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    Photos Of A Legacy

    Photos of a Legacy: Amazing exhibit of master works salutes curator's life in photography

    Tarra Gaines
    Jun 28, 2015 | 12:30 pm

    If Houston seemed just a little bit more photogenic than usual last week, that might be because by mayoral proclamation June 23 was officially declared Anne Wilkes Tucker Day throughout the city.

    In 1976, Tucker was initially hired to establish the department of photography. Now after 39 years at the Museum of Fine Arts, she is set to retire at the end of the month. But the MFAH, collectors, donors, artists and Anne fans didn’t intend to let her go without marking her legacy by partying down.

    But the MFAH, collectors, donors, artists and Anne fans didn’t intend to let her go without marking her legacy by partying down.

    Yet it’s Houston art lovers who are the ones receiving the best presents in honor of Tucker’s life in photography: the new exhibition In Appreciation: Gifts in Honor of Anne Wilkes Tucker, the coming Anne Wilkes Tucker Photography Study Center, with funds provided by Stanford and Joan Alexander, and the Anne Wilkes Tucker Young Photographers Endowment.

    Tucker has been a vital force in building the MFAH photography department practically from scratch, turning the 141 images photographs owned by the museum when she began her tenure into world class and renowned collection of 30,000 works. With the opening of the In Appreciation exhibition her friends, family, admirers and photo-philes all came together to celebrate her accomplishments.

    “Anne was global before it was fashionable, universal before anyone wrote about it,” MFAH director Gary Tinterow of Tucker said in announcing the new center. “Anne is a truly great individual, an institution, and most proper institutions require a physical structure, a monument.”

    More than 300 guests paid tribute to Tucker and view the new exhibit, which displays selections from the more than 150 works given to the museum in her honor. Among the highlights are a large print of Richard Avedon’s Dovima with Elephants (1955); Nan Goldin’s multimedia Ballad of Sexual Dependency; a unique Man Ray photomontage from around 1926 and a photograph by the medium’s inventor William Henry Fox Talbot from October 1840, which is the earliest firmly dated photograph in the MFAH collection.

    During a cocktail reception in Cullinan Hall, where images from Tucker’s tenure were projected onto the walls and guests nibbled on light bites from City Kitchen, Malcolm Daniel, Tucker’s successor, announced the creation of the young photographers endowment in her honor which will be used for the purchase of works by photographers under 40 who are not yet represented in the museum’s collection.

    Daniel promised the endowment would help the museum continue in the “spirit of what Anne has done.”

    When Tucker took the podium, she did not dwell on her own accomplishments— the over 40 exhibitions she has organized or co-organized, including the recent War/Photography: Images of Armed Conflict and Its Aftermath— but instead spent many minutes thanking the artists and colleagues she worked with for those 39 years.

    She also told of some of the “extraordinary experiences” she’s had along the way, like the time in 1985 when her hotel room was bugged when she traveled to communist Czechoslovakia or an exhibition or the curious incident of the late catalog printing caused by an escaped circus elephant storming into the printing bindery.

    “On June 30, the hardest thing I will do is turn in my badge,” she concluded. “For 39 years I’ve had the run of this facility, every corner of it at all the hours of day and night. There have been times when I’ve been here 24, 36 hours straight. Now I’m giving up the key to my second home. I’m ready but it will be hard.”

    The Tucker badge may be retired but the exhibition runs to Oct. 11, while her influence will likely linger for another 39 years and beyond.

    Among those on hand to salute Tucker were Joan and Stanford Alexander, Michael Zilkha, Phoebe and Bobby Tudor, Julie Alexander, Leslie and Brad Bucher, Mariquita Masterson, Hiram Butler, Jereann Chaney, Clare Glassell, Kathy and Marty Goossen, William J. Hill, Jim Malone, Nancy and John Parsley, Sara Morgan, Jeanie Kilroy Wilson and Wallace S. Wilson.

    Richard Avedon, Dovima with Elephants, Evening Dress by Dior, Cirque d’Hiver, Paris, August 1955, gelatin silver print, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

    Richard Avedon, Dovima with Elephants
    MFAH courtesy photo
    Richard Avedon, Dovima with Elephants, Evening Dress by Dior, Cirque d’Hiver, Paris, August 1955, gelatin silver print, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.
    unspecified
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    Best February Theater

    A Broadway legend and classic musicals star in Houston's best February shows

    Tarra Gaines
    Feb 5, 2026 | 3:00 pm
    Bernadette Peters
    Photo by Andrew Eccles
    The Hobby Center presents Beyond Broadway: An Evening with Bernadette Peters.

