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    a fall theater pre-preview

    Alanis Morissette, The King of Pop, and more must-see shows tease Houston's hottest early theater openings

    Tarra Gaines
    Aug 14, 2023 | 3:20 pm

    August has become a very special time of year for theater and performing arts lovers. Yes, it’s a bit of a dark month on stages throughout the city, but it also brings Houston Theater Week with its BOGO (buy one, get one free) and other pricing specials on many performing arts companies’ season.

    To celebrate, we thought a fall theater preview in order with a special roundup of those companies who have made formal announcements of their 2023-2024 seasons. We’re also noting those holiday shows already in the works.

    Mark calendars (especially September 22) for the opening shows and dates for each company and let’s grab those tickets for a fall filled with drama, music, comedy and several world premieres.

    Theatre Under the Stars opens with Jagged Little Pill (August 29)

    Once again, TUTS has one of the busiest falls in Houston with four shows before the year’s end.

    TUTS opens the season presenting this touring production of Jagged Little Pill, the Broadway sensation that married a contemporary family story with the music of Grammy winning Alanis Morissette, including many of the songs from one of a best-selling album.

    With bloody-good timing for Halloween, TUTS then celebrates Sondheim with Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street. Pivoting for the holidays, they’ll world premiere a musical by artistic director Dan Knechtges, The Ugly X-Mas Sweater on the Hobby Center Zikha Stage. (We hear rumors of so-ugly-it’s-beautiful costuming and even audience participation for that one.)

    Families will then have a (royal) ball with their production of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Cinderella. Look for a huge cast, including budding stars from their schools, for this fairytale happy ending.

    On the Verge Theatre opens with Far East (August 31)

    Heidi Blickenstaff, Allison Sheppard and Jena VanElslander Jagged Little Pill TUTS
    Photo by Matthew Murphy/MurphyMade
    Heidi Blickenstaff, Allison Sheppard and Jena VanElslander (left to right) star in the Tony and Grammy award-winning "Jagged Little Pill," coming to Houston via TUTS,

    One of Houston’s newest companies hasn’t officially announced their full season, but we do know they open this A.R. Gurney classic set in Japan. Following an American man's journey through a foreign land, Far East grapples with the complexities of cultural differences and human connections.

    During their inaugural season, On the Verge founders Bruce Lumpkin and Ron Jones set each show on a different stage or non-traditional location through its first season, but their second season begins by partnering with Alta Arts. The Bellaire-area interdisciplinary art center looks to be the company’s home for its next productions.

    Houston Ballet opens with A Midsummer Night’s Dream (September 8)

    Always theatrical, HB unleashes Shakespeare’s fairy vs. human hijinks danced to the music of Felix Mendelssohn, Gyorgy Ligeti, and traditional organ music.

    Originally created by the great choreographer John Neumeier in 1977 for Hamburg Ballet, this Midsummer Night’s Dream has been performed by companies around the globe, but HB became the first North American company to perform the distinguished work in 2014.

    Later in the month, the fall mixed rep program, Tutu, brings three distinct dances to the Wortham stage: HB artistic director Stanton Welch’s playful Tu Tu; George Balanchine patriotic Stars and Stripes, a HB premiere; and a world premiere ballet by internationally renowned Colombian-Belgian choreographer, Annabelle Lopez Ochoa.

    As always, the company wraps up–and puts a bow–on the year with Stanton Welch’s sugarplum dreamy Nutcracker Ballet.

    Stages opens the fall season with POTUS: Or, Behind Every Great Dumbass Are Seven Women Trying to Keep Him Alive (September 1)

    Technically, Stages began its 23-24 season with their summer hit Always… Patsy Cline, which is scheduled to get “Crazy” for many more months. But fall starts with POTUS. This Broadway smash political farce about the women who keep the world running — when a scandal-ridden president sends his administration into chaos.

    With three stages, the company has plenty of room to also bring a little mystery to spooky season, with Switzerland (October 12). The psychological thriller turns the real and Texas-born author of the “Tom Ripley” books, Patricia Highsmith, into a character in this twisty tale.

    For the holidays, Stages offers their latest new Texas panto, Panto Alicia in Wonderland, created by Houston’s own Theatx theater company and featuring song parodies of Ricky Martin, Selena, Bad Bunny, and more.

