Academy of the Arts Brings Elite Arts Training to Naperville

Naperville is known for its rich, artistic culture, with outlets for theater, fine arts, and music alike. However, for those looking for training in the performance arts, the closest options reside in the city. Enter the Academy of the Arts — a nonprofit educational institution that serves the Naperville area, coupling high-level arts and high-achieving academics. With a diverse portfolio of classes in dance, theater, and music, the aim to is offer quality programming worthy of big city recognition.

“We offer programs in visual arts, media arts, music, dance, theater, and technical theater. Our teachers are a combination of local arts professionals, national arts professionals, collegiate faculty, as well as highly qualified educators. Our students need to learn from a variety of perspectives to be able to truly have a well-rounded arts education,” said Executive Director and Co-Founder Dylan Ladd.

The Studio is the Academy’s evening and weekend program for adults and children that offers four 10-week sessions each year. Classes beginning October 25 include ballet, jazz, songwriting, voice, theater design, and acting. The Academy’s summer program, IMPACT, is for students ages 10–18 and provides training in Broadway masterclasses: dance, acting, and voice. And, finally, the jewel in the crown, the Academy’s K-12 day school that will start its pilot in Fall 2023.

Ladd explained that in starting the Academy, the mission was clear — to provide career-specific training that is often hard to hone in a traditional public school setting.  “As public schools work to support the needs of as many students as possible, it becomes very difficult to provide career-specific training. In the arts, there are many skills that students can begin working on at a very young age, but they do not receive these resources in most schools. By specializing our curriculum, we have the opportunity to offer classes that students might not see elsewhere such as music technology or ballet.”

With only one other independent arts high school (located in Chicago), the proximity limitation for suburban kids was tangible. The Academy will strike a balance between academics and arts to create well rounded students ready to tackle this competitive field without the hour-long commute.
“One way we plan to achieve our goals is through the incorporation of Arts Integration, where our teachers take standards from arts subjects as well as core subjects and teach both in the same lesson. An example that I love to share is one that my Co-Founder, Julie Hindenburg, uses in her 8th grade language arts class. Julie’s students work on narrative writing by creating and producing their own stage play. They also direct and perform their works for their peers, taking theater and language arts standards and placing them in the same lesson plans.”
Much research and logistics went into conceptualizing this unique Academy and choosing Naperville as its hub. The brainchild of three educators determined to create something different for young artists, the Academy sprung from an in-depth examination of needs. In Spring 2021, the team hired a consultant firm Connor Associates to complete a ‘location feasibility study.’ They looked at all of Illinois and Wisconsin to see where this type of school could find the most success. Ladd shared, “After researching locations with families that support the arts, high-growth rates in student populations, access to higher education, and great public transit, Naperville was the number one city in their study. In fact, they identified over 170,000 families in a 45-minute radius around Naperville that checked all of those boxes.”
The success that the students at the Academy have found this summer during the IMPACT Summer Series speaks for itself. Some of the biggest Broadway names trained students in dance, acting, and vocals. Students concluded the program with a field trip to see a Broadway show and a student performance for family and friends.
It was there that participant Layla Cummings was given the opportunity to audition for a Broadway show based on her performance. Her mother Laura recalls, “The theatre community is so special, and this group seemed to bond very quickly. Layla loved learning from the Broadway talent, especially Erica Henningsen. To have a chance to sing in front of her was incredible, and she truly gave Layla notes that improved her audition song. Finally, the experience with Merri Sugarman was a dream come true. We signed up for the camp in part because of Merri’s amazing background and reputation, and we knew she would give Layla really important insight and feedback. We never dreamed she might actually scout Layla and ask her to go to New York City to audition for a national tour, but that is what happened. Due to IMPACT, Layla got to go to New York and audition for the national tour of Les Misérables. We’re blown away that Merri is keeping Layla in mind for future opportunities, and Layla had a truly dream-come-true first time going to New York City. The Academy is connected to legitimate talent in the theatre industry. The experience, role models, and talent they bring is invaluable to area kids who are interested in theatre as a career.”
The Academy is actively fundraising to build its state-of-the-art academic and arts school with 50 classrooms. Having a direct connection with the professional arts world is important to the Academy’s mission, which is why they brought in a brilliant team of Artistic Advisors including Alex Lacamoire (Music Director and Orchestrator for Hamilton/In the Heights) and Taylor Dayne (Pop Star). Taylor Dayne is joining the Academy for a special event in Naperville on Friday, February 10th to support Academy of the Arts. Tickets are on sale now at IllinoisArtsAcademy.org/taylordayne.