    From mythic marriages to small moments of friendship, love is in the air–in its many forms–across Houston stages. This Valentine’s month brings romance and heartbreak among gods and goddess, but Houston theater companies also showcase stories of profound human connections in ordinary spaces, on trains, in diners, and classrooms. If all those dramatic and comic relationships aren’t enough, Theatre Under the Stars invites us to one of history’s greatest jam session and the Hobby Center brings Broadway royalty to town.

    Grand Horizons from Mildred’s Umbrella (February 5-21)
    Mildred’s is the first of many companies this month picking contemporary and sometimes very recent Broadway plays and musicals as sources for their fresh, local productions. The company begins this heartfelt season with Bess Wohl’s comedy-drama about a mature marriage and the grand chaos of falling out of love. The show opens on an ordinary older couple, Bill and Nancy, having dinner at their home in the Grand Horizons retirement community.

    But after 50 years of marriage, they’re ready to call it quits and calmly announce their decision to divorce, sending shockwaves through their family. As their adult sons rush to make sense of the news, long-buried tensions and unspoken truths rise to the surface. With wit and warmth, Wohl explores love, commitment, and the messiness of family in this modern look at what it really means to grow old together or apart.

    Beyond Broadway: An Evening with Bernadette Peters presented by the Hobby Center (February 6)
    The Hobby Center continues to bring the biggest musicals and screen stars for electrifying one-night-only shows with their Beyond Broadway series. Next up, living legend Bernadette Peters – the critically acclaimed queen of stage, film, television and recordings–will present a magical and inspiring evening of songs from some of the greatest musical theater masters. The multi-award winner creates an intimate audience experience when she performs celebrated selections from Rodgers and Hammerstein, Stephen Sondheim, Jerry Herman, and others.

    The Coast Starlight at Main Street Theater (February 7-March 1)
    With its debut in New York a few years ago, Starlight garnered much critical acclaim for its story about passengers on a Pacific Coast train from L.A. to Seattle. These strangers meet on this 36 hour journey and slip into and out of each others lives, perhaps influencing the small and big choices they all need to make.

    At the center of this journey is T.J., a Navy medic with a difficult decision to make. With the help of his fellow travelers, all of whom are reckoning with their own life circumstances, T.J. has roughly 1,000 miles to figure out how he wants to live the rest of his life. As MST continues to celebrate its momentous 50th season, they note this show “illuminates our capacity for invention and re-invention when life goes off the rails.”

    Hadestown presented by Broadway at the Hobby Center (February 10-15)
    This multiple Tony-winning musical and Broadway smash returns to Houston after beguiling Hobby Center audiences in 2022. The road to Hell is full of some bad intentions but some heavenly music as the story entwines the ancient Greek love stories of Hades and Persephone and Orpheus and Eurydice into one epic, bluesy tale. As the first song, “Road to Hell” even spoils, don’t expect a happily-ever-after with these stories, but do lookout for modern, complex visions of these classic myths.

    Katy Perry Candy Darling Mary Magdalene from Catastrophic Theatre (February 13-March 7)
    In a season of mostly world premieres, Catastrophic once again breaks genres and definitions with this edgy musical about Sophia, the lead singer of an underground Houston band called Bird Murderer. Sophia is on a quest to write the perfect song, with the simple requirements that it must be personal, universal, and under three minutes. Most of all, it has to pay tribute to her favorite artist of all time: Katy Perry.

    Describing Katy Perry Candy as “a madcap musical romp” and “a psychedelic meditation on the intertwining dualities of religious faith and gender identity, a harrowing disco-punk psychodrama and a hot wet heavy metal nightmare,” Catastrophic once again is set to defy any expectations of what theater can and should be. Playwright Joe Folladori certainly can write from experience as a long time Catastrophic music contributor and founder of the indie pop collective The Mathletes.

    English at Alley Theatre (February 13-March 8)
    The Alley produces this Pulitzer Prize winning play that just recently became a critically-acclaimed hit on Broadway. The narrative couldn’t be more timely as it deals with themes of language, immigration, assimilation, and ever changing political landscapes.

