Now and Then

Studio Aiello, under the direction of Tyler and Monica Petty Aiello, is set to grow into a full-scale art center over the next few years. In an old commercial building and on an adjacent lot in the far north reaches of the downtown railroad yards, the Aiellos plan to hold…

Artbeat

Each year, the Colorado Photographic Arts Center (1513 Boulder Street, 303-455-8999) selects three members as prizewinners and presents their works in an annual exhibit. The latest version of the show has the already-outdated-sounding title of 2002 CPAC Member Awards. (In fairness to the organizers, the exhibit opened in December, so…

Romeo and Juliet Revisited

It’s fun to watch a production of Romeo and Juliet in an auditorium full of middle- and high-school students, as I did when I attended Openstage Theatre’s final dress rehearsal in Fort Collins. The students’ giggles at the raunchy bits, half-comprehending response to the milieu and genuine grief at the…

Everyman Goes Dark

Since it opened two years ago with Paula Vogel’s The Baltimore Waltz, Littleton’s Everyman Theatre has been one of the metro area’s best and most interesting small venues. Now the company has closed its doors, a victim of budget problems and shaky economic times. Everyman was housed in a fairly…

Vanity Fare

As far as he can remember, he always wanted to be an actor. To him, being an actor was better than being president of the United States. Even before he first wandered into the high school auditorium for an after-school audition, he wanted to be one of them. It was…

Ground Zero Hour

Spike Lee’s adaptation of David Benioff’s 2001 novel The 25th Hour hews closely to the original tale, which the author has adapted in screenplay form. Montgomery Brogan, a working-class white boy who dreamed of being a New York City firefighter till he fell into the pile of easy money made…

Shining Story, Wooden Nickleby

Those who seek a polar opposite to Michael Caine’s kind-but-firm patriarch Dr. Wilbur Larch in The Cider House Rules will find it in Jim Broadbent’s horrid, one-eyed headmaster, Wackford Squeers, in the new adaptation of Nicholas Nickleby. Author John Irving cribbed extensively from Charles Dickens to create his delightful (and…

Grand Tour

Come now, young people, sit upon an old-timer’s knee and listen: Once upon a time, there was a wonderful entertainment called the repertory cinema. These palaces of film history featured schedules of classics, cult favorites, cutting-edge works and beloved genre films that changed daily. We pinned the schedules on our…

Just Sew Stories

Women have always worked well with others, so it was no surprise when forty members of the Colorado Women’s Caucus for Art decided to create together. The result is Maternal Legends, a collaborative installation of 128 Mylar panels stitched together to form an incredible ten-foot-square wall pastiche of personal mother-daughter…

Free For All

If you long for the days of running to class just as the bell rings or discussing the impact of global warming, sign up for one of the 32 free public courses being offered by the University of Denver as part of the Bridges to the Future project. A year-long…

Sporting Chance

Everyone knows that Denver loves its professional sports teams, so let’s give a warm, woolly welcome to the latest addition: the Colorado Mammoth men’s lacrosse team. Named for the fourteen-foot-tall, six-ton beasts that roamed the Front Range almost 17,000 years ago, the Mammoth is ready to roar. For those who…

In the Ghetto

There have been a number of films dealing with the Jewish ghettos during the Nazi occupation of Poland — some very good — but The Pianist, the latest feature from Roman Polanski, may be the best. Of course, it starts out with a huge advantage: The 69-year-old Polanski is probably…

Oh, Nose!

Francis Ford Coppola dreamed of doing an accurate Pinocchio film, but legal battles took that away from him. Walt Disney’s version is a classic, but it omits a huge amount of material from the original book and Disneyfies what remains. And although others have tried over the years, each tended…

Flick Pick

They’re both gone now, Jack Lemmon and Billy Wilder, but they leave behind the bittersweet legacy of such Hollywood gems as Some Like It Hot and Fortune Cookie. The best of all their collaborations, perhaps, is The Apartment (1960), in revival Friday, January 3, at the Starz FilmCenter. It’s a…

First Rites

World peace and global unity: Those inseparable humanitarian concepts seem to hit home a little harder as we segue into 2003, and there are plenty of people out there who aren’t really feeling the urge to party ’til they drop this New Year’s Eve. If you fall into that category,…

Loud Lang Syne

Most families observe certain customs during the holiday season: Some are religious, such as lighting the menorah; others aren’t, like singing off-tune carols or watching the Rose Bowl. At my house, the ritual was getting decked out in our festive finery — preferably something velvet — and traipsing to a…

Free For All

They say the dog is man’s best friend, and if you’ve hit Washington Park at dusk lately, the saying definitely holds true in Denver. So if you and Sparky are looking for something to do this Saturday night after playing fetch, curl up on the couch with a bottle of…

Small World

Kids are such deep little creatures. Though most parents will shake their heads at the notion of youngsters making truly meaningful New Year’s resolutions (other than shallow pledges promising to be even more greedy in the coming year), the small-fry will surprise you. And when we came a-polling, even those…

Naughty and Nice

It doesn’t have what I’d call a seasonal character, but Eye Candy, at Judish Fine Arts, does feel at times like a really wild holiday party. As the title implies, the exhibit is not sharply defined, but comprises things whimsically selected by gallery director Ron Judish according to whether they…

Artbeat

It all started in November, when Art Students League artist Cong Lu won a prize for his painting “Self-Portrait of a Martyr.” Conservative in style, it shows a very buff Lu raising his T-shirt, revealing that his abs are strapped with explosives. Some students and viewers objected, and this thin…

Chicago-Style Deep Dish

Al Capone himself probably couldn’t kill Chicago. The ribald Kander and Ebb musical has been charming theater audiences since 1975 with its gleefully jaundiced view of life, and Rob Marshall’s inventive movie version is likely to win a lot of new friends for the stage-struck murderess Roxie Hart, her sharpie…

Rabbit Punch

Based on the true story of three young aboriginal girls who walked 1,500 miles across the Australian Outback to be reunited with their mothers, Rabbit-Proof Fence might well be subtitled True Grit in recognition of the courage and single-minded determination that drove the trio to undertake such a perilous journey…