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    see these shows

    Holiday-themed productions star in Houston's 11 best shows for November

    Tarra Gaines
    Nov 5, 2024 | 10:30 am

    Our long fall nights have arrived just in time for all the evenings we’re going to need to see some of the most eclectic theater of the year. Holiday favorites like A Christmas Carol and The Nutcracker take to stages across town, but we’ve also got lots of comedies from holiday heartwarming to the darkly funny social commentary. Meanwhile Broadway at Hobby yields a corny harvest, and we’ve got two immersive shows for those who want to get caught up in the action.

    The Endings from Strange Bird Immersive (ongoing through 2024)
    Though known as the company who ties immersive theater with escape room experiences, there’s no escaping (the dark fun) with this new show that makes life and death choices into an absurdist adventure. Consider yourself a player, actor, or audience member. Either way you become a job applicant at an organization that seems to have a very bad history of OSHA violations. Wearing a headset and guided by a narrator, each applicant will explore a ruined office space and the hallways of their own mind. Players make choices that take them down different branching narratives. The Endings boasts eleven different narratives and thirty-six possible endings, but no matter where the story takes each player, it always ends in their very own ludicrous death.

    Safe at Home at Schroeder Park, University of Houston’s baseball stadium (November 7-10)
    Baseball meets immersive theater in this unique production from UH’s School of Theatre & Dance. In this new play by Gabriel Greene and Alex Levy, a visiting guest artist at UH, the actors and sets act as a kind of set bases as the audience moves from one scene to the next within Schroeder Park to see a whodunit thriller unfold. Each scene ends with a cliffhanger urging the audience to literally move onward into the story.

    Set against the backdrop of Game 7 of the World Series, the play provides a voyeuristic look into complex issues of U.S. immigration policies, racial politics, and the intersection of personal ethics with media influences — all the while challenging societal perceptions.

    Playhouse Creatures from Lionwoman Productions (November 7-23)
    Is there a new queen of Houston’s theater jungle? We’ll find out as this prideful new company Lionwoman sets its debut production at the MATCH this month. It’s a thematically resonating choice of plays for a company on a mission to lift diverse voices, as this play by award-winning playwright April De Angelis tells the story of some of the first women actresses on the British stage.

    Set during the 1660s in Restoration London, when women were first allowed into acting professions, Playhouse Creatures focuses on the lives of five, real-world actresses of the time. These fierce and fascinating “creatures” relish their opportunity to work on stage and navigate the society and time into which they’ve been “plopped.” Though a popular play in the U.K, this will be the first Texas production.

    Love Bomb from Catastrophic Theatre (November 15-December 7)
    It wouldn’t be the Houston theater holiday season if Catastrophic wasn’t decking the halls with some likely absurdist, wild, and avant garde counter programming. This year it’s a world premiere devised musical.

    Conceived and directed by frequent Catastrophic guest artist Brian Jucha, this collaboration with the Catastrophic ensemble actors centers around taxi dancers, women in early 20th century dance halls who earned a living by ballroom dancing one song and one man at a time. Featuring songs from 1970’s singer-songwriter and cultural icon Melanie (a.k.a the First Lady of Woodstock), the experimental production will invite audiences into a dance hall where people will do anything to find love. Catastrophic says the rest is going to have to remain a surprise, and we can bet it will be.

    The Twelve Ways of Christmas at Ensemble Theatre (November 15-December 22)
    With a musical and moving focus on the word “ways,” this new production at Ensemble looks at the many ways people celebrate Christmas — with family, with friends, the holiday's religious significance for some, the wonder of being a child receiving gifts, and the longing of a soldier away at war. The show even tackles the experience of knowing grief during the holiday season. With book and and a jazzy score by artist Chika Kaba Ma’Atunde, the show should bring lots of music, laughs, and genuine feelings to our theatrical holidays.

    A Christmas Carol at Alley Theatre (November 15-December 29)
    The Alley world premiered this charming new production of the classic tale adapted by Alley artistic director Rob Melrose a few years ago, and it’s already a Houston holiday theater tradition. Melrose went back to Charles Dickens' original novella for inspiration. David Rainey is back as Scrooge with the rest of the resident acting company and Alley regulars playing all the ghosts and Dickensian characters. The Alley creative team and designers weave their own holiday magic alongside the actors in this production to create a music-filled Victorian wonderland with floating houses, intricate and sometimes spooky costumes, beautiful puppetry, wondrous stage illusions, and light snow for every performance.

