George Mason University

01/14/2026 | News release | Archived content

Love, Legacy, and the Arts: How Rick Davis and Julie Thompson are shaping the future of Mason Arts

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Dean Rick Davis and Center for the ArtsExecutive Director Julie Thompson joke that, even among their College of Visual and Performing Arts(CVPA) colleagues, some people don't realize that they are married. Now the proverbial cat is out of the bag.

College of Visual and Performing Arts Dean Rick Davis and Julie Thompson, executive director, Center for the Arts. Photo by Emily Rusch/CVPA

They're not only married but were college sweethearts, meeting during their undergraduate days at Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin. The arts have played a role in their relationship from the start; Davis chuckled when recalling that their courtship even included a pre-requisite stint at The Troupe of American College Players, Thompson's father's summer stock theater in Colorado.

That was back in the 1980s, making it clear that long-term commitments are a hallmark of Thompson's and Davis's characters. Davis has been at George Mason University for 34 years, serving as CVPA dean since 2015 and as executive director of the Hylton Performing Arts Center since August 2011. Thompson became the executive director for the Center for the Arts on the Fairfax campus in 2007, but has served in other capacities at the university, including as a faculty member in the graduate Arts Management Program, for nearly 30 years.

They have recently ensured that their longstanding legacies will continue to enhance, nurture, and grow the arts at George Mason through a planned gift with multiple designations. The $700,000 estimated gift will support the Give Voice initiative for the renovation of the Center for the Arts; Center for the Arts programming; the Hylton Performing Arts Center Endowment; the William Reeder, Founding Dean Endowment in the Arts; and the establishment of the Rick Davis and Julie Thompson Theater Scholarship Endowment.

The main motivator for the gift is the renovation of the Center for the Arts on the Fairfax Campus, "something that Rick and I are emotionally involved in," explained Thompson. "It's been there for us all these years as well as for the college and the university."

The Give Voice initiative is a $35M fundraising effort to renovate and modernize the Center for the Arts, seeking to improve and enhance the venue's ability to support the needs of artists, audiences, and CVPA students and faculty. It will include technological and acoustical upgrades, improved accessibility and sightlines, additional aisles on the orchestra and balcony levels, a remodeled lobby, expanded teaching and rehearsal spaces, and more.

Davis invoked former university President George Johnson (1978-1996), who asserted that the arts are the front door to George Mason. "The arts pique the interest of the broader community and give them ways to interact with the university that they otherwise might not have had," said Davis. The Center for the Arts is the hub of artistic performances, classes, and university events, and Davis observed that it's "getting creaky" after admitting more than 6.5 million audience members since its doors opened in 1990.

Thompson and Davis agree that Mason Arts-the community of staff, faculty, students, artists, musicians, and performers and the audience they attract-is one of the tangibles that makes George Mason "all together different."

"The arts here are so dynamic," said Thompson, "we're not into a set pattern of things. We're always looking at how to reinvent, and look at things differently, which is exciting. And I think that's what's kept Rick and me here much longer than we've probably ever anticipated: the fact that [it is] such a dynamic place."

Both Davis and Thompson were quick to credit Susan Graziano, senior director of development for CVPA, who helped them realize that they could make even more of an impact through a planned gift than they originally thought.

They encourage members of the George Mason community-whether faculty, staff, alums, parents, or longstanding friends-to consider making a gift to the university. "If you have been paying attention," Davis said, "you know that Mason does more with less than many other institutions.

"A philanthropic dollar at George Mason has so much more immediate impact than a philanthropic dollar almost anywhere else," he continued. "You see how much good Mason does for people. You see how you're changing lives. And we are excited to imagine how our legacy gift will keep that spirit going for a long time to come."

George Mason University published this content on January 14, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on January 16, 2026 at 11:42 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]