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  • ‘Tron: Ares’ tops box office but falls short of expectations with $33.5 million debut

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    LOS ANGELES — LOS ANGELES (AP) — “Tron: Ares” powered up the box office grid in the top spot this weekend, but Disney’s third entry in the sci-fi franchise fell short of expectations.

    Despite some favorable reviews — including a three-out-of-four-star one from The Associated Press — the new “Tron” film starring Jared Leto, Greta Lee and Jeff Bridges earned $33.5 million, according to Comscore estimates on Sunday. The big-budget project, reported to cost around $150 million, arrived 15 years after “Tron: Legacy” opened to $44 million before grossing more than $400 million globally.

    The latest chapter follows a battle between two powerful technology firms, Emcom and Dillinger, who face off against the same artificial intelligence barrier. Both can generate physical creations using laser-based 3D printers — but each creation lasts only 29 minutes before collapsing into ash.

    “Tron: Ares” was packed with action and nostalgia, but it wasn’t enough to draw big numbers across more than 4,000 theaters.

    “It’s been tough for that franchise to gain traction for it to become a big mega franchise,” said Paul Dergarabedian, the senior media analyst for Comscore. He noted that the original “Tron” movie in 1982 initially struggled at the box office, but it ultimately grew a cult following.

    Dergarabedian said the international numbers could play a key role toward the film’s profitability.

    “It still topped the box office,” he said. “It picked a solid release date. All eyes are on a big Disney film that is a huge brand, known and has been around for decades.”

    It wasn’t the only new release that struggled to connect.

    “Roofman,” which starred Channing Tatum and Kirsten Dunst in the blue-collar dramedy about a construction worker trying to rebuild his life, opened in second place with a modest $8 million debut.

    Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another” came in third with $6.6 million. “ Gabby’s Dollhouse: The Movie” held steady in fourth place with $3.3 million. The Netflix and DreamWorks family release — based on the popular preschool series — continues to perform well with younger audiences in its third weekend.

    In fifth, “Soul on Fire” debuted with $3 million. The faith-based drama tells the true story of burn survivor and motivational speaker John O’Leary, featuring performances from Joel Courtney, William H. Macy and John Corbett.

    “The Conjuring: Last Rites” followed with $2.9 million, marking another steady entry in Warner Bros.’ long-running horror franchise.

    In seventh, “Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba – Infinity Castle” brought in $2.2 million, continuing the anime franchise’s strong theatrical momentum worldwide.

    “The Smashing Machine,” starring Dwayne Johnson as UFC legend Mark Kerr, added $1.7 million in eighth place.

    Rounding out the top 10 were “The Strangers: Chapter 2” with $1.5 million and “Good Boy” with $1.3 million.

    After a couple big weekends last month, the box office has taken a hit in October — a month that Dergarabedian calls a bridge month between summer and holiday movie seasons. He said this month is perfect for films like “The Smashing Machine” and “After the Hunt,” which releases Oct. 17, to shine in their own way.

    “If you’re a movie fan, particularly in the indie, art house, award season types of film, this is a great month,” he said. “Moviegoers should embrace the eclectic offerings out there on the big screen.”

    With final domestic figures being released Monday, this list factors in the estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore:

    1. “Tron: Ares” $33.5 million

    2. “Roofman,” $8 million.

    3. “One Battle After Another,” $6.6 million.

    4. “Gabby’s Dollhouse: The Movie,” $3.3 million.

    5. “Soul on Fire,” $3 million.

    6. “The Conjuring: Last Rites,” $2.9 million.

    7. “Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba – Infinity Castle,” $2.2 million.

    8. “The Smashing Machine,” $1.7 million.

    9. “The Strangers: Chapter 2,” $1.5 million.

    10. “Good Boy,” $1.3 million.

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  • You Can Find Innovative Queer Play ‘Smuta’ in the Club

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    “This is the first time I’ve ever done any type of interview that is theater-related,” says iconic New York City club promoter Ladyfag. Born Rayne Baron, Ladyfag has spent the past nearly two decades producing queer nightlife in New York, shepherding dance parties like Holy Mountain, Battle Hymn, and LadyLand, a Pride music festival whose headliners this summer were Cardi B and FKA Twigs. Now Ladyfag is stepping off the dance floor and onto the stage to produce a play called Smuta, which premieres in Brooklyn on October 9.

    “I guess I’m a theater queen,” she says.

    Smuta isn’t much of a departure from strobe lights and the DJ booth. Written by up-and-comer Jacob Wasson and directed by Niamh Osh Jones, Smuta (pronounced smoo-tah) takes place in 2019, inside a club patronized by Moscow’s queer underground. The two-hander stars Oh, Mary! scene-stealer James Scully and The Morning Show’s Augustus Prew as Yakov and Goodboy, strangers who find each other as a spate of gay hate crimes ravage their community outside the club.

    Jacob WassonRossCollab.

    “It’s a play about two people caught in these circumstances that they have no way out of, and that’s something that’s familiar to me right now,” says Wasson. The 29-year-old playwright first wrote and produced Smuta in June 2023, putting the show up at Gymnopedie, a gymnasium in Bushwick that he rented by the hour. “I set up the whole show 30 minutes before we let people in, and then I had to take it down because the guy would have bookings afterwards,” says Wasson. He thought that short successful run would be the end of the road for Smuta. Then he found himself talking to Ladyfag at a Passover seder. “We got to talking, and she’s really interested in helping young artists in New York. And it got born out of there,” says Wasson. “It was like, ‘Oh, maybe this is an opportunity to do Smuta again.’” Ladyfag has one word to describe their unexpected collaboration: “Serendipity.”

    “The only reason it’s actually happening is because of Lady,” says Wasson affectionately. “We’re just two Jewish girls.” Ladyfag chimes in: “Nice Jewish girls from the suburbs putting on a play.” Wasson finishes her sentence: “In the big, bad city.”

    Rather than taking the traditional downtown or off-Broadway route, Wasson and Lady decided to take a big swing by mounting Smuta in an actual nightclub: Refuge, which recently opened in East Williamsburg and where Ladyfag serves as a resident promoter/party thrower. “What I loved was Jacob’s use of an unconventional space,” says Ladyfag. “My career, which obviously is not in theater, I have also searched that out. I used to do a lot of [parties] in different places that people wouldn’t normally do.” Part of that was born out of necessity, as she explains: “There’s no funds and I want to do something crazy that’s going to make no money: ‘Hey, I know this weird spot.’”

    Ladyfag

    LadyfagPeter Tamlin.

    The two-week-old Refuge is something of a culmination for Ladyfag. After moving from Toronto in the early aughts, she got her start in New York City nightlife as a cage dancer. “I moved here in the classic ‘I got a hundred bucks in my pocket and a dream,’ and I didn’t even know what my dream was,” she says. “I just wanted to come here for a few months as my last hurrah before I was about to open a vintage and antique store.”

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    Chris Murphy

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  • Alley Theatre’s World Premiere of The Body Snatcher – Houston Press

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    For a spooky play that traffics in grave robbing, fog-enshrouded nights, serious anatomy lessons, and what ethical lengths a loving father – a famous surgeon in 1899 London – would go to save his beloved daughter from dying, The Body Snatcher, a world premiere from Katie Forgette (Sherlock Holmes and the Case of the Jersey Lily, Alley 2023) needs more heart.

    Like other doctors before him (Jekyll and Frankenstein come quickly to mind), Robert Noakes (a fiercely committed David Rainey) is ahead of his time as he plays God. He needs a fresh young heart to transplant into his daughter Elizabeth (dewy Alyssa Marek) to keep her from succumbing to his wife’s previous condition of “cardiac inefficiency.” She died young, too. As we’re in the Victorian age of the “resurrectionists,” that shouldn’t be much of a problem, just hire opportunistic Fettes (an unrecognizable Brandon Hearnsberger gleefully eating up the scenery) to snatch a body. What could go wrong?

    Everything, really.

    Awash in the Alley’s munificent production provided by Yu Shibagaki’s pungent set design replete with tomes, vials, anatomy charts; Pablo Santiago’s gang-bang lighting; a gothic sound design (beating hearts, frightened horse whinnies, thunder claps that would have lit up the heart of Hollywood’s master of horror, James Whale); and Asta Bennie Hostettter’s plummy Victorian costumes with their mutton sleeves, swishing muslin dresses, and mismatched plaids, none of this is enough to counter the sketchy rom-com romance between Noake’s daughter and Noake’s precocious assistant Dr. John Brook (Luis Quintero, sporting the most faux mutton chops that immediately stop any romantic notions from the start.) The quick romance never ignites. 

    And what are we to make of obsessed Dr. Noakes? This seemingly most ethical of physicians, a paragon of science, beloved by his students, will do anything to get that heart. His standards are lower than Fettes’. Where are his principles? Is this love for his daughter or love for the historic recognition he will garner from a successful operation? When he is willing to operate on his daughter while still alive, even in his misguided belief that he can save her, we tune out and lose our sympathy. He becomes his own Fettes.

    Act II dips into melodrama as if in a Victorian romance, culminating with Noakes entering the operating theater and addressing his students, preparing to begin a dissection. A shrouded body lies on the table. A veiled female figure sits in the background. Which woman is where?

    Although set ten years after the terror reign of Jack the Ripper in 1888, perhaps that thread could have be woven into Forgette’s drama. Talk about a body snatcher; there was a natural.

    Nimbly directed by the Alley’s Associate Artistic Director Brandon Weinbrenner, this world premiere while fragrant with chills fails to fully deliver. Talky at the beginning with too much exposition, it never catches the fire it promises pictorially. The heart everybody references repeatedly fails to materialize. It beats on the soundtrack, but nowhere else.

    A note to the author: You mention Puccini’s aria from Il Trittico, “O, mio babbino caro.” That opera premiered in 1918, two decades later than your play.

    The Body Snatcher continues through October 26 at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays, 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays; 2 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays; and 7 p.m. Sundays at Alley Theatre’s Neuhaus Theatre, 615 Texas. For more information, call 713-220-5700 or visit alleytheatre.org. $45-$74.                               

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    D. L. Groover

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  • Best Bets: Houston Korean Festival, Bayou City Art Festival, and We Will CHOIR! You! – Houston Press

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    It’s International Beer and Pizza Day, just in case you’re looking for meal ideas before or after checking out one of our best bet picks. This week, we’ve got a trio of festivals, a Greek tragedy, and more. So, keep reading for the best things to do this coming week.

