![Premiere of “Why Women Went West” by Pamela Madsen at Meng Hall, Cal State Fullerton, Sept. 17.](/sites/default/files/styles/medium/public/upload/image/WhyWomenWentWest_Slide.jpg.webp?itok=Ht7wEB0j)
“Why Women Went West” is a multi-media chamber opera that tells the unfolding narrative of a sole woman protagonist, Mary Hunter Austin, and her journey west. The performance is free and will be presented at RAFFMA on March 9 at 5 p.m.
![Stacey Fraser](/sites/default/files/styles/medium/public/upload/image/NewsSlide_NewFrontierOpera_17March2022.jpg.webp?itok=n4sA31ZE)
The NEA grant has allowed the CSUSB Opera Theatre to create two full-length works this spring semester, with one that premiered last month and the next, “The New Frontier: An Atomic Age Jazz Opera,” to premiere on March 24.
![Stacey Fraser, CSUSB professor of music, soprano and the project director.](/sites/default/files/styles/medium/public/upload/image/NewsSlide_StaceyFraser_NEAGrant_28May2021.jpg.webp?itok=Fn0Aw1Mk)
CSUSB has been approved for a grant by the National Endowment for the Arts to support the music department’s “New Frontiers: Multimedia Monodramas,” a project that focuses on aspects of new frontiers, California, diversity, women and the idea of the West.
![Community-based Art initiative](/sites/default/files/styles/medium/public/CSUSB-NewsSlide_CBA_PrisonArts_31Oct2017_v2.jpg.webp?itok=WI-W3EiG)
The contract’s funding of more than $1.6 million will allow CBA to significantly increase its programming inside California state prisons, expanding its partnerships with other CSU campuses and growing jobs in the region.