A
glittering showcase of music, piano and showmanship will be performed by amateur
and professional pianists as they tickle the ivories during the 2008 Liberace
Piano Competition season.
“We’re excited to continue a
15-year tradition of the Liberace Piano Competition, as this is a significant
event in the piano performance discipline and vital for us to build greater
awareness of the Liberace legacy of showmanship and support for the arts,” says
Liberace Foundation President Darin
Hollingsworth. “The competition, too, is
important to help us generate additional funds to support our scholarship and
grant program, as well as care for Liberace’s collection of glittering and
delicate costumes, pianos, cars, antiques and jewelry. We invite the public and businesses to
support us and come and watch the competitors.”
The competition will recognize
pianists
from across the U.S., and adults and children
starting at age 8 were invited to enter the competition to compete in classical
or showmanship categories. Philip Fortenberry will serve as
Competition Artistic Director and Chair of the Adjudicator Panel. He currently
is the associate music director for the Las Vegas
musical production of “Jersey Boys” and holds a Master of Music degree in
classical piano performance from New Jersey City University. He was an adjunct faculty member in the
Steinhardt School of Education at New York University. Fortenberry has studied piano privately at
Juilliard and previously competed in many competitions.
The
official competition season begins on Sunday, July 13, at1:30 p.m. during the Liberace Museum’s monthly 2nd Sundays
event with a showcase of pianists from last year’s competition who will perform
in the Museum’s showroom. Too, an
artistic poster will be revealed that will serve as the competition poster and
2008 semi-finalists will be announced at this time.
The Competitor’s Showcase event,
where all competitors will be given the opportunity to tickle the ivories and
showcase their talent, will be held on Sunday, Aug. 10, starting at noon. The Semi-Final competition will be held at
noon on Sept. 13-14. These events will take place at the Liberace Museum, 1775 E. Tropicana Ave. (at Spencer), and
admission is free but space will be limited with seating on a first come, first
serve basis.
The finals of the 2008
Liberace Piano Competition are set for Sunday, Sept. 21, at the auditorium at
Community Lutheran, 3720 E.
Tropicana Ave. in Las Vegas. Cost of admission to the finals event is $15
per person or $50 for a family four pack of tickets. Proceeds from the competition admission will
benefit two Las
Vegas non-profit organizations: The Liberace Foundation and Family Promise.
To date,
UnitedHeathcare and Cirque Du Soleil have made early sponsorship
commitments to the Competition.
The Liberace Piano
Competition has evolved from a 15-year tradition at The Liberace Foundation and
Museum. Foundation board member and
former Liberace publicist, Jamie James, and his team at The James Agency in 1993
created the Liberace Play-A-Like Contest to inspire enthusiasm for the wonderful
performance legacy given to us by Mr. Showmanship himself.
Liberace
himself studied classical music for 17 years at Wisconsin Conservatory of Music
and received a scholarship for his studies. Accordingly, The Liberace
competition features two categories:
classical and showmanship.
In the past two years, the
competition has grown and expanded to focus on Liberace’s significant classical
performance training and expertise as well as his infamous showmanship. Twenty-eight competitors in 2007 represented a
variety of ages presenting diverse musical repertoire with local talent and
performers from as far away as Australia, England, Mexico and Russia.
For
more information about the 2008 Liberace Piano Competition, to enter the
competition, or to buy tickets for the finals, call the Liberace Museum, (702)
798-5595.
ABOUT
THE LIBERACE FOUNDATION & MUSEUM:
Liberace
transported audiences to a dazzling world of color, jovial music, glittering
costumes and humor. His legend lives on
in the Liberace
Museum, considered to be
Mr. Showmanship’s greatest encore performance. Liberace opened his Museum in
1979 to share his collections with the world and to support his love of being an
active patron of the arts, and most importantly to support his mission of
helping talented students pursue careers in the performing and creative arts
through scholarship assistance. To date, the Liberace Foundation has awarded in
excess of $5.2 million in scholarships to more than 2,500 students at over 120
colleges and universities throughout the U.S.
The
Liberace Museum, located at 1775 E. Tropicana Ave. in Las Vegas, serves as a
significant funding source for the Liberace Foundation. It features Liberace’s
collections of rare pianos, classic cars, famous sequined and bejeweled costume
wardrobe, glittering stage jewelry and rare antiques, as well as Liberace’s
private papers and memorabilia. April 15, 2009 will mark the 30th
anniversary celebration of the Liberace Museum.
For more information and to become a member of the Liberace Foundation,
call 702.798.5595 or visit the website at www.Liberace.org.