≈ 2 hours · With intermission
Last updated: December 5, 2024
As we head into the holiday season, the NAC Orchestra is collecting donations for its two favourite local charities: the Ottawa Food Bank and the Snowsuit Fund. NACO musicians will be in the Southam Hall lobby after this evening’s performance to collect cash and credit card donations. You will recognize them by their red elf hats and jingle bells! We encourage you to give what you can.
ELF
Directed by JON FAVREAU
Produced by KENT ALTERMAN, CALE BOYTER, JULIE WIXSON DARMODY,
TOBY EMMERICH, and JIMMY MILLER
Written by DAVID BERENBAUM
Starring
WILL FERRELL
JAMES CAAN
BOB NEWHART
EDWARD ASNER
MARY STEENBURGEN
ZOOEY DESCHANEL
Music by JOHN DEBNEY
Cinematography by GREG GARDINER
Edited by DAN LEBENTAL
Produced by NEW LINE CINEMA & GUY WALKS INTO A BAR PRODUCTIONS
Distributed by NEW LINE CINEMA
There will be an intermission.
Justin Freer President/Founder/Producer
Brady Beaubien Co-Founder/Producer
Chief XR Officer / Head of Publicity and Communications Andrew P. Alderete
Director of Operations Andrew McIntyre
Senior Marketing Manager Brittany Fonseca
Senior Social Media Manager Si Peng
Worldwide Representation Opus 3
Music Preparation JoAnn Kane Music Service
Sound Remixing Justin Moshkevich, Igloo Music Studios
Evan Mitchell is proving to be one of Canada’s most able and imaginative conductors. Mitchell has enjoyed 10 triumphant seasons as Music Director of the Kingston Symphony, garnering praise for his programming, approach, and musical results. Before the pandemic, the past four seasons of the ensemble’s masterworks series performances were sellouts under his leadership.
Mitchell is one of Canada’s pre-eminent conductors of film scores live in concert, having performed 30 distinct film programs live to projection. After performing Singin’ in the Rain with the Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony, he conducted the North American premiere of Patricia Ward Kelly’s curated show Gene Kelly: A Life in Music with the Kingston Symphony. He has a longstanding relationship with Attila Glatz Concert Productions and CineConcerts, having conducted all eight Harry Potter films more than once. During the 2020 pandemic, Mitchell wrote, produced, directed, and edited several standout digital orchestral initiatives that exponentially increased the Kingston Symphony’s online viewership profile. Its digital performances, Symphonic Education Partnership presentation, and the landmark web series for young audiences entitled Harmon in Space, among others, have reached over 100,000 viewers and have been internationally acclaimed as the benchmark for digital excellence in innovation.
Mitchell champions initiatives designed to enhance the live concert experience, such as insider videos, informational podcasts, pre-concert talks, and special concerts devoted to live onstage insights into major orchestral works. His program SoundSync, which involves real-time guided listening updates delivered silently to mobile devices during the concert, was recently hailed as one of Canada’s best innovations to the live concert experience by the CBC. Equally comfortable in the realm of contemporary music, opera, and ballet, Mitchell has premiered over 30 new Canadian works ranging from the SOCAN award-winning opera Storybook by Darren Russo to Ryan Trew’s newly commissioned Symphony No. 1, as well as two digital full-orchestra world premieres during the COVID-19 lockdown (John Estacio’s Domestic Divertimento and Dean Burry’s Tracing Colville). He is a strong and vocal advocate for new, substantial Canadian works. As the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra’s past Assistant Conductor, Mitchell is extraordinarily grateful to the VSO for his time and experience with such a world-class orchestra. He considers that experience as the most important element of his development as a conductor.
Canada’s National Arts Centre (NAC) Orchestra is praised for the passion and clarity of its performances, its visionary learning and engagement programs, and its unwavering support of Canadian creativity. The NAC Orchestra is based in Ottawa, Canada’s national capital, and has grown into one of the country’s most acclaimed and dynamic ensembles since its founding in 1969. Under the leadership of Music Director Alexander Shelley, the NAC Orchestra reflects the fabric and values of Canada, engaging communities from coast to coast to coast through inclusive programming, compelling storytelling, and innovative partnerships.
