Jackson Hall will have been dark for 19 months when the Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts gets back to live shows. The 2021鈥22 season starts on Oct. 14.
鈥淲e consider this season to be something that is en route to normal,鈥 said Don Roth, executive director of the Mondavi Center. 鈥淲e鈥檙e on our way. This is going to be different than any season we鈥檝e had before, but we鈥檙e getting there.鈥
With the start of the pandemic, operations on campus were suspended and public events were canceled, including the rest of the Mondavi Center鈥檚 2019-20 season, which had been underway.
In place of live performances, the center鈥檚 Vanderhoef Studio Theatre hosted COVID-19 testing for the 嘿嘿视频 community, part of the free Healthy Davis Together program. And virtually, the center launched HomeStage, live-streamed events with such artists as Yo-Yo Ma and Wynton Marsalis.
But the pandemic created an uncertainty that made planning difficult. An abbreviated season was announced in June 2020, only to be canceled five months later due to continued pandemic-related concerns.
鈥淚f we didn鈥檛 plan the season then it couldn鈥檛 happen,鈥 Roth said. 鈥淚 think people were accepting of that. We had to do our best to have a season if the pandemic allowed it and no one really knew.鈥
Now, Roth said the new season will deliver the excitement the Mondavi Center has been known for over the past 19 years.
The 2021-22 season features a variety of genres 鈥 music, theater, dance, speakers and more. Returning favorites include The Alexander Quartet, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, Ballet Folkl贸rico de M茅xico and Ronald K. Brown/Evidence. Speakers include David Sedaris, Fran Lebowitz and Heather McGhee.
Lara Downes, renowned pianist and former artist in residence at the Mondavi Center, appears May 6, with World of Change, a collaboration with composer Clarice Assad.
鈥淚 am so happy to be going back to the live environment and all the vibrations that exist within that,鈥 Downes said. 鈥淚鈥檓 sure there will be some tears in these first performances.鈥
World of Change is the culmination of an idea to reflect on major concepts impacting people 鈥 climate change, renewal, rebirth.
鈥淭he piece has really formed itself around ideas of micro and macro shifts that we have all experienced during this time,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e having a wonderful time building a documentation of what we鈥檝e been through and where we鈥檙e going because of it.鈥
Shows that reflect current societal issues were also important for the season. Beethoven鈥檚 Fidelio is adapted by Heartbeat Opera of New York with a Black activist wrongfully incarcerated.
鈥淲e believe the arts can help us better understand our world,鈥 Roth said.
Some improvements to the facility are also in the works for this year. A digital sign will stand outside the ticket office to take the place of older signage.
Additional shows could still be announced. And pandemic-related requirements may continue to change for convening audiences. But the return of live performance promises the allure audiences have missed over the past few months, Roth said.
鈥淎s I look at the season, virtually every show has the potential to be quite the experience,鈥 he said. 鈥淧eople have been in their houses for months, and now, opening night, they can see Arturo O鈥橣arrill with 24 musicians onstage playing at the highest level. What could beat that?鈥