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    Best June Theater

    Houston's 8 best theater shows for June feature 2 Broadway favorites

    Tarra Gaines
    Jun 4, 2024 | 3:00 pm

    The summer heats up with some sizzling drama, comedy, musicals, and dance this June. While the musical hits keep coming to the Hobby Center, some local theater companies will end their 2023-2024 with a dramatic bang and perhaps a murder or two. From immersive dance about Georgia O’Keeffe, to intimate love betrays to our favorite rooftop fiddler to Catastrophic’s annual comic chaos, Houston stages bring the ultimate theatrical summer party.

    Hairspray from Broadway at the Hobby Center (now through June 9)
    The musical based on the 80s John Waters film that was later made into a movie musical is back on tour with an all-new production that reunites Broadway’s award-winning creative team led by Director Jack O’Brien and Choreographer Jerry Mitchell. The dance revolution will be televised as 60s high schooler Tracy Turnblad’s ambition to take her big hair and curves onto the Corny Collins Show opens her eyes to segregation and racial injustice. Filled with some big comedy, the show still packs powerful emotional punch.

    Dial M for Murder at Alley Theatre (now through June 30)
    The Alley starts summer chilling early with this thriller of a drama. If you’re familiar with every twist and turn of the classic Hitchcock film, you might be in for some gripping surprises, as the Alley advises this new Jeffrey Hatcher adaptation makes some changes to highlight the complex women characters while keeping us riveted. This version weaves a whole new tangled web when Tony plots to have his wife Margot killed after he discovers her affair. Even while subverting expectations for those that love the film, look for stylish set and lighting design that pay homage to Hitchcock’s brilliant noir vision.

    The Barricade Boys West End Party! at the Hobby Center (June 6-7)
    The latest show in the Hobby Center’s new Beyond Broadway Series bring a bit of London posh to town with these four triple-threat performers. Adding their stage credits together the Boys have acted in most of the big West End musicals, including of course Les Miserables, hence the Barricade moniker. With a promise to take Houston audiences on a journey through musical theater history and beyond, these greatest showmen will create a party musical mashup while also telling stories of their world tours and their times in some of the biggest productions on the West End.

    Four Seasons from Houston Ballet (June 6-16)
    HB ends their 23-24 season with a selection of one act ballets, including a world premiere. While artistic director Stanton Welch’s glorious The Four Seasons, which dramatizes the stages of a woman’s life, is on the bill, all four works dance with themes of time’s passage. Set to an original score by Zeng Xiaogang, Disha Zhang’s recent work, Elapse, explores ideas of aging. Though only 8 minutes, George Balanchine’s powerful Tschaikovsky Pas de Deux is not to be missed. Rounding out the program is a world premiere, The Lightning Round by acclaimed resident choreographer of Complexions Contemporary Ballet, Dwight Rhoden.

    Red Landscape: Georgia O’Keeffe in Texas 1912-1918 from Open Dance Project (June 7-June 15)
    No one does immersive dance experiences in Houston like ODP and company artistic director and choreographer, Annie Arnoult. Inspired by pioneering Modernist artist Georgia O’Keeffe’s real personal letters, journals, interviews, sketches, photographs, and paintings this multimedia experience chronicles O’Keeffe’s time living in Texas in her 20s. This full length dance tells the story of how O’Keeffe’s ideas about art and life evolved amid the red landscapes West Texas. With set, lighting and costume design magic from the OPD company, Rice Moody Center’s Lois Chiles Studio Theater will become that Canyon Texas landscape. Audience will be able to explore the space as they walk amid the dancers weaving a story of O’Keeffe’s inner life, relationships and creative power.

    Betrayal at Rec Room (June 13-July 6)
    There are more than three sides to story in Nobel Prize winning playwright Harold Pinter’s twisty love triangle. Emma is married to Robert, yet having an affair with Robert’s best friend, Jerry. But when truth and confession becomes another kind of relationship treachery who is the real betrayer? The answers aren’t so simple, as we witness Emma, Jerry, and Robert navigate their own brutal and unexpected feelings about each other and themselves. Adding to the complexity, Pinter unravels the tale backwards where the end is the beginning and the beginning of love and betrayal the end. The intimate immediacy of Rec Room’s stage should add another level of heat in the moment for this cast of veteran dramatic Houston actors including Rec Room regular Brandon Morgan, Jay Sullivan (Heroes of the Fourth Turning, Alley Theatre), and Molly Wetzel (Dance Nation).

