Orange County NC Website
William Henry Curry, Resident Conductor and Summerfest Artistic Director <br /> The Governor and Mrs. J. Melville Broughton Chair <br /> William Henry Curry enters his eighteenth season with the North Carolina Symphony in <br /> 2013/14. Maestro Curry serves as the artistic director for the Rex Healthcare <br /> Summerfest Series and all North Carolina Symphony summer programs. He has also <br /> served as music director of the Durham Symphony Orchestra since 2009. <br /> A native of Pittsburgh, Curry started conducting and composing music at age 14. His <br /> first major appointment was at age 21, when he was named assistant conductor of the <br /> Richmond Chamber Orchestra. He also served as resident conductor with the Baltimore <br /> Symphony and Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra. <br /> Maestro Curry was appointed associate conductor of the Indianapolis Symphony in <br /> 1983, a post he held until 1988, the same year he was named winner of the Leopold <br /> Stokowski Conducting Competition and performed in Carnegie Hall. <br /> Maestro Curry has conducted over forty orchestras, including appearances with the <br /> Chicago, Cleveland, Houston, National, Detroit, Denver, American, Atlanta, Shreveport <br /> and San Diego Symphonies, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Israel Camerata Jerusalem <br /> Orchestra, as well as the orchestras of Indianapolis, New Jersey, Bangkok and Taiwan <br /> and with the New York City Ballet in their famed Balanchine production of The <br /> Nutcracker. Opera engagements include the Houston Grand Opera, Chicago Opera <br /> Theater and New York City Opera. In 2009/10, at the invitation of the U.S. Department <br /> of State, Maestro Curry spent two weeks in Taiwan presenting master classes in <br /> conducting and leading concerts of American music. His final performance was filmed <br /> and shown throughout the country on Taiwan's Public Television Service. He has <br /> conducted the Charlotte Symphony and North Carolina Dance Theatre's production of <br /> The Nutcracker in multiple performances during the past two seasons. <br /> Maestro Curry is also a composer, and his works have been played by many of <br /> America's finest orchestras. The Indianapolis Symphony premiered his work Eulogy for <br /> a Dream. The late William Warfield of Porgy and Bess fame narrated the North Carolina <br /> premiere to an enthusiastic audience and critical acclaim in January 2002. <br />