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    Taylor Swift Shakes It Off

    Taylor Swift and special guest shake up sold-out Minute Maid Park with grown-up concert

    Jane Howze
    Sep 10, 2015 | 2:22 am

    Taylor Swift’s U.S. leg of her The 1989 World Tour rolled into Minute Maid Park — complete with back-up singers, a 10-piece band and about a dozen talented dancers. Originally scheduled for October 13, the concert was moved to Wednesday night to accommodate the Astros' anticipated (hopefully not jinxing them) playoff dates. Playing to a sold-out audience of 45,000, primarily pre-teen and teenage girls, part of the fun was eyeing the many costumes — why so many tutus? — and the signs, some in lighted letters spelling "STYLE."

    Seeing Swift perform is both a familiar and new experience. Familiar because many of us have watched her grow up and feel like she is our daughter, friend or crush. But each concert delights in different ways as Swift matures and raises the bar musically and creatively.

    Having seen this same concert in Salt Lake City last weekend, as well as Swift's previous Houston concerts (at Toyota Center in 2013, Minute Maid in 2011, and Reliant Stadium during RodeoHouston in 2009), I've found each one provides a number of aha moments. My five takeaways from this one are:

    There is something for everyone at a Taylor Swift concert

    While Swift’s previous concerts were plainly geared to teenage angst, 1989 is a more sophisticated and sleeker show that will indeed appeal to teenagers but also their parents. Sure, the lyrics still have to do with romance, love and loss, but they're germane to all ages with a more grown-up attitude. Even middle-aged parents (probably embarrassing their kids to no end) were standing, dancing and singing the songs.

    While most of the songs came from her 1989 album, a few standbys like “Love Story” and “We are Never Ever Getting Back Together” were differently arranged with a harder rock edge to thrill teenagers and older listeners as well.

    It's one of the best produced concerts you'll see

    For those in the audience who remember when Swift wore cowgirl attire as she performed at the Rodeo (and this writer remembers her as a 13-year-old before her first break), she has grown up and in a good way. She has turned out to be a more than capable dancer and an expressive performer who connects with her audience much like a Paul McCartney.

    1989 featured numerous costume changes for both Swift and her dancers and the use of a horizontal stage that lifted above the crowd and rotated so she could almost make contact with those in the nosebleed section. It was a unique, ambitious and visually dazzling spectacle.

    She gives good advice

    Mid-concert, Swift talked to the attentive audience for several minutes about what she had learned. While every parent with a teenager no doubt wished they could bottle the advice, I wanted to relay it to everyone I know and remember it myself. “You won’t be happy every day, every minute. But when you experience those hard times, think about the times you were happy. Let those thoughts of happiness sustain you until you can pull yourself back to a happy place again.“

    She went on to say, “The one thing I know is that performing for you makes me so happy. And it makes me happy to think that perhaps I have brought some happiness to you tonight.”

    She also reminded the audience that they were not defined by their mistakes or what others thought of them. “Failure means you are just not done yet,” she said.

    She loves surprises

    The most obvious surprise of the concert was the appearance of rapper Wiz Khalifa who sang a duet of his hit, "See You Again," with Swift to roars so loud the stadium shook. But Khalifa (and the other special guests such as John Legend, Ryan Tedder and Nicki Minaj who have regularly made appearances on this tour) wasn’t the only surprise.

    Swift's costumes were a mix between sassy and sophisticated. One lit up with cherry lights in a dance number with matching umbrellas while a dainty evening gown suddenly became a sleek gold body suit in the closing set. And to "Shake It Off" in the last number, Swift wore a spangly pink two-piece costume while her male dancers lit up the stage in purple suits.

    While Minute Maid is not the best place for a concert — the acoustics are horrible and many seats are far from the stage — the sound system worked well for this concert and the dazzling airport-sized runway stage that rose 40 feet in the air and rotated in a circle was beyond anything U2 concertgoers have come to expect. A crystal piano rose from underground, a keyboard soared in the air, each concertgoer had an LED wristband that changed colors to Swift's music, and, of course there were plenty of fireworks — so many that after the concert ended, the baseball diamond at Minute Maid was encased in a shroud of smoke.

