Stephen Sondheim’s Gender-Swapped Company Comes to Denver
Catch the gender-swapped revival of the musical comedy Company at Denver Center from May 22 to June 2.
Catch the gender-swapped revival of the musical comedy Company at Denver Center from May 22 to June 2.
After spending tens of millions on land since 1981, Jefferson County is considering a new trailhead west of Arvada – to the chagrin of residents nearby.
It’s home to eight food concepts serving everything from barbecue and pizza to shawarma and Japanese street food.
Biophilia: Nature Reimagined is an exhibit ten years in the making that shows the beauty of nature.
“We’re finding positivity and wonderful moments by bringing back some of Jeff’s songs,” says bassist Ben Kauffman.
Four students from Eaglecrest High School have been expelled and criminally charged for a January fight, but parents call the punishments unfair.
After falling from 2nd place in 2020 to 99th (ow!) last year, the Mile High City now ranks 40th best.
“We always want to give, we never want to take. We’re not a charity. We’re never going to ask.”
Five Denver intersections will be closed through the course of the summer as the L Line shuts down.
Taste some of the dishes from Cocina Libre: Immigrant Resistance Recipes at its launch party at Raíces Brewing on May 21.
An upcoming state tax credit will refund tuition costs for qualifying college students. Here’s how to claim it.
To get on the Colorado ballot, he needs to collect 1,500 signatures in each of the state’s eight congressional districts by July 11.
At our next members-only event on May 24, Culture Editor Emily Ferguson will interview Ipecac before they rock out at the Westword office.
It’s the newest concept from Nicholas Kayser and the team behind the recently-shuttered Rooted Craft American Kitchen.
Comedy Works hosts the 24th Annual New Faces Contest, where over 150 comedians compete for a cash prize and bragging rights.
The group plays an EP-release show at Globe Hall on Saturday, May 25.
Brunch returns to a neighborhood favorite, a top sushi spot is now open for lunch, and a daytime eatery is adding dinner service.
The game seven loss was historic in the worst way.
Danielle SeeWalker won’t be doing an artist residency in Vail this summer, all because of a piece she did months ago.
Denver could have polished off the Timberwolves in game six, but instead had an aneurysm-inducing loss.
This was Denver’s first Cheba Hut, and a downtown refuge for some fans.
Although we’ve always been free, quality local journalism doesn’t come cheap. Our first-ever spring membership drive runs through June 7.