About Mills Performing Arts
Mills Performing Arts is committed to promoting action and exchange in the performing arts, and supporting artists and scholars who reflect, explore, and celebrate the abundant cultural, racial, gender, and economic diversity of our society.
artists such as Pauline Oliveros, Dave Brubeck, Morton Subotnick, Anna Halprin, John
Cage, Merce Cunningham, Yvonne Rainer, Trisha Brown ’58, Muhal Richard Abrams, Molissa
Fenley ’75, Fred Frith, and Rebeca Mauleón ’89.
Mills Performing Arts makes these venues available to today’s vanguard of performing
artists and offers spaces where all voices and communities can be seen, heard, and
welcomed. The creation of safe, supportive places for the rigorous, creative practice
of innovation and craft in performance work is at the heart of our mission. We believe
that every performance is an opportunity, and with every telling of a story, sharing
of a song, or participation in a dance, we gain insight into our shared humanity,
our imaginations, and the interconnectedness of the world.
To further these goals, we host the Mills Performing Artist-in-Residence Program,
create opportunities for artists to collaborate with Mills students and faculty, and
provide access to Mills Performing Arts resources and venues—including Littlefield Concert Hall, Holland Theater, Rothwell Theater, the Greek Theatre, and the Digital Performance Theater.
We strive to support and present work that exemplifies the global vision and impact
of the Northeastern University community while fostering deep ties with the Bay Area
creative community and championing a dynamic, boundary-breaking performing arts scene.
Situated on the Mills College at Northeastern University campus in Oakland, California,
we acknowledge that Mills Performing Arts and our venues operate on the traditional
lands of the Ohlone People.
Our Values
Cultural Equity
- Showcasing a dynamic, diverse roster of performance-based artists and teachers
- Creating affordable access to resources for both makers and audience
- Providing a safe, professional, and inspiring creative environment for all artists,
staff, and guests
Inclusive Excellence
- Opening the door to a variety of personal experiences, values, and worldviews
- Encouraging rigorous inquiry and dialogue
- Engaging in community partnerships that create opportunity and support creative practice
and the production of performance work
Gender and Racial Justice
- Committed to challenging social, cultural, and economic inequalities imposed and arising
from any differential distribution of power, resources, and privilege at Northeastern
University and in the larger society
Our People
Alexander Zendzian is a dancer, musician, theater producer, and arts administrator originally from the
Penobscot Valley in Central Maine. In 2018 they arrived at Mills College following
eleven years with the Joe Goode Performance Group, as both a performing member of
the company and as program/operations manager. During that time, they were instrumental
in launching and operating the Joe Goode Annex, a multi-purpose performance venue
in San Francisco, California, and developing community-centered programming.
Zendzian’s career as a performing artist is rooted in work with dance pioneer Anna
Halprin, Sara Shelton Mann, and Joe Goode, as well as multiple organizations including
Capacitor, Motion-Lab, Gamelan X, touring nationally with Brass Menažeri Balkan Brass
Band and internationally as a member of Project Bandaloop. Their work in theater production
includes lighting design for Bay Area dance theater artists including Fog Beast, Heather
Baer, and James Graham; and extensive production stage management, including for Sara
Shelton Mann’s 40-year retrospective Erasing Time in December 2015 at the Forum at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco
and Bandaloop’s local and touring projects.
Zendzian is committed to cultivating opportunities for artists to engage in their
creative practice and to craft and share performances as a mechanism of our society’s
necessary seeking of shared understanding and repair. A long-time resident of Oakland,
California, Zendzian is inspired to be working to create a new point of access to
the performing arts, housed in such historic venues in East Oakland, that serves the
local community as well as the greater Bay Area and beyond.
Marcel Quiroz is a highly accomplished studio and live sound engineer, Tahitian musician and drummer,
and jiu jitsu enthusiast who was born and raised in San Francisco’s Mission district.
He graduated Salutatorian from Ex’pression College of Digital Arts in 2004 and has
since worked with many artists from around the world. Most notably he was the recording
engineer for Reggae singer J Boog, where his work was nominated for Reggae Album of
the Year in 2016 and 2017 by the GrammyÓ board. He later went on to become stage manager
and monitor engineer for the singer, which lead him to tour around the world. As Front
of House engineer for such artists as Fortunate Youth, The Movement, The Expanders,
and Inna Vision, he was able to mix sold out shows at Red Rocks, Wolf Trap, both the
Berkeley and Los Angeles Greek Theaters, as well as many other famous venues around
the world.
For the past four years he was the production manager of the world-famous Yoshi’s
here in Oakland’s Jack London Square, overseeing the clubs renovation to it’s new
100% digital form.
