World Turning

Suppose you put 100 public figures together in one place, gave them some provocative subjects to expound on and then just set them loose with one another. It’s Bill Maher’s Politically Incorrect, right? Wrong. Actually, it’s the brainchild and culminating statement of the late Howard Higman, a former CU sociology…

Under One Roof

The idea of sustainability in architecture has been kicking around for years. Never mind that most of us haven’t got the slightest idea what it means. For architects, who seem to interact in a subtle, theoretical world that makes perfect sense to them, it’s all in a day’s work. Richard…

Earth, Wind and Fire

Remarkable achievements in craft traditions are on display in two local shows. At Cherry Creek’s Pismo, Lino Tagliapietra, a living legend of Venetian glassmaking, is the subject of a self-titled solo show. Up in Golden, it’s the Colorado Clay Exhibition 1998, this year’s version of the venerable annual showcasing some…

Harlem Renaissance

Crying at the top of her lungs, “I’m sick of Negro dreams–all they ever do is break your heart!” a middle-aged woman flails away with her fists at the one man who promises he’ll rescue her from her dead-end existence. For one brief, glorious moment, it appears that Angel will…

Irish Eyes

No single event stamps its imprint more indelibly on the body politic than the taking of a hostage. In fact, hostage situations involving American soldiers, journalists and businessmen have each proved the point that nothing–not internal racial discord, impending economic disaster or even a presidential sex scandal–strikes a more resonant…

Beautiful Dreamers

You are likely to take to The Real Blonde, a bittersweet farce about romantic yearning and delusional ambition in Manhattan, in direct proportion to your tolerance for self-absorbed 25-year-olds and the value you put on the advertising and theatrical trades. If, for instance, you can stomach the waiter who believes…

Brown and White

Lovers of American movies used to joke that foreign films wouldn’t look so good if you saw them without subtitles. John Sayles’s latest movie, Men With Guns, plays better than his other films because it has subtitles: Bald dialogue always sounds better in Spanish and Indian dialects. Set in an…

Stealing Your Heart

The great charm of Richard Linklater’s The Newton Boys derives from its quartet of matinee idols–Matthew McConaughey, Skeet Ulrich, Ethan Hawke and Vincent D’Onofrio–and its unbridled affection for the high-spirited gang of Texas country boys they portray, adventurers who rob banks with such sunny enthusiasm and impeccable yes-ma’am manners that…

Local Celluloid

When Denver’s own Donna Dewey won an Academy Award last week for her short documentary A Story of Healing, moviegoers here were reminded that not every example of the art cinematic springs full-grown from the city of Los Angeles. The notion arose again on Sunday night, when the Creative Film…

Fifteen Minutes of Fame

Sixty-six bands have their fingers crossed. Only a few will be lucky. But they’ll all have a chance to strut their stuff Sunday at the annual Capitol Hill People’s Fair Entertainment Auditions, an eleven-hour marathon designed to separate the local music community’s wheat from its chaff. The auditions, which are…

Talking With Mr. X

Douglas Coupland doesn’t have time to be anyone’s guru. He’s flown from San Francisco to New York in the middle of a grueling book tour, is waiting for a grilled cheese sandwich from room service, wants the heat turned down in his hotel room and will have to hang up…

Night & Day

Thursday March 26 The only thing better than listening to a Los Lobos record is seeing rock’s best performing band live. It’s no secret why. The bandmembers play with a depth not often found in the slick, overproduced and overhyped world of popular music. Guitarists David Hidalgo and Cesar Rosas…

A Thousand Words

The Nazis had a perversely high regard for the arts. As early as 1933, Adolf Hitler’s goons began a campaign against modern art, closing art schools, expelling modernist art teachers from German universities, and arresting and incarcerating scores of artists. Hitler, after all, was a failed artist who, as a…

Return to Gender

Playwright August Wilson was at Dartmouth College the other day, spouting off once again about why America needs a separate theater dedicated to the interests of African-Americans. White artists, Wilson has repeatedly argued, are simply ill-equipped to understand and interpret his Pulitzer- and Tony-award-winning plays about black life. It takes…

Playing It Safe

The John Grisham industry has claimed another heavyweight. A few months back, Francis Ford Coppola delivered up John Grisham’s The Rainmaker, and now Robert Altman sails into view with The Gingerbread Man, based on an original Grisham screen story–although it’s basically a recycling of other Grisham recyclings. Who would have…

Leaps and Bounds

The American reissues of Jackie Chan films have met with declining box-office success since Chan burst onto the scene in 1996 with Rumble in the Bronx. With any luck, the latest Chan opus to be recut and redubbed for Americans, the year-old Mr. Nice Guy, should reverse the trend. No…

True Grit

In the course of an extraordinary acting career, Gary Oldman has portrayed, among other outcasts, the drug-addled punk rocker Sid Vicious, the possible presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald and the notorious bloodsucker Count Dracula. They’re all choirboys compared to the barbarous South London blokes Oldman gives us in Nil by…

Terrible Teens

Still have your doubts that Western civilization has been conquered by sixth-grade dropouts snorting meth? No longer. Hollywood has just now released the first film noir for teenagers–a boiling stew of greed, betrayal, murder and three-way sex in which the female characters have not yet graduated from high school and…

Night & Day

Thursday March 19 While playwright August Wilson reworks his script for Jitney, originally scheduled by the Denver Center Theatre Company during this time slot, director Israel Hicks will take a break from his ongoing Wilson marathon to stage something a little different. Pearl Cleage’s Blues for an Alabama Sky stays…

Holmes Is Where the Heart Is

Long before Jerry Garcia picked up his first banjo or Spock was a glint in Gene Roddenberry’s eye, there were Sherlockians–or Holmesians, as they prefer to be called in England. A cultist’s cult dedicated to good, if somewhat macabre, clean fun, the fans of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s fictional detective…

Wake Me When It’s Over

We all know Molly Brown didn’t go down with the Titanic. So why host a wake in her former home, a Denver museum commemorating her name? “Molly was unsinkable,” local-history scholar Tom Noel attests. “Her mother was not.” Noel, who teaches local lore at CU-Denver, will be the ringleader Sunday,…

The New Yorkers

The Round World gallery opened quietly last fall on the edge of downtown Denver, moving into a pair of rehabbed storefronts that share a red-brick Victorian building with the popular La Coupole French restaurant. It’s an obscure location for an art gallery; the neighborhood is neither LoDo, which remains downtown’s…