Review: Curious Explores the Meaning of Family in Your Best One
The second of Meridith Friedman’s storytelling trio premieres at Curious Theatre.
The second of Meridith Friedman’s storytelling trio premieres at Curious Theatre.
Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine have turned George Seurat’s Painting into a musical.
Readers respond to our review of Super Troopers 2.
Boulder Ensemble Theatre Company offering the regional premiere of Bekah Brunstetter’s Going to a Place Where You Already Are.
Don’t be bored this weekend.
Denver’s rich with entertainment opportunities…all free.
Denver’s being showered with funny business this month.
Peter Morgan is fascinated by the British monarchy, and his play at Vintage Theatre proves in.
While the topic may be subversive, this Off-Center production just isn’t.
This weekend, Denver bookworms, music aficionados, and nerds of every stripe are spoiled for choice as shows, readings, concerts and screenings abound.
The production at Curious Theatre Company is one huge, nourishing and gut-punching wallop of an evening.
Tickets cost $100 and neither phones nor cameras are permitted.
Local standups Nolawee Mengist and John Davis use their pithy persuasion to review hip-hop albums on As the Rhyme Goes on.
You’ll fall to pieces over Always…Patsy Cline at BDT Stage.
The powerful cast is more than a match for Arthur Miller’s powerful play.
Get ready to laugh all month long.
Real Women Have Curves focuses on immigration and the fear that immigrants live with daily.
Daniel Pearle’s A Kid Like Jake is getting its regional premiere as Benchmark Theatre’s opener for the fledgling company’s second season.
The Electric Baby goes from delight to dud in its regional premiere at the Arvada Center.
Rajiv Joseph’s Guards at the Taj, currently in a regional premiere with the Boulder Ensemble Theatre Company, is often compared both to Tom Stoppard’s work and to Beckett’s Waiting for Godot.
Beneath Fun Home’s lightness of touch, there’s profound emotional depth — and this beautiful production does every moment full justice.
Despite a lengthy on-camera career that began back in 1987 as the host of MTV’s Remote Control, Colin Quinn generally seems most comfortable when he’s telling jokes or gently roasting fellow comics.