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    Weekend Event Planner

    These are the 11 best things to do in Dallas this weekend

    Alex Bentley
    May 10, 2018 | 6:00 am

    Festival season continues in Dallas this weekend, with music in a wide variety of forms being showcased. You can also take in an award-winning Broadway play, laugh with a bunch of well-known comedians, see a famous rock group one last time, celebrate the anniversary of a local singer, listen to blues music at its finest, and more.

    Below are the best ways to spend your free time this weekend. Want more options? Lucky for you, we have a much longer list of the city's best events.

    Thursday, May 10

    2018 SOLUNA Festival
    The annual SOLUNA Festival gets going in earnest with six different events. Among the options happening on different days through Sunday will be ReMix: Mozart-Tchaikovsky-Berg at Moody Performance Hall; Melodies of a Certain Damage at Meyerson Symphony Center; Music and the Brain at Moody Performance Hall; Array with Nas, Kaleo, and more at the Bomb Factory and Canton Hall; Lihuel Gonzalez: "Las Personas No Van Juntas" at Dallas Museum of Art; and Kid Koala's Vinyl Vaudeville at Annette Strauss Square.

    AT&T Performing Arts Center Broadway Series: The Humans
    Stephen Karam’s The Humans, which won the 2016 Tony Award for Best Play, is an uproarious, hopeful, and heartbreaking play that takes place over the course of a family dinner on Thanksgiving. Breaking with tradition, Erik Blake has brought his Pennsylvania family to his daughter’s apartment in Lower Manhattan. As darkness falls, the Blake clan’s deepest fears and greatest follies are laid bare. The production will run at Winspear Opera House through May 20.

    Improv Addison presents Maz Jobrani
    Comedian Maz Jobrani is a founding member of The Axis of Evil Comedy Tour, which first aired on Comedy Central. He has had two Showtime specials, Brown and Friendly and I Come In Peace. He is also a regular panelist on NPR’s Wait Wait Don't Tell Me, and released the book, I’m Not a Terrorist but I’ve Played One on TV, in 2015. He'll perform five times through Saturday at Improv Addison.

    Friday, May 11

    Lynyrd Skynyrd in concert
    After a career that has spanned more than 40 years and includes a catalog of more than 40 albums, Southern Rock icons Lynyrd Skynyrd comes to Dallas as part of its Last of the Street Survivors Farewell Tour. This will be your final chance to hear the band sing "Sweet Home Alabama" and, uh, their other songs, too. They'll play at the recently rebranded Dos Equis Pavilion.

    Improv Arlington presents Arsenio Hall
    Comedian Arsenio Hall has been a name brand for over 30 years, thanks to collaborations with Eddie Murphy and his eponymous talk show, which ran from 1989-1994. He's been in and out of the Hollywood spotlight since the end of that show, but audiences at the Improv Arlington on Friday and Saturday will get to see him back in his natural element, as a stand-up comedian.

    MainStage Irving-Las Colinas presents The Full Monty
    The Full Monty is the cult classic musical comedy with 10 Tony Award nominations and the most highly anticipated closing number of any show. After spying on their wives enjoying male strippers at a “Girls’ Night Out,” a group of unemployed, jealous and emasculated steelworkers from Buffalo concoct a bold and unclothed way to make some quick cash by letting it all hang out. The production will run at Irving Arts Center through May 26.

    The Statler Presents Ricki Derek and His Swinging Big Band 20 Year Anniversary Party
    The Statler will present Ricki Derek and his swinging big band in their historic ballroom for a grand celebration honoring Derek’s 20th anniversary of his first performance. It was 20 years ago, on May 14, 1998, when Ricki Derek first hit the stage and Frank Sinatra passed on to the big show in the sky.

    Saturday, May 12

    Commemorative Air Force Barnstorming Event
    You can watch history come alive when the Commemorative Air Force AirPower History Tour barnstormers bring the sights, sounds, and stories of World War II aviation to Dallas. The event features World War II military airplanes both flying and on static display, and visitors can ride in aircraft including a C-45 Expeditor, T-6 Texan, PT-13 Stearman, and T-34 Mentor.

    Homegrown Music & Arts Festival
    The annual Homegrown Music and Arts Festival has become a tradition in Dallas, a day-long event that features both Texas and national acts. The lineup for this year's event, taking place as always at Main Street Garden, will include Explosions in the Sky, The Black Angels, Alvvays, Roky Erickson, UME, Vodi, D.A.R.Y.L., Medicine Man Revival, Acid Carousel, DEULL, and Sad Cops.

