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    The Review is In

    Frenzied bodies: Daring and provocative dance takes over in Houston Ballet season opener

    Joseph Campana
    Joseph Campana
    Sep 6, 2013 | 11:37 am

    What's in a name?

    "Four Premieres" may be an accurate title for Houston Ballet's season opener, which runs through Sept. 15 at Wortham Theater Center, but the program might as well have been called "Frenzy."

    Each year a company must decide how to start a season. It's so easy to pick works that are charming, romantic or nostalgic. Hats off to the company for adding daring and ambitious to the list. Premiere works by Houston Ballet associate choreographer Christopher Bruce, former Houston Ballet dancers Melissa Hough and Garrett Smith and National Ballet of Canada artist-in-residence James Kudelka were provocative, surprising — and surprisingly different.

    Bruce's Intimate Pages premiered with Ballet Rambert in 1984, but this revised version represents a North American premiere. The title references romantic letters between composer Leoš Janáček and Kamila Stösslová, a much younger married woman. Set to Janáček's String Quartet No. 2, the work is a study of the tortures of unrequited love. Bruce makes extraordinary use of the score, which was exquisitely performed by the Houston Ballet Orchestra.

    Intimate Pages was less idiosyncratic and less dominated by groups than other Bruce works in the Houston Ballet repertoire. Often it seems that Bruce has unearthed some lost vernacular in the way bodies twitch and touch to create new forms of social dance.

    Intimate Pages was austere. Deliberate strings swing from desperate to sweet as the flawless Ian Casady, principal, and first soloist Jessica Collado act out a love scene that's constantly interrupted. Bruce deploys a clever device as he pairs each lover with two other dancers. As the lovers reach for one another, the other dancers, garbed in ghostly colors, distract them into other phrases of movement. Occasionally they unite, but never for long. Such is the frenzy and pain of frustrated love.

    Athleticism and spelunking in undergarments

    Hough and Smith more than held their own with the more established Bruce and Kudelka, bringing plenty of frenzy into play.

    Hough's concept is a paradox: Thrilling yet cerebral, athletic yet complex. Her title, …the third kind [is] useless, quotes Machiavelli's The Prince. With a jarring, ponderous score by Gabriel Prokofiev (grandson of Sergei) at her disposal, Hough rings the dancers through exciting changes: One minute sinuous, the next, abrupt. Of course she had ample support from startling lighting and costume designs by Lisa J. Pinkham and Monica Guerra.

    Never has the always-exceptional Simon Ball been so persuasive. It felt like I was seeing him dance for the very first time. Is that not what all passion, especially in ballet, aspires to?

    Principal dancer Connor Walsh plays a prince consumed by a power that slowly destroys him from within. With mere gestures, he moves the bodies around him. The dance is marked by an ambitious patterning of bodies in groups that swerve between unity and individuality.

    Whereas Hough's earlier choreography seemed wonderfully intimate and sexual, this latest effort is queasy, wry and capacious. I couldn't help thinking of the middle of Balanchine's Prodigal Son, with Kelly Myernick as the Siren drawing the prince to his doom. As if drunk on power, Walsh slowly unravels until dissent finally overtakes him. He whimpers at the end, "I'm the prince."

    Maybe no one's really the prince, but Hough held all the power.

    Smith's Return may not pack the dense, cerebral punch of Hough's thrilling creation, but he accomplished something extraordinary: A genuine crowd-pleaser.

    That term is often a backhanded compliment that refers to exciting but shallow work. And admittedly, the scenario of young dancers exploring caves seemed, at times, hokey. As they emerged on the stage, someone nearby whispered, "Why are they spelunking in their underwear?"

    But harnesses strung over shorts were part of Smith's ambitious athleticism. Mere straps and the strength of dancers Oliver Halkowich and Rhodes Elliot kept Nozomi Iijima and Jacquelyn Long swinging in dizzying and dazzling circles. These were only a few of a series of thrilling moments. So what if there were a few too many flashlights on helmets for my taste? Smith made an ambitious selection of John Adams' scores, his well-composed choreography handily withstood the music's awesome force. That's his brand of frenzy delights.

    Fighting or making love?

    What a pleasure it was to end with Kudelka's masterful Passion, one of the most intelligent pieces of choreography I've seen. Set to Beethoven's Concerto for Piano in D major (the composer's transcription of the Violin Concerto), Passion opens on a gauzy, neo-classical affair. Five women in a line travel like a fragment of a corps de ballet while three couples glide around them. Whether this is a performance or a ball, the dancers maintain a gorgeous façade that evokes dance as pure elegance.

    But like wolves after prey, principal dancers Simon Ball and Karina Gonzalez stalk the stage. Ball wears a vest but no shirt; Gonzalez sports disheveled hair. It's as if they've just been fighting or making love. They only eye each other as if unaware of the others. Overwhelming forces rage beneath the pristine exterior of this ballet.

    It takes a choreographer of supreme confidence to obscure his central couple. For long stretches, they walk around and stare at one another. At times they struggle while at other times they melt, weary, into one another. Never has the always-exceptional Ball been so persuasive. It felt like I was seeing him dance for the very first time.

    Is that not what all passion, especially in ballet, aspires to?

