Ashford: From ‘Ruthless’ to the Good Girl of Tony Town
Tony Award nominee Annaleigh Ashford has come a long way since playing an aspiring child actress who hangs a rival girl from a catwalk with…
Award-winning arts journalist John Moore has created a groundbreaking new position as the DCPA’s Senior Arts Journalist. With The Denver Post, he was named one of the 12 most influential theater critics in the US by American Theatre Magazine. He is the founder of the Denver Actors Fund, a nonprofit that raises money for local artists in medical need. John is a native of Arvada and attended Regis Jesuit High School and the University of Colorado at Boulder. Email him at jmoore@dcpa.org. Follow him on Twitter @MooreTheatre.
Tony Award nominee Annaleigh Ashford has come a long way since playing an aspiring child actress who hangs a rival girl from a catwalk with…
Creede Rep started as a far-fetched idea to save a dying mining town. Now it is a national example of how the arts can revitalize…
The young playwright credits teacher Moss Kaplan and Curious Theatre’s Dee Covington as among his key influencers.
The school, located just 20 miles from the New Mexico border, swept top honors at the annual awards gala celebrating Colorado high-school theatre.
“My goal was to eliminate any distance between the Founding Fathers and the fights we are still having, and the struggles that are still happening…
Two days of performances and tough classroom talk help students better understand the issues at the heart of Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet.”
Mountain View High School in Loveland leads all schools with 12 nominations, including outstanding musical, for its staging of Disney’s “Aida.”
Both Wheat Ridge High grad Annaleigh Ashford (You Can’t Take it With You) and Castle Rock native Beth Malone (Fun Home) were nominated this morning…
For Jessica Quiñónez’s students, six months of hard work culminated with about 5 glorious minutes of performance time under a tent at the Denver Performing…
The region’s largest cultural institutions would voluntarily give up about 5.78 percent of their share of the annual art-tax pie. “It’s the right thing to…