Art Talk: There’s Always Magic In The Air

While it is true that the neon lights are bright on Broadway, they won’t hold a candle to the radiance that will emanate from North Central College’s Wentz Concert Hall on February 18.

That is the night the Academy of the Arts, a new west-suburban nonprofit academic and art school, hosts A Night of Broadway Cocktails + Concert, its first fundraising gala. The star-studded event begins at 6PM and features stars from some of the biggest shows on stage and screen.

Zonya Love (Celie in “The Color Purple”); Cathy Rigby (Peter Pan in “Peter Pan”); Julia Murney (Elphaba in “Wicked”); Karen Mason (Tanya in “Mamma Mia!”); Meecah (starring in “Hamilton”); and Stephen Wallem (Thor Lundgren on “Nurse Jackie”) are among the celebrities supporting the endeavor.

Their engagement will launch the Academy’s year-one fundraising goal of $2 million.

“Community support is critical to meet our goal to fully open in fall 2025,” Academy co-founder Dylan Ladd said. “It sounds lofty, but we’ve done the research and have the data: This is the right location with the level of community engagement needed to bring this asset to the families of Naperville and surrounding suburbs.”

Tailored for grades 6 through 12, the Academy will offer classes in math, reading, language arts, social studies, and science along with a range of visual arts and performing arts programs. This rigorous curriculum blends academic content with an equal dose of arts courses to prepare students for success in the arts beyond their high school experience.

The facility is a planned world-class arts center: a 1,200-seat auditorium with a proscenium stage, fly loft, orchestra pit, an outdoor amphitheater, a modular black box theater, dance studios, and academic classrooms. The estimated cost of the endeavor is $80 million.

“We have a lot of work ahead before we have our state-of-the-art facility and our first class of full-time students,” Ladd said. “And our work moving forward is securing funding for the project.”

Tickets to the gala are priced at $100 for the event that includes a cocktail hour, silent auction, and concert, and can be ordered at www.illinoisartsacademy.org/gala.

Hotel Arista, Naperville’s only AAA Four Diamond hotel, is offering a special group rate for gala ticketholders. Call (630) 579-4100 to request the Academy of the Arts rate.

Learn more about the Academy, its gala, and other opportunities to support its mission at www.illinoisartsacademy.org.

Academy of the Arts’
A Night of Broadway Cocktails + Concert
6PM Fri., Feb. 18
Wentz Concert Hall – 171 E. Chicago Ave.

Julia Murney, Cathy Rigby & More to Take Part in Academy of the Arts Concert

Academy of the Arts, a new, west-suburban, non-profit academic and art school projected to open in fall 2025, will host its first fundraiser gala and concert at 6 p.m. Friday, Feb. 18, at North Central College’s Wentz Concert Hall in Naperville. The concert will feature stars from some of Broadway’s biggest shows.

Performers include Julia Murney who last appeared on Broadway in Wicked; former gymnast turned Peter Pan Cathy RigbyKaren Mason who most recently played Mrs. Marsh in Ryan Murphy‘s Halston on Netflix; Zonya Love who played Celie in The Color Purple; Stephen Wallem known for his role as Thor Lundgren on Nurse Jackie; Chadae Nichol, a Joliet native who made her Broadway debut in Motown the Musical; and Meecah who is currently on tour with Hamilton.

“We are thrilled to see this level of support from the Broadway arts community for this event and our mission,” said Academy co-founder Dylan Ladd. “We anticipate a strong level of support from the west suburban community as well.”

Ladd’s mission is to build and open the school for grades 6 through 12, offering the core academic areas of math, reading, language arts, social studies and science, along with a range of visual arts and performing arts programs, by the 2025-26 academic year.

