Los Angeles Times

L.A. Phil celebrates Disney Hall, Gehry

The orchestra’s 2023-24 season marks the 20th anniversar­y of the DTLA venue.

- By Jessica Gelt

Walt Disney Concert Hall, the Frank Gehry-designed home of the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic, celebrates its 20th anniversar­y this year with a 2023-24 season that will pay tribute to the hall and its architect, the orchestra announced Tuesday — on Gehry’s 94th birthday.

This fall’s Disney Hall lineup will call back to Oct. 24, 2003, when a Times article titled “Disney Hall opens to fanfare” began: “With a parade of stretch limos and the sort of celebrity buzz that Los Angeles usually reserves for Oscar night, a black-tie crowd of the powerful and socially prominent threw a Thursday night coming-out party for the

city’s most highly anticipate­d debutante in decades: the new Walt Disney Concert Hall.”

The $274-million edifice will once again be the belle of the ball with a 20th anniversar­y season dedicated to its acoustic charms and the man who made it possible. An early-October gala for Gehry will help kick off a season that includes the statewide California Festival featuring more than 50 partnering institutio­ns; a two-year tribute to the film music of John Williams; the continuati­on of Gustavo Dudamel’s Pan-American Music Initiative; a revival of the critically lauded “Fidelio” opera in collaborat­ion with Deaf West Theatre; more than 12 world premieres of L.A. Phil commission­s; guest conductors including Michael Tilson Thomas, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Zubin Mehta and Simone Young; and guest artists including Yuja Wang, Yo-Yo Ma, Itzhak Perlman, Marisa Monte and Herbie Hancock.

The season announceme­nt comes after the Feb. 7 news that Dudamel intends to leave his post as music and artistic director of the L.A. Phil to conduct the New York Philharmon­ic at the conclusion of his contract in 2026. The headlines landed with hard edges on L.A. fans who had come to assume their hometown hero would never desert them. Nonetheles­s, L.A. Phil Chief Executive Chad Smith said, three years is a long time, and the love that Angelenos feel for Dudamel is being reciprocat­ed through the programmin­g announced Tuesday.

The way the news ricocheted around the world underscore­s the work Dudamel has done to capture the imaginatio­n of audiences in classical circles and beyond.

“So we think this next season continues that commitment to being the orchestra at the bleeding edge of what a relevant, progressiv­e creative arts institutio­n can and should be,” Smith said.

Dudamel’s Pan-American Music Initiative is part of that, and this third season will be curated by Mexican composer Gabriela Ortiz with a focus on Latina feminism and art as cultural protest. Programmin­g will be featured in the California Festival, including the world premiere of Ortiz’s “Revolución diamantina,” conducted by Dudamel.

The California Festival was designed to strengthen the L.A. Phil’s partnershi­ps with arts organizati­ons across the state in an effort to better understand the new music and trends that are driving conversati­on in classical music, Smith said.

“We’re going to be able to look at all of that contempora­ry work that these organizati­ons put forth in these two weeks and say, ‘OK, what does this say about the state of music in our world today? What are the themes that we see?’ ” Smith said, adding that the full picture will be much more powerful than if the L.A. Phil curated the festival itself around a single theme.

Diversity in programmin­g and in the audiences that the programmin­g reaches remains the goal in this new season, Smith said.

“The L.A. Phil is a service organizati­on,” Smith said. “And we provide opportunit­ies for our audiences to hear great music, in a great space with the greatest musicians — and we do it in a way that provides the warmest possible welcome. That is how we continue to celebrate the city and serve the communitie­s of L.A.”

A sampling of highlights from the 2023-24 season: Japanese Breakfast Ichiko Aoba Sept. 28

Natalie Merchant Sept. 30

L.A. Phil Gala: Celebratin­g Frank Gehry Oct. 5

Stravinsky and Shostakovi­ch with Dudamel and Sheku Kanneh-Mason Oct. 6-8

Halloween Organ, Film & Music: “The Phantom of the Opera” Oct. 31

John Williams Spotlight: “E.T. the Extra-Terrestria­l” in Concert Nov. 2-3

Dudamel Leads Khachaturi­an plus the U.S. premiere of Thomas Adès’ “Tower for Frank Gehry” Nov. 4-5

California Festival: A Celebratio­n of New Music Nov. 9-19

Zubin Mehta Conducts Mahler 1 Dec. 7-10

“Home Alone” in Concert Dec. 20-22

Dudamel Leads “Das Rheingold” with scenic design by Gehry Jan. 18-21, 2024

Mälkki Conducts Brahms Feb. 23-25, 2024

Leila Josefowicz Feb. 28, 2024

John Adams’ “City Noir” March 22-24, 2024

Michael Tilson Thomas Leads Tchaikovsk­y March 28-30, 2024

Yo-Yo Ma April 3, 2024

Pan-American New Music April 30, 2024

Dudamel Leads Mozart and Strauss May 2-5, 2024

Dvorak and Ortiz with Dudamel May 9-12, 2024

Yuja Wang May 12, 2024

Beethoven’s “Fidelio” with Dudamel and Deaf West Theatre

May 16-17, 2024

Dudamel Conducts “Harry Potter” May 18-19, 2024

For the full season lineup, go to laphil.com.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? WALT DISNEY Concert Hall, designed by Frank Gehry, opened its doors Oct. 24, 2003, to great fanfare.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times WALT DISNEY Concert Hall, designed by Frank Gehry, opened its doors Oct. 24, 2003, to great fanfare.
 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? GUSTAVO DUDAMEL, the L.A. Phil’s music and artistic director, announced he was leaving for the New York Philharmon­ic but will remain in L.A. until 2026.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times GUSTAVO DUDAMEL, the L.A. Phil’s music and artistic director, announced he was leaving for the New York Philharmon­ic but will remain in L.A. until 2026.

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