Paul Stewart

Paul Stewart, founder and curator emeritus of Denver’s Black American West Museum, stands before the third group of schoolchildren he’s seen today, this time at Greenlee Elementary School, where the students are mostly Hispanic. He’s here for an assembly celebrating Martin Luther King Day, just another in a long line…

Dottie Lamm

Dottie Lamm, currently a candidate for the U.S. Senate, is known throughout Colorado because of her husband. That may be her biggest blessing–or her biggest curse. The frontrunner for the Democratic nomination, Dottie Lamm seems likely to face incumbent Republican senator (and turncoat Democrat) Ben Nighthorse Campbell in November. That…

Sage Remington

Sage Douglas Remington marches to a different drummer. A Southern Ute drummer these days–but that’s just one of the beats that’s driven him over the years. Remington, 48, came to activism early in life. “My father worked very hard and taught me the value of hard work and to also…

Barry Fey

When Barry Fey sold his interest in the concert firm that bore his name late last summer, a lot of his competitors figured that, career-wise, he was as good as dead–but the old cuss won’t lie down. Since then, the man who was Denver’s most successful, and most feared, promoter…

Essie Garrett

It’s a typical morning for Essie Garrett, in that she ran the five miles to her job at the Emily Griffith Opportunity School, where she has been in charge of the refrigeration department for fifteen years. As usual, she’ll run back home at the end of the day, her backpack…

Twenty Years of Denver

1977: Colorado is in the grip of a severe drought, yet permits for construction of new homes top 20,000 annually, to better accommodate the thousands of immigrants inspired by John Denver’s lyrical vision of the state (1973’s “Rocky Mountain High”) and James Michener’s bestselling novel Centennial (which celebrates the state…

John Elway

It seems impossible–doesn’t it?–that on the first day, he was terrible. Facing the Pittsburgh Steelers at Three Rivers Stadium, he completed just one of eight passes for a measly fourteen yards. He got sacked, hard, four times, and by game’s end looked like a deer in the headlights. Because those…

Clarrisa Pinkola Estes

Clarissa Pinkola Estes is thinking about what story she would tell to residents of Denver in 1998. She settles on “Stone Soup,” an ancient tale–but not an ancient idea. The people are starving–for soulfulness, for spirit–and they shut their doors and live behind them, and what little they have they…

Noel Cunningham

Noel Cunningham is almost too good to be true. The owner of two of the town’s best restaurants, Strings and 240 Union, and the driving force behind several charities that have raised more than a million dollars in Denver, Cunningham is one of the few people in the back-stabbing, chef-eat-chef…

Phil Bender

Denver’s art scene has witnessed momentous changes over the last twenty years, including the establishment of a contemporary-art department at the Denver Art Museum and the tremendous expansion of both public and commercial gallery scenes. But the most important development was the rise of the alternative spaces, which grew into…

Walter Gerash

He lurks in the bad dreams of hungry prosecutors and hidebound judges, a caped avenger in bolo tie and maroon beret. The cameras catch him exiting the courtroom in the eye of the media whirlwind, a feisty bantamweight with a large voice–a voice so thunderous when raised in outrage that…

Marilyn Megenity

December 31, 1997, 6 p.m.: The Merc fills slowly at first, but you can already feel the heady air of celebration wafting through the murky dining room, with its darkly polished honky-tonk bar, fringed dancing-girl lamps and Dede LaRue’s neon-encircled papier-mache circus animals crashing through walls. People nest in the…

Bob Cot

Against all odds, Bob Cote finds himself in a suspended state of grace. “How else to explain why I’m here?” he wonders. “It’s been a series of miracles.” More than merely being here, though, these days Cote, the ex-alcoholic president of Step 13, a shelter for homeless men on the…

Tony Church

The December 1979 opening of the Denver Center for the Performing Arts’ first production was billed as the “Dawn of the Denver Decade.” The DCPA was going to make Denver the Rocky Mountain entertainment equivalent of New York City, with touring productions of Broadway plays and musicals sharing the complex…

Birth of a Notion

Depending on how you measure these things, Westword was born late one night in a college newspaper office, when starting a weekly seemed like a much better idea than typing a resume and finding a real job, or at a rugby game in Washington Park, where the vigor of the…

Letters

The Hype Report Alan Prendergast’s January 22 article, “City of Hype,” claims that “no other city in the world has to put up with so much drivel in the name of sports journalism.” While I agree that it is ridiculous bordering on the offensive, I lived in Los Angeles for…

Artsbeat

When filming begins this week on The Closer, Tom Selleck’s mid-season replacement show, the California set will be littered with Colorado memorabilia. That’s because the sitcom is the first TV show since Dynasty supposedly set in Denver, and Selleck, an advertising-agency guy, hangs out at a LoDo sports bar filled…

Someone to Lien On

In Colorado, property-tax bills are due April 30; if they are not paid, the landowner receives a delinquent tax notice a few months later. In Denver, which has approximately 171,000 separate pieces of taxable property, about 10,000 people–just under 6 percent–were late on their payments and received such a notice…

City of Hype

Smiling, frosted-haired matrons, their teeth capped in orange and blue. A naked man in a barrel making a heartfelt plea for playoff tickets. Nightly weather bulletins on the field conditions in Kansas City or Pittsburgh, pre-empting the local snow report. If it all sounds vaguely familiar, then consider yourself a…

Fight, Team, Fight!

Eleven years ago, Bronco Vance Johnson was ready to explode into the national consciousness. A cocky little wide receiver known for his pigtails, flashy lifestyle, motormouth and allegedly artistic drawings, he parlayed the Super Bowl hoopla into an appearance on the Joan Rivers Show, during which “The Vance,” as he…

Home Sick

Mildred Bennett was born to royalty. She is the child of a Russian czar–the proof, she tells you, being a birthmark on her back. George Washington is her grandfather. One of her husbands was the king of Spain; she was the queen. A second husband was a king of France,…

Off Limits

No bull: On Tuesday, animal-rights activists–the Vegetarian Society of Colorado and the Rocky Mountain Animal Defense Fund–hung what they’d promised would be a “huge” banner, but which more closely resembled a bath towel, off the 15th Street overpass to protest the Stock Show’s cruelty to animals. Their action lasted exactly…