    Quilting goes a long way back, with possibly the earliest hint of quilting found in the British Museum, which holds an ivory carving excavated from the Temple of Osiris in 1903 that shows a royal figure in a quilted cloak. To get a sense of how far quilting has come, stop by the International Quilt Festival, which returns to George R. Brown Convention Center on Thursday, October 9, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Visitors will find more than 1,100 quilts will be displayed across 33 exhibits, as well as over 575 opportunities to shop and over 275 classes, lectures, and other events. The festival continues through October 12. Daily admission tickets range in cost from free for children 10 and under to $18 for adults, with full show passes available for $58.

    The Bayou City Art Festival brings an outdoor gallery to Memorial Park. Credit: Andy Bao

    Phoenix-based painter Jonah Ballard will bring his signature pink palette to town as the featured artist of the Bayou City Art Festival when the Art Colony Association, Inc. (ACA) brings the outdoor art gallery back to Memorial Park on Friday, October 10, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. More than 270 artists from 19 art disciplines will display their works, while guests can also enjoy live entertainment, a food truck park, a beer garden and wine bar, putt-putt mini golf, and more. The festival will continue on Saturday, October 11, and Sunday, October 12, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. both days. Tickets, $5 for children ages 6 to 12 and $20 for adults, must be purchased in advance online here.  Children under five get in free, and VIP options are available for $75 to $150. 

    Grief and vengeance take the stage over at Classical Theatre Company on Friday, October 10, at 7:30 p.m., when they officially open Sophocles’ Electra at The DeLuxe Theater. Murder begets murder in the one-act play, which finds the titular character out to avenge the murder of her father, Agamemnon, by her mother and her mother’s lover. CTC’s Artistic Director, John Johnston, recently told the Houston Press the play “is an exploration of the dark side of human nature,” adding that once the show “starts rolling it just kicks off and it really hurdles towards the climax. It comes to an end in a very somber and resigned way.” Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays, and October 13; 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Saturdays; and 2:30 p.m. Sunday through October 18. Tickets can be purchased here for $10 to $30.

    YouTube video

    On Friday, October 10, at 7:30 p.m., Houston Symphony will present its latest program, Jean-Yves Thibaudet + The Three-Cornered Hat, at Jones Hall. The concert will feature three works by Manuel de Falla, two from his two-act opera La vida breve and The Three-Cornered Hat, and welcome Thibaudet, a Grammy-nominated French pianist, for Camille Saint-Saëns’ “Egyptian” Concerto, which has been described as a work that is “melodious and straightforward and exudes the sophisticated charm and brilliance of a craftsman of the highest order.” The concert will be performed again at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, October 11, and 2 p.m. Sunday, October 12. Tickets for the in-hall performances are available here for $29 to $140. Saturday night’s show will also be livestreamed, and you can purchase access here for $20.

    Celebrate the food, music, and cultural traditions of Korea when the Houston Korean Festival returns to Discovery Green on Saturday, October 11 from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Hosted by the Korean American Society of Houston (KASH), the festival promises 40 food and merchandise vendors, arts and crafts, a kimchi eating contest, K-Pop performances, a modern Hanbok fashion show, and, for the first time, a Korean Food Fair and Expo, where visitors can try free samples from top Korean food brands. The festival will continue on Sunday, October 12, from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Festival admission is free, and you can register here, but one- and two-day VIP passes with additional benefits (including access to a private VIP tent and cooling stations, seating, and a rice cake making workshop on Sunday) are also available for $50 to $75.

    An auditorium full of people singing together.
    Choir! Choir! Choir! will bring singalong fun to the Hobby Center. Credit: Bill Woodcock Photography

    Choir! Choir! Choir!, an interactive show that invites its audience members to sing along to every note, is bringing We Will CHOIR! You!: An EPIC QUEEN Sing-Along! to the Hobby Center for the Performing Arts on Saturday, October 11, at 7:30 p.m. Nobu Adilman and Daveed Goldman, the Canadians behind the choir, said in 2023 that their shows are “a party where singing is the excuse to hang out in a room full of strangers and connect. You’re going to laugh, you’re going to dance, you’re going to find yourself sharing intimate details of your life, you’re going to meet people you would never have before, and yes, you’re also going to sing harmonies to some of the greatest songs of all time.” Tickets can be purchased here for $51.20 to $71.

    The 2025/2026 Inprint Margarett Root Brown Reading Series will welcome Adam Johnson to the Wortham Theater Center, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Orphan Master’s Son, on Wednesday, October 15, at 7:30 p.m. to read from his upcoming historical epic, The Wayfinder. Johnson previously told People that telling the story, about a little girl tasked with saving her people, he “needed poetry, myth, dance and breathtaking portraits of the natural world. I needed to capture the vastness of the ocean and the unbroken nature of human lineage. Most of all, I needed characters whose bonds were as precious and pressing as our own as we navigate our own age of uncertainty.” After the reading, Johnson will participate in an on-stage conversation followed by a book sale and signing. Tickets for the reading are available here for $6.50.

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    Natalie de la Garza

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  • Witch-obsessed comedian Tim Murray is bringing his costumes, camp and cackles to Orlando one last time

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    Credit: courtesy photo

    Comedian, actor and writer Tim Murray, famed for his sharp-witted TikToks and stage work that blends Broadway flair with queer culture, is on his way to Orlando. Murray is bringing his solo show Witches!, a dazzling mix of stand-up, music and drag, to the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts to mark the spooky season with a comedic Halloween cabaret. 

    “It is exciting and I am pumped to do it again,” Murray tells Orlando Weekly. “But, I want this to be the last time because I really want to write a new show. It is a big production and a lot of work with costumes, makeup, wigs, props and prep for the show.”

    In just over an hour, Murray blends storytelling, musical comedy, improv, drag and crowd work, seamlessly combining all of his passions, topped off with a perfectly pointy hat. He belts out parody songs and riffs with audience members about their personal favorite witches all while dressed in his Wicked Witch of the West best.

    First staged in 2022 as a one-off Halloween show, Witches! quickly grew into a phenomenon. Murray toured the show across multiple U.S. cities before taking it to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, where he refined it for international audiences. 

    “I want people to experience the feeling of celebration with their friends and to grow up and feel proud of being queer,” Murray says. “Going to Fire Island, trying on wigs, playing dumb games — it’s about the joy of finding your people.”

    On his journey with Witches!, Murray has created a coven of fans. One fan gave him a VHS copy of The Worst Witch after he joked about not knowing the film during a set. An Orlando local named Patty was so moved by the show’s message of finding your coven that she had Murray’s face tattooed on her arm. 

    “I want people to feel frivolity and joy, especially in this current time we’re living in,” Murray says. “I just want people to be able to turn their brains off for an hour and laugh and leave feeling refreshed and like they can party for a little bit.”

    For Murray, the project is personal. He grew up obsessed with witches, from Bewitched and Sabrina the Teenage Witch to Buffy’s Willow and Hocus Pocus. As a queer performer, those spellcasters embodied power, transformation and community. That throughline becomes the show’s message, urging audiences to “find your coven.”

    “I have always felt like I loved being creative, but I had a hard time finding my path,” Murray says. “So, this show felt like a way to get 10,000 hours doing all my favorite things in one show.”

    This fall, Murray will finally capture Witches! on film for an upcoming comedy special as a final document. Beyond that, he has his eyes on new creative horizons, including writing Broadway musicals and plays. He’s also set to perform in the 10th anniversary of I Put a Spell on You, a star-studded Halloween concert event in New York.

    But for now, he’s savoring the chance to share his witchy world live with audiences one last time.

    “I’ve wanted to bring this show to Orlando for a long time,” Murray says. “The fact that it’s finally happening on this last tour is thrilling. I just love that city, I always have a great time there.”


    Orlando’s daily dose of what matters. Subscribe to The Daily Weekly.




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    Emmy Bailey
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  • No, Taylor Swift did not turn down the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show

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    NEW YORK — NEW YORK (AP) — Taylor Swift says she did not turn down the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show, which will be headlined by Bad Bunny.

    “The Life of a Showgirl” singer paid a visit to “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” on Monday and dispelled a few rumors. Most notably, she shared she did not turn down the NFL’s biggest stage because she wouldn’t be allowed to own the performance footage, as claimed in a popular internet rumor.

    “No, no, no,” Swift said.

    The Super Bowl halftime show is produced by the NFL, Apple Music and Roc Nation — the latter founded by music mogul Jay-Z.

    “Jay-Z has always been very good to me. Our teams are really close. Like, they sometimes will call and say, ‘How does she feel about the Super Bowl?’ And that’s not like an official offer or, like, an official conference room conversation,” Swift told Fallon. “We’re always able to tell him the truth, which is that, like, I am in love with a guy who does that sport on that actual field,” she continued, referring to fiance Travis Kelce — a star tight end for the Kansas City Chiefs and a Super Bowl champion.

    “Like, that is violent chess. That is gladiators without swords. That is dangerous. The whole season I am locked in on what that man is doing on the field,” she said.

    “Can you imagine if he’s out there every single week, like putting his life on the line, doing this very dangerous, very high pressure, high intensity sport and I’m like, ‘I wonder what my choreo(graphy) should be?,’” Swift joked.

    “‘I think we should do two verses of ‘Shake It Off’ into ‘Blank Space’ into ‘Cruel Summer’ would be great.’ And this is nothing to do with Travis, he would love for me to do it, I’m just too locked in.”

    Last month, it was announced that global superstar Bad Bunny will bring his Latin trap, reggaeton swagger and Puerto Rican pride to the Super Bowl live from Levi’s Stadium on Feb. 8 in Santa Clara, California.

    It’s an ideal casting: Bad Bunny is fresh off a historic Puerto Rico residency that drew more than half a million fans and is leading all nominees at the Latin Grammys in November.

    “What I’m feeling goes beyond myself,” Bad Bunny said in a statement. “It’s for those who came before me and ran countless yards so I could come in and score a touchdown… this is for my people, my culture, and our history.”

    On Saturday, Bad Bunny hosted the season 51 premiere of “Saturday Night Live” with a few jokes about his forthcoming Super Bowl halftime show.

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  • Generations of Rage in Electra at Classical Theatre – Houston Press

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    Agamemnon, commander of the Greek forces that invaded Troy, survived the 10 years of the Trojan War, only to come home and be murdered by his wife and her lover.

    An ironic death that begat a cycle of bloody vengeance through the generations as Sophocles details in the one-act Electra about to go on stage with Houston’s Classical Theatre Company.

