This Week’s Day-By-Day Picks

Thursday, April 8 Star-crossed lovers. Feuding families. It’s obvious: Romeo and Juliet. But what if it weren’t presented in the tired format we always see, with a longhaired waif, attractive punk and over-the-top rivalries (and settings) that aren’t ever really founded or explained. The Plano Repertory Theatre said “nay” to…

A-Go-Go A-Here-Here

Doonesbury gets the letters of complaint and the threats to cancel newspaper subscriptions. But Bizarro hits its mark faster and more stealthily. Instead of four panels, the nationally syndicated newspaper cartoon Bizarro takes just one frame to lambaste those who oppose gay marriage but don’t apply the same standards to…

Ruff Stuff

4/11 Forget about the Easter Bunny. For the past 18 years Easter has gone to the dogs in Lee Park as the Turtle Creek Association presents its annual Easter in the Park celebration featuring the infamous Pooch Parade and a performance by the Dallas Symphony Orchestra. Each year a colorful…

On the Hunt

4/10 Not many tools are needed for this hunt: a keen eye, a quick hand, a basket and the chutzpah to shove scabby brats out of your way. When you spy a brightly colored egg nestled in a tuft of grass, those other snotty-nosed rugrats had better look out. OK,…

Surveillance Footage

4/14 For Suzanne Weaver, keeping an ear to the ground for some earth-shaking rumble in the world of contemporary art isn’t enough. She palpates the inner wrist of the great body of art with her two longest fingers, feeling for the most energetic life force before enticing it to the…

Rag ‘Em Up

Ongoing “When he smiles that smile, flashes those eyes and does those dimples, the house is his and he knows it.” So says The Washington Post about Ken Prymus’ turn in the Tony-winning musical revue Ain’t Misbehavin’. Sounds like a winner, right? One problem: How did the D.C. paper review…

The Wince and Me

She’s a pre-med farm girl intent on administering to the world’s suffering children. He’s a car-racing Danish prince looking to shed the burdens of royal duty. They’re both in America’s heartland, where they share a chem lab, an employer and a penchant for driving fast. What, pray tell, is going…

What the Devil?

The Golden Age of the Comic Book Movie has turned the color of tarnished copper. But there is no going back, not when comic shops have become movie studios’ research and development labs. But no moving forward, either; the comic-book movie has become a cinematic smudge once more, one blurring…

Jersey Gurgle

Full disclosure: I like precisely one and a half Kevin Smith movies. There’s the one everyone else hates, the John Hughes homage Mallrats, and the first hour of the one everyone else loves, Chasing Amy, which dries up around the time Ben Affleck dumps Jason Lee for Joey Lauren Adams…

Dirty Blonde, Black Roots

When Sheran Goodspeed-Keyton sings, the little hairs on the backs of your wrists start to quiver. Her magnificent voice can split the heavens and move an audience to tears. In Bessie Smith: Empress of the Blues, now onstage at Fort Worth’s Jubilee Theatre, her performance in the starring role seems…

Time Traveler

Just as you found yourself comfortably attuned to painting as a two-dimensional medium, along comes an elaborate exhibition of work by the 19th-century English painter J.M.W. Turner to tell you otherwise. You find yourself asking, “Height and width, right?” That’s all there is to this timeworn window into the world–those…

Capsule Reviews

Bessie Smith: Empress of the Blues When Smith, a superstar on the vaudeville circuits of the 1920s, died in a car accident in 1937, rumors started that she bled to death after being refused treatment at a whites-only hospital. Edward Albee picked up on the tale for his controversial 1960…

Capsule Reviews

Jesús Moroles: Rock, Roll, and Play Its confusing to enter a gallery space that invites you to touch the art. It is even more so when the space beckons you to make and destroy pieces as part of the show. The current installation at the Dallas Museum of Art created…

Dance Dance Revolution

Once a year, millions crowd in front of televisions to watch the year’s greatest commercials wrapped around some football championship game. And just as football is evenly divided between offense and defense, Super Bowl commercials also split into two camps: funny and serious. The zany side is generally predictable, led…

This Week’s Day-By-Day Picks

Thursday, April 1 We’ve been told that to appreciate NASCAR and not see it as cars driving in circles, we must attend a race. Only then, schooled by a fan of the sport, will we fully understand the skill behind pit strategy, the technology of cars going really fast for…

Fire in the Bowl

Bathroom humor is common at most food-eating contests or cookoffs. Contest foods run the gamut from wings to sausage to pie, and all have a certain level of disgusting magnetism that makes people line up either to watch or join in on stuffing their gullets. But what of the event…

Fair Play

4/2 It was the weekend my friends met the ever-soulful Erykah Badu in all of her effortless elegance. I couldn’t be there with them because of work, but, of course, the one day I didn’t go, something extra-special happened. That was a couple of years ago, and now I try…

In the Ring

4/1 You can feel it. Its arrival is inevitable; its excitement unparalleled. It’s the type of happening that reignites friendships and sparks creative impulses. It’s a public statement, a mission affirmation with a triple-edged meaning. Is it accusatory, rhetorical or self-referential? Yes, making your very own “WHO FARTED?” sign for…

Loaded

4/2 Confession may be good for the soul, but the handful of practicing Roman Catholics we know have an increasingly cynical take on it. “It’s gotten so bad,” one says of her weekly trek to the confessional and the recent troubles in the priesthood, “I feel like saying, ‘You first.'”…

Jazz Hands

4/2 Wynton Marsalis knows his jam from his jelly roll. Out promoting his new CD, The Magic Hour, the Juilliard-trained trumpeter says a jazz jam session doesn’t necessarily produce the best music. “All the guys get so competitive,” Marsalis told an interviewer. “It’s a top this, top that kind of…

Blarney Rubble

As a proud sponsor of the Colin Farrell media blitz, Intermission opens on the lad’s salable mug, basically sporting the same buzz-cut ‘n’ tats look from his punky cameo in Veronica Guerin. It’s a cunning editorial move, pushing the product from the get-go, yet it gets interesting as Farrell’s dumb…

Lost in Translation

Those of us who grew up in the United States may be weary of our country’s claims of freedom and opportunity. Faced with a wobbly quote from our leader attributing terrorism to envy, we might roll our eyes, aware of a reality far darker and more complex. But there are…