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    The Best Houston Holiday Shows

    15 cutting-edge, classic, and comical stage shows heat up Houston's holiday season

    Tarra Gaines
    Nov 26, 2018 | 9:15 am

    With the holidays upon us, it’s time to ask that eternal question once more. Sure we’ve loved spending quality time with all our visiting family and friends, but what do we do with them now? Have no fear, the Houston theater community has the answer with enough evenings and afternoon matinees shows to keep everyone entertained for two months.

    Whether you’re looking for a traditional holiday story, a comedy for the whole family or a bit of adult me-time, there’s the perfect show for everyone. We’ve made a list you can check twice for the best winter theater.

    Family fun

    A Christmas Carol - A Ghost Story of Christmas at Alley Theatre
    (runs through December 30)
    James Black gives Santa a run for hardest working man of the season. After 11 years behind the scenes directing a Christmas Carol, James Black returns to the spotlight and Bah Humbugs once more. Black, who also maintains his role as interim artistic director will direct the entire Alley company in this year’s Carol while also playing everyone’s favorite grouchy miser. Expect a rousing, hilarious, intimate, must-see holiday classic.

    Panto Star Force at Stages Theatre
    (runs through December 30)
    A long, time ago in a country far far away (England), the holiday tradition Panto was born, balancing both the adult and kid theatrical forces, while giving fairytales a contemporary irreverent spin. For ten years, Stages has taken that tradition and Texas-ified it for silly fun for the whole family. This year watch the a heroic rebel band try to save the galaxy from the powerful Emperor Snorkelfish and Dark Tater.

    It’s A Wonderful Life: A Live Radio Play from A.D. Players
    (November 28-December 23)
    Houston actors play 1940s radio actors playing the cast of It’s a Wonderful Life broadcast on the radio. This new take on the beloved, feel good holiday story of a life remembered and renewed gets a fun comic twist as we see how the radio magic happens or doesn’t when what can go wrong probably will while the show must go on over the airwaves.

    Elf the Musical at Queensbury Theatre
    (December 6-23)
    For those wanting some theatrical joy without a trip inside the Loop, Queensbury has you covered as they bring that singing human raised by Santa’s elves named Buddy to the CityCenter. Join Buddy’s musical journey south to find his bio dad and spread North Pole, Elfish earnestness to a jaded New York.

    Disney's Beauty and the Beast from Theatre Under the Stars
    (December 8-23)
    As TUTS celebrates their 50th season they bring back a beastly (but beautiful) blast from the past. The Disney mega musical had its first tryout in Houston as a TUTS presentation before it hit Broadway and the rest is theatrical history. With new direction and choreography from Broadway choreographer, Chris Bailey, look for an old favorite to get at fairytale, magical transformation.

    The Nutcracker Ballet from Houston Ballet
    (runs through December 29)
    Not technically theater, but our anticipation for Stanton Welch’s Nutcracker Balletreturning to the Wortham Center resembles a five-year-old waiting for Santa. We’ll join Clara and our favorite Prince (sorry Harry) as they battle a (frankly adorable) rat army and then journey to the Kingdom of Sweets for all the international dancing fun.

    Traditional twists

    The Ultimate Christmas Show (abridged) at Stages Theatre
    (runs through December 23)
    What to do when all the acts scheduled for the the Annual Holiday Variety Show and Christmas Pageant at St. Everybody's Non-Denominational Universalist Church can’t get to the theater due to Houston’s cold (almost 50 degrees) weather? Three hapless but enthusiastic emcees are forced to frantically improvise a show that embraces every winter holiday ever. With mixes of satire and slapstick Christmas Show proves our three hosts, Ronnie Blaine, Joseph Palmore and Gabriel Regojo are some of Houston’s ultimate performers.

    Christmas is Comin’ Uptown at Ensemble Theater
    (runs through December 30)
    Scrooge has a thousand faces every year and in this jazzy musical version, he’s a Harlem slumlord bent on foreclosing on a tenement house and church on Christmas. Will a gaggle of groovy ghosts change his mind and ways before dawn breaks? We’re betting there will be a bright Christmas for everyone in this tale.

