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    Appetite for Advocacy

    Texan TED talk phenom offers words to live by at vital Dallas luncheon

    Jennifer Chininis
    May 4, 2016 | 2:12 pm

    Dallas is full of champions for children, and 1,600 of them showed up recently for the ninth annual Appetite for Advocacy luncheon at the Sheraton Hotel in downtown Dallas.

    They were there to see Brené Brown, a research professor at the University of Houston Graduate College of Social Work who wowed the world with her TED talk (24 million views and counting), and to raise mission-critical funds for Dallas Children’s Advocacy Center (DCAC).

    Event co-chairs Paula Richmond and Megan Steinbach started the luncheon by painting a picture of the typical client served by DCAC: a 9-year-old girl who has been sexually abused by someone she knows and trusts.

    “While her peers have been memorizing state capitals and discovering what vinegar does to baking soda, she has endured abuse more heinous than many of us would allow our minds to imagine.” But their message ended with hope for her future. Through therapy at DCAC, she “no longer lives as a victim of the abuse she’s suffered. … Instead she is a survivor, empowered to walk in freedom.”

    Once the purpose of the day’s event was firmly stated, Brown came to the stage. She explained that she only does a couple of these talks a year, because the mission of the organization has to speak to her. “The DCAC works speaks to me,” she said.

    She continued candidly — and humorously — about her work studying vulnerability, courage, worthiness, and shame. She also admitted how lousy she felt reading the comments on that now-famous TED talk; in them she saw “everything she feared about her career,” and it sent her straight for a jar of peanut butter and a Downton Abbey marathon.

    But they also led her to discover a speech Theodore Roosevelt gave at the Sorbonne in Paris in 1910, in which he said, “It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena.”

    Words to live by, not unlike Brown’s. (She is the author of three New York Times bestsellers, after all.) She also reminded everyone that they can shoulder their share of the burden of child abuse, big or small, so that one person doesn’t have to bear it all.

    The luncheon also afforded DCAC an opportunity to honor those who have made a significant impact on the lives of abused children in the community. Irish Burch, DCAC’s chief of coordination and training, received the Bill Walsh Award, while this year’s Ruth Altshuler Award went to Capital for Kids.

    As the luncheon concluded, sponsors of $10,000 and above visited with Brown at a VIP reception, during which they received signed copies of her newest bestseller, Rising Strong. All tallied, the event raised $325,000.

    Spotted in the charitable crowd were DCAC president and CEO Lynn M. Davis, Kara and Randall Goss, Ruth Altshuler, Susan Sharp, Christie Houser, Leah and Jim Pasant, Jen and Brad Adams, Lauren Loftis, Emily Greene, Lauren Ozanus, and Chelsea Hill.

    The mission of the Dallas Children’s Advocacy Center is to improve the lives of abused children in Dallas County and to provide national leadership on child abuse issues. The only agency of its kind in Dallas County, DCAC reduces the revictimization of the child, removes barriers to investigation and treatment, and enhances criminal prosecution with its distinctive multidisciplinary and united approach to child abuse cases.

    Mary Anne Wyly, Andi Hood

    Mary Anne Wyly, Andi Hood
    Photo by Kristina Bowman
    Mary Anne Wyly, Andi Hood
    fundraisers
    news/society

    Centerstage spotlight

    Showstopping Dallas Theater Center gala raises the curtain on a new era

    Stephanie Allmon Merry
    May 22, 2026 | 12:59 pm
    DTC Centerstage Gala 2026
    Photo by Tamytha Cameron
    Zeke Williams, Grace Cook, Jeff Netzer, Lynn McBee, Kristina Kirkenaer-Hart

    On a picture-perfect Saturday night, more than 250 of Dallas’ most devoted arts patrons gathered at the Dee and Charles Wyly Theatre for CENTERSTAGE 42, the annual gala benefiting Dallas Theater Center. The elegant evening on May 2 proved to be both a celebration of Dallas theater’s past and a curtain-raising for its future.

    As the sun began to set across the Diane and Hal Brierley Esplanade in the Dallas Arts District, guests descended the outdoor staircase for an al fresco cocktail reception. One popular stop was just inside the doors of the lobby: A "Ziya" digital photo booth from local company Make Life Sweeter that turned patrons' posed photos into stylized watercolor portraits.

    Throughout the venue, installations highlighting Dallas Theater Center’s Public Works initiative reminded attendees that the organization’s impact stretches from the stage to the neighborhoods of North Texas.

