EVERY PICTURE TELLS A STORY

The old maxim that a picture is worth a thousand words takes on new significance when art incorporates text. The use of letters, words and meaningful phrases as visual elements in artwork is a fairly recent invention–the two media still are perceived by many as essential opposites. If not for…

TV GUILE

Something’s happenin’ here, and what it is ain’t exactly clear. But it’s exciting, funny and bugged-out. The Home Medical Shopping Network, an hour-long performance theater piece now playing at The Bug, takes on the business of medicine and the inanity of cable TV (and the culture that has produced them…

TWISTED SISTERS

It’s great fun to see famous Broadway and Hollywood actors on a Denver stage–it seems to bring out the “golly gee” in all of us. Wendy Wasserstein’s slick, sophisticated and tepid comedy The Sisters Rosensweig, passing through Denver via the Auditorium Theatre’s “renovated” stage, boasts a fine professional cast–all established…

ORDEAL AT THE O.K. CORRAL

Now that Westerns are back, you can get a fresh, vivid look at the Wyatt Earp/Doc Holliday legend by renting Tombstone at the video store. Released in theaters six months ago, George P. Cosmatos’s swift, concise hayburner features the able Kurt Russell as vengeful lawman Earp and edgy Val Kilmer…

WOLFMAN JACK

Nobody handed Jack Nicholson anything. He earned his place early on as one of Hollywood’s big dogs, and twenty-five years later, he’s not afraid to bare his fangs. For instance: A lesser force might not have gone anywhere near Wolf, recalling those campy werewolf flicks in which tormented Henry Hull…

THRILLS

Wednesday June 15 To be or not to be: Can you decide to not be gay? The question is turned over completely in One Nation Under God, this week’s installment of the PBS documentary series Point of View. Combining a look at activities within Exodus International, an organization touting “homosexual…

SEEING IS BELIEVING

Although there are several Denver galleries that specialize in African-American art, oftentimes the work displayed is as safe and stereotypical as that of the most conservative Cherry Creek showroom. Few opportunities exist in the area for African-American artists on the cutting edge, those who don’t conform to the demands of…

HEAVENLY FODDER

On the surface Nunsense II: The Second Coming may sound irreverent, anti-Catholic and irreligious. But like its predecessor Nunsense, it’s none of those things. The jokes are funniest to those most familiar with Catholicism–one former Catholic schoolboy informed me that the Latin motto on the floor of Mount Saint Helen’s…

‘ROUND ABOUT

Natalie Belcon is beautiful, funny and equipped with a luscious, rich voice. You can hear a long way down into the sound she makes, and in Robert Garner Center Attractions’ The World Goes ‘Round, she makes the world go around all by herself–almost. Belcon’s not really all by herself–there are…

ZOOM LENS

You’ll find plenty of bombs on every summer’s movie schedule. But this year Hollywood is setting them off on purpose. A little later in the silly season, terrorist Tommy Lee Jones will torment Boston cop Jeff Bridges with his penchant for explosives in Blown Away. For now we must content…

A BRIGHT WHITE

Clearly Krzysztof Kieslowski has plenty to say. Maybe he’s even got the faintest touch of serial killer in him. In any case, the extraordinary Polish director now makes his movies in bunches. The Decalogue was a relatively obscure series of ten films exploring each of the Commandments, and his “Three…

THRILLS

Wednesday June 8 Sweet home Chicago: Lady dicks don’t get any tougher than Windy City gumshoe V.I. Warshawski, who solves crimes while dealing with midlife crises. She’s the fictional creation of enormously popular author Sara Paretsky, who will autograph Tunnel Vision, the newest Warshawski mystery, from noon to 1 p.m…

SOMETHING OLD, SOMETHING NEW

Like a finely crafted poem, installation art must carefully balance its elements. In order to successfully fill an entire room (or at least a large space) with a single, multifaceted artwork, every object and idea within that space must contribute to the overall strength–and meaning–of the piece. Too many artists…

MONSTER MISHMASH

Who is the real monster in the gothic tale of Dr. Frankenstein and his handmade man–the poor innocent creature born against his will at the hands of the scientist, or the scientist himself? Mary Shelley’s original story made it clear that those who presume to tinker with nature (or tread…

GREAT SHAKES

The villainous Iago makes everything happen in Othello. He pulls all the strings and pushes all the buttons to make others jump to his will. And since that will is evil, all his machinations lead as well to his own destruction. You’ve got to love it. Compass Theatre Company’s production…

BEYOND BLARNEY

In recent years, visiting moviemakers have recast Ireland as a kind of cultural theme park packed with nostalgic folk wisdom exhibits, ongoing political tragedy rides and postcard views of verdant countryside. In this fantasyland, picturesque locals loose torrents of reheated Yeats in lilting brogues. At night everyone settles in at…

TO BE ALL YOU CAN BE

Penny Marshall probably won’t win the Nobel Prize anytime soon, but the TV-star-turned-director has a minor gift for detective work. After discovering the little boy inside the man (Big) and the ballplayer within the woman (A League of Their Own), Marshall has now unearthed the deep thinker in the dumb…

THRILLS

Wednesday June 1 Hit or Ms.: No member of the feminist movement has been more visible or accessible than Gloria Steinem, the brainy co-creator of Ms. magazine who now writes bestsellers on self-esteem. Steinem, here to plug her latest volume, Moving Beyond Words, appears this evening at the Radisson Hotel…

OF HUMAN BONDAGE

Dania Pettus uses the “principles” of black-and-white photography, assemblage and puppetry to construct the harrowing shadow boxes of Do It Until the Principles Are Burned Into Your Mind, at Edge Gallery. No problem there. Pettus’s searing images of disembowelment, dismemberment, piercing and bondage, though they involve anonymous paper-doll puppets, are…

STALK OF THE TOWN

Did you miss the road-show Phantom of the Opera? No problem: The Country Dinner Playhouse is presenting a far more spirited version of the classic horror tale, the excellent Arthur Kopit/Maury Yeston Phantom. For my money, it’s a better telling of the story than Andrew Lloyd Webber’s–or, for that matter,…

THE MOE THE MERRIER

It will help if you like cruise-ship activities–conga lines, audience-participation skits and sing-alongs. Five Guys Named Moe, now at the Auditorium Theatre, is the kind of raucous musical designed to bring out the silliness in you. Jolly, extravagantly choreographed, riddled with jokes and sight gags, Moe is more music than…

DISORIENTED

Has Bernardo Bertolucci flipped out? The man who once explored the frontiers of carnal obsession (in Last Tango in Paris) and the fervid intrigues of Italian politics (The Conformist, 1900) began gazing eastward last decade, coming up with a gauzy Chinese head trip called The Last Emperor. That’s the one:…