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    A Presidential Turn

    Breaking Bad star takes on Broadway, pot & prostitution: Why Bryan Cranston would legalize everything

    Joseph V. Amodio
    Mar 11, 2014 | 11:15 am

    NEW YORK — Don’t vote for Bryan Cranston. For anything.

    "I’m not electable,” he insists. “The first thing I’d do is legalize prostitution and marijuana — even though I don’t partake in either. But I’m progressive. And that would take the budget completely out of the red and into the black. It would solve a tremendous amount of problems.”

    Then he smiles and shrugs his shoulders as if to say, “See? Toldya so.”

    He may be underestimating his appeal. And his way around a filibuster.

    Both are apparent now that Cranston — the Emmy-Award winner who sunk to deliciously depraved lows as chem-teacher-turned-meth-dealer Walter White in TV’s Breaking Bad — is playing LBJ.

    Yep, that’s his new gig, bringing to life — on Broadway — the obstreperous, dust-kickin’, big-dream dreamin’ Texan Lyndon Baines Johnson, in All the Way, a new play by Robert Schenkkan (also a Texas native — and a Pulitzer Prize winner). It opened at the Neil Simon Theatre in Manhattan last week to great reviews.

    “The first thing I’d do is legalize prostitution and marijuana — even though I don’t partake in either. But I’m progressive. And that would take the budget completely out of the red."

    Seem a stretch? Those used to seeing Cranston as the whacked-out White may find some odd similarities between the two roles. Both figures are fueled by enormous stores of inner resolve. Both forge unexpected paths abiding inner compasses all their own. And their jobs? Messy, requiring a poker face, strong stomach and the willingness “to get your hands wet,” as Johnson says onstage.

    They’re also masters at hiding their true personalities.

    "He was a gregarious, back-slapping good-ole-boy,” says Cranston of our 36th President, “not the buttoned-down, measured person he presented to the public. He did that because he thought it was more presidential.”

    The play looks at one seminal year, from November 1963 (when veep Johnson ascended to the Presidency after John F. Kennedy’s assassination), to November 1964 (the date of the next Presidential election). Fearing he might not win, Johnson realizes he has only one year guaranteed in the Oval Office, and chooses to make the most of it, pushing Congress to pass the Civil Rights Act, one of the most significant — and controversial — pieces of legislation in U.S. history.

    Getting this play produced seems as implausible as that legislation. Just try floating this idea to theater producers — OK, it’s a new play no one’s heard of, it’s historical and requires 24 actors. Mmm, good luck with that.

    Such is the weight and revving power of Cranston’s name right now that this production got anywhere near Broadway.

    "I got cast before I knew the Lyndon,” says Betsy Aidem, who plays first lady Lady Bird Johnson. When she heard it was Cranston, she thought, “Oh, this is a game-changer.”

    "Cranston’s got the stuff, he’s got the juice,” agrees Michael McKean, who plays J. Edgar Hoover.

    Exploring the Hill Country

    Part of what drew Cranston to the role, he says, is the playwright, who seemed to have an inside scoop on the outsized Texan. Schenkkan says to know LBJ, you’ve got to know the Texas hill country from whence he came.

    "My Texas bona fides are genuine,” notes Schenkkan, who moved to Texas when he was 2, grew up in Austin and attended the University of Texas.

    Part of what drew Cranston to the role, he says, is the playwright, who seemed to have an inside scoop on the outsized Texan.

    To research his play, Schenkkan visited the LBJ ranch (home of the “Texas White House,” about an hour west of Austin) and the LBJ Presidential Library (in Austin), meeting with director Mark K. Updegrove, plus former directors Harry Middleton (who also served in the Johnson administration) and Betty Sue Flowers; Joseph A. Califano Jr. (a top LBJ White House aide who later became Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare under President Jimmy Carter); and most of the Johnson family..

    "There’s not much these folks agree on, except that “he changed everybody’s life,” Schenkkan says. “There’s nobody who knew him who doesn’t seem to feel changed by the experience. Altered. For. Ever.”

