Alumni Hall of Fame

Artists and entrepreneurs named 2024 SFSU Alumni Hall of Fame inductees

For 30 years, San Francisco State University has recognized notable alumni for their contributions to their communities, whether it’s the creation of innovative arts programs, their leadership in business or through the art they’ve made. This year’s San Francisco State Alumni Hall of Fame inductees are innovators in dance, poetry, food and health care and are also community and business leaders. SF State President Lynn Mahoney and the University community will honor the four newest inductees at a celebration and dinner Friday, Nov. 1, at The Ritz-Carlton, San Francisco.

“Each year, as we induct new alumni into our Hall of Fame, I’m impressed by the range of their accomplishments — though I’m not surprised by their success. SF State prepares students to be successful global citizens focused on problem-solving with a lens toward equity,” Mahoney said. “All our Hall of Fame alumni share a desire to leave an enduring mark through their work and in their communities. These four inductees exemplify this, and it is a pleasure to welcome them to the Hall of Fame.”

Headshot of Stephen Gillett

Stephen Gillett 
MBA, 2007 

Stephen Gillett is the chairman and chief executive officer at Verily, an Alphabet health technology company focused on research, care and public health to deliver on the promise of precision health and help people live healthier lives. He leads teams that create tools to accelerate data and evidence generation, products to enable more personalized care and science-based approaches to manage disease at a population level. 

Gillett is a highly recognized and sourced tech executive and thought leader who has 15 years of C-suite experience at some of the nation’s biggest brands, including Alphabet’s Chronicle, Symantec, Best Buy and Starbucks.  

Gillett’s achievements span industries and disciplines. He has been featured in Fortune’s “40 under 40” list, included in CNNMoney’s “Executive Dream Team” and selected as a Henry Crown Fellow by the Aspen Institute. His influence in the health-care industry is underscored by his inclusion in The 2022 Healthcare Technology Report’s “Top 25 Healthcare Technology COOs” and his nomination to Modern Healthcare’s 2023 “100 Most Influential People in Healthcare” list. His ingenuity extends beyond the corporate world: He was recognized by WIRED magazine as an innovative “Guild Master in World of Warcraft.” 

A devoted family man of Lebanese descent, he married his high school sweetheart, and together they have eight children living in Dallas. He is a board member for Discord, Dutch Bros and Granular Insurance. Amazon named him a bestselling author for his 2019 memoir “From Simi Valley to Silicon Valley.”  

Evan Kidera 
B.A., 2004; MBA, 2014 

San Francisco native Evan Kidera is the co-founder and CEO of Señor Sisig, a trailblazing Filipino-fusion restaurant. Raised in a culinary environment, with his late father being a sushi chef, Kidera was no stranger to kitchens across San Francisco. However, by college, he discovered his true passion was business. Determined to marry his entrepreneurial drive with his roots, he chose to channel his expertise into an industry that felt like home —food. 

In 2010, inspired by the street food movement, Kidera partnered with childhood friend Gil Payumo to launch their first food truck. While earning his MBA at SF State, Kidera applied his business acumen to grow Señor Sisig from a single truck into a celebrated name in the Bay Area’s culinary scene. Fourteen years later, Señor Sisig boasts a fleet of food trucks and three brick-and-mortar restaurants in iconic locations, including the Mission District, San Francisco Ferry Building and Oakland. A fourth restaurant is set to open at Chase Center in 2025. 

Under Kidera’s leadership, Señor Sisig has gained national recognition, appearing in major publications and on the Food Network’s “Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives.” The brand has played a key role in bringing Filipino flavors to a wider audience, popularizing it across the Bay Area and beyond. 

Kidera’s commitment to the community is equally strong. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Señor Sisig provided meals to frontline health care workers and communities in need. He maintains close ties with SF State, regularly speaking to business students and sharing insights on entrepreneurship. Above all, Kidera values his family, considering them his greatest achievement and source of joy. 