    A scene from Houston Ballet's production of ...the third kind [is] usless with Kelly Myernick and Connor Walsh, choreographed by Melissa Hough.

    Houston Ballet Four Premieres September 2013 the third kind [is] usless with Kelly Myernick and Connor Walsh choreographed by Melissa Hough
    Photo by © Amitava Sarkar
    A scene from Houston Ballet's production of ...the third kind [is] usless with Kelly Myernick and Connor Walsh, choreographed by Melissa Hough.
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    Concert News

    Jack Johnson rides into Houston on surf-themed 2026 tour

    Alex Bentley
    Nov 7, 2025 | 1:00 pm
    Jack Johnson
    Photo by Tahnei Roy
    Jack Johnson will play at Dos Equis Pavilion in Dallas on August 30, 2026.

    Singer-songwriter Jack Johnson, known his for laidback surf-rock music, will embark on the SURFILMUSIC Tour in 2026, which will include a stop at the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion in The Woodlands on Friday, August 28.

    The expansive 43-date North American tour, which starts on June 19 in Gilford, New Hampshire, will have three separate legs.

    The three Texas dates — The Woodlands on August 28, Austin on August 29, and Dallas on August 30 — will be part of the second leg, where Johnson will be joined by Lake Street Dive.

    The tour is Johnson’s first since 2022 and will celebrate a new era of music, film, and environmental connection rooted in his 20+ year career.

    Johnson is touring in support of a forthcoming soundtrack, scored by Johnson and Hermanos Gutiérrez for a new documentary, SURFILMUSIC, that chronicles Johnson’s evolution from surfer to filmmaker to musician.

    The film, which will be released in 2026, weaves through the making of his iconic surf films Thicker Than Water (1999) and The September Sessions (2000), which paved the way for his music career.

    It celebrates the lifelong friendships and ocean-driven community that shaped Johnson’s path, and features many of the surfers who appeared in the original films, including Kelly Slater, Rob Machado, and the Malloy Brothers.

    Johnson released his first album, Brushfire Fairytales, in 2001, and he has gone on to put out eight other albums, most recently Meet the Moonlight in 2022.

    Fans can register for the Jack Johnson presale at jackjohnsonmusic.com, now through Sunday, November 9. The presale begins Monday, November 10, 2025 at 10 am local time and runs through general on-sale date of Friday, November 14.

    Jack Johnson SURFILMUSIC 2026 Tour Dates

    • June 19 – Gilford, NH – Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion
    • June 20 – Mansfield, MA – Xfinity Center
    • June 21 – Holmdel, NJ – PNC Bank Arts Center
    • June 24 – Saratoga, NY – Saratoga Performing Arts Center
    • June 26 – Columbia, MD – Merriweather Post Pavilion
    • June 27 – Philadelphia, PA – Highmark Mann Center
    • June 28 – Wantagh, NY – Northwell at Jones Beach Theater
    • June 30 – Toronto, ON – RBC Amphitheatre
    • July 1 – Canandaigua, NY – CMAC
    • July 3 – Burgettstown, PA – Pavilion at Star Lake
    • July 4 – Noblesville, IN – Ruoff Music Center
    • July 5 – Grand Rapids, MI – Acrisure Amphitheater
    • July 7 – Cuyahoga Falls, OH – Blossom Music Center
    • July 8 – Cincinnati, OH – Riverbend Music Center
    • July 10 – Clarkston, MI – Pine Knob Music Theatre
    • July 11 – Chicago, IL – Huntington Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island
    • July 12 – Shakopee, MN – Minnesota Quarry Amphitheater
    • August 18 – West Palm Beach, FL – iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre
    • August 19 – Tampa, FL – MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre
    • August 21 – Alpharetta, GA – Ameris Bank Amphitheatre
    • August 22 – Raleigh, NC – Coastal Credit Union Music Park
    • August 23 – Charlotte, NC – PNC Music Pavilion
    • August 25 – Nashville, TN – Ascend Amphitheater
    • August 26 – Orange Beach, AL – The Wharf Amphitheater
    • August 28 – The Woodlands, TX – Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
    • August 29 – Austin, TX – Germania Insurance Amphitheater
    • August 30 – Dallas, TX – Dos Equis Pavilion
    • September 1 – Riverside, MO – MORTON Amphitheater
    • September 2 – Greenwood Village, CO – Fiddler’s Green Amphitheatre
    • September 3 – Greenwood Village, CO – Fiddler’s Green Amphitheatre
    • September 4 – West Valley City, UT – USANA Amphitheatre
    • September 6 – Stateline, NV – Lake Tahoe Amphitheatre at Caesars Republic
    • September 26 – George, WA – The Gorge Amphitheatre
    • September 27 – Bend, OR – Hayden Homes Amphitheater
    • September 28 – Troutdale, OR – McMenamins Edgefield Amphitheater
    • September 30–October 1 – Berkeley, CA – The Greek Theatre
    • October 3 – Santa Barbara, CA – Santa Barbara Bowl
    • October 4 – Santa Barbara, CA – Santa Barbara Bowl
    • October 6 – Phoenix, AZ – Talking Stick Resort Amphitheatre
    • October 9 – Chula Vista, CA – North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre
    • October 10– Los Angeles, CA – Hollywood Bowl
    • October 11– Los Angeles, CA – Hollywood Bowl
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