    A.D. Players opens with Forever Plaid (September 6).

    Death takes a hilarious holiday in the first two productions of A.D. Players new season.

    An audience-favorite dressed in family-friendly nostalgia, Forever Plaid actually has one of the most quirky books of any jukebox musical out there.

    Set in both the 1950s and a melodious hereafter, the show follows the life and death of a boy-group wannabes on the way to their first big gig. The Plaids die in a collision with a bus filled with Catholic schoolgirls on their way to see The Beatles. At the moment their careers and lives end, the story of Forever Plaid begins as they get a chance to return from the great beyond to perform one time.

    In November, the company brings back A Texas Carol, their outrageous, homegrown holiday show that they world-premiered last year. Written by executive artistic director Jayme McGhan, this Carol tells the story of a Texas family headed to Mee-Maw Jane’s East Texas ranch for what might be her last Christmas.

    The only problem: when the first grandchild arrives, Mee-Maw has already passed. Now, how to keep that fact (and her body) from the rest of the family and save Christmas?

    Main Street Theater opens with What the Constitution Means to Me (September 16)

    In this Tony-nominated play – which, we think, should have won – playwright Heidi Schreck contemplates what the U.S Constitution has meant to her as an individual woman, and to what it means to the world in the 21st century.

    The one-woman show becomes a two-women improvisational debate as Heidi and a teen question whether the Constitution needs a major overhaul. Schreck played herself on Broadway, but for this Houston debut, MST’s own Shannon Emerick plays “Heidi.”

    For the holidays, MST goes back to the world of Jane Austen, with Georgiana and Kitty: Christmas at Pemberley, the third and latest show of Lauren Gunderson and Margot Melcon’s Pride and Prejudice sequels. These Christmas at Pemberley plays have been a holiday hit for MST, so we’re can’t wait for the Regency romance with a 21st-century sense and sensibility that brings Mr. Darcy’s younger sister, Georgiana, and the youngest Bennet sister into the mix.

    4th Wall Theatre opens with The Pavilion (September 22)

    Craig Wright’s The Pavilion, a bittersweet love story with a cosmic perspective has been a staple for theaters across the country — as well as a juicy part for actors.

    Houston fave Luis Galindo — who has graced almost every local stage — and 4th Wall’s managing director play the reunited former high school sweethearts.

    In December, 4th Wall also turns to Jane Austen for the holidays with Kate Hamill’s adaptation of Sense and Sensibility. We’re looking forward to another spin around the dance floor with this one, as 4th Wall’s Pride and Prejudice rendition several Decembers ago was a theatrical highlight of the year.

    Alley Theatre opens fall with American Mariachi (September 22)

    The Alley began their 23-24 season with their Summer Chills world premiere adaptation of Agatha Christie’s The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, but the power of mariachi music trumpets in their fall.

    Set in the 1970s, American Mariachi, a show about family, tradition, memory, and independence tells the story of two cousins who love music and want to create their own all-women mariachi group.

    The Alley Neuhaus Stage season begins with Little Comedies (October 6) a world premiere adaptation and arrangement of Chekhov comedies. The show will be performed by the Alley’s Resident Acting Company and directed by the Tony-Award winning playwright and legendary director Richard Nelson.

    Celebrating the holidays, The Alley stages its enchanting new Christmas Carol, adapted by artistic director Rob Melrose that they world-premiered last year.

    Catastrophic Theatre opens with Waiting for Godot (September 22)

    We’ve been doing our own waiting for Catastrophic — Houston's home for avant-garde and absurdist theater — to bring back Waiting for Godot, Beckett’s masterpiece of absurdism.

    In the show, two penniless tramps stand waiting together on a country road for the enigmatic Mr. Godot to arrive to somehow improve their diminishing circumstances.

    Director and Catastrophic co-founder, Jason Nodler, reunites with Greg Dean (Vladmir), Charlie Scott (Estragon), Kyle Sturdivant (Pozzo), and Troy Schulze (Lucky), reprising their roles from Catastrophic’s acclaimed 2013 production.

    We can also always count on Catastrophic doing some counter-programming during the holiday season, and this year will be no different when they world premiere a stage adaptation of Henry James’s classic gothic ghost story, The Turn of the Screw.

