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    Modern Day Vaudeville

    Loincloths & beams, virginity poems with fishnets: FrenetiCore's Fringe Fest zooms past out there

    nancy wozny
    Aug 18, 2010 | 1:40 pm
    News_Nancy Wozny_Fringe Festival_Brandy Holmes_FRINGE
    "Fitting Room," conceived by Brandy Holmes
    Photo by Simon Gentry

    Houston, are you ready for yet another fringe festival? If we can stand two Starbucks across the street from each other, why not have two fringe fests?

    FrenetiCore's third annual Houston Fringe Festival gets underway Thursday and runs to September 1 at the Frenetic Theater. The folks at FrenetiCore aim to entertain, thrill and provoke, although not necessarily in that order, but quite possibly all on the same program.

    FrenetiCore's chiefs, Rebecca French and Robert Thoth, run a diverse festival, with everything from film to dance to theater to hard-to-classify performance art-y stuff. Hybrid forms are welcome and most shows contain more than one discipline.

    French finds performance opportunities lacking for independent artists. We all just can't afford to rent the Wortham to put on a show, but The indie Frenetic Theater provides a much needed performance venue for artists both up and coming and more established.

    "One of the best moments of the 2009 Fringe for me was when my former director Richard Hubscher performed a gorgeous dance solo wearing a loincloth and a 20-foot-long, eight-by-eight beam on his shoulders," French says. "That kind of magical performance doesn't happen everywhere.

    "We want to make sure that it can happen in Houston, and having Frenetic Theater as a venue puts us in an ideal position to produce the Fringe and provide this opportunity for other artists."

    Frenetic Theater's 1,200-square-foot space now boasts seating for 100, a new sound system, theatrical lighting, a projection system and the biggie, wait for it, air-conditioning. An exhibition hall and dance studio can also be found under their cozy east end roof.

    Unlike Bootown's Fringe Festival, this one is curated. Robert Boyd, of The Great God Pan is Dead blog fame, curates the visual arts component, while the performing arts is handled by a committee consisting of FrenetiCore board members, volunteers, and arts enthusiasts. The line-up is as eclectic as it gets.

    French is passionate about the role her festival plays in the overall ecology of Houston's art scene.

    "Festivals of all kinds are a crucial way for performers to get their work out there, meet other artists, and make a name for themselves," French says. "At the same time, the festival also presents work by artists who are already established in their own right, who just want to work on a new piece and be part of a fun, exciting festival.

    "A few examples of that are Ray Hill, who is very well known in Houston for both his social activism and one-man theatrical shows, and CORE Performance Company, who are practically dance legends in Houston. As presenters, we try to provide the audience with a healthy mix of experimental arts veterans and fresh talent."

    The festival offers a chance for artists to try out work still in the oven.

    Brandy Robichau Holmes is taking her first directorial leap with Fitting Room, with an A-list ensemble including Amy Guerin, Sara Jo Dunstan, Karen Schlag, John Dunn, Cristina Madero and Tracie Thomason. Holmes is experimenting with a co-creative process where each actor will be contributing their own virginity stories along with text from Pablo Neruda's poems and excerpts of Nancy Friday's collection of sexual fantasies. Women try on different dresses, fishnets, and other fetish clothing as they reveal what motivates them to consider having sex.

    "The Fringe offers me a chance to develop my work," Holmes says. "It's a place to be nurtured and play. I feel no pressure to present a polished or finished piece. If all goes well I may develop the piece into an evening length work."

    Out-of-town guests are always a highlight. Kettye Voltz, artistic director of the New Orleans-based Tsumani Dance Company, first met French when she came down for the Dance on Camera Festival hosted by FrenitiCore. The two hit it off, became Facebook pals and an invite was in hand shortly afterward.

    Voltz is a fringer herself, serving on New Orleans' festival jury. She cherishes the chance to get out of Dodge and have some new eyes on her work.

    "It's great to be produced by FrenetiCore," she says. "The space is inspiring; it really feels like home."

    Voltz is bringing one dance for camera work and two other dances, including her Banco Ballante and John Allen's athletic trio set to Philip Glass' relentless rhythms.

    "It's full of risk-taking near miss partnering," she says. "The dancers reach out for each other but struggle to connect."

    Other visiting artists include Austin's award-winning comedy troupe The Rat Girls, Atlanta's Zoetic Dance and Canada's circus dancers Moth/Sol L Luna. French dreams of starting of a fringe network as a kind of modern day vaudeville route.

    "So we didn't exactly blanket the country with calls for entries, but we intend to do so in the future as our festival continues to grow," French says. "We'd like to help create a fringe circuit for the lower United States, so an artist or group could conceivably perform at our festival after the Phoenix Fringe, on the way to the New Orleans Fringe.

    "The first fringe in Edinburgh, Scotland was a response to a bunch of theater groups being kept out of a mainstream festival and starting their own festival on the 'fringes' of the town. So we're committed to continuing the tradition of presenting and celebrating edgy, weird, and wild performances."

