This Week’s Day-by-Day Picks

Thursday, April 8 The English department at the University of Colorado at Denver lends some local presence to National Poetry Month by hosting the Denver Poetry Festival. The series, scheduled throughout the month of April, features free poetry readings by both award-winning and up-and-coming poets. The meter starts running tonight…

A Curious Invention

For Chip Walton and his Curious Theatre Company, staging a play like Inventing Van Gogh became an act of invention in itself. The time-traveling play, by former Coloradan Stephen Dietz, tells of a modern painter hired to forge Van Gogh’s final masterpiece. To take on such a work is not…

Serious Fun

TUES, 4/13 While sexual assault is no laughing matter, supporters of Denver’s Rape Assistance and Awareness Program will share a jovial evening while raising money at tonight’s Give A Wit comedy benefit. “Our issue is so heavy — we were looking for a way to lighten things up,” says RAAP…

Dog Smarts

THURS, 4/8 If you think your four-legged friend has the makings of a champion, check out Rally Obedience, a canine competition that’s quickly gaining in popularity. “It’s a new sport that is a cross between standard obedience and agility,” says Chrissy Linzy, owner of Educanines, which offers Rally Obedience classes…

Small World

MON, 4/12 Siona Benjamin’s background is beyond exotic, a story no journalist could resist repeating. A Sephardic Jew who grew up in the Bollywood district of Bombay, India, she hails from a milieu that has been defined by a swirl of multiculturalism, including Western and Eastern philosophies and Jewish, Catholic,…

Tapping Creativity

THURS, 4/8 According to Boulder dancer Ellie Sciarra, women tap dancers deserve an opportunity to strut their stuff under the bright lights of center stage. “The tap world is very male-dominated,” she says. “While we all know who Gene Kelly and Gregory Hines were, women tap dancers were traditionally just…

Land Minds

Putting together a coherent art show is difficult, and so many of the shows I see — even some of the good ones — don’t exactly make sense. Imagine, then, how rare it is to find not one, but three shows that all make sense. And not only that, but…

Artbeat

The Sandy Carson Gallery (760 Santa Fe Drive, 303-573-8585) is the flagship art venue of the Santa Fe arts district, which makes it one of the top spots in town. High-quality exhibitions are the reason why — and the current offering, 3 Search and Converge in the Creative, is just…

Now Showing

Full Frontal: Contemporary Asian Art From the Logan Collection. The normal stock in trade for the Denver Art Museum’s Asian-art curator, Ron Otsuka, is traditional styles, but he’s been drafted into doing contemporary duty by a gift that includes more than a score of pieces by Asian and Asian-American artists…

Shooting Blanks

The massacre at Columbine High School has been so intensively covered in the media — minutely dissected when it first occurred, rehashed with every newly uncovered fragment of information and on every yearly anniversary — that it’s hard to figure out what remains to be said about it. So it’s…

Deaf Jam

It was too loud. That was, I’m afraid, my prevailing impression of Hairspray. It was so loud that periodically I stuck my fingers in my ears. So loud that when a performer began one of those songs that starts low and intense, I found myself cowering in anticipation of the…

Encore

Bat Boy: The Musical. The character of Bat Boy is based on a recurring character in the Weekly World News — a two-foot-high boy, found in a cave in West Virginia, who endorsed Al Gore for president and later almost died after being sprayed by a pesticide truck. In the…

Jersey Gurgle

Full disclosure: I like precisely one and a half Kevin Smith movies. There’s the one everyone else hates, the John Hughes homage Mallrats, and the first hour of the one everyone else loves, Chasing Amy, which dries up around the time Ben Affleck dumps Jason Lee for Joey Lauren Adams…

What the Devil?

The Golden Age of the Comic Book Movie has turned the color of tarnished copper. But there’s no going back, not when comic shops have become movie studios’ research-and-development labs. There’s no moving forward, either; the comic-book movie has become a cinematic smudge once more, each blurring into the next…

Red Tide

Okay, say you feel like leaping from a highway overpass onto the roof of a fast-moving truck, then bouncing onto the top of the van that follows and then crashing headfirst onto the pavement. In Hong Kong, there are plenty of movie directors happy to let you try it. Just…

Flick Pick

In the ’60s and ’70s, underground cartoonist R. Crumb captured the anxieties and neuroses of an entire time and spawned a major cult with his “Keep on Truckin'” panels, his X-rated scoundrel Fritz the Cat and the unbridled lunacy he brought to Zap Comix. But it took the inspired documentarian…

Fool’s Gold

Schizophrenic musical cult figure and street artist Wesley Willis, all 300-plus pounds of him, had a photographic memory and a penchant for immortalizing celebrities he admired in idiosyncratic song. He always greeted people with a signature head-butt (for fans, it was a badge of honor to receive one) and topped…

This Week’s Day-by-Day Picks

Thursday, April 1 Two modern masters of comic illusion will tighten their skeptical — and scientifically proven — noose around another crop circle of dubious movements when the second season of Showtime’s original series Penn & Teller: Bullshit! debuts tonight with a snide exposé of that so-called animals’ best friend,…

Talk About the Passion

After nineteen years and a remarkable international expansion, pastor Stan Burgett’s Passion Play of Denver is really, in every way, the little Passion Play that could, a full-time non-profit business preoccupied with the stuff of miracles. Though sister productions have popped up under Burgett’s aegis as near as Las Vegas…

The Bitten Word

SAT, 4/3 Ever munched on Moby Dick or snacked on Shakespeare? Tonight, art lovers can dine on titles like “S’more and Peace” and “The Book of Apple Pi” during the International Edible Book Festival at the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art. Held every year in cities around the world, the…

Galloping Gals

SAT, 4/3 Move over, skate rats: The gals are going to tear up Lakewood’s X-Games Skatepark at today’s Op Girls Learn to Ride. “We’re trying to recruit some females to the sport since it is still a male-dominated industry,” says Nick Moscia, operations manager of the 40,000-square-foot skate park. Part…

Cine Power

THURS, 4/1 Expand your boundaries this weekend at the fifth annual Denver International GLBT Film Festival: Seeing Queerly 2004, which begins tonight with an 8 p.m. screening of the transgender film Transfixed. “This is our opportunity to bring cutting-edge queer films to the community at large,” says Greg Lovell, spokesman…