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    Actor Spotlight

    DFW actor John S. Davies reveals penchant for cheap wine and guitars

    Lindsey Wilson
    Aug 18, 2014 | 8:38 am

    In Bruce Graham’s exploration of late-life loneliness, Stella & Lou, it takes a zesty woman to shake up one man’s staid existence. That man is portrayed by John S. Davies in Circle Theatre’s production, which runs at the Fort Worth theater from August 21 through September 20.

    If Davies looks familiar, it’s because he’s no stranger to Dallas-Fort Worth stages — or film and TV screens, for that matter. Recent seasons have found him onstage at Theatre Three (Other Desert Cities), WaterTower Theatre (Black Tie) and One Thirty Productions (Finishing School). But he can also be spotted on screen in Robo-cop, Magnolia, JFK and The Alamo.

    As a director, he’s led productions for Shakespeare Dallas, Circle Theatre and the winners of the prestigious screenwriting competition, Ballroom Marfa, in Marfa, Texas.

    Before tending bar as Lou at Circle, Davies took the time to fill out our survey of serious, fun and sometimes ridiculous questions.

    Name: John S. Davies. Yes, I use the middle initial.

    Role in Stella & Lou: Lou

    Previous work in the DFW area: I’ve worked at most of the professional theaters in the DFW area and some that are, sadly, no longer with us. Somewhere north of 60 professional productions.

    Hometown: I was born in Regensburg FRG (Federal Republic of Germany) and grew up around the world. When we lived in the U.S., it was in various suburbs of Washington, D.C. So, basically, I don’t have a hometown.

    Where you currently reside: Carrollton

    First theater role: In R.U.R. by Karel Capek at Westminster School, Simsbury, Connecticut. I don’t remember which one of the scientists I played.

    First stage show you ever saw: It may well have been the first one I was in, which probably doesn’t count.

    Moment you decided to pursue a career in theater: Probably the first time I worked with professional actors as the Musician in Twelfth Night at the California Actors Theater in Los Gatos, California.

    Most challenging role you’ve played: Maybe Willy Brandt in Democracy

    Special skills: Guitar, dialects, charm

    Something you’re REALLY bad at: Working in an office

    Current pop culture obsession: Allison Tolman in Fargo

    Last book you read: The Moving Target by Ross MacDonald

    Favorite movie(s): I’m not a big movie fan.

    Favorite musician(s): Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton, Robert Johnson, my son Rees

    Favorite song: "Crossroads"

    Dream role: Lear

    Favorite play(s): August Wilson’s, but I don’t really have favorites.

    Favorite musical(s): A Chorus Line

    Favorite actors/actresses: Phillip Seymour Hoffman, Allison Tolman, Cliff Stephens

    Favorite food: Key lime pie

    Must-see TV show(s): The Wire, Breaking Bad

    Something most people don’t know about you: I didn’t live in the U.S. until I was 6 years old.

    Place in the world you’d most like to visit: Wales

    Pre-show warm-up: Coffee and a cigarette

    Favorite part about your current role: It’s funny and it’s in Philly.

    Most challenging part about your current role: It’s funny and it’s in Philly.

    Most embarrassing onstage mishap: I did a terrible play called Ancestors many years ago. The whole experience was embarrassing, but at one point we had an onstage sword fight with cheap ceremonial sabers. My opponent’s blade broke off at the hilt and I had to chase him offstage.

    Career you’d have if you weren’t a performer: Drinking cheap wine in a gutter.

    Favorite post-show spot: Whatever’s close to the theater.

    Favorite thing about Dallas-Fort Worth: My grandchildren

    Most memorable theater moment: So many, but when I was in grad school as an apprentice at the Dallas Theater Center under Paul Baker, we did a three-hour adaptation of War and Peace. I understudied the role of Prince Andrei, the lead, and played a small role as his servant.

    I attended all the rehearsals and learned the lines but never actually rehearsed the entire role. Then one Wednesday, I was working in the scene shop before a matinee when the call came in that the actor playing the Prince had thrown his back out and couldn’t get out of bed.

    I was hustled up to the dressing room and hastily tried on all his costumes — including tight riding breeches and fitted military jackets — while lines were fired at me by the ASM. I went on, was led around the stage by the other actors, dropped a line here and there, but ended up in a bed center stage (the Prince dies at the end) thinking, “I did it. I don’t know how but I did it.”

    The other actor never recovered, and I ended up playing the last three-and-a-half weeks of the run.

    Davies with Catherine DuBord in Contemporary Theatre of Dallas' Sylvia.

    John S. Davies in "Sylvia" at Contemporary Theatre of Dallas
    Photo by George Wada
    Davies with Catherine DuBord in Contemporary Theatre of Dallas' Sylvia.
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    news/arts

    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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