    Set in Iran in 2008, the play follows four Farsi-speaking adults and their teacher in an English class to prepare for the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language). They each have different reasons for learning English, from job prospects in English-speaking countries to strengthening family connections to gaining bilingual power. Over the course of six weeks, they reveal their unique life stories as well as their relationships with their motherland and identity. They might even forge friendships all the while speaking a foreign tongue.

    Million Dollar Quartet from Theatre Under the Stars (February 17-March 1)
    While the real 1956 impromptu jam and hangout session between Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, and Johnny Cash at Sun Record Studios in Memphis remains one of the most iconic and influential moments in music history, this musical depiction of that meeting is relatively new. The hit show made its Broadway debut in 2010 and went on to earn numerous Tony Awards nominations and later a national tour. Now TUTS brings their own rocking production to the Hobby Center.

    Along with depicting the real life backstage drama, including the clashing talent and big personalities, the show delivers fiery live performances of billion dollar hits, like “Blue Suede Shoes,” “Fever,” “Walk the Line,” “Great Balls of Fire,” “Hound Dog,” “Folsom Prison Blues,” and several beloved gospel standards.

    The Counter from 4th Wall Theatre (February 19-March 16)
    A small town diner sets the scene and pace for this recent Off-Broadway hit about an unlikely friendship between a regular customer and a waitress. Paul is a retired firefighter, and Katie serves him coffee daily. After months of small talk and hints at their complicated pasts, Paul reaches out for friendship, and Katie agrees, sensing his need.

    Through shared secrets, they begin to rediscover hope and joy in human connection. But when Paul makes an unusual request, will their new bond deepen or break completely? With a small, three person cast of some of our favorite Houston actors and the intimacy of 4th Wall’s Studio 101 space, look for the type of poignant experience only live theater can bring.

    Sylvia from Houston Ballet (February 26-March 8)
    Along with Hadestown, this month brings a second return of a 2022 production of Greek and Roman love myths. Houston Ballet brings back this audience favorite created by artistic director Stanton Welch about the legendary tale of the huntress Sylvia and her love for a mortal shepherd. Look for the whole HB company dancing as gods, goddess, nymphs, huntresses, fauns, and the odd naiad.

    Though perhaps not as well known to dance lovers as other story ballets, this depiction of the Sylvia myth, set to music by Léo Delibes, has created faun fans for almost a 150 years. In 2019, Welch put his own mark on the tale, and then HB delivered an epic encore in 2022. It’s no wonder Sylvia leaps into the Wortham Center once more, as the stunning costumes and set designs scenic by world-renowned ballet and opera designer Jerome Kaplan, with lighting design by Lisa J. Pinkham and myth building projections from Wendall K. Harrington, all have made this ballet a favorite for HB audiences.

    Venus in Fur from Dirt Dogs Theatre (February 26-March 14)
    Dirt Dogs brings a very different kind of romance to the stage for Valentine's season. This dark, sizzling drama from acclaimed playwright David Ives plays on ideas about sexual relationships but also on creative collaborations. Thomas is a playwright searching for the perfect actress to portray Vanda for in his stage adaptation of Leopold Sacher-Masoch’s infamous novella Venus in Furs.

    On a dark, stormy night of fruitless auditions, a mysterious and unconventional woman calling herself Vanda arrives to read for the part. Not only is she late, she also appears far from the ideal candidate Thomas had in mind. As the audition unfolds, Vanda’s performance takes an unexpected turn, blurring the lines between script and reality. Masks slips and identities transform, leaving the audience to perhaps wonder who’s really directing and who is acting. As the sexual and psychological tension builds, Thomas and Vanda must confront the complexities of their desires and the darker sides of human nature.

    The Chinese Lady at Stages (February 27-March 22)
    Last year, Stages had a quiet hit with award-winning playwright Lloyd Suh’s The Heart Sellers, a touching drama about friendship between young immigrants in the 70s. This winter they’re back with another of Suh’s plays, this one inspired by the true story of the first Chinese woman to arrive in the United States. This Lady begins her journey in the early 1800s as a 14-year-old girl brought to America by promoters and toured across the country as a living curiosity. As Afong Moy travels across America over the decades, with her translator her only constant companion, the Chinese Lady shares her witty, poignant, and occasionally heartbreaking observations of a young nation. Balancing Moy’s sharply funny observations with the historical realities of her circumstances, the play touches on themes of identity, exploitation, and racism.

    Bernadette Peters
    Photo by Andrew Eccles

    The Hobby Center presents Beyond Broadway: An Evening with Bernadette Peters.

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