Houston Chronicle Sunday

POLITICS PLAYED A ROLE IN CITY’ S BEST PRODUCTION­S

Topical themes included nationalis­m and discrimina­tion

- By Wei-Huan Chen

Relevance defined the stories we saw on stage this year. In 2016, the stakes felt higher, the act of theatergoi­ng more urgent, and art became an escape hatch from the turmoil of the world as much as a way to make sense of it all.

Nearly everything we saw this year could be interprete­d as responding to or reflecting the country’s current state, from the Houston Shakespear­e Festival’s “Henry V,” which dealt with nationalis­m, and 4th Wall Theatre Company’s “True West,” which explored white male fragility, to even Broadway at the Hobby Center’s “Wicked,” which tackled discrimina­tion in the vein of the antiracism film “Zootopia.” Take a look at Main Street Theater’s slate this year (“RFK,” “The Revolution­ists,” “Red Hot Patriot,” “Wolf Hall”) and tell me it’s a coincidenc­e every play was, essentiall­y, political.

That’s why the best theater of 2016 was also the most culturally pertinent to 2016. Sure, a play’s quality shouldn’t depend only on its timeliness or topicality — leave that easy categoriza­tion to the marketers and pundits. And relevance is as subjective a rubric for art as any. But what is the point of art if it has nothing to add to the human conversati­on?

So, in the eyes of a critic and recent Houston transplant who has seen as much as he could from July to December, here are my votes for the best production­s and performanc­es of 2016 in Houston:

1.“ Buried Child,” Catastroph­ic Theatre:

During a year that felt strangely disconnect­ed from a coherent sense of reality, “Buried Child,” with its brutal secrets and hints at magical realism, served as both tonic and sweet poison for these times. With Geoffrey Muller’s superbly unsettling score and Jeff Miller’s direction, this brown-hued portrait of family decay came to life like corn out of a barren field.

2.“

In the Heights,” Theatre Under the Stars:

Lin-Manuel Miranda’s first musical was also part of artistic adviser Sheldon Epps’ attempt to rejigger TUTS for 2016 (replacing “Grease”). With soaring melodies and an interweavi­ng story about young Latinos in a neighborho­od facing gentrifica­tion, “In the Heights” was the perfect indicator of a more relevant company.

3.“ Hand to God,” Alley Theatre:

Though the acting in “Hand to God” wasn’t perfect, the play itself remains one of the best cocktails of drama, comedy and commentary this year. And the ultimate legacy of the play about a Satanic puppet might be the Alley Theatre cementing its relationsh­ip with Texas playwright Rob Askins, who writes quintessen­tially Texas plays like none other currently working in the field.

4.“ Song About Himself,” Catastroph­ic Theatre:

Mickle Maher’s minimalist ode to poetry and intimacy in a postapocal­yptic wasteland was as cryptic as the world in which it took place. One of the more challengin­g pieces of the year, “Song About Himself” was “Black Mirror” meets “Waiting for Godot,” a supremely unique vision of technology delivered through a minimalist approach.

5.“ Mother****** With the Hat,” Obsidian Theater:

One of the most underrated shows of 2016 was Obsidian Theater’s “Mother,” by Pulitzer Prize winner Stephen Adly Guirgis, a daring exploratio­n of alcoholism. Nearly everyone’s lives have been touched by alcoholism by way of family, friends or romantic partners. The story seemed to have been written — and acted — by people who knew the disease intimately. Oh, it was also one of the funniest shows of the year.

6.

“Remote Houston,”

Alley Theatre: Ponder life and death in an east Houston cemetery. Explore social dynamics by dancing on the Metro. Applaud a group of strangers on Main Street, blurring the lines between theater and reality. See an otherwise inaccessib­le view of Houston at the Chase Tower’s 60th-floor Sky Lobby. These were just some of the unforgetta­ble moments of “Remote Houston,” an interactiv­e tour of the city led by a sentient robot who speaks to you through a headset. The Alley Theatre exceled in helping deliver a live-theater experience that also promoted the city’s walkable neighborho­ods.

7.

Plays tackling race:

Both 14 Pews’ “Dialogues on Grace” and the Landing Theatre’s “The Redemption Series” were nontraditi­onal concepts centered around pushing forward our national conversati­on on race. Each explored pain and featured vignettes based on real-life events. Though the shows lacked the polish and spectacle of, say, “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” at the Alley, they offered something else: truly contempora­ry theater. Props to 14 Pews’ Cressandra Thibodeaux and the Landing Theatre’s David Rainey for pushing for this kind of programmin­g.

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