It’s 2026! As we’re getting back into Mid-Week Intermissions in the new year, we thought this would be a good time to give you a rundown of one of the most important, coolest, and innovative departments at the Long Center – our fabulous Box Office

Some of the Box Office crew ☝️ Leslie, Jordan, Zuzu, Annie, Anne, and David

You might not know that the Box Office does soooo much more than getting you your tickets for all our shows here at the LC. On top of being the first friendly faces you see when you arrive, the Box Office can:

  • Help you make reservations at local restaurants 🍝
  • Give recommendations of things to do if you’re visiting Austin 🚣
  • Help you avoid resellers that are overcharging for Long Center shows 🙅
  • Point you in the right direction for most questions you could have! 

One of the Box Office’s biggest projects right now is educating the general public on how to get the best prices and guaranteed seats by purchasing from us directly. Since the pandemic, there has been a huge uptick in reseller activity, and people often wind up clicking on the first link when searching for our shows online, which, unfortunately, is often a reseller charging significantly more for tickets than are necessary for our performances or selling tickets that aren’t valid.

We always want to make sure you’re getting the best seats at the right price, so it’s best to go directly to thelongcenter.org to purchase tickets, or, even better, give the Box Office a call at (512) 474-5664 or visit them in person so they can talk to you about the best seats for your needs.

Our Box Office is a team of artists and culture lovers who LOVE to give you the inside scoop, from the best seats in the house to the next show at the LC you’re bound to love. They’re always happy to help so if you ever have a question, don’t hesitate to ask!

In the meantime, we sat down with some of the crew for a lightning round, chatting about some of the services they offer and the best part about being on the Box Office team. Read on for the deets! 

What’s your go-to restaurant recommendation for folks who want to grab a bite before or after a show?  

ANNIE: Carpenters Hall (southern-inspired fare in a former carpenters’ union building from 1949)  

DAVID: El Alma 

ANNE: Terry Black’s BBQ 

ZUZU: Sandy’s

JORDAN: El Alma 

What upcoming Long Center show do you most recommend right now?

ANNIE: Macbeth

DAVID: Neil deGrasse Tyson 

ANNE: Jason Isbell 

ZUZU: Texas Burlesque Festival

JORDAN: Jane Austen Improv!

Where’s the best place to stay in the area for our out-of-town folks (or Austinites who are looking for a staycation)?   

ANNIE: Austin Motel (funky, retro themed rooms on South Congress) 

DAVID: Anywhere in Bouldin Creek!

ANNE: Hotel San Jose (a boutique hotel on South Congress)

JORDAN: Carpenter Hotel (really hip spot within walking distance – not your typical hotel) 

What’s the best part about working in the LC’s Box Office?  

ANNIE: Helping fans get to see their heroes!

DAVID: Watching the patron fashion show as they enter the building 

ANNE: Welcoming new patrons and sharing a love for the arts with our wide variety of shows… and you can’t beat the downtown view!

JORDAN: People watching, and getting to witness people engage with something they love.

What’s one thing you think people might not know about the Box Office? 

ANNIE: Several of us are professional karaoke-ers

DAVID: We all have artistic backgrounds!

ANNE: We are at the windows Monday through Friday, 10am to 5pm… stop by and say “Hi!”

JORDAN: We have a core group of 7 team members working during day shifts, but we have 12-15 people on the full roster (including interns). 

What’s the best piece of advice you have for folks coming to see a show at the LC?  

ANNIE: Use public transit or arrive early to grab a bite nearby before the show!

DAVID: Come early and enjoy our beautiful park space.

ANNE: Arrive early so you have time to grab a drink and/or snack before the showThere’s a bar located on each level!

JORDAN: We share a parking garage with the Palmer Events Center and many businesses nearby, so arrive a little earlier than you think you need to find a good parking spot. 

Thanks, Box Office team!

You can reach our Box Office by calling at the number below, or visiting us in person during the below hours.

Box Office: (512) 474-5664 
Monday – Friday 10AM – 5PM
90 minutes prior to showtime weekdays/weekends

KEEP IN TOUCH

At the Long Center, we’ve always got a new partnership or something cool we know you’ll want to check out! Find and follow us @longcenter on your social media platform of choice, and we’ll see you real soon.

Scrolling past heavy, complex headlines each day can make stories blur together. With a fast-paced news cycle where tragedy becomes routine, it’s easy to forget that each headline represents real people.

Photojournalist Tamir Kalifa has spent years working close to those moments, witnessing the human impact beyond the articles. Through compassionate visual storytelling, his work asks us to pause, look closer, and remember the people at the heart of the story.

