After a 17-year hiatus from performing in Houston, Garth Brooks is making up for lost time.
The top-selling country artist has added a whopping eight performances at downtown’s Toyota Center to the Garth Brooks World Tour. Joining him is wife and fellow country crooner, Trisha Yearwood, making the show a family affair. Performers sometimes add an extra performance in Houston but the eight performances in a large arena is unprecedented.
The Texas leg of the tour kicks off in Houston this summer with four performances scheduled over a two-day period (Friday, June 26 at 7 p.m. and 10:30 p.m.; Saturday, June 27 at 7 p.m. and 10:30 p.m.).
Brooks and Yearwood will return to the Toyota Center for another four shows in July 2015 (Friday, July 3 at 7 p.m. and 10:30 p.m.; Saturday, July 4 at 7 p.m. and 10:30 p.m.).
Tickets ($74.98 per person; 8-ticket limit per guest) for all eight Houston concerts go on sale to the general public on Friday, May 8, at 10 a.m. To purchase, go online or call 1-(844)-63GARTH (844-634-2784).
Toyota Center officials explain that there will be an online waiting room that will open at 9 a.m. on May 8. They encourage fans to verify their ticketing account or sign up for an account online at the login box located in the upper right hand corner of the Toyota Center website or they can visit the page by clicking here.
At last, Brooks is finally making Houston fans feel the love.
It's about time Garth Brooks returned to perform in Houston.
Photo by Alex Bentley
It's about time Garth Brooks returned to perform in Houston.
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs made history in 1937 as the first-ever animated feature film from the then-fledgling Walt Disney Productions. As fate has it, it may also be the last of the classic Disney films to receive a live-action remake (of their big movies released prior to 1970, only Bambi and The Sword in the Stone have not been remade). And given the quality of the live-action remakes, that is a good thing, as few have come close to recreating the magic of the originals.
This new Snow White(minus the now politically incorrect second part of the title) stars Rachel Zegler as the titular princess who, in truly classic Disney form, loses both of her parents at an early age, leaving her to toil under the thumb of her stepmother, the Evil Queen (Gal Gadot). An encounter with Jonathan (Andrew Burnap), the leader of a group of bandits, opens her eyes to how bad things have become under the Evil Queen’s rule, and a kind-hearted action puts her on the Queen’s bad side.
Forced to flee to the nearby forest, Snow White is taken in by a group of seven (inexplicably CGI) little people, who are solely in charge of mining the area’s vast jewel resources. Snow White, the group of bandits, and the miners find they have common ground in opposing the Queen, and they soon set out to bring some sense of normalcy back to the kingdom.
In the hands of director Marc Webb and writer Erin Cressida Wilson, this new version of Snow White sits in a middle zone of being neither very good nor very bad. It plays on the nostalgia many viewers will have of watching the original when they were children, but also adds in some updates that could be viewed as subtle commentary on the modern world, even current American politics.
Versions of songs from the original like “Heigh-Ho” and “Whistle While You Work” remain, but songwriters Benj Pasek and Justin Paul (along with Paul Feldman) have added a slew of new songs to make the film more current. Some of them make an impression, like “Waiting on a Wish” and “Princess Problems,” but the issue that arises is they sound too much like the Broadway world from which the songwriters come, giving an anachronistic feel to the decidedly old-timey story.
The film maintains a pleasant and solid pace that keeps it watchable throughout. There are odd elements like never really getting to know the bandits — really just resistance fighters against the Evil Queen — and miners, but that’s part and parcel of the classic story. Snow White still doesn’t exactly exude girl power, but the film’s excision of the song “Someday My Prince Will Come” points to a certain amount of autonomy it gives her.
Zegler proved in West Side Story that she has musical chops, and she shows her worth as the title character here. She embodies Snow White’s changing demeanor well, and can really belt it in her signature songs. Gadot is fine as the Evil Queen, but it's a one-dimensional role with little nuance. Unfortunately, nobody else stands out, which doesn’t allow the film to reach beyond its traditional limits.
On the sliding scale of live-action Disney remakes, Snow White makes it on the positive side of the ledger, but not by much. It offers up a few new good songs, a solid lead performance, and a slight subversiveness epitomized by giving a new definition of “Who’s the fairest of them all.”