    Conceived and co-directed by Catastrophic core artist Afsaneh Aayani and New York City-based creative director and multimedia designer Adam J. Thompson this Turn will feature environmental staging, toy theatre, puppetry, live cinema, and a haunting soundscape.

    Ensemble Theatre opens with Chicken & Biscuits (September 22)

    Ensemble serves up this feel-good, family comedy with a delicious recipe for joyful theater.

    Chicken & Biscuits sees the Jenkins family coming together to mourn the death — but also celebrate the life — of the family patriarch. Unfortunately, squabbling sisters might ruin the funeral, and any hopes for a peaceful reunion unravel when everyone’s got either a secret or a truth to tell. The two sisters are faced with a truth that could either heal or break them.

    On November 17, Ensemble brings back their holiday hit A Motown Christmas, the perfect blend of traditional Christmas carols paired with the soulful sounds from such Motown celebrities as Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder, The Supremes, and The Jackson 5.

    Rec Room opens their fall season with Heroes of the Fourth Turning (October 5)

    For a company known for their edgy and unconventional productions, it’s perhaps appropriate that Rec Rooms rebels against traditional theater seasons.

    Heroes of the Fourth Turning, a haunting Will Arbery play, actually begins the second half of Rec Room's 2023 season. On the edge of the wilderness, four friends gather at a backyard party to honor their mentor and the newly inaugurated president of a conservative Catholic university. It has been years since they last met, and as the celebration runs deep into the night, their reunion spirals into spiritual chaos and a vicious fight to be understood.

    In December, look for a new and we’re betting intimately imaginative production of Peter Pan adapted and directed by Rec Room artistic director Matt Hune.

    Houston Grand Opera opens with Intelligence (October 20)

    HGO once again makes international opera news by commissioning this world premiere opera created by acclaimed composer Jake Heggie, librettist Gene Scheer, and director/choreographer Jawole Willa Jo Zollar, founder of the Urban Bush Women.

    Intelligence, an extraordinary new work, was inspired by the true story of Civil War spies Elizabeth Van Lew, who hailed from a prominent Confederate family, and Mary Jane Bowser, who was born into slavery in the family’s household. Together they form a secret pro-Union spy ring.

    After debuting Intelligence, HGO presents Verdi’s final masterpiece, Falstaff, which recounts the misdeeds of drunken, absurdly vain, formerly thin knight Sir John Falstaff, plucked straight from Shakespeare’s plays. Acclaimed baritone and no stranger to the Wortham stage, Reginald Smith Jr., plays Falstaff.

    Dirt Dogs Theatre opens with The Birds (October 20)

    An intense season begins fittingly for October with a staged version of the Daphne du Maurier’s 1952 short story, and the basis for Alfred Hitchcock’s classic film.

    In this Conor McPherson adaptation of The Birds, strangers Nat and Diane find themselves trying to survive together in an isolated cabin relentless and deadly slew of birds begins attacking humanity. Soon after, the young and attractive Julia arrives looking for shelter, bringing with her suspicion and distrust.

    When the duo becomes a trio, paranoia takes hold revealing an inside threat that rivals that of the murderous birds on the outside.

    Broadway at the Hobby Center opens with MJ: The Musical (November 14)

    The king of pop moonwalks into the Hobby Center and leads a slate of musical bio shows for the 23-24 season.

    With a book by Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Lynn Nottage, MJ: The Musical promises to go deeper into the life and music of Michael Jackson. The song list includes global hits like “Beat It,” “Billie Jean” and “Man in the Mirror,” but also some surprises like Rodgers and Hammerstein’s “Climb Ev'ry Mountain.” To borrow from a Michael line, Broadway at Hobby season is def “gonna be startin’ something” with this one.

