Good Luck Controlling Rocky Horror Show Fans

The Equinox Theatre Company has generally made a name for itself with cult, campy, genre shows, says artistic director Deb Flomberg: “Reefer Madness, Carrie, Little Shop of Horrors. Our audiences love them, and they’ve been asking for this one for quite a while.” Get ready for the Rocky Horror Show

Ten Things to Do in Denver for Under $10 (Eight Free)

Denver residents rightfully complain that our city is pricing out artists. Even so, the local creative scene is thriving – for the time being. While cash-strapped Denverites have less and less disposable income to devote toward leisure, adventurous and thrifty locals are in luck. With art-gallery openings, stoner-friendly comedy shows and even a city-wide festival going on this weekend, everyone from bookish nerds to active families have affordable entertainment options to suit their tastes.

Review: Edge’s Misery Has All the Fright Stuff

William Goldman’s Misery, a dramatization of Stephen King’s horror novel, is now receiving a searing production at the Edge Theatre. You may have read the book or seen the film starring Kathy Bates and James Caan, but you have never experienced this freaky story in such an intimate environment.

Review: She Rode Horses Like the Stock Exchange Is Hot to Trot

Square Product Theatre founder Emily K. Harrison focuses on innovative work that has audiences talking and guessing — and perhaps feeling just a touch unbalanced by the end. Now Square Product is presenting the regional premiere of Amelia Roper’s acerbic, wonderfully-titled one-act comedy, She Rode Horses Like the Stock Exchange, at the Dairy Arts Center.

Review: Denver Center’s Disgraced Is Nasty and Dangerous

I’ve been trying to moderate my immediate reaction to Ayad Akhtar’s Disgraced: that it’s a nasty, mean-spirited, dangerous and anti-Muslim piece of work, and I have no idea why a Pulitzer committee would have awarded it the 2013 prize for drama. But I can’t. The play falls into the general…

Review: A Skull in Connemara Digs Into Irish Culture at Miners Alley

A Skull in Connemara is the second in Martin McDonagh’s award-winning Leenane Trilogy. The title comes from Lucky’s nonsensical, despairing monologue in Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot, and it falls between The Beauty Queen of Leenane and The Lonesome West. All three were written in a frenzy of creative energy…