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    Theater District Open House

    Insider's Guide to Theater District Open House: Free performances, sizzling deals, don't-miss events

    Tarra Gaines
    Aug 25, 2016 | 10:15 am

    Pity us poor Houstonians in late August. Vacations are over; everyone is back to school and work, but we’ve still got months more of muggy Houston heat. Yet, it’s not all bad because while late August might not blow in a gentle fall breeze it does deliver some very cool performing arts in the form of the 23rd Annual TransCanada Theater District Open House on Sunday, August 28.

    One look at the expansive schedule this year, and it’s easy to see we’re in for quite a show.

    The Theater District has always packed a huge amount of drama, dance, comedy, concerts, musical theater and opera in a few downtown blocks, and every year the District’s Open House packs a concentrated sampling of the coming arts season in one afternoon.

    With five venues — The Alley Theatre, Hobby Center, Jones Hall, Wortham Center and Revention Music Center — all opening their doors and only five hours to explore them all, there’s almost too much to do and see. To help you navigate your day, here’s a preview of some of the not-to-miss events.

    All Star Performances

    One of the things the Open House does best every year is give performing art lovers the opportunity to get a live-and-up-close view of highlights from the coming seasons. Head over to the Hobby Center to get some of those sneak peeks into what Theatre Under the Stars and BBVA Compass Broadway at the Hobby Center have in store for musical theater lovers.

    The two presenters will have alternating shows onstage in Sarofim Hall with some additional treats throughout the day. Broadway has called in local cabaret favorite, the Music Box Theater songsters, to perform snippets from the upcoming shows. And while I won’t reveal spoilers, I will forewarn everyone to be on the lookout for some special TUTS musical surprises when you least expect them.

    Don’t forget to give some of Houston’s smaller performing arts organizations some love and appreciation in the Hobby Center’s Zilkha Hall for the Spotlight on Uniquely Houston performances. You could actually just plant yourself there all day and chillax with nine different music and dance performances from the likes of Ars Lyrica, Wind Sync, Hopestone Dance and Musiqa.

    As the afternoon winds down, you might want to get to Jones Hall a little early for the closing concert from the Houston Symphony because it fills up fast. Look forward to an eclectic taste of their future concerts with music of Beethoven, Rossini and even hits from James Bond movies.

    New and Old Favorite Interactive Experiences

    The Theater District Open House has always taken something of a hands-on approach (for both little and big hands) to its entertainment with lots of opportunities to get up close to the artists and action, like the Houston Symphony’s instrument petting zoo, arts and craft stations, face painting at the Alley Theatre, and backstage tours of the Hobby Center, Alley and Wortham Center. This year there’s more chances than ever to try your own hand and especially feet at the performing arts.

    The Houston Ballet is offering introductory ballet classes throughout the day in Cullen Theater Alcove. If ballet isn't quite your dance speed, how about a tango lesson at 12:30 in the Brown Theater Alcove.

    Learn that conducting entails more than just waving a pointy stick around during the Conducting 101 class on the mezzanine level of Jones Hall with Houston Symphony musicians and Community-Embedded Musicians hosting. Inspire a Houston poet over at the Alley Theatre as the Inprint Poetry Buskers will compose a poem based on (most) any theme or image you can give them.

    Head on back to the Wortham at 4 pm when the Houston Ballet will present both an onstage class with floor exercises and the chance to observe a run-through of a pas de deux from Sleeping Beauty. This Houston Ballet event will be a great alternative for anyone who can’t get into the Houston Symphony’s big concert.

    Sizzling Deals for an Artfully Cool Fall and Spring

    If you haven’t renewed that subscription or if you’re wanting to fill your nights and weekends for the next year with some amazing performing arts, the Open House offers some of the best deals on season subscriptions and packages you’ll likely see. An amazing array of performers and productions are scheduled to come to the Theater District during the 2016-2017 season, from Elvis Costello to The Book of Mormon to Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo, Nixon in China, and maybe even a vampire or two. The Open House gives some of the best prices and discount ways to see all your favorites.

    Just Have Fun

    While every minute in all five venues is programmed with maximum entertainment, there’s also the option of pitching the schedule and just take the afternoon to meander and discover on your own. With trolley rides, food trucks and even free boat rides along Buffalo Bayou starting from Fish Plaza at the Wortham Center, there’s also the option of slowing down to enjoy where the day takes you and gain a new perspective on downtown and the Theater District.

    The artists of Houston Ballet in La Bayadere.

    Theater District Open House 2016-Houston Ballet
    Photo by Amitava Sarkar
    The artists of Houston Ballet in La Bayadere.
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    Houston museum sounds off after vandals deface artist's painting

    Jef Rouner
    Jun 9, 2026 | 4:00 pm
    Clarence Heyward painting with damage at HMAAC
    Photo courtesy of HMAAC
    Clarence Heyward's Man in the Garden was intentionally damaged

    The Houston Museum of African American Culture (HMAAC) announced on Monday, June 8, that a museum visitor intentionally damaged one of its paintings on May 21. The damage included a puncture and large cut or scrape in a painting by North Carolina artist Clarence Heyward called Man in the Garden, part of the EDEN exhibition in the downstairs gallery.

    HMAAC CEO Emeritus and exhibition curator John Guess Jr. held a press conference at the museum on Tuesday, June 9, and said the vandalism was representative of continued bigoted attitudes in Houston.

    "If we're honest about it, this is a very racist town," he said. "We're the fourth-most economically segregated city in the country. Houston has the highest poverty rate of any of the 25 metropolitan cities. And no one talks about that.This town itself has some serious issues. We're demographically diverse, but we remain segregated."

    According to Guess, two young white men entered the museum carrying a large bag. They visited an exhibition of Kandy G. Lopez's work upstairs, where they asked a staff member to take a picture of them in front of a painting. When the staff member obliged, the two men made an obscene gesture at the work.

    Later, they briefly went downstair to the Heyward exhibit before quickly leaving. Afterwards, staff discovered the defacement. Unfortunately, the museum's cameras had malfunctioned the day before the attack, and a work order to repair them was placed hours before the suspects arrived.

    HMAAC says they have filed a report with HPD, but have not yet heard of any movement in the case. This incident is the first time that HMAAC has had a work defaced, though there have been previous incidences of threats against the museum in its logbook. A man also showed up at the museum in the past with a Bible claiming that God had told him to take vengeance on the museum, though he was removed before he caused any damage.

    After initially taking the painting down to start reconstruction, the museum said they returned it on the wall to illustrate the damage. Guess compared leaving the marred painting up to the mother of Emmett Till's mother insisting on an open casket funeral after her son was abducted and lynched. The exhibition ended Saturday.

    Heyward's painting highlights one of his signature techniques of portraying Black people, specifically his family members, with green skin. In his artist statement, the Brooklyn-born Heyward describes the techniques as linking skin tone to the cinematic process of green screening, where green backgrounds are used to project computer-generated new realities. "This provides an alternative entry into the conversation of existing while Black in America," he said in the statement.

    HMAAC vowed to continue displaying works by Black artists despite the vandalism.

    "Our immediate priority is supporting the artist and ensuring the proper restoration of the work,'" said CEO Davinia Reed in a statement. "At the same time, we remain committed to presenting exhibitions that encourage learning, reflection, and dialogue. Acts intended to intimidate, censor, or damage cultural expression will not deter us from our mission."


    Clarence Heyward painting with damage at HMAAC

    Photo courtesy of HMAAC

    Clarence Heyward's Man in the Garden was intentionally damaged

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