Two Months After Hurricane Harvey, Houston Theatres Relight Their Stages | 半岛体育

半岛体育

Special Features Two Months After Hurricane Harvey, Houston Theatres Relight Their Stages The Alley Theatre, Houston Grand Opera, and Theatre Under the Stars are among the city鈥檚 leading arts organizations that have found creative ways to bring audiences together.
Alley Theatre Bill Saltzstein, Empty Space Images with Paul Butzi

Just 60 days after Hurricane Harvey swept through the Gulf region in late August, spilling more than 19 trillion gallons of water in the Houston metropolitan region鈥攁nd leaving eight feet of water in downtown streets鈥攖he city, its residents, and its vibrant arts community are rebuilding and finding creative ways to move forward.

Despite millions of dollars in damage to performance spaces鈥攁nd in some cases a total loss of their artistic homes鈥擧ouston鈥檚 arts organizations are continuing with their programming. Among the hardest hit: Houston Grand Opera, and its artistic home, The Wortham Theater Center, which completely flooded during the storm.

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Wortham Theater Center

鈥淲e lost our two performance spaces, rehearsal spaces, and offices indefinitely, along with our costume shop and several vehicles,鈥� Houston Grand Opera Managing Director Perryn Leech tells 半岛体育. 鈥淭he basement of our building, the Wortham Theater Center, was completely flooded, and there was water on the stage and in the seating area. Because our internet and telephone connections were located in the basement, we were unable to conduct business for nearly two weeks, just at the start of the fall sales period.鈥�

The Alley Theater, a massive arts complex that takes up an entire city block (housing performance and rehearsal spaces, administrative offices, and scenic studios), was also hit hard. While the Hubbard Theatre, the larger of its two venues was unhurt, the company鈥檚 smaller 310-seat Neuhaus space was completely destroyed. Unique among arts organizations, the Alley owns the entire physical building, which has given the theatre a head start on demolition of the Neuhaus and other structural repairs.

Artistic Director Gregory Boyd points out that because the Alley is able to operate independently, however, it doesn鈥檛 receive financial aid from the city as some other non-profits do. 鈥淲e are doing it all on our own,鈥� he says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 about $15 million worth of damage, and we think the insurance will cover about half of that, which means we have to raise the other half. We鈥檙e still looking for help, for sure.鈥�

Another devastating blow was the loss of the Alley鈥檚 vast props collection amassed from over 30 years of productions. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about a million objects, and we lost about 75 percent of that,鈥� Boyd says. 鈥淭hat was huge. A lot of those things were one-of-a-kind items that just can鈥檛 be recovered. That was hard.鈥�

Theatre Under the Stars鈥攖he city鈥檚 leading producer of musical theatre鈥攐perates out of the Hobby Center, which survived Harvey nearly unscathed thanks to the swift thinking of two employees who stayed on site during the hurricane. 鈥淲ater was coming in through one of the loading docks in the small theatre, and they reverted the water around the theatre so that it came in through the side door and poured into the orchestra pit, and then they flushed it into the sewer system,鈥� explains TUTS Artistic Director Dan Knechtges. 鈥淚t basically saved the stage. The orchestra pit was raised, so it only damaged the electrical beneath it. The theatre can still be used鈥攊t鈥檚 just that the pit can鈥檛 be raised and lowered until the electrical is fixed.鈥�

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Alley Theatre flooding. Facebook/@alleytheatre

Harvey proved to be a baptism by fire for Knechtges, the Tony-nominated choreographer of the Broadway musical Xanadu, who was announced as TUTS鈥� new artistic director in early August. 鈥淢y first day was going to be the day the hurricane landed. And, of course, that changed, and I arrived ten days later,鈥� he says. 鈥淚t was like being a general taking over a battle in a war that I knew nothing about. I quickly learned about relief and how to marshal the forces. Our staff was already on the move on how to do a lot of this stuff. They really started to put much of this in place before the hurricane because they knew what was coming.