Born and raised in Montreal, Aaron came to the Bay Area in 2011 to pursue an MFA in
Electronic Music and Recording Media at Mills College (now part of Northeastern University),
where he studied with renowned musicians and composers such as Roscoe Mitchell, Fred
Frith, Zeena Parkins, John Bischoff, Chris Brown, and James Fei.
After finishing his MFA in 2013, Aaron worked at Expression College for Digital Arts
in Emeryville, CA, teaching Sound Design, Interactive Audio, Video Game Audio, Computer
Music Production, and Live Multimedia Performance. He continues to work as a composer
and performer, with recordings on Full Spectrum Records, Geomancy Records, and Other
Minds.
Aaron brings his years of experience as an artist and educator to his work as Technical
Director, endeavoring to bring an artist’s touch to event production, and always working
with students and others to educate and train them.
graduate of the Theater and Performance Studies Program at UC Berkeley, he was previously
production and lighting director of Alonzo King LINES Ballet, an internationally renowned
touring contemporary ballet company. He has designed and implemented lights at over
150 venues in 20 countries and four continents, including the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco,
the Palais de Chaillot in Paris, and the Mariinsky Theatre in St. Petersburg.
Mills Performing Group and pulled the curtain for dance concerts in Lisser Hall. After
university, he joined the College staff in 1972 as technical director of Haas Pavilion,
the newly constructed performance space for dance at Mills. In 1982, he became the
founding director of the office of technical services, combining production services
for dance, the Language Lab, and the Audio-Visual Services office. In his time as
director, Graham oversaw the introduction of widespread video-recorded instructional
assistance and use of computers in the classroom, retrofitting dozens of existing
classrooms for new technology and participating in the design of the Betty Irene Moore
Natural Sciences Building, the Education Complex, and the Lorry I. Lokey School of
Business and Public Policy building. Along the way, he became technical director of
Lisser Hall, when the Dance Department moved its production program out of Haas Pavilion
in 2003. In a 2014 departmental reorganization, he relinquished his audiovisual position,
thus being the first, last, and only director of technical services for Mills College.
He retained his position in Lisser Hall and participated in the design for its renovation,
which was completed in 2018. Graham’s most recent major project for the College was
the design of Rothwell Theater, built in 2017.
Advisory Council
In 2021, Mills Performing Arts launched an Advisory Council drawing together leaders
from the Mills, regional performing arts and East Oakland communities to collaborate
with and consult on community engagement, outreach, and programming.
During the 2012 International Association of Venue Managers Performing Arts
Managers Conference in New York City, Mount Allen introduced the concept of non-
higher-education performing arts venue participation in research and education
networks. Since that introduction, he has worked to integrate advanced networking
technology into the arts industry, highlighting the use of JackTrip in NMP involving
world-renown jazz artists: Where latency truly matters.
Presently, Mount is the Director of Operations for the San Francisco Jazz Organization.
He opened the SFJAZZ Center in 2013, which is now a first adopter of research and
education network technology in a non-academic arts environment.
Prior to joining SFJAZZ, Mount was on the opening team of Jazz at Lincoln Center in
New York City, the world’s first venue specifically designed for jazz. Before this
appointment, Mount was on the opening team for the New Jersey Performing Arts
Center, the nation’s sixth largest performing arts center.
In recognition of the value of higher education, between the openings of SFJAZZ and
Jazz at Lincoln Center, Mount worked at Lehigh University as a Director Scheduling,
where he achieved a Bachelor’s degree in organization management, and a Master’s
degree in educational leadership. He currently is in the final year of his doctorate
in
education with a research focus on the intersection of jazz and technology. He also
holds the professional designation of Certified Venue Executive (CVE).
David W. Bernstein is Professor of Music and Head of the Music Department at Mills College. His publications
include The San Francisco Tape Music Center: 1960s Counterculture and the Avant-Garde; Writings
through John Cage’s Music, Poetry, and Art (co-edited with Christopher Hatch), Cage (Re)Considered, a special double issue of Contemporary Music Review, and essays for Cage & Consequences, ed. Julia Schröder and Volker Straebel; The Cambridge Companion to John Cage, ed., David Nicholls; John Cage: Music, Philosophy, and Intention, 1933-50, ed., David Patterson; The New York Schools of Music and the Visual Arts, ed., Steven Johnson; Alvin Curran: Live in Roma, ed., Daniele Margoni Tortora; Intimate Voices: Aspects of Construction and Character in the Twentieth-Century String
Quartet, ed., Evan Jones; the Cambridge History of Western Music Theory, ed., Thomas Christensen; Theoria, Journal of the Arnold Schoenberg Center, Music Theory Spectrum, Contemporary
Music Review, and Current Musicology. He is presently writing a book on Pauline Oliveros for the University of Illinois
Press and Experiments in the Fault Zone, a history of experimental music at Mills
College. He also served as editor of Music Theory Spectrum, the flagship journal of the Society of Music Theory.
