Vol. XXIII No. 8
May 2008

6 Honorary Doctorates to Be Awarded at Commencement

Renowned opera singer and conductor Plácido Domingo will address the graduating class on May 23 at Juilliard’s 103rd commencement in Avery Fisher Hall. Mr. Domingo will receive an honorary Doctor of Music degree, as will jazz legend Hank Jones and acclaimed pianist Mitsuko Uchida. Doctor of Fine Arts degrees will be awarded to dancer and actor Carmen de Lavallade, and playwright and actor Anna Deavere Smith. Earning a Doctor of Humane Letters will be philanthropist Charles Simonyi.

Carmen de Lavallade, distinguished actor and dancer for more than 40 years, began training when she won a scholarship to study with Lester Horton at the age of 16. Throughout her career she has danced leading and principal roles with the Metropolitan Opera, American Ballet Theater, Alvin Ailey, the Boston Opera, and the John Butler Dance Company. Ms. de Lavallade also appeared in the films Carmen Jones and Lydia Bailey, and received acclaim for roles as Emilia in the Roundabout Theater’s production of Othello and as Titania in the famed Yale Repetory Theater’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. During her career, she was honored with a Dance Magazine Award, the Clarence Bayfield Award, the sixth annual Women of Strength and Courage Award, and the Capezio Dance Award, among many others. She has also taught movement to actors at Yale University and held the position of director of dance at Adelphi University.

Plácido Domingo has sung 124 different roles—likely more than any other tenor in the annals of music. He has sung repertoire ranging from Mozart and Puccini to Wagner and Ginastera in major opera houses around the world, and has opened the Metropolitan Opera’s season a record-setting 21 times. Among Mr. Domingo’s many recordings, which have earned him eight Grammy Awards, are 101 of full-length operas, as well as more than 50 videos and 3 theatrically released films: Zeffirelli’s Traviata and Otello and Francesco Rosi’s Carmen. His telecast of Tosca from Rome was seen by more than a billion people in 117 countries. As a conductor, Mr. Domingo had led opera in houses including the Met, Covent Garden, and the Vienna State Opera, as well as symphonic concerts with the Berlin and Vienna Philharmonics and the London and Chicago Symphonies. He is currently general director of both the Washington National Opera and the Los Angeles Opera. Through benefit concerts, he has raised millions for victims of disasters around the world. He has been honored by the Kennedy Center, received France’s Legion of Honor, is an Honorary Knight of the British Empire, and was awarded the United States Medal of Freedom.

Hank Jones, one of the few individuals recognized by the National Endowment for the Arts as a “Jazz Master,” has had a prolific career. Over the course of his 70 years as a jazz pianist and composer, Mr. Jones has performed with Billy Eckstein’s big band, Colman Hawkins, the Jazz Philharmonic, Ella Fitzgerald, Artie Shaw, Johnny Hodges, Tyree Glenn, and Benny Goodman, and also served as CBS studio's staff pianist for 17 years. He accompanied Marilyn Monroe when she sang “Happy Birthday Mr. President” to the late John F. Kennedy. With more than 500 albums and CDs and numerous concerts, Mr. Jones is one of the most sought after and recorded pianists in jazz history. Inducted into the International Jazz Hall of Fame, he has also received other notable awards and titles including a Congressional Achievement Award, ASCAP’s Living Legend Jazz Wall of Fame, several Grammy nominations, a Jazz Journalist Award, and the Highlights in Jazz Award.

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Carmen de Lavallade
(Photo by Amy Audry)