Closet Concerns

When this year’s PrideFest march takes off down East Colfax Avenue on Sunday, it will be as much a salute to the gay-rights movement’s past as it is a celebration of gains to be proud of today. There’ll be the usual banners and costumes, but at the forefront will march…

Street People

Some people will do anything for attention. But anything sometimes leads to art–though it might be the kind of art that’s played out on street corners for a handful of change. This weekend, a horde of street performers will swarm into downtown Denver for the seventh annual US West Buskerfest…

Night & Day

Thursday June 24 It’s Greek to us–and you, and everybody else–when the Greek Festival ’99, one of Denver’s oldest ethnic celebrations, returns for its 34th year. Featuring a craft market, import bazaar, taverna and live entertainment, the festival has always been its own best advertisement. But maybe everyone’s favorite reason…

Home Is Where the Heart Is

The Women of the West Museum is alive and well, but at the moment, you can wander its halls only in cyberspace. Museum spokeswoman Jeannie Patton thinks it’s just fine being a museum without walls for now; like pragmatic women throughout time, the people behind the scenes at WOW are…

Night & Day

Thursday June 17 Bug frenzy is about to break loose at the Denver Botanic Gardens, 1005 York St., where they’re trying something different this summer. Get a preview tonight from 5:30 to 8:30 at the Bugaloo!, an opening celebration for the whole family announcing the arrival of Dave Rogers’s Big…

She Sings for Their Supper

She is the most unexpected of pleasures–slender, dark-haired, with a voice like Mexican honey…and all of nine years old. When Nayeli Meza-Gallegos began to sing at the Cinco de Mayo celebration last month at El Tejado restaurant, forks full of refried beans and bottles of Pacifico beer halted mid-air, and…

London Calling

By a lucky accident of scheduling, the Denver Art Museum is presenting a pair of shows that provide visitors with a striking juxtaposition. On the seventh floor, in sumptuously appointed galleries, is Art in the Age of Queen Victoria: Treasures From the Royal Academy of Arts, a traveling exhibition showcasing…

Mother of Confusion

Alcoholism, journalism, communism, racism, Christian fundamentalism, tell-all autobiographies and the uses and abuses of plant food all surface as topics of debate in Sarah Fisher Lowe’s When the Wood Is Green, a world-premiere play that comprises Program Two of the Colorado Women Playwrights’ Festival. As if all of those subjects…

The Slime of Our Lives

A few years before the entertainment business became the state religion, off-Broadway playwright Sam Shepard wrote Angel City, a surreal satire about Hollywood’s gangrenous grip on the American national character. A wicked and prescient take on the same industry that would eventually make Shepard into a bit of a celluloid…

Father Knows Worst

Simon West, the director of The General’s Daughter, the new thriller starring John Travolta and Madeleine Stowe, likes the kind of close-ups that bore into an actor’s face, exposing every clogged pore and mascara smudge. In the film, his camera also tracks in to capture the thick layer of sweat…

A Vine Time

Disney departed from its usual practice of basing big, animated features on classic literature or myth when it made what has proved to be one of the studio’s most popular films ever, The Lion King. Yet just barely beneath its surface, that film had a streak of xenophobia carried almost…

The Horror! The Horror!

Back in the early Seventies, Ed Neal was a professional actor and part-time drama student at the University of Texas when a shoestring film crew came to campus looking for actors. A Shakespeare student who had already worked with actress Sandy Duncan in a touring production, Neal looked at the…

Night & Day

Thursday June 10 Coloradans have an ongoing love affair with their Western heritage–even if they came here from New Joisey. Place of birth notwithstanding, there’s an unending demand in these parts for that Lonesome Dove kind of lore. If you fall into the category that craves such entertainment, a new…

Art for Space

If Grant Wood had moved his artist’s eye a few acres to the left of the couple he depicted in “American Gothic”–the classic 1930 image of a gaunt bespectacled farmer gripping a pitchfork and standing beside his solemn wife–the painter might have seen rolling acres of earth, broken only by…

The Shock of the Now

As we near the end of the 1900s, it’s interesting to notice that the world of the visual arts is wide open, with a staggering profusion of artistic visions. Quite literally, anything goes. There are so many competing styles, ranging from straight traditionalism to the wildest fringes of conceptual art,…

It’s Awful, Baby, Yeah!

There is, near the end of the spy-spoof sequel Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, a dick joke. It begins like many run-of-the-mill dick jokes, of which the rest of the film is almost entirely composed, but it blossoms into one stellar, protracted, deftly executed, masterful dick joke. It…

Leaving Mike Figgis

Pretentiousness masquerading as profundity; self-indulgence masquerading as art. The Loss of Sexual Innocence, the dreadful new film from writer/director Mike Figgis (Leaving Las Vegas, One Night Stand), joins the ranks of the worst films ever made. On the surface, this statement may seem harsh and heartless–but it will strike anyone…

Frozen Stiffs

In John Sayles’s Limbo, which is set amid the rough-and-tumble of southeast Alaska, an ex-salmon fisherman with guilty memories (David Strathairn), an itinerant lounge singer with a lousy voice (Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio) and the singer’s melancholy teenage daughter (newcomer Vanessa Martinez) become stranded, Robinson Crusoe-style, on a remote island. This…

Last Tango in Rome

Bernardo Bertolucci’s Besieged is a movie of enthralling visual poetry. Set almost entirely within a ravishing Roman villa, the film is a love story played out in furtive glances and stolen looks by characters on opposite sides of the ethnic divide. Culturally, Mr. Kinsky (David Thewlis) and Shandurai (Thandie Newton)…

Chairman of the Board

A 540, switch-foot, tick-flip McTwist–Ev Rosencrans says it’s the hardest trick he’s ever seen executed on a skateboard. “It looks like he goes upside down, but then he spins the board, catches it, ticks it and lands on it again while doing a twist in air…” Well, you get the…

Night & Day

Thursday June 3 In typical form, the theme-friendly Arvada Center for the Arts and Humanities opens its summer gallery season with a trio of interconnected shows that seem to go with the flow of summer by exploring family relationships, the lure of the road and teen rites of passage, respectively…

Hand Jobs

For most of us, twirling a yo-yo for eight hours would be the ultimate display of slacker behavior. Not so for Denver resident Jon Gates, a professional yo-yo player who earns his keep “walking the dog” around the world. “I travel around the planet,” Gates says matter-of-factly, “playing with my…