Evan Kidera
Headshot of Genny Lim

Genny Lim
B.A., 1977; M.A., 1988

Genny Lim is a second-generation Chinese American born and raised in San Francisco’s Chinatown. She is an award-winning playwright, poet, performer, educator and community leader. San Francisco Mayor London Breed named her poet laureate of San Francisco in 2024, the first Chinese American to hold the title. She was previously the SF JAZZ poet laureate (2016 – 2018). She’s been a San Francisco Arts Commissioner and established community-based arts programs such as the Cultural Equity Arts Program and Writers Corps.

Lim has authored five poetry collections: “KRA!” (2017), “La Morte del Tempo” (2017), “Paper Gods and Rebels” (2013), “Child of War” (2003) and “Winter Place” (1989). Her award-winning play “Paper Angels” (1978) has been produced in the U.S., Canada and China and was the first play by an Asian American to air on PBS’s “American Playhouse” in 1985. She is the co-author of “Island: Poetry and History of Chinese Immigrants on Angel Island” (1980), which won an American Book Award. She’s collaborated with jazz legends Max Roach and Herbie Lewis, as well as Bay Area musicians Marcus Shelby, John Santos, Francis Wong and many others.

Over the years, she’s been honored for her work. Most recently, she received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the city of Berkeley in 2022 and the Reginald Lockett Lifetime Achievement Award from PEN Oakland in 2021. She’s taught poetry at local colleges and K – 12 schools and curated the Poetry in Schools Program at the de Young Museum from 1989 to 1993. She earned a certificate in Journalism from Columbia University.

Patrick Makuakāne 
B.A., 1989

Patrick Makuakāne founded and oversees the cultural organization Nā Lei Hulu I Ka Wēkiu, which features a traditional dance company that blends classical hula with stylized movements and contemporary music with a theatrical flair. Raised in Honolulu, he began dancing at 13 and studied with some of Hawai’i’s most recognized hula masters. Makuakāne founded his dance school in 1985. 

In 2023, he received a MacArthur “genius” grant for his groundbreaking work as a cultural preservationist. As the leader of the organization, he’s trained thousands of dancers in hula, creating and sustaining a thriving community. His productions combine traditional hula with contemporary music and movements that uplift Hawaiian culture and history while tackling powerful topics such as colonialism and Native Hawaiian transgender artists. 

Over the past 39 years, Makuakāne has been honored for his work. He received a Lifetime Achievement Kulia i ka Nu’u Award from the Honolulu Chamber of Commerce of Northern California. In 2020, he was a recipient of the prestigious Hewlett 50 Arts Commission, which supports the creation and premiere of 50 exceptional works by world-class artists. The San Francisco Arts Commission presented him with a Legacy award in 2018. He is the spiritual and cultural adviser for the Native Hawaiian Religious Spiritual Group at San Quentin State Prison.   

His latest projects are writing and choreographing a musical based on the epic tale of Hi’iakaikapoliopele, the youngest and favorite sister of the Hawaiian god Pele. He’s directing and choreographing the first major Hawaiian-language opera based on the life of native Hawaiian patriot Timoteo Haʻalilio, which will premiere with the Hawai’i Opera Theatre in May 2026. 

More details about the event, including how to purchase tickets, are available online.

Patrick Makuakane

Leaders in finance, magazine publishing, education, music and film named 2023 Alumni Hall of Fame inductees

Four notable alumni to be honored at Nov. 3 celebration

For the past 29 years, San Francisco State University has recognized alumni for their varied contributions to their communities, whether it’s through art, medicine or technology. This year’s Alumni Hall of Fame inductees have made an indelible imprint on the Bay Area and beyond in the world of banking, education, skateboarding, art, music and film. San Francisco State President Lynn Mahoney and the University community are proud to honor the four newest inductees at a celebration and dinner Friday, Nov. 3, at The Ritz-Carlton, San Francisco.

“This year’s inductees represent the diversity of the University and the city of San Francisco,” said Nicole Lange, associate vice president for alumni relations and university engagement. “This year, we’ll honor the president of an Indonesian bank with a 30-plus year career in finance, a longtime educator and school administrator turned professor, the publisher of an iconic skateboarding magazine and a filmmaker and musician whose films and music carry powerful messages about labor, wealth inequality and injustice. This group of accomplished alumni embody both the spirit of SF State and the city, and I couldn’t be prouder.”