鈥淚 got in my rental car, arrived directly at the theatre, and I was immediately pulled into a meeting that included all of the area theatre heads. It was an awful way to greet the community, but also a wonderful way to come together. We were all in the same boat.鈥�

鈥淚t was clear at once that there was a common bond and willingness to help each other out in any way that we could,鈥� Houston Grand Opera's Leech adds. 鈥淭he overall feeling of 鈥榃hat I have is yours if you need it鈥� was a very strong, emotional crutch during a very difficult time for all of us as we made plans for our individual companies. I cannot speak highly enough about the amazing collegiality and friendship of every one of these people.鈥�

After losing the Neuhaus, the Alley was able to move its world premiere of Rajiv Joseph鈥檚 Describe the Night to the Quintero Theatre across town, while scheduling was shifted in order to move a planned production of Laurence Wright鈥檚 Cleo to later in the season. The Alley will officially reopen its doors November 24 when performances of A Christmas Carol begin in the Hubbard Theatre. 鈥淲e are hoping the Neuhaus will be open by Valentine鈥檚 Day, which is the opening of another world premiere, the new Duncan Sheik-Suzanne Vega musical, Lover, Beloved,鈥� Boyd says.

At the Hobby Center, TUTS was able to continue with the rolling pre-Broadway engagement of The Secret Garden, which concluded its scheduled run October 22. (Dates of a Broadway arrival have yet to be announced.)

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The Hobby Center for the Performing Arts Facebook/@TheHobbyCenter

Faced with the total loss of its performance and rehearsals spaces, Houston Grand Opera constructed a 1,700-seat theatre, combining stadium and floor seating within the exhibition hall of the Houston Convention Center. Productions of Handel鈥檚 Julius Caesar and Verdi鈥檚 La Traviata are currently running in repertory in what has been christened the HGO Resilience Theatre.

鈥淲e looked at many possible spaces, but few could accommodate the complex needs of an opera company鈥攖hat is why the Wortham was built,鈥� explains Leech. 鈥淏ut when I saw the exhibit hall in the Convention Center, I knew it was possible, with a lot of work, to create an exciting and even intimate space there for opera. I had experience creating a pop-up theatre in a sports arena in Edinburgh after a fire, so I knew it could be done. Fortunately, the city of Houston, through Houston First, runs both the Wortham and the Convention Center. They moved more than 30 conventions and other bookings to enable us to use the hall.鈥�

鈥淲e never considered cancelling the season,鈥� adds HGO Artistic Director and Music Director Patrick Summers. 鈥淚t happens that this fall marks the start of Seeking the Human Spirit, our six-year multidisciplinary artistic and community initiative to highlight the universal spiritual themes raised in opera. We hope that the beauty of opera will help people find hope and healing to carry them forward.鈥�

This is only a temporary fix for such a major arts institution, and Leech and Summers remain cautiously optimistic. 鈥淲e still do not know where we will be presenting our final two productions, West Side Story and Norma, in the spring,鈥� Leech says. 鈥淚t is a challenge to find rehearsal space for performances by our HGO Studio and our community engagement programs. On the business side, it has cost us more than a half million dollars to build this temporary theatre, and our total losses could amount to as much as $15 million. So we have quite a mountain to climb. It could take three to five years to get back to where we were.鈥�

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Julian Lammey, Jeremy Kushnier, and Bea Corley Melissa Taylor

While each organization has set up funding pages to help with relief efforts, Knechtges adds, 鈥淭he thing people can do most besides giving is to buy a ticket. If we lose our audiences, that鈥檚 everything. So, buying a ticket and showing up is the best thing that people could do.鈥�

After the shared experience of weathering Hurricane Harvey, Houstonians have welcomed the invitation to gather and share in an uplifting communal experience. For many, attending the theatre or the opera is the first opportunity they have had to come together in public.

鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be a year where people are going to feel a little out of sync, but the audiences went through it, too. We can鈥檛 forget that,鈥� Boyd says. 鈥淲e all live in the city where everybody went through it. The coming together of any audience in a room is powerful, but now to have that and then to share this incredible back story with each other鈥攊t鈥檚 been amazing.

鈥淭he conversations that go on are amazing,鈥� he continues. 鈥淵ou really find out what a theatre company means to people. To see how audiences reacted. It鈥檚 a great theatre story.鈥�

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