    Tamarie’s Texas Toast from Catastrophic Theatre (June 21-August 3)
    Catastrophic fans favorite time of the year rolls around once more as company co-founder, Tamarie Cooper, unleashes her comic commentary on subjects far, wide. For over 20 years she’s taken on aging, elections, truth telling and holidays, but somehow she’s never tackled Texas. Well it’s about time as Tamarie and her merry, mayhem-inducing performers sing, dance and pratfall through Texas sacred longhorns from high school football to gas station beavers, flag parades, giant roaches, tons of guns and the glory of Whataburger. Of course, it wouldn’t be a show focused on Texas without including a musical love letter to the best city in the Lone Star State, H-Town. Best of all, we get to play our favorite annual theater guessing game: Which Catastrophic regular performer will have to wear the weirdest costume of the year and what will it. Toast, roach, beaver, a 610 traffic jam? We can’t wait to find out.

    Fiddler on the Roof at A.D. Players (June 26-August 4)
    The company ends their 23-24 season with this multi-Tony-winning classic musical sure to put a song in audiences’ hearts. Set in the quaint village of Anatevka, Fiddler on the Roof follows Tevye, a humble milkman, as he grapples with tradition, family, and societal change in the face of encroaching modernity and anti-Semitic persecution in early 20th-century Russia. Though set over a century ago, the story of family, tradition and prejudice continues to resonate with us while songs like “Matchmaker, Matchmaker,” “If I Were A Rich Man” and “Sunrise, Sunset,” remind us why we love musicals. Look for a huge cast of A.D. regulars, Houston favorites and prestigious visiting actors to bring this musical event to live.

    Alley Theatre presents Dial M for Murder
    Photo by Melissa Taylor

    Alley Theatre presents Dial M for Murder.

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    Best June Theater

    The 10 best plays, musicals, and ballets to see in Houston this month

    Tarra Gaines
    Jun 3, 2026 | 10:35 am
    The Company of the Second North American tour of Clue
    Photo by Evan Zimmerman for MurphyMade
    Broadway at the Hobby Center presents Clue

    Musicals take the mic across Houston stages this June. From the tragic to the silly, everyone’s got a number, or dozen, to sing. Ironically, the one play exception is from the presenter Houstonians rely on to bring us the hottest Broadway musicals, Broadway at the Hobby Center, who instead gives us a Clue to solve a madcap summer mystery. We’re also highlighting some theatrical dance shows this month bringing us kinetic stories of love and life.

    Spamilton: An American Parody at Stages (now through June 21)
    Parodies of cultural phenomenons are as American as the founding fathers and Broadway itself, so if any musical deserves a gentle satire, it’s Hamilton. Written by Gerard Alessandrini, who created the long-running Forbidden Broadway, Spamilton spreads its comedy wide, taking on the show Hamilton, as well as Lin-Manuel Miranda’s journey to write a revolutionary new musical and save Broadway. Along the way, Spamilton takes shots at other big musicals like Book of Mormon, Lion King, and Cats.

    To top it off, Stages also adds a mini musical, 21 Chump Street, to the end of every performance. Running under 20 minutes, Chump Street was created by Lin-Manuel Miranda based on an episode of This American Life. While the musical is rarely performed by itself because of the short length, Stages is adding it on as a special treat for Miranda fans.

    Clue presented by Broadway at the Hobby Center (June 9-14)
    While Broadway at the Hobby Center usually presents touring musicals, they occasionally slip in the odd play, and this looks to be great fun. Clue is the ultimate comic whodunit based on the cult '80s film and classic board game. Six mysterious guests, who may or may not know each other, assemble at Boddy Manor to dine on red herrings and then play a little after dinner game of blackmail, threats, and murder. Was it Mrs. Peacock in the study with the knife, Colonel Mustard in the library with the wrench, or Miss Scarlet in the conservatory with a candlestick? Did the butler do it all along? Or perhaps the twisty ending only leads to more twists.

    Giselle from Houston Ballet (June 11-21)
    With an emotional story that brings audiences to tears even while awed by the dance, Giselle has been embraced by ballet companies and choreographers for almost two centuries. Just a decade ago, Houston Ballet artistic director Stanton Welch brought his own interpretation of this tragic story of a beautiful peasant girl who falls in love with a duke, but he later betrays her. Welch used composer Adolphe Adam’s unedited score to expand the drama and allow the cast to explore the complexities of their roles.

