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    Theater Review

    Emotionally charged Hit the Wall doesn't back down in Addison

    Lindsey Wilson
    Aug 4, 2017 | 3:01 pm

    Shortly after being appointed the new artistic director of WaterTower Theatre, Joanie Schultz made her first bold move by replacing the company's previously announced season finale, the musical Sunday in the Park with George, with a gritty and raw play about the 1969 Stonewall Riots. Her second was to ensure that, under her direction, the play would be uncompromising, uncomfortable, and exactly what DFW needs right now.

    Ike Holter's 2012 play Hit the Wall is a lyrical gut-punch about a true historic event, one that brings to colorful and captivating life struggles that are still being felt — more recently now, for sure — for many Americans. Though the setting is Greenwich Village during the sweltering summer of '69, it might as well be today's Texas heat as tensions continue to rise over the debate for basic human rights, respect, tolerance, and safety.

    In those early-morning June hours, a raid at a packed gay dance club sparked a riot that would reverberate throughout the country and propel the modern movement for LGBTQ rights. Holter's script is linear, with key characters stepping forward to confirm "I was there" as they lead up to the big confrontation and screech into an aftermath. But unlike most historic touchstones, there is not a minute-by-minute account where every action, word, or placement is analyzed. This is because accounts differ, from those in the club to the police who barged in to those who stood by, either jubilantly cheering or silently watching. Not everyone who was there could talk.

    This allows Holter dramatic freedom, but he doesn't abuse it. He stays true to his characters, a motley group of hopeful dreamers and guarded souls who are sketched in deeply grooved lines. The ensemble cast — it's difficult to pick stand-outs, but Walter Lee and Kelsey Leigh Ervi will make you cry while Gregory Lush might give you nightmares — deliver sometimes poetic, other times starkly simple statements about who they are, whom they love, and what they believe.

    A house band called The Mystiks, comprised of Deep Ellum musicians Ivan Dillard, Lina Reyne, and Gerard Bendiks, punctuates the action and proves especially handy at sound effects.

    On Jocelyn Girigorie's evocative set, under Jason Foster's foreboding lighting, and in Ryan Matthieu Smith's groovy costumes, the actors hold nothing back, exposing the ugliness of homophobia that might make some wince.

    But the scary part is, it might not faze others at all. By switching out Sondheim for Stonewall, Schultz has made the decisive — and potentially divisive — statement that under her leadership, WaterTower Theatre will reflect its current world, even if sometimes the world isn't a place we want to be.

    On your way into the theater, you can pick up and affix a rainbow ribbon to your shirt. On the way out, there's an opportunity to donate to Abounding Prosperity, a Dallas organization that provide services to black men, with a particular emphasis on gay, bisexual, and male-to-female transgender individuals. The message is clear: No matter how you do it, don't stay silent.

    ---

    WaterTower Theatre's production of Hit the Wall runs at the Addison Conference & Theatre Center through August 20.

    Walter Lee and Gregory Lush

    Walter Lee and Gregory Lush in Hit the Wall
    Photo by Jason Anderson
    Walter Lee and Gregory Lush
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    Museum News

    2 Dallas museums partner on landmark Roy Lichtenstein acquisition

    Teresa Gubbins
    Nov 12, 2025 | 12:51 pm
    Roy Lichtenstein
    Courtesy
    Roy Lichtenstein

    The Dallas Museum of Art (DMA) and the Nasher Sculpture Center will present works from the joint acquisition of more than 50 artworks generously gifted by the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation in 2024, showing prints, drawings, and sculptures by the groundbreaking American artist at the two neighboring institutions in the Dallas Arts District.

    According to a release, the installations will be on view from January 31 to August 16, 2026 at the Nasher and from January 1 to July 5, 2026 at the DMA.

    The joint gift made by the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation to the DMA and the Nasher in Celebration of the Centennial of Roy Lichtenstein is comprised of a selection of prints, drawings, maquettes, and sculptures by Roy Lichtenstein (1923–1997), a leading figure in twentieth-century American art and a pioneer of the Pop Art movement.

    The works were specifically selected by the curatorial staff of both institutions and relate to objects already in their respective collections including sculptures, works on paper, and maquettes, along with tools and study objects.

    Organized by the Nasher Sculpture Center’s Senior Curator Dr. Catherine Craft, The Nancy and Tim Hanley Assistant Curator of Contemporary Art at the DMA Ade Omotosho, and The Allen and Kelli Questrom Assistant Curator of Prints and Drawings at the DMA Dr. Emily Friedman, the presentation is divided according to each institution’s strengths and will be shown in combination with objects by Lichtenstein already in their respective permanent collections.

    At the Nasher, works relating to three sculptures from the Raymond and Patsy Nasher Collection—Head with Blue Shadow, Peace through Chemistry, and Double Glass—will be accompanied by a selection from the Foundation's gift of more than two dozen drawings and maquettes associated with Lichtenstein’s Brushstroke sculptures.

    At the Dallas Museum of Art, the presentation features a set of Brushstroke sculptures carved from wood alongside various prints and studies that reveal the artist’s eclectic imagery.

    Events
    In addition to the exhibition, the DMA and the Nasher will co-host a Study Day focused on the artist on March 28, 2026, sponsored by the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation. This scholarly event will bring together a variety of curators, academics, and conservators to discuss Lichtenstein’s studio practice and the fabrication and conservation of his sculptures.

    Concluding the Study Day will be a public conversation held at the DMA between Nasher Director Carlos Basualdo and artist Alex Da Corte, regarding Da Corte’s work on the forthcoming Lichtenstein retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art.

    “In bestowing this generous gift, the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation established Dallas as a center for the study and display of Lichtenstein’s work,” Basualdo says in a statement. “This collaborative presentation of the gift and the corresponding programming is an important step in the direction of pursuing that goal, deepening the understanding of an artist who remains immensely influential to contemporary art and its relationship with mass media and today’s culture.”

    Roy Lichtenstein is made possible by support from the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation and the Dallas Tourism Public Improvement District (DTPID).

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