Local Theater Company Will Introduce 10 New American Plays in 2021
The 2020 Local Lab was canceled due to COVID-19, but the Boulder theater company is planning for a larger, more inclusive slate of new playwrights to feature in the new year.
The 2020 Local Lab was canceled due to COVID-19, but the Boulder theater company is planning for a larger, more inclusive slate of new playwrights to feature in the new year.
Put on your dramaturge hat and take a seat at the writer’s table at this three-day play development festival, featuring three new American plays, eight short plays written by local middle school students, and plenty of parties.
Recipe, a collaborative effort of three Denver theater companies, proves more cooks in the kitchen isn’t always a bad thing.
Roshni, an emerging interethnic performing arts organization, merges Indian-style theater and dance with a Colorado-based storyline in its inaugural production, Mountains Made for Us.
A new Boulder musical has seven Coloradan’s stories that didn’t quite make the history books—but probably should have.
The Black Actors Guild’s production of Mosque by Jihad Milhem wrestles with questions of identity and belonging in the 2010 landscape of New York City, when outrage sparked over a Muslim community center near Ground Zero.
The Boulder Ensemble Theatre Company is performing the Tony Award-winning play The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, which celebrates neurological diversity of the human mind.
Pandemic Collective, a nonprofit horror theater company based in Denver, gets eerie and supernatural in its latest production, Laveau.
Chicano Power 1969: The Birth of a Movement, centered around the 50th anniversaries of the West High School walkout and the Kitayama Carnation strike, opens on March 14.
These four downtown restaurants offer special menus and deals just for theater-goers.
The Cake—from This Is Us writer Bekah Brunstetter—was inspired, in part, by the Masterpiece Cakeshop court case.
Going to a Place Where You Already Are is a poignant tale touching on topics of love, religion, and the afterlife.
With Emancipation Theater Company, founder and artistic director Jeff Campbell creates an African American playhouse dedicated to strong, consistent community theater.
Bird-watching, family dynamics, and habitat destruction mingle in a unique play showing at the Boulder Ensemble Theater through November 12.
Upcoming productions ask the audience to move with the actors—and, sometimes, participate.
The local theater company plans to use the grant to bring more nationally recognized playwrights to the Mile High City.