☝️ This is Tamir - Photo by Amit Elkayam

Long Center: Welcome to Mid-Week Intermission! We usually like to ask folks for a song to go with their interview – anything come to mind? Maybe a song off Witness?

Tamir Kalifa: I’m choosing the song “Jackie’s Rock,” written about being asked by the family of Jackie Cazares, who was killed in the Robb Elementary School shooting in Uvalde, to take a painted rock to Paris, France, in her honor in 2022. The simple request became one of the most meaningful experiences of my career. Jackie’s family joined me in the studio when we recorded the song and Jazmin, Jackie’s older sister and a gifted singer, sang harmonies.

Tamir Kalifa and Jazmin Cazares performing together. Photo by Sam Owens

LC: We’re so excited about your upcoming show at the Long Center. Can you share a little about yourself for our readers who might be unfamiliar?

Tamir Kalifa: I’m a longtime Austin photojournalist and musician. I’ve been photographing around Texas, the U.S. and internationally for The New York Times, Texas Monthly and others for over a decade – all while playing music in Austin bands. My career has taken me from documenting hurricanes, gun violence and politics in America to covering the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. In between assignments and projects, I also played accordion, piano and guitar in the orchestral indie-rock ensemble Mother Falcon and toured with them for years. This new project, Witness, is the first time I’ve brought my photographs and music together.

LC: How did you get into photojournalism, specifically covering sensitive subjects impacting individuals and communities?

Tamir Kalifa: My path into photojournalism started early. My father was a video cameraman for CNN when I was growing up in Kensington, Maryland, in the 1990s. I remember watching the nightly news with him and feeling a sense of awe as the President of the United States spoke directly into my dad’s camera from the Oval Office. I loved history, and his work placed him inside the rooms where it was being made. He inspired me to pick up a camera at a young age and I never put it down.

I came to see photojournalism as both a way to experience history as it unfolds and a means of holding truth to power. Over time, as I covered more stories, I realized they felt more resonant when there was intimacy in the images — when viewers could recognize part of themselves in the lives of those depicted. I also began to notice a theme emerging from the most difficult assignments: when people are pushed to their limits, they can reveal an extraordinary resilience. I’ve tried my best to sensitively document individuals and communities facing the great issues of our time with the hope that compassionate visual storytelling can help foster an understanding and emotional engagement needed to move people toward action.

Marcela Martínez, members of her family, friends, and others make their way up Mount Cristo Rey in Sunland Park, New Mexico, carrying crosses honoring the 23 victims of the El Paso Walmart shooting, on Sept. 15, 2019. Marcela’s husband Luis survived being shot five times during the attack and his father, Jorge Calvillo Garcia, was among the victims. Photo by Tamir Kalifa.

LC: Witness, your latest project, is a multimedia endeavor that combines your journalism with your music. What inspired this project and why did you feel it was important to pursue?

Tamir Kalifa: Music has been a constant companion throughout my life and writing songs about my experiences behind the camera became a way for me to process some of the most difficult moments I encountered. Over time, I began to feel frustrated by the unrelenting news cycle and how quickly stories can be consumed and forgotten. I wanted to create a space where these stories, some of them years old, could linger and resonate longer, grounded in the humanity that made them urgent in the first place.

Witness grew out of that. I wrote songs inspired by covering the Texas–Mexico border, the Pandemic, the El Paso shooting, natural disasters, and the families I came to know in the aftermath of the shooting at Robb Elementary in Uvalde. It is easy to scroll past difficult headlines or avoid uncomfortable realities out of fatigue, fear, or numbness — I’m certainly guilty of that myself. Still, I believe art can help offer a way through, not by providing answers, but by opening hearts, encouraging empathy, and reminding us of how much we have in common.

I feel a sense of purpose and a profound responsibility in pursuing this work. I’m also immensely grateful to the individuals whose trust allowed me to witness some of the most difficult days of their lives. This project is, in part, a way to honor that trust and pay that gratitude forward by introducing audiences to these remarkable people.

Siblings from Honduras wait with their family on the Mexican side of the bridge between Brownsville, Texas, and Matamoros, Mexico, hoping to be allowed entry into the United States to seek asylum on June 26, 2018. Photo by Tamir Kalifa.

LC: You’ve covered some pretty historic events, from natural disasters, global conflicts, and political campaigns. Is there a moment from your travels across the world that really struck you, or stands out as a career highlight (so far)?