Mills College Music Department, Chair
Sarah Crowell has taught dance, theater and violence prevention for over 30 years. She just recently
left her position as the Artistic Director at Destiny Arts Center in Oakland, CA where
she served in different capacities from 1990-2020, including Executive Director from
2002-2007. She founded and directed the Destiny Arts Youth Performance Company from
1993-2020, which has been the subject of two documentary films, and won the National
Arts & Humanities Youth Program Award. Sarah has facilitated arts integration, violence
prevention, cultural humility and team building professional development sessions
with artists and educators since 2000, both locally and nationally. She is the recipient
of the KPFA Peace award, the KQED Women’s History Local Hero award, the Bay Area Dance
Week award, the Alameda County Arts Leadership award, and the National Guild for Community
Arts Education Milestone award. She is also a four-time finalist for a Tony Award
for Excellence in Theater Education.
Sarah is a retired professional dancer, having performed and toured with numerous
dance and dance/theater companies including Impulse Jazz Dance Company in Boston and
the Dance Brigade in San Francisco. She also co-created the dance/theater company
i am Productions! She believes that the arts are an essential component of the journey
to social justice, especially art forms that involve moving the body. She believes
that movement must be part of all movements for social change.
East Bay Queer Arts Center
Carolyn Johnson (“C.J.”) joined the East Oakland Black Cultural Zone Collaborative and Black Cultural
Zone Community Development Corporation in 2019 with thirty years of experience in
entrepreneurship and business management, non-profit operations, finance and commercial
real estate. She is a native of Oakland, California and a proud graduate of Castlemont
High School. She brings to the Black Cultural Zone her homegrown knowledge of East
Oakland, where she was born and raised, and her commercial real estate experience
encompassing thirty years of commercial development, investment and leasing transactions
from New York to California. She has completed over $250 million in Investment Sales
transactions and has leased hundreds of spaces throughout the bay area, particularly
Oakland. Most recently, CJ was the Broker for and Director of Commercial Real Estate
at a leading Bay Area affordable housing community development corporation. Currently,
she is also a tenured Professor at the College of Alameda in the Business Department
and is in the process of launching its first online Entrepreneurship Certificate Program.
C.J. has a BA from the University of California at Los Angeles in Psychology with
a specialization in Business Administration; a MPH from the University of California
at Berkeley in Health Policy and Administration; a MBA from Columbia University in
Marketing, Corporate Finance and Real Estate Finance; and her Doctorate (EdD) from
Saint Mary’s College of California in Educational Leadership.
Peter J. Kuo (he/him) is the Director of the Conservatory at American Conservatory Theater
(A.C.T.) He is a theatre director, producer, writer, and educator focusing on raising
the visibility of marginalized
communities. He is on the Advisor Council for the Intimacy Directors of Color; and
has started a meeting group for BIPOCs working at Predominately White Institutions.
He earned his MFA in Directing at The New School for Drama in New York City. Named
as one of Theater Communication Group’s Rising Leaders of Color in the Round 3 cohort,
he is also a co-founder of Artists at Play, an Asian American theatre collective that
produces Los Angeles premieres of works for Asian Americans.
Adriana Marcial is the Interim Executive Director at San Francisco Girls Chorus where she leads all
operations in order to achieve the artistic and educational goals of the organization.
Marcial has an extensive background in the performing arts, and believes that exposure
to the arts, and a meaningful investment in our young people are integral to a thriving
community. Prior to SFGC, Marcial served for four years as Executive Director of Joe
Goode Performance Group, a dance theater company based in San Francisco. Marcial is
a member of Women of Color in the Arts and is a graduate of Northwestern University.
Dr. Julia Chinyere Oparah, Professor of Ethnic Studies for twenty-four years at Mills, became Provost and Dean
of the Faculty in January 2017. She continues to teach, advise and support the Ethnic
Studies Program and its students. Previously, she pursued a career in nonprofit administration,
taught within the University of California system, and served as Canada Research Chair
in Social Justice at the University of Toronto. For the past two decades, she has
provided leadership around social justice, inclusive excellence, racial equity and
queer and trans inclusion at Mills. Oparah has edited and written numerous books,
chapters and journal articles and received the 2019 Maternal-Child Health Champion
Award Visionary of the Year award for her most recent work, Battling Over Birth.
