Opiates for the Masses Brings the Street Into Helikon Gallery

Karl Marx has been quoted — not quite accurately — as calling religion the “opiate for the masses.” If art is your religion, you’ll want to overdose on Opiates for the Masses, a new show at Helikon Gallery that’s guest-curated by Myah and Scott Bailey, the busy duo who own Sally Centigrade gallery.  In…

Photos: Flaming Sculptures at the Breckenridge Fire Arts Festival

While some folks have been sculpting blocks of ice for the International Snow Sculpture Championship in Breck this week, others are going pyrotechnical by lighting the nights with art borne from flames for the Breckenridge Fire Arts Festival. Yin or yang – take your pick: The snow sculpture extravaganza ends…

Gallery Sketches: Three New Front Range Shows January 29-31

Brush off winter and take in some art: This weekend at Front Range galleries, you can go big, revel in the small or walk on the wild side. Jenene Nagy: Disappear Here GOCA at University of Colorado, Colorado Springs January 29 through March 12 Opening reception: 5 to 8 p.m…

Mary Jane Is Turning Forty With an All-Day Bash Saturday

Colorado’s favorite madam is turning forty this weekend, with an all-day birthday bash on Saturday, January 30.  After four decades of skiers and snowboarders racing down her bumpy terrain, Winter Park’s Mary Jane will be celebrating in style — ‘70s glam style, to be exact.  And the fun won’t stop…

Diva Watch 2016: Khloe Katz Embodies Klass With a Capital ‘K’

In Diva Watch, we’ll profile the passionate, diverse and fascinating performers who light up Denver’s drag community, expanding on our Diva Dozen list from 2015 and our new Fresh Faces list for 2016 by asking different queens — from established to ingénue — questions that take a peek beneath the…

Photos: Die-Hard Fans and the Enigma Welcome Back The X-Files

Mulder and Scully are back, at least for the length of a mini-series, and legions of costumed X-Files fans re-emerged from the shadows to cheer on their long-lost heroes at a big-screen premiere party at the Oriental Theater. The Enigma was there, too — tattoos, horns and all — just to…

In 45 Years, Rampling and Courtenay Lead Us in Looking Back

“Every film is a documentary of its actors,” Jean-Luc Godard once said. Starring Tom Courtenay and Charlotte Rampling, Andrew Haigh’s shattering marital drama 45 Years expands that maxim: As we gaze at and listen to these performers, whose characters reflect on nearly a half-century together — almost as long as…

Incisive and Funny, The Lady in the Van Doesn’t Stink at All

The movie they’re selling isn’t the movie this is. Sony Pictures Classics is peddling Nicholas Hytner’s film of Alan Bennett’s play and memoir The Lady in the Van like it’s the usual twinkly Best Exotic time-with-our-elders holiday entertainment. There’s Maggie Smith, dressed up as what my grandmother used to call…

Playbill: Three New Plays in Denver January 27-31

Whether you prefer Broadway musicals or tour-de-force biographical political dramas — or something more intimate — there’s plenty of variety to go around this week on Denver stages. Try these on for size, or check Westword’s online theater listings for more theater choices. Dirty Dancing – The Classic Story On…

Review: The Normal Heart Is a Heart-Wrencher at Vintage Theatre

Larry Kramer’s The Normal Heart, which premiered in 1985, is a sad, angry play that vividly evokes the atmosphere of those early AIDS years, when headlines spoke of a strange new cancer affecting gay men and the cause and progression of the illness were unknown. All that was known was…

Popcorn Serves Up Salty, Buttery Frights Tonight

Popcorn is a truly rare gem in a vast, picked-over field of rocks: a fun, smart slasher film that was released during a time when we all thought we’d never scream at a slasher again. Well, break out the earplugs: Popcorn is showing Wednesday, January 27, at the Alamo Drafthouse. For…