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    New Cutting-Edge Performances

    Houston hits the arts jackpot as new entertainment company showcases cutting-edge performing artists

    Tarra Gaines
    Nov 19, 2015 | 12:45 pm

    Several hours before Bridget Everett, one of New York’s hottest cabaret stars and an Inside Amy Schumer frequent guest, took the stage at the MATCH, Kathryn Lott and Allison Lott, founders of Lott Entertainment Presents, were supervising the pre-show preparations of Matchbox 3, worrying over a string of light bulbs falling and a logo misprint in the programs. Of course, once showtime arrived and Everett entered singing songs of all-sized titty pride and using her own ample bra-less breasts as weapons of cabaret comedy terror, no one in the audience was paying much attention to the logos in the programs.

    There’s a new performing arts presenting company in town and with Everett as their first show, beautifully bellowing for us all to “Fuck Some Shit Up” as a kind of rallying cry, the Lott partners are making it clear that this is definitely not your grandma’s performing arts series, unless Gammy is really into bizarre and sexual explicate cabaret and off, off Broadway innovated and interactive plays.

    A Houston void?

    I went to talk with Allison and Kathryn as they did their debut show preparations, and soon found their fill-the-void philosophy for bringing acts to Houston was more than a motto.

    “Our goal is to be different and our goal in programming is to bring something that wouldn’t be here otherwise. That’s the first question we ask ourselves when we’re looking at shows,” explained Allison Lott.

    No, they’re not related, but the women became friends while working at Society for the Performing Arts. They later left to start their own consulting and special events firm, but still their performing arts experience kept calling them to do something alongside Lott Entertainment. A trip to New York to see the off Broadway play The Other Mozart and to catch shows at the iconic Joe’s Pub nightclub at the Public Theater made them realize that Houston is missing out on some great performing art.

    “We just couldn’t stop talking about how Houston doesn’t have this sort of thing,” described Allison Lott. After wondering why no one was bringing these kind of cutting-edge acts to Houston, they began to ask: Why not them? And so was born the non-profit offshoot of Lott Entertainment, Lott Entertainment Present.

    They were first determined to bring the one-woman play The Other Mozart, the little known true story of musical prodigy Nannerl Mozart, the sister of Wolfgang Amadeus. But early on they also started talks with some of the people behind the programming of Joe’s Pub.

    Opening their own pub

    Joe’s Pub has brought so many international-know and up and coming singers and performing artists to its intimate stage, while cultivating new acts and helping them to develop their work, that its gained a reputation as THE showcase for new talent. What Joe’s Pub does has never been completely duplicated outside New York, but now Allison and Kathryn are ready to see if it could possibly be loosely franchised with their Joe’s Pub Series. They’ll bring in some of the venue’s staple artists within the Lott Entertainment Presents season.

    “We started the conversation with Joe’s Pub thinking: No Way. But they actually bit really easily. They were really excited about it, and thought Houston was a great market,” explained Kathryn Lott, and adding “I think it’s going to a huge claim to our company and to our city to have the first Joe’s Pub outside from New York City.”

    The new year will bring the rest of this debut season, starting with The Other Mozart on January 7 and continuing with two more from the Joe's Pub Series with Daniel Koren (Feburary 18-20) and Bridget Barkan (April 7). The Method Gun (May 26-28) rounds out the 2015-2016 lineup. The shows of this first season don’t have any striking themes in common, but Team Lott promises they’ll all be “high quality art.”

    “The thought behind the first season is go really big and bold and show you what the brand is from the very first show, hoping you’ll trust me after that and you’ll have such a good time you’ll take even more risks with me,” said Kathryn Lott of her programming strategy.

    A Texas Method to the Madness

    They’ll end this inaugural season in May not looking to New York for inspiration but to some real Texas grown theater with the Austin based Rude Mechs and their joyous comedy The Method Gun, a work that’s part play, part dance and all weird tribute to acting and the volatile and inspirational student/teacher relationship. (I saw The Method Gun in Austin in 2014 and it was my favorite live performance of that year.) This last production will take place on the larger and more traditional Matchbox 4 stage.

    The Lott not-sisters are pleased with their fit into the MATCH and how easily Matchbox 3 could be turned into a Joe’s Pub-inspired space. Of the MATCH Kathryn Lott finds, “It was new. We were knew. They had this space which was just perfect, and we knew we could turn it into Joe’s Pub.”

