Our Artistic Director

Artistic Director – Julie Pietrangelo

Julie has become well-known in the London area for her choirs.  A memorable trait of all her choirs has been precision and great diction.  Nobody does it better!

  • Director of The Broadway Singers September 2005 to present
  • Founder/Conductor of the St. Paul’s United Church Teen Choir (B.R.A.T.T.S.) September 1999 to June 2007
  • Conductor/Producer of 2 CD Recordings, 2001 & 2005, the B.R.A.T.T.S.
  • Conductor of East Elgin Children’s Chorus, Aylmer, 1990-91
  • Former elementary school music teacher in Elgin County (Sparta PS/Davenport PS) 1976-1988 – produced award winning bands & choirs (St. Thomas, London, and Toronto Music Festivals)
  • Theatre credits as co-musical director: The Sound of Music, The King & I, The Shaping (Elgin Theatre Guild)
  • Theatre credits as children’s chorus director: Oliver! (Parkside Collegiate Institute)
  • Theatre credit as musical director: Amahl and the Night Visitors (Aylmer Community Theatre, 2005)
  • Graduate of Don Wright Faculty of Music and Faculty of Education, U.W.O.

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   The Beat Magazine
     January 2011

Julie Pietrangelo is a self-described
“Broadway nut.” That’s a good thing, because
she’s also the artistic director of London’s
Broadway Singers, a 35-member mixed voice
choir dedicated to presenting the music of the
Great White Way.
Now in its 11th season, the Broadway Singers
perform music from hits like The Producers,
Smokey Joe’s Café, Mama Mia, A Chorus Line
and Come Fly Away at the Church of St. Jude,
January 30.
“It’s a beautiful sanctuary to sing in,”
comments Pietrangelo, who has been leading
the group since 2005. With many members
actively involved in the local musical theatre
scene, the choir always puts on a real “show,”
she says, and has managed to attract a growing
and enthusiastic following.
“Broadway is a [musical] genre unto itself,”
comments Pietrangelo, who started university
as a piano major, graduated as a choral
specialist and spent many years working with
London and area youth choirs and musical
theatre groups.
“It draws from a lot of other genres, but the
bottom line is: Broadway music is meant to be
entertainment, although some shows can have
a very strong message. That’s why its appeal is so
widespread.”

Nicole Laidler is editor of The Beat – Arts in
London and a local freelance writer and business
communicator.