CDI Mourns The Loss of Jacques d'Amboise
CDI Mourns The Loss of Angela Lansbury
Angela Lansbury was a great friend to California Dance Institute. Not only was she a long time donor, and she served as an Ambassador and Honorary Chair for our 2018 Event of the Year.
From NBC News, by David K. Li: Angela Lansbury, a versatile actor who wowed generations of fans as a murderous baker, a singing teapot, a Soviet spy and a small-town sleuth among a host of memorable roles, died Tuesday, her family announced. She was 96. “The children of Dame Angela Lansbury are sad to announce that their mother died peacefully in her sleep at home in Los Angeles at 1:30 AM today, Tuesday, October 11, 2022, just five days shy of her 97th birthday," her family said in a statement. The London-born actor took her life’s final bow as one of the most decorated players in stage history. Lansbury won five Tony Awards, most recently in 2009 for best featured actress in a play for her work in Noel Coward’s "Blithe Spirit." Ms. Lansbury also won Tony awards for her portrayal of Nellie Lovett in Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, and for her roles in Mame, Dear World, and Gypsy. Other famous roles were Mrs. Potts in Beauty and the Beast, and Jessica Fletcher in the long-running TV series Murder, She Wrote, which she credited with making her a world-renowned star. California Dance Institute sends its condolences to Ms. Lansbury's family and friends. |
CDI Mourns The Loss of Bruce Gladstone
Bruce Gladstone, Director Emeritus, In Memoriam
Electrical Engineer; Co-Founder: ComCore Semiconductor, FutureNet, FutureData
California Dance Institute is grateful to Bruce Gladstone for the years he spent supporting and guiding the organization. He was indefatigable in his advocacy of CDI.
Electrical Engineer; Co-Founder: ComCore Semiconductor, FutureNet, FutureData
California Dance Institute is grateful to Bruce Gladstone for the years he spent supporting and guiding the organization. He was indefatigable in his advocacy of CDI.
CDI Mourns The Loss of James Catterall
James Catterall, Director Emeritus, In Memoriam
From UCLA Newsroom:
From UCLA Newsroom:

Joanie Harmon | September 11, 2017
UCLA professor or education James Catterall died Aug. 23 in Santa Monica, following a heart attack and massive stroke. He was 69.
Catterall was known internationally for his studies on the cognitive effects of music and the arts on education, and after retiring from UCLA in 2011, founded the Centers for Research on Creativity, located in Los Angeles and in London. Catterall authored the 2009 book, “Doing Well and Doing Good by Doing Art” and the study, “Unpacking the Effects of Music on Intelligence.” His teaching and research interests included the arts and human development; arts and neuroscience/brain structure and function; evaluation of arts integration programs; educational policy implementation; and at-risk students.
“I had the good fortune of working with James going back to my earliest days in Moore Hall, back in the 1980s, and for the last seven or eight years before his retirement, we were neighbors in the corridor right across from the Reading Room,” recalled Stuart Biegel, senior lecturer in the UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies and lecturer at UCLA School of Law. “He always embodied the very best that GSE and IS stands for. Dedicated, upbeat, supportive, creative, optimistic. Always a kind word. We all remember him fondly, and rightly so. He will be missed.”
“I can best speak of his constant support for colleagues,” said John McNeil, professor emeritus of education. “Among the numerous creative actions taken by Jim was his organizing an extended exchange of his house together with his family in Topanga with a family living in a red state in order to throw light on the importance of place in forming national political opinion on a key issue.”
“I’m very saddened by the news of Jim’s passing,” said Alexander Astin, who is the Allan M. Cartter Professor Emeritus and founding director of the Higher Education Research Institute. “He was a wonderful friend and colleague. GSE and IS has lost one of its best.”
Prior to arriving at UCLA in 1981, Catterall taught economics of education and a finance seminar as a graduate teaching assistant at Stanford. He was also a mathematics instructor in private and public schools in Oregon and Minnesota.
Catterall was the director of the Center for the Study of Educational Policy in Palo Alto from 1978 to 1981, and edited The School Choice Forum. At Stanford, he was a fellow for the Institute for Research on Educational Finance and Governance and a Ford Foundation fellow. From 1972 to 1973, Catterall served as chief committee consultant on taxation for the Minnesota House of Representatives. He was also a researcher and writer for Minnesota’s tax study commission and a program officer in budget and fiscal planning for the New Jersey Department of Higher Education.
