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    Creating a sanctuary under the rafters

    For August: Osage County, set designer Kevin Rigdon turns an Alley into a home

    Nancy Wozny
    nancy wozny
    Mar 5, 2011 | 1:38 pm
    News_Nancy_Kevin Ridgon_Behanding_3965
    Rigdon created the set for the Alley Theatre production of "A Behanding in Spokane"
    Photo by Jann Whaley

    How best to build a house for Violet Weston, the pill-popping anti-heroine matriarch of Tracy Letts' August: Osage County, now running at the Alley Theatre through March 13?

    The task falls to Kevin Rigdon, a leading designer who just happens to be based here in Houston.

    Rigdon's life has come full circle. After having served as Steppenwolf Theatre Company's resident designer from 1974-1996, he finds himself designing sets and lights for Letts' powerhouse family saga, which originated at the renown Chicago theater company and won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama and the Tony Award for Best Play.

    "It's a fine piece of theater. When I saw it on Broadway, I had no idea I would ever be designing the show," recalls Rigdon. "It's a daunting task. These are the people I grew up with."

    Todd Rosenthal designed the original production, which featured a three-story half-a-doll-house construction.

    "Todd brilliantly followed the geography of the space, and his set worked well on Broadway," says Rigdon. "The Alley is a new production, directed by Jackson Gay. The space needs to be enclosed."

    Rigdon drew from the iconic clap board siding of prairie farm houses that conjure the Oklahoma landscape where Letts grew up.

    One look at Rigdon's set tells us that we are in store for a monumental family drama. It's largess matches Letts' scale. The Westons are not a junior league dysfunctional family, they are the real thing. Rigdon has created a home for this unruly brood that literally grows out of the cavity of the Hubbard Stage.

    "Letts' play is an expressionistic epic," says Rigdon. "I tried to support that in the scenery."

    "The horizontal lines combined with the set's massive three-story height created a visceral tension," I told Rigdon.

    "You are dead on. That was the idea," he responded. "I wanted a contained and more claustrophobic space."

    And that he did. We feel closer to the Weston family, whether we want to be or not. One of the marvels of Rigdon's design is the third floor room, which precariously hovers over the first floor. It's looming presence eventually beckons Violet in the last moments of the play.

    "It's the sanctuary under the rafters," says Rigdon. "It's a bit protective and off balance, like a cocoon."

    Indeed — spoiler alert! — the final image of the play with Violet curled in a fetal position while Johanna sings is exquisitely framed by the angled borders of this suspended room.

    Details lurk like clues in the Weston dwelling, from a mess of books stuffed under the stairs, to odd towers of books in other locales.

    "Outside of their wedding china, the house is devoid of any ornamentation," Rigdon adds. "There are books everywhere, and no family photos."

    Rigdon prefers to design both sets and lights. "It's more unified," he says. "There's more give and take. In August , the lighting makes it flow and keeps the play moving."

    "How do you begin?" I asked Rigdon.

    "By reading the script," he responds, laughing. "You would be surprised."

    Rigdon cracks me up with a story about a designer not knowing the names of the characters. He gets in a more serious mood when talking about the job of containing a work of art. "You must follow the ground plan of the play or it's not going to work," he says. "You have to create the world of the play."

    Rigdon has designed over 50 Alley productions and serves as the Alley Theatre's associate director/design. Most recently, he conjured that flop house hotel that made a perfect setting for Martin McDonagh's A Behanding in Spokane. "It was inspired by a flea bag hotel I stayed in once," quips Ridgon. Other recent Alley productions include St. Nicholas, Intelligence-Slave, Mrs. Mannerly, Our Town and Mauritius, a set Rigdon was particularly pleased with.

    Rigdon is also a professor at University of Houston's School of Theatre & Dance. where he is head of graduate design.

    Although he calls Houston home, the two-time Tony nominated designer works all over the globe. Rigdon has designed over 345 productions, including numerous plays on Broadway. Today, he regularly works with the top 10 regional theaters in America. He's just wrapped designing sets and lights for David Mamet's Race at Philadelphia Theatre Company. Before that it was Charming Billy at Round House Theatre, in Bethesda, Maryland.

    Last fall, he found himself back in his old stomping ground at Steppenwolf, lighting Lisa D'Amour's Detroit. With seven Joseph Jefferson Awards, four Drama Desk Award nominations, two American Theatre Wing Design Awards and The Drama Logue Award, let's just say he's one in demand guy.

    "It's been an exciting year," he admits.

    A believer in hands-on learning, Ridgon has given many grad students a chance to work along side him. "They get to see what life is like for a working professional," he says. "I Iove teaching, witnessing those 'aha' moments and watching them mature before my eyes."

    Rigdon created the set for the Alley Theatre production of "A Behanding in Spokane"

    News_Nancy_Kevin Ridgon_Behanding_3965
    Photo by Jann Whaley
    Rigdon created the set for the Alley Theatre production of "A Behanding in Spokane"
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    Creed concert review

    Creed serve up millennial nostalgia at pyro-packed RodeoHouston concert

    Craig Hlavaty
    Mar 11, 2026 | 11:54 pm
    Creed concert RodeoHouston
    Courtesy of Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo
    Singer Scott Stapp serenades the RodeoHouston crowd.