    Agamemnon, king of Mycenae, had sacrificed his daughter Iphigenia to placate the goddess Artemis who had stopped him setting off for war with high winds so that his ships couldn’t sail. Those winds calmed after the sacrifice.

    His wife Clytaemnestra(Shannon Emerick) justified killing Agamemnon upon his return because he sacrificed their daughter. Now another daughter, the title character Electra (Lindsay Ehrhardt), wants revenge on her father’s death and is ready to kill her mother and Aegisthus (Andraes Hunt), who also happens to be Agamemnon’s cousin.

     Sophocles, like most Greek playwrights, got to the point fairly quickly in his plays, according to Classical Theatre Company’s Artistic Director John Johnston.

    When Electra’s long lost brother Orestes (Seth Carter Ramsey) returns from exile – and at first they don’t recognize each other – a plot to kill Clytaemnestra is quickly hatched.

    “She doesn’t recognize him because she hasn’t seen him since he was a very, very young child. It’s been like 20 years or so. He’s a grown adult man now.   And also why it takes him a while to confirm that it is her.”

    “This is an exploration of the dark side of human nature.  As I feel that very prevalent right now.”

    “It is a cycle of blood and revenge basically and that really is the exploration of this dark side of human nature,” he says. “Blood begets more blood  and so the result is this  nevitable demise. There’s no glorification of the deaths of Clytaemnestra and Aegisthus at the end of the show.  

    The death of Clytaemnestra is “quite gruesome,” Johnston says. “The son stabs his mother multiple times . While the action takes place off stage, the body is brought onstage.”

    Greek mythology  which of course all of this is drawn from does have a great deal of this idea of destiny, a foregone end determined by the Fates. The Greek plays historically, the comedies and the tragedies both, are examinations of Greek culture and society.

    “Was it worth it to sacrifice Iphigenia so that they could fight the Trojan War and defeat the Trojans? Do the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few? I suppose you would have to ask the few about that,” Johnston says.  

    “The Greeks  at large probably would have found it a worthwhile sacrifice but when you ask the Agamemnon family, they do not feel that way. “

    Greek audiences knew the stories, knew what they were getting into when they went to play festivals. Johnston says. What they were looking for was how effective the playwrights were at political and social commentary within the plays, he adds.

    Other cast members include Matthew Keenan as Orestes’ tutor and Elissa Cuellar as the Chorus. Jon Harvey directs.

    Asked why he likes this tragic play so much, Johnston says:

    “I like the way it kind of ramps up towards the end of the play. The beginning of the play there’s a lot of exposition, there’s a lot of setting of the scene so that everyone understand how everyone feels about everyone else.”

    “And then once it starts rolling it just kicks off and it really hurdles towards the climax. It comes to an end in a very somber and resigned way. “

    The play doesn’t have a firm ending, Johnston says. “What lies down the line for Orestes and Electra is not certain. But it’s certainly not a glorification. There’s nothing triumphant about the deaths.”

    Performances are scheduled for October 10-12 (Opening night October 9 at 7:30 p.m.) at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and 2:30 Saturday and Sunday at The DeLuxe Theater, 3303 Lyons. For more information, call 713-963-9665 or visit classicaltheatre.org. $10-$30.

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    Margaret Downing

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  • Taylor Swift’s ‘The Official Release Party of a Show Girl’ debuts at No. 1 with $33M

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    LOS ANGELES — LOS ANGELES (AP) — This weekend’s box office belonged to two undeniable draws: Taylor Swift and Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson.

    It might have looked like a heavyweight matchup, but Swift’s devoted fanbase once again proved unstoppable with her film “The Official Release Party of a Show Girl,” which debuted at No. 1 with $33 million in North America, according to Sunday estimates from Comscore. The AMC Theatres release — announced only two weeks ago with minimal promotion — served as a companion piece to Swift’s 12th studio album, packaging music videos, behind-the-scenes footage and profanity-free lyric visuals into an 89-minute experience.

    The film played at all 540 AMC theaters in the U.S. for three days, ending after Sunday. AMC aired the show in Mexico, Canada and across Europe.

    “For Taylor Swift to harness the power of the movie theater to build her brand, create excitement among her fans, and create a communal experience outside of her touring, outside of her live performances, is really a stroke of genius,” said Paul Dergarabedian, the senior media analyst for Comscore. “To be able to add another $33 million to the box office bottom line is much welcomed by theater owners who were looking for content for their big screens.”

    It comes nearly two years after her “The Eras Tour” concert film opened to $96 million, with Swift extending her streak of box office dominance.

    Meanwhile, Johnson saw a more modest showing. His A24 drama “The Smashing Machine,” co-starring Emily Blunt, opened in third place with a mere $6 million, trailing Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another,” which earned $11.1 million and has now accumulated $107 million globally.

    Despite strong reviews and a 15-minute standing ovation at the Venice Film Festival — where Johnson drew praise for portraying MMA legend Mark Kerr — the film marked one of the lowest openings as a lead.

    “When major movie stars branch out into more indie roles, like Tom Cruise in ”Magnolia,” they’re trying to redefine their career,” Dergarabedian said. “They can straddle both universes, so Dwayne Johnson and all the acclaim he’s getting. That prestige factor. That’s the currency. He knows box office. He studies this and he’s a business person. But also realize that when you go outside of your comfort zone, it puts him in a certain light. … Dwayne Johnson is redefining what he can do.”

    Beyond the two marquee names, the rest of the weekend lineup offered a wide mix ranging from animated adventures to horror sequels and international releases.

    DreamWorks Animation’s family adventure “Gabby’s Dollhouse: The Movie” debuted in fourth place with $5.2 million, expanding the popular Netflix preschool series to the big screen. Warner Bros.’ supernatural thriller “The Conjuring: Last Rites” followed in fifth with $4 million, pulling in $458.2 million globally.

    In sixth was “Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba – Infinity Castle,” the latest entry in the hit Japanese anime saga, earning $3.5 million. A re-release of “Avatar: The Way of Water” made a splash in seventh with $3.1 million — a solid return for the 2022 blockbuster ahead of “Avatar: The Fire and Ash” on Dec. 19.

    Rounding out the top 10 were “The Strangers: Chapter 2” with $2.8 million, the IFC dark comedy “Good Boy” with $2.2 million, marking the company’s second-best opening weekend ever. “Kantara: A Legend – Chapter 1” with $1.7 million.

    Dergarabedian said he’s looking forward to October films such as “Tron: Ares,” “Kiss of the Spider Woman” and “Roofman,” starring Channing Tatum.

    With final domestic figures being released Monday, this list factors in the estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore:

    1. “The Official Release Party of a Show Girl,” $33 million

    2. “One Battle After Another,” $11.1 million.

    3. “The Smashing Machine,” $6 million.

    4. “Gabby’s Dollhouse: The Movie,” $5.2 million.

    5. “The Conjuring: Last Rites,” $4 million.

    6. ““Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba – Infinity Castle,” $3.5 million.

    7. “Avatar: The Way of Water,” $3.1 million.

    8. “The Strangers: Chapter 2,” $2.8 million.

    9. ““Good Boy,” $2.2 million.

    10. “Kantara A Legend: Chapter 1,” $1.7 million.

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  • Freud’s Last Session a Riveting Meeting of the Minds at A.D. Players – Houston Press

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    It’s Sunday, September 3, 1939, and the world is once again at the brink of a global conflict. Hitler’s invasion of Poland is underway, and Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain is soon to speak from 10 Downing Street. And, in A.D. Players’ production of Freud’s Last Session by Mark St. Germain, over at 20 Maresfield Gardens, London, 83-year-old Sigmund Freud awaits the arrival of a young Oxford professor named C.S. Lewis.

    Though Lewis assumes Freud’s invitation is based in his taking offense at a character Lewis modeled on Freud, one Lewis describes as a “vain, ignorant old man,” Freud says no. He never read Lewis’s book; he was intrigued by Lewis’s essay on Paradise Lost.

    Freud, an avowed atheist, has summoned Lewis, an atheist-turned-Christian, to understand why he “abandoned truth and embraced an insidious lie.” In turn, Freud wonders if Lewis came, at least subconsciously, for a debate. Regardless of whether or not he did, that’s what the men find, an intellectual tête-à-tête that digs not only into their different worldviews, specifically regarding the existence of God, but also their families and, in particular, their fathers (whom they both despised), the problem of suffering, sex, mortality, and humanity, which appears to be once again on the eve of catastrophe.

    Though Freud and Lewis never met in real life, St. Germain was inspired to bring them together for a morning conversation in his 2010 play by Armand Nicholi, a Harvard professor who turned his course on the two men’s diametrically opposed viewpoints into a 2002 book called The Question of God. As such, the play is talky and never leaves its singular location, Freud’s London study. Though light on action, Christy Watkins’s direction keeps the evening taut, expertly navigating the ebb and flow, the wit and tension of St. Germain’s script so the back-and-forth never gets a chance to wane in the play’s brisk, 80-minute runtime.

    James Belcher in Freud’s Last Session at A.D. Players. Credit: Jesse GrothOlson

    Freud’s Last Session is a two-hander, and, as such, the production belongs to its two actors, James Belcher and Philip Hays.

    Belcher projects every bit of the intellectual certainty you would expect from Freud, his voice sure and booming. But it’s the way Belcher embodies Freud’s illness, with a recurring cough and a handkerchief glued to his hand, that adds tension and poignancy to the character. His cancer, inoperable and advanced, forces his own frailty to the fore, undermining him, as even though his mind is sharp and he is more than willing to bark and bellow his disagreement, his body repeatedly betrays him when he does.

    Opposite Belcher, Hays plays C.S. Lewis with an openness and optimism that stops just short of naivete. His younger status is further emphasized by Costume Designer Marissa Burnsed, who gives Hays a softer look, with a light blue sweater vest beneath his jacket. Hays’ quieter mannerisms are a good foil to Belcher’s bombast. As Lewis, Hays often appears to take Freud’s more aggressive salvos in stride, with a curious tilt of his head and a thoughtful twist of his mouth. Though Freud does manage to score some direct hits, it’s the air raid siren, and the ensuing panic, that reveal an even deeper humanity in Lewis’s character. Hays lets the shadow of Lewis’s experience in the World War I settle over him – composure disappearing, eyes unseeing, breathing uneven.

    Together, Belcher and Hays settle into a captivating rapport, making it easy to forget that the play is just two men talking in one room. Their chemistry is entrancing, particularly during humorous exchanges. Belcher’s quips lean dry, sometimes disdainful, while Hays delivers with more of an aware, understated amusement. The perfectly played rhythm keeps the conversation dynamic and real. The momentum of the play is further sustained by the design choices, which ensure the world hums (and sometimes wails) with life throughout the show.

