Best Oddities Shops in Denver: From Skulls to Creepy Clowns
What’s in store this spooky season.
What’s in store this spooky season.
The 47th Denver Film Festival runs from Friday, November 1, through Sunday, November 10, at venues including the Sie FilmCenter, AMC 9+10, Denver Botanic Gardens and the Holiday Theater.
In collaboration with Denver Arts Week, seventeen museums are open with free admission for the evening of November 2.
Nick Holmby took a risk when he left his manager job at Comedy Works to start his own studio, but it’s paid off.
It’s not too late to avoid a basic costume before Halloween on Thursday.
“Our overall purpose is to do our best to get to the bottom of paranormal claims.”
This homegrown horror story is coming to life in multimedia.
This Halloween, why not look for inspiration around our great city, with its never-ending stream of colorful characters, iconic symbols and inside jokes?
Theodore Glava died in Colorado in 1918, but his Transylvania origins caused some locals to believe he was a vampire.
From Mulder and Scully to Jay and Silent Bob, resurrect these ’90s icons with a simple costume that won’t break the bank.
A trifecta of superstar artists opens at Robischon Gallery, while the Denver Art Museum welcomes Slam Nuba and the legacy of Maurice Sendak.
Unleashed Theatre Co. presents a hilarious two-woman show about Matt Damon and Ben Affleck’s rise to fame.
The South Park boy’s campy, gory take on Alferd Packer is brought to life in a production that promises to be “offensive but not hurtful.”
Colorado was one of just 22 states in which women used a negative word to describe the men. And this one hurt.
The hotel is celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of Stephen King’s bone-chilling stay with a ball on Saturday, October 26.
The DCPA’s Off-Center, in collaboration with the original London production team, has put an immersive spin on the popular Hasbro board game.
They met on Match. He wanted to go to Winter Park; she wanted to go to Vail. And the date went nowhere…fast.
Authors will read from We Can See into Another Place: Mile-High Writers on Social Justice at the Bookies on Friday, October 25.
Combining gothic horror and humor, this interactive trunk show invites audiences to help bring Mary Shelley’s classic tale to life.
They’re pushing for improved safety, pay and communication, joining a broader trend of unionization efforts in Denver.
Find your roots in cultural festivities in Westwood and Breckenridge or commune with nature at Bell Projects and Understudy.
Hamilton will be at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts from October 16 to November 24.