    Shucked presented by Broadway at the Hobby Center (November 19-24)
    While many a traditional holiday show debuts this month, Broadway at Hobby isn’t quite done with its fall musical harvest, as it brings the Broadway smash musical Shucked to town. If legendary oldies Brigadoon and The Music Man ever had a Gen Z baby, that baby would be Shucked.

    In this award-winning show, travel to a lost, magical farming town that needs the help of a Florida (con)man to save its dying corn harvest. With an original book by Robert Horn and an original score by the Grammy Award–winning songwriting team of Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally that's filled with numbers like the “Corn” song, the “Corn (reprise)” song, and the finale showstopper “Corn Mix,” this is one musical that loves four things: love stories, down home dance numbers, corn, and every corny pun it can sow and reap.

    Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike from 4th Wall Theatre (November 22-December 15)
    While not a holiday homecoming, siblings reuniting to hilarious results is definitely a core narrative in Christopher Durang’s Tony-winning comedy that gets an up close and personal production from 4th Wall. The story follows two middle-aged siblings, begrudgingly named after Chekhov characters, who are living a static existence in Pennsylvania until their movie-star sister Masha arrives, accompanied by her attractive and younger lover, Spike. Add in a possibly clairvoyant housekeeper, a wannabe actress neighbor, and a costume party to bring out everyone’s best-worst behaviors as the characters lives get thrown into comic disarray.

    This all-in-the family production is directed by 4th Wall artistic director, Jennifer Dean and stars 4th Wall founders Philip Lehl and Kim Tobin-Lehl, along with some Houston favs. It should be a good pick for theater fans looking for a non-holiday comic treat. Small spoiler alert: Vanya and Sonia contains what is arguably one of the greatest comic monologue rants in the last 15 years of American theater, and we can’t wait to watch Lehl tackle it.

    Winter Solstice at Rec Room (November 23-December 14)
    Leave it to one of Houston’s smallest and most innovative theater companies to bring us a very different kind of awkward holiday family get-together with this play from award-winning German playwright, Roland Schimmelpfennig. On Christmas Eve, married couple Bettina and Albert get an unexpected surprise when Bettina’s mother brings a guest to dinner, a seemingly charming stranger she meets on the train. But charm can be deceiving. Rec Room says this sharp edged and sometimes experimental comedy plays with liberalism's inability to immunize itself against fascism’s rhetorical power in this wildly theatrical and inventive production.

    A Texas Carol: Part Deux at A.D. Players (November 29-December 22)
    A few years ago A.D. Players artistic producer Kevin Dean and executive artistic director Jayme McGhan created a new seasonal comedy for Houston with a decidedly east Texas twang. The holiday trials and tribulations of the dysfunctional but loving Dinkel family as they faced the death of their beloved matriarch made for a moving yet funny hit for the company.

    This month, A.D. Players debuts the world premiere sequel with the members of the Dinkel family returning, along with most of the original actors. Two years after the events of the original Texas Carol, the extended family gathers once more at Mee-Maw's beloved ranch on Christmas Day for more holiday mayhem, including a wedding, bickering relatives, budding romances, weather emergencies, visiting French Canadians, Texas hockey, a giant feral hog on the loose, and probably most volatile of all, college cousins on opposite sides of the UT and A&M divide. The company calls the show their zany and heartfelt ode to families who, despite their dysfunction, somehow manage to keep moving forward in love.

    The Nutcracker from Houston Ballet (November 29-December 29)
    Houston Ballet wraps up the year with Stanton Welch’s sugarplum dreamy Nutcracker Ballet. The full company of dancers will perform during the production’s run, joined by hundreds of young dancers — a mix of students from Houston Ballet Academy as well as locals from the annual open audition. Dancing to the beloved Tchaikovsky score, all our favorites — the Nutcracker Prince, Sugarplum Fairy, Rat King, and the international ambassadors — will take a turn at the magical winter court. In Welch’s imagining, Clara becomes the hero of this enchanting story where the all the animals dance as well as the weather, in the form of the loveliest snowflakes in Houston.

    \u200bThe Alley Theatre Presents A Christmas Carol
    Photo by Lynn Lane

    The Alley Theatre Presents A Christmas Carol.

