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    The Arthropologist

    Ben's Last Ballerina: When this leggy dancer leaves the stage and becomes a Mommy Diva, a Houston era ends

    Nancy Wozny
    Sep 17, 2013 | 7:08 am

    Mireille "Mimi" Hassenboehler is Ben's last ballerina, in that she is the last remaining principal appointed by former Houston Ballet artistic director Ben Stevenson. I've had my little play on Li Cunxin's Mao's Last Dancer story in my mind for some time now, I just didn't expect to be doing it for her last dance. Hassenboehler ends her 21-year career at Houston Ballet after her final performance as Hanna in The Merry Widow on Sept. 28. (She also performs this Thursday and Sunday.)

    "Oh, what better way to go than with a glass of champagne and a waltz," quips Hassenboehler, trying to cheer me up.

    And she's right, if ever there was a delightful exit ballet for a dancer with a smile as bright as Texas, it's The Merry Widow. “It's a role for a woman of substance — that's Mimi,” says Stanton Welch, Houston Ballet's artistic director.

    "I'm going to be mommy diva now. I have so much to learn about special education."

    "It feels sudden," I tell her.

    "It is and it isn't. I'm 40 and I can feel it," she replies.

    The difficulties of raising a special needs child with a husband who travels a lot have caught up with the elegant dancer. "It's been challenging," Hassenboehler says. "I'm going to be mommy diva now. I have so much to learn about special education. That's my new career now."

    Eventually, she also plans to hunker down and finish college. Returning to dance in some capacity will take place on her own time.

    "I'm open to it, but I need a big hiatus from ballet. I want to take a big breath," Hassenboehler says. "One of the things I have learned from other dancers is that you need to separate yourself for a while. I want to learn some new things, and return with a fresh frame of mind."

    The Goodbye

    Leaving Houston Ballet is bittersweet. Hassenboehler literally grew up there. "It's like breaking up with a boyfriend," she sighs, "Ballet is my first love. It's a big thing to leave."

    The New Orleans native first came to Houston Ballet at 18 to study in the Academy. By the next year, Hassenboehler joined the company. "I spent what seemed like a lot of time in the corps before moving up," she recalls.

    During her tenure at Houston Ballet, her repertoire was extensive, dancing all the major classical roles, and excelling in contemporary work. Her elongated lines proved a perfect match for Welch's crisp, geometric choreography. Welch cherished choreographing on her. "I started with Indigo and I never stopped," he says, with a tone of sadness in his voice.

    "It's like breaking up with a boyfriend. Ballet is my first love. It's a big thing to leave."

    Clearly, Welch is going to miss his leggy muse. “When you see her on stage welcoming the audience, that's really her. It's not an act," he says.

    More than once life imitated art. While she was preparing to get married she danced Jiří Kylián's Svadebka, which chronicled the tale of a bride and groom. While Hurricane Katrina was destroying her hometown, she was dancing Kylián's Forgotten Land, which deals with the power of the sea overtaking the land. Hassenboehler possesses a powerful fluency in Kylián's work, which she explains articulately.

    "I understood the movement immediately because I could see a connection with Stanton's vocabulary," she says. "His work prepared me for Kylián's, I could feel the lineage. I always found one ballet prepared me for the next."

    First soloist Linnar Looris partners her in The Merry Widow. As a fellow tall dancer, he relishes the opportunity to take this last waltz with her.

    "She trusts her partner fully, which builds a lot of confidence to work through even the hardest moves," Looris says. "She has a lot of patience, and it makes any role or partnership as perfect as it can be, something that one does not always expect from a principal ballerina.

    "And she has a great sense of humor. It makes the whole process from the studio to the stage easy and fun."

    Hassenboehler will be honored during the Jubilee of Dance on Dec. 6 with a special video tribute. We will miss her radiance on and off stage. I will miss the zest she brought to every single role.

    Although the ballerina is heading for the departure gate, she's right on her game, ready to deliver a breathtaking goodbye. "It's odd to be exit mode and gearing up at the same time," she says. "But I don't want to sizzle out. There's no backing off."

