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    Theater Review

    Nevertheless, the revolutionary females of this Dallas play persist and provoke

    Lindsey Wilson
    Jul 25, 2018 | 9:08 am

    Though cutesy at times and sluggishly meta at others, Lauren Gunderson's The Revolutionists is nevertheless a persistent, provocative, and particularly relevant piece of theater. Under the direction of co-artistic directors Ashley H. White and Joe Messina, Imprint Theatreworks' production delivers a deluge of poignant, witty moments, beautifully rendered and flamboyantly framed.

    It's not surprising that Imprint Theatreworks, the newish company that's already made waves with its inaugural season, chose Gunderson's script. It features four fierce female characters, some based on infamous historical figures and one a composite that represents the sentiments of the time. That would be during the French Revolution's Reign of Terror, when thousands met their fate at the guillotine and the French government, aristocracy, and entire status quo was in upheaval.

    "I hate that bitch," playwright and activist Olympe de Gouges (an arresting Marianne Galloway) grumbles, referring to Madame Guillotine. She should indeed hate — and fear — the device, as she and her compatriots are headed there post-haste for execution scenes that manage to be both chilling and lovely. Each woman is fighting for freedom and fairness, for their people, their country, and themselves (being a woman has never been easy).

    While wrestling with a particularly nasty bout of writer's block, Olympe is visited by her friend Marianne Angelle, who's seeking asylum while she works to abolish slavery. The Caribbean activist (the only character who historically did not exist, but others like her did) is played with sass and heart by Sky Williams, who is often tasked with the most serious storyline and rises to the challenge.

    Also popping in are two people Olympe has never met before (and probably didn't in her real life): the cherubic-faced assassin Charlotte Corday and the queen of France herself, Marie Antoinette. Charlotte (Dani Holway, mesmerizing when she's not mugging) is readying herself to kill Jean-Paul Marat, and knows she will surely be executed for her crime. She seeks out Olympe to pen her some memorable last words for the scaffold, and continually states how her belief that Marat must die was nope, definitely not, not at all caused by a man who wouldn't return her affections.

    But it's Jennifer Kuenzer who turns in the show's most captivating performance, reveling in Marie's vapid silliness before stunning with remarks that are cutting in their raw honesty. Kuenzer fully inhabits the rainbow-colored petticoats of the deposed queen, toying like a kitten with the ribbons encircling her wrist and exclaiming "gasp!" and "sigh" in a manner that's both humorously grating and irritatingly adorable.

    When Marie finally makes it to the gallows (not a spoiler, because come on), Kuenzer is stripped bare of her frippery and left exposed, suddenly seeming much smaller and many times more fragile. It's a heartbreaking, honest, and hilarious performance.

    Notice yet how often the costumes have been mentioned? That's because the outfits that Jessie Wallace has designed, in tandem with Michael B. Moore's striking hair and makeup, are a riot of color and pattern. From Charlotte's Betsey Johnson-esque gown and coat to Olympe's smart suit, the costumes each have a modern twist that adds layers to the character. But even when leeched of color for the execution scenes, with the women dressed in simple white shifts, the effect is no less powerful.

    ---

    Imprint Theatreworks' production of The Revolutionists runs through August 4 at the Margo Jones Theatre in Fair Park.

    Holway plays the Angel of Assassins, Charlotte Corday.

    Imprint Theatreworks presents The Revolutionists
    Photo by Jessie Wallace
    Holway plays the Angel of Assassins, Charlotte Corday.
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    Balloon News

    Global art exhibit Balloon Museum bounces immersively into Dallas

    Teresa Gubbins
    Oct 23, 2025 | 1:14 pm
    Balloon Museum
    Balloon Museum
    Balloon Museum

    A new museum tour featuring huge airy installations — also known as balloons — is coming to Dallas: Called Let’s Fly – Art Has No Limits, it's a multisensory exhibition from an entity called the Balloon Museum, and it will touch down at Dallas' South Side Studios at 2901 Botham Jean Blvd. on Saturday, November 22, where it will reside until April 16, 2026.

    Created by Italy-based Lux Entertainment, Let’s Fly will feature huge artworks spanning more than 65,000 square feet. Rooted in the concepts of flight, freedom, and lightness, the exhibition explores air as both a physical element and a symbol of movement and limitless travel.

    According to a release, Lux Entertainment specializes in traveling as well as site-specific exhibitions that combine monumental artworks, engaging environments, and live performances. In June 2024, an Italian investor SIMEST (CDP Group) pledged $5.8 million to expand Lux into the U.S., spawning the creation of the first permanent Balloon Museum overseas.

    Their mission is to transform entertainment into a personal journey, where the audience is not a spectator but a protagonist via innovative formats such as Balloon Museum, This is Wonderland, Christmas World, and Color Hotel.

    Balloon Museum was founded in Rome in 2021 as a pioneering art space dedicated to showcasing inflatable and air-based contemporary installations that merge creativity, technology, and sensory exploration. They have four main exhibitions: Pop Air, EmotionAir, Let’s Fly, and Euphoяia, which have toured across three continents.

    Let's Fly previously stopped in Austin and, simultaneous to Dallas, it will also stop in Houston, as well.

    The dozens of artists featured in each exhibit vary from city to city; Dallas' Let’s Fly – Art Has No Limits stop will include:

    • “Squeezed In,” an installation inhabited by oversized characters, by Lucas Zanotto
    • “Her Joy,” a mirrored sphere that breathes and reflects light like a resonating body, by Alex Schweder
    • “Crazy Love for Polygons" explores geometric forms, by Cyril Lancelin
    • “Balloon Tree,” uniting nature and artifice, by Myeongbeom Kim
    • “Lava Lamp,” a 44-meter psychedelic and breath-like installation inspired by the iconic 1963 lamp, by Michael Shaw
    • “BB,” using hundreds of balloons to explore symmetry and reflection, by Tadao Cern

    One notable piece is Christopher Schardt's “Mariposa”, a 26-foot butterfly sculpture with 39,000 LEDs, which was first presented at Burning Man 2023.

    Dallas seems to have a child-like rapture for big bouncy round things — from the Yayoi Kusama pumpkins at the Dallas Museum of Art to Bubble Planet, the immersive experience with larger-than-life bubbles which makes its debut at Grapevine Mills on October 23.

    “With its world-class arts scene and bold, design-driven landscape, Dallas offers the perfect backdrop for Balloon Museum’s “Let’s Fly,” says Lux Entertainment founder Roberto Fantauzzi in a statement. “We’re proud to bring an exhibition that reflects the city’s scale and spirit — dynamic, creative, and constantly in motion, always reaching for what’s next.”

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