THRILLS

Wednesday November 1 Look at me, ma: The school pageant grows up, beginning tonight at the Auraria campus, where the student-developed Kindness and Its Many Opposites: A Mosaic of Poems, Stories, Music and Drama opens at 8. Called a performance “collage” by CU-Denver theater professor Brad Bowles, the ensemble work…

THRILLS

Wednesday October 25 Tan parlor: The tearjerkers don’t get any better than those written by Amy Tan, whose Chinese mother-daughter paean The Joy Luck Club was made into the rare women’s movie that spills right over into being a people’s movie. The same combination of clannish ties, humor, poignancy and…

SECOND IMPRESSIONS

Fads, fashion and fancy are all reflected in the historic art that is of interest to people today. And just like art itself, the study of art history is subject to change over time. One of the sea changes in the field in the last twenty years has been the…

OUT THE WINDOW

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, many of that country’s most famous contemporary artists have come to settle in the West, especially in New York City. This colony of Russian expatriates has had a profound effect on American contemporary art. And the artist’s artist of the group is Oleg…

THE POLITICAL ARENA

Over the past year, many of Denver’s most powerful and insightful theater productions have been political in nature, displaying a passion for justice without resorting to propaganda: My Sister in This House, Six Degrees of Separation, Star Fever, Parallel Lives, God’s Country, The Interrogation, Oleanna, Death and the Maiden and…

BANG THE DRUMM SLOWLY

Resignation to suffering is the best playwright Hugh Leonard can offer as resolution to the accumulated pain of a lifetime. But the strength of his humanist viewpoint in A Life lies in its cultivated compassion. The Denver Victorian Playhouse production of this gentle reflection on one man’s life and the…

HAM AND YEGGS

As the story goes, Wayne Wang’s Smoke, that fascinating loaf of life set in and around a Brooklyn cigar store, got such a grip on its authors and actors amid last year’s shooting that no one wanted to let go. So they didn’t. With just six more days of filming…

MOB SCENES

It has been half a century since the star-struck gangster Bugsy Siegel arranged a screen test for himself (alas, his gifts lay elsewhere), and more than two decades since assorted soldiers from the Lucchese and Gambino crime families stood around the Godfather set giving Mafia style tips to Marlon Brando…

THRILLS

Wednesday October 18 The big Chile: Chile encompasses Andean heights, prairie-like pampas, the still-wild bottom of the world at Tierra del Fuego and the cultural mysteries of Easter Island–all co-existing within the lean South American nation’s boundaries. Interpreting this kind of diversity is a major task for members of Ballet…

AGONY AND ECSTASY

Expressing a variety of minority views through art is the goal of two exhibits currently on view at Golden’s Foothills Art Center. According to center director Carol Dickinson, the shows also are intended to reflect how minority artists can use their art to “triumph over victimization.” The Holocaust is a…

ABSTRACT CONCEPTS

Several current local shows zero in on the renewed vitality of abstract art in the Nineties. Chief among these are the group exhibit Reinventing the Abstract, at the Mackey Gallery, and a single-artist display, Gary Passanise, at the CSK Gallery. In the Mackey show, gallery director Mary Mackey includes her…

LATINO LOVERS

Director Israel Hicks zeroes in on Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet with fervor and style in his new telling of the classic tale at the Denver Center Theatre Company. He has the temerity to set the greatest of Shakespeare’s cautionary tales in old California (instead of old Verona), with Spanish dons…

GUARE NOIR

Toward the end of John Guare’s tragicomic Landscape of the Body, one of the characters tells us that the mystery is always greater than the solution. This sentiment (seen most recently in the movie thriller Seven) may be oh so au courant, but it may also be a dodge–a way…

CLASSICS ILLUSTRATION

The reading public–O, endangered species–grows understandably wary every time screenwriter, director and cast get their collective hooks into a bona fide literary classic. It doesn’t happen every time, but some of the world’s most dreadful movies have dropped stillborn from some of the greatest books. Who can imagine Tolstoy’s reaction…

THRILLS

Wednesday October 11 Things to do in Denver before you’re dead: Denver’s annual fifteen minutes–or in this case, ten days–of Hollywood glamour and glitz begin today, when the Denver International Film Festival kicks off with a big premiere. In what is getting to be a tradition for the fest, it’s…

FRONTIER WOMEN

It truly is fall in Denver, and the trees themselves are coming down along with the leaves. Given this loss to our visual environment, it’s some solace that another, more expected feature of autumn also has arrived: the start of high season for the art world. This year in Denver,…

MONK BUSINESS

Thomas Merton, it’s fair to say, was an individual worth writing a play about. An American monk who lived a hermetic life out in the woods, he nevertheless kept up a mighty correspondence with many of the greatest writers of his age during a literary career that ran from 1941…

BIBLE CAMP

It may be juvenile, brash and silly here and there, but Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat ultimately transcends its own naivete with delightful exuberance and dazzling production values. From lyricist Tim Rice’s humor to Webber’s sweet pop tunes to the sophisticated lighting and set designs, the…

SUFFERING FROM BAD HIP

Gus Van Sant, best known for the junkie street fantasy Drugstore Cowboy and the quasi-poetic road movie My Own Private Idaho, is a hipster first and last–a contemporary Jack Kerouac with a Panaflex pointed at the Nineties. So the swipes Van Sant takes in To Die For at celebrity worship…

ROLL ‘EM

The eighteenth Denver International Film Festival gets under way October 11 at the Auditorium Theatre with the local premiere of Woody Allen’s new film, Mighty Aphrodite–in which Allen and Helena Bonham Carter play a married couple with plenty of, well, marital problems. The festival closes nine days later at the…

BROTHERS OF INVENTION

Cushioned by money and blunted by convention, Dead Presidents lacks the raw thrill that catapulted the Hughes brothers’ first film, Menace II Society, onto critics’ Best Ten lists and into the consciousness of an America obsessed with race and violence. Like many filmmakers on their second outing, Allen and Albert…

THRILLS

Wednesday October 4 Powell to the people: Harlem-born to Jamaican parents, Colin Powell joined the army, eventually rising to the rank of four-star general. His mastermind role during Operation Desert Storm catapulted him into the public eye; now his possible presidential candidacy is discussed in a tone well above a…