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    Best, Worst, and Wildest

    Best, Worst, and Wildest happenings on the Houston theater scene in 2016

    Tarra Gaines
    Dec 27, 2016 | 1:50 pm

    Though 2016 will probably not make many people’s list of great years, for Houston theater these 12 months brought some stellar drama and comedy, while many companies settled down after all the venue and name changes of the past few years. Instead of looking for that one absolute best play or performance, I’d like to take a backward glance at some of the trends and changes in Houston theater as well offering a few of my own–completely made up–awards for some of the quirkiest fun we enjoyed of staged (and mostly) intentional drama of 2016.

    The Playing with Your Theater Award
    While Houston might not readily dive into the kind of immersive theater so popular in New York that requires audience members to don masks and follow Lady Macbeth into her bathroom, we do dip our toes into the immersive theater tub now and then.

    One of my favorite audience participation pieces came from the visiting Big Dance Theater and their work, This Page Left Intentionally Blank, at the Menil Collection during the CounterCurrent Festival. Turning the traditional docent tour into a part wacky-docent characters study, part art history lecture, and topping in off with an participation dance performance, This Page allowed audiences to discover the comedy and the theatricality of a walk through any museum.

    Best Real and Reimagined History on Stage
    For their 2016 seasons, many Houston artistic directors picked plays chronicling the real lives large and small that created history, and many Houston actors gave their best performances playing those kings, queens, presidents, saints, martyrs and philosophers. I can’t recount them all, but also can’t think back on all the extraordinary performances this year without remembering Shawn Hamilton’s radiant Martin Luther King Jr in All the Way (Alley Theatre), Bree Welch’s dizzy but strangely wise 21st century version of Marie Antoinette in The Revolutionists (Main Street Theater) and Carolyn Johnson’s portrayal of Judy Garland as an almost Shakespearean tragic hero in The End of the Rainbow (Stages Theatre).

    Best: Maybe We Should Have Called Each Other to Compare Outfits
    When Catastrophic Theatre and 4th Wall proved they were fools for Sam Shepard love by scheduling Buried Child (Catastrophic) and True West (4th Wall) last fall and even opening within a day of each other, it could have become Shepard overkill, but their unique visions of such different plays instead gave Houston audiences a chance to savor Shepard’s range as an American master.

    Worst: Maybe We Should Have Called Each Other to Compare Outfits
    On the other hand, even Shakespeare himself might have found three separate, major productions of Much Ado About Nothing in five months not as we like it. I love Benedict and Beatrice as much as the next arts writer, but there’s such a thing as too much ado.

    The Steve Buscemi “How do you do, fellow kids?” Award for age-blind casting
    Not even the wondrous, foul-mouthed, demonically possessed hand puppet and fascinating comic exploration on the nature of good, evil and teen angst could distract from the distraction of 30-something-looking actors playing seventeen-year-olds in Hand to God at the Alley Theatre. And it’s not like Houston is devoid of young actors who look like teens. (Case in point: the heart-wrenching performances from Melissa Molano and Mateo Mpinduzi-Mott in Stages’ production of I and You.)

    The Working It Super Model Acting Award
    2016 theater had its share of crazy costumes, but I’d say in my very unscientific survey no one had to wear his share of them more than Kyle Sturdivant. Whether he was playing a horny Thanksgiving turkey, one-legged man who lost his artificial leg, the good witch of Oztin or Panto Dorothy’s Auntie Ann Richards (eat your heart out Holland Taylor), no one worked a costume across a stage like Sturdivant.

    Best Dystopia
    If you feel like 2016 was one for the wretched record books you weren’t alone, and several theatrical tales of the future perhaps reflected the pessimism some feel for the present. Among the bleakest yet most beautiful, was the Alley’s production of Jennifer Haley’s The Nether. Told like a noir detective story, The Nether depicted a dark, colorless future reality where people escape to a seductive virtual world that turns the search for love into horror. Let’s hope Nether is but a warning not a foretelling.

    Best Out of Town Guests
    Local theaters have had quite a few successes bringing in other companies to inhabit their stages for a time, and this year was no exception as 4th Wall hosted New York’s Bedlam Theatre in their production of Shaw’s Saint Joan. With only four actors playing all the roles and times in the play that required the audience to move into different rooms and different seats, this Saint Joan became theater raw and concentrated. Bedlam took Shaw’s play and illustrated how its questions of leadership, faith and fame are just as relevant today, all the while giving audiences a new perspective on their role as silent witnesses.