When Catterall founded the Centers for Research on Creativity he was trying to meet what he saw as a demand from the corporate sector for a more creative workforce. The centers are focused on creative development in students; teaching for creativity; and building empathy and collaboration into teaching practice and student engagement. Throughout his academic career, Catterall was a sought-after expert on learning and the arts for the media, with citations, quotes and op-eds in a wide range of media including PBS, NPR and many other online sources.
Catterall earned his A.B. with honors in economics from Princeton University; his master’s degree in public policy analysis from the University of Minnesota; and his doctorate in educational policy analysis from Stanford. He is survived by his wife Rebecca Catterall, three children Lisa, Hannah, and Grady Catterall; and four grandchildren, Mikal Jacob Pendleton, Addison James Catterall-Pendleton, Phoenix Catterall-Pendelton, and Sage Elizabeth Bloomfield.
UCLA professor or education James Catterall died Aug. 23 in Santa Monica, following a heart attack and massive stroke. He was 69.
Catterall was known internationally for his studies on the cognitive effects of music and the arts on education, and after retiring from UCLA in 2011, founded the Centers for Research on Creativity, located in Los Angeles and in London. Catterall authored the 2009 book, “Doing Well and Doing Good by Doing Art” and the study, “Unpacking the Effects of Music on Intelligence.” His teaching and research interests included the arts and human development; arts and neuroscience/brain structure and function; evaluation of arts integration programs; educational policy implementation; and at-risk students.
“I had the good fortune of working with James going back to my earliest days in Moore Hall, back in the 1980s, and for the last seven or eight years before his retirement, we were neighbors in the corridor right across from the Reading Room,” recalled Stuart Biegel, senior lecturer in the UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies and lecturer at UCLA School of Law. “He always embodied the very best that GSE and IS stands for. Dedicated, upbeat, supportive, creative, optimistic. Always a kind word. We all remember him fondly, and rightly so. He will be missed.”
“I can best speak of his constant support for colleagues,” said John McNeil, professor emeritus of education. “Among the numerous creative actions taken by Jim was his organizing an extended exchange of his house together with his family in Topanga with a family living in a red state in order to throw light on the importance of place in forming national political opinion on a key issue.”
“I’m very saddened by the news of Jim’s passing,” said Alexander Astin, who is the Allan M. Cartter Professor Emeritus and founding director of the Higher Education Research Institute. “He was a wonderful friend and colleague. GSE and IS has lost one of its best.”
Prior to arriving at UCLA in 1981, Catterall taught economics of education and a finance seminar as a graduate teaching assistant at Stanford. He was also a mathematics instructor in private and public schools in Oregon and Minnesota.
Catterall was the director of the Center for the Study of Educational Policy in Palo Alto from 1978 to 1981, and edited The School Choice Forum. At Stanford, he was a fellow for the Institute for Research on Educational Finance and Governance and a Ford Foundation fellow. From 1972 to 1973, Catterall served as chief committee consultant on taxation for the Minnesota House of Representatives. He was also a researcher and writer for Minnesota’s tax study commission and a program officer in budget and fiscal planning for the New Jersey Department of Higher Education.
When Catterall founded the Centers for Research on Creativity he was trying to meet what he saw as a demand from the corporate sector for a more creative workforce. The centers are focused on creative development in students; teaching for creativity; and building empathy and collaboration into teaching practice and student engagement. Throughout his academic career, Catterall was a sought-after expert on learning and the arts for the media, with citations, quotes and op-eds in a wide range of media including PBS, NPR and many other online sources.
Catterall earned his A.B. with honors in economics from Princeton University; his master’s degree in public policy analysis from the University of Minnesota; and his doctorate in educational policy analysis from Stanford. He is survived by his wife Rebecca Catterall, three children Lisa, Hannah, and Grady Catterall; and four grandchildren, Mikal Jacob Pendleton, Addison James Catterall-Pendleton, Phoenix Catterall-Pendelton, and Sage Elizabeth Bloomfield.