'Decadent Desires' captivates with its tale of jazz-age excess
Wonderbound's latest world premiere pairs roaring 20s glamour with emotional wreckage.
Wonderbound's latest world premiere pairs roaring 20s glamour with emotional wreckage.
Vintage Theatre's lively production delivers laughs and heart " though minor technical hiccups hold it back at times.
Miners Alley's regional premiere of 'My Mother and the Michigan/Ohio War' uses a historic border dispute to explore the funny, messy dynamics of family life.
A lean, modern staging sharpens Shakespeare's tragedy, though its bold cuts may challenge newcomers.
Bowls with the Bard's take on R&J has flashes of innovation but lacks a clear vision to support its premise.
At the Denver Center's Buell Theatre, the national tour turns a bestselling novel into a muscular, moving stage spectacle.
Terence Anthony's world premiere at the Denver Center is a gripping, if slightly disjointed, story about freedom in the uneasy aftermath of slavery.
The Catamounts' Colorado premiere of Jay Torrence's Burning Bluebeard transforms the Carsen Theater into a playful, unsettling meditation on why live performance matters.
Springs Ensemble Theatre stages Lucy Kirkwood's post-disaster drama an intimate setting that pulls the audience into every uneasy exchange.
Colorado debut of Donnetta Lavinia Grays' one-person play features impressive design but struggles to deliver a clear, compelling story.
Powerful performances and evocative design elevate production of this absurdist play about waiting.
Johnstown production embraces classic comedy and brassy Broadway style in an energetic, cartoon-like romp.
DCPA Theatre Company's world premiere is a sharp, moving exploration of identity and grief in the rural West.
The Moot Point Project's Revolt. She Said. Revolt Again. is a confrontational, experimental provocation that challenges audiences to rethink power, patriarchy and performance.
A high-energy production in Lafayette boasts a winning Elle Woods, slick choreography and a lovable 27-person cast.
'Shrek the Musical' at Parker's PACE Center shines musically, though its scale occasionally slows the pace.
OpenStage Theatre & Company delivers a tense Mousetrap, with sharp performances and atmospheric design.
A beautifully sung South Pacific at Lakewood Cultural Center proves this Rodgers and Hammerstein classic still hits home in 2026.
While we look back on the shows that were in 2025 with the upcoming OSCA awards
The touring Broadway production of The Notebook - The Musical delivers spectacle without substance, flattening a complex love story into hollow sentimentality.
A split holiday bill from Ballet Ariel delivers a moving Little Women and a less-polished Nutcracker Suite.
'What The Dickens!?' reinvents A Christmas Carol through long-form improv, with big laughs and occasional misfires.
Wonderbound's ambitious holiday production mixes Elvis Costello and ghosts in a time-bending narrative.
UnLeashed Theatre Co. serves up a scrappy holiday mashup that's more Hallmark than horror until its frantic, bloody finale.
Upstart Crow's tense, thoughtful A Few Good Men features standout performances and sharp casting, despite some community theatre bumps.