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  1. My Movies Houstonians Love Inspiration: “Hedwig and the Angry Inch”

    Feb 24, 2016 - What I found onscreen, however, was a story about a scathingly witty person overcoming cruel tragedies to achieve her artistic dream. Hedwig made me laugh until I cried. She made me cry until my shirt was stained with eye makeup. In the end, she made me sigh, rise, and leave the theater with renewed ambition, which resulted in my first book being published. But Hedwig was definitely an inspiration to me as an artist, a woman, and a karaoke enthusiast.

  2. Walk Away Renee

    Oct 31, 2012 - Also, I began watching The Territory on PBS in Houston, and THOSE films simply blew my mind—and kind of simultaneously elated me and terrified me. When I was about 12, I was hanging out with these older film snob types in Houston (have no idea how I even met them) and they exposed me to the likes of Paul Morrissey and John Waters, etc. JC: When I was 8 years old, my grandfather, Adolph, used to take me to the original Meyerland Theater and AMC Shamrock Six, and I would sneak my tape recorder in and record the audio of the films I would see.

  3. Capturing “Inverted Worlds”: A Talk with Vera Lutter

    Feb 8, 2016 - The landscape around me was built up from industry. The old, monumental structures were overwhelming and frightening. I think later on when I started photographing, I subconsciously thought of that. I went to the lowest elevation, where it was most likely to flood, and a friend helped me find a room with a good view. There are a lot of factors going in to the decision where I set up my camera. I looked for a long time for the right hotel room with that iconic Times Square view, the one with Seventh Avenue and Broadway meeting. I’m quite high up, which gives me that view with a certain distance.

  4. Choose Me

    Choose Me is a symphony of coincidence, spontaneity, and unpredictability set to the jazz sounds of Teddy Pendergrass. Choose Me Directed by Alan Rudolph(USA, 1984, 35mm)Introduced by Roberto Tejada, University of Houston The characters in Alan Rudolph’s multilayered romantic comedy interact within a film noir of deception, love, and sex among

  5. Get #trill with Gibson & Join Us on Sundays for “MFAH on the Mat”

    Apr 20, 2020 - I use yoga as my own way to reset and restore. Yoga gives me strength and confidence, and it helps me breathe deeper and more mindfully than any other activity. I treat each practice uniquely as I explore what’s going on in my body, mind, and soul. Every time I practice, I feel much better after than when I started. To me, yoga is a moving meditation with breath. Finding the right music combination, or a really great teacher, always helps me keep it #trill. What advice do you have for practicing yoga at home?

  6. A Noir to Remember

    Sep 17, 2018 - I think that’s where my love of film began. I also remember my parents taking me to a matinee of Gone with the Wind at the downtown Loews Theater when I was about 10! That disappointed me! I thought he was wonderful. Why did you pick Laura for Movies Houstonians Love? When I first saw Laura, I was 15 years old and a sophomore at Lamar High School. I thought it was the most sophisticated, glamorous movie I’d ever seen! Though there have been many other contenders for favorite film over the years, Laura still retains its aura of elegance, mystery, and romance for me.

  7. Ima Hogg: “Like a Rock Star”

    Apr 19, 2016 - When I got older, she gave me advice on colleges I was considering, and told me how pleased she was when I graduated and wanted to be a teacher. Later, when I was in junior high, she would sometimes ask me to play the piano at Bayou Bend. I remember crawling or playing on the kitchen floor, and being cleaned up in the sink before my parents came to get me!

  8. MFAH Teaching Artist Shares Her Inspirations for “Metamorphosis”

    Sep 23, 2020 - Being surrounded by incredible art in our Museum has directly inspired me to try new techniques and to incorporate them into my own artwork. I wouldn't be the artist I am today if it weren’t for my job at the MFAH. I hope viewers will think of the word “metamorphosis” and how it applies to changes in their own lives. The process of transforming physical remnants of human breakdown into works of art has brought me enlightenment and joy. I recognized these items as the debris of personal disruption and anguish. When I looked closer, however, I saw the same objects as elements of artistic beauty and meaning.

  9. In the Beginning

    Nov 3, 2011 - Believe me, ever since the 1993 federal ruling in Armstrong v. Executive Office of the President, “better men” than I have been working on it. Sitting down to write my first blog entry – adding, I might note, to the sixty terabytes of data already whirling on the museum’s more than thirty virtual servers - I began to reflect on what could possibly have driven me to tackle The potential dawned on me about ten years ago when I discovered that academic researchers were testing blob recognition for, as one example, distinguishing urban scenes from seascapes.

  10. Sushi: The Global Catch

    Oct 5, 2012 - MH: Yes, I really like sushi. I definitely approach it differently after making Sushi: The Global Catch. MH: I'm pretty active on Facebook—that's a good place to connect with me and follow the films I am working on. You can also visit the website of my distributor, Kino Lorber, for information on Sushi: The Global Catch. My experience with the Internet definitely made me research methods of marketing films to potential audiences.