Provost and Dean of Faculty, Mills College
Kirsten Saxton is an award-winning teacher, a professor of English at Mills, and an alum from the
class of 1990. Her scholarly work focuses on how reading eighteenth- and nineteenth-century
texts (broadly understood) through anti-racist, feminist, queer, and crip theoretical
positions offers us productive ways to understand not only historical texts and contexts,
but also our own cultural moment. Her writing is centrally concerned with embodiment
and gender, often as it is presented in popular narratives, from the eighteenth century
to the present.
Her scholarly books include a monograph on the murderess, a collection on early British
woman writer Eliza Haywood, and a 2019 edited collection on teaching entitled, Adapting the Eighteenth-Century: A Handbook of Pedagogies and Practices. She’s a founding editor for two scholarly journals and currently runs a mentorship
program for women and non binary scholars in her field. As an Oakland native, she
is particularly delighted to be part of the We Are The Voices Mellon project on Oakland
Arts Scholarship and Activism with Mills Professors Sheila Lloyd, Ajuan Mance, and
Stephanie Young. Her scholarly work and her teaching are braided, ongoing conversations,
and her work with students at Mills Colleges motivates and shapes both her intellectual
and activist commitments.
Professor, Literature and Languages Department, Mills College
Sheldon B. Smith has been making dances, music and video art for over 30 years in both the Midwest
and California. Originally trained in ballet and french horn, his interests have since
shifted. He now makes cross disciplinary presentations with movement at the core.
He has been interested in technology for many years and, with Lisa, regularly performs
work that integrates technology and dance in order to allow both elements to speak
to common human experience. He has collaborated on projects with many significant
local and international artists including Kathleen Hermesdorf, Scott Wells, Jess Curtis,
Bob Eisen and many others For the last ten years he has been a full-time Visiting
Assistant Professor in the Mills College Dance Department. There he teaches various
composition, music, technology and theory related courses. He has a BA in Dance from
Colorado College and an MFA from the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign.
Adjunct Professor, Dance and Theater Studies Department, Mills College
Susan Stryker is Professor Emerita of Gender and Women’s Studies at the University of Arizona,
and currently holds the Barbara Lee Professorship in Women’s Leadership at Mills College,
2020-2022. Stryker is founding executive editor of TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly,
author of Transgender History: The Roots of Today’s Revolution, and co-director of
the Emmy-winning documentary film Screaming Queens: The Riot at Compton’s Cafeteria.
Victor Talmadge is an educator, actor, playwright and director. He is currently Professor of Practice
and Director of the Theater Studies Program at Mills College. Most recently he was
Interim Chair of the Performing Arts Department and Faculty Professor of Acting at
Santa Fe University of Art and Design. He has taught acting/playwriting for Johns
Hopkins University, New York University and served as an Adjunct Assistant Professor
for the City University of New York. As an actor he has performed in over 100 professional
classical and contemporary plays on the New York stage and in regional theaters throughout
the country. He worked on Broadway in the world premiere of David Mamet’s, November.
He played “The King” in the Tony Award winning production of the Broadway National
tour of The King and I for which he received the Bay Area Theater Critics Award, and was seen as Scar in
the Los Angeles production of The Lion King. Victor Talmadge boasts extensive film and television credits, as well. He is a recurring
character on two TV series, Manhattan and The Night Shift. As a playwright, his play, The Gate Of Heaven, was awarded The Nakashima Peace Prize. It was the first live theater to be produced
at The U.S. Holocaust Memorial and has been subsequently performed at The Old Globe
Theater, Fords Theater, and The Annenberg Center, as well as various venues around
the country. As a director, Mr. Talmadge has presented both experimental and classical
pieces. His directing work has been seen on both coasts. He has served as a Trial
Consultant for the international litigation firm of Latham and Watkins.
Professor, Dance and Theater Studies Department, Mills College
Deborah Brooks Vaughan is the Artistic Director, and co‑founder of Dimensions Dance Theater, a contemporary
dance company, founded in Oakland, California in 1972 and she also received her Masters
Degree from Mills College. Throughout her career, Deborah has been committed to investigating,
producing, creating, performing, and teaching dance that reflects the historical experience
and contemporary life within the African Diaspora. She is well-known for initiating
cross-cultural and issues-oriented collaborations. Under her artistic leadership,
Dimensions Dance Theater presents original contemporary choreography drawn from African,
Caribbean and Modern dance idioms. Dimensions also sponsors Rites of Passage (ROP)
for underserved youth and Dimensions Extensions Performance Ensemble (DEPE) the youth
dance company. Dimensions DanceTheater is based at The Malonga Casquelourd Center
for Arts in Oakland.
Mills College, Alumnae ’71
Contact Us
Mills Performing Arts
5000 MacArthur Blvd.
Oakland, CA 94613
P: 510.430.2191
E: millsperformingarts@northeastern.edu