    If Johnson shaped lives, what shaped his own seems to be the hill country where he grew up — at first prosperous, the son of a successful rancher and politician, then poor, after his father lost it all, Schenkkan explains, and Johnson experienced firsthand poverty and shame.

    “The hill country is beautiful, but it’s a hard place to grow up, especially during the depression and before electricity,” he says.

    Both Cranston and Aidem traveled to the area to tour LBJ’s ranch.

    “There’s something about the hill country, your whole nervous system goes into a calmer place,” says Aidem, who also explored the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center in Austin.

    So what sticks with them about the ranch? First and foremost, the three television sets, which ran constantly back in the day, tuned to each of the then three major networks.

    Cranston spotted embroidered pillows in Lady Bird’s bedroom — one that read “I slept and dreamt of a life in beauty;” another, “I awoke and found a life of duty.”

    Good luck snagging a carefree nap on one of those.

    For Aidem, it was Lady Bird’s bathroom that intrigued, particularly a mirror, placed high at a tilt. She couldn’t imagine what it was used for.

    Well, look in the mirror — what do you see?” her tour guide beckoned.

    Aidem saw the back of her head.

    "When you have a bouffant,” the guide explained, “you don’t want to have any holes in it.”

    Welcome to 1964

    Cranston, raised in Canoga Park, Calif., was a kid when the play takes place, but he recalls how the period shocked and politicized the adults around him. He can still picture his 8-year-old self noticing that “something was up and that I should start paying attention,” he says. For him, Johnson was “the first president I became interested in.”

    Talk to any of the actors in the play (most of whom play multiple roles) and you’ll hear that the chance to play real-life figures from such a tumultuous period is what attracted them to this production. This is especially true for Cranston, who must embody the immense contradictions of Johnson — a man who fought for civil rights in one breath, then tossed around the “N” word in the next.

    But that’s what makes him fascinating, notes Cranston, who knows a thing or two about complicated characters.

    “He had tremendous goals — he wanted to accomplish something,” says Cranston. “He said” — and here Cranston slips into his twangier, gruffer LBJ voice — “ ’What the hell’s the point of being President if you can’t do what’s right?’ ”

    What to say of LBJ?

    Historians love Lyndon Johnson’s contradictions — from biographers Michael Beschloss and Doris Kearns Goodwin to Robert Caro, whose LBJ books span 3,388 pages (and he’s not done). But they don’t all agree on why, in the face of incredible odds — and during an election year — Johnson chose to push the Civil Rights Act through Congress.

    For playwright Schenkkan, the answer lies in one of Johnson’s earliest jobs — as a first-grade teacher to dirt-poor Mexican American kids from a border town in Texas. (Just imagine him, all six-foot-four, looming over them.)

    Johnson loved his students and their eagerness to learn, Schenkkan explains.

    “Yet there would be this moment when he’d see the light in their eyes die because they realized the world hated them because of the color of their skin,” Schenkkan says. “It’s the moment they realized they were other, and less than, because of racism. That clearly resonated with him in a profound way.”

    Some historians suggest Johnson’s support of civil rights was political expediency, but Schenkkan thinks otherwise.

    “He’d experienced poverty, he’d known ‘other’ and he’d seen how wasteful, how crushing, how ugly racism could be,” Schenkkan says. “No, this is a man who walked his talk. He lived it. It mattered.”

    Bryan Cranston as Walter White in Breaking Bad

    Bryan Cranston as Walter White in Breaking Bad
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    Weekend event planner

    These are the top 14 things to do in Houston this weekend

    Craig D. Lindsey
    Apr 8, 2026 | 6:30 pm
    Houston BBQ Festival Truth barbecue brisket
    Photo by Robert Jacob Lerma
    The Houston BBQ Festival returns on Sunday.

    Things may get a bit damp this weekend.

    It’s been projected to rain throughout the weekend, which means a lot of outside events (like the annual Houston Art Car Parade and the Tacos & Tequila Festival, both happening on Saturday) might require a raincoat.

    As long as the weather cooperates, this weekend has lots to offer, including a barbecue festival, a couple of ballet shows, and a three-day event focusing on wellness – which we all need right about now.

    Thursday, April 9

    Fresh Arts presents "Our Road Home: Gallery As Instrument" opening reception
    The opening reception of Fresh Arts' "Our Road Home: Gallery As Instrument" launches an eight-week residency with a celebration that is equal parts art opening, community gathering, and party. Guests are invited into a gallery space already alive with visual works, costume pieces, video installations, and projection art drawn directly from the stage worlds of "Our Road Home" and "Shout!," giving visitors an intimate glimpse of the productions. Through Friday, May 29. 7 pm.

    Blue Man Group: Bluevolution
    From those days doing weird stuff on MTV to serving as a storyline on the sitcom Arrested Development, Blue Man Group has been one of the more fascinating entertainers of the past 40 years. Blending art, invention and mind-bending curiosity, Blue Man Group is a euphoric celebration of human connection. On the new World Tour, audiences will be introduced to “The Musician,” a new character who will showcase her drumming and percussion skills throughout the show. 7:30 pm (2 & 7:30 pm Saturday; 1 & 6:30 pm Sunday).

    Memorial Hermann Broadway at the Hobby Center presents Six
    Divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived. From Tudor queens to pop icons, the six wives of Henry VIII take the microphone to remix 50 years of historical heartbreak into a euphoric celebration of 21st-century girl power. Originally debuted at Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2017, this musical comedy has won 23 awards in the 2021/22 Broadway season, including the Tony for Best Original Score (Music and Lyrics) and the Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Musical. 7:30 pm (7:30 pm Friday; 2 & 7:30 pm Saturday; 1:30 & 7 pm Sunday).

    Friday, April 10

    Blessings Apothecary and da Gama in the Heights present Spring Reset Wellness Weekend
    Fresh from returning from a recent wellness journey to India, former Houston Ballet star-turned-wellness advisor Anne Tyler Harshbarger returns to Houston as host of an immersive three-day event designed to nourish the body, mind and soul. In an exclusive collaboration with Michelin-recognized restaurant da Gama in the Heights and the wellness boutique Blessings Apothecary, the weekend festivities will offer an uplifting set of ancient traditions for modern Houston life. 7 pm (5:30 pm Saturday; 10 am Sunday).

    Rice Cinema presents Westermann: Memorial to the Idea of Man If He Was an Idea
    Westermann: Memorial to the Idea of Man If He Was an Idea is a 3D documentary film that chronicles the story of a marine veteran who navigated the profound traumas of war by making art, becoming a hero to generations of artists, including his friends Ed Ruscha and Frank Gehry, among others interviewed in this immersive film. The film features actor Ed Harris as the voice of H.C. Westermann. Stay for a Q&A with director Leslie Buchbinder and art professor/Department of Art chair John Sparagana. 7 pm.

    Asia Society Texas and Houston Ballet present Sons de L’âme
    For two nights, Asia Society Texas and the Houston Ballet are presenting Sons de L’âme (Sounds of the Soul), making its U.S. debut. The work will be performed in its entirety for only the second time, with music accompanied live by award-winning pianist George Li. Set to piano pieces by Frédéric Chopin, the intimate and elegant Sons de L’âme was created by Houston Ballet artistic director Stanton Welch AM and premiered in 2013 with renowned concert pianist Lang Lang at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in Paris, France. 7:30 pm.

    Improv Houston presents Mo Amer
    Houston’s own Mo Amer had a great 2025. He wrapped up his second and final season of his critically acclaimed Netflix show Mo, and he also dropped a new Netflix special, Mo Amer: Wild World, in October. The Houston Chronicle also called him Houstonian of the Year. Now, Amer is back at it, doing new standup material over at Improv Houston. But don’t get it twisted; he still continues to give audiences observational comedy, political satire, and race-related material in his unique, conversational style. 7:30 & 9:45 pm. (7 & 9:30 pm Saturday).

    Saturday, April 11

    FLATS and FotoFest Biennial 2026 present Uncle Bob’s Photo Zine & Book Market
    An official part of the FotoFest Biennial 2026, Uncle Bob’s Photo Zine & Book Market is a free, two-day fair celebrating regional photography through small publishers and self-published zines and books. 50+ artists and publishers from across the South will be in attendance, along with special guests like Houston Aura Photography and Houston Camera Exchange. Expect stacks of photo books, handmade zines, prints, and plenty of conversations with the artists who made them. 11 am.

    Orange Show Center for Visionary Art presents 39th Annual Art Car Parade
    For the 39th year, 250 rolling works of art will take over Houston’s streets as more than 300,000 fans cheer them on from the sidelines. The parade begins at Dallas and Bagby Streets on Allen Parkway, heads into downtown, circles City Hall, and returns outbound on Allen Parkway before dispersing at Waugh Drive. For the ultimate viewing experience, VIPit offers reserved seating, private hospitality suites, family-friendly activities, and premium parade views, with proceeds supporting year-round programming at the Orange Show Center for Visionary Art. 2 pm.

    Tacos & Tequila Festival
    The Tacos & Tequila Festival brings the biggest names in 2000s hip-hop to Houston for a day of nostalgia, flavor, and fun. The festival will also feature the area’s best tacos and street eats, craft margaritas, Lucha Libre wrestling matches, a chihuahua beauty pageant, an exotic car showcase, and more. Headlined by Three 6 Mafia and Fat Joe, the lineup will also include performances by Xzibit, Trina, Ying Yang Twins, Bubba Sparxxx, Mims, Murphy Lee, and DJ Ashton Martin. 2 pm.

    Archway Gallery presents Fifty Forward opening reception
    Archway Gallery, Texas’ longest-running artist-owned/operated gallery, proudly marks its 50th anniversary with this landmark exhibition titled Fifty Forward, which pays tribute to the artists who are continuing to build Archway Gallery’s legacy. A striking wall of self-portraits, featuring each of the current artists, honors the people whose creative energy and shared vision are carrying the gallery into the next half century. As part of the celebration, one guest submission will be selected to receive a $500 gift certificate. Through Thursday, April 30. 5 pm.

    Sunday, April 12

    Clark's presents First Annual Houston Crawfish Boil
    The Montrose (by way of Austin) restaurant is holding an all-you-can-eat crawfish boil. Tickets ($52, gratuity included) provide access to crawfish and keg beer, plus DJ sets by Morgan Morgan and country music by Christopher Seymore. Cocktails and other drinks are available for an additional price. A portion of proceeds will benefit the Southern Smoke Foundation. 11 am.

    13th Annual Houston Barbecue Festival
    The Houston Barbecue Festival is back for its 13th year, celebrating everything that makes Houston barbecue unique. Fan favorites return alongside several new and up-and-coming barbecue joints making their festival debut. From established Houston institutions like Blood Bros BBQ and Roegels Barbecue Co. to newer standouts such as Eastbound Barbecue and Space City BBQ, the festival offers a rare opportunity to taste the past, present, and future of Houston barbecue in a single afternoon. 1 pm.

    Houston Repertoire Ballet presents Celebration of Dance
    Houston Repertoire Ballet celebrates its 30th season with Celebration of Dance, featuring a blend of classical and contemporary works. The performance begins with Sleeping Beauty, brought to life by HRB’s dancers alongside Kansas City Ballet guest artists Olivia Jacobus and Andrew Vecseri. Other selections will include Bolero, a contemporary ballet choreographed to the score of Maurice Ravel; Take Five, a jazz piece choreographed to the music of Dave Brubeck; and Rodeo, a story-ballet, set to the music of Aaron Copland. 1 & 4:30 pm.

    The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston presents Why Has Bodhi-Dharma Left for the East?
    The first Korean feature to have U.S. theatrical distribution explores themes of consciousness, acceptance, and redemption. An old Zen master wishes to make the ceremony of his death his final lesson to his apprentice, who is struggling to come to terms with abandoning worldly ways. Meanwhile, a young boy has his own awakening to mortality as he attempts to nurse a bird he thoughtlessly injured with a stone. This film (shown in glorious 35mm!) complements the MFAH exhibition Buddha | Nature: Five Dialogues on Our Shared World. 2 pm.

    Houston BBQ Festival Truth barbecue brisket

    Photo by Robert Jacob Lerma

    The Houston BBQ Festival returns on Sunday.
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