PHOTOS: Inside the Brooklyn Academy of Music's 2026 BAM Ball

The Brooklyn Academy of Music has never been ordinary, and neither is its much-anticipated spring benefit gallery, the annual BAM Ball. Earlier this week, a culture-conscious crowd gathered at the cavernous Adam E. Max Gathering Space for a monochromatically dressed night that went from cocktails and step-and-repeats to sit-down dinners and talks and finally, the acclaimed New York premiere of Robert Wilson. Moby Dick-a production that transforms Herman Melville's saga of infatuation and revenge with the tart dialogue and soaring ballads of British singer-songwriter Anna Calvi.
The night brought more than its fair share of memorable photo highlights, including a tribute Gabriel Pizziwho was honored for his leadership of BAM's Endowment Trust and received a standing ovation. The most touching moment of the evening, however, came when the choreographer Lucinda Children welcome on behalf of the late art critic Robert Wilson, recalling in his words how Wilson would write thank-you notes to artists and participants after attending opening nights. The dinner hour ended with the Watermill board chair William Campbell leading the gala in the band's song: “We miss you, Bob. We love you, Bob!”


The guest list was a perfect immersion into the BAM universe—intellectually serious, artistically omnivorous and incapable of dull conversation. A political strategist Huma Abedinfounder of Warehouse of St Susan Feldmanbuilder Charles Renfro and producer and philanthropist Fabiola Beracasa Beckman shared a room with a Grammy-nominated composer and songwriter Clyde Lawrencepoet and cultural commentator Hanif Abdurraqib and an interdisciplinary artist Helga Davis. An opera director came to the theater world Julie Taymorlyricists Lucinda Childs and Annie B Parsondirector Annie Dorsenactor and director Paul Lazar and Tony-nominated director, actor and singer Whitney White. The content of the screen was equally well distributed: Separation actor John Turturro, Game of Thrones student Robert Aramayo and a comedian and actor Jaboukie Young-White they held their own in a space where the competition for the most interesting people in attendance was intense. A fashion entrepreneur Cynthia Rowley we gathered this well-heeled crowd.
At that time DJ Miss Hap started the party (where the miracle came from Talib Kweli sent the crowd into a frenzy), the evening had raised more than $1.25 million in support of BAM's work. Not a bad night's work.
Carla Shen


Clyde Lawrence


Karen Brooks Hopkins and John Turturro


George Sheldon and Yasuko Noguchi


Jaboukie Young-White


Will Davis, Amy Cassello, Lindsay Pizzi, Hilary Jager and Annie MacRae


Charmaine Warren


James Sheldon and Janel Callon


Elizabeth Holtzman and Tim Sebunya


Emilia Sherifova, Raj Keswani, Kabir Ahuja and Amena Chaudry


Ezra Max, Diane Max and Ros Shinkle


Jake Friedman and Kristen McElwain


Donna Augustin and Cynthia Rowley


Alex Ching, Roni De Toledo, Jim Wilentz, John Buttrick and Nora De Toledo


Serge Laurent and Virginie Bos


Daniel Gortler and Charles Renfro


Huma Abedin and Fabiola Beracasa Beckman


Alex Ching and John Buttrick


William Campbell, Edward Tyler Nahem and Tanya Minhas


Carla Shen and Lindsay Pizzi


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