Avoiding the Tag

They’re the forgotten group, and it’s no surprise so many of them end up on the street: When you’re poor and stuck between the ages of 14 and 24, few service organizations want to deal with your headstrong, uncute and hopelessly unreformed ways. Unless you’re lucky enough, that is, to…

Weaving a Story

The Colorado History Museum’s major exhibition this season is Spirit of Spider Woman, an intelligent and elegantly presented examination of Navajo weaving that’s been two years in the making. But don’t expect the dry, straightforward approach that is typical of the CHM. Instead, like the exhibit’s catchy title, Spider Woman…

Women’s Wear

Near the end of Josefina Lopez’s Real Women Have Curves, an aspiring young writer tells us that as she grew up, she wanted to teach her Chicana elders how to live a better, more liberated life. “But in their own way,” Anna says in retrospect of her mother’s friends and…

Chivalry’s Nearly Killed

To dismiss Cervantes’s epic novel about the quintessential dreamer Don Quixote as an insubstantial story about chivalry is like saying that King Lear is just a grumpy old man’s four-hour rant. Or that Chekhov’s four comic masterpieces are simply boring talky dramas in which nothing ever really happens. And even…

True Drew and No Go

Courage comes in an infinite variety of forms and faces, but who among us would be brave enough to go back and relive our high school years, face the horrors of homeroom and confront hallways so fraught with danger that the most treacherous battlefield would look as placid as a…

Death as an Amateur Theatrical

Has any major American director had quite so many career swings as Robert Altman? Maybe not, but if there’s one thing the last thirty years have made clear, it is that it’s never safe to count Altman out. The mid- and late-’90s have been particularly unfriendly to him. After his…

Don’t It Make That White Hair Gray

Steve Martin says he doesn’t want audiences to expect the same old Steve Martin whenever he stars in a comedy. But that means one thing when he’s referring to Roxanne and L.A. Story, two inspired flights of romantic farce (based on his own scripts), and another when he’s talking about…

More Than Words Can Say

Local admirers of Franco Piavoli’s Blue Planet, a poetic evocation of earthly harmony, will be heartened to learn that the Italian painter/filmmaker’s latest visual ballad, Voices Through Time (Voci Nel Tempo), opens an indefinite run Friday at the UA Flatirons Theater in Boulder. It was previously shown in Colorado at…

Spread the Word

Suppose you hopped into a shiny new Volkswagen Beetle one day and set off for a month-long road trip through the heartland of America. Say that the Beetle was covered with words. And maybe the words were actually magnetic poetry tiles, stuck right there on the side of the Bug,…

Night & Day

Thursday April 1 Ha, ha–you’re no fool. At least you won’t be once you’ve read local author Jamie Grenney’s Pranks 101: The Complete Guide to Practical Jokes from cover to cover. A cheeky tome covering everything from basic short-sheeting to Saran Wrap on the toilet seat, the self-published book is…

Sound Effects

Leta McKenzie likes to go the movies, but only if she can read the film. McKenzie, who is profoundly deaf and unable to understand movie-screen conversation, relies on open-caption films to enjoy the big-screen experience. Open-caption films insert text across the bottom of the screen to convey dialogue as well…

The Wild, Wild West

When John Hull moved to Denver last year to become the head of the art department at the University of Colorado’s Denver campus, the city didn’t gain just another academic. It also netted itself an important artist, as shown in John Hull Narrative Paintings, Hull’s regional debut exhibit at the…

A Long Night Out

Despite an encouraging beginning, several refreshing portrayals and a few side-splitting moments, the Mirror Image’s evening of three one-act plays starts to run out of steam after the second offering. That’s understandable, given that two and a half hours is about as long as most people are willing to watch…

Voice Lessons

Can a performing artist, whether it be legendary opera diva Maria Callas or veteran New York actress Gordana Rashovich, subjugate herself to a writer’s intent while imbuing his work with her own unforgettable charisma? Is it possible to be at once transparent and luminous, reflecting a dramatic composer’s fleeting brilliance…

The Ultimate Illusion

Stuffed full of fantasy comics, addicted to action and steeped in digital technology, the frenetic moviemakers Andy and Larry Wachowski have done what they must–create an eye-popping, morph-mad, quasi-mythical sci-fi flick that will thrill computer nerds as it kicks serious ass. The Matrix also presumes to (ahem!) think deeply–although this…

Man at the Top

Jimmy Cagney brought the same electric physicality to gangsters that he did to song-and-dance men. He gave a bright-eyed mug like his character in Public Enemy extraordinary powers of attraction and repulsion. In The General, Brendan Gleeson enacts a real-life criminal chieftain–Dublin’s notorious Martin Cahill–with a belly-hanging-out buffoonery that is…

Seasoned Liberally

Back in a dark corner of America’s post-war baby boom, a small contingent of kids grew up in a manner directly counteractive to the suburban ethos that ruled through the ’50s and ’60s. They’re known as the “red diaper babies”; their parents were left-thinkers active in the civil-rights movement and…

A Joyful Noise

Twenty years ago, Harlem nightclub singer Sandra ReAves-Phillips decided to put together a one-weekend show to honor her musical heroes. Two decades later, she’s still serving as the one-woman cast of a tribute to America’s best blue-note singers, The Late Great Ladies of Blues and Jazz. “It’s a labor of…

Night & Day

Thursday March 25 In an age when there’s an art walk each month to suit every taste, you have to figure the time is ripe for an Art-Walk-Your-Dog-&-Coffee event that puts out the welcome mat not just for you but for the family pooch, too. Three businesses at the intersection…

Sticks and Stones

The landscape has served as both artistic inspiration and subject matter for thousands of years, dating back to Neolithic cave painting. And today the landscape’s allure is just as strong, even if the pieces it inspires are often far from traditional. Like landscape-driven art, Eight Ounce Fred, a funky little…

Squall Lines

Infused with more theatricality–and more songs–than any other play in the Shakespearean canon, yet lacking a plot substantial enough to undergird the work’s inlaid histrionics, The Tempest has for centuries fascinated, confounded and inspired directors charged with making sense of the Bard’s valedictory. At times a philosophical discourse about reality…

The Sound and the Furry

Somewhere in the mad rush to ensure that our children will know more than we did at their age–even if they don’t yet have a clue what to do with all that knowledge–what often gets overlooked is an idea as old as humanity itself: The encouragement of a child’s creative…