Tamir Kalifa: Documenting Uvalde in the wake of the shooting has been the most formative experience of my career. What started as a breaking news assignment – one I reluctantly accepted – has evolved into a life-long project and commitment to the community that I have grown to care deeply for. I went to Uvalde because I had covered gun violence in the past and wanted to create a depiction of mass shootings that went beyond the familiar rituals of mourning in America, one that visualized grief, and the issue of gun violence, with care, compassion and patience.  

As I attended school board meetings, protests, barbecues, graveside birthdays and more, I was moved by the quiet, ordinary courage the families demonstrated each day as they navigated the wilderness of grief. I lived in Uvalde full-time from March to May 2023 so I could be fully present and not miss these moments, which led to some of the most meaningful photographs of the project. While I have since taken on other assignments, Uvalde is a place I regularly return to. Witness, and the songs I wrote about Uvalde, are a continuation of my commitment to honoring the families and the memory of their loved ones.

Caitlyne Gonzales, who lost many of her friends in the shooting at Robb Elementary, sings and dances to Taylor Swift songs at Jackie Cazares’ grave in Uvalde, Texas, on April 19, 2023. Jackie loved animals, wanted to be a veterinarian and dreamed of one day visiting Paris. Photo by Tamir Kalifa.

LC: What’s something that you hope the audience might take away from Witness?

Tamir Kalifa: I hope Witness inspires audiences to reflect more deeply on what connects us as humans and what responsibilities we have to one another. I often return to something my former UT photojournalism professor Donna DeCesare once said to me, which I incorporated into the final lyrics of the album: “Pictures don’t change a thing, people do.

Richard Schott reacts to seeing lava from the Kilauea volcano eruption up close as it flows through the Malama-Ki Forest Reserve on Hawaii’s Big Island on May 19, 2018. Photo by Tamir Kalifa.

LC: Anything you want to tease about your upcoming show in Austin on January 23?

Tamir Kalifa: One of the most meaningful parts of developing the performance of Witness is that I’ve done it in collaboration with Jazmin Cazares, Jackie’s older sister. She is a gifted singer and has become an integral part of the performance, singing not only on “Jackie’s Rock,” the song about her sister, but on other songs as well. I’m in awe of her talent and stage presence, but also her resilience and the way she and her family honor Jackie with every breath.

Thanks, Tamir! 

Grab your seats for Witness on January 23.

KEEP IN TOUCH

At the Long Center, we’ve always got a new partnership or something cool we know you’ll want to check out! Find and follow us @longcenter on your social media platform of choice, and we’ll see you real soon.

 Vote for The Drop-In!

We need YOUR HELP to make The Drop-In a finalist for the Levitt Music Series Grant!

Your vote could help secure up to $120,000 in matching grant funds that will keep Austin’s favorite free summer concert series alive, thriving, and grooving for the next 3 years. Every voice counts, and with your support, we can keep bringing unforgettable music and community vibes to the Long Center lawn.

Let’s make The Drop-In a Levitt finalist together! Text AUSTIN to 877.409.5525 OR vote below!

 Become a Member to get the most out of your Drop-In​

LC Members get first dibs on RSVPs, access to the Member Lounge, members-only bar, drink specials and other surprises!

Be in-the-know for The Drop-In

Tickets for The Drop-In are FREE and artists are announced every Friday! Stay tuned for the full lineup dropping on May 5.

Amplify Austin Day has officially started — help us reach our goal of $20,000 raised so that more students can access more art, free from barriers, through our Long Reach for the Arts program.

Support the Soul of Austin with a Gift Today

Here at the Long Center, we believe that creativity is the center of community. That’s why we’re proud to be Austin’s go-to spot for countless interests that bring the community together. Your donation to the Long Center this season doesn’t just support this work, it celebrates it!

We’re not just about moments like these… we’re also a nonprofit dedicated to supporting the creativity they create! On this Giving Tuesday, we want to thank you for all the support you’ve given the Long Center in 2024. Your year-end gift today will help us do even more in 2025! 

Too stuffed for savings? Get $20 tickets to select shows at the LC! Get ’em now before the sale ends on Cyber Monday 12/2 at 11:59pm

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Year-End Gift 2023 | Long Center
Your Support Today, Transforms Tomorrow

We’ve made it our mission to support creativity in all its forms, and we hope this season you’ll join us and do the same. Your donation doesn’t just support our work, it’s a declaration that creativity belongs to everyone

LEVEL UP YOUR DROP-IN

Become a LC member today and and get first dibs on RSVP before the public, early entrance into the venue for you and your guests, members-only bars, and other surprises!

Amplify Austin is here – and we need your help to provide free arts experiences for K-12 students through our Long Reach for the Arts program.  Because the kids need art!