Freedom Sings

The folks who started the Denver Gay and Lesbian Community Band rechristened it the Mile High Freedom Band shortly after its debut in 1984, figuring the new name better captured the essence of what the band was all about: supporting open-minded diversity and raising community awareness through music. And now,…

This Week’s Day-by-Day Picks

Thursday, December 9 Just when you thought you’d been through every place in town, along comes a fresh holiday shopping ground. The Arvada Center Art Market Show and Sale kicks off tonight with an artist reception and first-pick event from 5 to 9 p.m. (admission is $5) and continues daily…

Real Film

Any film geek worth his weight in black-framed glasses knows the joy of sitting in a dark theater listening to the whir of the projector. The sound of delicate celluloid shooting through that machine in the booth overhead echoes an earlier era, when cinematographers changed film in thick sacks, their…

Talking Shop

SAT, 12/11 Next to Santa’s workshop, could any place on earth be more magical to a kid at Christmas time than the Hammond’s Candies factory? Located right here in Denver since Carl T. Hammond Sr. set up shop in 1920, Hammond’s is especially known (and nationally, at that) for its…

Wilderness Witness

SAT, 12/11 John B. Weller’s love affair began on an innocent date. Four years ago, the Boulder resident returned to the Great Sand Dunes National Park for the first time in years — and was overwhelmed by the natural beauty that surrounded him. “We camped out. It was ice-cold, five…

Needed Needles

Growing up, I spent at least twenty Decembers covered with pine needles and sticky with sap, working my family’s Christmas-tree lot in Scottsdale, Arizona. Even today, the lot is a much loved, and missed, part of my childhood, one that’s inextricably linked to my concept of Christmas. I try not…

Musical Mission

SUN, 12/12 This is a season for giving, and there will be plenty of it at the Swallow Hill Music Association Benefit Holiday Show featuring Denver chanteuse Celeste Krenz and the folk trio Dakota Blonde. They take the stage tonight to help raise funds for 25-year-old Nicholas Huber, who is…

Changing Views

Daniel Libeskind must be happy with Denver since, unlike in New York, the Polish-born American architect has been allowed to follow his vision to its logical conclusion. In New York, Libeskind’s Freedom Tower, which will be erected on the site where the World Trade Center once stood, was neutered and…

Artbeat

Well-established Denver artist Michael Brohman takes an idiosyncratic route to contemporary sculpture in his solo, ME AND MY SHADOW, now at Pirate (3659 Navajo Street, 303-458-6058). Brohman has a preference for working in old-fashioned ways, using metal casting as his method and the nude human figure as his subject. However,…

Now Showing

Anxiety and Desire. Clare Cornell, assistant professor of digital imaging at the Metropolitan State College of Denver, put together Anxiety and Desire, an exhibit of photo-based pieces that address psychological concepts. He included work from an array of artists from around the country, each working in their own ways, though…

Im-purr-fect

No one goes to see a play in a vacuum, so let me put the evening I attended Cats in context: It came at the end of a week spent alternately reading student papers (in my other life, I teach writing at CU) and conferencing with the authors of those…

Encore

Beirut. In Alan Browne’s play, Beirut is the name given to New York’s East Village, where, in a futuristic dystopia, HIV-positive people are quarantined (the play doesn’t use the terms “AIDS” or “HIV,” but the references are clear). Outside of this area, the world has changed. Sex is forbidden on…

Lust Buster

The new Mike Nichols film, Closer, is a boiling pot of lust, mistrust and double-dealing that we might take for outright soap opera or, in quite a few places, soft-core porn, were it not for the sophisticated gleam of its well-heeled London desperadoes and the vicious dazzle of its dialogue…

Boy Meets Whirl

Movies pushing the indomitablity of human nature tend to make me want to puke, mainly because they’re often created with a palpable self-congratulatory air by film-biz insiders whose real-life concept of “suffering” extends to being brought an incorrectly prepared frappuccino. This emetic response is doubled when the featured indomitable human…

Flick Pick

One of the most compelling films of 2004, first-time indie director Joshua Marston’s Maria Full of Grace is a drug movie that has no machine guns and no car chases, just an unforgettable portrait of a sixteen-year-old Colombian girl (played by the extraordinary Catalina Sandino Moreno) forced by circumstance to…

The World’s Sport

In 1986, Jack Kemp spoke out before the United States Congress against a resolution backing an American bid to host the World Cup. “I think it is important for all those young out there who someday hope to play real football, where you throw it and kick it and run…

This Week’s Day-by-Day Picks

Thursday, December 2 Gift shopping has never been better than at the annual Junior League Holiday Mart, a gargantuan, high-quality marketplace running today through Sunday at the Wings Over the Rockies Museum, Hangar #1, 7711 East Academy Parkway in Lowry. The Mart will spotlight nearly 200 vendors, including seventy artists…

First Comic Touring

John Heffron is doing his best to enjoy a rare day off at his home in Los Angeles, but it’s proving rather difficult. At the tail end of an exhausting seven-month tour, the standup comedian has only been awake a few minutes and is already on his third interview of…

C’mon, Get Hip-Hoppy

FRI, 12/3 For the past three months, Metropolitan State College’s Social Action Through Art class has been studying urban arts, including graffiti and hip-hop culture. “We even had some breakdance instructors come in,” remembers student Nicole Aragon. “It was quite the experience. It was a lot of fun, but I…

Tricks Are Not Just for Kids

FRI, 12/3 Snow makes a great cushion — especially when snowmobilers land on it after doing backflips across a sixty-foot gap. That’s one use of frozen water to expect at the FSX-Freestyle Snocross, which takes place inside the Denver Coliseum. “This is a two-hour show with incredibly high energy,” says…

Angels in the City

SUN, 12/5 For someone like Richard Nelson, who grew up in the small northeast-plains town of Peetz, Colorado, East High must have seemed a far cry from the schoolhouses of his youth. His first shock came when he walked into the mammoth school as the new English teacher in 1964…

The Sounds of Solstice

SAT, 12/4 Neal Conan may know radio, but he can’t keep a beat. The Talk of the Nation host was once a peppy percussionist who was asked to permanently retire his drumsticks by his high school bandleader, ultimately diverting Conan to a distinguished career in broadcast journalism. Luckily for us,…