2019 Colorado New Play Summit featured playwrights announced
Theatre Company’s signature event will bring Bonnie Metzgar back to Denver and feature a one-night concert from The Lumineers’ Neyla Pekarek
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.
Theatre Company’s signature event will bring Bonnie Metzgar back to Denver and feature a one-night concert from The Lumineers’ Neyla Pekarek
Chairman Martin Semple and fellow Trustee Isabelle Clark respond to the call from the Denver Center’s first-ever capital campaign
From the film Hair to Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, beloved actor delivered winning performances with heart right up to his twilight
Colorado theatre companies will stop to reflect on brutal murder that led to the Denver Center’s premiere of ‘The Laramie Project’
This article was published on September 30, 2018 Future star of stage and screen headlined inaugural production of The Caucasian Chalk Circle but did not finish the run When the Denver Center Theatre Company debuted on New Year’s Eve 1979 with the first of three plays opening on successive nights, Tyne Daly was not yet […]
The Ricketson Theatre will be renamed in honor of the DCPA Trustee and former Denver Post owner who says live theatre has helped in his ongoing battle with Multiple Sclerosis
How a single audience suggestion leads to improv comedy gold that is equal party silly, sharp and impressively stupid
Chris Coleman is setting the classic musical in an African-American town, and he looks forward to the conversations that spurs
Here’s why the creators of Vietgone think using an art form that didn’t fully exist in 1975 still makes for the perfect storytelling tool
Qui Nguyen believes Vietgone ‘should remind us all that America can be better than what it is right now.’