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    Weekend Event Planner

    These are the 10 best things to do in Dallas this weekend

    Alex Bentley
    Jul 7, 2022 | 6:00 am

    This weekend around Dallas is arts heavy, with five separate theater productions — mostly from local companies — along with an art scavenger hunt, the closing of two art exhibitions, and the start of a month-long chamber music festival. On the larger scale is the return of a pro basketball league and a rising country music star.

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

    Thursday, July 7

    Eisemann Center for Performing Arts presents The Secret Comedy of Women
    The Secret Comedy of Women celebrates the joys of the journey from girlhood to womanhood. An immersive theatrical experience that rejoices in the challenges of being a woman — from boys to bras and pantyhose to menopause — this two-woman show explores the universal female experience through a rollicking spectacle of sweetly sharp comedy, songs, dances, stories, and spontaneous moments of discovery that all women share. The production will run through July 31 at Eisemann Center for the Performing Arts in Richardson.

    Theatre Three presents Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (UPDATE: Performances will now start on July 9.)
    It's been quite the odyssey for Theatre Three trying to get their latest production to the public. Originally scheduled to start on June 9, it has been delayed due to demands by the city over recent renovations to the theater. They're hopeful they'll finally get to show Edward Albee’s escalating, perversely erotic dance of booze, anger, and resentment in which an older couple draws a younger couple into their bitter and frustrated marital love-hate ambivalence. The show, which is now pay-what-you-can for all tickets, will have eight performances through July 17.

    Friday, July 8

    Big3 3-on-3 Basketball League
    It got lost in the shuffle of the Fourth of July weekend, but the Big3 Basketball League has returned to the area, setting up camp at Comerica Center in Frisco for the next month. Created in part by rapper/actor Ice Cube, the Big3 is a league that features fast-paced and interactive games, bringing fans an up-close and personal look at NBA Hall of Fame players; former Dallas Mavericks; Nancy Lieberman coaching her own son, T.J. Cline, and more. There will be games on both Friday and Sunday, and then more games every weekend through August 7.

    Parker McCollum in concert
    Country singer and Texas native Parker McCollum has been a fixture on the local festival scene since releasing his debut album in 2015, but in 2021 he skipped over all the smaller venues in the area and went straight to Dos Equis Pavilion, where he'll return on Friday. His 2021 album, Gold Chain Cowboy, made the top 10 on the Billboard Country charts, and with a couple of top 10 hits, the future seems bright for the Texas native.

    Richardson Theatre Centre presents Plaza Suite
    Plaza Suite is an evening of three one-acts set in the Plaza Hotel. In Visitor from Mamaroneck, a middle-aged married couple tries to rekindle their dying spark. In Visitor from Hollywood, a film producer invites his childhood sweetheart to a hotel for sex. In Visitor from Forest Hills, a bride has locked herself in the bathroom on her wedding day, with her parents desperate to get her out. The production will run through July 24 at Richardson Theatre Centre.

    Dallas Theater Center presents The Odyssey
    Inspired by the historical pageantry movement of the early 1900s — known for blending mass spectacle with community engagement — this final work in deBessonet and Almond’s grand trilogy reimagines the Greek epic with Public Works’ signature blend of professional actors, community members, and special guests. The man-eating Cyclops, a sorceress that turns sailors to beasts, and the deadly sweet song of the Sirens explode onto the stage with spectacular numbers in this joyful, larger-than-life musical about finding your way home — no matter where fate may lead you. There will be four performances through Sunday at Wyly Theatre; for anyone who can't get into the free shows, the production will be recorded and streamed for free at a later date.

    Saturday, July 9

    AURORA presents Art Quest
    Art Quest is a month-long public art discovery program designed to connect diverse communities with regional artists in unexpected ways. It will feature a game element in which a different piece of art commissioned by AURORA will be placed at a new secret outdoor location on a weekly basis, with the clues for finding the hidden artwork revealed each Saturday. Anyone interested in participating in Art Quest should follow @dallasAURORA and #AuroraArtQuest on Instagram, subscribe to AURORA’s newsletter, and check the AURORA Instagram feed every Saturday morning for clues to find the artwork at the given location. There will be different events every Saturday through August 6.