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    best October art

    Where to see art in Houston now: 10 exhibits and shows opening in October

    Tarra Gaines
    Oct 9, 2025 | 1:48 pm
    Gyula Kosice, La ciudad hidroespacial (The Hydrospatial City) [detail], 1946–72, acrylic, paint, metal, and light, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, museum purchase funded by the Caroline Wiess Law Accessions Endowment. © Fundación Kosice – Museo Kosice, Buenos Aires
    Photo courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
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    The best art shows in October might also be the best explorations into scientific realms Houstonians will see all year. Nature, time, and the secret connective patterns of the universe seem to be major themes of artists and exhibitions this month. Art lovers can journey into orbital space habitats, dive into quantum landscapes, speed amid stars, and question the meaning of time.

    Head back to Earth for Menil television, a look at a Jewish family's evolution, and a massive art show in Memorial Park. Finally, Anya Tish Gallery says goodbye with an era-ending show.

    “Spectral Field” presented by Diverseworks (now through November 8)
    Explore the nature of everything with this plasma art installation from Austin-based, Iranian-American artist Anahita (Ani) Bradberry in the art gallery at MATCH. These large sculptural pieces attempt to imagine unfathomable vastness, or at least put the viewer in the contemplative space to explore the cosmic scales of stars, time, particles, displacement, loss, and interconnectedness. In keeping with the interconnectedness of Texas art and science, the installation will include aspects of Bradberry’s collaboration with scientist and Rice physics and astronomy professor, Christopher M. Johns-Krull, as part of the Open Interval Cohort — a collaborative program for artists, scientists, and art organizations — awarded by the Simons Foundation’s Science, Society and Culture division.

    “Fractal Worlds” at Artechouse (now through November)
    This Artechouse collaboration with cutting edge Dutch artist Julius Horsthuis takes guests on an adventure into the world of fractals, those complex patterns that repeat at every scale in nature from the branching of trees to our lungs, from the spiral of galaxies to sea shells. Along with this immersive cinematic journey, the exhibition will feature a Fractal Lab, with nine interactive works, an Infinity Room offering Horsthuis’ kaleidoscopic loops built from fractal formulas, and the meditative installation “Nascense,” Horsthius’ exploration of how nature is able to give rise to complexity.

    "Growing Up Jewish – Art & Storytelling” at Holocaust Museum Houston (now through December)
    This exhibition of acclaimed contemporary artist Jacquelline Kott-Wolle’s figurative paintings will chronicle one North American Jewish family’s story through five generations from 1925 to the present. Kott-Wolle’s parents and grandparents arrived in Canada in 1949 after the Holocaust, and their history has influenced the artist’s own identity and creative enterprises. The exhibition includes Kott-Wolle’s spoken stories about her family, as well as artwork depicting scenes of Jewish holidays, moments at Hebrew school, family vacations, and other milestone celebrations. Together they depict a rich mosaic of a family starting over in a new land, living, and thriving after surviving one of modern history’s darkest chapters.

    CraftTexas 2025 at Houston Center for Contemporary Craft (now through January 31, 2026)
    The 12th edition of this series will feature 50 works from 49 Texas craft artists. The craftwork in this year’s show will touch on a diversity of themes, like caregiving, expanded approaches to quilting, and landscape exploration.

    "The artists featured in CraftTexas 2025 demonstrate that craft remains a vital and relevant means of cultural expression, addressing contemporary concerns while honoring deep material traditions. These selected works collectively highlight that Texas continues to nurture some of the most compelling voices in contemporary craft,” juror Abraham Thomas, Curator of Modern Architecture, Design, and Decorative Arts at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art said in a statement.

    "Lines of Resolution: Drawing at the Advent of Television and Video” at Menil Drawing Institute (now through February 8, 2026)
    This extraordinary showcase at the Menil Drawing Institute will examine how artists responded to television's invasion into individual households from the 1950s into the height of the “network era” during the 80s. During this dawn and zenith of network programming power, the nature of people's responses to recorded imagery changed. Artists chronicled, were inspired, and sometimes rejected those changes.

    With a special focus on drawing, the exhibition features 50 works on paper, video, mixed media sculpture, and an immersive installation, created by 25 artists from 10 countries. Look for several works that have never been exhibited in the U.S., including the groundbreaking “raster pictures” of German artist Karl Otto Götz, and the room-sized installation “4 mensajes [4 messages],” by Peruvian artist Teresa Burga.

