares about raising the whole, caring, emotionally intelligent, well-rounded student.”

Three great performances followed Patil, showcasing the great acoustics of the auditorium. First was a piece by Mindy Truong, grade 4, rendering a truly incredible version of ”Fantaisie-Impromptu, Op. 66” by Frédéric Chopin on one of the features of the new center, a Bösendorfer piano. 

Two alumni working in performing arts took the stage in turn, starting with Michelle Holt ’11, a Harker vocal conservatory certificate graduate who went on to The Blair School of Music at Vanderbilt University in Nashville. Holt, who will be trying out for Opera San Jose this spring, sang “Regnava nel Silenzio,” from “Lucia di Lammermoor.”  

John Ammatuna ’11, a musical theater Conservatory certificate graduate who attended Marymount Manhattan College for musical theater, is currently working on Broadway as “Brother Bear.” Ammatuna reprised a tune from “Pippin,” the upper school musical he and Holt both played in in 2011, singing “Corner of the Sky.” 

Both singers were accompanied by Catherine Snider of the performing arts department, an accomplished pianist and musical director, on the Bösendorfer.

During the evening, the audience was treated to a trio of videos showing a time lapse of the RPAC being built and student reactions (wild!) to theater and dressing rooms, showing the spaces visitors can’t get to like catwalks, and showing the various Harker venues, from Blackford Theater to De Anza Performing Arts Center that the new facility supersedes.

The audience was enthralled, and applauded each act and video in turn.

Marieke Rothschild had some inspiring words for those thinking of trying a performing art: “Don’t be afraid to fail, go out there and fail, go out there and carry that tune, just do it! And if you don’t want to be on stage, then be behind the scenes. The arts have so much to offer, there is so much there! You don’t have to be a star, just try it!”

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Rothschild Performing Arts Center and its Patil Theater open to admiring crowd of nearly 700

The Rothschild Performing Arts Center opened tonight to an excited crowd of nearly 700 visitors. The state-of-the-art facility opened its doors at 6:30 p.m. to a throng of students, parents, faculty and staff, alumni, alumni parents and guests.

Guests included Jeff and Marieke Rothschild, for whom the facility is named, and Suhas and Jayashree Patil, daughter Dr. Teja Patil ’02, family members DJ and Devika Patil and their children, Veyd grade 6 and Samaara, grade 3, for whom the 450-seat theater is named. Other guests of honor included Diana Nichols, board of trustees chair, and members of the architectural and construction teams, as well as many of the major donors.

“It is a gorgeous building,” said Marieke Rothschild. “Harker has been known for its STEM students, and deservedly so, but the talent that is here in the arts – this gives them a home. It reminds me of the Bing Concert Hall (Stanford University) and the smaller theaters in New York. It is 450 seats, it is a good sized theater, but it is intimate.”

Diana Nichols, board chair, consultant to Harker and lifetime trustee, spoke eloquently on the passion the performing arts department faculty bring to their students: “Their talent their motivation, their ability to inspire students and move them to greater heights.” She went on to thank the donors along with the multitude of others, from architects to builders that helped make the 50,000-square-foot center possible, singling out Joe Rosenthal, executive director of advancement, for his years of work on the $45 million capital campaign for the performing arts center and the athletic center that opened in August. 

Head of School Brian Yager then conducted the ribbon cutting, done in three sections by donors, faculty and staff, and the architects and builders

“Our main program,” Yager noted, “is to prepare kids for success in college and life, as well as to take their place as global citizens – those are the two bookends of our mission. The arts and performing arts are essential to both elements. In terms of preparing them for success in their own lives, performing arts open incredible opportunities for kids, not just professionally, but in terms of exploring who they are, understanding themselves and the world around them. That blends into the second part, which is making a difference in the world. You have to have an appreciation for others, for beauty and for the creative process to make a difference and this building provides a great platform for gaining that appreciation.”

As the doors opened, the crowd flowed into the building, filling the theater for the very first time. In a moment that sent a chill down the spine, in a darkened house, the show began with Laura Lang-Ree, chair of the performing arts department rising up from the orchestra pit, singing a few lines from that old show tune, “There’s No Business Like Show Business.” Check out this video of the show!

Following opening remarks by Lang-Ree and Jeff Draper, drama teacher (and a delicious pass across the stage by Karl Kuehn, dance teacher!), the very first act performed on the new stage was by Suhas and Jayashree along with their grandchildren, Veyd and Samaara, dancing to “Never Knew Love Like This Before.”

Next, Dr. Teja Patil, who was in the first graduating class from Harker upper school and an original member of the Harker Conservatory who performed in many Harker shows, took the stage and delivered heartfelt remarks that dovetailed beautifully with Yager’s comment. She noted that Draper’s instructions to her as a performer were instrumental in her development. Following his insightful instructions to seek to move the audience while on stage one day, “I felt so powerful and confident and inspired,” she said. “So much of growing up is about gaining confidence, it is about learning how to express yourself and Harker theater did that for me.”

She went on to note that, “Theater … really helps you to understand other people. Theater builds empathy. When you ask a child to play a character, you are really asking them to think deeply about someone outside of them self. It is emotional. It is a different kind of learning. Through that kind of transformative experience, you build your emotional intelligence. You gain empathy.”

Patil noted that as a doctor at the Stanford Palo Alto Veterans Hospital, she deals with men aged 60 to 100, people quite different than herself. “They lived, sometimes, quite difficult lives. They have fought for our country. It is not just my job to care for them, but to connect to them. Everything I know about understanding other people, feeling empathy, my emotional intelligence, it was built here, not in biology class, but here, in the theater. This space is physical proof that Harker cares about raising the whole, caring, emotionally intelligent, well-rounded student.”

Three great performances followed Patil, showcasing the great acoustics of the auditorium. First was a piece by Mindy Truong, grade 4, rendering a truly incredible version of ”Fantaisie-Impromptu, Op. 66” by Frédéric Chopin on one of the features of the new center, a Bösendorfer piano. 

Two alumni working in performing arts took the stage in turn, starting with Michelle Holt ’11, a Harker vocal conservatory certificate graduate who went on to The Blair School of Music at Vanderbilt University in Nashville. Holt, who will be trying out for Opera San Jose this spring, sang “Regnava nel Silenzio,” from “Lucia di Lammermoor.”  

John Ammatuna ’11, a musical theater Conservatory certificate graduate who attended Marymount Manhattan College for musical theater, is currently working on Broadway as “Brother Bear.” Ammatuna reprised a tune from “Pippin,” the upper school musical he and Holt both played in in 2011, singing “Corner of the Sky.” 

Both singers were accompanied by Catherine Snider of the performing arts department, an accomplished pianist and musical director, on the Bösendorfer.

During the evening, the audience was treated to a trio of videos showing a time lapse of the RPAC being built and student reactions (wild!) to theater and dressing rooms, showing the spaces visitors can’t get to like catwalks, and showing the various Harker venues, from Blackford Theater to De Anza Performing Arts Center that the new facility supersedes.

The audience was enthralled, and applauded each act and video in turn.

Marieke Rothschild had some inspiring words for those thinking of trying a performing art: “Don’t be afraid to fail, go out there and fail, go out there and carry that tune, just do it! And if you don’t want to be on stage, then be behind the scenes. The arts have so much to offer, there is so much there! You don’t have to be a star, just try it!”

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