The Hixson-Lied College of Fine and Performing Arts announced a major gift from James and Rhonda Seacrest, of Lincoln, Nebraska, during a freshman student recital at the Glenn Korff School of Music on Aug. 24.
The Seacrests have made a contribution to the University of Nebraska Foundation for the Glenn Korff School of Music to create the James C. and Rhonda Seacrest Tour Nebraska Opera Fund.
“Nebraskans across the state rarely have the opportunity to experience live opera other than in Lincoln or Omaha,” the Seacrests said in a statement. “We are delighted to join with the Glenn Korff School of Music to share the enrichment of opera performance with Greater Nebraska.”
The fund will be used to support the production, promotion, travel and other expenses incurred by the Glenn Korff School of Music for outreach opera events, both artistic and educational, across Nebraska, especially in rural venues.
“We are extremely grateful for the leadership and continued generosity of Jim and Rhonda Seacrest to the Hixson-Lied College of Fine and Performing Arts, especially for our opera program,” said Charles O’Connor, the Hixson-Lied Endowed Dean of the college. “This fund will help us take our exceptional opera program to all corners of the state of Nebraska through a variety of outreach activities, which is an important mission of our land-grant university.”
Glenn Korff School of Music Director John W. Richmond said planning was already underway for this new initiative.
“This gift will permit us to take our UNL Opera across Nebraska to share opera with the entire state and with special attention to our rural communities,” Richmond said. “Hixson-Lied Professor and Director of Opera William Shomos and I have begun the planning for the launch of this remarkable initiative that will mean so much to so many. Whether in historic opera venues in our state, such as the historic opera houses in Red Cloud or Minden, or in church basements and middle-school cafetoriums, UNL Opera will serve Nebraska audiences that have been beyond our reach.”
Shomos is eager to start planning opera outreach.
"I was a part of both Ireland trips they sponsored, and I saw first hand how those experiences were real life-changers for so many of the students involved. I remember thinking, during those trips, about how remarkable it would be to tour opera in our own home state of Nebraska," he said. "This gift makes possible what I believe is potentially the most important project of my career at the University. The opportunity to take UNL Opera out to rural Nebraska, creating new audiences in intimate settings is a dream come true for me. I look forward to the wonderful work ahead, and am ever grateful for the seemingly boundless support the Seacrests continue to provide to UNL Opera and its students."
James Seacrest graduated from UNL in 1963 with a bachelor’s degree in business administration. The Seacrest family owned and published newspapers in Lincoln, Scottsbluff and North Platte. Since leaving the newspaper business, the Seacrests have given their time, talent and financial support to many UNL projects. Their support has touched many areas at the university, including the College of Journalism and Mass Communications, the College of Business Administration, Sheldon Museum of Art, Nebraska Educational Telecommunications and the Hixson-Lied College of Fine and Performing Arts.
In 2008, James Seacrest received the Nebraska Builder’s Award, the highest honor given annually to individuals who have been “builders” of UNL through their philanthropy.
Their previous donations to the University of Nebraska Foundation for the Glenn Korff School of Music funded two trips to Ireland for the UNL Opera program to compete in the Waterford Light Opera Festivals in 2002 and 2007, where it won Best Opera in 2007. Their gifts have also helped support a chamber/opera orchestra and the creation of the Ariel Bybee Professorship, among many others. They also created the James C. and Rhonda Seacrest Program Excellence Fund in 2011 for the Hixson-Lied College of Fine and Performing Arts during the Campaign for Nebraska, as co-chairs of the Hixson Lied College’s campaign committee.
“Jim and Rhonda Seacrest are what I like to call proactive, preemptive philanthropists,” Richmond said. “They see a need or a wonderful opportunity and then come to us with an offer to help. They are true standard bearers among our many supporters, and we could not be more grateful for this gift.”