    Cara Mía Theatre presents Teatro en Fuga Festival
    Cara Mía Theatre's Teatro en Fuga Festival comes to an end with Tomás Ayala-Torres’s new translation of Yanga by Mexican playwright Jaime Chabaud. This new play is inspired by the real-life story of Gaspar Yanga, who led a slave revolt and eventually negotiated an independent territory with the Spanish crown less than 100 years after the arrival of Hernán Cortés in Mexico. Yanga is presented in partnership with the Latino Arts Project and the African-American Museum’s visual arts exhibition, "Yanga: Journeys to Freedom." The performance will be at Latino Cultural Center.

    Sunday, July 10

    Dallas Museum of Art exhibition closings
    The Dallas Museum of Art will close two exhibitions on Sunday. "Slip Zone: A New Look at Postwar Abstraction in the Americas and East Asia" features works from the Museum’s collection that chart the significant innovations in painting, sculpture, and performance that shaped artistic production in the Americas and East Asia in the mid-20th century. Bosco Sodi: "La fuerza del Destino" features approximately 30 large-scale spherical and rectangular sculptures by Sodi installed in the Museum’s Sculpture Garden. Created from clay sourced at his studio in Oaxaca, the sculptures are dried in the sun and fired in a traditional brick kiln, resulting in surfaces that bear the beautiful scars of their process, each uniquely influenced by their encounter with the elements.

    Fine Arts Chamber Players presents Basically Beethoven Festival
    Since 1981, the Basically Beethoven Festival has featured free chamber music concerts during the month of July, a traditionally slow time for arts events in Dallas. The festival features professional musicians from local ensembles performing a diverse range of music. Each program begins with a Rising Star Recital spotlighting local, gifted young musicians, followed by the Feature Performance showcasing professional musicians from across Dallas-Fort Worth. Weekly performances will take place at Moody Performance Hall through July 31.

    Theatre Three presents Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? through July 17.

    Theatre Three presents Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
    Photo by Sarah Barnes
    Theatre Three presents Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? through July 17.
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    news/entertainment

    R.I.P.

    Texas actor James Van Der Beek, beloved for Dawson's Creek, dies at 48

    Associated Press
    Feb 11, 2026 | 4:47 pm
    James Van Der Beek
    James Van Der Beek/Instagram
    James Van Der Beek announced he was being treated for colorectal cancer in 2024.

    Actor James David Van Der Beek has died, according to an announcement on his social media. He was 48 years old.

    "Our beloved James David Van Der Beek passed peacefully this morning," the post reads. "He met his final days with courage, faith, and grace. There is much to share regarding his wishes, love for humanity, and the sacredness of time. Those days will come. For now we ask for peaceful privacy as we grieve our loving husband, father, son, brother, and friend.

    Van Der Beek shared in 2020 that he and his family were moving to the Austin area, and they settled in Spicewood. He announced his colorectal cancer diagnosis in 2024.

    In late 2025, Van Der Beek auctioned some of his TV memorabilia from his time on Dawson's Creek to pay for his treatment.

    The actor originally starred in coming-of-age dramas at the dawn of the new millennium, shooting to fame playing the titular character in Dawson’s Creek and in later years parodied his own hunky persona.

    Forever tied to ‘Dawson’s Creek'
    A one-time theater kid, Van Der Beek would star in the movie Varsity Blues and on TV in CSI: Cyber as FBI Special Agent Elijah Mundo, but was forever connected to Dawson’s Creek, which ran from 1998 to 2003 on The WB.

    The series followed a group of high school friends as they learned about falling in love, creating real friendships and finding their footing in life. Van Der Beek, then 20, played 15-year-old Dawson Leery, who aspired to be a director of Steven Spielberg quality.

    With Paula Cole’s “I Don’t Want To Wait,” as its moody theme song, Dawson's Creek helped define The WB as a haven for teens and young adults who related to its hyper-articulate dialogue and frank talk about sexuality. And it made household names of Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, Michelle Williams, and Joshua Jackson.

    “While James' legacy will always live on, this is a huge loss to not just your family but the world,” Sarah Michelle Gellar wrote to his widow on Instagram. Katharine McPhee Foster added: “This is just beyond devastating news.” Others posting messages of mourning were Jenna Dewan and Olivia Munn.

    The show caused a stir when one of the teens embarked on a racy affair with a teacher 20 years his senior and when Holmes' character climbed through Dawson's bedroom window and they curled up together. Racier shows like Euphoria and Sex Education owe a debt to Dawson's Creek.

