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    Strong as Mustard Gas

    Holland Taylor's uncanny portrayal of Ann Richards makes her a Tony favorite

    Joseph V. Amodio
    By Joseph V. Amodio
    Jun 9, 2013 | 9:00 am

    NEW YORK — Just 48 hours—give or take—till the Tony Awards on Sunday night, and Holland Taylor sounds a bit like a hurricane over the water…gaining speed, storing up energy. On her Thursday night sign-in board at Lincoln Center’s Vivian Beaumont Theatre, there’s only one signature—hers. And below her name, she’s jotted a note, as if the call board was asking for proof that she really IS Holland Taylor:

    YES, I AM,” she writes in all caps. “I AM AS STRONG AS MUSTARD GAS.”

    It’s a line she’s used to described Gov. Ann Richards in the one-woman play, Ann, which she conceived, researched, wrote and stars in, and which opened here in New York last winter.

    Now the self-described “Yankee” actress, who slips into Texas drawl at the drop of a hat—at times, it seems, without quite realizing it—is up for a Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play.

    She shrugs.

    "To be part of the Tonys is great. But believe me—playing this role is its own reward.”

    “I don’t like the competition,” she says. “Honoring people is wonderful. But setting up a horse race…. I don’t think actors can be compared, really. To be part of the Tonys is great. But believe me—playing this role is its own reward.”

    And one she never expected.

    She felt compelled to write the play—for reasons she still can’t quite explain—after Richards’ death in 2006, after only having met the fabled gov’ once—at a lunch with mutual friend Liz Smith.

    Over the years she’s performed it in Galveston, Chicago, Washington, D.C, and now on Broadway through Sept. 1.

    Taylor’s eyes sparkle when she says the date. That would have been Richards’ 80th birthday.

    Wild, no?

    Not political

    Taylor, 70, the smart, sexy Emmy winner best known as the acerbic matriarch on CBS’ Two and a Half Men, has given a lot, besides time, to get this show up and steam-rolling along. There’s the guest room in her Los Angeles home, consumed by boxes of Richards research, including countless interviews with friends and colleagues, letters, speeches and photos. And the Twitter feed—Taylor’s no tweet fanatic by any stretch, but she’s toned down any snarky comments on politics she might’ve made prior to playing Richards, because she’s adamant about letting people know this show is not a political tale.

    Case in point: Two words you’ll never hear come out of Taylor’s mouth on stage during the show—“George Bush.”

    And even when she takes off the wig (carefully—it cost $6,500), the Annitude is still there. Which Taylor likes.

    It would’ve been easy—and was certainly expected—to mention the name of the fellow who beat Richards in her bid for reelection in 1994. But no.

    “The play is not political,” Taylor emphasizes. “It’s about her life. About a life well-lived. If you write a play about Amelia Earhart, is it going to be about aviation? Or about a hero?”

    The play opens with Taylor onstage delivering a fictitious commencement speech, and slowly morphs its way into friendly chit-chat with the audience. And laughs. Lots of laughs. (Hey, Taylor knows a thing or two from sitcoms, after all.) Eventually the play offers a glimpse into the governor’s office in Austin, when an elaborate set-piece emerges. The audience gets to be a fly on the wall for a typical day as gov—which involves handling a hot-potato stay-of-execution case, mediating disputes between her kids over the phone, writing a personal check to cover business expenses and… chewing out certain underlings.

    “She could be very, very, very, very hard on people, to the point of being mean,” Taylor admits. “I think she got that from her mother, who was TRULY mean. She loved her mother. Had a sunny father. But her mother just wanted her to be married, a socialite. I have a picture of her inauguration. On the grandstand, there’s only one person not standing—Ann’s mother. You really gotta laugh.”

    Richards’ children have seen the play multiple times, which Taylor finds gratifying. Thougb she did once ask Richards’ daughter Cecile why she kept coming back.

    “And this floored me—she said ‘It’s like spending another two hours with my mother.’ What can you SAY to something like that?”

    The actress feels somehow “Ann-adjacent.” She didn’t know Richards. She learned about her through others. “But Cecile says I’m getting more like her.”

    Amazing transition

    Physically making that happen each night is no easy matter.

    The transition from that Yankee actress (Taylor was raised outside Philadelphia) to funny—make that VERY funny—Lone Star firebrand (with Q-Tip bouffant and matching white suit) takes two-and-a-half hours and includes recreating her eyebrows, lips, energy (Taylor walks up and down 20 flights to get revved).

    And even when she takes off the wig (carefully—it cost $6,500), the Annitude is still there. Which Taylor likes.

    “I’m happy to tell you Charlie Sheen is a friend.”

    “Her vigor, taking delight in things, has increased in me—by tenfold,” says Taylor. “And my seizing and enjoying the moment. I’ve never been good at that. But she was. Now I’m getting better.”

    Of course, part of the reason Taylor has been so successful at “becoming” Richards is because the two women were similar from the get-go—both hard-working, determined straight shooters.

    Ask Taylor about her former Two and a Half Men co-star (and tabloid bad boy) Charlie Sheen and she jumps right in—“I’m happy to tell you Charlie Sheen is a friend.”

    Yes, his departure from the series was rather bumpy, she admits, but in the years prior to that on set he was “the most well-behaved person,” respectful to the staff, never pulling attitude.

