Most Popular
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Ultrarunning Gets Younger and Faster
Tony Krupicka takes his sport to new extremes.
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Target Practice: Racism and Police Shootings Are No Game
Are Denver cops trigger-happy for minorities? A video game might hold the answer.
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GB Fish & Chips
If at first you dont succeed, fry, fry again.
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Encore Restaurant
Recycling is good for the planet and it can taste good, too.
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Rent-a-Cop
Denver's finest protect and serve, whether they're being paid by the city or the corner bar.
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Target Practice: Racism and Police Shootings Are No Game (6)
Are Denver cops trigger-happy for minorities? A video game might hold the answer.
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Vonnegut (5)
Fall Into Place
Self-released -
CU's Campus Press Fights for Independence (3)
A contentious faculty meeting points to independence for CU-Boulder's student newspaper — but at what cost?
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Shakeup in Denver Radio (4)
Denver radio's getting a shakeup, with more alterations on the horizon. But do any of the switches qualify as improvements?
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Deconstructing the DNA of a Denver Post Pulitzer Finalist (3)
Critics raise questions regarding an impressive Post series shortly after it's named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.
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Pole-Dance Princess
Lori Huett combines yoga, Pilates and sexy moves for an all-out workout.
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Smokin' Hot
Help pick the 2009 Colorado Firefighter Calendar cover boy.
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Belly Up With the Bard
Celebrate National Poetry Month with a special brew.
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Gregory Alan Isakov
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Voice of the City
Kevin Larson puts on a Vaudeville show.
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Denver Crack Dancers Get Down
04:26PM 04/29/08 -
Monolith Line Up Announced
10:00AM 04/29/08 -
Lots of Lux
04:18PM 04/29/08 -
Fashion Moto 2008
11:15AM 04/28/08 -
Carded: Supreme Court OKs Voter Photo ID
09:56AM 04/29/08
What we are writing about
- Barack Obama
- Brad Pitt
- Charlie Huang
- Cherry Creek
- Colorado Rockies
- David Lane
- Denver Art Museum
- DeVotchKa
- dogs
- Fisher Clark Urban...
- Glenn Morris
- hi-dive
- Hillary Clinton
- Jason Sheehan
- Knocked Up
- Larimer Lounge
- Lupe Fiasco
- Mark Travis
- My Kid Could Paint That
- Nathan & Stephen
- No Country for Old Men
- PlayStation
- Radiohead
- Seth Rogen
- There Will Be Blood
- Various Artists
- Vinyl
- Wii
- William Havu Gallery
- Xbox
Recent Articles By Mark Dragotta
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Think Globally, Drink Locally
Save the planet, drink some beer.
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Hip-Hop Nation
The Chicano oral tradition is alive and flourishing.
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Road Trip
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Getting Hot in Here
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Nut House
National Features
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The Pitch
Time Bomb in a Bottle
"The idea that you're using sex hormones to make plastic is just totally insane."
By Nadia Pflaum -
Houston Press
Foreclosure Pets
When homeowners are pushed out, animals get left behind.
By Paul Knight -
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
On Your Honor
A judge's alleged relationships with defense lawyers and prosecutors raise eyebrows.
By Bob Norman -
Village Voice
A Soldier's Story
Remembering the day a black mob lynched a white man.
By Tony Ortega
As Barack Obama bids for a room in the White House, it's hard to imagine that less than fifty years ago, blacks couldn't even stay in the Sahara Hotel in Las Vegas. Legendary African-American blues singer Dinah Washington had something to say about that little fact in 1959: Instead of settling quietly into her back-door Jim Crow trailer, Washington the first black woman ever to perform in Vegas staged a diva-style sit-in in the Sahara lobby.
In Oliver Goldstick's Dinah Was, this wonderfully heated moment on the road serves as a catalyst for exploring the life of the talented, stubborn and ultimately self-destructive "Queen of the Blues." A series of vignettes weaves together a musically fueled montage of Washington's life. "It's one of the few plays I've seen like this that flows so beautifully," says director Jeffrey Nickelson. "Normally, a play like this feels like it's all over the place, but it moves in a relatively linear way considering that it's non-linear in representation."
Today at 3 p.m. at Shadow Theatre Company, 1468 Dayton Street in Aurora, watch as Washington overcomes personal and political struggles, including a domineering and jealous Baptist mother, seven marriages and divisive prejudice. "This is a powerfully entertaining and educational story that reflects our history in an accurate form," says Nickelson.
Tickets are $25; the show runs Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 7 p.m. and Sundays at 3 p.m. through May 24. For information, call 720-857-8000 or visit www.shadowtheatre.com.
Thursdays-Saturdays, 7:30 p.m.; Sundays, 3 p.m. Starts: April 24. Continues through May 24, 2008











