A fairytale of love, fate, and the triumph of good over evil.

Enter a world of enchantment with The Sleeping Beauty, presented by Indianapolis Ballet and the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra at Clowes Memorial Hall, March 6-7, 2026. Featuring Tchaikovsky’s glorious score performed live, this beloved fairy tale ballet comes to life with lavish costumes, stunning sets, and exquisite dancing. Follow Princess Aurora’s journey from a cursed slumber to true love’s kiss in this timeless production that promises to dazzle audiences of all ages.

Performances

Clowes Memorial Hall

Friday, March 6, 2026 at 7:30pm

Saturday, March 7, 2026 at 2:00pm & 7:30pm

Quick Info

Approximately 2.5 hours

Recommended for ages 10 & up

Choreography: Marius Petipa, Victoria Lyras

Conductor: Maestro Jack Everly, Principal Pops Conductor for the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra

Music: Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

This production is not included in the 25/26 Access Pass Program

Box Office

The Clowes Memorial Hall Box Office is open to the public Wednesday through Friday from 10am until 4pm. The box office will open two hours prior to each ticketed event to provide day of show walkup sales and will call services. Advance ticket sales are not available two hours prior to ticketed events. The information line is monitored Monday through Friday from 10am until 4pm.

Contact Information:

Email: clowesboxoffice@butler.edu

Phone: 317.940.6444

Venue

Clowes Memorial Hall - Butler University

4602 Sunset Avenue, Indianapolis, IN 46208

 

Music

About the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra

The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra was founded in 1930 by German conductor and local violin teacher Ferdinand Schaefer. At first, comprised of volunteer musicians who split the revenue from ticket sales, the ISO became a professional orchestra with salaried musicians in 1937. That same year, Fabien Sevitzky – a Russian-born conductor and nephew of famed conductor Serge Koussevitsky – became Music Director of the ISO. Sevitzky’s appointment was highlighted in an April 5, 1937 article in Time Magazine, which began, “Of Midwestern orchestras, none has risen so rapidly or so recently as the Indianapolis Symphony.”

Soon after, the ISO blossomed into one of the nation’s most renowned orchestras. Sevitzky worked to promote the ISO through a variety of national radio broadcasts, and his successor, Izler Solomon, ensured the creation of the Clowes Memorial Hall on the campus of Butler University as a venue meant specifically for the ISO (until then, the ISO had been performing at the Murat Theater). Throughout the 1950s and 60s, the ISO traveled around the world to perform “Salute” concerts in countries such as Finland, Korea, Japan, Formosa, Portugal, The Netherlands, Israel, Mexico, Austria, Venezuela, Thailand, Greece, and Chile – earning the Orchestra a Citation from the Voice of America and the United States Information Agency as well as a letter of commendation from President John F. Kennedy – the first-ever such commendation to a symphony orchestra.

Solomon’s successor, John Nelson (1976-1987), is associated with the Orchestra’s appearances at Carnegie Hall and the Kennedy Center, plus a debut European tour in 1987. In the summer of 1982, a 14-year-old violinist named Joshua Bell was the first performer for the ISO’s Symphony on the Prairie series, and in 1984, the ISO moved downtown to its new home at the restored movie palace — the Circle Theatre.

In 1987, internationally renowned performer, conductor, and composer, Raymond Leppard (1987-2001) was selected as the Orchestra’s fifth Music Director. During his tenure, several key accomplishments took place: a return to regular recording with a series of CDs on the Koss Classics and Decca labels; performances on NPR’s “Performance Today”; nationally-syndicated radio broadcasts of ISO concerts; acclaimed tours on the East Coast and two tours of Europe; and a performance at Carnegie Hall as part of the venue’s centennial season.

Following Maestro Leppard’s retirement, Mario Venzago was appointed Music Director (2002-2009) and led the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra in a deeper commitment to repertoire of the mid-19th century — specifically works by Felix Mendelssohn and Robert Schumann — the Second Viennese School, contemporary scores and new commissions, including Jennifer Higdon’s Violin Concerto with world-renowned violinist Hilary Hahn in 2008.

From 2011-2021 Krzysztof Urbański served as the seventh Music Director of the ISO, and upon his appointment, was the youngest Music Director of any major American orchestra. During Urbański’s tenure, the ISO was selected to perform at SHIFT: A Festival of American Orchestrasat the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C. in April 2018.

Music Directors

Ferdinand Schaefer (1930-1937)
Fabien Sevitzky (1937-1955)
Izler Solomon (1956-1975)
John Nelson (1976-1987)
Raymond Leppard (1987-2001), Conductor Laureate from 2001 to his death in 2019
Mario Venzago (2002-2009)
Krzysztof Urbański (2011-2021)

Jun Märkl (2024-Present)

Pops Conductors

Erich Kunzel, Pops Music Director (1982-2002)
Jack Everly, Principal Pops Conductor (2002-present)

For more information and performances, please visit www.indianapolissymphony.org.