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Contact the Young Vic  
Brian Goodman, General Manager  
brian@yvtc.org  
Phillip Collister, Music Director  
pcollister@yvtc.org  
James Harp, Stage Director  
jharp@yvtc.org  
Young Victorian Theatre


   From our humble beginnings in 1971 as an enthusiastic high school troupe, the Young Vic has grown into a vital part of Baltimore's theatre scene. With enthusiasm as high as ever, we continue to blend the area's finest professional talent with a core of students who sing, build, dance, manage, and learn.

    In this, our thirty-ninth season as Baltimore's Gilbert and Sullivan repertory company, we pledge to remain an essential and enjoyable part of Baltimore's summer cultural landscape.

Brian Goodman Brian Goodman
General Manger
    This summer marks Mr. Goodman's 32nd. season as the company's General Manger, a position he has held since his sophomore year in college. A graduate of Gilman School, the Johns Hopkins University, and the University of Maryland Law School, Mr. Goodman is a partner in the law firm of Hodes, Pessin & Katz, P.A, where he specializes in civil litigation, with a particular emphasis on insurance defense, premises liability, and medical malpractice cases.

Phillip Collister Phillip Collister
Music Director
Phillip Collister, music director & conductor, is an Associate Professor of Voice/Opera at Towson University where he has been a member of the music faculty since 1998.  At Towson, Dr. Collister is head of the Voice Division and is producer and director of Towson’s Music for the Stage program. At Towson he also teaches private voice, vocal pedagogy, and vocal literature courses. 

    Collister has an extensive background as a conductor and stage director of operas and musicals.  He has produced, directed, or conducted numerous operas, musicals, cabarets and revues including  (operas) Dido and Aeneas, The Magic Flute, Cosi fan tutte, The Wandering Scholar, The Face on the Barroom Floor, The Stoned Guest, Mahagonny Songspiel, Die Dreigroschenoper,  Riders to the Sea, The Medium, The Old Maid an the Thief, A Hand of Bridge, Trouble in Tahitti, Too Many Sopranos, Green Eggs and Ham, Sid the Serpent Who Wanted to  Sing, and others,   (musicals) Ragtime: The Musical, Cabaret, Gypsy, A Little Night Music, Godspell, Forever Plaid, Hair, How to Succeed in Business, Little Shop of Horrors, Chicago, Teddy and Alice, The Fantastics & others,  (revues & cabarets) Cole, Broadway Bound, Beehive, A Weill Cabaret, It’s Oh So Quiet: Hollywood Composers in Exile, When I Fall in Love, Golden Years: an operetta revue and others. 

    From 2001-2006 Collister was the producing director and music director for the Maryland Arts Festival.  From 2001-2003 Collister was the conductor of the opera studio at the Fairbanks Summer Arts Festival.  He also has an extensive background as a choral conductor including works conducted with professional orchestras such as Messiah, (Handel), Magnificat (Bach), Gloria (Vivaldi and Rutter), Requiem (Faure and Mozart) and numerous other chamber works.

     Dr. Collister is also an active solo singer having performed extensively as a soloist in musical theatre, opera, oratorio, and recital.  He has performed frequently with the Bach Sinfonia in Washington D.C., the  Handel  Choir of Baltimore and the Baltimore Opera.  He has also performed is  soloist with the Washington Bach Consort, the Maryland Handel Festival & Smithsonian Chamber Players, and internationally at the Handel Festival in Halle, Germany. He maintains an active solo concert schedule which has included performances at St. Peter's Concert Series (New York City), a recital tour of American Art Song in both the United States and in Germany as well as numerous recitals at Towson University.  Collister holds a DMA in Voice & Opera from University of Maryland (College Park), a Masters of Music and Performance Certificate in Voice & Opera from Northwestern University (Evanston), and Bachelor of Arts in Music/Theatre from Marycrest College (Davenport, Iowa).

J. Harp James Harp
Stage Director
    James Harp is well known in the Baltimore area as a stage director, pianist, organist, singer, composer, lecturer, writer and conductor. He began his musical career at age 7 as a church soloist, and has concertized in Italy, France, Greece, Israel, the Bahamas, and extensively throughout his native Southern United States. Among his more unusual musical experiences include singing "My Old Kentucky Home" as a soloist on National Television at the 1981 Kentucky Derby, coaching Lily Tomlin in arias from AIDA for an Emmy-nominated "Homicide" segment, and nearly drowning after falling backwards into the Sea of Galilee while conducting madrigals. This is his fourth season with the Young Victorian Theatre Company.

     He holds Bachelor's and Master's degrees from the Peabody Conservatory of Music. He has been the Artistic Administrator of the Baltimore Opera Company since 1989 and has been the Chorus Master since 1993. Since 1983 he has served as organist for the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, and since 1987 has been the Cantor (Organist/Choirmaster) for Baltimore's historic St. Mark's Lutheran Church, where he also serves as Artistic Director of the St. Cecilia Society Concert Series.

     His stage direction credits include such well known operas as MADAMA BUTTERFLY, DON GIOVANNI, COSI FAN TUTTE, and CARMEN, as well as less well-known American works: BUXOM JOAN (Raynor Taylor); SLOW DUSK (Carlisle Floyd); BEAUTY AND THE BEAST (Vittorio Giannini); THE VILLAGE SINGER (Steven Paulus); TOO MANY SOPRANOS (Edwin Penhorwood); THE MUSIC SHOP (Richard Wargo). As a solo singer he has performed with Baltimore Opera Company, Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Jacksonville Symphony, Summer Opera Theatre of DC, Opera Theatre of Northern Virginia, and the Contemporary Music Forum of Washington, DC. He has appeared with the Young Vic in three productions: RUDDIGORE (Sir Despard Murgatroyd); THE GONDOLIERS (Don Alhambra); and IOLANTHE (Earl Mountararat).

     Knowledgeable in many areas of music, he has lectured extensively on opera in many venues, including the Towson Arts Festival, the Maryland Opera Society, the Biblical Archaeology Society, The Baltimore Opera Perspectives Series, and the Joy of Opera Series. He is on the faculty of the Johns Hopkins School of Continuing Education where he lectures on the repertory of the Baltimore Opera. Successful as a writer of operatic children's programs, he and his work PUPPETS & PAGLIACCI were featured on a PBS documentary. His reworking of Puccini's GIANNI SCHICCI, changed from Florence, Italy in 1299 to Florence, Alabama, in 1929 and retitled THE TALE OF JOHNNIE S. KICKEY, has been well received and performed in several regional opera companies and universities. He has served on several national advisory boards as a consultant and advocate for arts agencies.

     Sought after as an orchestral musician and accompanist, he has been featured as soloist with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra in works ranging from Saint-Saens ORGAN SYMPHONY to Lloyd Webber's THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA. He has appeared as continuo (harpsichord/organ) soloist with many local orchestral and choral groups, where his informed and histrionic realizations of baroque figured bass have won acclaim. Accompanist to many local singers, many of whom feature his own compositions, he has also accompanied such artists as Leontyne Price, Marilyn Horne, Sherrill Milnes, Licia Albanese, Anna Moffo, Chris Merritt, Lucine Amara, and Paul Plishka.

     An aficionado of gardening, theology, genealogy and all things Victorian, he lives in the Bolton Hill neighborhood of Baltimore with his three gregarious pugs, Vivian, Jewell, and Woodrow.



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