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    the culturemap interview

    Broadway smash Miss Saigon grips Hobby Center with gritty Houston run

    Tarra Gaines
    May 3, 2019 | 5:35 pm

    One of the last 1980s blockbuster musicals, Miss Saigon, has earned its many awards and accolades by marrying a tragic love story with a contemporary, complex war story. Loosely based on Puccini's Madame Butterfly, but set during the Vietnam War, the show became a smash international hit, so it wasn’t that surprising when, in 2017, producer Cameron Mackintosh brought a gritty Miss Saigon revival to Broadway soon after its 25th anniversary.

    With this new production set to land in Houston as part of the Mischer Neurosciences Broadway at the Hobby Center season (running May 7-12), CultureMap caught up with actor Anthony Festa, who plays Chris Scott, half of the tragic lovers, to find out how Miss Saigon speaks to 21st-century audiences while remaining true to its musical heart.

    The perfect role
    In the show, army sergeant Chris meets and falls in love with orphan bar girl Kim shortly before the U.S. evacuation, and then they’re separated. The show jumps through time as Kim has a son and struggles to stay alive, while attempting to find her way back to Chris.

    Festa, who saw a touring production of the original Miss Saigon in his mid-teens, found a deep theatrical connection to the story and the morally torn Chris.

    “I remember my dad really loving it and saying to me, 'Someday, Chris, [this] is a role for you,'” describes Festa.

    While he mostly forgot about his father’s foretelling comment, the show spawned many questions for the teen about Vietnam, the war, and what it meant for the U.S.

    “We lost my father ... so he didn’t see me do this role, but I know he would be super proud of his son playing the American GI all over America.”

    A timeless love story
    Although it's set in the mid-’70s and first premiered in London’s West End in 1989, Festa says that the show holds just as much for audiences now, as we grapple with issues of immigration and stories of refugees. But above all, it is Kim’s (played by his co-star Emily Bautista) story that moves Festa.

    “What’s been most powerful and unique for me is watching the journey that Kim takes, how current that is with the empowering of women,” describes Festa. “She’s this young woman who births this child out of love and carries it through three years of God only knows what to give her child a good and happy life. The power of that journey and everything that she goes through brings so much emotion for me when I see her again after it all. I feel like it’s so poignant and so powerful now.”

    As for his own character, Festa finds much nuance to tackle in the role.

    “I feel he’s a guy who is morally trying to finally do the right thing. I think he’s trying to see everything for the better but always seems to get himself caught up somewhere not so good.”

    Of course, one of the traditions of musicals allows characters to put their heart and dilemma into song, sometimes solo songs, and for Festa this comes in the powerful first act number “Why, God, Why?”

    “It’s me on stage alone with a cigarette and a little conversation with God," he describes. A great challenge for Festa as an actor, he tries to deliver the core of Chris, and perhaps the eternal questions of war, to the audiences.

    “I think it is a beautiful piece, because it becomes a question within himself that builds and builds until he can’t find the answer,” Festa says. “As an actor, I get to experience so many emotions throughout the question. He’s asking two countries: ‘What’s going on, why are we doing this?' By the end of the piece, you can see his heart for a moment for the first time, and then I cover it up for a while. It challenges me.”

    The heart of the show
    Along with the love story and music, one of the aspects of Miss Saigon everyone remembers is the life-sized helicopter that lands on stage for the evacuation flashback later in the show. Now as iconic as the chandelier in Phantom, the helicopter sometimes represents Miss Saigon as much as the music. When asked, jokingly, if the actors ever felt a bit upstaged by such famous scenic design, he laughed but whorled into praise not just for the helicopter, which he calls a giant robot and uses the pronoun “her,” but for all the artists on stage and off in the mammoth show.

    “I could never be jealous of her ever. She’s something special. Everybody I work with on stage is so incredibly special. All of them bring so much heart and soul to their roles that they force me to be there, to be committed. It never becomes about me, but the story we tell as a whole.”

    ---

    Miss Saigon runs May 7-12 at the Hobby Center for the Performing Arts, 800 Bagby St. For tickets and showtimes, visit the show's site.

    Red Concepción as the Engineer in Miss Saigon.

    Miss Saigon: Red Concepci\u00f3n
    Photo by Matthew Murphy
    Red Concepción as the Engineer in Miss Saigon.
    theater
    news/arts

    welcome to houston

    Musical theater veteran joins prominent Houston company

    Holly Beretto
    Dec 9, 2025 | 1:30 pm
    Stages Theater Valerie Rachelle headshot
    Courtesy of Stages
    Stages has named Valerie Rachelle as its new associate artist director.

    A Houston theater company is adding an accomplished artist to its ranks. Stages announced that Valerie Rachelle will be the company’s new associate artistic director beginning in January 2026.

    For more than a decade, Rachelle has been artistic director of the Oregon Cabaret Theatre in Ashland, Oregon, where she oversaw artistic vision and operations. That theater specializes in musical theater performances offered in a cabaret setting.

    Rachelle comes to Houston with a career spanning nearly 30 years as a director and choreographer. She has extensive experience in developing new musicals and plays for regional theaters and opera companies across the United States, including the Tony Award-winning Oregon Shakespeare Festival, the Utah Shakespeare Festival, and Sierra Repertory Theatre. She was appointed to her position at Stages following a nationwide search.

    “I’m beyond thankful for this opportunity to join this incredible company, and I’m excited to be a part of a creative entity that has a strong mission and vision as Stages,” Rachelle said in a statement.

    In her role with Stages, she will support artistic director Derek Charles Livingston with season planning and casting; liaise with artists, press, and staff; and coordinate day-to-day operations for the artistic department. She will also assist with crafting educational materials, direct and choreograph productions, and serve as the primary liaison with theatrical unions.

    “We are thrilled to welcome Valerie to Stages in this role,” said Livingston. “I have seen her work as a director and director choreographer — she's excellent. Those skills combined with her experience as a theatre artistic director and manager only further fortify Stages' commitment to artistic excellence and community engagement.”

    Born and raised in Eugene, Oregon, Rachelle began her career as a dancer and apprentice ballerina with the Eugene Ballet Company before earning her BFA in acting from California Institute of the Arts. She received her MFA in Directing from the University of California, Irvine. She has held teaching and directing positions at numerous institutions, including the University of Southern California, Southern Oregon University, Pacific Conservatory of the Performing Arts, and others. She has also served as a mentor through Statera Arts, an organization dedicated to gender equity in the arts.

    Rachelle teaches musical theater, auditioning, and singing at Southern Oregon University when she isn’t on the road as a freelance director and choreographer. She’s also a classically trained singer and toured the world with her parents and their illusionist show as a child.

    “Joining the team that has a long-standing reputation of excellence in theater is an honor,” Rachelle added.

    performing-artsstages theater
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