Denver Film Rocks Out in August (in More Ways Than One)
Denver Film has been working overtime to make summer one of the absolute best times of the year for cinema.
Denver Film has been working overtime to make summer one of the absolute best times of the year for cinema.
No one knows what happened to Julia de Burgos, the Puerto Rican poet, in the last nine days of her life. The Flamboyán Theatre is examining her life in its debut play.
Denver author Sue Seserman “transforms disabilities into superabilities.”
Washington Park is celebrating its 125th birthday today with plenty of fun and games.
Check out a new $7.8 million interactive exhibit where you can cross paths with kangaroos.
See D’art Gallery’s fully expanded space, observe work from an artist who stayed at the Amache internment camp and get down with a hip-hop art show and concert.
Filled with big prizes and “twists,” Colorado’s Next Drag Superstar competition will see drag artists performing at X Bar each Sunday until September 29.
There will be a fundraising concert to support the Aztlan on Saturday, August 3.
The professor and playwright will be honored at a memorial on Friday, August 2.
The shift in the award distribution this year was striking.
Artistic director Jada Suzanne Dixon discusses the theater company’s plans following the announcement it was selling the building where it has resided since 1998.
“If we can inspire just one person to question our patriarchal norms in society and feel their freedom a bit more, that’s enough for me.”
“We deserve to have the same rights and comforts as any man, because we are all human, and that’s just that.”
Samuel Ká»ÌlaÌwá»leÌ, whose most recent book is making serious waves in national literary circles, will join Colorado authors in conversation this weekend.
Set yourself free at Evans School, celebrate co-ops in 40 West, or see the Denver Art Museum’s Biophilia with different eyes.
Casey Hosch, Sol Tribe’s manager, was just as surprised as everyone else by the sudden news.
Experience Wicked live at the Buell Theatre from July 24 to August 25, ahead of the film adaptation’s release in November.
From July 26 to August 3, the RISE Comedy Festival will showcase standup talent from Colorado and around the US.
This expertly designed retro summer-camp experience puts visitors back in 1999 to solve a murder at Camp Z.
Hundreds of tattoo artists from around the U.S. brought their designs and fresh new ink to festival-goers.
Dance to Firefly Music with Lauri Lynnxe Murphy, Daisy Patton is back at K Contemporary, and Pard Morrison and others keep Robischon Gallery filled to the rafters.
“What they’ve done in this park in the last seven, eight years has been incredible.”