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    Resilience Indeed

    Setting a whole new stage: How HGO quickly turned a convention hall into a really grand theater

    Tarra Gaines
    Oct 16, 2017 | 7:11 pm

    “They thought we were mad.” Houston Grand Opera managing director Perryn Leech says that was the reaction when he and HGO artistic director Patrick Summers met with the good people of Houston First to broach the idea of staging the HGO 2017-2018 season in the George R. Brown Convention Center.

    Yet less than two months after Hurricane Harvey flooded HGO’s home at the Wortham Center, the crazy idea to temporarily house one of the world’s best opera companies in an vast exhibit hall in the Houston convention center will become a reality with the opening this weekend of Verdi’s La traviata (October 20–November 11) followed by Handel’s Julius Caesar (October 27– November 10).

    The show will go on: The fat lady will sing and art will thrive in a very different venue than usual, but this is a city and artistic community that survives by getting creative about everything, including our use of space.

    “We serve up to 60,000 Houstonians a year who seek in opera a refuge or some kind of artistic home. We never once considered not providing that simply because we were out of our home. An opera company is more than just a building,” Summers says about the decision by HGO to seek a new venue when it became apparent that the Wortham Center could not reopen until May, 2018 at the earliest.

    While HGO looked at other venues — Leech concedes that if you had a performing space in Houston it was probably visited by HGO officials — George R. Brown ended up being the best pick in the chaotic circumstances that was post-Harvey Houston. Once they saw the viability of the idea, Houston First, the city corporation that manages the Wortham and George R. Brown, worked tirelessly to rehouse conventions scheduled for the space this fall.

    Room to roam

    To stage the grand operas on this HGO season roster, the artists and crew need lots of room to roam, and the Exhibit Hall, renamed and remade into Resilience Theater, can provide a 124,000 square feet area while also becoming an intimate space opera audiences have likely never experienced before, with only a 100 feet maximum distance from a theater seat to the performance area.

    To turn the cavernous third floor exhibit hall into a grand, yet intimate, theater, they’ve used enormous swaths of fabric curtains and nearly one mile of truss for hanging lights and equipment to help create distinct areas and a proscenium arch stage on the floor of the hall.

    A curved reflective plastic drop called a cyclorama lines the back of the stage area. While lights and projections can be used to turn the cyclorama into a part of the set, its most most important duty is to reflect sound back into the audience. The same type of plastic drop hangs behind the back of the seating area and to the sides of the theater. In essence, the cyclorama acts as the acoustics keeper, catching the music and holding it within the the makeshift theater.

    “The acoustics have been fantastic so far, ” says Leech after experiencing the space during orchestra rehearsals.

    A little normalcy

    To help bring back a little normalcy to its audience, HGO will offer many of the amenities subscribers expect, including valet parking, a donor room, pre-performance lectures, and a concessions area to purchase refreshments and a light meal before the performance. Leech also hopes their new closeness to Discovery Green, the restaurants, bars and stadiums near to east downtown might coax a whole new audience into the Resilience Theater to get a taste of opera.

    “We’re particularly moved that we were able to bring our opera house into the George R Brown, which was itself such a refuge for so many Houstonians after the storm. That’s such a meaningful connection for us,” says Summers. “We’re just so eager to show you what we’ve done.”

    Check out this video of Resilience Theater from our news partners at ABC13:

    HGO turned George R. Brown Convention Center, Exhibit Hall A3 into Resilience Theater.

    HGO Resilience Theater
    Photo by Tarra Gaines
    HGO turned George R. Brown Convention Center, Exhibit Hall A3 into Resilience Theater.
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    let's dance

    Houston Ballet leaps into 2026-2027 with world premieres and Swan Lake

    Tarra Gaines
    Feb 17, 2026 | 10:30 am
    Artists of Houston Ballet in Stanton Welch’s Swan Lake
    Photo by Lawrence Elizabeth Knox
    Artists of Houston Ballet in Stanton Welch’s Swan Lake.

    Announcing its 2026-2027 season, Houston Ballet leaps into an immersive wonderland with the world premiere ballet Where’s Alice? from co-artistic director Stanton Welch. This is just one of many dance adventures set for a season filled with spectacular story ballets, cutting edge contemporary dances, and world premieres.

    “This season reflects the full breadth of what Houston Ballet is — and where we’re going,” Houston Ballet co-artistic director Julie Kent said in a statement. “We are honoring the great choreographic voices that have shaped our art form, from Balanchine and MacMillan to Lubovitch and Peck, while simultaneously opening the door to new creative possibilities through world premieres and bold collaborations.”

    The season begins September 11 through 20 with a classic Texas twang for Pecos Bill, the title production of an eclectic mixed repertory program. Stanton Welch’s fun and rollicking dance follows the adventures of the folklore cowboy, Pecos Bill. The program also showcases a work from 20th century dance master, George Balanchine, with the elegant and dynamic Symphonie Concertante. And for the first time, the company will perform celebrated choreographer Lar Lubovitch’s Meadow, a piece Julie Kent herself once danced when it first debuted.

    Sir Kenneth MacMillan’s Manon returns September 24 through October 4. First performed by the company in 1994, the doomed love story between irresistibly beautiful femme fatale, Manon, and impoverished student, Des Grieux, has had audiences swooning for decades.

    Of course, it wouldn’t be a Houston Ballet season without the annual Margaret Alkek Williams Jubilee of Dance. And then closing out 2026, the company gifts Houston with Welch’s delightful and delectable Nutcracker Ballet.

    The new year premieres Where's Alice? , Welch’s brand new work will be a re-envisioning of Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland, February 25 through March 7. Describing it as one of the most ambitious undertakings in HB’s recent history, the company plans for Alice to become a fully immersive theater experience that incorporates cutting-edge audio and visual effects that will take audience down the rabbit hole into a living, breathing, wondrous world.

    Keeping with what looks to be the 26-27 season’s theme of blockbuster ballets from Welch, the company floats into spring, March 11 through 21, with the classic story of Madam Butterfly, a dramatic exploration of love, sacrifice, and cultural collision danced to Puccini’s heartbreaking score.

    Beginning May 27 through June 6, HB offers the second mixed repertory program of the season, The Rite of Spring, and with it another world premiere. First, the company brings back the hypnotic, contemporary ballet, Reflections, a piece it originally debuted by the dance world’s reigning rock star, Justin Peck. Company member and up-and-coming choreographer Jacquelyn Long will create a new ballet for the program. Another highlight of the evening and the title work, Welch’s The Rite of Spring, offers a a visceral and elemental reimagining of dance for Stravinsky’s score that shocked the music world when it first debuted.

    Artists of Houston Ballet in Stanton Welch\u2019s Swan Lake

    Photo by Lawrence Elizabeth Knox

    Artists of Houston Ballet in Stanton Welch’s Swan Lake.

    The season ends June 10 through 27 with one of ballet’s most beloved stories, Swan Lake. Stanton Welch’s celebrated production was first staged by the company in 2006 and has gone on to become an audience favorite. Inspired by Pre-Raphaelite painter John William Waterhouse’s painting “The Lady of Shalott,” the production features lavish sets and costumes.

    Reflecting on the whole season and his Alice in particular, Welch echo’s Kent’s belief that the programming offers a vision that connects the company’s history, present, and future.

    “Where’s Alice? is an example of that vision – a production that pushes the boundaries of ballet through immersive sets and thought-provoking storytelling that makes you question, 'Who in the world am I?' as Alice did, creating an entirely new world audiences can step into,” Welch said. “It’s work like this that allows us to welcome new audiences into the theater while continuing to challenge and inspire our longtime supporters.”

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