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    actors, onstage!

    These Houston theaters announce new seasons full of fan favorites and world premieres

    Tarra Gaines
    Apr 28, 2020 | 1:50 pm

    As Houston performing arts organizations continue to offer the city performances and moments of art from home, our theater companies also continue to prepare for a better theatrical future full of drama, comedy, and music. We’ve already taken at peek at what’s to come from Stages and the Alley Theatre.

    Now, several other Houston favorites have recently revealed their upcoming 2020-2021 season. So let’s take a preview of the fall and times when we can hopefully come together to experience the immediacy and intimacy of live theater again.

    A.D Players
    Like several Houston theater companies, A.D. Players will be offering a whole new season in the fall, but include one previously canceled show from this spring, The Spitfire Grill. The musical, based on the inspirational film, now moves to March 2021. The company is calling the 2020-2021 season one of discovery, as the lineup includes world premieres and new works to Houston.

    That first world debut, an A.D. Players commission, tells the out-of-this-world story NASA’s first mission to orbit the moon, Apollo 8 (September 11-October 4). For the holidays, open the gift of the second new work, The Christmas Shoes (November 27-December 23), based on the beloved best-selling novel by Donna VanLiere and adapted for the stage by Jessica Lind Peterson.

    The next year begins with another true science exploration story with Photograph 51 (January 22-February 7), about Rosalind Franklin’s major role in the discovery of the shape of DNA. After Spitfire, comes a David Ives adaption for contemporary audiences of a recently discovered Mark Twain play, Is He Dead? (April 23-May 9). Written at the turn of the 19th century but not published until 2003, the farce depicts an artist staging his own death in order to increase the value of his paintings. The company rounds out the season with a visit from everyone’s most beloved flying nanny, Mary Poppins (June 18-July 18).

    4th Wall Theatre
    Houston’s most acting-centric company celebrates 10 years with a season of Houston premieres, and a lineup of very contemporary plays, many offering unique takes on urban life. They begin in late summer with a makeup run of Between Riverside and Crazy from Stephen Adly Guirgis (September 3-26). The company had to close the Pulitzer Prize-winning play in March after only a handful of performances. Now, Houston theater lovers get another chance for a look inside one retired NYC cop’s rent-controlled apartment on Riverside Drive in New York reveals a whole world of crazy ties, battles and relationships between family, friends and enemies.

    The new year will bring and decidedly different New York story with Gloria by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins. This satire on literary life pits an ambitious group of editorial assistants against each other at a cultural magazine. The Alley’s James Black will direct (January 14-February 6). In the spring, one of the stage’s most complex and still controversial women comes home in A Doll’s House, Part 2. Lucas Hnath’s new sequel to the Ibsen masterpiece imagines what happens when seemingly perfect wife and mother Nora Helmer walks back into the lives of her family she left 15 years before. 4th Wall co-founders Kim Tobin-Lehl and Philip Lehl play the classic estranged couple.

    The season finishes with another view of New York magazine life with The Lifespan of a Fact by Jeremy Kareken and David Murrell and Gordon Farrell. The play is based on a book about the making of an essay between writer and fact checker. Kim Tobin-Lehl directs this comedy about the ethical blurred lines of truth and fiction.

    Main Street Theater
    No final word yet on the remaining shows from this season, but MST will forge ahead into its 45th season with a lineup of revealing perspectives on the past and future. We could all use some beach time right about now, so why not join Darwin in Malibu (September 12-October 11). Crispin Whittell’s comedy on faith, science and plastic surgery imagines Charles Darwin, Thomas Huxley, and the Bishop of Oxford, Samuel Wilberforce, hanging out at a beach house. Let the evolutionary theological debating begin.

    After a celebrated run in December, MST brings back the holiday sequel to the sequel to Pride and Prejudice, The Wickhams: Christmas at Pemberley (November 21-December 20) for another awkward but mostly well-mannered family reunion.

    In 2021, look for a new take on the Joan of Arc story, as playwright Jane Anderson shifts the point of view to Joan’s devoted mother in Mother of the Maid (February 6-28). Next, the company revives a hit from 2012, Dog Act (March 27-April 18). This comedy by Liz Duffy Adams offers a very different comic take on post-apocalyptic stories, following a performing troupe on journey to their next gig. The Alley Theatre produce the world premiere of Adams’s Born With Teeth around the same time.

    MST is calling Julie Kramer’s adaptation of Rona Jaffe’s book The Best of Everything (May 15-June 13, 2021) a kind of Mad Men meets (or maybe crashing into) Sex and the City. In the late ’50s, a group of secretaries try to have it all in the big city.

    It wouldn’t be a big anniversary season without one of MST’s favorite playwrights, Tom Stoppard, so look for one of his classics, The Real Inspector Hound (July 17-August 8). This sort of satire on whodunits plays with the very idea of plays and theater might be the perfect ending to a the ultimate season of comedy and ideas.

    Main Streets invites you to spend the holidays at Pemberley once again.

    Main Street Theater presents The Wickhams: Christmas at Pemberley
    Photo by Bryan Kaplun
    Main Streets invites you to spend the holidays at Pemberley once again.
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    Top arts stories of 2025

    Blockbuster exhibits star in Houston's top 10 arts stories of 2025

    Holly Beretto
    Dec 29, 2025 | 3:01 pm
    Three Chinese Terracotta Warriors amid an archeological dig.
    Photo courtesy of the Shaanxi Cultural Heritage Promotion Center
    Terracotta Warriors and more than a hundred artifacts head to the HMNS this November.

