Pikes Peak or Bust

Pity Colorado Springs if you must. Today it’s known primarily for its right-wing politics. But as recently as the early 1950s, the city was famous mostly for its art–a lot of which was left-wing. Hard to believe? Perhaps. But it’s a message that Manitou Springs painter Tracy Felix wants to…

Stage and Screen

The play may be the thing, but movies have always voraciously consumed the literature of the stage–and with wildly mixed results. A lot of plays simply don’t belong on screen (most anything with fewer than ten characters, for example). A lot of modern plays need the intimacy of the stage…

Another Hearty Shot of Scotch

In a land most Americans associate with single-malt whiskey, four-putt greens and the lyrics of Robert Burns, a major literary and cinematic revival continues apace–and the Scottish tourist office is probably still hiding its head. No sooner has the dark and brilliant Trainspotting painted Edinburgh as a nest of roving…

Make My Davis

Lovely Geena Davis doesn’t look much like Arnold Schwarzenegger. But once the prop department for The Long Kiss Goodnight outfits her with enough high-tech assault rifles, .45 automatics and shark-fin hunting knives to take out a fair-sized army, it’s pretty hard to tell the difference. Like Big Arnie on a…

Thrills for the week

Thursday October 10 Guessing games: Wise men or wise-asses? It’s the question we all must ask ourselves when Washington’s foremost analysts go at it on CNN’s often-vitriolic Capital Gang and other political panel shows of its ilk. Two Gang members–Mark Shields and Robert Novak–are taking their banter on the road…

In the Air

For the denizens of the art world, it’s not runs, hits and errors that are on our minds every October, but runs, drips and errors–in acrylics or oil paint or wood or pencil. Right now there are at least a score of worthwhile events being presented in one or another…

Wonder Women

The trouble with message plays is the annoying tendency of the moral to get stuck in your throat as the playwright tries to ram it down. Very unpleasant. That’s why a play like Mark Dunn’s The Deer and the Antelope Play is rare and welcome: Its message is so clear,…

Test Patter

It may be hard to believe now, but truly great talents once graced the world of television–and viewers across America knew how to appreciate a good gag or a searing drama. Before the era of sitcoms and car chases, before cynical admen took control and cut up the airwaves into…

Of Minor Note

With six straight hit movies in the bank and a pair of Oscars on the mantel, Tom Hanks has inflated into a major Hollywood power. So when he tells the guys in suits he wants to write and direct a film all his own, the suits start nodding vigorously into…

Moll World

In Larry and Andy Wachowski’s Bound, film noir gets one helluva gender-bending. But when the scamming and shooting stop, the genre looks healthier than ever. Envision Double Indemnity with two Barbara Stanwycks, no Fred MacMurray and a couple of enflamed lesbian love scenes. Throw in a briefcase stuffed with 2…

Thrills for the week

Thursday October 3 World party: Visitors to Denver’s sprawling Auraria campus are greeted by the picture of multiculturalism, as students from all walks of life crisscross its urban quads. Apropos to the wonderfully motley quality of the higher-education complex, a World Friendship Festival, held today from 10 to 2 at…

Once Upon a Time

The paintings and sculptures in the current show at Denver’s Artyard Gallery were completed in the last five years, but they still provide a look back at the city’s nascent contemporary-art scene of the 1960s. Reunion joins Robert Mangold, a household name and old-guard wizard of local contemporary sculpture, with…

Lenny and the Jets

There are no surprises in the touring production of Leonard Bernstein’s fabulous West Side Story, but there fortunately are no disappointments of any importance, either. Baby-boomers are bound to sink into a pleasant pool of nostalgia over this one: Where were you when the 1963 movie version opened across the…

Bard Copy

The Melancholy Dane has been done by so many so well that every performance of Hamlet is haunted by the geniuses of the past. Recognizing just how haunted the part is, playwright Paul Rudnick brings back the specter of one of those geniuses, early American movie star and Hamlet extraordinaire…

Using Their Noodles

The best movie of the year has nothing to do with space aliens blowing up the White House. Or the durability of the Klan in Mississippi. Or shooting heroin in Scotland. The best movie of the year is about a couple of Italian immigrant brothers struggling to keep a restaurant…

The Good, the Bad and the Brilliant

Imagine a Quentin Tarantino movie made by a grownup. A movie fueled by Tarantino’s brand of daredevil adrenaline but with none of his schoolboy nihilism. A movie drenched in blood that also understands loss. A swaggering black comedy stuffed with betrayals that still takes time to glimpse the soul of…

Thrills for the week

Thursday September 26 The patter of little poets: When Crofton-Ebert Elementary School students put pen to paper, out came a fantastic pastiche of funny, sweet and imaginative poetry, collected in the book When Elephants Smash the School. Toads in the Garden, an ongoing Thursday night poetry series on the Auraria…

On and Off Broadway

Fall has arrived, and with it the most desirable slots in the exhibition schedules of the city’s art galleries. This time of year, excellent solo shows by established artists seem to pop up nearly everywhere. Among the most notable this autumn are a fine pair of exhibits that feature the…

Soviet Disunion

Director Louis Malle’s 1994 film Vanya on 42nd Street brought David Mamet’s adaptation of Anton Chekhov’s play Uncle Vanya to the screen. It’s a magnificent movie, beautifully written and a veritable textbook on the art of acting. But it has left a big problem for theater companies: How in the…

Over the Hump

Victor Hugo’s magnificent, sardonic novel The Hunchback of Notre Dame is everywhere you look these days. Disney’s animated musical interpretation was a smash hit, and even The Simpsons television sitcom satirized Andrew Lloyd Webber’s penchant for musicalizing tragedies in its hilarious “Hunchback” episode. Still another rendering of the dark medieval…

A Firing Offense

All right, buffs, let’s see if we can get this straight. In 1961 the great director Akira Kurosawa made a lightly veiled homage to American Westerns called Yojimbo, starring Toshiro Mifune as a cold-eyed samurai-for-hire who teaches an overdue lesson to both warring factions in a lawless town–now located in…

Run for Your Wives

In the final scene of The First Wives Club, a comic fantasy in which three middle-aged women take revenge on the husbands who have traded them in for newer models, the triumphant heroines, all dressed in stylish, sinless white, link arms in the glistening dawn streets of lower Manhattan and…