    Most Mysterious Backstage Drama
    Theatre Under the Stars certainly had some upheaval behind the curtain as its CEO John Breckenridge retired in the spring and soon after artistic director Bruce Lumpkin seemed to disappear from the TUTS team with no notice. Then, a special position of artistic advisor was created for Sheldon Epps who came on board and quickly changed half of the already announce 2016-2017 season. And while whatever was going on backstage might have enough fodder for a fine musical in a decade, so far the onstage changes have produced some mighty fine shows, including In the Heights and a gorgeous holiday rendering of Into the Woods. Now, if TUTS will only make some definite announcement about the series formally known as TUTS Underground.

    Best Musical You Should Absolutely Not Take Your Mom To See
    Standing Room Only production of Silence! The Musical, the musical version of The Silence of the Lambs with a singing lamb chorus and a showstopper from Hannibal about smelling Clarice’s (let’s say) flower, was the don’t-miss musical of the year that should not be mentioned in polite company, ever.

    Saddest Ending and One Happy Second Chance
    Unfortunately, we had to say goodbye in 2016 to Texas Repertory Theatre Company after 11 years of bringing quality shows to audiences not wanting to make the trip inside the Loop. On a happier note, after one last curtain call at the Kaleidoscope Theater in central downtown, several members of that creative team moved a bit east and just this month opened the EaDo Playhouse.

    Here’s hoping in 2017 we’ll be living in interesting theatrical times not as a curse but a blessing.

    As Marie Antoinette, Bree Welch gave life to the revolution in Main Street's production of The Revolutionists.

    Main Street Theater presents The Revolutionists
    Photo courtesy of Blueprint Film Co.
    As Marie Antoinette, Bree Welch gave life to the revolution in Main Street's production of The Revolutionists.
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    Best April Art

    9 can't-miss art events and openings happening in Houston this month

    Tarra Gaines
    Apr 8, 2026 | 9:15 am
    Art Car parade
    Courtesy of the Orange Show Center for Visionary Art
    Art Car weekend returns April 9-12.

    April is the perfect month to head outdoors and even underground for great art across Houston. The Orange Show brings days of moving art and one of the best parties of the year, as the Art Car Parade rolls into town. The Woodlands hold their own annual outdoor art festival, and the Buffalo Bayou Cistern begins its 10 year anniversary a little early with their next expansive installation. But if you prefer your art more indoors, the Menil, HMAAC, the Asia Society, and Sawyer Yards have vivid new shows to see.

    “Allegiance to the People” at Houston Museum of African American Culture (now through June 6)
    This first Texas solo exhibition of Afro-Caribbean American, multidisciplinary, portrait artist Kandy G. Lopez will showcase pieces of extraordinary fiber art. Lopez uses color and layered textiles to create dynamic portraits that capture the complexity and vibrancy of Caribbean and urban American everyday life. HMAAC notes that the people Lopez portrays in her work are not symbolic archetypes but real individuals she has encountered. Each portrait reflects the subjects' lived experience, while embodying cultural memory, resilience, vulnerability, and perhaps a little swagger.

    “World: Photographs” at Houston Museum of African American Culture (now through June 6)
    Dr. Jayasimha N. Murthy is is a board-certified pulmonologist and sleep medicine specialist practicing in Houston, but he’s also a world traveler and photographer. In this HMAAC exhibition, Murthy uses his photographic artistic skill to document his journeys, capturing moments where natural beauty, architecture, and atmosphere converge. Exhibition co-curator, John Guess, Jr., states he encountered Murthy’s work on the walls of Methodist Hospital and thought they deserved to be seen by a wider audience at the museum. The curators note that Murthy’s photographs reflect a careful awareness of light, color, and composition, while often catching fleeting atmospheric conditions that transform familiar landscapes into something extraordinary.

    "Our Road Home: Gallery As Instrument” at Fresh Arts’ Winter Street Studio (April 9-May 29)
    For this latest installment of Fresh Arts’ Space Taking Artist Residency initiative, director, choreographer, and ethnochoreologist Jakari Sherman will turn the gallery into a place for performance and sound art. Sherman plans to transform the space bi-weekly to feature rotating exhibitions of scenic design artwork, digital projection landscapes, documentary film screenings, and creative writing installations, all which reveal the collaborative process behind theatrical creation. Sherman hopes viewers and visitors will see how art can become homemaking as they experience weeks of performance, visual art, dance workshops, artist talks, and community gatherings.

    Art Car Parade and Festival across Houston (April 9-12)
    Houston’s own keeping-it-weird Orange Show presents almost a week of activities and celebrations around the internationally famous Art Car Parade. Thursday brings the Main Street Drag and its mini parades as the art cars cruise to locations across Houston, visiting with individuals that may not have the opportunity to attend the actual parade, such as schools, nursing homes, developmental centers, and hospitals. Later that day, Discovery Green and Avenida Houston become a preview art parking lot for over 100 art cars. Come out for a close look at the cars, meet the artists, and enjoy live music and art-making fun for the whole family. Friday night, don’t miss the wild costumes, more live music, interactive and performance art, food, drinks, and a huge selection of illuminated and fire-breathing art cars at the annual Legendary Art Car Ball, this year in downtown Houston.