    Pride and Prejudice at 4th Wall Theatre
    (November 29 – December 22)
    With an exuberant, unconventional adaptation by Kate Hamill, and a cast of only eight (there’s five Bennet sisters alone in P&P) we’re looking for something of a contemporary sensibility in this classic, though we expect love will prevail no matter what.

    Miss Bennet: Christmas at Pemberley at Main Street Theater
    (runs through December 23)
    Meanwhile in Rice Village, Main Street brings back their holiday hit from last year, the Lauren Gunderson and Margot Melcon penned sequel to Pride and Prejudice that gives the bookish sister Mary her own love story and flighty sister Lydia who cause all the commotion in Austen’s original gets a nice bit of redemption. A sweet, funny holiday treat with some nutritional value of sisterly love, we can see why Main Street brought it back for 2018.

    Hansel and Gretel at Rec Room
    (December 6-23)
    Last year the sold out show for the season was this innovative adaptation of the classic Englebert Humperdinck fairytale opera. With a stark and scary forest set surrounding an audience of about 20 and a witch throwing baking ingredients in everyone’s hair, the show became intimate, in-your-face opera at its liveliest. The show expands this year to allow more people into each performance, but we’re betting the intensity will remain on high.

    Naughty nights

    A Drag Christmas Carol at Obsidian Theater
    (November 29-December 15)
    The ghosts of Christmas go glam instead of ghoulish as a compassionless politician gets, well, dragged into a new outlook by a group of working-it queenly ghosts in this original jukebox Christmas musical from Rhett Martinez and the gang at Obsidian Theater. Probably not your grandpa’s Dickens.

    Who’s Holiday! at Stages Theatre
    (December 5-30)
    In this decidedly adult show, Cindy Lou Who, the adorable tike who saved Christmas from the Grinch, has reached 40, lives in a trailer on Mount Crumpit and boy has she seen some Seussicial shit in her time. Houston fav Bree Welch plays the bawdy, outrageous Cindy Lou, who has quite the story for you.

    Edgy, alternative shows

    First Suburb from Catastrophic Theatre
    (runs through December 9)
    There’s not a Claus or Scrooge in sight in this world premiere from Catastrophic Theatre by their playwright in residence, Chana Porter. Billed as comedy, though knowing Catastrophic probably an absurdist one, the play explores the suburban world of five preteens living in a new planned community in the early '90s, so before they would be classified as tweens. The Catastrophic regulars playing the adolescents should make for quite a story.

    The Flick from Horse Head Theatre at Houston Warehouse Studios
    (November 30-December 15)
    Annie Baker's Pulitzer Prize-winning dark comedy explores the lives of three 20-something co-workers turned friends, who keep the movies going in a run-down movie palace. Horse Head has a history of creating unusual, immersive sets for many of their shows, so we’re looking forward to seeing them turn the 100-year-old studio space on the east side into a the interior of a movie house.

    The Pride and Prejudice story continues at Main Street with Miss Bennet: Christmas at Pemberley.

    Main Street Theater presents Miss Bennet: Christmas at Pemberley - Skyler Sinclair
      
    Photo by Pin Lim
    The Pride and Prejudice story continues at Main Street with Miss Bennet: Christmas at Pemberley.
    theaterholidaysdance
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    series/holiday-happenings-houston-2018

    See these shows

    World premieres and a modern Hamlet headline Houston's 12 best new theater shows

    Tarra Gaines
    May 2, 2025 | 2:02 pm
    Open Dance Project presents Panopticon
    Photo by Lynn Lane
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    May is set to thrill Houston audiences, as some theater companies end their 2024-25 seasons with their biggest shows of the season. Look for new spins on classics, plus some dramatic and lavish world premieres. From danced dystopias to Jack the Ripper, the hottest romances to convenient comedy, cake and coffee with friends to tiki bar mai tais with friends, we’ve got the most delicious shows to savior this spring.

