Dancing on Air

Nancy Smith is a motion addict. “I had a childhood love for spinning, for getting dizzy and falling down,” she says. “I loved swings and swingsets and motion–repetitive motion that takes you into an altered state.” So when the Boulder choreographer first saw aerial dancer Robert Davidson perform on a…

Meet Me at the Ronnyvoo

Only a pilgrim would be caught dead in blue jeans at a mountain-man rendezvous. And depending on whom he met there, the dang flatlander might either get it between the eyes with a tommyhawk or get lucky and find some kind soul who’d lend him a spare pair of buckskins…

Goodbye, Columbus

The new exhibit at Denver’s Museo de las Americas has an impenetrable title and an equally confusing outlook. 1598, 1848, 1898: Conquest and Consequences is billed as an exploration of the myriad relationships between the United States, Mexico and Spain. Its title suggests a provocative discussion and explanation of the…

Insight Unseen

In 1963, Robert Redford made his Broadway debut in, of all plays, Neil Simon’s Barefoot in the Park. On the heels of that triumph, the sandy-haired heartthrob launched a successful movie career and used a portion of his Tinseltown megabucks to jump-start the Sundance Institute, a Utah artists’ colony dedicated…

Springer Fever

Television’s mutant family of talk shows has effectively bastardized the theater’s long-sacred belief that one person’s emotional odyssey is appropriate subject matter for an audience’s shared catharsis. But not even Jerry Springer’s warped view of the human condition can compare with the shock-value tactics of Canadian playwright Brad Fraser. In…

Not Much of a Hit

Most disaster movies would be a lot better with more disaster and less “human drama.” In Deep Impact, the impending obliteration of much of Earth by a pair of comets is merely the sideshow. The main event is all that goopy human-interest stuff–the daughter who reunites with her estranged father,…

White Like Me

It’s the tail end of the 1996 California primary election, and incumbent Democratic senator Jay Bulworth (Warren Beatty) is having a nervous breakdown. Sleepless for days, famished, he channel-surfs aimlessly in the darkness of his office, where in a rare moment of lucidity he has an inspiration: He arranges to…

The Larry David Show

Not since the death of Diana has there been a pop phenomenon as cataclysmic as the demise of Seinfeld. The surrounding hoopla has reached such proportions that it has turned the series’ saturnine co-creator–balding, bespectacled Larry David–into a cult celebrity. The press has presented David as a mysterious demigod who…

What a Hoot

On the folk scene, one way you can separate the newer singer-songwriter fans from the well-rooted moldy figs is to play a song. If everyone in the room sings along, they probably belong to the latter group. And if you do it, too, chances are you’re old enough to remember…

Night & Day

Thursday May 7 It’s a good Thursday to go dancing, with a couple of concert offerings guaranteed to put some oomph in your step. New Orleans’s unshakable Funky Meters provide nonstop R&B grooves tonight at 10 at the Aggie Theater, 204 College Ave. in Fort Collins. True classics of their…

A Slice of Cheesecake

Here’s to the girlie-girls of bygone days. Beginning in the 1920s, their doe eyes and impossible dimensions began to grace all persuasions of advertising, from laundry-aid promos to nightclub matchbook covers, finally culminating in the unself-consciously lush and ridiculous Vargas Girls of the Forties. Nowadays that seething sexuality seems soft,…

Abstract Concepts

Robin Rule, director of the Rule Modern and Contemporary Gallery, is on cloud nine, thanks to the nine abstract paintings that make up the gorgeous Dale Chisman: New Paintings exhibit that just opened at Rule. Not only is this show an aesthetic triumph for Chisman, the well-known contemporary master, but…

Remembers Only

Contemporary dramatists don’t typically direct their own plays, mostly because of the notion that at some point, all writers lose a sense of objectivity concerning their own ideas. Lately, though, more playwrights have chosen to direct their own transparent confessions. And in the Denver Center Theatre Company’s world premiere of…

The Farce Side

There’s no one more qualified to examine the pretensions of theater professionals and their critics than England’s greatest living playwright, Tom Stoppard, who began his illustrious career as an itinerant drama reviewer. The surreal sense of humor Stoppard displays in The Real Inspector Hound is perfect for taking the air…

Crashing Symbols

Chinese Box arrives with one of the weirdest hybrid pedigrees in living memory. The writing credits include–in addition to the film’s director Wayne Wang–Jean-Claude Carriere, who worked on most of the best films of Luis Bunuel’s late period (Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie, Phantom of Liberty, Belle de Jour); classy…

Dutch Master

One of the few seemingly spontaneous bursts of energy at the recent Oscars ceremony was provided by motor-mouthing Dutch director Mike van Diem, who seemed genuinely surprised to have won the award for best foreign film for his debut feature, Character. If the commercial popularity and Oscar sweep for Titanic…

Turning Hugo Into a Yugo

Moviemakers have been making themselves miserable wrestling with Les Miserables for almost ninety years. The very first American feature film was a 1909 silent adaptation of Victor Hugo’s dark masterpiece, and it’s been reprised on the screen at least half a dozen times since then. Most memorable? The 1935 version,…

Reed Between the Lines

The focus of documentarian Barbara Kopple’s Wild Man Blues is Woody Allen the clarinet player. Not Woody Allen the comedian and filmmaker, not the cradle-robber, not even Woody the world-class worrywart. Kopple’s subject, plain and simple, is the Woody Allen who can knock out a passable version of “Down by…

The Quiet Man

The professor wears high-top sneakers. One’s black, one’s white; both look well-broken in. It’s the kind of statement trumpet player Ron Miles seems fond of making: No big deal, it just is–but doesn’t it look really, really good? Miles is sweet-tempered and rumpled and always thinking, in his quiet way,…

Night & Day

Thursday April 30 During the Holocaust, Oskar Schindler wasn’t the only guy with a list. Varian Fry, an American, helped a select group of thinkers, scientists and artists escape Nazi Germany’s death-hold on Europe during World War II; among them were such cultural luminaries as Marc Chagall and Marcel Duchamp…

Birds of a Feather

International Dawn Chorus Day developed as a lay introduction to International Migratory Bird Day, when really serious birders convene to count the various species that pass through the region each spring. But taking part in the dawn chorus requires no special gear, manuals or fancy binoculars. It’s simple, and it’s…

Coming and Going

There’s good news and bad news these days at the Denver Art Museum. We’ll start with the good: After years of being on the road or in storage, the DAM’s own stash of modern and contemporary art is back on display with the opening of Welcome Back! Selections From the…