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    Choose your own adventure

    New digital project offers explorers the opportunity to create their own story

    Joel Luks
    Apr 13, 2014 | 11:30 am

    If you choose to go down this tunnel and into the dark alley, will you discover something extraordinary or will you encounter an assassin who's on a paid mission to erase your existence from history?

    Roused by feelings of panic and anxiety brought on by the good old days of choose-your-own-adventure books and video games such as the text-based interactive fiction setup of Zork for the Commodore 64, author Lacy M. Johnson imagined what would happen if she could add more experiential layers to the excitement of a scheme that turns a reader into a temporary protagonist.

    "We take users out of a digital place and put them in a real setting as they work their way through a story," Okun says.

    What if your life depended on avoiding being caught by the FBI while covertly chasing a mercenary goddess who's on a quest to decapitate exotic dancers at strip bars? How would you fare as the getaway driver for a brutal crew of thugs?

    In Johnson's first formal collaboration with her husband, Josh Okun, who's a multimedia artist, digital guru and executive creation director at The Company of Others, an engaging literary installation was fashioned to augment readers' relationship with the real world.

    The outcome is [the invisible city] project, a geolocation-based collection of narratives that launched as part of the University of Houston's Cynthia Woods Mitchell Center for the Arts inaugural CounterCurrent Festival, held through Sunday.

    "We take users out of a digital place and put them in a real setting as they work their way through a story," Okun says. "We are offering an experience that takes advantage of technology and, at the same time, is more analogous to reading books."

    The players

    Okun — whose professional work in digital media has largely been in advertising that results in a consumer making a purchase, clicking on a page or signing up for a mailing list — coded a mobile optimized website that's compatible with gadgets that are data and geolocation enabled. A participant simply clicks on a desired journey, gathers necessary equipment such as a reusable water bottle and compass and locates the start of the adventure. As readers select their own path, they are asked to complete activities as they travel to other destinations.

    "One of our goals is to disrupt the way people typically consume content on their mobile devices," Okun adds.

    "One of our goals is to disrupt the way people typically consume content on their mobile devices," Okun adds. "On technology, we are either looking for information or we are creating relationships with people, but we don't create relationships with places. The infrastructure of [the invisible city] allows participants to forge a relationship with a place in a way that's outside of the everyday norm."

    The collision of real and imagined elements mingling between a virtual and an actual milieu is something that's very personal for the creative duo. The two met on the now defunct social network Friendster. After getting married and starting a family, the couple moved to Kansas City to be closer to relatives. They returned to Houston three years ago.

    Johnson, a graduate of the University of Houston Creative Writing Program, was hired last year as the director of academic initiatives at the Mitchell Center, where she overseas the interdisciplinary art curriculum. She has authored Trespasses: A Memoir, a coming-of-age novel in which the characters have a love-hate relationship with a place that binds them, and The Other Side: A Memoir, which is based on Johnson's true account of surviving an abusive ex-boyfriend who held her captive in a soundproofed basement apartment with the intent of raping and killing her.

    Choose your own adventure

    For this project, Johnson's story is also titled The Invisible City. In an effort to compel readers to explore Houston's diverse social, economic and material wards, participants travel from Allen's Landing to the 69th Street Wastewater Treatment Plant, Brady's Landing, J. R. Harris Elementary School, Antioch Missionary Baptist Church, Founders Memorial Cemetery and the African American Library at the Gregory School, among others, in search for this elusive hidden ending point.

    In a second story, titled On the Lam, Hold the Lamb by Eric Higgins and Sophie Rosenblum, players learn what it means to be a vegetarian living in Houston.

    "I wanted to write a different kind of story, one that asked people to see the city in a slightly different way to consider how our choices as inhabitants, as consumers, as drivers and as people who walk around affect others around us," Johnson says. "I want people to think about our economic and environmental choices and how our behavior may affect our neighbors and the community at large."

    In a second story, titled On the Lam, Hold the Lamb by Eric Higgins and Sophie Rosenblum, players learn what it means to be a vegetarian living in Houston. This adventure begins at DiverseWorks and meanders to nine locations, including Double Trouble, Tacos A Go-Go and Radical Eats. Raj Mankad, editor of Cite magazine, and wife Miah Arnold, author of Sweet Land of Bigamy, are working on a naughtier third story in which the protagonist pursues a deity with a penchant for cutting people's heads off.

    "I think of our work also as a piece of theater," Johnson says. "You turn from a third person observing a story to partake in a genre in which you are the actor — you are the star. The difference is, unlike traditional theater, you have agency in a framework that retains all the nuances of great storytelling. That story can be set in the past, present or future."

    The launch of [the invisible city] is just the beginning. Johnson and Okun plan to open up the platform for writers globally.

    "My fantasy is having a geolocation-based story that moves people around the Texas, across continents, perhaps around the world," she says.

    "Who knows, one of these contributions could be the most expensive novel in the world to read."

    Josh Okun is a multimedia artist, digital guru and executive creation director at The Company of Others.

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    news/arts

    welcome to houston

    Musical theater veteran joins prominent Houston company

    Holly Beretto
    Dec 9, 2025 | 1:30 pm
    Stages Theater Valerie Rachelle headshot
    Courtesy of Stages
    Stages has named Valerie Rachelle as its new associate artist director.

    A Houston theater company is adding an accomplished artist to its ranks. Stages announced that Valerie Rachelle will be the company’s new associate artistic director beginning in January 2026.

    For more than a decade, Rachelle has been artistic director of the Oregon Cabaret Theatre in Ashland, Oregon, where she oversaw artistic vision and operations. That theater specializes in musical theater performances offered in a cabaret setting.

    Rachelle comes to Houston with a career spanning nearly 30 years as a director and choreographer. She has extensive experience in developing new musicals and plays for regional theaters and opera companies across the United States, including the Tony Award-winning Oregon Shakespeare Festival, the Utah Shakespeare Festival, and Sierra Repertory Theatre. She was appointed to her position at Stages following a nationwide search.

    “I’m beyond thankful for this opportunity to join this incredible company, and I’m excited to be a part of a creative entity that has a strong mission and vision as Stages,” Rachelle said in a statement.

    In her role with Stages, she will support artistic director Derek Charles Livingston with season planning and casting; liaise with artists, press, and staff; and coordinate day-to-day operations for the artistic department. She will also assist with crafting educational materials, direct and choreograph productions, and serve as the primary liaison with theatrical unions.

    “We are thrilled to welcome Valerie to Stages in this role,” said Livingston. “I have seen her work as a director and director choreographer — she's excellent. Those skills combined with her experience as a theatre artistic director and manager only further fortify Stages' commitment to artistic excellence and community engagement.”

    Born and raised in Eugene, Oregon, Rachelle began her career as a dancer and apprentice ballerina with the Eugene Ballet Company before earning her BFA in acting from California Institute of the Arts. She received her MFA in Directing from the University of California, Irvine. She has held teaching and directing positions at numerous institutions, including the University of Southern California, Southern Oregon University, Pacific Conservatory of the Performing Arts, and others. She has also served as a mentor through Statera Arts, an organization dedicated to gender equity in the arts.

    Rachelle teaches musical theater, auditioning, and singing at Southern Oregon University when she isn’t on the road as a freelance director and choreographer. She’s also a classically trained singer and toured the world with her parents and their illusionist show as a child.

    “Joining the team that has a long-standing reputation of excellence in theater is an honor,” Rachelle added.

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