    Panopticon from Open Dance Project (May 2-10)
    For their 10th anniversary season, Houston’s source for truly innovative immersive dance is revisiting some of their most provocative shows that invite audiences to walk through danced worlds. First up, Panopticon sets audiences into a futuristic dystopian society where everything is regimented and monitored, even joy and sexual attraction. The audience takes on the role of visitors from the outside “Savage” lands, a place that still offers moments of privacy and spontaneous human emotions. During our tour of Panopticon, we walk amidst the moderated, regulated citizens to view their daily lives. Perhaps we’ll discover two would-be lovers struggling with their desire for physical and emotional intimacy in a world where deep, human connection is forbidden. Open Dance Project once again offers dance storytelling at its most intimate.

    Denise Fennell’s Lessons Learned at Stages (May 2-11)
    In addition to their fun, eclectic mix of comedy, drama, and musicals, for their 2024-25 season Stages brought in comedy fav Denise Fennell for an add-on season of four Late Nite Catechism shows. Now that she’s dispensed sisterly schooling for summer, Halloween, Christmasm and wedding season, this one-woman-show phenomenon takes off her habit to teach us some real life lessons she’s learned as an artist, performer, and writer. Drawing from personal experiences and observations, Fennell weaves together hilarious tales of everyday life, showcasing her talent for finding humor in the ordinary.

    Hamlet from 4th Wall Theatre (May 2-24)
    You’ve never seen Shakespeare’s masterpiece done this way before. Using a directorial vision first conceived by the innovative New York theater company Bedlam, this stripped down and raw Hamlet calls for a cast of only four actors. Wesley Whitson tackles the role of the conflicted Prince Hamlet with Christy Watkins, Philip Hays, and 4th Wall co-founder Philip Lehl jumping in and out of around 30 roles between them, including furniture. The other 4th Wall co-founder, Kim Tobin-Lehl, directs this greatest of tragedies.

    Primary Trust at Alley Theatre (May 2-25)
    This recent Pulitzer Prize-winning show by Eboni Booth is making its Houston debut. The play explores the inner and outer lives of Kenneth, a lonely 38-year-old man who works in a bookstore in a small New York town. His one after-work joy is sipping on mai tais at the local tiki bar with his friend Bert. But after being laid off from his long-time job, he is forced to make changes in his life of comfortable routine. This tender comedy cherishes the intimate moments in any life where every choice matters and every connection holds the power to create change.

    Coconut Cake at Ensemble Theatre (May 9-June 1)
    Ensemble partners with several prestigious theaters across the U.S. to produce this new play by acclaimed playwright Melda Beaty as a “rolling” world premiere. The show has already won awards for giving authentic voice to a group of retired Black men who meet every week for coffee at a local restaurant. The dramatic and comic play gives audiences a seat at the table to listen in as these men talk about their wives, families, and the latest neighborhood gossip. But when a mystery woman moves into the abandoned house down the street, with her Creole wiles, tempting coconut cake, and medicine cabinet secrets, the men find their daily talks and perhaps quiet, retired lives might change forever.

    Bug from Dirt Dogs (May 16-31)
    Having treated Houston audiences to a standout production of the Tracy Letts contemporary classic August: Osage County two years ago, Dirt Dogs goes back to the Letts well for this devastating earlier work that explores the darkness in the human mind. Bug's exploration of conspiracy theories and paranoia might seems just as timely today as it did in the late 90s. A lonely waitress and veteran drifter find unexpected love as they meet regularly in a seedy Oklahoma City motel room. But as their affair continues, mysterious bugs begin to take over their space. Are they simple pests or could they be the result of military experiments? The couple’s fears soon over take them and disrupt any attempt at normalcy.

    Kim’s Convenience at Main Street Theater (May 17-June 15)
    The international hit Canadian television and Netflix comedy began as an Ins Choi play about the Kims, a Korean-Canadian family running a neighborhood convenience store in Toronto. While contending with new luxury buildings going up around the convenience store and a Walmart preparing to move in, the Kims also must manage their traditional expectations for their children. Their daughter and son are very much a product of their modern, Canadian upbringing.

    Meanwhile, when Mr. Kim receives an unexpected offer for his property, he has a difficult decision to make. Should he take the money and give in to developers or convince his daughter to follow in his footsteps and run the family business? This Main Street production is the first time Houston will get a chance to see the original stage play that started the Kim’s Convenience streaming sensation and changed some of the rules of situation comedies.

