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    October theater

    Houston's 9 must-see stage shows for October tell tawdry and thrilling tales

    Tarra Gaines
    Oct 1, 2019 | 2:05 pm

    It’s alive! Mwahahaha! October Houston theater, that is. And like a trick-or-treat bag full of goodies, we have something for every theatrical taste this month, including comic horror, quiet tales of life and aging, immigrant love stories, sex, war, more sex, and lots and lots of singing felines.

    October also brings some very good news as two theater companies, Classical Theatre Company and Obsidian Theatre, settle into new performance homes after losing their spaces last year, while 4th Wall Theatre hits a big acting milestone achieving Equity status.

    So let’s usher in those longer fall nights with these can't-miss shows.

    The Feast from Obsidian Theatre at the MATCH (October 3-26)
    Obsidian Theatre is finally back in show business with a move to the MATCH after losing their theater space in the Heights. As harrowing as this experience has been for the company that has produced some of the quirkiest and most innovative shows for Houston in recent years, it probably wasn’t as scary as this spooky October offering. This reality-bending dark comedy sends one nice couple’s relationship into the toilet when the sewers under their apartment open up and begin to speak.

    Empanada Loca from Obsidian Theatre at the MATCH (October 4-26)
    One production is apparently not enough for Obsidian this Halloween season, so they’ve got another underground-themed show for us, this one loosely based on Sweeney Todd. In this one-woman show, a young woman tells a tale of horror involving weed dealing, a massage business underneath an empanada shop, and a final bloodbath that sends her to live in an abandoned subway tunnel with mole people.

    Salt, Root and Roe at Stages (October 4-20)
    We get into the acting harvest of the season with this U.S. premiere from Stages that caused a critical stir in the U.K. In this Tim Price drama with threads of real humor, elderly identical twins decide they want to die together until the daughter of one of the sisters attempts to persuade them to not act as one. Stages favorites Sally Edmundson plays one of the twins.

    Vietgone at The Alley Theatre (October 4-November 3)
    Qui Nguyen’s comic love story of two Vietnamese refugees in 1970s America became one of the most lauded works out of New York in recent years. Desdemona Chiang directs this regional debut that should resonate literally with Houston, as the Alley is promising a “hot soundtrack that serves up hip-hop, sass, and revolution.”

    Spring Awakening from Theatre Under the Stars at Hobby Center (October 8-20)
    Set in the late 19th century with a very contemporary rock score, the musical based on German playwright Frank Wedekind’s story of teens discovering their sexuality in not so blissful ignorance. Both joyful and tragic, the show won the Tony for best musical. Now TUTS awakens a new production for fall with local choreographer Marlana Doyle composing the moves.

    Glass Menagerie from 4th Wall Theatre at Studio 101 (October 11-November 2)
    Always ready for an acting challenge, 4th Wall tackles one of the great of American Theater, Tennessee Williams’s quiet, yet volatile, story of a family lost and broken.

    4th Wall has extra reason to celebrate this month, as the Los Angeles Representative of Actors Equity will come to town to present the company with a plaque designating it with official Equity theater status. This will make for an important moment for the company, which has made it its mission to provide competitive pay in supporting theater artists.

    Lysistrata from Classical Theatre Company at DeLuxe Theater (October 16-November 3)
    One of theater’s edgiest comedies is also one of its oldest. War or sex, the men of Greece can’t have both when the Greek women go on a sex strike to end the Peloponnesian War. Classical Theatre tends to bring a fresh perspective and relevance to some of the most ancient plays, so we can’t wait to see its vision for this Aristophanes masterpiece. They’ve also managed to make a thematic connect with their mission and new home as they set up theater shop in the recently renovated historic DeLuxe Theater.

    Cats presented by Broadway at the Hobby Center (October 22-27)
    Relive all the catty “Memories” while also experiencing new sound design, direction, and choreography for this revival of the multi-Tony Award-winner, the 4th longest running show on Broadway. While the live version won’t star Taylor Swift, you won’t have to worry about weird CGI shenanigans, just a ton of cat makeup and the furriest of costumes.

    Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein from Manual Cinema presented by Society for the Performing Arts at Jones Hall (October 30)
    Something a bit different but appropriate for the season comes with this one-night-only performance by the Chicago performing arts collective and film company, Manual Cinema. Neither a staged musical, play, concert, puppet show, or live filming, this version of Frankenstein has elements from all these performance mediums. Actors, artists, and musicians mingle onstage as the audience watches the act of creation and the creation itself come alive before them, perhaps a perfect way of retelling the Frankenstein story.

