2023 Ellen Kelley Volunteer of the Year – Karinne McCullough

The Ellen Kelley Volunteer of the Year Award is given in recognition of outstanding service to the Houston Symphony League. Our Houston Symphony League directory is dedicated to this year’s winner, Karinne McCullough.

As a POPS concert subscriber since 1990, Karinne came to know the League in Spring 2014 through a B# Brunch program featuring Principal POPS conductor Michael Krajewski. At the Fall Membership Lunch, she signed up to try almost every volunteer opportunity at least once and life as a volunteer with the League began.

Karinne’s participation spans Education – Student Concert Usher, Family Concerts, Junior Patrons, Instrument Petting Zoo, Crafts, Ima Hogg Competition Judges’ Hospitality Liaison and Liaison for Winner’s Community Residency (both pioneer roles); Fundraising for violins for Lewis Elementary students, Magical Musical Morning; Symphony Community Outreach as liaison for Community Embedded Musicians, escorting CEMs to bedside visits with oncology patients at Texas Children’s Hospital and importantly, simply providing a “pair of hands” behind the scene.

Leadership roles include Recording Secretary (2021-23); Annual Fund Chair (2022); By-Laws Committee (2022); Vice President of Education; Strategic Planning Committee (3 years); Nominating Committee (3 years), and Co-chair of Mailing Committee (3 years). She is a member of the Symphony’s Education Committee. Karinne was the recipient of the 2019 Ardyce Tostengard Crystal Cello Award. She and husband Bill are members of the Houston Symphony Legacy Society.

Professionally, Karinne taught pre-school and elementary children with language-learning disabilities. She was a consultant for publishers of classroom material. Karinne holds a JD from South Texas College of Law. In private practice, she focused on insurance defense and appeals before joining the First Court of Appeals as a staff attorney. She served as the Court Administrator until appointed Clerk of the Court, retiring from the Court after 13 years of public service. Other volunteer organizations include the Salvation Army Women’s Auxiliary and the Barbara Bush Ladies for Literacy Guild.

Karinne and Bill attend South Main Baptist Church where she sings in the Sanctuary Choir. She also serves on the Board of Directors at 2016 Main Condominiums where they live with their two cats, Jack and Red.

A Lifetime of Service: Angela Apollo’s Passionate Patronage of the Houston Symphony 

When thinking of Houston Symphony volunteers, few have had a longer or more varied tenure than Angela Apollo. As a Symphony subscriber, donor, and League member for over 30 years, Apollo has been a valued member of the Symphony community.

Angela has always had an appreciation for music. Growing up on the coast of Italy in Calabria, she often huddled around the radio with her family on Saturday afternoons to listen to operas and classical music. She began playing piano as a child—a hobby she continued into adulthood. She came to New York City as a foreign exchange student in the 1960s, where she met her husband, Anthony Apollo, at a party. “He asked for my phone number, and that was it!” Angela reminisces. They got married and lived in New York City for 11 years until Anthony’s job transferred them to Houston.  

After moving, Angela fell in love with Houston and its extensive arts scene. Angela became involved in several organizations—she served as a volunteer docent at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston (MFAH), was a member of the MFAH Guild, and is a Trustee at the Houston Grand Opera. However, as a musician herself, her love of the Symphony was unmatched. Angela and Anthony—also an avid piano player—began subscribing to Symphony Classical Series concerts in the 1980s when the Symphony had concerts on Monday nights. Although her children weren’t as interested in seeing orchestra performances (“They were much more interested in KISS at the time,” Angela remembered with a smile), concerts became a cherished bonding activity for her and her late husband. “We loved seeing a show and discussing the performance together on the way home,” says Angela. She has many treasured memories of her time with Symphony—both at concerts and as a volunteer. 

Beginning in 1990, she joined the Houston Symphony League and over the years volunteered at Student Concerts, fundraisers for the Symphony, luncheons, and in the Archives. Angela’s service to the orchestra earned her the Crystal Cello Award in 2002, a League award that honors outstanding volunteers whose dedication and service make a lasting impact on the education programs of the Houston Symphony. These days, she’s slowed down in her volunteer duties, occasionally coming out of League retirement to help organize certain events like the Musician and Staff Appreciation Luncheon (where her famous meatballs are a hit amongst the attendees). “From 1986 to 2019, I did everything—I think it’s someone else’s turn now,” she remarks with a chuckle. Angela still attends Symphony concerts, and you can often find her at Jones Hall on Sunday afternoons. “For the Mahler Songs of the Earth show, I had extra tickets and brought along four friends of mine. One friend had never been to a Symphony concert before and was blown away by the performance,” says Angela. “I always try to bring new people to concerts and expose them to the Symphony.” 