    Ballets Jazz Montréal, Dance Me: The Music of Leonard Cohen presented by Performing Arts Houston (June 12-13)
    Poetry and deep storytelling were always inherent in the songs of Canadian songwriter and singer Leonard Cohen. Ballets Jazz Montréal, the acclaimed dance company from Cohen’s hometown, put its bodies into those stories told in some of his most iconic songs like, “Suzanne,” “So Long, Marianne,” “Dance Me to the End of Love,” and of course, “Hallelujah.” Three international choreographers collaborated on this “dance concert,” including Andonis Foniadakis, Ihsan Rustem, and Annabelle Lopez Ochoa, whose stunning Broken Wings Frida Kahlo ballet just wowed Houston Ballet audiences in March. Dance Me combines scenic, visual, musical, dramaturgical, and choreographic writing to pay tribute to one of Montreal’s greatest artists.

    Songs for a New World from Garden Theatre (June 12-14)
    Calling it a musical theater extravaganza, the company is producing three musical shows in one weekend. Running June 12 and 13, the unique Songs for a New World from Tony winning composer Jason Robert Brown delivers song and characters connected by the choices humans must make and the consequences they bring. The one-woman cabaret Not Your Ingenue will also be in the lineup on June 13. Then this musical mini-festival ends with the rousing debut of Garden’s original cabaret show From Seed To Stage. Timed with the company's fifth anniversary, Seed will feature 35 returning cast members from previous Garden productions, singing some of their favorite numbers from five years of musicals.

    The Hunchback of Notre Dame from Houston Broadway Theatre (June 16-July 5)
    One of Houston’s newest theater companies will ring the bell on this Disney musical that’s been a favorite regionally and internationally but has never actually had a big Broadway run. Based on the Victor Hugo novel and the Disney animated adaptation, the musical tells the emotional tale of the orphaned and disabled Paris cathedral bell ringer, Quasimodo, and his love for the kind and independent Romani woman, Esmeralda. The musical weaves songs from the film and new music for the stage, all by Oscar winning composer Alan Menken. The lavish Houston production boasts a 21-piece live orchestra on stage, making this the first time this expanded orchestration will be performed in the U.S.

    Tamarie’s Greatest Hits, Volume 3 from Catastrophic Theatre (June 18-August 1)
    Summer brings one of Houston's longest running theatrical traditions, another new comedy from the wonderfully warped mind of Catastrophic’s cofounder, Tamarie Cooper. Every decade, Tamarie does a greatest hits compilation show with some of the best scenes, skits, and songs from the previous nine shows. According to Catastrophic, we can all look forward to a “ridiculous” new script and a few brand new songs to tie the whole thing together. Many of the company’s wild regulars, including a few we haven’t seen in the summer show in a while, will be along for the ride, likely vying for the most outrageous performance.

    Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat at A.D. Players (June 24-July 19)
    Somehow this will be the first time Houston’s spiritual theater company brings to stage this early Andrew Lloyd Webber hit musical. The story follows young Joseph, favorite son of Biblical patriarch, Jacob. Left for dead by jealous brothers, Joseph sets out on a series of adventures, including a stint as a dream interpreter. He eventually rises to power as the man behind the throne of Egypt. Filled with catchy songs like “Any Dream Will Do,” the somewhat campy musical still wrestles with weighty themes like family loyalty and betrayal.

    Get Ready at Ensemble Theatre (June 26-July 26)
    Filled with nostalgia, complex comedy, and hope, the show puts us in the rehearsal room for the reunion of the fictitious Doves, a 1950s doo-wop group that might be having a resurgence after one of their old songs makes it back on the charts. Can these five former friends, now older but perhaps wiser, find that musical magic again, or will the squabbles of the past break them up once more? Ensemble won critical praise when it produced this show during the 30th anniversary season. Now as it wrap up the 25-26 lineup, this season topper will Get (Houston) Ready for Ensemble’s upcoming 50th anniversary.

    Forever Nebrada present by Voices of Arts Central (June 27)
    Houston Ballet principal dancer Karina González pays tribute to pioneering Latin American choreographer Vicente Nebrada (1930-2002) with this special production from the organization she founded last year to present innovative artistic projects that connect dance, culture, and storytelling. Featuring dancers from Houston Ballet and Oklahoma City Ballet, Forever Nebrada will give audiences rare insight into Nebrada’s repertoire, dance vision, and how Venezuelan cultural heritage influenced his work. González says she hopes the production will be both a celebration of Nebrada’s legacy but will also be a way to bring together artists and audiences from across the diverse Houston community.


    The Company of the Second North American tour of Clue
    Photo by Evan Zimmerman for MurphyMade

    Broadway at the Hobby Center presents Clue.

    hobby centerhouston balletmusicalsperforming-arts
    news/arts
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