“We have a lot of work ahead before we have our state-of-the-art facility and our first class of full-time students,” Ladd said. “And that work moving forward is funding the project.”

The facility is a planned world-class arts center: A 1,200-seat auditorium with a proscenium stage, fly loft and orchestra pit, an outdoor amphitheater, a modular black box theater and dance studios, and academic classrooms.

The non-profit Academy’s year-one fundraising goal is $2 million from which it anticipates building momentum toward the $80 million needed to break ground and build the new facility.

“Community support is critical to meet our goal to fully open in fall 2025,” Ladd said. “It sounds lofty, but we’ve done the research and have the data: This is the right location with the level of community engagement needed to bring this asset to the families of Naperville and surrounding suburbs.”

Tickets to the gala are priced at $100 for the event that includes a cocktail hour, concert, silent auction and a reception, and can be ordered at www.illinoisartsacademy.org/gala. Hotel Arista, Naperville’s only AAA Four Diamond hotel, is offering a special group rate for gala ticketholders. Call 630-579-4100 to request the Academy of the Arts rate.

Learn more about the Academy, its gala and other opportunities to support its mission at www.illinoisartsacademy.org.

Academy of the Arts to launch first classes

A private school focused on the performing and visual arts will begin after-school classes this fall on the CityGate Centre campus at Interstate 88 and Route 59 in Naperville.

Dylan Ladd, one of the founders of the Academy of the Arts, said programs will roll out progressively, with a goal of being fully open by the 2025-26 academic year.

They plan to construct a new building on a site not yet chosen that will be a full-time school for sixth-grade though high school-age students offering core academic curriculum in math, reading, language arts, social studies and science in addition to a range of visual arts and performing arts classes.

When complete, they hope to have a school on par with the Chicago Academy for the Arts. The facility will have a 1,200-seat auditorium with a proscenium stage, fly loft and orchestra pit, an outdoor amphitheater, a modular black box theater, dance studios and academic classrooms.

No location for the estimated $80 million school has been chosen so, in the interim, the academy will lease space on the fifth floor of a building at 2135 CityGate Lane, Ladd said.

As a means of introducing itself to the community, the academy will host a series of pop-up events over the coming year to give area residents a taste of what the new school will have to offer, Ladd said.

Two inaugural master classes were taught this week by Chadae Nichol, a Broadway performer and academy arts educator.

Ladd said the academy is eager to launch programming and was fortunate to have Nichol provide this cornerstone event.

“Holding these classes during winter break fills a gap for students,” he said. “Even a lot of local performing arts schools suspend classes during this time so it allows students to keep up their skills, fill their time and be exposed to accomplished artists.”

Nichol, who grew up in the area and graduated from Joliet West High School, said she was excited to return as a teacher.

“I’ve been traveling and working professionally for the past several years,” said Nichol, who made her Broadway debut in “Motown the Musical.”

Her “Motown” stint enabled to her work with people in the music industry, including Motown founder Berry Gordy, whose autobiography formed the basis for the musical, and to meet musicians Stevie Wonder and Smokey Robinson, she said.

“But even outside of that, it’s continued to open up doors,” she said. “That was definitely one of the most impactful jobs because it’s still it’s kind of like the gift that keeps on giving.”

Nichols said the musical was like being a part of history repeating itself as a group of Black artists with the Broadway troupe traveled across the country and presented the music to the masses in the way similar to how the original Motown artists did more than 60 years ago.

“It was really an experience that I don’t even think that you can fully imagine or explain. It was kind of surreal at times,” she said.

Growing up in Joliet, Nichol said she didn’t see many people pursing the performing arts and she would have loved the opportunity to learn from professionals.

Her first introduction to the arts was a program held during a school holiday break.

“We had the opportunity to take a class with people who were dancing professionally at the time,” Nichol said. “For me, that experience was a defining moment. For the first time I saw, ‘Oh, I think that’s something that I want to do.’”

For that reason, she wants to share her experiences in the hope of inspiring a new generation.

Ladd said the academy has a lot of work to do before opening its state-of-the-art facility and welcoming its first class of full-time students. “Much of that work is fundraising, and we will be holding our first gala event in February,” he said.

