Upcoming Events

MADE IN AMERICA

Houston Ballet
Brown Theater

Balanchine, Morris, Fonte. All three have created ballets from companies around the world. This program, however, was made entirely in America. Mark Morris's breezy Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes was commissioned by Mikhail Baryshnikov for America Ballet Theatre. George Balanchine created Theme Variations, his grand tribute to the Imperial Russian Ballet, for the same company. Nicolo Fonte, a Brooklyn native who danced with Les Grands Ballets Canadiens de Montreal and the Compania Nacional de Danza in Madrid, will premiere a new work, chreographed specifically for Houston Ballet.

Tickets $18 - $175

Starts: Thursday, May 24, 2012
Ends: Sunday, May 27, 2012
Ticket Info

 

HOUSTON YOUNG ARTISTS' CONCERT 25TH ANNIVERSARY REUNION CONCERT

Houston Young Artists' Concert
Cullen Theater
 
Frank Huang violin Houston Symphony Concertmaster, Sophie Shao cello Avery Fisher Award Recipient, and Adam Golk piano Gilmore Young Artist -- These 3 former Houston Young Artists' Concert musicians light up the stage with this piano trio concert. Houston Young Artists' Concert is celebrating 25 years of encouraging young musicians to be the best they can be.
 
Tickets: $25 - $50 / 713-222-5400
Starts: Sunday, May 27, 2012 2:30 PM
Ends: Sunday, May 27, 2012 5:00 PM
Ticket Info

 

MADE IN AMERICA

Houston Ballet
Brown Theater

Balanchine, Morris, Fonte. All three have created ballets from companies around the world. This program, however, was made entirely in America. Mark Morris's breezy Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes was commissioned by Mikhail Baryshnikov for America Ballet Theatre. George Balanchine created Theme Variations, his grand tribute to the Imperial Russian Ballet, for the same company. Nicolo Fonte, a Brooklyn native who danced with Les Grands Ballets Canadiens de Montreal and the Compania Nacional de Danza in Madrid, will premiere a new work, chreographed specifically for Houston Ballet.

Tickets $18 - $175

Starts: Friday, June 01, 2012
Ends: Sunday, June 03, 2012
Ticket Info

 

Wortham Theater Center from Urban Land Institute on Vimeo.

 

About the Wortham Center

Wortham Theater Center represents Houston's can-do spirit at its very best.

Built at the height of the 1980s oil bust, Wortham Center was funded entirely by the private sector. More than 3,500 donors contributed $66 million to build a new performing arts mecca amid a period of job losses and recession. It was a true community effort -- 2,200 individuals gave $100 or less.

What's more, the 437,500-square foot facility was completed four months ahead of schedule and $5 million under budget, a testament to Houston's trademark ability to get things done. At the time, Wortham Center was the first major opera house built in the U.S. in more than 25 years, further underscoring Houston's capacity to do things other communities would not dare under take.

The building is the legacy of the late Gus S. Wortham, the founder of American General Insurance Company whose foundation contributed $20 million to the capital campaign. The Cullen Foundation and the Brown Foundation donated $7.5 million and $6 million, respectively, in a demonstration of the collective strength of Houston's philanthropic spirit.

The Wortham Center is home to Houston Ballet and Houston Grand Opera. Since its opening in 1987, Wortham has entertained more than 8 million people. It has also served as the backdrop for social galas, corporate and even weddings, further underscoring its role as a community center as well as a performing arts venue.

Bold and beautiful, the Wortham is a facility like no other. It is a masterful, creative playground for performing artists, and unrestrained in the exuberance of its architecture. Within this splendid domain are an array of public spaces, both monumental and intimate: the jewel box-like theaters, the soaring six-story Grand Foyer, the delicately scaled Green Room and Founders Salon.  Eugene Aubry of Morris Aubry Architects designed Wortham Center.

The facility features two theaters, the Alice and George Brown Theater and the Lillie and Roy Cullen Theater.

At 2,405 seats, the Brown is the larger theater with a 17,000-square foot stage used primarily for major performances by Houston Ballet and Houston Grand Opera. Despite its size, no seat is more than 138 feet from the stage.

The 1,100-seat Cullen Theater hosts smaller opera and ballet productions and serves other arts groups, such as Da Camera of HoustonSociety for the Performing ArtsMercury and Houston Metropolitan Dance. Its intimate size is ideal for solo artists, chamber music, small touring shows and recitals.

Host to many of the world's most accomplished entertainers, it is the place of memorable times, special people and important events.