    Editor's note: Houstonians had lots of reasons to be excited about the arts this year, as evidenced by the 10 most-read stories of 2025. Ancient Chinese warriors came back to the Bayou City, bringing with them a history dating back more than 2,000 years. Life-sized elephant sculptures marched across the city, too, helping Houstonians learn about these remarkable creatures and the artists who made them. And an interactive new museum really lifted people's spirits.

    Read on for the 10 hottest arts headlines in Houston this year:

    1. China's Terracotta Warriors return to Houston Museum for fall exhibit. Visitors to the Houston Museum of Natural Science were able to get an up-close look at these life-size figures, which date to 206 BCE. They’re one of the greatest archaeological discoveries in Chinese history, unearthed in the 1970s. Presented with items from more recent digs, HMNS curator of anthropology Dr. Dirk Van Tuerenhout said the exhibit represented “a story of over two millennia with kingdoms waxing and waning.” The warriors were last in Houston in 2012 and 2009.

    2. Unforgettable elephant art installation rumbles into Houston's Hermann Park. One-hundred life-size Indian elephant statues came to Hermann Park and surrounding areas like the Texas Medical Center from April 1-30. Created by the artists of The Real Elephant Collective, a community of 200 Indigenous artisans living within India’s Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve, each elephant is one-of-a-kind and based on a real-life pachyderm. “The Great Elephant Migration is more than an art installation — it is a call to action and a place to experience joy,” said Cara Lambright, president and CEO of Hermann Park Conservancy.

    3. World-renowned interactive balloon art museum glides into Houston. The Balloon Museum opened November 15, emphasizing inflatable and air-based art. Think balloons, aerial installations, interactive lighting displays, and more. It showcases the work of 14 artists from around the world, and is one of several balloon museums worldwide, including in Paris. The museum is open through April 19, 2026.

    4. Houston Ballet principal dancer announces retirement after 13 years. For more than a decade, Soo Youn Cho dazzled Houston audiences with her elegant artistry and technical brilliance in roles like Aurora in The Sleeping Beauty, the Sugar Plum Fairy in The Nutcracker, and myriad others. Her retirement came following spinal surgery to treat chronic back pain. The company’s first Korean principal, she called dancing with the Houston Ballet “one of the greatest blessings and privileges of my life.”

    5. Houston Ballet names new executive director with deep ties to its past. Ballerina Sonja Kostich was on stage dancing in a commission that would pave the way for Stanton Welch to become the Houston Ballet’s artistic director. In May, Welch announced that Kostich would become the company’s executive director, with a tenure to begin in August. In addition to a dynamic career as a dancer, she also earned a Bachelor of Business Administration in Accounting from the Zicklin School of Business at CUNY Baruch College, graduating as salutatorian, and has a master's degree in arts administration.

    6. Where to see art in Houston now: 10 exhibits and shows opening in September. Houstonians got a preview of all that was to come in the year’s ninth month. Among the shows to see were an exhibit of of bonded marble sculptures by Nigerian sculptor Ejiro Fenegal at Mitochondria Gallery; works by seven international artists at Rice’s Moody Center for the Arts that was inspired by nature and biological processes; and necklaces and brooches dating from 1976 to 2025 by internationally renowned German jewelry artist, Dorothea Prühl, that is still on display at The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston through January 3.

    Three Chinese Terracotta Warriors amid an archeological dig.
    Photo courtesy of the Shaanxi Cultural Heritage Promotion Center
    Terracotta Warriors and more than a hundred artifacts head to the HMNS this November.

    7. All roads lead to Houston museum's blockbuster exhibit of Imperial Rome. “Art and Life in Imperial Rome: Trajan and His Times” showcases 160 objects of antiquity, including marble sculptures, frescoes, mosaics, delicate glass vessels, and exquisite bronze artifacts. On display at the MFAH, the exhibit transports visitors back in time to the Roman Empire. Pieces in the collection are on loan from several Italian museums. “This is truly a rare opportunity for U.S. audiences to experience spectacular objects from this glorious era of the Roman Empire,” said Gary Tinterow, director and Margaret Alkek Williams chair of the MFAH.

    8. Hermann Park's always-free theater breaks ground on new Gateway Plaza. The Miller Outdoor Theatre Advisory Board broke ground on the new Gateway Plaza in November. Enhancements to the theater's welcome space include new walkways, new shade structures that replicate the theater’s distinctive, A-frame design, and an improved “Dining Boutique” with refreshed picnic tables and other improvements. Audiences will experience the changes for themselves next summer.

    9. First-ever Houston Art Weeks promotes local galleries and supports mental health. Taking a cue from the popular Holiday Shopping Card, the StellaNova Foundation unveiled the inaugural Houston Art Weeks 2025 in October. The initiative was designed to support local Houston artists and provide contributions to assist Houston-area organizations that connect those in need to necessary mental health services. Shoppers could purchase works from local artists, galleries, and art events, bringing home unique items and knowing a portion of the sale would be donated to this year’s primary beneficiary, The Montrose Center.

    10. Museum of Fine Arts, Houston celebrates Frida Kahlo with groundbreaking new exhibit. A pioneering exhibit organized by the MFAH, “Frida: The Making of an Icon,” traces Kahlo’s phenomenal rise onto the world art stage and her colossal influence on generations of later artists. More than 30 works in the exhibit are by Kahlo herself, which will hang amid more than 120 objects by artists from the 1970s into the 21st century who were influenced by her work. The exhibit opens in January 2026.

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