    Actor Philip Hays in Freud’s Last Session at A.D. Players.
    Philip Hays in Freud’s Last Session at A.D. Players. Credit: Miranda Zaebst

    The play is contained within one crescent-curved set, which depicts Freud’s London study, a replica, he says, of the one he left behind in Vienna after fleeing the Nazis. In the hands of Scenic Designer Chad Arrington, with properties by Charly Topper, the room, highly detailed and richly textured, feels like an extension of Freud’s mind – overflowing with knowledge. Books fill the shelves that line the walls and more are stacked, precarious and haphazard, in every available nook. Artifacts, busts, a globe, and other assorted knick-knacks, as well as a phone and radio that are almost third and fourth characters in the play, fill the space between.

    Amongst the furniture is, of course, Freud’s famous couch, the throw over it an echo of the Qashqa’i shekarlu rug that covered the real deal. The real prize of the room, however, is the eye-catching stained-glass window at the set’s center, flanked by red curtains drawn to mostly obscure the frosty windows through which the men look for and catch glimpses of the encroaching war outside.

    The war is an ever-present threat looming over Freud and Lewis’ encounter. It’s made most concrete via the updates coming in over the radio and then panic-inducing when the air raid siren blares, both diegetic examples of Sound Designer Jacob Sanchez’s contributions to the production. They interrupt and add further depth to the world outside the study.  

    Christina Giannelli wraps the study in warmth with her lighting choices, giving the room an almost cozy feel that contrasts with the war so close on the horizon. The 14 light bulbs that hang bare over the stage add an interesting note, again emphasizing the concept of ideas at play here. Most effective, though, is the dramatic spotlight that introduces Freud in the play’s opening image – standing before the stained-glass window, back to the audience – which the show later closes with, circling back to it in a haunting tableau.

    Freud’s Last Session is a gift of an answer to the question-plea of “to be fly on the wall.” For a brief moment, over at The George Theater, you can be a fly on the wall to hear two of the finest thinkers of the 20th century engage in a little good faith debating on a Sunday morning, though it’s far from a quiet Sunday morning. War is inevitable, and life is never guaranteed. Freud says at one point, “Do you count on your tomorrows? I do not.” This sense of urgency is woven though the play, making the production not just an intellectual exercise, but a deeply human reflection on the questions that we wrestle with most. And, as Freud reminds us, the “greater madness is not to think of it at all.”

    Performances of Freud’s Last Session will continue at 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays through Fridays, 2 and 7:30 p.m. Saturdays, and 2 p.m. Sundays through October 19 at The George Theater, 5420 Westheimer. For more information, call 713-526-2721 or visit adplayers.org.$30-$85.

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    Natalie de la Garza

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  • Best Bets: Freud’s Last Session, The Music of Elvis, and Hasan Hates Ronny – Houston Press

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    It’s officially October (i.e., Halloween month), and yes, bits of horror (gothic) are starting to seep into our best bets. But we’ve also got an imagined clash of intellect between historical figures, an evening of Elvis Presley tunes, and a screening of a classic surrealist film. Keep reading for these and more below.

    If you love the Halloween spirit, and spirits (i.e., alcohol), don’t miss Drunk Shakespeare Society’s latest boozy take on a classic, Drunk Dracula, at The Emerald Theatre on Thursday, October 2, at 7:30 p.m. Joey Herrera, who is playing the titular vampire in the adult-only show for the second time, recently told the Houston Press, “As Dracula, drunk or not, I like to lurk around the audience. And by the end, you won’t know who’s bit or not bit.” Performances are scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays, Thursdays, and October 28; 7 and 9 p.m. Fridays, with an additional 5 p.m. performance on October 31; 3, 5, 7, and 9 p.m. Saturdays; and 5 and 7 p.m. Sundays through November 15. Tickets are available here for $49 for $199, with a special “Royal Experience” also available for $500.

    What if, on the day England declared war on Germany in 1939, psychoanalyst Dr. Sigmund Freud invited author and born-again Christian C.S. Lewis to his home for a conversation? That scenario is exactly what Mark St. Germain imagined for his 2009 play, Freud’s Last Session, which A.D. Players will open on Friday, October 3, at 7:30 p.m. Director Christy Watkins told BroadwayWorld Houston the play “models a respectful dialogue between two people with opposing viewpoints, where both individuals engage honestly and openly with one another, even in the face of profound disagreement. That level of respect and mutual understanding is something I deeply admire and am excited to bring to life on stage.” Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays through Fridays, 2 and 7:30 p.m. Saturdays, and 2 p.m. Sundays through October 19. Tickets can be purchased here for $30 to $85.

    For many, Elvis Presley has never left the building. Baz Luhrmann, for example, is currently touring his second Elvis-themed picture in four years around the festival circuit. If you’re one of those fans, you won’t want to miss Houston Symphony’s latest concert, King for a Day: The Music of Elvis, on Friday, October 3, at 7:30 p.m. at Jones Hall. Vegas mainstay Frankie Moreno will join the orchestra, helmed by Principal POPS Conductor Steven Reineke, to perform songs like “Suspicious Minds” and “Can’t Help Falling in Love,” alongside professional dancers Josh Bradford and Lacey Schwimmer. The concert will be performed again at 7 p.m. Saturday, October 4, and 2 p.m. Sunday, October 5. Tickets for the in-hall performances are available here for $29 to $142. Saturday night’s show will also be livestreamed, and you can purchase access here for $20.

    July 4, 2026, will mark 250 years since the signing of the Declaration of Independence, and on Saturday, October 4, at 7 p.m., Apollo Chamber Players will open its American Story series with Declare, a musical and spoken-word program reflecting on the founding document, at the Hobby Center for the Performing Arts. The ensemble will be joined by current Houston Poet Laureate Reyes Ramirez as well as five past Poets Laureate – Robin Davidson, Deborah D.E.E.P. Mouton, Leslie Contreras Schwartz, Outspoken Bean, and Aris Kian Brown – and former Texas Poet Laureate Lupe Mendez for works that explore American identity, including topics like the right to dissent, equality, and the responsibility to act. Evergreen Quartet will perform before the concert at 6:30 p.m. Tickets can be purchased here for $10 to $75.

    YouTube video

    If Disney’s 1991 animated film Beauty and the Beast is the first thing that comes to mind when you think of Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont’s fairy tale (classic though it is), you will want to visit The Menil Collection on Saturday, October 4, at 7:30 p.m. when the museum presents a screening of Jean Cocteau’s La Belle et la Bête on the Menil lawn. With the 1946 surrealist fantasy, called “one of the most magical of all films,” Cocteau “was not making a ‘children’s film’ but was adapting a classic French tale that he felt had a special message after the suffering of World War II: Anyone who has an unhappy childhood may grow up to be a Beast.” The screening, co-presented with Villa Albertine in Houston, is free and open to all.

    Musician, vocalist, and composer Amanda Ekery will visit Asia Society Texas on Saturday, October 4, at 7:30 p.m. to play music from and talk about her latest album Árabe, “a jazz, folk, pop-infused album that serves as a tribute to Ekery’s Syrian-Mexican roots and hometown of El Paso, Texas.” (An album that also comes with 60 pages of essays about each track on the album.) Of her music, Ekery has said, “I think you can hear the jazz influence in what I write, but jazz isn’t all that influences me. For Árabe in particular, I drew inspiration from classical Arabic music, norteño, country, Americana folk and jazz. These styles are filtered through my personal style, but you can hear moments of each.” Tickets to the concert can be purchased here for $25.

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    Two Daily Show correspondents, Hasan Minhaj (former) and Ronny Chieng (current), are bringing their joint tour, Hasan Hates Ronny | Ronny Hates Hasan, to the Hobby Center for the Performing Arts on Sunday, October 5, at 6 p.m. The two comedians will take their on-air frenemy status to the next level, performing onstage at the same time in a “debate to the death” format. Ahead of the tour, Minhaj told Deadline, “I’m not giving you a pull quote saying how excited I am. I’m not excited, I detest Ronny Chieng and I resent his career.” Chieng said back, “I hope after this show people can finally stop listening to this uneducated fraud.” Few tickets remain for the 6 p.m. show, but there’s more availability for the second performance on Sunday, October 5, at 8:30 p.m. Tickets can be purchased here for $69.50 to $293.30.

    A father turns to grave robbing to save his daughter in The Body Snatcher, Katie Forgette’s Robert Louis Stevenson-inspired play set to officially open at the Alley Theatre on Wednesday, October 8 at 7:30 p.m. Alley resident acting company member David Rainey told the Houston Press that not only does the production have “all kinds of cool effects,” it is “a tremendous love story – a father’s love. And the passion he has to try to save her. It raises the question of what lengths would you go to in order to save the person you care about the most.” Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays, 8 p.m. Fridays, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturdays, and 2 and 7 p.m. Sundays through October 26. Tickets can be purchased here for $45 to $85.

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    Natalie de la Garza

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  • Jeremy McCarter’s Audiodrama Puts Us Inside Hamlet’s Head

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    McCarter’s audio adaptation of Hamlet embraces audio experimentation to renew one of theater’s most familiar texts. Courtesy Make-Believe Association and the Tribeca Festival

    For early modern audiences, the question of how to represent Hamlet’s dead father was answered by trapdoors, white flour on an armored face or an actor playing a bloodied corpse. After lighting and sound technology standardized the spectral stage, film answered with the magic of superimposition and the green screen. More recently, the 2023 Public Theater production uniquely possessed Hamlet by putting the ghost inside him. In a rapturous performance, streaming on Great Performances through tomorrow, Ato Blankson-Wood rolls his eyes back into his head, fiercely mouthing his father’s fiery plea.

    In a new audio production, Jeremy McCarter, disciple of Oskar Eustis’s Public Theater and founder of the production company Make-Believe Association, goes a step further than the Delacorte staging. McCarter places not the ghost but us, the listeners, inside the character of Hamlet. The sounds of his environment merge with the sounds of his body. We hear what he hears.

    Readers might know McCarter as Lin-Manuel Miranda’s co-writer of Hamilton: The Revolution and as a public historian in his own right. But since the founding of Make-Believe in 2017, McCarter’s collaborative efforts have centered around original, live audio plays by Chicago writers. With the pandemic, the company shifted to longer form studio productions, including most recently Lake Song, which is something of a Waterworld for the modern ear. Listening through Make-Believe’s stream, I thought: Is this what would have happened if Studs Terkel, Norman Corwin and Octavia Butler got together and played around with 21st-century recording technology?