    Van Der Beek sometimes struggled to get out from under the shadow of the show but eventually leaned into lampooning himself, like on Funny Or Die videos and on Kesha's “Blow” music video, which included his laser gun battle with the pop star in a nightclub and dead unicorns.

    “It’s tough to compete with something that was the cultural phenomenon that Dawson’s Creek was,” he told Vulture in 2013. “It ran for so long. That’s a lot of hours playing one character in front of people. So it’s natural that they associate you with that.”

    A popular GIF and Varsity Blues
    More than a decade after the show went off the air, a scene at the end of the show’s third season became a GIF. Dawson was watching as his soul mate embarks on a love affair with his best friend and burst into tears.

    “It wasn’t scripted that I was supposed to cry; it was just one of those things where it’s a magical moment and it just happens in the scene,” Van Der Beek told Vanity Fair. He seemed exasperated when he told the Los Angeles Times: “All of a sudden, six years of work was boiled down to one seven-second clip on loop.” (Van Der Beek himself recreated the GIF in 2011 for Funny or Die and gave it a second life.)

    While still on Dawson’s Creek, Van Der Beek hosted Saturday Night Live — the musical guest was Everlast — and landed a plumb role in Varsity Blues, playing a second-string high school quarterback who leaps into the breach when the star suffers an injury.

    Van Der Beek’s character, Mox, turns out to not be a football fanatic, preferring to read Kurt Vonnegut and yearning for the college education that will allow him to escape the jock mentality of his Texas town.

    “I don’t want your life,” he screams at one point. Critic Roger Ebert called him “convincing and likable.

    After Dawson’s Creek
    Some of his projects after Dawson’s Creek included co-creating and playing Wesley “Diplo” Pentz, a dull but likable music producer in the mockumentary satire on Viceland, What Would Diplo Do? In 2019, he made it to the semifinals of ABC’s Dancing with the Stars and played a balding, out-of-shape ex-boyfriend on How I Met Your Mother.

    “The more you make fun of yourself and don’t try to go for any kind of respect, the more people seem to respect you,” he told Vanity Fair in 2011. “I’ve always been a clown trapped in a leading man’s body.”

    Between 2003 and 2013, he made appearances in shows like Criminal Minds, One Tree Hill, and How I Met Your Mother. He played himself with a crackpot intensity in the Krysten Ritter-led ABC drama Don’t Trust the B— in Apartment 23, and the short-lived CSI spinoff CSI: Cyber and CBS’ Friends With Better Lives.

    He’s also appeared in movies such as Kevin Smith’s 2001 comedy Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back and its 2019 sequel, Jay and Silent Bob Reboot. He was in the Bret Easton Ellis adaptation of The Rules of Attraction in 2002 opposite Jessica Biel and Kate Bosworth.

    In 2025, he was unmasked as Griffin on The Masked Singer, after singing a cover of John Denver’s “Take Me Home, Country Roads” and “I Had Some Help” by Post Malone and Morgan Wallen.

    Early life as a theater kid
    Van Der Beek, who was raised in Cheshire, Connecticut, started acting at 13 after suffering a concussion playing football that prevented him from playing for a year. He landed the role of Danny Zuko in his school production of Grease.

    He stuck with theater, landing at 16 in 1994 an off-Broadway role in Finding the Sun by Pulitzer Prize-winner Edward Albee and one of the sons in a revival of Shenandoah at the prestigious Goodspeed Opera House in his home state.

    He earned a scholarship to New Jersey’s Drew University but left school early when he was cast in Dawson’s Creek. In 2024, he returned to campus to accept an honorary degree for his “selfless service and exemplary commitment to the mission of Drew,” the university said.

    Drew University President Hilary Link welcomed Van Der Beek with a popular quote from his Dawson’s Creek character: “Edge is fleeting,” she said, “but heart lasts forever. So on this morning, we pay tribute to that heart.”

    He is survived by his wife, Kimberly, and six children, Olivia, Joshua, Annabel, Emilia, Gwendolyn and Jeremiah. A GoFundMe fundraiser has been established for the family.

    ___

    AP Music Writer Maria Sherman and CultureMap Austin editor Brianna Caleri contributed to this report.

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