Skyfall drags 007’s psyche through the interrogation process

If Hollywood’s rut du jour is the origin story as bid for franchise immortality, you can’t say that Skyfall — the 23rd “official” James Bond film in fifty years — isn’t on trend. Eight years ago, in Casino Royale, Daniel Craig’s first outing as Bond, we learned that 007 owes…

Curious asks the hard questions in Time Stands Still

“Look out, Haskell. It’s real.” — From Haskell Wexler’s Medium Cool, 1969 For all but a small sliver of U.S. society, wars are just a distant rumbling. But for those who have experienced them — soldiers, journalists, refugees — they are devastating. The images engrave themselves indelibly on the brain…

Drag Machine makes history at The Jones

While we wait for Drag Machine, people start handing out freshly spun cotton candy to a line that snakes around the Jones Theatre. Inside, we find that the Drag Queen bathroom (there’s one for Drag Kings, too) sports a glittering tinsel curtain; decorated top hats are taped to stalls for…

Swap On

Breaking out of consignment-shop confinement, tonight’s Holiday Fashion Swap aims to capitalize on recycled fashion’s burgeoning popularity. This organized clothing-trade party invites all you frugal fashionistas to bring a bag of up-to-date, gently used and seasonally appropriate attire to exchange for a bag of new-to-you goods in a pop-up boutique…

Buffalo Exchange

Bison are the largest land mammals in North America, and they have the richest cultural history (just ask the elected officials pushing the National Bison Legacy Act, which would make the woolly beasts our national mammal). Bison are so big, in fact, that MCA Denver needs two full days for…

Crowd Pleaser

From her legendary standup routines to her versatile work for television and radio, comedian Paula Poundstone has been interacting with audiences for more than three decades. Tonight, Poundstone comes to the Newman Center with her one-woman show — which is just the way she prefers it. “I’m so isolated in…

Aria Having Fun?

“Opera seems very conservative and traditional, but it’s not,” says Opera on Tap’s Eve Orenstein. “Opera’s not stuffy at all. It’s kind of fun and naughty.” The monthly series, which just moved from the now-defunct Bender’s Tavern to the Bar, is a raucous night of opera singers performing songs centered…

Paris Calling

It’s never too early to start holiday shopping, and for those seeking handmade or unusual gifts, the first wave of sales begins this weekend, with many time-honored annual gift events rubbing elbows with a few fresh ones. One of the latter, the Paris Holiday Market Trunk Show, is actually in…

The Light Fantastic

The RiNo art-studio community Wazee Union is a little like the proverbial beehive of activity all the time, with art being made in its studio cells and artists communing in its labyrinthine hallways day and night. But tonight’s Second Saturday building takeover, Rock Paper Projector, will raise the buzz to…

Author! Author!

If Lighthouse Writers had tried to snag smoking-hot author Junot Díaz for a Denver appearance in the last year, it probably wouldn’t have happened, notes Lighthouse program director Andrea Dupree. But thanks to a an inside contact and discussions that literally began years ago, Díaz — a Pulitzer Prize-winner and…

Fit for a Queen

France’s notoriously out-of-touch, extravagant and ill-fated queen will come to life tonight in the regional premiere of Joel Gross’s Marie Antoinette: The Color of Flesh. The intimate, three-person production by Spark Theater imagines a love triangle between the cake-loving queen; her portrait painter, Madame le Brun; and a count named…

Arts for All

Denver Arts Week unlocks one of the city’s most precious secrets: Almost all of the events and places falling under its diverse cultural banner are actually available to the public nearly 365 days a year, give or take an hour or a day. First Friday gallery walks and dozens of…

Writing for Life

Thordis Niela Simonsen will bring her latest book, Dances in Two Worlds: A Writer-Artist’s Backstory, to life tonight with Building on Memory, a performance of her ongoing work as a writer, painter and photographer. Rooted in her journeys to Greece over more than twenty years, the book and the live…

Believe It — or Not

People believe in some pretty funny stuff, from virgin birth to Bigfoot. For Ian Harris and his partners in The Evolution of Comedy show, all of those beliefs are fair game. “Even the most seemingly rational people, who might not have a particular religion or something, they still have some…

Dreams, Song and Steampunk

Steampunk and German lieder, a romantic form of song, don’t seem like they’d go well together, but Luminous Thread Productions likes to combine the unexpected. Nuptials for the Dead, which opens the company’s 2012-13 season, titled Dreampunk, gives German art songs a new life in this story of a woman…

Cookies and Community

Serious adult conversations can be boring, which is why pairing them with cookies and milk might be the best way to get people interested. That’s what Evan Weissman hopes to do with Warm Cookies of the Revolution, which he describes as a “civic health club” designed to get people engaged…

Wrapped up in Books

“When you walk into a bookstore, you’re faced with life in such a grand scheme, between fiction and nonfiction and travel and every-thing under the sun,” says Ronald Rice. “I’m so overwhelmed by how much there is yet to know, and that feeling makes you alive.” And he’s not the…

Wall-to-Wall Art

Gallery owner Carmen Wiedenhoeft likens local abstract artist Jeffrey Keith’s creative output to that of Clyfford Still or Vincent Van Gogh. “When these people are so voraciously creative, they do anything and everything their whole life, and it’s incessant,” explains Wiedenhoeft, who has been working with Keith, a professor of…

Women Grown

“Men have their midlife crisis, but we never talk about women having their midlife crisis,” says Susan Lyles of the And Toto Too Theatre Company about the premise of Toto’s latest production, Naked in Encino. Written by Mork & Mindy and Anything but Love writer Wendy Kout, the play explores…

Comedian Paula Poundstone on politics and her best friend, the audience

Over the past three decades, Paula Poundstone has worked as a standup comedian, political correspondent, television-show creator, cartoon-voice actor and columnist. And during that time, Poundstone has decided that the best place to be is the stage — alone with a microphone and no one else on the bill. The…