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5 Things to Do in Houston This Weekend, June 4-6

You ve never seen Danny Tanner like this. By Emma Schkloven 6/4/2021 at 6:00am Bob Saget at Houston Improv There’s a part of us that’ll always think of him as lovable, cleaning-obsessed sitcom dad, but Bob Saget actually got his start in the comedy circuit (including here in Space City). And he was known for his … let’s call them “adult-oriented” standup routines. How rude, Mr. Tanner! Thanks to the pandemic, he’s got more than an hour of brand-new material, which he’ll be showing off to Houston audiences over two nights and four shows. June 4–5. From $120 (seats sold as tables for four and six).

Best Virtual Bets the Week of June 3-9, 2021

If classical music keeps one thing from the pandemic, let it be the opera short

If classical music keeps one thing from the pandemic, let it be the opera short
washingtonpost.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from washingtonpost.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

A Slave Memoir Becomes an Opera

Omar Ibn Said died in 1863 at the age of ninety-three, an ocean away from where he was born. He was known as “Uncle Moreau,” and his obituary in the Raleigh, North Carolina, Weekly Standard, describes his Christian piety, after being converted from “heathenistic” Islam. By then Ibn Said had been a slave for 56 years. Much of his identity had been lost or erased. Or was it? When he was sixty-three, Ibn Said penned a 15-page autobiography in Arabic. He opened with a verse from the Qur’an called the Sūrah al-Mulk. Mulk means dominion or ownership. In Islam, everything belongs to God and nothing to man.

Performing and visual arts events for Sarasota-Manatee: April 22-28

Westcoast Troupe follows the ‘Pipeline’ The Westcoast Black Theatre Troupe combines live theater and video for the Sarasota premiere of Dominique Morisseau’s timely drama “Pipeline.” The play, which WBTT originally planned to present live in the fall, is being filmed inside the theater and will then be shown in outdoor screenings in the theater’s parking lot Friday through April 30. Home streaming will be available May 1-23. The roughly 90-minute play is about an inner-city public high school teacher whose son is threatened with expulsion from an elite private boarding school after he attacks a teacher. It is directed by L. Peter Callender, an actor and artistic director of the African-American Shakespeare Company of San Francisco. Tickets are $20. For more information: 941-366-1505; westcoastblacktheatre.org

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