    Still, the team is committed to “fluidity” in the future, explained Allison Lott. They want the freedom “to add and not be tied to that traditional model” of a set season like many performing arts organizations. Looking, hopefully, to coming years, they plan to explore putting shows in other venues around town.

    “There are going to be times when you won’t know where we’re going to pop up next. There eventually will be a big element of surprise,” promises Kathryn Lott, the woman who has just brought Houston a brimming eye-full of the faux-leopard-skin panty covered crotch of Bridget Everett. Here’s to seeing what’s next.

    Austin's own Rude Mechs are under The Method Gun in May.

    Rude Mechs: The Method Gun
      
    Courtesy Photo
    Austin's own Rude Mechs are under The Method Gun in May.
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    Salutations, Soon Youn

    Houston Ballet principal dancer announces retirement after 13 years

    Holly Beretto
    Jun 20, 2025 | 10:00 am
    ​Houston Ballet Principal Soo Youn Cho
    Photo by Amitava Sarkar (2016). Courtesy of Houston Ballet.
    Houston Ballet Principal Soo Youn Cho and in Theme and Variations.

    Houston Ballet principal dancer Soon Youn Cho has announced her retirement, after 13 years with the company.

    For more than a decade, she has captivated audiences with her elegance, emotional authenticity, and technical brilliance. Audiences have seen her in roles such as Aurora in The Sleeping Beauty, Kitri in Don Quixote, Odette/Odile in Swan Lake, the Sugar Plum Fairy in The Nutcracker, and Suzuki in Madame Butterfly, among many others.

    Cho’s retirement follows a period of recovery from spinal surgery prompted by chronic back issues that intensified during and after her pregnancy.

    "This decision was not made lightly, but with a great deal of reflection and acceptance over the past year," said Cho. “Since I first began ballet at the age of four, it has been the greatest love of my life. Even through pain and injury, I felt joy and purpose in every moment. I gave my best to every step along the way, and I now leave the stage with a peaceful heart and deep gratitude.”

    Cho further said that even before becoming pregnant, she had been managing chronic back issues throughout her career.

    “With dedication, careful conditioning, and the unwavering support of those around me, I was able to continue dancing for many years,” she said. “Despite my best efforts to recover, I’ve come to the difficult realization that I won’t be able to return to dancing at the level I once did. With a heavy but full heart, I’ve decided to retire from the stage.”

    Born in Korea and trained there, as well as in Canada and Germany, Cho danced with Opera Leipzig Ballet in Leipzig, Germany and the Tulsa Ballet in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where she was promoted to principal in 2010. She joined the Houston Ballet in 2012 as a demi soloist. She quickly rose through the ranks, promoted to soloist in 2014, then first soloist in 2016. In 2018, she became the Houston Ballet’s first Korean principal.

    Upon achieving the designation, she said, “I feel like I have made an important mark in history, along with other great dancers, for my people in such a great company.”

    Cho’s roles onstage reflected her wide artistic range and commitment to storytelling through dance. Her Houston Ballet colleagues and audiences admire and praise the passion and sincerity she brought to every performance. One of those, Cho’s portrayal of Suzuki in Madame Butterfly, is especially close to her heart, not only for its emotional depth but for the lifelong friendship it sparked with fellow principal Yuriko Kajiya.

    “Becoming part of this Company and working alongside such extraordinary people has been one of the greatest blessings and privileges of my life. I close this chapter with a full heart and immense appreciation for the art, the audiences, and the people who made it all so meaningful.”

    Cho said that while she doesn’t yet know what will come next, she departs the company filled with gratitude.

    “Looking back, I feel nothing but gratitude,” she said. “Gratitude for the incredible colleagues and mentors I’ve shared the studio with. Gratitude for the audiences who supported us performance after performance. And gratitude for the art form itself — so demanding, so beautiful, and so deeply rewarding. I leave the stage with peace in my heart. Because I gave everything I had to this journey, I can move forward without regret.”

    \u200bHouston Ballet Principal Soo Youn Cho
      

    Photo by Amitava Sarkar (2016). Courtesy of Houston Ballet.

    Houston Ballet Principal Soo Youn Cho and in Theme and Variations.

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