Andy Noble and Dionne Sparkman Noble introduced NobleMotion Dance just six years ago at the 2009 Big Range Dance Festival in Houston. In the last season, the company filled Hobby Center's Zilkha Hall for a two-night run — a rarity among local performing arts companies. The company, part of the resident incubator program at the Houston Arts Alliance, mounts three full-length Houston productions and a New York City tour every year. The company's signature quality is innovation. It paired with Musiqa, a contemporary music group, for Tonal Impact, a recent production. The company ended the summer on a high note, producing what may have been the group's most ambitious program — Storm Front: Experience the Elements, an impressive exploration of wind, rain, snow and light.

David Rozycki

Generally speaking, nothing ruins a good dive bar like talking about what a great dive bar it is — because then the people who "just love dive bars" show up in droves — but Alice's Tall Texan has long been the exception to that rule. With its neon signs and cowboy wallpaper, you get clued in to the vibe of the place the second you walk in the door. The jukebox is usually blaring out classic country tunes and you're welcome to help yourself to any of the food people bring in and put on the side table for everyone to enjoy. Alice's serves other things — though you won't find any craft beer on tap around here — but it's always smart to go with a frosty fishbowl goblet of Lone Star for $1.25 or Shiner for $2.50.

READERS' CHOICE: Poison Girl

It was perhaps the most important 18 minutes in American history, the 1836 Battle of San Jacinto. Texas forces led by Sam Houston faced off with the Santa Anna-led Mexican army and the fate of two nations hung in the balance. Houston's forces won; Texas became an independent nation, eventually joining the United States and Mexico began a long decline in territory and power. Today the San Jacinto Monument marks the spot. Surrounded by the battleground, the Monument is actually a museum/research library/observation deck. Picnic on the battleground, watch Texas Forever!! The Battle of San Jacinto, a chronicle of Texas history, tour the exhibition (currently "A Destined Conflict: The U.S. – Mexican War") or ride the elevator up 500 feet and get a 360 degree view of the area from the monument's observation deck.

READERS' CHOICE: Johnson Space Center

The last time we went to PJ's, we waited in anticipation inside the nearly empty upstairs cave while the Karaoke Man set up the sound system, tweaking this knob and that. We wanted to get there early to get a good seat. He wore all black, which blended nicely with his bushy gray mane and beard. He looked like he was once maybe a roadie for Grand Funk Railroad. Hell, he might have actually been in Grand Funk Railroad. And then, once his sound-levels were just right, he grabbed the mike and belted out a pitch-perfect rendition of "Selling the Drama" by Live. What a curveball. Before we knew it, it was an hour and a half later, the room was packed and everybody had somehow become best friends, hoisting cold Shiners and shout-singing along to "Piano Man." Friday night karaoke at PJ's means instant fun and instant friends, even if they're off-key. It can't be beat.

READERS' CHOICE: Glitter Karaoke

Even before the construction of Frolic's Castle, Memorial City Mall sported the best indoor playgrounds in the city. Now it's so good it's hard to believe it's free. It features a massive, multi-story castle set among an equally huge fairy-tale forest, and kids can run, jump, climb and play for hours in the cool air of the mall. Plus, the playground is gated and monitored by a security guard so that you don't have to worry about your munchkins running out of your sight as they dart among giants and dragons. The only downside is that Frolic's Castle is open only during mall hours, so be aware if you're trying to get in an early Sunday morning play session that the gate will likely be locked.

David Rozycki

The death of izakaya Goro & Gun was sad, but it made way for new life in the form of an innovative bar. Moving Sidewalk (run by Goro's former bar manager, Alex Gregg) initially received a lot of attention for creating nitro-frozen cocktails, some of which were designed to change character as they melted. Moving Sidewalk is no snooty, pretentious bar, though. The program changed this past summer to a more lighthearted theme inspired by the surfer-crime drama Point Break. Among the most popular drinks are Babes, a carbonated, bottled cocktail of white rum, clarified strawberry and lime, and the MS House Old Fashioned with bourbon, rye, piloncillo syrup and Angostura bitters.

READERS' CHOICE: Cottonwood

Okay, so you can catch the latest blow-'em-up blockbuster at any of dozens of movie theaters around town. Why pick one over the other? Parking? Prices? Popcorn? All those things are important, sure, but Alamo Drafthouse Cinema — Vintage Park takes our Best Movie Theater award because of its super-special programming. The theater recently screened A League of Their Own and Tank Girl with actor Lori Petty in attendance. Dragon Ball Z: Resurrection "F," and a 3-D version of the monster flick Creature from the Black Lagoon got screen time. Popular series include quote-alongs (Better Off Dead), Kids Camp (The Parent Trap) and Video Vortex (Blood Massacre).

READERS' CHOICE: River Oaks Theatre

Somewhere along the radio dial, amid the bluster of conservative blowhards and guy-centric sports talk, is public radio. And while those words can be code for "liberal, hippie, elites" in a state like Texas, KUHF has managed to deliver the kind of legitimate local discussion so often missing from radio in the form of Houston Matters. And at the center of the show is the soft-spoken Craig Cohen, who deftly moderates discussions on a wide variety of far-ranging topics, all focused on Houston. His shows are not only topical but well researched, and his guests are fascinating. It is, simply put, the best midday listen on the airwaves.

Jennifer Mathieu has the perfect combination of skill and curiosity every good writer needs. On top of that, she considers teens and young adults, who make up both her characters and her readers, "fascinating." Mathieu's first young-adult novel was The Truth About Alice; it examined the results of malicious gossip on a girl in high school. Released in the summer of 2014, it received an energetic reception. Mathieu's newest release, Devoted, out this summer, is about a girl from a restrictive religious movement. It's also finding an eager audience. The Truth About Alice and Devoted are hardly Mathieu's first experience with writing success; when she was in kindergarten, a story she wrote about an ape dancing inside a library won a contest in Cricket magazine.

The exhibit "Luis Jiménez: Prints, Drawings & Sculptures," the first solo show for the artist since his death in 2006, was almost a decade in the making. Moody Gallery owner Betty Moody and her late husband, artist Bill Steffy, were friends with Jiménez, who died in a studio accident during the construction of his 32-foot sculpture Blue Mustang. Moody had to go outside the usual channels to put together "Prints, Drawings & Sculptures." Estate issues tied up Jiménez's work for several years, and few pieces were available for loan from institutions. Moody went to private collectors for the work seen in the exhibit and put together an impressive selection of Jiménez's work. The exhibit included pieces in a variety of mediums and from various stages in the artist's career.

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