Email Author Susan Froyd
Fishing has long been a man's domain, especially in Florida, where the big boys go out on big boats to hook really big fish. Men, it seems, have... More >>
A dance festival in the summer, in Colorado? You've gotta wonder what folks are thinking. But the Colorado dance festival manages to pull it off... More >>
If you're seventeen today, Bob Dylan may be an afterthought: But your boomerish folks? Well, they're a different story. Like Mizel Arts... More >>
South Dakota artist Mark McGinnis spent the '80s exploring political and social issues in his work, in search of a doable code for living, but he... More >>
Are you detail-oriented? Is your spidey sense tingling? If so, the Denver Museum of Nature and Science wants you. Arachnophobes can check out... More >>
In Pueblo, there are two distinct classes: westsiders and eastsiders. The westside folks, notes Jina Pierce, visual-arts curator at the Sangre de... More >>
The Arvada Center for the Arts and Humanities tends to be taken for granted, in spite of its groundbreaking accomplishments. On the eve of its... More >>
Every kid's a comic artist. John Murphy, owner of northwest Denver's Highlander Comics and Games, can vouch for that: "When my comic store had... More >>
In America, we've got a holiday for everyone and everything. And in case you didn't know, May 25 is, by governmental decree, National Tap Dance... More >>
Growing pains are to be expected in any endeavor as ambitious as the Celebrate Colorado Arts Festival, but no one could have predicted the... More >>
When was the last time you had a life-altering art encounter? Folks at the Mizel Museum of Judaica are willing to bet, well, never.... More >>
It's been a few years since we've heard a peep out of the Mackey Gallery: Artist/proprietor Mary Mackey closed the venue in 1997 to concentrate on... More >>
You could call it the greening of North America, because it seems that you don't have to be Irish to enjoy things Gaelic in the New World.... More >>
The spread-out life women lead in the rural West poses unique challenges, not the least of which would be steering through the vagaries of... More >>
Think of the theater, and you think of a curtain, a proscenium, a rack of lights. Characters enter and exit; a story is told. But how, within... More >>
Local freelance writers Erin Kindberg and Wendy Burt don't make any bones about it: Their new book, Oh, Solo Mia! The Hip Chick's Guide to Fun... More >>
Denver painter and newspaper illustrator Herndon Davis is best remembered in these parts for his "Face on the Barroom Floor," a dreamy portrait... More >>
In photographer Jerry Uelsmann's visionary world, nothing is necessarily where it's supposed to be: A tree and the earth in which it's rooted... More >>
Thomas Buckner only interprets living composers. An expressive, theatrical baritone (and the grandson of IBM founder Thomas Watson) who's part... More >>
When local historian and native nice Jewish boy Phil Goodstein steps up to the podium at the Mercury Cafe this Friday evening to speak on... More >>
Ah, those were the days. Rockin' with Alan Hodges and His Nite Owls. Cruising your T-Bird to the Frosted Scotchman. Catching fouls at Bears... More >>
As any mother of a library-going three-year-old will tell you, returning 21 thin picture books on time every three weeks is easier said than done.... More >>
The once-upon-a-time life that photojournalist-turned-author/mom Deborah Copaken Kogan -- five-foot-two and barely two steps out of Harvard --... More >>
Most folks in Colorado could only watch with interest when the Westminster Kennel Club met at Madison Square Garden last week for the most elite... More >>
Valentine's Day falls just in the nick of time -- 'tis the season when our gonads traditionally get fired up for spring, the season of... More >>