    She is a fan of her fans

    Swift knows how to make her fans feel special. She noted that Houston is one of her favorite places to play and that her parents had gotten married in the Bayou City.

    And prior to the concert in what has become a tradition, her mother, Andrea Swift, walked through the audience and selected 20 to 30 ecstatic fans to join her in a roped-off area near the stage. Andrea made sure that handicapped and ticket holders in the nose-bleed section were also included. Andrea rarely misses her daughter's concerts and, by the cheers and hugs she received, she has quite a fan base herself.

    And well deserved. She is unfailingly gracious to everyone, posing for millions of pictures, giving autographs, singing along to every song and loving the concert as much as we do.

    Like mother, like daughter, perhaps?

    Toward the end of the concert, Taylor Swift had some serious words for her adoring fans.

    Taylor Swift concert at Minute Maid Park
      
    Photo by Jane Howze
    Toward the end of the concert, Taylor Swift had some serious words for her adoring fans.
    unspecified
    news/entertainment

    bigger and stronger

    Winner of Ren Fest lawsuit plans to keep the event mostly unchanged

    Jef Rouner
    May 14, 2025 | 2:34 pm
    Texas Renaissance Festival
    Photo courtesy of Texas Renaissance Festival
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    The Texas Renaissance Festival will soon be under new ownership, but will remain much the same as it has been for the last half century, attorney Anthony Laporte of Houston law firm Hanszen Laporte tells CultureMap.

    "All of the vendor contracts are in place for 2025," says Laporte. "Everyone who was already there will be there this year. Maybe one Dippin' Dots guy here and there will be swapped out with another, but we're sticking with what works. Even when the litigation was ongoing, they're having entertainment auditions. Both the old owners and the new ones are planning to give visitors a great time."

    Founder George Coulam has owned the Texas Renaissance Festivals since 1974. Now in his late 80s, Coulam has teased selling the festival multiple times, a process chronicled in a recent HBO docuseries. After pulling out of the latest sales agreement, the prospective buyer sued Coulam for breach of contract. Grimes County Judge Gary W. Chaney ruled against Coulam on May 7, paving the way for the sale to finally go through.

    The identity of the new owner was a mystery for some time. Court documents listed only the corporate entities RW Lands, Texas Stargate, and Royal Campgrounds. The prospective new owner is Meril Rivard, a real estate investor with no prior festival experience who sought to purchase the fair for $60 million. However, Rivard's son is married to the daughter of Geoff Wilson, owner of several Greek food establishments in the festival. Wilson's clan, referred to as "The Greeks" in the HBO documentary, were one of the groups featured in the show trying to buy the fair.

    "This is a family business now," says Laporte. "He has family that lives it, works it, and is part of it."

    According to Laporte, an appeal by Coulam and his counsel seems unlikely. He reports that all parties mostly feel relief that the case is over, though until the judgment is finalized in the next couple of months there is still the possibility that Coulam will try one last time to remain king of the festival.

    The rough final sales price of the Texas Renaissance Festivals is $60 million, Laporte says. This includes the intellectual property rights, some physical property owned by the festival but not strictly part of its grounds, and other assets. The festival is also partially owned by some of the larger business owners. The recently-settled lawsuit does not change those arrangements.

    "It's hard to say what will happen [to the partial owners]," Laporte says. "This judgment does not affect them, per se, but there will be ripple effects. However, no one wants the festival to fail."

    Coulam will no longer have an official role in the running of Texas Renaissance Festival, though he may advise in an unofficial capacity. Laporte did say there will be no more parades in his honor. Coulam has repeatedly been accused of sexual harassment by former employees.

    Until the judgement is finalized, no official date for the transfer of ownership will be set. In addition to the money changing hands for the sale, Coulam owes Rovard and the other plaintiffs $22 million in damages and another $1 million in attorney fees, the judge ruled. None of this is projected to impact the October opening of the festival in any way.

    "Everyone is ready to make Ren Fest bigger and stronger," says Laporte.

    news/entertainment
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