    “The works on display in Lines of Resolution present new opportunities that artists found for drawing through its relationship to and its interactions with the small screen,” explains Kelly Montana, the exhibition’s co-curator. “Some of the artists featured used the screen as a surface, a mirror, and as an interface — prefiguring our use of screens today. Others used drawing to critique and deconstruct the power television exerts over its audience.”

    Bayou City Art Festival in Memorial Park (October 10-12)
    The festival always gives art lovers and collectors a chance to meet artists, view original works, and purchase artwork from more than 270 artists across 19 disciplines, including world-class paintings, prints, jewelry, sculptures, and more at prices for everyone. Special treats this year include an interactive art portal from Meow Wolf Houston’s Radio Tave, the iconic “Be Someone” graffiti transformed in a sculpture, and art cars from Houston Art Car Klub. Also look for selfie stations, some mini-sized mini golf, a beer garden and wine bar, live entertainment throughout the day, and a food truck park.

    "Temporal Estrangement: A Path to No Place” at Lawndale Art Center (October 17-November 15)
    Inspired by traditions of Mahayana and Theravada Buddhist art, Black queer Southern dance performance (J-Setting) and Afrofuturist soundscapes Houston-based artist Christopher Paul explores ideas of changing identities through self-portrait collages. This multidisciplinary exhibition will feature projection mapping, video, sound, and works on paper and textile. Paul’s artistic ambition is to create a space of “no-place” that is neither here nor there, where time is unraveled and the self is dissolved into the cosmic unknown.

    "The House of Pikachu: Art, Anime, and Pop Culture” at Asia Society (October 17-March 15, 2026)
    Japanese animation, a.k.a anime, has taken over global popular culture and our imaginations in recent years. But some of the aspects of anime – particularly the flatness, saturated colors, and stylized features – have also been an inspiration and influence on artists for decades. This new exhibition will explore that influence of Japanese animation on contemporary art, presenting the work of 25 national and international artist including creators from Japan, Brazil, China, Mexico, Côte d'Ivoire, and Texas. Highlights of the exhibition include work from animator Yoshitaka Amano, renowned for his work on Speed Racer the Final Fantasy game series, Houston-based artist Gao Hang, who creates retro-futurist pieces that mine the language of '90s video games, and acclaimed artist Monsieur Zohore, who is creating for the exhibition the monumental painting “Houston, We Have A Problem.” Look for iconic Japanese artist Yoshitomo Nara’s large scale sculpture “Your Dog” on special lone for the show.

    “End of an Era” at Anya Tish Gallery (October 24-December 31)
    After the death in 2024 of its influential founder, Anya Tish, the gallery continued to present diverse and intriguing shows, but the time has come for the gallery to close. This final group show will be a chance for the gallery and the whole Houston art community to look back with artists and artwork that still define the present and the future of contemporary art. The show will feature artists who have shaped the gallery’s program and their expansive range of works, including figurative and abstract paintings, sculptures in various mediums, video art, light installations, animations, photography, and drawings.

    “Gyula Kosice: Intergalactic" at Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (October 26-January 25, 2026)
    From the opening of its doors five years ago, one of the stars of the MFAH’s Kinder Building has been international avant-garde artist Gyula Kosice’s masterpiece, “The Hydrospatial City,” the room-sized sculptural installation that depicts utopia orbital cities of the future. The mammoth installation will go on a journey this month as the centerpiece of “Intergalactic,” a traveling exhibition of the art and artistic experiments of pioneering sculptor, painter, poet, and theorist, Gyula Kosice. Co-organized by the MFAH and Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires, this first large-scale survey of Kosice’s art in the U.S. will feature more than 70 two-dimensional works and kinetic sculptures made of acrylic materials, air pumps, water, light components, and neon gas tubes.

    “Gyula Kosice’s radical vision continues to challenge us, with novel ideas about society, the environment and art that seem as forward-thinking now as they were more than a half-century ago,” MFAH’s curator of Latin American art, Mari Carmen Ramírez, said in a statement. “Kosice’s fascination with technology, and his commitment to expressing the possibilities of a hopeful future, led to the groundbreaking works of art that we are presenting.”

    Gyula Kosice, La ciudad hidroespacial (The Hydrospatial City) [detail], 1946\u201372, acrylic, paint, metal, and light, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, museum purchase funded by the Caroline Wiess Law Accessions Endowment. \u00a9 Fundaci\u00f3n Kosice \u2013 Museo Kosice, Buenos Aires
    Photo courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

    Museum of Fine Arts, Houston presents Gyula Kosice: "Intergalactic"

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