    That beaming smile, those gorgeous legs and generous heart, we get one more chance to see the magic that is Mimi.

    Meet Mimi!

    Mireille Hassenboehler in Forgotten Land with Jun Shuang Huang, choroegraphed by Jiri Kylian

    Houston Ballet Mireille Hassenboehler in Forgotten Land with Jun Shuang Huang choroegraphed by Jiri Kylian
    Photo by © Amitava Sarkar
    Mireille Hassenboehler in Forgotten Land with Jun Shuang Huang, choroegraphed by Jiri Kylian
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    Movie review

    Will Arnett shines in Bradley Cooper’s divorce drama Is This Thing On?

    Alex Bentley
    Jan 9, 2026 | 10:30 am
    Will Arnett in Is This Thing On?
    Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Jason McDonald
    Will Arnett in Is This Thing On?.

    With 12 Oscar nominations in the past 12 years in multiple categories, Bradley Cooper has turned into not only an acclaimed actor, but also a touted filmmaker. Given that pedigree, it might be difficult to remember that he first gained recognition as a comedy star in movies like Wedding Crashers, Yes Man, and The Hangover series. For his latest directorial effort, he has married comedy with drama in Is This Thing On?.

    Unlike the previous two films he directed, Cooper only has a supporting role, ceding the lead to Will Arnett. He plays Alex Novak, who, as the film begins, is starting the process of divorce from his wife of 20 years, Tess (Laura Dern). Forced to move to a depressing apartment in New York City and only getting limited time with his two kids, Alex finds the unexpected outlet of stand up comedy when he signs up for open mic night at the famous Comedy Cellar.

    The film follows Alex as he continues to pursue comedy while still having to see Tess on a regular basis, thanks to a shared custody agreement and get-togethers with friends like Balls and Christine (Cooper and Andra Day) and Stephen and Geoffrey (real life couple Sean Hayes and Scott Icenogle). While the comedy serves as a form of counseling for Alex, truly moving on proves more difficult than expected.

    The film, co-written by Cooper with Arnett and Mark Chappell, is loosely based on the real-life story of British comedian John Bishop, so one of the biggest things they needed to get right was the comedy itself. Alex’s marital situation lends his comedy more of a confessional style than actual jokes, and his evolution in that space is done well. Shooting in the actual Comedy Cellar and populating the club with real comedians like Amy Sedaris, Jordan Jensen, Reggie Conquest, and more gives those scenes an extra dose of realism.

    As if to underscore the personal and emotional nature of the story, Cooper and cinematographer Matthew Libatique make liberal use of closeups with handheld cameras. The camera is constantly moving around and often seems to be right in the actors’ faces, something that is most noticeable when Alex is performing. As if the stories Alex was telling weren’t intimate enough, having Arnett's entire face fill the frame forces the audience to pay attention to what his character is saying.

    If there is something to knock about the film, it’s a lack of dramatic stakes. While there’s natural tension between Alex and Tess due to the divorce, it’s way less than in a movie like, say, Marriage Story. There’s also a sneaking suspicion that Cooper was just looking to have fun with the film, casting himself as the comic sidekick and working with good friends like Arnett and Hayes. If ever there was a good hang divorce movie, this is it.

    Arnett rarely gets to be in movies, much less as the lead, but he ably embodies this somewhat dramatic part. It helps that he’s given a great scene partner like Dern, who knows when to dial her acting up or down for a particular situation. Cooper and Day are also good despite their story being slightly superfluous, and Christine Ebersole and Ciarán Hinds as Alex’s parents lend the film some extra gravitas.

    Is This Thing On? is a much different type of film from Cooper’s first two directorial efforts, A Star is Born and Maestro, and it’s nice to see the filmmaker offer something new. It has a relatable story for anyone who has ever been married while offering an element of uniqueness with someone discovering an undiscovered skill late in life.

    ---

    Is This Thing On? opens wide in theaters on January 9.

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