Hall of Fame Inductees

Headshot of Vincement Matthews

Vincent Matthews
B.A., ’86; M.A., ’90; Ed.D., ’10 

Dr. Vincent Matthews has been an educator for more than 30 years, eventually leading the same school district he attended from kindergarten through 12th grade. The San Francisco native was the San Francisco Unified School District superintendent from 2017 to 2022. After high school, he attended SF State, earning a bachelor of arts, a master of arts in Educational Administration and eventually a doctorate in Education. He was part of the inaugural cohort in the University’s Educational Leadership program.

Matthews began his teaching career at Washington Carver Elementary School in San Francisco and later served as an elementary school principal, a high school assistant principal and a middle school principal. He then led the San Jose Unified School District as superintendent for five and a half years, raising academic achievement, narrowing the achievement gap between Latino and white students and passing landmark agreements with the San Jose teacher’s union. He then served as a state-appointed superintendent for Oakland Unified before he was the state-appointed superintendent of the Inglewood Unified School District. 

In 2020, Matthews returned to the classroom at his alma mater SF State. He started as an adjunct faculty member in the Equity, Leadership and Instructional Technologies program and is now an assistant professor.

Headshot of Boots Riley

Boots Riley
History, Cinema

Activist, filmmaker and musician Boots Riley studied film at SF State before rising to prominence as the front man of hip-hop groups The Coup and Street Sweeper Social Club. His debut feature film “Sorry to Bother You” premiered at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival, was acquired by Annapurna Pictures and was released to resounding box office success and widespread critical acclaim.

Fervently dedicated to social change, Riley was deeply involved with the Occupy Oakland movement and was one of the leaders of the activist group the Young Comrades. His book of lyrics and anecdotes, “Tell Homeland Security-We Are The Bomb,” is out on Haymarket Press.

He is the recipient of the Independent Spirit Award for Best Feature Film and SFFILM’s Kanbar Award.

Headshot of Pramukti Surjaudaja

Pramukti Surjaudaja
B.S., ’85

Pramukti Surjaudaja has been in banking for more than 30 years. He was the CEO and president director before assuming the role as president commissioner of Bank OCBC NISP in Indonesia. His primary responsibility is serving as chair of the bank’s supervisory board. In addition, he has served as the non-executive director at OCBC Bank Singapore since 2005.
 
Over the past three decades, Surjaudaja has been honored with awards such as Best CEO, Most Prominent Banker and Outstanding Entrepreneur. He also serves on the boards of nonprofit and educational organizations such as The British School Jakarta, Karya Salemba Empat Foundation, Parahiyangan Catholic University, Indonesia Overseas Alumni and served on the South East Asian Nations Council of INSEAD. Surjaudaja is a member of the Business Advisory Council for the Lam Family College of Business.
 
After graduating from SF State in 1985, he earned his MBA from Golden Gate University. He lives with his family in Jakarta, Indonesia.

Headshot of Gwynn Vitello

Gwynned Rose Vitello
B.A., ’74

Gwynned Rose Vitello is a principal partner with High Speed Productions, the San Francisco based media company that publishes Juxtapoz Art and Culture Magazine and Thrasher, often referred to as the Bible of Skateboarding. She met her late husband Fausto Vitello (B.A., ’71) when they were both students at San Francisco State, after which, in 1981 he co-founded Thrasher Magazine, suffusing the sport with Bay Area energy and worldwide street appeal. Fausto passed away in 2006, so Gwynned stepped in to oversee the skate and art enterprises.

Prior to High Speed Productions, Gwynned Vitello worked at San Francisco City Hall in the administrations of Mayors Joseph Alioto, George Moscone and Dianne Feinstein. Today she continues as an executive in what is still a family business, alongside her two adult children who both have strong connections to the University. Tony attended SF State from 2003 through 2006 as a History major and has currently taken over the reins at High Speed Productions. Sally assists at the magazines and serves on the board of the Paul K. Longmore Institute on Disability. The family is proud that over the years, several SF State students have served as employees at High Speed Productions. 

More details about the event, including sponsorship information, this year's sponsors and how to purchase tickets are available online.