Night & Day

Thursday August 5 Oh, those Russians–so romantic, so histrionic. It takes an even hand to navigate an orchestra through all of those ups and downs, and that’s what the Colorado Music Festival will get from guest maestro GYnter Neuhold, an Austrian wunderkind who’ll lead the festival orchestra–and his wife, piano…

Saving Grace

Boulder choreographer Jerri Davis says she’s a lily-white girl from Idaho who grew up knowing little about domestic violence and the damage it can do. But several years ago, while she was studying dance at the University of Colorado, she decided to base a work on the stories of battered…

Real to Real

The Singer Gallery’s mid-summer offering, the absolutely fabulous John DeAndrea: Fragments, provides local viewers a rare opportunity to see the work of one of the greatest artists in Colorado, ever. DeAndrea was born in Denver in 1941 and raised in the old Italian neighborhood on the west side. “We lived…

Bard Games

The rising tide of William Shakespeare’s popularity reached its high-water mark recently with the hit movie Shakespeare in Love, a delightful tale that reshaped the Bard’s image from that of a paunchy though brilliant literary lion to one of a hot-blooded, if bumbling, dramatic poet. As refreshing as it was,…

Fall Colors

It has been almost forty years since Eric Rohmer, riding the crest of the French New Wave, embarked on the first of his Six Moral Tales. The series would eventually include at least two classics–My Night at Maud’s (1969) and Chloe in the Afternoon (1972). Linked by theme and style…

The Squeaky Wheel

First published under the title The Iron Man in Great Britain in 1968, The Iron Giant is a minor classic of twentieth-century children’s literature. The slim volume by the English poet laureate Ted Hughes is a pacifist parable in the guise of a sci-fi hero fantasy. Hughes spun his yarn…

Paint It Slack

One of our leading men’s fashion magazines runs a column every month titled “What Were We Thinking?” in which it presents a ludicrous photograph of a famous person dressed in what the magazine had earlier decreed a style that every hip cat would soon be wearing. It’s my guess that…

Tales of the Crib

It’s always amusing when the movie industry discovers its spiritual side. Profoundly secular institution that it is, Hollywood promotes–at its peril–the notion that teenagers spewing pea soup in Georgetown can be purged of their demons by Catholic priests, that angels from heaven intercede in the lives of ballplayers from losing…

Cause and Effect

The year was 1965, and Danny Valdez was seventeen when he landed in Delano, California, during the thick of the first legendary union-generated grape strike, led by Cesar Chavez and the United Farmworkers of America. A different kind of strike, it had deep cultural roots in addition to a hard-line…

Night & Day

Thursday July 29 They say Mahler’s Symphony No. 7 isn’t often performed because it’s just so darned long, and even the most dedicated classical music fans have been known to squirm in their seats when that happens. But the faithful know that it’s worth it: When Maestro Giora Bernstein and…

Bella Dinner

It is one of the most nourishing, intoxicating and satisfying ways to spend an evening: the dinner party, where food is conversation and conversation is food, and secrets spill across the table as wine drains from the bottle. When the lights go up on the world premiere of Bernard Rands’s…

Flash Point

The Spark Gallery has reached a milestone: It has two decades’ worth of history under its belt. To mark this momentous event, the current members of the city’s oldest extant art cooperative invited back its founders, none of whom are still involved with Spark, and many of whom no longer…

They Feel Pretty

Although it’s been more than forty years since West Side Story opened on Broadway, the landmark musical still has the power to transport theatergoers to unparalleled heights. Its combination of soaring melodies and frenetic dance sequences makes Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim’s 1957 show spellbinding in a way that often…

Poetic License

The ever-malleable topics of love, artistic creation and the end of the world are tempered by various forms of poetic justice in Summerplay, The Changing Scene’s annual festival of new works written and performed by artists with a Colorado connection. Although the trio of one-act plays varies considerably in quality…

Not a Ghost of a Chance

Robert Wise’s 1963 version of The Haunting, from Shirley Jackson’s novel The Haunting of Hill House, has long been considered one of the milestones of horror film. Now, after 36 years, DreamWorks has bankrolled a new version, under the direction of Jan de Bont (Speed, Twister)–an idea that should sound…

Wed Alert

Runaway Bride, the long-anticipated reunion of Pretty Woman, starring Julia Roberts and Richard Gere, isn’t a sequel, but it feels like one. In everything, there is a distinct sense of predestination, of events occurring according to some irresistible force of the inevitable. This makes life especially easy for Garry Marshall,…

Chance of a Lifetime

Judith Schwartz moved into Warren Village with her two young sons in February 1974. It was a subsidized, live-in, welfare-to-work program for struggling single parents, and Janet and her sons were the inaugural participants in a grand experiment in human services. The first facility of its kind in the nation,…

Run for the Gold

Many Colorado Gold Rush prospectors of yore relied on the tenacious little burro–a small but sturdy equine that can surefootedly haul its weight in gold–to pack necessary gear through the steep, rough terrain of the Rocky Mountains. But that was then, and this is now: Though lots of the fuzzy…

Night & Day

Thursday July 22 One of Denver’s better cultural values–not to mention a great way to while away a summer evening–is Theater in the Park, which returns tonight to the open-air Greek Amphitheater in Civic Center Park at Broadway and Colfax. Show up with a picnic in tow, and you’ll be…

Coming of Age

The Denver Art Museum has gotten good at attracting crowds. The blockbuster Toulouse-Lautrec, which just closed, brought in more than 100,000 visitors. And last year, the Berger Collection had similar success with a comparable attendance. Thousands of people also visit the various galleries scattered throughout the seven-story museum that feature…

Give My Regards

These days, musical blockbusters are marked by their star-studded casts, syrupy storylines and truckloads of extravagant scenery. That’s why a fifty-year-old ensemble piece like Kurt Weill’s Street Scene seems destined to remain mothballed under layers of critical and scholarly acclaim. But in Central City Opera’s version, director Michael Ehrman’s character-driven…

Missed Congeniality

Feel like shooting lutefisk in a barrel? Pick on beleaguered Minnesota again as the epicenter of everything that’s square-headed and unhip in America. Eager to let the world know that two plus two equals four? Take aim one more time at the vain stupidity of beauty contests. Drop Dead Gorgeous,…