    Maybe so. But even today’s listeners will need to warm up to any version of Hamlet told only from the main character’s perspective. And McCarter knows this. Episode 1 begins not with the “Who’s there?” of the famous sentinel scene (Hamlet’s absent from it, after all), but instead with listening directions for the modern commuter: “The tale that you’re about to hear, with its carnal, bloody and unnatural acts,” whispers Daveed Diggs, in a playful pastiche of the playtext, “will come most vividly to life, if you listen to it…on headphones.”

    And so it does. When we first encounter Hamlet, sound designer Mikhail Fiksel conjures a scene reminiscent of an actor readying to enter a stage. We hear footsteps echo across the solitary silence of the stereo soundscape, a deep inbreath and then a heavy door opening unto Claudius’s coronation scene. Suddenly, the social space—the music, the laughter, the chatter—of Elsinore is upon us. Daniel Kyri, who plays Hamlet with a subtleness rarely afforded to stage actors, pummels himself, right from the get-go, with the wish that “this too too solid flesh would melt.” Soliloquies, under McCarter’s direction, are not private thoughts uttered aloud but instead long-running interior monologues.

    Adapting Hamlet to audio is not a new thing. Orson Welles’s Columbia Workshop took it up in fall 1936, and the BBC 12 years later. These adaptations sound dated to us today, but they were part of a vibrant auditory culture of their time. As Neil Verma has written, radio dramatists constructed a fourth wall for listeners at the same time that stage dramatists attempted to break it down for spectators. Contemporary productions on Audible tend to eschew the declamatory style of these earlier works, and also, sadly, their acoustic experimentation. This is where McCarter’s production is a welcome intervention into this overproduced yet underheard play: a return to the imaginative possibilities of the acoustic medium.

    Hamlet: World Premiere Listening Event - 2025 Tribeca FestivalHamlet: World Premiere Listening Event - 2025 Tribeca Festival
    Daniel Kryi, who plays the titular character, at the “Hamlet: World Premiere Listening Event” during the 2025 Tribeca Festival. Photo by Roy Rochlin/Getty Images for Tribeca Festival

    The series doesn’t sacrifice the visual sense but instead spatializes it: a complex arrangement of lavalier, shotgun and binaural mics captures sound in all directions. Purists might cry that McCarter slashes up the text to highlight Hamlet’s point of audition, but they are posers. Any Shakespeare scholar knows that the text we read today is itself highly mediated, a composite of at least three different versions. In the age of Grand Theft Hamlet, this version offers remarkable fidelity despite its formal innovation.

    Intimacy might just be the word to describe what the Make-Believe team achieves here. And it’s true: We do hear Hamlet’s heartbeat, breath and memory against the backdrop of his social world. I think the experiment works best when we hear Hamlet not foregrounded but embedded in the specificities of his place and time; when the mic is not inside him, or even him, but instead on his lapel, capturing the soundscape as it merges with his fractured perceptions. This happens most memorably in Episode 3, when the sound of bells decreasing in half steps tells not just the time of day but also the scale of mental descent.

    Yet there is a danger in achieving this intimacy by reducing Hamlet the play to Hamlet the character. We might call this McCarter’s “Hamilton-ization” of Hamlet: the individualizing of the character against his social world. The “To be or not to be” soliloquy, for instance, is done completely underwater. It makes for riveting audio, methinks, but it erases the fact that most of the soliloquies of the play are overheard. This includes the usurping King Claudius’s speech, where he laments that his “O limèd soul, that struggling to be free / Art more engaged.” This speech is translated as overheard noise in the audio, but we’d do better to listen broader. Claudius is comparing his soul to an animal caught in a glue trap, and at times, Make-Believe’s production, too, becomes more ensnared as it attempts to become more free.

    McCarter’s stated aim is to resist the commonplace that Hamlet, as Laurence Olivier famously voiced over the 1948 film, “could not make up his mind” by, well, getting us into his mind. But this rhetoric ends up perpetuating that romantic individualism instead of challenging it, making what is social—primogeniture, murder, love—solely a problem of the conscience. In doing so, the artwork, too, ends up privatizing very public questions: What system do we resort to when an injustice has been enacted? How do we test the truth of our beliefs when we cannot trust our own perceptions? As McCarter explains in his New York Times op-ed, he is most interested in this question: “Who among us hasn’t felt,” he writes, “that ‘the time is out of joint’?” But in making the play into a universal coming-of-age narrative, we lose out on asking what an “us” is.

    And so, how does this production stage “Enter Ghost”? I won’t give it away. It sounds awesome, even if it doesn’t quite make sense. (Especially if you’re a nerd like me and study the script along with the audio. How exactly does Hamlet write something down when he’s in the ocean?) But that’s no matter, because this adaptation is less about making sense than remaking the senses.

    Indeed, the most compelling adaptation of the stage direction “Enter Ghost” is not an adaptation at all, but Isabella Hammad’s 2021 novel Enter Ghost. It tells the story of a British Palestinian actress caught up in a production of Hamlet in the West Bank. The novel doesn’t aim to make its characters like us but instead attempts the opposite: to force readers like me to confront a world that is radically different from their own. This is what all great art should do. Or so I’ve heard.

    More in performing arts

    Jeremy McCarter’s Audiodrama Puts Us Inside Hamlet’s Head

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  • Get your spontaneity on with classes at Alameda’s new Improv Central

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    Comedians like the late Robin Williams have relied on their finely honed improvisational skills to take audiences on a laughter journey at comedy clubs for decades. What many don’t realize, though, is that these very same techniques can be put to use in everyday peoples’ business and personal lives.

    That’s where Alameda’s new improv skills training facility, Improv Central, comes in. The first of its kind in the country, Improv Central’s goal is to “activate the inner improviser in everybody, like the improviser we are every day in our real lives,” says Improv Central founder Claire Slattery. Or, as stated on their website, Improv Central is “a place for everyday people to joyfully navigate their unscripted lives, together.”

    An Island native and Alameda High School graduate, Slattery studied drama and communication at Stanford University before diving into the acting life, performing in the Bay Area with the California Shakespeare and American Conservatory Theater companies. Later she held leadership positions with comedy and training organizations Killing My Lobster and Speechless Inc.

    This shift led her to switch gears from performing to coaching and eventually contracting with Google and the Nature Conservancy to teach their employees how to give more effective and entertaining presentations on-stage, in meetings and online using improvisational tools and techniques. Slattery says one of the keys to developing one’s improv chops is to let go of perfectionism and the over-preparation that comes with it.

    “I’m hoping to undo some of that fear-based over-preparing that we do in our life,” she says. “(For example,) you’re throwing your kids’ birthday party, and it has to be perfect, and you’re getting every party favor, and they have to match identically.”

    As a self-described “recovering perfectionist,” Slattery says she wants to free people from perfectionism through improv.

    “How do you trust yourself? How do you show up and practice being able to be curious, letting go of that control, understanding that it might not be perfect, but do you get to be more present in the moment? Do you get to be more rested and then you get to enjoy it? That’s OK,” says Slattery.

    A technique Slattery says she uses to get people to loosen up focuses on those work or personal-life moments when people are called upon to expound on what they’re up to: the dreaded “what are you working on?” or “what did you do in school today?” queries.

    “We kind of create a monotone approach for ourselves” when faced with this question says Slattery. To combat most people’s tendency to drearily recite a series of events when asked to update everyone on what they’ve been doing lately, Slattery uses a timing method she calls the accordion.

    Just as an accordion expands and contracts, Slattery gives her charges different amounts of time to give their updates. She typically starts with giving them one minute to tell their story.

    “Then I say, ‘OK, now you have 30 seconds.’ And they have to change their words, their language, they have to edit on the fly. And then I say, ‘OK, great. Now do it in 15 seconds.’ And everyone’s like, ’15 seconds? Are you crazy?’ I’m like, ‘You can do it.’ And then stuff drops away, and they do it in 15 seconds and then I say ‘five seconds.’ And they’re like, ‘What? No way.’ Typically the minute speech whittled down to five seconds turns into a sentence.”

    To further drive home the point of how brevity can be a more effective way to communicate, Slattery then asks her students to go back to trying to give a one-minute update.

    “None of them can fill a minute, where before they started they’re like, ‘a minute is too short.’ And now it becomes too long,” says Slattery.

    Another skill Slattery wants improv newbies to pay special attention to is the art of really listening to others intently.

    “I think very successful, grounded, connected, healthy people are really good at deep curious listening. I’m not saying don’t prepare, but at the same time, whatever preparation I did, I need to let go of that so that I can listen to you.”

    Wylie Herman, a teacher at Improv Central, hopes the classes will help people become more connected to their fellow personal-device-transfixed humans.

    “A lot of people are grappling with how to stay connected to our fellow humans while we’re bombarded by overwhelming distractions and negativity. I hope Improv Central will grow into a safe place where everyday people can come together to connect, inspire and, most importantly, play!” says Herman.

    Improv Central is at 500 Central Ave. in Alameda. For more information visit improv-central.com.

    Paul Kilduff is a San Francisco-based writer who also draws cartoons. He can be reached at pkilduff350@gmail.com.

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    Paul Kilduff

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  • Get Bloodier and Boozier This Halloween with Drunk Dracula – Houston Press

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    Halloween season is upon us, and it’s about to get bloodier and boozier thanks to the Drunk Shakespeare Society, which will once again present Lori Wolter Hudson’s Drunk Dracula at The Emerald Theatre from October 2 through November 15.

    If you’re not familiar with Drunk Shakespeare, here’s the set-up: At the start of each performance, one actor takes five shots of their liquor of choice before leading the rest of the cast through one of Shakespeare’s classic plays in under 90 minutes.

    “If somebody hasn’t seen the show before and they’re planning to come, what they can expect is drunk, professional, and outrageous performances from five actors who are all trying to keep the show going, while one of them is blasted, completely obliterated, with alcohol,” says actor Joey Herrera, who will don the Count’s fangs in Drunk Dracula.

    Herrera, an original member of Houston’s Drunk Shakespeare Society, says when it comes to The Bard, all the actors are “huge nerds,” and the alcohol just lets that nerdiness out.