Since taking the helm in 2015, Shelley has shaped the Orchestra’s artistic vision, building on the legacy of his predecessor, Pinchas Zukerman, who led the ensemble for 16 seasons. Shelley’s influence extends beyond the NAC. He serves as Principal Associate Conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in the UK and Artistic and Music Director of Artis—Naples and the Naples Philharmonic in the United States. In addition to his other conducting roles, the Pacific Symphony in Los Angeles’s Orange County announced Shelley’s appointment as its next Artistic and Music Director. The initial five-year term begins in the 2026-2027 season, with Shelley serving as Music Director-Designate from September 2025. Principal Guest Conductor John Storgårds and Principal Youth Conductor Daniel Bartholomew-Poyser complement Shelley’s leadership. In 2024, the Orchestra marked a new chapter with the appointment of Henry Kennedy as its first-ever Resident Conductor.
The Orchestra has a rich history of partnerships with renowned artists such as James Ehnes, Angela Hewitt, Renée Fleming, Hilary Hahn, Jeremy Dutcher, Jan Lisiecki, Ray Chen, and Yeol Eum Son, underscoring its reputation as a destination for world-class talent. As one of the most accessible, inclusive and collaborative orchestras in the world, the NAC Orchestra uses music as a universal language to communicate the deepest of human emotions and connect people through shared experiences.
A hallmark of the NAC Orchestra is its national and international tours. The Orchestra has performed concerts in every Canadian province and territory and earned frequent invitations to perform abroad. These tours spotlight Canadian composers and artists, bringing their voices to stages across North America, the United Kingdom, Europe, and Asia.
John Debney is the ultimate film-music character actor. In equal demand for family films such as Jingle Jangle, Come Away, and Elf as he is for adventure films like Iron Man 2, the Oscar-nominated composer also scored the powerful and poignant The Passion of the Christ. Debney is an agile jack-of-all-genres, composing for sci-fi adventure (The Orville), comedies (Bruce Almighty), horror (Dream House), and romance (Valentine’s Day) with the same confidence and panache. Debney is also known for his work in such films as The Princess Diaries, Sin City, Liar Liar, Spy Kids, No Strings Attached, The Emperor’s New Groove, I Know What You Did Last Summer, and Hocus Pocus. Debney’s work also includes Disney’s The Jungle Book, directed by Jon Favreau, Fox’s Ice Age: Collision Course, directed by Mike Thurmeier, and 20th Century Fox’s award-winning musical The Greatest Showman, starring Hugh Jackman and Zac Efron. Debney’s most recent films include The Beach Bum starring Matthew McConaughey and directed by Harmony Korine, the Warner Bros. Pictures comedy feature Isn’t It Romantic starring Rebel Wilson, Paramount Pictures’ family adventure feature Dora and the Lost City of Gold, and Bleecker Street’s biopic Brian Banks, and Come Away directed by Brenda Chapman and starring Angelina Jolie.
Born in Glendale, California, Debney’s professional life began after he studied composition at the California Institute of the Arts when he went to work writing music and orchestrating for Walt Disney Studios and various television series. He won his first Emmy Award in 1990 for the main theme for The Young Riders, and his career soon hit a gallop. Since then, he has won three more Emmys (seaQuest DSV) and been nominated for six (most recently in 2012 for his work on the Kevin Costner western miniseries Hatfields & McCoys). His foray into videogame scoring—2007’s Lair—resulted in a BAFTA nomination and a Best Original Score for a Video Game award from the International Film Music Critics Association.
Debney has collaborated with acclaimed directors as diverse as Robert Rodriguez, Garry Marshall, Mel Gibson, the Farrelly brothers, Jon Favreau, Jim Sheridan, Ivan Reitman, Peter Chelsom, Rob Cohen, Brian Robbins, Tom Shadyac, Sam Raimi, Adam Shankman, Howie Deutch, Renny Harlin, Peter Hyams, and Kenny Ortega. He was nominated by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for his Passion of the Christ score. Inspired by that score, he created The Passion Oratorio, performed in 2015 in the historic Mosque-Cathedral of Cordoba, Spain, in front of 6,000 people during Holy Week. In 2005, Debney was the youngest recipient of the Henry Mancini Career Achievement Award from the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers.