The gala — “A Night of Broadway,” featuring stars from Broadway hits like “Hamilton,” “In the Heights,” “The Lion King,” “Wicked” and “The Book of Mormon” — is planned for Feb. 19 at North Central College’s Wentz Concert Hall in downtown Naperville.

Tickets are $100 and available online at illinoisartsacademy.org/gala.

The nonprofit’s first year fundraising goal is $2 million from which it anticipates building momentum toward the $80 million needed to break ground on the school.

“These classes, the gala and community support all are critical elements toward meeting our goal to fully open in fall 2025,” Ladd said.

“It sounds lofty, but we’ve done the research and have the data. This is the right location with the level of community engagement needed to bring this asset to the families of Naperville and surrounding suburbs,” he said.

Broadway Performer Will Instruct Masterclasses for Aspiring Dancers

Looking for the perfect gift for an aspiring dancer?

Academy of the Arts, a new nonprofit educational institution, is launching its programs on December 28, 2021, by presenting two master classes for ages 12 to adult. The classes will be led by accomplished performing artist Chadaé Nichol.

A performer, arts educator and Joliet native who made her Broadway debut in Motown the Musical, Nichol will lead a contemporary jazz master class at 4:30PM, Tues., Dec. 28;  followed by a musical theatre dance master class at 6:15PM also on Tuesday, Dec. 28.

Both classes will be held at 2135 CityGate Lane, next to Hotel Arista in the CityGate Centre campus, Route 59 and Ferry Road.

“We are so eager to launch our programming, and so fortunate to have Chadaé join us for this cornerstone event,” said Academy of the Arts Co-Founder Dylan Ladd. “Holding these classes during winter break fills a gap for students, and even a lot of local performing arts schools suspend classes during this time, so it allows students to keep up their skills, fill their time and be exposed to an accomplished artist.

“This kind or experience can be a great holiday gift for budding performers,” he added.

Participation is $100 per class and a select number of needs-based scholarships are available. Enroll at www.illinoisartsacademy.org/enroll.

Chadaé Nichol: Master Class Teacher / Artist Brief Bio

Chadaé Nichol made her Broadway debut in Motown the Musical. She was most recently seen at the Lyric Opera in the Chicago productions of Oklahoma and Showboat. Regionally, Nichol has been part of productions of Little Shop of HorrorsCabaret, and The Wiz.

She also has starred in productions at Disneyland in California.

Currently, Nichol is the education manager for The Broadway Collective. She earned her BFA in Musical Theatre from Ball State University.

Academy of the Arts

Academy of the Arts aims to provide high-level arts curriculum while engaging students in a rigorous academic education when its new state-of-the-arts facility plans to open in the fall of 2025. Learn more about Academy of the Arts as well as upcoming master classes, fundraising initiatives and other opportunities to support its mission at www.illinoisartsacademy.org.

In addition to space leased to Academy of the Arts, CityGate Centre also is the multi-use campus with AAA Four Diamond Hotel Arista, CityGate Grille, Che Figata, Zorba Cocktail Bar, LavAzza, Arista Spa and Salon, DuPage Medical Group, Olympia Executive Fitness Center and Tap in Pub.

New West Suburban Arts Academy to Launch With Master Classes This Winter

Academy of the Arts, a new, west-suburban, non-profit educational institution, is launching its programs just in time for the holiday season with a series of performing arts masterclasses led by accomplished performing artists. Classes will serve dancers age 12+ and vocalists age 10+, and be held Dec. 28 and Dec. 30, at the CityGate Centre campus, Rte. 59 & Ferry Rd., Naperville.

Broadway performer, arts educator and Joliet native Chadaé Nichol who made her Broadway debut in Mowtown the Musical will lead a 4:30 p.m. contemporary jazz master class and a 6:15 p.m. musical theatre dance master class, both Tuesday, Dec. 28, for ages 12 to adult.

At 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 30, recently retired North Central College Fine Arts Director Brian Lynch who played Les Miserables lead Jean Valjean will present “Les Miserables: Behind the Scenes” – a vocal workshop for ages 10 to adult. All three classes will be held at 2135 CityGate Ln., Naperville, next to Hotel Arista.