    4th Wall Theatre brings an intimate production of the classic The Glass Menagerie to the stage (October 11-November 2).

    4th Wall Theatre Company presents The Glass Menagerie
    Photo by Gabrielle Nissen
    4th Wall Theatre brings an intimate production of the classic The Glass Menagerie to the stage (October 11-November 2).
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    See these shows

    Cirque du Soleil and Broadway classics lead Houston's 11 best October shows

    Tarra Gaines
    Oct 2, 2025 | 11:00 am
    Cirque du Soleil: OVO
    Photo by Marie-Andrée Lemire
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    As the nights grow longer, we have more hours for theater. What a harvest of shows October brings. We enter spooky season with grave diggers, an immersive sci-fi western, drunk vampires, and probably the scariest of all, small town city council meetings and middle school spelling bees.

    For those avoiding the chills, the month also brings high-flying insects, spiritual debates, and intergenerational drama and trauma. Plus, a season of sublime opera opens from a Houston arts institution most recently nominated for the worldwide Opera Company of the Year award, Houston Grand Opera.

    Freud’s Last Session at A.D. Players (October 1-19)
    Calling their 25-26 season one of exploration, the company examines the human mind and spirituality with this “what if” play. What if on the eve of World War II the aging, world-renowned psychiatrist and noted atheist, Sigmund Freud, met the young, up-and-coming author and theologian C.S. Lewis? Freud is nearing the end of his life, while Lewis has just begun his rise as an author and academic, but is still haunted by his memories of World War I. During this amicable meeting and clash of minds, the two debate about love, beauty, death, God and what it means to be human. Houston actors James Belcher and Philip Hays play Freud and Lewis.

    Cirque du Soleil’s OVO at the Toyota Center (October 2-5)
    Cirque connoisseurs might remember OVO (Portuguese for egg) as a returning favorite. But we anticipate surprises, as the Soleil team of artists have created a new iteration for audiences to rediscover this soaring production. Look for a reimagined set design, new acrobatic acts and costumes, original characters, and reinvented music for this wild journey into the insect world. From juggling, to gravity defying leaps, to midair dances, the Cirque choreographers, artists, and performers were inspired by nature’s smallest creatures for this show that spins, weaves, and flies admit giant flowers.

    Drunk Dracula at Emerald Theater (October 2-November 15)
    From the national artistic company who gets their drink on for Shakespeare most of the year comes this special spooky season performance. For October, the Bard takes a break, as the sober and drunk actors alike attempt an epic retelling of the most famous, or at least most mathematically inclined, vampire of them all, Count Dracula. After centuries of being cooped up in his creepy old castle, Transylvania’s thirstiest bachelor is in need of fresh blood to maintain his youthful looks and chiseled physique. Now, he’s ready to take a giant bite out of Houston.

    The Body Snatcher at Alley Theatre (October 3-26)
    Actor David Rainey celebrates his 25th year at the Alley with a star turn in this world premiere play by Katie Forgette. Body Snatcher is inspired by, though not a direct adaptation of, the classic Robert Louis Stevenson’s horror short story of the same name. We also hear Forgette was intrigued by the macabre but real history of English Victorian era body snatchers, who dug up the dead to sell cadavers to medical schools. In Forgette's freshly dug grave tale, things go bump in the cemetery at night when a loving father, who is also a genius doctor, must decide how far he’ll go to save his ailing daughter. And that feisty daughter just so happens to be giving her heart to her father’s young medical assistant. As they push medical boundaries and the bodies stack up, the question remains: how deep will they dig for the ones they love?

    Midnight High: A Night at the Oxhead from The Octarine Accord (October 8-25)
    Billed as western told through a science fiction lens, Midnight High is set in a wild saloon in a dusty frontier town in the 1800s. Secrets lurk in every corner and the audience will find itself in the middle of a tense and otherworldly standoff. Attendees may find themselves pulled into exclusive solo scenes or witness dangerous showdowns as they follow cryptic clues that lead deeper into the mystery. Every experience will likely be a little different, depending on the path walked, choices made, and drinks partaken, as tickets include libations at the saloon bar.