    “The whole point of the drinking is that it enables us to geek out as much as we want,” explains Herrera. “If we’re the drunk actor, we’ll do a monologue, and we can cut in between and talk to the audience, break the fourth wall a little bit. It’s almost like you’re preaching to your friends. It’s that back-of-the-bar-room vibe where it almost feels like a bunch of Shakespeare nerds are getting together.”

    A graduate of Texas State University, where he studied acting, Herrera says a “party animal instinct kicks in” for the drunk actor that makes acting become “like second nature.”

    “As an actor, you’re always in your head about something…And then, as soon as you get five shots of tequila in your body, all that goes out the window, the confidence level goes up, and you’re like, ‘You know what? I don’t care. I’m just going to be me. I’m going to be as authentic as I can be. I’m going to nerd out about Shakespeare, or I’m going to nerd out about Halloween, and I’m going to take you guys along for the ride,’” says Herrera. 

    Drunk Dracula returns to Houston for Halloween. Credit: Travis Emery

    In honor of Halloween, the ensemble will take audiences on a drunken ride through Bram Stoker’s 1897 vampire tale Dracula.

    “We have the book that we reference, and then the drunk actor has the freedom to mess around with it,” says Herrera. “And there’s a lot of inclusion of pop culture references. We stay with the times, with the zeitgeist, and what’s currently trending, and we have a lot of fun with it.”

    For his own take on the Transylvanian bloodsucker, Herrera says he found inspiration in Stoker’s source material and every single film he could get his hands on featuring Dracula. He also pulled from some unexpected places.

    “A little bit of my own twist into it is pulling from a lot of performers, like I pull from Michael Jackson and Prince and anybody who has stage presence, because with a character as iconic as Dracula, you have to command the room,” he says. “I think leaning into campiness has done wonders for the production, because at the end of the day, we’re all being silly, and we’re all portraying these heightened versions of these characters. But at the same time, I’ve taken bits and pieces from every iteration of the character.”

    The production marks Herrera’s second year in the role of Dracula, and he says the show developed something akin to a cult following last year.

    “I didn’t know so many people were into vampires,” says Herrera. “We had a lot of people come see the show multiple times, and then they’d bring their friends, and they’re really there for the vampire. They’re there to see some blood sucking and get hypnotized. They love it.”

    One thing that pleasantly surprised Herrera was the number of people who showed up in costumes for the show. “We don’t really get that for Romeo and Juliet or any of the other Shakespeare things that we’ve done.”

    Actor Joey Herrera posing as Dracula in Drunk Dracula.
    Actor Joey Herrera as Dracula in Drunk Dracula. Credit: Travis Emery

    For those big spenders that would like a few guaranteed audience participation opportunities, there’s “The Royal Experience,” a package which offers its buyers a chance to be a Count or Countess for the evening, complete with a throne and crown, a bottle of champagne, two hand-crafted cocktails, treats, and a little bell, which they can ring twice, at any time during the performance, to have the drunk actor complete a challenge or take another drink.

    “They kind of become characters in the story themselves,” Herrera explains. “They love it. They just soak it up.”

    But even if you’re not royalty for the night, Herrera says you may still find yourself in Dracula’s crosshairs.

    “As Dracula, drunk or not, I like to lurk around the audience. And by the end, you won’t know who’s bit or not bit,” he says with a laugh. “It’s fun connecting with the audience that way, and that’s essential—to make them feel included, even people in the back rows. To give them a memory to leave the show with.”

    The result of it all is a show that can be completely different from night to night, with Herrera saying there is “a lot of unpredictability to it.”

    “You never really know what kind of performance you’re walking into. The configuration of the cast, whoever the drunk actor is, it always changes. And it’s just ever evolving.”

    One thing, however, does not change, and it’s the message Herrera wants anyone considering Drunk Dracula to know: “We will welcome you with open arms and open fangs.”

    Performances are scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays, Thursdays, and October 28; 7 and 9 p.m. Fridays, with an additional 5 p.m. performance on October 31; 3, 5, 7, and 9 p.m. Saturdays; and 5 and 7 p.m. Sundays through November 15 at The Emerald Theatre, 412 Travis. For more information, visit drunkdracula.com. $49-$199, with The Royal Experience available for $500.

    Drunk Dracula is an adult-only show (21+) featuring strong language, vulgarity, sexual humor, and audience interaction, with potential elements of nudity. It also contains fog, strobe effects, and loud noises.

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    Natalie de la Garza

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  • The Fall of the House of Lehman: The Lehman Trilogy at Stages

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    Rags to riches to rags.

    This ancient axiom neatly describes Stefano Massini’s epic play The Lehman Trilogy, now mesmerizing at Stages. Adapted from the Italian (and its five-hour long length) by Ben Power, Lehman now clocks in at a more reasonable three-and-a-half hours with two intermissions. Believe me, the time flies by.

    Consistently entertaining, the drama encapsulates the history of the largest and most powerful of all American investment companies, Lehman Brothers, whose bankruptcy in 2008 rocked Wall Street and led to the collapse of the tottering global financial empire that had been built on sand. The fall was big, huge, and the consequences are still felt to this day.

    Trilogy is the story of one side of American capitalism. Grit, greed, and hubris play a part in this kaleidoscope of global economics that begin in 1844 with the arrival of young Bavarian immigrant Hayum Lehmann (Spencer Plachy) who flees Germany’s rising antisemitism. Arriving “excited and trembling” at New York’s Castle Garden, he’s immediately given a new identity. Like so many other immigrants, this land of opportunity is his for the taking, if he’s up for it. Everything changes in America, he exclaims. With his new name Henry Lehman, the family tale spins wildly onward.

    Settling in Montgomery, Alabama, he opens a dry goods store. With the later arrival of his two brothers, Emanuel (Orlando Arriaga) and Mayer (Robby Matlock), the store is christened Lehman Brothers. Henry is the head, Emanuel the arm, and young Mayer is the “potato,” smooth and just peeled.

    For three years, saddled with debt, the three “work, work, work,” selling clothes and necessities to the poor sharecroppers, until Henry’s brainstorm that they should be dealing in Alabama’s golden cash crop, cotton. There’s profit to be made from this, as numbers fly across the stage floor and up the back wall. They can be the “middle men” between the plantation and the northern weaving factories. How many carts of raw goods will turn a profit? Cotton bolls are strewn across the stage. More numbers fly by, signifying their growing business acumen. The yellow fever pandemic takes Henry in 1855, but as the two surviving brothers sit “shiva,” their mantra of “we make money” takes root.

    As Ash Parra’s lighting design pulses bright then dim, the brothers’ fortunes rise and fall with the catastrophe of the Civil War, the ruination of the cotton crop, a fortuitous move to New York, and then new prosperous business ventures into tobacco and coffee…and money management. Wall Street’s 1929 disaster ends Act II. In three acts, each an hour long, the Lehman brothers delineate the changing face of America’s economy.

    Throughout, the three actors play multiple characters with a panoply of accents, tics, and subtle gestures. They grow old, they die, they totter off, while their fiancees, wives, wily sons, or politicians take their place. In Afsaneh Aayani’s marvelously efficient and atmospheric set design, lawyer’s file boxes are rearranged as desks, podiums, or seats as the fascinating family saga unfolds.

    Power’s poetic adaptation, replete with repetition, overlays the drama with a mythic ancient vibe akin to Homer or Virgil. The brothers speak in the third person, whether talking about themselves or to others, that subtly distances us, and them, from the mundane. The drama goes universal.

    Breathlessly directed by Stages’ artistic director Derek Charles Livingston, this story of an American dynasty’s pride and ultimate fall moves nimbly. While the third act veers into rushed territory, as if the author wanted to get to the ending as quickly as possible, we aren’t as moved as we should be by the inevitable decline of this family.

    After nearly 164 years, the Lehman Brothers’ fortune dissolved into the largest bankruptcy in history, taking down numerous financial institutions with it. When the Lehmans moved from selling solid goods like cotton and plows into the province of ephemeral cash like prime mortgages, the end was almost certain. The fall was swift and ugly. American history is filled with such tales, and The Lehman Trilogy is thoroughly American in its own tragic way.

    Stages has grown up with this thoroughly engrossing production of the 2022 Tony Award-winning Best Play. A crown jewel for its ’25-’26 season opener, it can’t be bettered. Glorious work by all.

    The Lehman Trilogy continues through October 12. 6:30 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays; 7 p.m. Fridays; 1 p.m. and 7 p.m. Saturdays; and 1 p.m. Sundays at The Gordy at Stages, 800 Rosine. For more information, call 713-527-0123 or visit stageshouston.com. $25 to $109.

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    D. L. Groover

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  • Get Bloodier and Boozier This Halloween with Drunk Dracula

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    Halloween season is upon us, and it’s about to get bloodier and boozier thanks to the Drunk Shakespeare Society, which will once again present Lori Wolter Hudson’s Drunk Dracula at The Emerald Theatre from October 2 through November 15.

    If you’re not familiar with Drunk Shakespeare, here’s the set-up: At the start of each performance, one actor takes five shots of their liquor of choice before leading the rest of the cast through one of Shakespeare’s classic plays in under 90 minutes.

    “If somebody hasn’t seen the show before and they’re planning to come, what they can expect is drunk, professional, and outrageous performances from five actors who are all trying to keep the show going, while one of them is blasted, completely obliterated, with alcohol,” says actor Joey Herrera, who will don the Count’s fangs in Drunk Dracula.

    Herrera, an original member of Houston’s Drunk Shakespeare Society, says when it comes to The Bard, all the actors are “huge nerds,” and the alcohol just lets that nerdiness out.

    “The whole point of the drinking is that it enables us to geek out as much as we want,” explains Herrera. “If we’re the drunk actor, we’ll do a monologue, and we can cut in between and talk to the audience, break the fourth wall a little bit. It’s almost like you’re preaching to your friends. It’s that back-of-the-bar-room vibe where it almost feels like a bunch of Shakespeare nerds are getting together.”

    A graduate of Texas State University, where he studied acting, Herrera says a “party animal instinct kicks in” for the drunk actor that makes acting become “like second nature.”

    “As an actor, you’re always in your head about something…And then, as soon as you get five shots of tequila in your body, all that goes out the window, the confidence level goes up, and you’re like, ‘You know what? I don’t care. I’m just going to be me. I’m going to be as authentic as I can be. I’m going to nerd out about Shakespeare, or I’m going to nerd out about Halloween, and I’m going to take you guys along for the ride,’” says Herrera. 

    click to enlarge

    Drunk Dracula returns to Houston for Halloween.