“We are so eager to launch our programming, and so fortunate to have Chadaé and Brian join us for this cornerstone event,” said Academy Co-Founder Dylan Ladd. “Holding these classes during winter break fills a gap for students, and even a lot of local performing arts schools suspend classes during this time, so it allows students to keep up their skills, fill their time and be exposed to accomplished artists.

“This kind or experience can be a great holiday gift for budding performers,” he added.

Regular Academy programming will begin in fall 2022, and the school is projected to fully open serving grade 6 to 12 students by the 2025-26 academic year with a curriculum that provides the core academic areas of math, reading, language arts, social studies and science, along with a range of visual arts and performing arts programs.

“We have a lot of work ahead before we have our state-of-the-art facility and our first class of full-time students,” Ladd said. “Much of that work is fund raising and we will be holding our first Gala event in February.”

The facility Ladd references is a planned world-class arts center: A 1,200-seat auditorium with a proscenium stage, fly loft and orchestra pit, an outdoor amphitheater, a modular black box theater and dance studios, and academic classrooms.

The non-profit Academy’s year-one fundraising goal is $2 million from which it anticipates building momentum toward the $80 million needed to break ground and build the new facility.

“These classes, the gala, and community support all are critical elements toward meeting our goal to fully open in fall 2025,” Ladd said. “It sounds lofty, but we’ve done the research and have the data: This is the right location with the level of community engagement needed to bring this asset to the families of Naperville and surrounding suburbs.”

All three December master classes will be held in a 5th floor studio spaced leased by the Academy at 2135 CityGate Ln., Naperville, next to Hotel Arista. Participation is $100 per class and a select number of need-based scholarships will be available. Enroll at www.illinoisartsacademy.org/enroll

Learn more about the Academy of the Arts, its December masterclasses and February gala, and other opportunities to support its mission at www.illinoisartsacademy.org.

Academy of the Arts School Coming to Naperville in 2025

Academy of the Arts

A new arts-focused school and center for the community will be coming to Naperville in the next few years.

“The biggest thing that was important for us was to find a community that’s very arts focused and Naperville having Century Walk and all these other very important arts institutions really stuck out for us,” said Dylan Ladd, co-founder of Academy of the Arts.

The first of its kind in the suburbs, Academy of the Arts is a non-profit that will be providing arts education to students in sixth through twelfth grade.

“The ultimate goal is to provide a place for students to really get that high level arts instruction, arts curriculum, connections to the professional world, understanding of the business world in the arts,” said Ladd. “But all of that without sacrificing their academic education and making sure that they have very strong academics too so that way when they leave they’re prepared to either be at the top of their game in the arts world or any other professional setting.”

The plan for the full academics and arts school is to have 50 traditional classrooms, aiming for smaller class sizes of around 15 students per class. They hope to eventually provide K-12 education.

The school will also have a black box theater, 1,200-seat auditorium, several dance studios, music classrooms, and recital halls.

“[We’re] also looking at some of the more innovative arts areas that aren’t focused in a traditional school setting,” said Ladd. “So we’re looking at things like having a TV studio within there so the students can really get into the media production side of things, a recording studio. And then a full set shop, costume shop.”

As work begins to build a curriculum, the school has created an artistic advisory board to help give them feedback. Those on the board include professional artists like Alex Lacamoire who was the orchestrator and music director for Hamilton and In the Heights, as well as 80’s artist Taylor Dayne.

Arts Center for the Community

The project also includes building an arts center for the community.

“The arts center is going to be really great because that’s one thing that the cultural scene of Naperville is missing right now is having this professional theater,” said Ladd. “And so we’re really excited to be able to create that space for the community.”

The plan is to bring professional musicians, professional theater groups, and touring acts to the area. Community organizations in Naperville will also be able to use the theater space.

A specific site for the around 200,000 square-foot building has not been chosen yet.

Ladd said they are looking at the average tuition cost of surrounding private schools to set a price. Financial aid to support students “from all financial backgrounds” is also in their budget.

The plan is for Academy of the Arts to open in August 2025.