    Electra from Classic Theatre Company (October 9-18)
    The theater company that specializes in bringing an original perspective to even the most ancient plays tackles one of the greatest tragedies of all, Sophocles’ Electra. Thousands of years before it became a psychological phrase, the ancient Greeks knew how to turn intergenerational trauma into cathartic theater. In this tale of woe, Electra struggles with her pain and sorrow following the murder of her father, King Agamemnon, at the hands of her mother, Clytaemnestra, and her mother's lover, Aegisthus. Electra fires her grief into deadly revenge, as her long-lost brother Orestes returns from exile and the siblings forge a bloody plot against their father's killers.

    Mud Row at Stages (October 10-November 2)
    A stellar Houston-based cast brings award winning playwright Dominique Morisseau’s intergenerational story to life. The story moves across time but in the same space, as two generations of sisters navigate class, race, love, and family on Mud Row, an area in the East End of West Chester, Pennsylvania. In the mid-20th century, Elsie hopes to move up in the world by marrying well, while her sister Frances joins the fight for Civil Rights. Decades later, estranged sisters Regine and Toshi are forced to reckon with their shared heritage and each other, when Regine inherits granny Elsie's house, which she never wanted, while her sister Toshi has been squatting there for months. Beneath the roof of one house, generations apart, these women must confront their shared legacies, conflicts, and the bonds of family.

    The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee from Theatre Under the Stars (October 21-November 2)
    TUTS opens its 2025-2026 season with this hilarious and touching Tony-winning musical. TUTS artistic director Dan Knechtges choreographed the original Broadway production of this comedy about the cutthroat world of middle school spelling bees, so we can’t wait to see his full directorial and choreographic vision in this new production. Similar to A Chorus Line, if populated by quirky and awkward adolescents, all the characters have their own unique, yet touchingly universal stories to tell. They’ll sing out those stories while spelling their way to greatness. The show also offers the audience the chance to get in on the spelling action with some interaction and participation, so get those dictionaries ready.

    The Minutes from Dirt Dogs Theatre Company (October 23-November 8)
    Dirt Dogs is celebrating its 10th season by turning to one of its favorite playwrights, Tracy Letts (August: Osage County, Bug). In this political satire set during a small town city council meeting, not much business is getting done because everyone on the council has their own agenda when it comes to reading the minutes of the last meeting. A Broadway hit a few years ago, the show leaves audiences debating the humor and plot twists weeks after they leave the theater. We can’t wait to see how this large cast of stellar Dogged regulars and company newcomers tackle this story in one of the intimate MATCH theaters. Spoiler alert: Letts plays with genre here, and we’ve heard the comedy might transform into a play quite appropriate for scary season.

    Porgy and Bess from Houston Grand Opera (October 24-November 15)
    HGO is calling its 25-26 lineup a season of “grand dreams” and that’s certainly the case with its opener, George and Ira Gershwin’s grand American opera that's set in the Jim Crow era and the fictional Charleston slum of Catfish Row. Porgy, a disabled beggar, and Bess, a woman struggling with addiction, fall in love.

    Though it originally debuted on Broadway in the '30s, HGO’s production 50 years ago is said to have renewed Porgy’s popularity in opera houses around the world. That 1976 production went on to Broadway and earned HGO both a Tony and a GRAMMY. In honor of the 50 year anniversary, HGO presents this acclaimed production from the Washington National Opera directed by Francesca Zambello and starring two HGO favorites, Michael Sumuel as Porgy and Angel Blue as Bess.

    Il trittico from Houston Grand Opera (October 30-14)
    Along with Porgy, HGO will presents for the first time Puccini’s masterful trio of one-act operas Il trittico all in one performance. First up is the tragic love story, Il tabarro, a tale of passion and betrayal between a barge captain, his young wife, and her lover. Next, an opera filled with hope and redemption, Suor Angelica, delves into the desperation of a cloistered nun with a haunted past. The night ends in glorious laughter with the witty Gianni Schicchi, the tale of a cunning conman who turns a family’s greed into a delightful farce. Taken together, these three operas will take audiences from the depths of tragedy to the heights of love to sublime comedy. HGO is singing the praises of the powerhouse lead cast, taking on multiple roles across the three operas, including soprano Corinne Winters in her company debut, mezzo-soprano Jamie Barton, bass-baritone Ryan McKinny, and tenor Arturo Chacón-Cruz.

    Cirque du Soleil: OVO
    Photo by Marie-Andrée Lemire

    Cirque du Soleil present its new production OVO at the Toyota Center.

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