Symphony’s Family Series serves as introduction to classical music

The atmosphere inside Jones Hall during a typical Houston Symphony performance is a model of decorum. Silence and stillness prevail; anything more than an occasional cough is conspicuous. This is not the case during a concert in the orchestra’s Family Series.
To read the entire article click here.

Houston Icons Saluted at Symphony Gala

From insights on dinners with President Nixon and President George Herbert Walker Bush to the socialites who have chased me across ballrooms, Donna Vallone of Tony’s fame and I answered myriad questions from our interviewer Leisa Holland Bowman at the Houston Symphony League‘s annual “Conversation With an Icon” luncheon.

Read the entire article on Paper City

Inside Houston Symphony’s $1.1M ‘Golden Age of Hollywood’ ball at the Post Oak Hotel

Welcome to Hollywood, Texas.

For one night only, Houston Symphony transformed the Post Oak Hotel at Uptown’s into scenes from the “Golden Age of Hollywood” for its annual black-tie ball.

Think “L.A. Confidential,” and “Chinatown.” A quartet of trench-clad reporter impersonators welcomed 400 guests into the gala. Pencils and notepads in hand, they shouted interview questions at arrivals. Inside, Marilyn Monroe and Audrey Hepburn lookalikes posed against Art Deco-inspired backdrops. 

To learn more, read the entire article on the Houston Chronicle

Houston’s Lunch of Secrets Earns the Symphony League a Coveted National Gold Award

Applause, applause for the Houston Symphony League which has received a coveted Gold Award for one of its special events from the Volunteer Council of the League of American Orchestras, a national leadership group of individuals recognized for outstanding support of their local symphony orchestras.

To read the entire article, please visit Paper City

Musicians bring Houston Symphony to people in communities that may not have access otherwise

The holiday party at CarePartners’ Dementia Day Center is in full swing. Maybe 30 to 40 clients, known as “members,” mingle with family members, enjoying cookies and hot chocolate in the center’s day room. Seventh-graders from nearby St. Mark’s Episcopal School fan through the crowd, passing out treats.

To read the entire article, please visit Preview at the Houston Chronicle by clicking this link.

Charlie Wilson’s War Heroine Shares Tales of the Earliest Days of the Houston Symphony League — Joanne King Herring Has Been Involved Since 1946

What: The Houston Symphony League Fall Membership Luncheon

Where: The Junior League of Houston

PC Moment: The age-defying Joanne King Herring — who has lived many exciting interludes in her 90-plus years, including having Julia Roberts portray her in Charlie Wilson’s War — took a step way back to recall the early days of the Houston Symphony and her memories of Ima Hogg, principal of the symphony founding in 1913. Herring was just 17 when she first became involved with the symphony in 1946.

To read the entire article on PaperCity click here

Jones Hall is undergoing a $25.5M upgrade to improve sound and replace aging infrastructure

Over the span of a month, Jones Hall served as the setting for an emotional farewell to Houston Symphony music director Andres Orozco-Estrada and a grandiose welcome to his successor Juraj Valcuha.

Rather than Mahler’s “Resurrection” symphony or Beethoven’s Ninth, the sounds emanating inside the downtown hall this week are from construction, the first step in an endeavor called “Overture to the Future,” a multi-year, multi-million-dollar update of the performing arts space that opened in 1966. In a city known for tearing buildings down, Jones Hall will — like the Alley Theatre a few years ago — be the beneficiary of a significant renovation rather than demolition.

To continue reading click here for the article on HoustonChronicle.com (subscription may be required)

Inspiring Conversations with Jacquie Baly of BalyProjects

Today we’d like to introduce you to Jacquie Baly. She shares her story with us below:

*Native of St. Croix USVI, came to Texas at the age of 7.
*Parents are from the French West Indies and a majority of my relatives live in St. Martin/Maarten
*I am the first of my family to graduate from college (however my mother earned her degree soon after).
*My parents taught me that hard work, discipline, dedication and a good work-ethic will take me very far.
*After graduate school (I have a master’s in City Planning with a concentration in Public Affairs) I began my work career as a city planner and progressed to Vice President of the Greater Houston Partnership before starting my own consulting practice.

To continue reading click here to read the article on VoyageHouston