Kennedy Center’s NSO executive director leaves for the Wallis in L.A. area
The tumult continues at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts as the National Symphony Orchestraβs executive director, Jean Davidson, steps down from her role to become executive director and chief executive of the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts. Davidson will assume her new position May 4, the Wallis announced Friday.
Davidson is not new to L.A., having served as the president and CEO of the Los Angeles Master Chorale at the Music Center from 2015 to 2023. She left the Master Chorale for the NSO in Washington, D.C., where she worked for two years until President Trump began his controversial takeover of the Kennedy Center, firing its board and installing himself as chairman. Major artist defections ensued, culminating with a board vote to rename the center the Trump Kennedy Center in December and Februaryβs surprise announcement that the center would close for two years for renovations, beginning July 4.
βIβve learned a lot in the last three years, and I think itβs no secret that itβs been a hard year,β Davidson told The Times, adding that the politicization of the Kennedy Center was a factor in her decision-making. βI had intended to stay through the [orchestraβs] 100th anniversary in 2031, but found it more and more difficult to achieve the goals that we had set out to achieve given the external forces that are at work that are just so far beyond my control.β
It seemed like βI had reached a natural ending point,β she said.
With the imminent closure of the Kennedy Center, speculation has swirled around the NSOβs future, especially in light of the Washington National Operaβs decision in January to cut ties with the storied venue, which has been its home since 1971. The Kennedy Centerβs Trump-appointed leadership, however, made it clear that it intended to support the NSO in the long term, and the orchestraβs board chair assured musicians that the orchestra and its staff would remain intact.
Davidson said the NSO is in the process of identifying venues for the next two years, and that the orchestra has been told by the Kennedy Center that its financial support is not in question.
βMany venue operators in the D.C. area have been very generously reaching out to us, asking how they can help,β she said. βOf course, we plan our seasons years in advance, and so next season was already planned. We already have conductors and soloists and all of that, and so itβs a bit of a jigsaw puzzle aligning our existing programming and obligations to those artists with venues that are appropriate for those programs.β
It will take several more weeks to come up with a cohesive plan and it will likely include several venues, βbut we will have a season,β Davidson said. βAnd we hope that everybody will come.β
In many ways, Davidson said, the NSO is stronger than it has been in quite some time. During her tenure, Davidson helped reboot the orchestraβs international and domestic touring, which includes upcoming shows at New Yorkβs Carnegie Hall in May and at the Hollywood Bowl in August. The orchestra also extended acclaimed music director Gianandrea Nosedaβs contract through 2031.
βThe orchestra is just playing at such a high level and they really have never sounded so good,β said Davidson, echoing what notable critics have also been saying. βWeβre still welcoming many new players after our audition process, and I think thatβs all very positive for the NSO.β
Davidson knows that leaving her role will be difficult for the orchestra, but she believes it will emerge stronger.
βI care deeply about the NSO and I am so proud of everything that weβve accomplished together. I think the world of Gianandrea, of [principal conductor] Steven Reineke, our musicians, our staff and board β itβs a great community of people,β said Davidson.
Davidson also believes that the upcoming renovations to the Kennedy Center will ultimately result in a better experience for both audiences and artists. She just wishes there had been much more advance notice.
βUsually orchestras will plan for being out of their hall years in advance, and we only have months to do that, so it is causing a bit of strain,β she said. βI think the most important thing is that our audiences and donors continue to support the NSO during this transition period.β
Davidson will now embark on her own transition as she moves from D.C. to L.A., rejoining her husband who has stayed in the area as a music professor at UC Irvine.
βThis is an opportunity thatβs been on my bucket list of things that I want to do in my life and it seems like the right time,β said Davidson of her new role at the Wallis in Beverly Hills.
Compared to the NSO, the Wallis is a practically brand new, having opened in 2013.
Davidson is excited that there is lots of room for growth, and that the Wallis has evolved into one of the regionβs most exciting multidisciplinary performing arts presenters and home base to a wide variety of local arts groups.
βI think anytime youβre starting a new role, thereβs a lot of learning that needs to occur,β Davidson said. βAnd Iβm not somebody that is prone to walking in with a big vision thatβs going to suddenly change course. I think theyβve been doing a lot of great work and so Iβm looking forward to collaborating with the team thatβs there β to learn and to create a shared vision for the future.β
Itβs an exciting time to be in Los Angeles, Davidson said.
βThe last decade or so has seen a lot of growth in the art sector, and there are so many talented artists and organizations in L.A. that need a place to perform.β