    We’ll then have to wait to the new year before the simply the best, queen of rock arrives in the form of Tina-The Tina Turner Musical. Another Pulitzer Prize winning playwright, this time, Katori Hall, wrote the book on Turner’s extraordinary, no-holds-barred story.

    news/arts

    Best May Art

    MFAH's blockbuster modern art exhibit and 7 more openings in Houston this month

    Tarra Gaines
    May 11, 2026 | 12:45 pm
    as Pablo Picasso, Woman in a Multicolored Hat, part of the MFAH's upcoming Picasso–Klee–Matisse: Masterpieces from the Museum Berggruen exhibit, opening May 20
    Image courtesy MFAH
    Museum of Fine Arts, Houston presents Picasso–Klee–Matisse: Masterpieces from the Museum Berggruen (Pablo Picasso, Woman in a Multicolored Hat, 1939, oil on canvas, Museum Berggruen, Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin. © 2026 Estate of Pablo Picasso / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York)

    May brings some of the biggest art shows and museum exhibitions of the year to town. Some fly in with patriotic fanfare, while others give us a rare opportunity to gaze at European masterworks. Whether someone is looking for irreverent performance art at the CAMH, wants to get in touch with whimsical spirits at Moody Art Center, buy art for a good cause at Silver Street, or get ready for the World Cup at Sawyer Yards, Houston artists, galleries, and museums have a show for all tastes.

    “Freedom Plane National Tour: Documents That Forged a Nation” at Houston Museum of Natural Science (now through May 25)
    We’ll call this one the art of democracy. This exhibition 250 years in the making might not fit the usual definition of "art," but this touring presentation of Founding-era documents at HMNS has to make this month's must-see list. The National Archives and Records Administration, in partnership with the National Archives Foundation, set aloft this flying tour of some of the nation’s most historical documents, complete with their own plane. Houston is one of only eight U.S. cities where the Freedom Plane will land. The original National Archives records featured in the exhibition are traveling together for the first time. Just some of the historic documents included in the exhibition are an original engraving of the Declaration of Independence; George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, and Aaron Burr’s Oaths of Allegiance, 1778; and the Secret Printing of the Constitution in Draft Form, 1787.

    “As our nation approaches its 250th anniversary, there is no more fitting tribute than bringing these original documents, leaving the National Archives together for the very first time, directly to the American people,” says Joel Bartsch, president and CEO of HMNS. “From George Washington’s oath as a Continental Army officer to the Treaty of Paris that secured our independence, these are not replicas or reproductions. They are the genuine records, and Houston will have the rare privilege of experiencing them in person this May.”

    “20th Annual Empty Bowls” at Silver Street Studios (May 15 and 16)
    For two decades this beloved grassroots fundraising event has given art lovers the chance to pick up one of a kind, handcrafted ceramic bowl-shaped artworks for just $25 dollars each and helped to serve up millions of meals to the hungry. Over the years, Empty Bowls Houston has raised over $1.2 million for the Houston Food Bank. The lunch fundraiser is a collaboration between Houston-area ceramists, woodturners, and artists working in all media and Houston Center for Contemporary Craft. A special ticketed preview party on May 15 will feature light bites, beer and wine, live music, a pottery throw down event with local potters, and a chance to purchase a bowl early before the main event on May 16. Archway Gallery will also host its own annual Empty Bowls exhibition throughout May.

    “No Longer, Not Yet” at Art League (May 15-July 19)
    This exhibition of mixed media and fiber sculptures from Houston-based artist Marisol Valencia is the culmination of Valencia volunteering at a Houston-area shelter serving migrant women and children. To create the works in the show, Valencia uses material imbued with meaning, including fibers sourced from rural Mexican communities where migration often shapes daily life; bedsheets and pillows gathered from the shelter; and porcelain pieces inscribed with collected definitions of “home.” At the center of the exhibition will be a large cascading crochet sculpture made in collaboration with women and volunteers at the shelter.

    “Picasso–Klee–Matisse: Masterpieces from the Museum Berggruen” at Museum of Fine Arts (May 20-September 13)
    Houston claims another first as the MFAH hosts the U.S. debut of this monumental touring exhibition of masterworks by Pablo Picasso, Paul Klee, Henri Matisse, Alberto Giacometti, and other major artists of postwar Europe. The exhibition will also tell the story of influential gallerist Heinz Berggruen and his relationship with the artists and collecting world. From the 1940s into the 1990s, Heinz Berggruen assembled a singular collection of hundreds of modern masterworks, many directly from the artists, and then in 2000, Berggruen placed the collection with the German state. The collection is now housed in the Museum Berggruen in Berlin-Charlottenburg as part of the Berlin State Museums/Foundation of Prussian Cultural Heritage.