    Saturday brings the big parade, as 250 rolling art/auto masterpieces cruise through downtown and along Allen Parkway. On Sunday, the weekend ends with the Art Car Awards Ceremony back at the Orange Show Headquarters. Over $16,000 will be distributed to Art Car artists, schools, and nonprofit groups in various categories through a judging process that rates entries based on their creativity, artistic techniques, and inspiration.

    Woodlands Waterway Arts Festival at Town Green Park (April 10-12)
    Set along the banks of The Woodlands Waterway in Town Green Park, festival guests will have the opportunity to enjoy a vibrant outdoor gallery with authors, music, food, and kids' activities while shopping for art created by local, national, and maybe even some international artists working in a variety of mediums. For those wanting some performance art amid their visual art, look for multiple stages with live music concerts, dance performances, poetry readings, and storytelling throughout the 3 days of the festival.

    "Outerworlds" at Asia Society (April 15-August 2)
    Born in Baghdad and now making a home in Louisville, Kentucky, artist Vian Sora has had her artwork showcased in museums around the world. This multi-venue mid-career survey exhibition will feature 24 of Sora’s paintings which allow viewers to follow her evolution as an artist who uses bold, abstract images to depict tumultuous events of her own life.

    Her artwork also depicts ancient Mesopotamian history and Iraq’s diverse natural landscapes, including its deserts, rivers, and archeological sites. Using vibrant colors, Sora splashes, pours, and sprays her paints onto canvases, sometimes creating upwards of 50 layers of oil and acrylic paint in a single work. Sora says that this she wants this multilayered effect to give concrete form to the chaos of life, and that the paintings reference the cycles of life and evolution in biology as well as the history of her homeland.

    “Second Nature” at Asia Society (April 15-October 4)
    Look for acclaimed sculptor Nevine Mahmoud's carved stone objects throughout the Asia Society’s public spaces, offering uncanny surprises as visitors wander the building. Mahmoud uses cutting-edge robotic processes with hand-carving techniques to shape stone, a "natural" material rendered otherworldly into both recognizable and strange shapes. Some pieces included in the scattered exhibition will be jumbo-sized fruits dripping with glass, a contorted marble faun, and children's toys that have been immortalized in white alabaster. The Asia Society notes that though Mahmoud’s subjects range from the luscious to the surreal to the playful, her sculptures play with our understanding of nature.

    "The Hour Of The Dog” at Menil Collection (April 24-October 11)
    The Menil gets immersive with this monumental, six-channel video and sound installation by the Ghanaian-born British artist, Sir John Akomfrah. Co-commissioned by the Menil and the Baltimore Museum of Art, this new work touches on some of the ideals of the museum's founders John and Dominique de Menil, who believed art can reveal injustice while also inspiring social change. Running a little over 50 minutes, “Hour of the Dog” explores the history of the Civil Rights movement in the American South from 1954 to 1963, examining many of the nonviolent methods used, especially marches, protests, boycotts, and voter registration efforts. To create the encompassing installation, Akomfrah used archival documentary footage, oral histories, newsreels, and photography, while also creating new footage with actors on a soundstage.

    “Activism is not confined to what happens in the streets; it's bound up with who and how we remember, who and how we mourn, and how we dream forward,” Akomfrah said in a statement. “The dreams and despairs of 1960s activists still pulse through our contemporary condition, waiting for new forms, new utterances. Returning to that moment, to those voices, is less about nostalgia and more about listening again — and differently.”

    “Undercurrents” at the Buffalo Bayou Cistern (April 24-January 27)
    To celebrate the Cistern’s 100th Anniversary and 10-Year Mark as one of the world’s most unique public art venues, Buffalo Bayou Partnership presents this new immersive installation. Created by acclaimed multi-media artist Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, “Undercurrents” weaves together light, generated from a mile’s worth of LED devices suspended like a web just above the reflective surface of the Cistern’s waterline, with the recorded voices of five Houston writers, including Aris Kian, Jennifer Teets, Martha Serpas, Nick Flynn, and Roberto Tejada. But the installation will constantly evolve and change as visitors can also record their own voices and messages into intercoms along the path. Their voices will be mixed with the recorded writers. Together, the voices will trigger the light patterns.

    “As our first truly interactive installation in the Cistern, ‘Undercurrents’ offers visitors not only something to behold, but something to become a part of,” said BBP's Vice President of External Affairs, Karen Farber. “It is such an honor to witness Rafael’s inventive studio responding to the unique conditions of the Cistern and we can’t wait for audiences see – and hear – the space through this new artwork.”

    Art Car parade
    Courtesy of the Orange Show Center for Visionary Art
    Art Car weekend returns April 9-12.
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