    Dreams of oblivion in the trees A short film by louviere + vanessa featuring featuring Tsunami Dance Company:

    "Fitting Room," conceived by Brandy Holmes

    News_Nancy Wozny_Fringe Festival_Brandy Holmes_FRINGE
    Photo by Simon Gentry
    "Fitting Room," conceived by Brandy Holmes
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    Concert Review

    Nine Inch Nails hammers Houston at career-spanning Toyota Center concert

    Craig Hlavaty
    Sep 13, 2025 | 1:12 am
    Nine Inch Nails
    Photo courtesy of Nine Inch Nails
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    Nearly 40 years down the spiral, Rock And Roll Hall of Fame inductees Nine Inch Nails returned to Houston and the Toyota Center on Friday, September 12. NIN was last in Houston in December 2017, where they played a rainy, abbreviated set at the final Day For Night festival at the future POST Houston complex on a stage festooned with strands of VHS tape and stinging coastal rain. The Bayou City had been due for a catharsis.

    Now led by twin film score composers Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, NIN has grown alongside its audience in time. They’ve created some of the best film scores of the past 20 years, from the devastating Gone Girl to Disney’s ethereal Brian Eno-esque Soul soundtrack, not to mention the Oscar-winning companion music for The Social Network. Children of ‘90s NIN fans have even been indoctrinated via the duo’s unlikely Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem score, some of whom were at Toyota Center on Friday night. The band’s forthcoming TRON: Ares soundtrack releases next week, and it's already shaping up to be some of the duo’s best work in years.

    Houston has always been an industrially-minded city, which is likely why NIN’s brand of industrial music has always had a special place in its musical DNA. Even the iconic hip-hop DJ Screw seemed to have a little gothic terror floating in his styrofoam cup and the Tone Zone Records spirit in his releases. Generations of Houstonians still pack Numbers in Montrose on a weekly basis to dance to the acts that influenced Reznor, and his face is even painted on the side of the building. The band’s 1995 club show at the Westheimer landmark is spoken of in reverent tones like a visit from the pope.

    International electronic act and kindred spirits Boys Noize opened Friday night’s show, with Alexander Ridha’s harsh electro tenderizing the black-clad masses already clutching NIN merch. He even mixed in NIN’s “Down In It” to make the scene twitch.

    NIN called the evening to order right before 9 pm with the industrial ballad “Right Where It Belongs” and Reznor alone at the piano on a squared, elevated stage set in the middle of the arena. Reznor then delicately began “Ruiner,” stripped of its armor left with just his voice and some stark synths as band members joined him, finally.

    The grim percussive mania of drummer Josh Freese signaled the band’s change of venue to the main stage as “Wish” segued into the high blood pressure Olympics of “March of the Pigs.” Having Freese in the fold has been the best thing to happen to the band in the past two decades, capturing the inherent funkiness in Reznor’s Prince-influenced catalogue.

    With the band bathed in sheer curtains, we got a boot stomping evangelical “Heresy” and the trance of “Copy of A” — where the stage production projected several Reznors in militia garb across the fabric.

    We’re now 20 years removed from the muscular juggernaut that was 2005’s return-to-form With Teeth wherein Reznor fused the feral lullabies of 1994’s The Downward Spiral with brash low-end and Bush-era dystopia fully ensconced in Bowie’s Berlin-era. Even though NIN’s discography spans decades, it all exists at once in a live setting, outside of any year or perceived era. He’s managed to craft a singular vision even as the collaborators have changed.

    Reznor and Ross returned to the b-stage on the arena floor to convene with Boys Noize for “Vessel” from 2007’s Year Zero. The trio then offered up a funked to death and purple-tinged “Closer” and “Sin,” turning Toyota Center into Numbers for 30 minutes.

    The scarily prescient “I’m Afraid Of Americans” came next, followed by a rueful “The Hand That Feeds.”

    NIN has always had a forward propulsion. There’s no concept of nostalgia, just raw nerves endlessly being rediscovered by fresh ears.

    Cue a blistered and oozing “Head Like A Hole.”

    There’s a legacy of elegance, though, in what may seem ugly if you’re not tuned in to the NIN frequency. Reznor was just getting us ready.

    Cue a hymnal “Hurt.”

    SETLIST

    B-Stage

    Right Where It Belongs
    Ruiner
    Piggy (Nothing Can Stop Me Now)

    Main Stage

    Wish
    March of the Pigs
    Reptile
    Heresy
    Copy of A
    Gave Up

    B-Stage (with Boys Noize)

    Vessel
    Closer
    As Alive as You Need Me to Be
    Sin

    Main Stage

    Mr. Self Destruct
    Less Than
    The Perfect Drug
    I’m Afraid Of Americans
    The Hand That Feeds
    Head Like a Hole
    Hurt

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