    Photo by Travis Emery

    In honor of Halloween, the ensemble will take audiences on a drunken ride through Bram Stoker’s 1897 vampire tale Dracula.

    “We have the book that we reference, and then the drunk actor has the freedom to mess around with it,” says Herrera. “And there’s a lot of inclusion of pop culture references. We stay with the times, with the zeitgeist, and what’s currently trending, and we have a lot of fun with it.”

    For his own take on the Transylvanian bloodsucker, Herrera says he found inspiration in Stoker’s source material and every single film he could get his hands on featuring Dracula. He also pulled from some unexpected places.

    “A little bit of my own twist into it is pulling from a lot of performers, like I pull from Michael Jackson and Prince and anybody who has stage presence, because with a character as iconic as Dracula, you have to command the room,” he says. “I think leaning into campiness has done wonders for the production, because at the end of the day, we’re all being silly, and we’re all portraying these heightened versions of these characters. But at the same time, I’ve taken bits and pieces from every iteration of the character.”

    The production marks Herrera’s second year in the role of Dracula, and he says the show developed something akin to a cult following last year.

    “I didn’t know so many people were into vampires,” says Herrera. “We had a lot of people come see the show multiple times, and then they’d bring their friends, and they’re really there for the vampire. They’re there to see some blood sucking and get hypnotized. They love it.”

    One thing that pleasantly surprised Herrera was the number of people who showed up in costumes for the show. “We don’t really get that for Romeo and Juliet or any of the other Shakespeare things that we’ve done.”

    click to enlarge

    Joey Herrera as Dracula in Drunk Dracula.

    Photo by Travis Emery

    For those big spenders that would like a few guaranteed audience participation opportunities, there’s “The Royal Experience,” a package which offers its buyers a chance to be a Count or Countess for the evening, complete with a throne and crown, a bottle of champagne, two hand-crafted cocktails, treats, and a little bell, which they can ring twice, at any time during the performance, to have the drunk actor complete a challenge or take another drink.

    “They kind of become characters in the story themselves,” Herrera explains. “They love it. They just soak it up.”

    But even if you’re not royalty for the night, Herrera says you may still find yourself in Dracula’s crosshairs.

    “As Dracula, drunk or not, I like to lurk around the audience. And by the end, you won’t know who’s bit or not bit,” he says with a laugh. “It’s fun connecting with the audience that way, and that’s essential—to make them feel included, even people in the back rows. To give them a memory to leave the show with.”

    The result of it all is a show that can be completely different from night to night, with Herrera saying there is “a lot of unpredictability to it.”

    “You never really know what kind of performance you’re walking into. The configuration of the cast, whoever the drunk actor is, it always changes. And it’s just ever evolving.”

    One thing, however, does not change, and it’s the message Herrera wants anyone considering Drunk Dracula to know: “We will welcome you with open arms and open fangs.”

    Performances are scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays, Thursdays, and October 28; 7 and 9 p.m. Fridays, with an additional 5 p.m. performance on October 31; 3, 5, 7, and 9 p.m. Saturdays; and 5 and 7 p.m. Sundays through November 15 at The Emerald Theatre, 412 Travis. For more information, visit drunkdracula.com. $49-$199, with The Royal Experience available for $500.

    Drunk Dracula is an adult-only show (21+) featuring strong language, vulgarity, sexual humor, and audience interaction, with potential elements of nudity. It also contains fog, strobe effects, and loud noises.

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    Natalie de la Garza

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  • Tina Turner statue unveiled in Tennessee community where she grew up

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    BROWNSVILLE, Tenn. — A 10-foot statue of rock n’ roll queen Tina Turner was unveiled Saturday in the rural Tennessee community where she grew up — before becoming a Grammy-winning singer, an electrifying stage performer, and one the world’s most recognizable and popular entertainers.

    The statue was revealed during a ceremony at a park in Brownsville, located about an hour drive east of Memphis. The city of about 9,000 people is near Nutbush, the community where Turner went to school as a child. As a teen, she attended high school just steps from where the statue now stands.

    The statue shows Turner with her signature wild hairdo and holding a microphone, as if she was singing on stage. It was designed by sculptor Fred Ajanogha, who said he tried to capture her flexibility of movement on stage, how she held the microphone with her index finger extended, and her hair style, which he compared to the “mane of a lion.”

    Turner died May 24, 2023 at age 83 after a long illness in her home in Küsnacht near Zurich. Her Grammy-winning singing career included the hit songs “Nutbush City Limits,” “Proud Mary,” “Private Dancer,” and “We Don’t Need Another Hero,” from the film “Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome.” Her movie credits also include “Tommy” and “Last Action Hero.”

    Turner teamed with husband Ike Turner for hit records and live shows in the 1960s and ’70s. She survived her troubled marriage to succeed in middle age with the chart-topping “What’s Love Got To Do With It,” released in 1984.

    Her admirers ranged from Mick Jagger to Beyoncé to Mariah Carey, and she was known as the the “Queen of Rock ‘n’ Roll.”

    The unveiling was part of the 10th-annual Tina Turner Heritage Days, a celebration of her life growing up in rural Tennessee, before she moved away as a teenager. The statue was sculpted in clay and cast in bronze, and it took about a year to complete.

    Karen Cook said she traveled from Georgia to attend the event with her friend, a cousin of Turner’s, to honor the legendary performer.

    “She’s a great artist, I love her music,” said Cook, 59. “My mom listened to her a lot. It’s a big deal and a great thing for the community to have Tina Turner in her small town.”

    About 50 donors gave money for the statue, including Ford Motor Co., which donated $150,000. Ford is building an electric truck factory in nearby Stanton.

    The statue stands near a museum honoring Turner at the the West Tennessee Delta Heritage Center in Brownsville. The museum opened in 2014 inside the renovated Flagg Grove School, a one-room building where Turner attended classes in Nutbush. The school closed in the 1960s and was used as a barn before the dilapidated building was moved by tractor-trailer from Nutbush to Brownsville.

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  • History has been renewed at the Lansdowne Theater

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    Friday, September 26, 2025 2:17PM

    History has been renewed at the Lansdowne Theater

    History has been renewed at the Lansdowne Theater. Shuttered for nearly 40 years, the near-century-old space has been restored to its former glory.

    Lansdowne, Pa. — History has been renewed at the Lansdowne Theater. Shuttered for nearly 40 years, the near-century-old space has been restored to its former glory.
    The theater original opened in 1927. An electrical fire caused it to close in 1987. After years of sitting empty the space got new life with a restoration project that took nearly 20 years.
    Lansdowne Theater is on the historic register. A blast from the past that remains one of the few theaters from the Hollywood movie era of the 1920s.
    The restoration project recreated the original theaters grandeur using images from the theaters former life to imitate the original stage curtain, the decore on the seats and lights that line the walls. Original items include the centerpiece chandelier and the neon clock on the front wall. And you can’t miss the marquee that welcomes guests to the new home for entertainment in Delaware County.
    The former movie house is now a live stage for music, comedy and community events.

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    CCG

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  • Winter Park Playhouse secures permanent Orange Avenue home – Orlando Weekly

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    Credit: via Winter Park Playhouse

    After months of uncertainty, Winter Park Playhouse will remain in the space it has called home for more than two decades.

    After receiving grant funds from Orange County Tourism Development Tax, Winter Park formally purchased the theater’s space at 711 N. Orange Ave. this week. The nonprofit professional musical theater has called the spot home for the past 23 years. 

    Winter Park Playhouse’s future came into question in February 2023, when the building’s owners decided to sell the property. To preserve the nonprofit’s place in the community, the city of Winter Park partnered with the theater to apply for TDT funds, citing the $1.9 million economic impact and 30,000 guests it attracted each year.

    Winter Park was in turn allotted $8 million by Orange County last fall to purchase and renovate the space.

    Now that the permanent home is secured, the TDT funding will also be used to employ major renovations to the building, including a 50 percent increase in seating capacity and upgrades designed to elevate the audience experience.

    While the renovation continues, the playhouse will continue to perform its MainStage Musicals and Spotlight cabarets at the Lowndes Shakespeare Center/Orlando Shakes theater complex.

    Founded in 2002, the Winter Park Playhouse is a local mainstay, known for its lineup of musicals, cabarets and special events. 


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    It comes with an enclosed courtyard pool, a summer kitchen with a pizza oven, a private tennis court and more

    The show is a fundraiser for the Yellow Brick Road Foundation

    We were all, indeed, taken out


    Orlando’s daily dose of what matters. Subscribe to The Daily Weekly.




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    Emmy Bailey
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  • Alley Theatre Puts Together a Sleek Da Vinci Code

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    Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code is one of the bestselling books of all time, so successful that Hollywood brought it to the big screen with A-lister Tom Hanks. If you’ve read it, or seen the movie, you probably wouldn’t think a stage adaptation inevitable, but that’s what Rachel Wagsstaff and Duncan Abel did, adapting it as a play that you can catch now over at the Alley Theatre.


    Based on its enduring popularity, there’s clearly something in there that resonates with folks. The question is, how well does that something translate to the stage?


    Our not quite intrepid hero here is Robert Langdon, a Harvard symbologist in Paris for a conference. He is, unexpectedly, called to the Louvre, where a detective, Bezu Fache, shows him the body of curator Jacques Saunière, shot dead and lying starfished on the marble floor. Prior to his death, Saunière drew a pentacle with his own blood and, ostensibly, Fache has called on Langdon to get some insight into the meaning of the symbol.


    Though Langdon quickly explains the symbol and deduces that Saunière has positioned himself as Leonardo da Vinci’s “Vitruvian Man,” thereby making himself a symbol, his expertise isn’t the only reason Fache called him. It turns out that Saunière and Langdon were supposed to meet that night, though Saunière cancelled at the last minute. It’s clear that Fache is suspicious of Langdon, but his investigation is interrupted by the sudden arrival of cryptographer Sophie Neveu.


    Sophie sneakily warns Langdon that he’s in danger, and when they get a little privacy, she reveals that Saunière was her estranged grandfather, and he left behind one more message Fache had yet to reveal: “PS Find Robert Langdon.”


    Fache believes the message implicates Langdon in the killing, but Sophie believes the message was for her, telling her that she needs Langdon to solve her grandfather’s murder. Together, with the police and Saunière’s fanatical killer hot on their trail, Sophie and Langdon set off to unravel a mystery hidden in plain sight that has the potential to “shake the pillars of Western civilization.”

    click to enlarge

    Chris Hutchison and Dylan Godwin in Alley Theatre’s production of The Da Vinci Code.