    Hello, my friend, we meet again.

    I’ve had a torrid relationship with Creed. As a circa-2000s punk rocker, it was implied that I was supposed to hate them. Nevertheless, I enjoyed those hook-laden Mark Tremonti riffs and Scott Stapp’s burly, Bono-grasping vocals, with just a hint of irony deep in the mix. I had “One Last Breath” on a burned mix CD, bunched in with Fugazi, Rancid, and Sham 69. I would skip it as quickly as I could, depending on who was in the car. Driving home from a long day slinging milk in the Kroger dairy cooler? Windows down, Stapp up.

    When I began my music journalism career 20 years ago (!!!), I began sticking up for them, much to the consternation of a lot of my fellow writers who were hung up on stuff that was supposed to be cooler and hipper. Creed’s pop-culture zenith came right as The Strokes and The White Stripes were thrust on us by the music press as a counter to post-grunge, which other music writers were categorically allergic to. Remember when our biggest problems in America were bands that were overtly influenced by Pearl Jam and Alice In Chains?

    In 2012, I interviewed lead singer Scott Stapp along the way for the Houston Press, and I distinctly recall Stapp being confused on our call that a guy from a smug alt-weekly wasn’t asking him stupid questions or making fun of his leather pants. The band was heading to Houston for a two-night stand at the Bayou Music Center in 2012 when they played 1997’s “My Own Prison” and 1999’s “Human Clay” in their entirety.

    Fun fact: “Human Clay” has sold over 20 million albums alone, besting Nirvana’s “Nevermind” and Pearl Jam’s “Ten” by only a relatively small margin. Creed moved more physical CDs when people actually bought music.

    Somehow, along the way, people stopped hating Creed and Nickelback, and the hate gave way to pre-social media, millennial high school, and pre-9/11 nostalgia. The similarly maligned Nickelback sold out the rodeo in 2024.

    On Wednesday, March 11, I saw junior high school kids wearing crispy new Creed shirts with their parents. Gen Alpha is beginning to get curious about what mom and dad were up to during spring break 2001, and Zoomers are rediscovering Y2K fashions. Haven’t you seen those “Mom, What Were You Like In The ‘90s?” memes?

    Creed has been sold out for weeks, drawing 70,007 attendees. If you had told someone 10 years ago that Creed would sell out RodeoHouston, they would have been skeptical. And yet here we are, staring down at a sold-out Creed show. These things run in cycles. Emotions fade. Annoyance turns into wistfulness for the days of Nokia brick phones and 99-cent gas. You can even go on a Creed Cruise now.

    Creed hit the stage just before 9:30 pm, an enviable bedtime for most elderly millennials, kicking off with the TOOL-chugalug of “Bullets,” with Stapp and Tremonti making the best use of their stage platforms, crucial devices for any major rock band in the 2000s. Unrelenting pyro shot from the dirt surrounding the stage every time Stapp lifted or flailed his arms like Elvis if he discovered cardio.

    The dirge of “Torn” — the second single from My Own Prison — was pyro-less, likely giving the cannons a few minutes to cool off. The sweaty Stapp, at just 52, looks to be in better shape than he did 20 years ago, now sporting a conservative haircut like he stepped out of his company’s stadium suite or finished a twilight run at Memorial Park.

    Stapp introduced “My Own Prison” with a preachery pep talk that wouldn’t sound out of place at an altar call at Sturgis. The crowd hung on every emphatic word. Maybe seeing two middle-aged dudes wearing Stryper shirts down on the concourse made more sense than I realized. Is Creed actually just TOOL that accepted Christ? The graphics behind the band could’ve fooled me.

    Stapp introduced “One” with a speech on commonalities and love. Looking back, Creed’s lyrics were much too earnest, hitting at a time when critics were still hungover from grunge.

    During “With Arms Wide Open,” the rodeo cameras would routinely cut to tattooed dads and rocker chicks in the crowd playing air guitar along with Tremonti and singing their guts out like they did the first time they heard it on 94.5 The Buzz. For a large segment of the crowd, they might have had a Gen-X parent jamming this stuff on the way to school in the morning.

    “Are you ready to get higher in here, Houston?” Stapp yells. The place erupts as “Higher” starts. Stapp was in his element, pyro shooting off, his silver jewelry dangling, taking in the crowd, like he didn’t expect such a response.

    Possibly the last true rock power ballad ever recorded, “One Last Breath,” got the biggest screams of the night; it might also be the Gen-Z “Don’t Stop Believing” as long as we’re making wildly controversial statements. [Editor’s note: Isn’t that Mr. Brightside? -ES]

    Welcome back, Creed, from pop-culture purgatory, and props for what might have been the loudest RodeoHouston show in years.

    SETLIST

    Bullets
    Torn
    Are You Ready?
    My Own Prison
    What If
    One
    With Arms Wide Open
    Higher
    One Last Breath
    My Sacrifice

    Creed concert RodeoHouston

    Courtesy of Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo

    Singer Scott Stapp serenades the RodeoHouston crowd.

    rodeohoustonhouston livestock show and rodeoconcert review
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