Lemme See It Is Denver’s Newest Standup Comedy Showcase
Lemme See It combines standup laughs with award-winning local films, hosted by Preston Tompkins and Stephen Agyei (Bojack Horseman, Abbott Elementary).
Lemme See It combines standup laughs with award-winning local films, hosted by Preston Tompkins and Stephen Agyei (Bojack Horseman, Abbott Elementary).
“Our history should really be taught in schools so people don’t walk around and think that racism doesn’t exist in our country.”
Curious Theatre Company and Phamaly Theatre Company team up for the regional premiere of Martyna Majok’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play.
From comedian to veterinarian to conservationist, what can’t this contemporary renaissance man do?
It may be snowy, but that doesn’t mean you can’t paint the town.
Five of the six pairings have failed in the show’s first Denver-based season.
One of Denver’s biggest street artists discusses gratitude, storytelling and the power of blue cows.
The Mile High City is getting Shreked this week, with both Shrek the Musical and a Shrek Drag Brunch.
The magicians’ act has been a pinnacle of the magic world for almost fifty years.
One answer? Good audiences. “I think Denver has always been great for comedy because it’s a smart city but it’s not an industry town,” says Adam Cayton-Holland.
With Memento Mori, Danelle Rains creates cremation memorials by blending ashes with glass.
The ninth year welcomes Denver-born rising star Ji-Young Yoo and dishes out some of the area’s best food.
The Colorado Convention Center is full of dinosaur dynamite!
All the residents of Placid Pines Senior Care Center want is a jukebox, but that simple request leads to a side-splitting, roller-coaster journey.
Three new shows open with a party at MCA, while co-ops and indie galleries fill their walls.
“There are so many people we meet who are like, ‘Dyketopia is the first comedy show I’ve ever felt safe going to.'”
A fight over Austin sneaking around with a female producer led to a group shouting match.
In addition to a local star, there’s another twist: A sprinkler mishap has moved the opening to Thursday night.
The “boutique hot springs” and botanical gardens are owned by a longtime local family with a background in mining and agriculture.
Nick Swardson was booed and booted from the Vilar stage on Monday; he’ll be at Comedy Works South tonight.
The fifth annual Colorado DIVAs celebrated the entertaining, the fabulous and the best of the best.
The immersive musical, which is based on seventy pages from War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy, is at the Arvada Center through March 31.