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- 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' ; When: Jan. 28-Feb. 26, Stage Theatreperformances: Monday Through Thursday, 6:30 P.M., Friday and Saturday, 7:30 P.M., Saturday Matinee, 1:30 P.M.Where: Denver Center for the Performing Arts, 1101 13th St., Denvercost: $10, $18, $54 or $64.Online: Http:// Denvercenter.Orgmore Info: 800-641-1222
The play will be set in a Neo-classical time period with military-style costumes.
By Karen Cotton
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DENVER -- The Qwest Foundation today announced a $25,000 grant to Denver's premier performing arts organization - The Denver Center for the Performing...
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By Karen Cotton
kcotton@wyomingnews.com
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Denver has so many great restaurants, but here's my new favorite reason to drive north: Four Seasons Hotel's Edge Restaurant & Bar, 1111 14th St., near the Denver Center for the Performing Arts.
The cuisine is American steakhouse, priced to be lower than most of the other upscale Denver steakhouses. It is featuring Colorado- ranched beef and other locally sourced ingredients.
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By Karen Cotton
kcotton@wyomingnews.com
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[...] in today's crowded and competitive media landscape, with newspaper companies repositioning themselves as information conglomerates that disseminate news via everything from ink-on-paper to the Internet to PDAs to cell phones, the move made perfect sense. In its September 8 issue, the Post broke the news that one of Colorado's most prominent citizens, former Post Publisher Donald R. Seawell, was stepping down as chairman of the Denver Center for the Performing Arts, which he had founded. Mike Shannon, managing editor of Oklahoma City's Oklahoman, generally agrees that breaking news goes on the Internet while project-type stories are the true exclusives and should go first into the paper.
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... Regency Denver at the Colorado Convention Center, 650 15th St. . Proceeds of the event help fund th... DEEP CONNECTIONS WITH BUSINESS, CIVIC AND ARTS GROUPS . It's one of her favorite lines, Ann Padil... a trustee at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts, and counsels small- and women-owned business...
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By Karen Cotton
kcotton@wyomingnews.com
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Last week, I wrote a column addressing the accomplishments and future direction of the Theatre Alliance of Buffalo, the region's unifying theater group. I'm told a response from the alliance's new executive, Robert Brunschmid, is forthcoming.The alliance's development director and communications specialist, Constance McEwen Caldwell, called to let me know that the seven-year-old organization is close to achieving 501(c)3 status, which she says will allow it to become both more nimble and effective in the pursuit of largescale collaborative projects.
And yesterday, I received a thoughtful e-mail from Kevin Leary, a graduate student in the University at Buffalo, putting forward a few of his own suggestions for the group and its new leadership. He suggested, convincingly, that the alliance...
..., thereby creating the critical mass arts communities so desperately need. Before Shea's to... Main Street, Buffalo might have had a performing arts block rivaling Kentucky Center for the Arts (...'s Theatre District, or the stunning Denver Center for the Performing Arts. Provided the thea...
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Denver Center for the Performing Arts
th St., Denver Directions: Take I-25 to Auraria Parkway (Exit 210C); turn right on Speer Boulevard; left on Arapahoe Street; and right into the DCPA parking garage. Phone: 1-303-893-4100 Web site: www.dcpa.org Denver is the best theater city in the country between Chicago and California -- and a major reason is the Denver Center for the Performing Arts. It's not just the facility's size and scope, though these attributes are impressive: a four-city- block downtown complex with 11 performance venues totalling 11,260 seats, with a 2004 budget of $5.8 million. But the talent and support the Denver Center attracts also spill over to other theaters, ranging from niche companies such as Buntport Theater and the Bug Theatre, to Curious Theatre Compa...