“If I’m doing my job well,” says Debney, “I need to feel it. I really try to make sure that whatever I’m doing— even if it’s a comedy—that I’m feeling it and feeling either humour or the pathos or the dramatic impact of what I’m seeing. That’s the way I approach it.”
Tobi Hunt McCoy is enjoying another year as season Stage Manager with the National Arts Centre Orchestra. In past seasons, she stage-managed Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream with Christopher Plummer in 2001 and Colm Feore in 2014. She co-produced the 1940s Pops show On the Air with Jack Everly for the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra, a show they co-produced in 2007 for the NAC Orchestra.
In 2018, McCoy made her Southam Hall acting debut in the role of Stage Manager in the Magic Circle Mime Co.’s production of Orchestra from Planet X. Additional professional duties have included aiding Susanna and the Countess in schooling the Count and Figaro on the finer points of marital love during The Marriage of Figaro, keeping her eyes open (for the first time ever) during the flying monkey scene in The Wizard of Oz, mistakenly asking Patrick Watson for proof of identity backstage, holding her breath while marvelling at the athletic ability of the cast during Cirque Goes Broadway, continuing to implement feedback on her British-Columbian French with the choruses of Ottawa, and cheering on Luke and Princess Leia with Charlie Ross, Émilie Fournier, and Eric Osner during the Star Wars Pops concert.
In her spare time, McCoy is the Head of Arts, Drama, English, and Library at Lisgar Collegiate Institute.
First Violins
**Yosuke Kawasaki (concertmaster)
Jessica Linnebach (associate concertmaster)
Noémi Racine Gaudreault (assistant concertmaster)
Marjolaine Lambert
Jeremy Mastrangelo
Carissa Klopoushak
Jeffrey Dyrda
Manuela Milani
*Martine Dubé
*Renée London
*Andrea Armijo Fortin
*Heather Schnarr
*Sarah Williams
Second Violins
Emily Kruspe (principal)
Emily Westell
Frédéric Moisan
Leah Roseman
Jessy Kim
Mark Friedman
Karoly Sziladi
**Edvard Skerjanc
**Winston Webber
*Oleg Chelpanov
*Erica Miller
*Sara Mastrangelo
Violas
Jethro Marks (principal)
David Marks (associate principal)
David Goldblatt (assistant principal)
Tovin Allers
Paul Casey
**David Thies-Thompson
*Sonya Probst
*Brenna Hardy-Kavanagh
*Emily Kistenmaker
Cellos
Rachel Mercer (principal)
Julia MacLaine (assistant principal)
Leah Wyber
Timothy McCoy
Marc-André Riberdy
*Desiree Abbey
*Sonya Matoussova
*Daniel Parker
Double Basses
Sam Loeck (principal)
Max Cardilli (assistant principal)
Vincent Gendron
**Marjolaine Fournier
*Paul Mach
*Doug Ohashi
*Daniel Lalonde
Flutes
Joanna G’froerer (principal)
Stephanie Morin
Oboes
Charles Hamann (principal)
Anna Petersen
English Horn
Anna Petersen
Clarinets
Kimball Sykes (principal)
Sean Rice
Bassoons
Darren Hicks (principal)
Vincent Parizeau
Horns
Julie Fauteux (associate principal)
Lauren Anker
Louis-Pierre Bergeron
*Olivier Brisson
Trumpets
Karen Donnelly (principal)
Steven van Gulik
*Amy Horvey
Trombones
*Nate Fanning (guest principal)
*Steve Dyer
Bass Trombone
Zachary Bond
Tuba
Chris Lee (principal)
Timpani
*Jonathan Rance (guest principal)
Percussion
Andrew Johnson
Jonathan Wade
*Andrew Harris
*Zac Pulak
*Louis Pino
Harp
*Angela Schwarzkopf (guest principal)
Keyboards
*Ruth Kwan
*Frédéric Lacroix
Principal Librarian
Nancy Elbeck
Assistant Librarian
Corey Rempel
Personnel Manager
Meiko Lydall
Assistant Personnel Manager
Ruth Rodriguez Rivera
Orchestra Personnel Coordinator
Laurie Shannon
Stage Manager
Tobi Hunt McCoy
*Additional musicians
**On leave
International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees