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    hamilton is here

    Hamilton finally opens in Houston — here's what to know about Broadway's most revolutionary show

    Tarra Gaines
    Apr 23, 2018 | 10:00 am

    Ladies and gentlemen, the hottest phenomenon on the stage, Hamilton, is here. While it's taken more than a year to arrive, the hottest Broadway ticket finally settles in Houston on April 24, making the Hobby Center its home for almost a month (through May 20).

    CultureMap caught up with Houstonian and Hamilton insider, cast member Dorcas Leung. Excited to help bring the Tony Award-winning show to her hometown, Leung, a Broadway and television veteran, was happy to give us the scoop of what we should know before seeing the show.

    As a standby performer, Leung must always be ready to go on for any of the major female roles, Angelica Schuyler, Eliza Hamilton, and Peggy Schuyler/Maria Reynolds, when the principle cast member needs to bows out. Sometimes Leung knows a month in advance she’ll jump into character on a given night; sometimes she has to make an entrance with as little as half an hour notice. Yet Leung says she’s living her dream and enjoys the acting challenge of having to know so many parts.

    Leung gives some of the credit to her love of musical theater to growing up in Houston, going on theater field trips as a child and then participating in high school performing arts programs. In fact, this won’t be Leung’s first time on a Hobby Center stage. She was last lit by Hobby lights several years ago competing in the Theatre Under the Stars Tommy Tune Awards with her Stratford High School classmates in Damn Yankees, and yes they won best musical.

    “I’m so excited to go back and do a professional show in that setting,” says Leung of this Houston to Broadway and back journey. “I remember being in high school and being in awe when I looked around backstage and saw all the wall texts of different shows that had been there. It’s bizarre for me that I’m going to be in the show that’s there.”

    Our expert advisor offers up the Hamilton dish, even spilling some revolutionary tea on backstage secrets, to get you ready to join the musical revolution.

    The hip-hop of Hamilton
    If you’ve heard all the well-deserved acclaim, but kept yourself mostly spoiler free, Leung says be prepared for a musical unlike any other.

    “I think what people are most surprised by is the sheer amount of music and how hip-hop and pop-based the score is,” describes Leung. “From the moments you sit down, and hear those first beats, you’ll say: Oh, I’m at a concert. You’re not sitting down for a normal musical; you’re sitting down for an experience, a storytelling experience with hip-hop and pop music involved.”

    Live theater is never the same twice
    For those who already have the Grammy-winning cast album memorized, or even the lucky Texans who might have seen the show in New York, Leung says Hamilton offer revelations every night.

    “I think as an audience member even if you’ve heard the the album backwards and forwards, it’s not exactly what you’ve been hearing every day. That’s exciting because this is a piece of art that’s fluid. So many people can do the roles in different ways and you still get a powerful story.”

    All about the history
    The musical tells the life story of founding father Alexander Hamilton and depicts the American Revolution with a driving beat. Yet, it also dives into the politics of the creation of the First Bank of the United States and why our national capitol sits on the Potomac instead of the Hudson, making remote historical fact into relevant and even relatable theater.

    Leung reveals that as part of the rehearsal process all the actors receive history packets and are expected to do their own research and maybe some self-assigned homework. She calls Ron Chernow’s book that inspired the musical “riveting.”

    “The show humanizes what we think of as these towering old white men,” describes Leung. “It humanizes them, showing them as they were: young, revolutionaries causing a ruckus in this new country. It also shows their scandals, how they fell in love and become fathers. It puts modern people in touch with our history.”

    The Revolution is growing
    As a standby, Leung is part of a second cast ready to go on at a moment’s notice, but she’s also a part of a huge and now international Hamilton family.

    “Everyone in Hamilton is HamFam,” she says.

    Besides the New York show, which is still difficult to get a ticket for, Chicago has its own long-term production and now so does London. Most important for the rest of us, two Hamilton casts tour the nation, named the Philip cast and the Angelica cast. Having two tours allows the production to spend more time in any one city, giving more people the opportunity see the show.

    “Being able to sit down in these cities that may not have the opportunity to see Hamilton is not only a present to the city but also a present to us because every show we do is so unique and special, and we’re excited to share that with the rest of the city,” explains Leung.

    While the main cast and its large standby cast is enormous, even the set, with a revolving stage within a larger revolving stage and four sets of stairs, has its own backup. There are actually four sets roaming the country right now, two for each touring production. Because it takes so long to assemble, the two stages leap frog each other, only stopping at every other city.

    All in the HamFam
    With so many Alexander Hamiltons, George Washingtons, Angelica Schuylers, and Marquis de Lafayettes running around the U.S. and now England, you might think there would be a bit of good-natured acting competition, but Leung says no. Everyone is supportive of each other. In fact, the first national tour sent out video congratulations to the second touring cast, when the names were announced.

    “It’s quite amazing that we have so many companies that are able to relate to us and know the process that we also go through. They share the joy of being able share the story with other people too. That’s pretty fun.”

    ---

    Tickets to Hamilton are still available for select shows. Ham fans can also try the ticket lottery, which releases 32 tickets for $10 per performance. For details check the official Hamilton lottery registration.

    Houstonians are rightfully clamoring for tickets to Hamilton, which runs through May 20.

    Chris De'Sean Lee and cast of Hamilton, Chicago company
    Photo by Joan Marcus
    Houstonians are rightfully clamoring for tickets to Hamilton, which runs through May 20.
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    hail to the chief

    Iconic Houston sanctuary selects new leader to guide future growth

    Holly Beretto
    Aug 6, 2025 | 10:00 am
    Abdullah Antepli
    Photo courtesy of Duke University's Sanford School of Public Policy
    Abdullah Antepli has been named the new president of the Rothko Chapel.

    The Rothko Chapel, one of Houston’s most-recognized landmarks, has a new president. The chapel’s board of directors has named Abdullah Antepli to the role. He begins his tenure on September 1. Antepli succeeds David Leslie, who retired in June after 10 years at the Chapel.

    Antepli brings decades of stewardship, scholarship, and advocacy across higher education and the nonprofit sector to the role. He is a globally recognized leader in cross-religious and cross-cultural dialogue, with a deep commitment to pluralism and intellectual diversity, according to press materials.

    “It is with great excitement and a deep sense of purpose that I join the Rothko Chapel – a sanctuary where the sacred, the artistic, and the just converge,” said Antepli. “I am eager to walk alongside the Rothko Chapel family as we write the next chapter of its remarkable journey. At a time when the world is fracturing along religious, partisan, and ideological lines, the Rothko Chapel dares to offer a sacred space where art, silence, and justice meet, and I am humbled to help steward that space forward.”

    Antepli is a Turkish-born American imam and one of the few scholars working at the convergence of faith, ethics, and public policy. He currently serves as director of POLIS: Center for Politics at Duke’s Sanford School of Public Policy, where he is also professor of the practice of interfaith relations.

    He integrated the Civil Discourse Project into POLIS, broadening the center's scope and sharpening its focus on the civic and moral dimensions of public life. Antepli is also a senior fellow on Jewish-Muslim relations at the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem, where he founded and co-directs the Muslim Leadership Initiative.

    Antepli led faith-based humanitarian and relief efforts in Myanmar and Malaysia, and served as Wesleyan University’s first Muslim chaplain. He was the associate director of the Islamic Chaplaincy Program and interfaith relations at Hartford Seminary, and served as Duke University's first Muslim chaplain and director of its Center for Muslim Life and later as its chief representative for Muslim affairs. He also held the position of associate director of the Duke Islamic Studies Center.

    He completed his graduate work at Hartford Seminary and his undergraduate studies at Ondokuz Mayis University in Turkey. He is the only Muslim chaplain to have delivered prayer at the House of Representatives, first in 2010 and again in 2017. In 2018, he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

    “Abdullah’s spirit, values, and successes resonate deeply with the Rothko Chapel’s mission,” said Troy Porter, chair of the board. “We are confident that he will successfully implement the ambitious strategic plan we’ve just adopted, and that his leadership will guide the Chapel into its next chapter as a convening space for spiritual exploration, artistic expression, and the pursuit of justice.”

    Antepli joins the chapel at a time of change and bold plans. Last year, it was announced the chapel would spend $42 million on a campus expansion, adding new buildings just north of the existing Chapel on the other side of Sul Ross St., including an Administration and Archives Building, the Kathleen and Chuck Mullenweg Meditation Garden, and a new Program Center.

    Long a place for contemplation, the chapel shuttered after Hurricane Beryl tore through Houston last summer, causing millions in damage. It reopened last December, following much-needed repairs. Funds for the repairs came via a Bank of America grant.

    Founded by Houston philanthropists Dominique and John de Menil, the chapel was dedicated in 1971 as an interfaith, nonsectarian sanctuary. It is open every day of the year, free of charge.

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