    A multicourse dinner was served on the stage inside the Potter Rose Performance Hall, making attendees feel like the stars of the show in the intimate, theatrical atmosphere.

    One of the night’s most meaningful moments came with the presentation of the prestigious Linda and Bill Custard Award to Larry Angelilli, recognized for more than three decades of leadership and advocacy that helped shape Dallas’ cultural landscape. The gala also paused to honor the memories of two beloved arts patrons, Linda Custard and Sarah Warnecke, both longtime champions of Dallas Theater Center and the broader arts community.

    Inspired by their example, guests bid high for fabulous live auction items, including trips to Palm Springs and Hawaii and a private dinner with actor Michael Urie at a home on White Rock Lake. A paddle raise followed, with patrons giving generously all around the room.

    Every $100 counted - from upstage, downstage, and closer to the wings - as the sold-out fundraiser's earnings totaled an impressive $545,000 in support of the Tony Award-winning theater company and its education and community engagement programs, including Project Discovery, Summer Stage, Saturday Sessions, and Community Workshops.

    It wouldn't have been a theater benefit without a showstopping performer. When scheduled headliner Michael Urie was called away for filming commitments tied to Shrinking, Dallas Theater Center called on homegrown talent — and the result brought the crowd to its feet. Broadway performer Tiffany Mann, a DFW native with credits including Be More Chill and Waitress, delivered a powerhouse performance - and a few sparkly outfit changes.

    The entire program was emceed by Bri Woods and Akron Watson, both fresh off Dallas Theater Center’s acclaimed production of Ragtime. Woods, an SMU Meadows graduate and Linda and Bill Custard Meadows Actor in the Diane and Hal Brierley Resident Acting Company, represented the next generation of Dallas theater talent, while Tony-, Grammy-, and Emmy-winning Watson brought Broadway pedigree and star power to the gala stage.

    This year’s gala leadership reflected the milestone spirit of the evening. Rather than appointing a single chair, Dallas Theater Center reunited gala chairs from the past decade to lead CENTERSTAGE 42 collectively. Leadership included Jennifer and Peter Altabef, Mickie and Jeff Bragalone, Stephanie Byrd, Scott Davis, Melinda Johnson, Brett Levy, Michelle Lockhart, Ann Mahowald, Deborah McMurray, Scott Moore, Scott Orr, Andy Smith, Paul Von Wupperfeld, Hamilton Sneed, and Krista Farber Weinstein.

    The evening also marked an exciting turning point for Dallas Theater Center as it prepares to enter a new era under incoming Enloe/Rose Artistic Director Jaime Castañeda, a TCU grad who is making his return to DFW. The affable leader introduced himself to the audience with a few fun personal anecdotes (including one involving an Easter bunny suit) and expressed his enthusiasm for the vision and direction of DTC.

    Cheers went up as Castañeda made a surprise announcement: That The Lehman Trilogy would be the final show in DTC's 2026-27 season.

    Upon retrieving their cars from valet, guests departed with an ingenious gift on their front seat: A thank-you note and invitation for two tickets to the DTC's next production, the world premiere of Jonathan Norton's play Malcolm X and Redd Foxx Washing Dishes at Jimmy’s Chicken Shack in Harlem -on stage now through June 7. "We look forward to welcoming you back to the theater!" read the note.

    Spotted in the crowd, enjoying the evening, were DTC patrons and supporters including Zeke Williams, Grace Cook, Jeff Netzer, Lynn McBee, Kristina Kirkenaer-Hart, Ann Mahowald, Michelle Lockhart, Hamilton A Sneed, Krista Farber Weinstein, Caroline Hamilton, Brandi Willis, Paul von Wupperfeld, Andy Smith, Mickie Bragalone, Jeff Bragalone, Deborah McMurray, Glen Davison, Cynthia Smoot, Jeff Netzer, Jeremy Lock, D'Andra Simmons Lock, Lynn Richardson, Elvenn Richardson, Michelle Lockhart, Krista Weinstein, Paul von Wupperfeld, Sarah Jackson, Andy Smith, and many more. (Scroll through the photos, above, to see highlights of the night.)

    DTC Centerstage Gala 2026

    Photo by Tamytha Cameron

    Zeke Williams, Grace Cook, Jeff Netzer, Lynn McBee, Kristina Kirkenaer-Hart

    dallas theater centertheatergalas
    news/society
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