THRILLS

Wednesday June 14 Down in the valley: Even if you can’t attend the Telluride Bluegrass Festival (this weekend at the lofty resort town), there’s one part of it you can still enjoy: the inordinate number of popular acts, acoustic and otherwise, that tend to hang out–and sometimes even perform–in the…

BLACK ACHE

Odd as it may seem, Denver hasn’t always been the art-making hub of Colorado. From the nineteenth century up to the 1970s, Colorado Springs was the home of our most important contemporary art scene. And it was there that a loosely affiliated group formed the state’s first true artist cooperatives–years…

SHELTER-SKELTER

Everyone on earth has a purpose, homeless Betty declares, and hers is to act as a mirror–the one you can’t get away from when you leave the bathroom. In her is reflected the whole human condition, and playwright Joe Turner Cantu wants us to gaze long and hard into that…

RETURN TO GENDER

The Industrial Arts Theatre Company’s Goddesses is equal parts sense and nonsense. Written by company member Mary Guzzy-Siegel in collaboration with five other women in the company, it can be witty and charming at times and embarrassing and didactic at others. The liberties this feminist piece takes with history and…

COLLECTIVE GUILT

For now, citizens of the New Russia have more important things to do than revitalize their creaky old movie industry. Like keeping the St. Petersburg mafia at bay. Getting the telephones to work. Importing millions of hair dryers, brassieres and car alarms that play the lambada, usually from the United…

THE NAKED APE

If the star of your summer fantasy/adventure movie happens to be a gorilla–or rather, a gorilla suit with a tiny actress stuffed inside–you naturally get a little stingy with the rest of the casting. That’s what the makers of Congo have done. The bogus primate is called Amy, and she…

THRILLS

Wednesday June 7 Taping measures: Local jazz vocalist Lynn Skinner will be in fine company tonight when she performs with two of Denver’s best instrumentalists–guitarist and master of chordal changes Dale Bruning and open-minded trumpet player Ron Miles–at Vartan Jazz, 231 Milwaukee St. The 8 p.m. show–which promises to smoke…

GET REAL

In Denver, like everywhere else, there are two highly distinct and opposing camps when it comes to the fine arts. There are the artists associated with a number of contemporary movements, and there are those who embrace more traditional styles. The rivalry between the two is anything but friendly: Traditionalists…

BRITTLE WOMEN

Four women inhabit a mansion in hell (provincial France circa the 1930s), and the horror they experience there is as dark as it gets on earth. Wendy Kesselman’s relentless exploration of class hatred and oppression in My Sister in This House amounts to an important modern tragedy of almost mythic…

SUGAR RUSH

It doesn’t matter how sappy the music is, the kids are what sells Rodgers and Hammerstein’s classic The Sound of Music. The Country Dinner Playhouse’s revival features seven terrific kids, and every time they’re on stage, the whole production lifts a notch. Blatantly sentimental, the show has a few minor…

A PRO’S AMATEUR

Hal Hartley’s Amateur flirts with pretension, but Hartley always pulls its head out of the clouds with dark humor. Consider: A French ex-nun named Isabelle (Isabelle Huppert), who believes the Virgin Mary has appeared to her, is now living in New York, writing pornographic sketches for a skin magazine. A…

STAR DRECK (THE NEXT GENERATION)

Trying to squeeze the goo out of Robert James Waller’s romantic bestseller, The Bridges of Madison County, must have been like cleaning up the Exxon Valdez oil spill. Wherever you look, there’s another mess. Clint Eastwood, a man of few words, and screenwriter Richard LaGravenese, a man of patience, have…

THRILLS

Wednesday May 31 Bottom of the month: A favorite mingle–the Denver Art Museum’s Top of the Week spring music series–comes to a close tonight. And what a swinging finale it’ll be–with the Queen City Jazz Band’s spirited Dixieland-style music accompanying a stroll through selected museum exhibits. Top of the Week…

MOVING MOUNTAINS

The husband-and-wife team of Tracy and Sushe Felix emerged from the free-for-all that was 1980s art in Colorado. The Manitou Springs couple was associated with a hip, cartoonlike approach that was part and parcel of the neo-expressionism that dominated the period. But in the meantime, they’ve changed significantly, taking their…

HEIR JORDAN

Louis Jordan was an ingenious saxophonist, vocalist and songwriter whose energetic music lit up radio airwaves in the 1940s and continued to delight audiences into the 1960s. Roll Jordan Roll, at the Denver Civic Theatre, celebrates the moment in Jordan’s life when he began to make it big with his…

OKIE DOKE

Humorist and movie star Will Rogers made political satire a gentle art. The Oklahoma country boy once said he never met a man he didn’t like, and that kindly sentiment even governed the way he skewered politicians. The Will Rogers Follies celebrates Rogers’s show-business career in the brazen style of…

YOUTH WANT TO KNOW

What does it say about Hollywood that it has taken a British writer, Paula Milne, and a British director, Antonia Bird, to come up with the most provocative movie in years about American first love and American teenage anxiety? Mad Love is a little rough around the edges, but there’s…

KILT IN ACTION

If we are to believe Mel Gibson’s version of thirteenth-century history–and there’s not much evidence that we should–the ragtag army led by Scottish patriot William Wallace gloried in goring onrushing Englishmen with deer antlers, in bludgeoning, spearing, crushing and dismembering them. But first they mooned them. Braveheart, Gibson’s bloody (and…

THRILLS

Wednesday May 24 A key player: Musician Robin Connell takes her jazz straightahead, but she isn’t afraid to rework the standards to her own liking. The Detroit composer/pianist, who knocked about New York City before moving to Greeley in 1991, will bring drummer Mike Smith, bassist Eric Applegate and trombonist…

LOCAL COLOR

The Mackey Gallery is as filled with color as a spring garden. But bright hues are about the only common ground shared by the two very different artists on display. Lynn Heitler’s work falls readily within the tradition of abstract expressionism. Her more or less instinctive formal relationships provide a…

NAKED CITY

Two respected Denver artists, Dan Ragland and Bill Stockman, offer more reasons to respect them, with new work displayed in separate exhibits at the Grant Gallery. Most of Ragland’s somber, mixed-media pieces started out as Polaroids. Although the original photo images remain fairly true, Ragland enlarges them to mural size…

LOCAL ZERO

When a scumbag becomes a TV talk-show celebrity, the world is in trouble. And so English playwright Alan Ayckbourn skewers the cult of the celebrity, the mendacity of television and the public’s infinite appetite for manipulative trash in Man of the Moment. With a subject such as this, sparks ought…