Next Stop, Second Floor

Ever wonder what goes on in that maze of rooms above the Capitol Hill eatery City, O’ City? You might know the jewel-box room Deer Pile for its recurring alternative shows, but the rest of the building’s second story is home to a hive of artist, yoga and recording studios…

Walk and Roll

Today’s AIDS Walk Colorado, at Cheesman Park, is a multifaceted event as well as the largest fundraiser for HIV and AIDS in the state. Aside from the annual 5K walk and a 5K qualifying run for the Bolder Boulder, the day will include a “Celebration of Life” Festival, with races…

Wheels Down

Living car-free takes a little extra effort, which is why LiveWell Colorado is providing some extra incentive today with its third annual Viva Streets party — this time in the Berkeley/Regis neighborhood. The organization, which celebrates healthy and green lifestyles, will close off Tennyson Street around 46th Avenue to cars,…

What Happens in Vegas

Perhaps it’s the “fantastic awfulness of Vegas” that makes it a fitting place for two strangers — a famous motivational speaker and a tollbooth collector — to kill themselves…together. That’s how the action goes down in Suicide(s) in Vegas, which opens tonight at Spark Theater. “With its seductiveness, spontaneity and…

A Mural Grows in Globeville

PlatteForum’s ArtLab projects usually involve resident artists working indoors with students to create a culminating installation and exhibit. But this summer, the nonprofit art-making machine branched out to work on a community project outside of PlatteForum’s usual boundaries, in collaboration with the Denver Urban Art Fund and city councilwoman Judy…

Fair Weather

In its third year, the Denver County Fair is leaner and more user-friendly than ever, without having forfeited one iota of what made it great in 2011 and 2012: The urban-alternative celebration once again combines the traditional and the quirky, breaking the mold with everything from drag shows and zombie…

Net Gains

Whether it’s used to end wars or just win a basketball game, withholding sex can be a powerful tool. Aristophanes recognized that when he wrote the classic Greek comedy Lysistrata, in which the title character empowers a group of women to stop the Peloponnesian War by denying their husbands sexual…

All the World’s a Stage

Early this year, it looked as if the Colorado Shakespeare Festival might be on its last legs. But after some re-organization, a strong marketing push and a tightening of the festival’s focus, the New York Times named the CSF one of the summer’s hot tickets — and A Midsummer Night’s…

Possessed

Throughout history, there have been accounts of “demonic possessions,” during which seemingly normal people suddenly go haywire, experiencing a whole spectrum of unusual and psychotic behaviors. In modern times, it happened to journalist Susannah Cahalan, who flew off the handle — out of the blue — in a haze of…

Veggie Tales

Colorado’s most productive growing season is upon us, and if your garden (or your community-supported agriculture box) runneth over, let Chef Michele Morris, author of Tasting Colorado, teach you how to make the most of it at Tentiko’s Craft a Family Meal From a Farm Box. Co-founded by Jim Chesebro…

Signs Language

Back in 1986, Ann Bolinger-McQuade had a gut feeling that she should get a mammogram; she followed her instinct and discovered that she had breast cancer. Due to early detection, the writer was able to get treatment and recover, but the experience ignited an interest in following intuition and messages…

Quick on the Draw

There’s a long and involved process that goes into creating a finished graphic novel, and artists Samantha Reveley and David Balan will give the public a behind-the-scenes view of that process in their new multimedia exhibition, Sequentially Speaking: the Art of Comic Books. The show examines everything that went into…

Mother Moon

The theme for Amaluna came from a statement that Cirque du Soleil founder Guy Laliberté made when the organization decided to embark on the production. “He said, ‘This time around, I want us to showcase women,’” explains Cirque company manager Jamie Reilly. “That’s the only thing he said.” Crafted by…

Taste Treats

What do the great escapist Houdini and the scientific phenomenon of déjà vu have in common? How about sinkholes and wormholes? Or refrigeration and the Austrian avant-garde? All are topics teamed up for this season’s Mixed Taste series, opening tonight at the MCA Denver. Now in its ninth year, the…

Breaking Away

Walter White’s final stand is at hand. For five and a half seasons, the chemistry-teacher-turned-meth-kingpin has built his empire, and now, in its final eight episodes, Breaking Bad is going to chronicle it all falling down. And if you can’t stand to watch the final days of the ultimate anti-hero…

Womenswear Wednesdays: Summer street-style sample

This week’s weather has been classic Denver: sunny one minute, rainy the next. To honor our changing climate, we thought we’d bring you a variety of street styles: four different looks we saw this week, including the one sported by Olivia Jones (above), a local accountant we spotted at 16th…

Photos: Robischon Gallery is featuring several stellar summer shows

Michael Paglia visits Robischon Gallery in this week’s review, taking in four separate shows focusing on conceptual abstraction. There are three solos featuring works from Jae Ko, Lisa Stefanelli, and Andrew Millner. The group show contains pieces by Ted Larsen, Peter Millett and Don Voisine. Continue reading for photos from…

Low Down Dog world premiere at the Oriental tonight

Four years ago historians of bad behavior got a rare glimpse into Denver street life and drug culture of the 1950s-1990s with the posthumous publication of Vato Maldito: My Life of Crime, by John “Bubbles” Gallegos, a local heister and heroin fiend. Now underground filmmaker and provocateur Raoul Vehill, who…