    Photo by Melissa Taylor

    If you were at all cognizant around the time Brown’s novel was released in 2003, you will remember the overwhelming popularity of his fast-and-loose romp through facts and history. There’s a lot going on, with the Catholic Church, Jesus Christ, Mary Magdalene, the works of Leonardo Da Vinci, the Priory of Sion, the Knights Templar, and more all coming together to make an improbable, but irresistible page-turner.  


    Wagsstaff and Abel undertook the unenviable task of adapting Brown’s novel, condensing the 454 pages of my hardcover copy into approximately two hours (including a 15-minute intermission). The result is…okay. There’s a bit too much exposition, and though the important beats are present and accounted for, we hit them at a pace that doesn’t leave much time for the characters to develop, and we skate by the puzzles (i.e., the fun part) as too often characters encounter a challenge and solve it in seconds.


    Director Rob Melrose and the design team, the real heroes of the evening, did their best to compensate for the script’s shortcomings. Melrose helms quite the cinematic production, with sound designer John Gromada, who contributes original music to the production, underscoring the show’s movie-like feel with his suspenseful score. The theatricality is heightened by Victoria Beauray Sagady’s sophisticated projections and Thom Weaver’s lighting choices, shifting from a stage filled with striking, glowing color to an unforgiving spotlight dramatically isolating a character at the drop of a hat.


    Speaking of items of clothing, Helen Huang’s costume designs are both apt (Langdon’s tweed jacket, Sophie’s sensible blue suit) and playful (the red heels Elizabeth Bunch dons as Vernet and the chain at Dylan Godwin’s belt).


    Michael Locher’s sleek and dexterous set allows fluid movement from scene to scene, easily going from the Sorbonne, with the first three rows of the audience arranged in chairs as if conference attendees (a fun touch) to the Louvre, with a marble floor and I.M. Pei’s iconic glass pyramid visible, to then a number of locations – a church, a mansion, a bathroom, a private jet, etc. There are also two eye-catchingly beautiful, towering archways put to good use throughout the show.


    The play pays short shrift to its characters, meaning that we don’t get much of an emotional connection to them until the second act, and even then, it may be more of a testament to the actors than what is actually on the page.

    click to enlarge

    Chris Hutchison and Susan Koozin in Alley Theatre’s production of The Da Vinci Code.

    Photo by Melissa Taylor

    As the “Harvard geek,” Robert Langdon, Zack Fine is unassuming and reluctant, a man who mostly seems to go along because it seems like the right thing to do. Fine and Melissa Molano, as the much more gung-ho Sophie, settle into a fun, playful banter in the second act that gives them a chance to show off a little chemistry. Molano hits the right emotional notes at the end, particularly as she encounters a remorseful, but composed Susan Koozin and an at-a-loss Victor J. Flores.


    Todd Waite is a highlight as Sir Leigh Teabing, a character of a character, who is as amusing as he is hoity, while Dylan Godwin, as Teabing’s butler, Rémy, is a stolid, but menacing presence. Also, menacing, though in a different way, is Chris Hutchison’s Silas, who is both disturbing and pitiable.


    Christopher Salazar does his best with the one-note Fache, while Michelle Elaine is able to do more with policewoman Collet (not the least of which is deliver a consistent accent).


    Rounding out the cast is Kevin Cooney, who brings gravitas to Saunière, a role that asks little and offers even less, and Elizabeth Bunch, who adds in some fun character moments in supporting roles, even if they sometimes feel like they are from a different show.


    Despite its seeming ubiquity, not everyone is familiar with The Da Vinci Code. The gasps from the audience at a certain reveal made that clear. Fans of the book won’t get that, both the Alley’s production does still offer one thing to fans and newbies alike: A real stunner of a production, so as you’re swept away in the mystery, you also get quite the view.

    Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays, 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 2 and 7 p.m. Sundays through October 19 at Alley Theatre, 615 Texas. For more information, call 713-220-5700 or visit alleytheatre.org. $36-$135.

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    Natalie de la Garza

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  • Best Bets: The Lehman Trilogy, Fiesta Sinfónica, and Manhattan Short Film Festival

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    It’s the last Best Bets of September, and the arts are in full swing around Houston. To close out the month, we’ve got an epic of a stage production, a celebration of Latin American and Hispanic composers, and a collection of the best short films you can find. Keep reading for these and everything else that makes our picks for the best of the week.


    On Friday, September 26, at 7 p.m. at Stages, you can see The Lehman Trilogy, which, adapted by Ben Power from Stefano Massini’s epic novel and play about the rise and fall of Lehman Brothers, covers 160 years and features over 70 characters. Orlando Arriaga, one of three actors in the production, told BroadwayWorld Houston, “There were a lot of characters to create but for most of them I came to an immediate decision on who they were and how I was going to present them. I didn’t bother with time periods because human beings deal with family, love and money pretty much the same since the beginning of time.” Performances will continue at 6:30 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays, 7 p.m. Fridays, 1 and 7 p.m. Saturdays, and 1 p.m. Sundays through October 12. Tickets are available here for $25 to $109.

    When Alex Thompson’s short film Em & Selma Go Griffin Hunting screened at Sundance, the first frame, with its “so-real-you-can-touch-it CG image” of two griffins, “elicited gasps of amazement.” You can join film lovers from around the world to view and vote on the shorts featured in the 28th Annual Manhattan Short Film Festival – including Thompson’s – at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, on Thursday, September 25, at 7 p.m. Audience ballots will determine the winners of Best Film and Best Actor from the ten curated films, which come from seven different countries. The films will screen again at 7 p.m. Friday, September 26, and 2 p.m. Saturday, September 27, and Sunday, September 28. Tickets can be purchased here for $8 to $10, and get your tickets in advance; some screenings are likely to sell out.

    A string arrangement of Benjamin Britten’s 1932 Double Concerto for Violin and Viola, the sketch of which was only discovered more than 20 years after his death in 1976, will be the centerpiece of Kinetic’s season-opening concert, Notes Unspoken, at the MATCH on Friday, September 26, at 7:30 p.m. The conductor-less ensemble will tackle Britten alongside Michael Torke‘s December, Libby Larsen’s String Symphony, and the world premiere of Rice University graduate Alex Berko’s Unstrung for string orchestration. Berko, who originally composed Unstrung for the Louisville Orchestra in 2024, has said the piece, “a deconstructed bluegrass tune,” was his attempt “as a new Kentucky resident and admirer of” the genre “to pay homage to the art form.” Tickets to the performance can be purchased here for $15 to $35.

    click to enlarge

    ROCO returns to Miller Outdoor Theatre to open their season on Friday.

    Photo by Rolando Ramon

    Four world premieres and a not-oft-heard symphony make up ROCO’s season-opening program, Feels Like Home, which you can hear on Friday, September 26, at 7:30 p.m. when the chamber orchestra visits Miller Outdoor Theatre. The premieres, which will be performed alongside Emilie Mayer’s 1847 Symphony No. 4 in B minor, draw from various sources of inspiration, including husky rescues and a ROCO member’s work in hospice care. The performance is free, and you can reserve a ticket here starting at 10 a.m. today, September 25. Or, as always, you can sit on the Hill – no ticket required. The concert will be performed a second time at The Church of St. John the Divine on Saturday, September 27, at 5 p.m. Tickets are pay-what-you-wish here with a suggested price of $35 and a minimum of $0.

    A percussive pulse drives the lover’s declarations in ‘And now you’re mine,’” one of five sonnets written by Chilean poet Pablo Neruda and set to music by American composer Peter Lieberson in Neruda Songs, which you can hear at Jones Hall on Friday, September 26, at 7:30 p.m. during the Fiesta Sinfónica. Conductor Gonzalo Farias will lead the Houston Symphony and special guest mezzo-soprano Josefina Maldonado in the orchestra’s annual celebration of Latin American and Hispanic composers. This year, audiences can expect musical selections like “I Feel Pretty” and “Somewhere” from Leonard Bernstein’s West Side Story, the Habanera from Georges Bizet’s Carmen, Albert Gonzales’s arrangements of Rafael Hernández Marín’s “El Cumbanchero” and Daniel Alomía Robles’s “El cóndor pasa,” and more. This concert is free, but ticket reservations are required here.

    click to enlarge

    6 Degrees Dance company members Michelle Reyes, Shelby Craze, and Mia Pham in Testimony with steel sculptures by Craze.

    Photo by Adri Richey Photography

    Inspired by Shahzia Sikander’s vandalized sculpture “Witness,” choreographer Toni Valle of 6 Degrees Dance, composer George Heathco, and singer-composer Misha Penton created Testimony, an aerial dance and visual art installation that will premiere at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, September 25, at the MATCH. Valle recently told the Houston Press that though “Witness” is their “point of reference, Testimony is also about the much larger picture of how women in general have been silenced,” adding that the beheading of the statue is “such a metaphor for how violence is often used to silence artists, to silence women, to silence people.Testimony will be performed again at 7:30 p.m. Friday, September 26, and Saturday, September 27, and 5 p.m. Sunday, September 28. Tickets can be purchased here for $20-$35, with a pay-what-you-can option on September 26.

    After going from viral on TikTok to selling out comedy clubs around the country, Jiaoying Summers will return to Punchline Houston on Friday, September 26, at 7:30 p.m. with her latest hour of comedy, What Specie Are You? Summers recently told the Houston Press the show will be her “origin story,” saying, “We laugh about all the things that have happened and what I’ve been a victim of…I think that is the best place to find good comedy, to say things you are embarrassed of and ashamed of and make it funny. People can connect with me, I think.” Additional shows are set for 9:45 p.m. Friday, September 26, and 7 and 9:15 p.m. Saturday, September 27. Tickets to the show can be purchased here for $32 to $69.


    Arthouse Houston
    ’s Mobile Movie Palace is once again setting up shop at the MATCH, this time on Sunday, September 28, at 7 p.m. to screen the Jane Fonda-Lily Tomlin-Dolly Parton comedy 9 to 5, “a feminist lark with laughs, crude comedy, wafts of pot smoke and a catchy anthem written by Parton.” Doors open at 7 p.m. for a set from Houston singer-songwriter Allison Holmes, who will perform live country music from artists like Parton and Loretta Lynn prior to the start of the revenge comedy, which “hit No. 2 at the box office in 1980, beaten only by The Empire Strikes Back.” The film, about three office workers who kidnap their horrible boss, will then begin at 7:40 p.m. General admission tickets are pay-what-you-can, with a suggested price of $20, here.

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    Natalie de la Garza

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