    “I care for the man. He has the human touch with people in a way I admire. But he’s had...”—and here, she pauses—“a life that has…predetermined certain things that will be quite hard for him to avoid.” She shrugs again. “I want him to do well…be well.”

    As for “Ann,” well…there’s Tony night to get through. And several months more in the Big Apple. Then…perhaps touring with the show. Taylor is vague on the details.

    “I can’t even see tomorrow,” she says.

    But she can see Richards…staying with her, being a part of her life from now on, whether she’s putting on that poofy white wig or not.

    “Oh, she’ll always be with me. I’m not a particularly woo-woo person. I’m a journeyman actress. I’m playing a role. I’m playing a role that requires absolutely all my heart. It’s acting. Still…I know she’ll always be with me."

    Holland Taylor is nominated for a Tony for her role in Ann.

    Holland Taylor as former governor Ann Richards in the Broadway play Ann.
    Photo by Ave Bonar
    Holland Taylor is nominated for a Tony for her role in Ann.
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    news/entertainment

    Concert News

    The Doobie Brothers and Santana team up for 2026 tour coming to Houston

    Alex Bentley
    Feb 17, 2026 | 11:30 am
    Carlos Santana
    Photo by Erik Kabik
    Santana's co-headlining tour with the Doobie Brothers comes to American Airlines Center in Dallas on August 22, 2026.

    Rock and Roll Hall of Fame artists Santana and The Doobie Brothers will come together again on the Oneness Tour in 2026, which will include a stop at The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion in The Woodlands on Friday, August 21.

    The 28-city U.S. and Canada tour will start on June 13 in Tinsley Park, Illinois, with dates running through the summer.

    A Texas run will come late in the tour, with the two classic rock acts also playing in El Paso on August 16, Austin on August 18, and Dallas on August 22.

    Santana is also scheduled to play a solo show on March 29 in San Antonio.

    Santana and The Doobie Brothers share a history of touring together, most notably in 2019, when The Doobie Brothers supported Santana on the Supernatural Now tour, which had dates in Austin and Dallas.

    The tour, which takes its name from Carlos Santana's 1979 solo album, will feature the band Santana playing hits from their more than five decade career, dating back to 1969.

    Their remarkable career saw them earn No. 1 albums in the early 1970s, and then again in the late 1990s and early 2000s, demonstrating their longevity and enduring popularity.

    The Doobie Brothers have had an equally long career, releasing their debut album in 1971. And unlike some acts, they're still putting out new music. They released Walk This Road in 2025, their 16th album overall and their second of the 2020s.

    It's also notable as the first-ever Doobie Brothers studio album to feature Michael McDonald, Patrick Simmons, Tom Johnston, and John McFee together, with songwriting by all three Songwriters Hall of Fame inductees.

    Tickets for the tour will first be available starting with a Citi presale on Tuesday, February 17 at 10 am, followed by an artist presale beginning on Tuesday, February 17 at 2 pm.

    Additional presales will run throughout the week ahead of the general on-sale beginning on Friday, February 20 at 10 am at Santana.com.

    SANTANA & THE DOOBIE BROTHERS 2026 TOUR DATES

    • Sat, Jun 13 – Tinley Park, IL – Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre
    • Mon, Jun 15 – Grand Rapids, MI – Acrisure Amphitheater
    • Wed, Jun 17 – Cincinnati, OH – Riverbend Music Center
    • Thu, Jun 18 – Clarkston, MI – Pine Knob Music Theatre
    • Sat, Jun 20 – St. Louis, MO – Hollywood Casino Amphitheater
    • Sun, Jun 21 – Noblesville, IN – Ruoff Music Center
    • Wed, Jun 24 – Bristow, VA – Jiffy Lube Live
    • Fri, Jun 26 – Hershey, PA – Hersheypark Stadium
    • Sat, Jun 27 – Holmdel, NJ – PNC Bank Arts Center
    • Mon, Jun 29 – Mansfield, MA – Xfinity Center
    • Wed, Jul 1 – Saratoga Springs, NY – Saratoga Performing Arts Center
    • Thu, Jul 2 – Wantagh, NY – Northwell at Jones Beach Theater
    • Sat, Jul 4 – Bethel, NY – Bethel Woods Center for the Arts
    • Sun, Jul 5 – Toronto, ON – RBC Amphitheatre
    • Wed, Jul 8 – Charlotte, NC – Truliant Amphitheater
    • Thu, Jul 9 – Alpharetta, GA – Ameris Bank Amphitheatre
    • Thu, Aug 6 – Auburn, WA – White River Amphitheatre
    • Sat, Aug 8 – Wheatland, CA – Toyota Amphitheatre
    • Sun, Aug 9 – Mountain View, CA – Shoreline Amphitheatre
    • Tue, Aug 11 – Chula Vista, CA – North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre
    • Thu, Aug 13 – Los Angeles, CA – Hollywood Bowl
    • Fri, Aug 14 – Phoenix, AZ – Mortgage Matchup Center
    • Sun, Aug 16 – El Paso, TX – UTEP Don Haskins Center
    • Tue, Aug 18 – Austin, TX – Moody Center
    • Fri, Aug 21 – The Woodlands, TX – The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
    • Sat, Aug 22 – Dallas, TX – American Airlines Center
    • Wed, Aug 26 – Kansas City, MO – Morton Amphitheater
    • Thu, Aug 27 – Shakopee, MN – Mystic Lake Amphitheater
    concertsmusic
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