    In the Heights from Theatre Under the Stars (May 20-June 1)
    With music and lyrics by Hamilton author Lin-Manuel Miranda and book by Quiara Algeria Hudes, In the Heights is set over three days in the Washington Heights neighborhood in NYC. Narrated by bodega owner Usnavi, the show follows the daily struggles and celebrations of the people in Usnavi’s neighborhood, as some of them question what home means to them. During these few days, there’s news of a winning lottery ticket and then an electrical blackout ends up shedding new light on family and romantic relationships. The show touches on issues of immigration, assimilation, gentrification, and even the high price of college education, making Heights just as relevant as when it debuted on Broadway in 2008. Yet, it’s the rich lives and songs of the characters that will bring the TUTS 2024-25 season to close on such a joyful note.

    Private Lives at Alley Theatre (May 23-June 15)
    Though first staged in 1930, the reason that this Noël Coward classic comedy has withstood the test of time is that the show’s witty, central couple became a model for almost a century of sexy, bickering lovers to appear on stage and screen afterwards. To keep it fresh, the Alley gives Private Lives a tango spin, moving the sophisticated comedy from Europe to South America. When divorced couple Elyot and Amanda accidentally find themselves honeymooning with their new spouses in adjacent rooms, sparks fly and tempers flare in a whirlwind of passion and humor. The Alley brings back acclaimed director KJ Sanchez to add that spicy twist to the relationships, transporting audiences to 1930s Argentina and Uruguay.

    Toros at Rec Room (May 24-June 14)
    After giving Houston audiences an original and reinvigorated take on the American classic Death of a Salesman last month, Rec Room gets contemporary with this play about a trio of aimless twenty-somethings. Toro is back in Madrid hanging out with his high school friends, Juan and Andrea (and Juan’s dying golden retriever, Tica). They spend their weekends exactly like they used to: chain-smoking pitis in Juan’s garage, listening to Juan’s latest DJ mix, and going out to clubs around Madrid. As sexual tensions emerge and old power dynamics get challenged, these third-culture-kids struggle to grow up, take responsibility, and find a version of reality to believe in. This is a Rec production so look for a surreal twist to all this Gen Z angst, perhaps in the role that veteran Houston actor Greg Dean is playing.

    Raymonda from Houston Ballet (May 29-June 8)
    Dance lovers have certainly been anticipating this show ever since HB announced artistic director Stanton Welch would be creating a world premiere new vision for this most traditional classical ballet. The original late 19th century storybook ballet, choreographed by Marius Petipa to the music of Russian composer Alexander Glazunov, is rarely staged in its entirely, lacking some of the drama that modern audiences crave. Though inspired by Petipa, Welch has moved the original story set in the Middle Ages to a more fairytale realm.

    In Welch’s version, the lovely young Raymonda and her sisters are destined to be betrothed to dukes from various countries. But Raymonda's heart already belongs to another. An evil plot by the queen’s trusted advisor may change the destiny of Raymonda and her one true love. Along with HB’s world class dancers, look for lavish sets and costumes by acclaimed Italian designer Roberta Guidi di Bagno. Raymonda is sure to become a treasured classic amongst Houston Ballet’s illustrious repertoire.

    Let. Her. Rip. at Stages (May 30-June 22)
    When Stages announced their 2024-25 season, they left the final pick to the incoming artistic director, Derek Charles Livingston, who has chosen this world premiere thriller play by Maggie Lou Rader. It’s a work he helped to develop in his previous position as the director of new plays at the Utah Shakespeare Festival.

    Houston will be the very first to see the first full production of this intriguing tale of camaraderie, activism, and ferocity which lies in the crosshairs of London’s Match Women labor movement and the Jack the Ripper murders of 1888. Labor leaders Em, Liza, and Nana are endeavoring to make the East End safer for women and all working people when the headlines move away from their accomplishments to the man murdering women of their community. They must reignite their fight against deadly misogyny, police brutality, and their own personal demons. But as tensions come to a head, who will make the final rip?

    Open Dance Project presents Panopticon
      
    Photo by Lynn Lane
    Open Dance Project presents Panopticon
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