    “It is especially rewarding to introduce our audiences to the life and legacy of Heinz Berggruen — a pioneering art dealer, publisher, and collector whom I was privileged to know and work with for more than two decades,” remarks MFAH director Gary Tinterow on bringing the exhibition to Houston.

    “Ballet of the Masses” at Sawyer Yards (May 21-July 25)
    As Houston gets ready for the World Cup, local artists score their own kind of goals with this exhibition of artful soccer balls. Over 40 Houston artists have put a unique spin on a regulation sized fútbol — turning them into sculptural pieces. Organizers will suspend the works from the ceiling of Sabine Street Studios' North Gallery to create a kind of celestial soccer constellation. Together, these works will celebrate the dynamism and joy within sports and art.

    “Never Forgotten” at Sabine Street Studios (May 21-July 25)
    This powerful exhibition comes from a unique collaboration between Texas Center for the Missing, Houston Police Department Forensic Artists, and Sabine Street Studios, all dedicated to bringing the missing home. Three local forensic artists: Thurston Johnson, Bryan Bradley, and Kristen Aloysius have created age-progression portraits of missing persons in the hopes of reuniting families. Beyond showcasing real art, “Never Forgotten” was organized to shine a light on each individual case and continue raising awareness of the missing in our community. Sabine Street Studios will also host special programming in conjunction with the show, including a workshop on forensic drawing and drawing portraits based on memories.

    “Mary Ellen Carroll: How To Talk Dirty and Influence People” at Contemporary Arts Museum (May 22-November 1)
    Acclaimed New York-based conceptual artist Mary Ellen Carroll has spent over four decades crossing disciplines of performance art, photography, architecture, writing, video making, and public art to explore issues of environmentalism, architectural and technological infrastructure, immigration, urban legislation, and identity, as well as tackling fundamental questions of the nature of art. And some of this exploration has taken place in Houston with Carroll’s continual transformation and documentation of a post-war home in the city’s Sharpstown neighborhood.

    This first major museum survey of Carroll’s work takes inspiration from legendary comic Lenny Bruce’s 1965 autobiography of the same name, and emphasizes the irreverent and honest nature of Carroll’s work. The exhibition will bring renewed focus onto some of Carroll’s larger series, for example, “prototype 180,” the Sharpstown project, and “My Death Is Pending… Because,” consisting of separate pieces like video documentation of the artist driving and destroying a 1985 Buick in a demolition derby in 2017 and video of Carroll in a polar bear suit climbing a defunct smokestack in Memphis.

    “Carroll is that unique kind of artist who continually reminds you of the power of art and artists to inspire radical change, in ourselves and the world,” notes senior curator Rebecca Matalon.

    "Shapeshifters, Sprites, and Spirits” at Rice Moody Center for the Arts (May 29 - August 15)
    Delve into a world of whimsical wonder in this new exhibition and the first Texas solo show of acclaimed Japanese artist Masako Miki’s sculptural work and installations. Influenced by diverse artistic movements from European Surrealism to Japanese manga, Miki creates sculptures from felt layered over wood armatures. Once completed, they resemble animated and large scale forms of everyday objects infused with personality and character.

    Miki’s work is also inspired by folkloric traditions, especially Shinto animism and its belief that all beings and things contain a spirit. For the site specific Moody exhibition, Miki has also created works with a focus on yōkai, supernatural entities taking the form of beings, objects, and apparitions, and particularly those that appear in the Night Parade of One Hundred Demons (Hyakki Yagyō), a legend dating to medieval Japan.

    “My characters are ordinary but have extraordinary powers,” describes Miki of her sculptures. “They are secular but are attuned to sacred traditions. As a collective, they advocate for both individual and collective agency, and the importance of stories as unifying systems in today’s complex world.”

    as Pablo Picasso, Woman in a Multicolored Hat, part of the MFAH's upcoming Picasso\u2013Klee\u2013Matisse: Masterpieces from the Museum Berggruen exhibit, opening May 20
    Image courtesy MFAH

    Museum of Fine Arts, Houston presents Picasso–Klee–Matisse: Masterpieces from the Museum Berggruen (Pablo Picasso, Woman in a Multicolored Hat, 1939, oil on canvas, Museum Berggruen, Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin. © 2026 Estate of Pablo Picasso / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York)

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