    Sunday, May 13

    Buddy Guy and Jonny Lang in concert
    Fans of blues music will be in heaven at Verizon Theatre at Grand Prairie when Buddy Guy and Jonny Lang team up for this concert. The 81-year-old Guy is a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee who was a major influence on rock titans and a pioneer of Chicago’s fabled West Side sound. The 37-year-old Lang is helping to keep the blues tradition alive, having released eight albums over the past 20+ years, including 2017's Signs.

    AT&T Performing Arts Center presents Whose Live Anyway?
    Whose Live Anyway? is 90 minutes of improvised comedy and songs, all based on audience suggestions. Cast members Ryan Stiles, Greg Proops, Jeff B. Davis, and Joel Murray will showcase some of the improv games made famous on the long-running TV show as well as some exciting new ones. Audience participation is key, with some members even being asked on stage. The show will be at Majestic Theatre.

    The Humans, the 2016 Tony Award winner for Best Play, will be at Winspear Opera House through May 20.

    AT&T Performing Arts Center Broadway Series presents The Humans
    Photo by Julieta Cervantes
    The Humans, the 2016 Tony Award winner for Best Play, will be at Winspear Opera House through May 20.
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    Movie Review

    New film The Plague turns tween bullying into chilling drama

    Alex Bentley
    Jan 2, 2026 | 1:14 pm
    Everett Blunck in The Plague
    Photo courtesy of IFC
    Everett Blunck in The Plague.

    Anybody who’s attended elementary school in the last 100 years knows the concept of “cooties,” a fictional affliction that is typically caught when touched by a member of the opposite sex. A more updated version of the same idea is featured in the Diary of a Wimpy Kid series, this time called the “Cheese Touch,” making anyone who touches a moldy piece of cheese on the school’s basketball court an outcast.

    A much more menacing version of this “disease” is on display in The Plague, which takes place at a summer water polo camp for tweens. The film focuses on Ben (Everett Blunck), a slightly awkward boy who struggles to fit in with the “cool” crowd led by Jake (Kayo Martin). That group has no problems making fun of others that they deem to be different, especially Eli (Kenny Rasmussen), who has been ostracized because of a rash he has that the kids call “the plague.”

    Ben wants to be part of the main group, but his natural empathy leads him to reach out to Eli on more than one occasion despite Eli engaging in some uncomfortable behavior. With the camp’s coach (Joel Edgerton) not much help when it comes to the bullying tactics by Jake and others, especially those that take place at night, Ben is left to fend for himself. His vacillations between wanting to be accepted and wanting to do what’s right continue until his hand is forced.

    Written and directed by first-time feature filmmaker Charlie Polinger, the film has all the feel of a horror movie without actually being a horror. The staging used by Polinger gives the film a claustrophobic feel as Ben can’t seem to escape the psychological torture inflicted by Jake and others no matter where he goes. He also employs a jarring score by Johan Lenox to great effect, one that’s designed to keep viewers on edge even when nothing bad is happening.

    No matter how far removed you are from middle school, the film will likely bring up feelings you thought you had left behind. Much like with Bo Burnham’s Eighth Grade, Polinger finds a way to tap into something universal in his depiction of tweens, an age when everyone is still discovering who they really are. Some go along to get along, others don’t even attempt to fit in, but no one truly feels settled.

    Whether the plague is real or not in the world of the film is up for debate. While most of the time it comes off as something made up to underscore the feeling of otherness felt by Ben, Polinger does literalize it to a degree. He even tiptoes up to the line of body horror before wisely retreating, although what he does show will still make some viewers squeamish. However, because he seems to be leaning one way before pulling back, there’s the possibility that some will be disappointed by the tease of something more intense.

    The film’s biggest success is in its casting. Finding good child actors is notoriously tough, and yet Polinger and casting director Rebecca Dealy found a bunch who sell the story for all it’s worth. Blunck, Martin, and Rasmussen get the most play, but everyone else complements them well. Edgerton is the only well-known actor in the film, but he’s used sparingly and isn’t asked to do much, leaving the kids to carry the story on their shoulders.

    Fitting in as a tween is hard enough without others actively trying to find ways to cast someone out. The Plague is an effective demonstration of the dynamics that can play out in a competitive environment that also includes a group that has yet to develop into fully-rounded people. It features discomfort on multiple levels, marking an auspicious debut for Polinger.

    ---

    The Plague is now playing in theaters.

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