The Hero’s Journey

Nobody is innocent in America, but there is one segment of the population that seems doggedly determined to deny its own ignorance, ugliness and violence. So hands up: Who really likes rednecks? The sludge on the bottom of the melting pot, this embarrassing offshoot of European ancestry continues to this…

Uncommon Valor

I sincerely hope that Jodie Foster gets a chance to relax and unwind this holiday season, because the lady has obviously worked like a horse to instill her latest role with humanity and significance. As intrepid British widow Anna Leonowens, in the huge and poetic new Anna and the King,…

Digging Jules

Jules Feiffer has long been known for the acerbic edge he brings to his theatrical and film writing and, especially, his widely revered syndicated cartoons. But when he’s writing for kids, another Feiffer comes out — one very few people outside of his immediate family knew existed. “There’s a whole…

Phantom of the Supper

A front-row seat for the touring version of Phantom of the Opera may be the hottest ticket in Denver this holiday season. But if you can’t get an A-list seat to this hugely popular play — it’s played to over fifty million people during its run of more than thirteen…

Disappearing Legacy

I’m going to posit a radical claim, one that flies in the face of standard beliefs. I think Denver was a more sophisticated town twenty or thirty years ago than it is today. And though the city is more crowded and there are a lot more big-box retailers and chain…

Art Beat

Using Your Faculties is a three-part exhibition series at the Emmanuel Gallery that features the work of the art instructors at Auraria’s three institutions of higher learning. Part two of the series, which showcases talent from the University of Colorado at Denver, is on display now and runs through December…

Class Warfare

Veteran critic Mel Gussow’s fine biography of Edward Albee reveals that most people who knew the artist as a young man had an inkling of his potential but not a clue about his destiny. Nearly all agreed that Albee, whose streak of hedonism could sometimes turn self-destructive, would pursue some…

Song Sung Blue

Part of the promise of an evening of Rodgers and Hammerstein favorites is that the audience will be able to enjoy the company of charismatic artists. No matter how cleverly the selections have been juxtaposed for continuity’s sake, theatergoers rely on the actors to provide a sense of import and…

Anywhere but There

The heroines of Gavin O’Connor’s offbeat road movie Tumbleweeds are a struggling single mother named Mary Jo Walker (Janet McTeer) and her feisty twelve-year-old daughter, Ava (Kimberly J. Brown), who set out together from a back hollow in West Virginia to make a new life — or something like one…

Instant Karma

Have you ever endured a relationship in which your partner beat you up mercilessly just so he could “heal” you and play the redeemer later on? Granted, that’s a weird question perhaps better explored via Akbar and Jeff in Matt Groening’s “Life in Hell” comic strip, but it relates closely…

Tunnel of Love

Down in the basement of Union Station, there’s a water-stained passageway of stone masonry that leads past a solid vault door gone green with age. Those walls date back to the 1880s, and their musty smell and weathered stone provide all necessary testimony regarding their age. Like much of the…

Jingle Beers

Giving and receiving are the most important concepts this time of year. Unfortunately, for too many of us. those ideas translate into “buying” — the deeper meanings of the season be damned. Thankfully, the holidays also offer plenty of relief from the stresses of shopping till dropping. This month local…

Light My Fire

When Hanukkah, the Jewish Festival of Lights, gets under way Friday evening, they’ll be lighting the first candle on menorahs all over town and getting ready to open the first night’s gifts. But unlike Christmas, when the whole haul is carried away in one fell swoop, there’s still another week’s…

Funkadelic

It’s sort of funny. LoDo’s Robischon Gallery, one of the city’s most straight-laced contemporary outlets (it sells the work of Robert Motherwell, for heaven’s sake), often shows some of the oddest and most raucous exhibits around town. That’s surely the case with the holiday offering Robert Hudson: Ceramics, Sculpture, Drawings,…

Art Beat

Studio 1818, a boutique-style gallery in LoDo, features art glass, ceramics and jewelry in addition to paintings, sculptures and custom framing. The art exhibits are installed mostly in the back room, which is also where the frame samples are displayed — but the shows usually spill out into the front…

Collision Discourse

Is total sincerity the key to maintaining healthy relationships, or should people bend the truth now and again to spare each other’s feelings? That’s the underlying dilemma facing seven disparate academic types in Germinal Stage Denver’s production of The Philanthropist, Christopher Hampton’s charming and erudite “bourgeois comedy.” Among other exploits,…

Map of the World

Lonely Planet, through December 11 at the Denver Civic Theatre, 721 Santa Fe Drive, 303-595-3800

Austen Powers

The last half-decade has been very good to Jane Austen: Besides Ang Lee’s estimable 1995 version of Sense and Sensibility, we’ve been given film or TV adaptations of Emma, Persuasion and Pride and Prejudice, not to mention Clueless, Amy Heckerling’s remarkably apt updating of Emma. Now Miramax and the BBC…

Baby, It’s You

A tangible sense of sadness and longing hangs over The Legend of 1900, the mesmerizingly beautiful and poetic new film from Italian director Giuseppe Tornatore, best known in the United States for his Academy Award-winning Cinema Paradiso. Based on a dramatic monologue by contemporary Italian novelist Alessandro Baricco but filmed…

Rev On

When you wax nostalgic for the ’50s and ’60s, aren’t the cars what you think of first — the ’57 T-Birds and ’62 ‘Vettes of your (or someone else’s) bygone youth? It doesn’t matter if you weren’t alive then: They’re the stuff of popular folklore and, truly, the style barometer…

Souped Up

European folklore includes a story called “Stone Soup,” in which a wanderer creates meals for entire villages using basic ingredients that everybody possesses. The fable provides artistic inspiration for Daniel Horsey, Eric Mather and Robin Davies, who, as the improv collective Stone Soup, try to create something new — and,…

Oldies but Goodies

Beauty is out there, all over the place. So why is it so hard to find? Locating the right finishing touches for your new living salon, bedroom or bath can be quite a pain in the neck, a fishing expedition in a great big sea: You travel far and wide,…