For the Benefit of Miss Larue

Denver artist Dede LaRue can’t help but be noticed for her colorful artwork. The self-taught superstar burst onto the scene years ago as a graffitist who randomly spray-painted pink flamingos on dumpsters. She then took up sculpting, creating increasingly sophisticated papier-mâché creatures. “Some of them are wry, funny and political,…

Live Lit

The consumption of literature is often a solitary endeavor, so people don’t usually associate books with a night out on the town. But the creators of Stories on Stage believe in bringing the rhythm, imagination and drama of classic narratives into the medium of live performance. Tonight’s show — performed…

Okto-Beer’s Here

The tradition of Oktoberfest began in Bavaria in 1810 as a royal festival, but has evolved over the years into a multiweek celebration of beer. And while there are rules regarding which breweries can participate in Munich, U.S. celebrations have typically included any old beer maker who wants to sponsor…

Mean Streets

A bunch of friends were hanging together on East Colfax Avenue, “watching ‘Colfax Science Theater 3000’ walk by,” says mean-street habitue Sam Kohlenberg, when, in the midst of the parade of drunks, hipsters, homeless people and working girls, the conversation hit a “what if” moment, and the Miss Colfax Pageant…

Verse-Case Scenario

As the Aurora Cultural Arts District continues to take strides in its bid to shape a vital city center, ACAD director Tracy Weil and staff find new ways to draw attention to downtown Aurora’s eclectic cultural community. The latest event, tonight’s Poetry@Play, will celebrate wordsmiths and artists alike with two…

Creative Kickstart

During the course of its seven years, the Create Denver Expo has grown to encompass more and more of its original goal of kickstarting local creatives and independent business owners with better access to resources. But this year there will be some changes, not the least of which is the…

Life Lessons

Peeling back the shiny top layer of a completed radio broadcast, tonight’s Reinventing Radio: An Evening With Ira Glass reveals what it takes to produce a program from start to finish. But Glass, the host and co-creator of National Public Radio’s This American Life, doesn’t just take listeners behind the…

Dish It Up

What’s been the best development on the Denver dining scene over the past twenty years? That’s what we asked readers last month, and they responded with craft beer, increased competition, chef-driven restaurants, local ingredients. And “the fact that we have a dining scene today.” Denver’s dining scene has changed a…

Writing in the Dark

For her best-selling debut, Special Topics in Calamity Physics, novelist Marisha Pessl precisely mapped out her characters and plot using spreadsheets, graphs and tables. But for her followup, a psychological thriller called Night Film, she took a more exploratory approach. “The book takes on a life of its own,” she…

Mom-Com

Standup comedy isn’t just for freewheeling, up-all-night youngsters with no limits or responsibilities. Sometimes the in-by-ten mommies deserve a night of cocktails and belly laughs, too, says comedian Shayna Ferm, creator of the Pump & Dump comedy night. “Because of my own fucked-up experiences as a new mom, I thought…

Get Your Golden Ticket

For a kids’ movie, Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory sure is full of weird shit. Oompa Loompas. psychedelic interludes. A seemingly psychotic Gene Wilder. And, of course, the candy — the crazy, colorful candy. “That film, at least for me, created such wild ideas about fantasy and candy,” says…

Making Room

Walk into the Rocky Mountain College of Art + Design’s Philip J. Steele Gallery tonight and you might have a strange sense of déjà vu: English artist Daniel Eatock’s new show, An Empty Room: The Sequel — which is in part a reaction to elements left over from a previous…

Zombie Dust

If you’re looking for an undead-killing experience that’s a little more visceral than shooting zombies in video games, a trip to Anderson Farms for a Zombie Paintball Hunt may be in order. You’ll jump on a wagon with a handful of other would-be ghoul slayers, grab one of the mounted…

Womenswear Wednesdays: Sharron Hicks on her Parisian style

To hype the upcoming Passport to Paris exhibit at the Denver Art Museum, the DAM recreated a Parisian street scene in its outdoor plaza yesterday, complete with ten local artists painting that scene. One of those artists was Ron Hicks, and his fashionable wife was present as well, posing as…

Ten best businesses along 13th Avenue in Capitol Hill

Often overlooked for its bigger, brasher cousin, East Colfax Avenue, the quaint little strip of 13th Avenue between Downing and Sherman streets is one of the few remaining arteries of pedestrian shopping, historic buildings and authentic culture in the Denver area. Its lack of recognition may actually be the secret…

Meet new Denver Film Society programming manager Ernie Quiroz

A decade of continuity for the Denver Film Society ended with the departure of programming manager Keith Garcia last month. Denver film fans who came to trust Garcia’s vision needn’t worry, though — the show will go on, and the newest addition to the DFS family is already on the…

THE GREAT GREEN helicopters in to the Boulder Fringe Festival

The show must go on, and for Laura Ann Samuelson and Joanna Rotkin, a helicopter rescue was the only way to keep their production THE GREAT GREEN on track for the Boulder International Fringe Festival, which starts today. Rotkin, creator and star of THE GREAT GREEN, resides in Jamestown, which…

Clean comedy isn’t comedy — it’s politics

On Sepember 19 Denver crowds will unload a serious amount of cash on an event titled “The Clean Guys Comedy,” which features such stand-up legends as Jamie Kennedy (Scream), Uncle Joey from Full House, and some other folks you vaguely remember from somewhere. The comics themselves aren’t what’s selling this…