Best Wall Art

Assembly art gallery is know for showing more controversial, cutting-edge works than some of its neighbors on Santa Fe Drive. But it wasn’t an exhibit that got director Jared Anderson in trouble with the City of Denver. No, it was his yard art, “Womb.” Designed as a freestanding monumental sculpture,…

Best Tribute to Old Denver

Lakeside Amusement Park creaks on year after year, slowly sliding down the path toward historical oddity. It’s Colorado’s very own Coney Island, and that’s exactly what makes the place so charming. Local photographer Christina Ianni captured the broken-down park — with the rickety old Cyclone and carny-favorite Tilt-A-Whirl — on…

Best African-American Treasure Chest

Retired teacher and Colorado Preservation, Inc. State Honor Award-winner Grace Stiles rescued a once-dilapidated Victorian frame house in Five Points and reshaped it for the greater good. The Stiles African American Heritage Center is stuffed with Stiles’s own special legacy for black Denver’s youth: a haystack of pictures and artifacts…

Best Museum Outreach Using a Virgin

For several Decembers now, the Denver Art Museum has hyped an exhibition on Our Lady of Guadalupe by offering free Southwest Santos family backpacks, which include special games designed to encourage interaction with the artwork. Families can play Rhymes & Riddles or put together an Our Lady of Guadalupe magnet…

Best National Appearance by a Colorado Treasure

Last August, a selection from the Denver Art Museum was reduced to a tiny canvas, but it reached a global audience. An intricate 1940s Navajo weaving by master artisan Daisy Taugelchee was one of ten artifacts depicted in “The Art of the American Indian” stamp, a series of 37-cent stamps…

Best Development for Western Playwrights

Organized by Pamela Jamruszka of the Red Rocks Community College theater faculty, and with the support of the Arvada Center for the Arts and Humanities, the first Playwrights Showcase of the Western Region featured three intense days of panels, workshops, discussions and play readings. The series was designed to inform…

Best Theater Production

Edward Albee’s play about a man in love with a goat makes you question every assumption about sexual mores you’ve ever made. Just where are the boundaries between the permissible and the impermissible, and what do they mean in the lives of actual people? The Goat or, Who Is Sylvia?…

Best Dramatic Script

Inventing Van Gogh unleashes a torrent of ideas about art — possibly enough for a dozen plays. But its primary achievement is illuminating the artist’s struggle to wrench meaning from a recalcitrant world, and to ransom his own soul. Steven Dietz’s script incorporates historical fact without lecturing; bits of Vincent…

Best Actor in a Drama

In a luminous portrayal, Brett Aune made Vincent van Gogh an essentially gentle and guileless man, a little uncomfortable in his own body. Aune possessed an arrogance that stemmed from the artist’s bone-deep understanding of the rightness of his work, coupled with the insecurity of someone who has laid bare…

Best Actress in a Drama

Angels in America’s Harper is a pill-popping young Mormon wife who spends half her time yearning for her faithless husband and the other half in a fantasy. She could easily seem fey or just plain irritating. But Laura Norman moderated Harper’s dopey ethereality with a wry humor and a sense…

Best Supporting Actor in a Drama

Christopher Leo gave two confident star turns in Inventing van Gogh — as an unscrupulous art authenticator named Bouchard, and as the painter Paul Gauguin. Bouchard was self-mockingly mannered, effete in the most amusing way, while Gauguin was arrogant and thick-skinned. Both characters possessed a juicy vitality that served as…

Best Supporting Actress in a Drama

Harold Pinter’s Old Times is a bleak, enigmatic play, but Denise Perry-Olson’s sensual energy and radiant smile animated it. Her Anna — sophisticated, sexy and well-traveled — flirted equally with onetime best friend Kate, and with Kate’s husband, Deeley. It sometimes seemed she was about to stride off with Bas…

Best Musical

Many regular customers of Boulder’s Dinner Theatre stayed away from Cabaret. The show’s seedy settings, writhing dance numbers and uncomfortable focus on fascism clearly set it apart from most BDT fare. But in a just world, it would have attracted dozens of people who normally never set foot in a…

Best Actor in a Musical

Bat Boy: The Musical is based on a character in the Weekly World News, a bat-human creature found in a cave. In this musical, he’s discovered by some teenagers, one of whom he bites. Nicholas Sugar — an actor we should be seeing a lot more of — plays the…

Best Actress in a Musical

Dulcet-voiced and warm, Shelley Cox-Robie is always a joy to watch. As Joseph’s narrator, she was the constant presence that stitched together all of the jokes and wild goings-on in the Boulder’s Dinner Theatre reading of this early Andrew Lloyd Webber musical. Cox-Robie’s empathetic work with the children in the…

Best Supporting Actress in a Musical

Most people remember Guys and Dolls’ Adelaide as the chanteuse (or chantoosie) who sings “Take Back Your Mink” and “A Bushel and a Peck.” PHAMALy’s Lucy Roucis delivered these songs with sass and sang the famous “Adelaide’s Lament” so feelingly that you didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Either…

Best Singing in a Musical

Hi-Hat Hattie was a sentimental, one-dimensional piece of theater, but Sheryl Renee made it work. She’s a fine actress, but it was her vocal abilities that transfixed us as she sang a mix of blues, funk and show music. At times, Renee’s voice emanated from the depths of her being;…

Best Actor in a Comedy

Randy Moore’s Scrooge was pinch-mouthed and mean, but he was also an aging child, with a child’s unconcern for decency and politeness, as well as a vulnerability. Although Moore has played the role for several years, this was his most joyous and deeply felt performance. When the reformed Scrooge humbly…

Best Actress in a Comedy

Anna is one-half of a prickly lesbian couple that forms the heart of Boston Marriage, David Mamet’s first play to feature female protagonists. She likes falling dramatically onto the chaise lounge, having the vapors, exploring flights of self-pitying fantasy, and tossing off acerbic witticisms. In a tour-de-force performance, Annette Helde…

Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy

The Fourth Wall featured a housewife so distressed by contemporary politics that she arranged the furniture to create an invisible fourth wall in her living room. Rhonda Lee Brown played Julia, a brittle interior decorator from New York, brought in by the protagonist’s husband to help unravel her motives. Affected…

Best Performance by a Child

Tongue of a Bird is a pretentious, forgettable play about a woman pilot searching the mountains for a lost child. But it had a bright spot in teenage actor Brittany Heileman. She appeared to the protagonist in visions, her face bloodied, in a performance that was sharp, quick, cheerful and…

Best Actress in an Experimental Production

In one of the funniest, sweetest scenes in Kafka on Ice, Erin Rollman skated on a floor of artificial ice, skidding, gliding and falling cutely about as a Chaplinesque Kafka (played by Gary Culig) sped to her rescue again and again. Rollman is one of Denver’s most inspired comic actresses;…