Heather Mitchell performs at a Gold Street Music concert Saturday, Nov. 3. Mitchell will be the narrator and a performer during the Juneau Cabaret “Great American Songbook” Series concerts in December. (Ben Hohenstatt | Capital City Weekly)

Heather Mitchell performs at a Gold Street Music concert Saturday, Nov. 3. Mitchell will be the narrator and a performer during the Juneau Cabaret “Great American Songbook” Series concerts in December. (Ben Hohenstatt | Capital City Weekly)

Juneau Cabaret opens up ‘The Great American Songbook’

Ongoing series includes new performances of classic songs

You’ll hear old tunes and learn new information.

Juneau Cabaret’s ongoing “Great American Songbook” Series focuses on learning through live performances of music by classic songwriters and typically includes excerpts from more than a dozen songs and biographical information about composers and lyricists.

“What I think is really handy is a little bit of context, understanding some of the stories, some of the motivations for the composer,” said Heather Mitchell, who will be narrating and performing during upcoming performances. “People really like to hear those stories.”

Mitchell said people also like to hear standards performed in the cabaret style, an intimate format that includes a singer with simple accompaniment.

“It’s not a big band,” Mitchell said. “It lets the performer have a conversation with the audience.”

Tom Locher, music director for Juneau Cabaret, provides backing on piano and Clay Good will sit behind the drums for the December shows. Experienced Juneau Cabaret performers Alyssa Fischer, Ericka Lee, Margeaux Ljungberg and Mitchell will be the vocalists.

Pulling music from “The Great American Songbook” means the shows have strong material with which to work.

“Every five years, you will find a major rock or pop singer who will put out a standards album,” Mitchell said. “They’re standards for a reason.”

She said the songs tend to be easy to mold and kind to singers, too.

Typically, shows last for about 75 minutes and include snippets of as many as 20 songs

Performances slated for 2 p.m. Saturday Dec. 1 at the Alaska State Library, Archives and Museum, and 6 p.m, Sunday, Dec. 2, at the Mendenhall Valley Library, will specifically focus on the work of Harry Warren.

“People say they don’t know Harry Warren, and I say, ‘Yeah, you do. You just don’t know it,’” Mitchell said.

Warren wrote the music for “42nd Street,” “I Only Have Eyes for You,” “Jeepers Creepers,” and “The Gold Digger’s Song (We’re in the Money)” among hundreds of other songs. He also racked up three Academy Awards.

Mitchell said even in his day, Warren found success without ever being the most well-known songwriter. She described him as a consummate professional, who had one wife, two children and lived to be 87.

“There’s not a lot of scandal going on with Harry Warren,” Mitchell said.

January’s show will be centered on the music of Hoagy Carmichael, March will include a variety of lyricists and May’s season-capper will by all about Peggy Lee.

This is the “Great American Songbook” series’ third year, and new to this season is an expansion from a downtown-only series to a presence in the valley.

Saturday shows are at the state museum and Sunday shows are at the Mendnehall Valley Public Library..

“Both of those places are beautiful,” Mitchell said.

Also, it’s hoped the Sunday shows might help draw in some new interest in Juneau Cabaret and “Great American Songbook” songs.

“I really want to get more teens coming,” Mitchell said. “It really does play to all of our populations.”

Know & Go

What: Juneau Cabaret “Great American Songbook” Series Concerts

When: 2 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 1 and 6 p.m. Sunday Dec. 2

Where: Andrew P. Kashevaroff Building, 395 Whittier St., and Mendenhall Valley Public Library, 3025 Dimond Park Loop.

Admission: Pay as you can


• Contact arts and culture reporter Ben Hohenstatt at (907)523-2243 or bhohenstatt@juneauempire.com.


Heather Mitchell sings while accompanied by Tom Locher on piano at a Nov. 3 Gold Street Music Concert.. Locher and Mitchell will also perform during upcoming Juneau Cabaret concerts. (Ben Hohenstatt | Capital City Weekly)

Heather Mitchell sings while accompanied by Tom Locher on piano at a Nov. 3 Gold Street Music Concert.. Locher and Mitchell will also perform during upcoming Juneau Cabaret concerts. (Ben Hohenstatt | Capital City Weekly)

More in Home

Gustavus author Kim Heacox talked about the role of storytelling in communicating climate change to a group of about 100 people at <strong>Ḵ</strong>unéix<strong>̱</strong> Hídi Northern Light United Church on Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025. (Mari Kanagy / Juneau Empire)
Author calls for climate storytelling in Juneau talk

Kim Heacox reflects on what we’ve long known and how we speak of it.

The Juneau road system ends at Cascade Point in Berners Bay, as shown in a May 2006 photo. (Michael Penn / Juneau Empire file)
State starts engineering for power at proposed Cascade Point ferry terminal

DOT says the contract for electrical planning is not a commitment to construct the terminal.

A cruise ship, with several orange lifeboats visible, is docked in downtown Juneau. (Laurie Craig / Juneau Empire file photo)
CBJ seeks input on uses for marine passenger fees

Public comment period is open for the month of December.

Browsers crowd into Annie Kaill’s gallery and gift shop during the 2024 Gallery Walk. (Juneau Empire file photo)
Gallery Walk guide for Friday, Dec. 5

The Juneau Arts & Humanities Council announced community events taking place during… Continue reading

A spruce tree grows along Rainforest Trail on Douglas Island. (Mari Kanagy / Juneau Empire)
Where to cut your Christmas tree in Juneau

CBJ and Tongass National Forest outline where and how residents can harvest.

Michael Wilson of Keet Enterprises offers staffs, salves and more at the Juneau Public Market on Friday, Nov. 28. (Mari Kanagy /Juneau Empire)
Five faces of the Juneau Public Market

Of the more than 175 vendors, the Empire spoke to five across different mediums.

The Alaska Marine Highway System ferry LeConte at the Auke Bay Terminal on Monday, March 5, 2018. (Juneau Empire file photo)
Update: Public comment period extended on proposed Cascade Point ferry terminal

The $28 million first phase would extend Glacier Highway and prepare the site on Goldbelt land.

Local nonprofit St. Vincent de Paul delivered over 500 meal baskets on Saturday as part of its Thanksgiving Basket Drive. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Skinner)
St. Vincent de Paul delivers 521 Thanksgiving baskets amid rising need

The annual holiday drive saw a 30% increase in demand.

Hundreds of people pack into Treadwell Arena on Friday night for a free Santa Skate. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Seasonal events guide for the end of November

Skating and feasting and shopping, oh my!

Most Read