Roll Call

Fri 9/12 During its heyday in the late ’60s and early ’70s, the sport of women’s roller derby proved that ladies with skating skills and a penchant for foul play made for great entertainment. Some 30 years later, the derby keeps a lower profile, a condition that a group of…

Social Scenes

9/12-10/5 Putting the “community” in community theater, Teatro Bravo launches its Triple Rep Fest this weekend, addressing “important contemporary, even urgent issues of concern to various segments of our community,” according to artistic director Guillermo Reyes. Arizona’s only bilingual theater company opens the curtain Friday, September 12, with an 8…

This Week’s Day-by-Day Picks

Tursday, September 11 Two years ago, after the terrorist attacks on New York and near Washington, D.C., people truly started to wonder if it would ever be possible to laugh again. It took some time, but we completely regained our chuckling capacity — thank goodness. On Thursday, September 11, commemorate…

Pet Project

Kathy Taylor is not a nut-box. She’s an artist who mixes the ashes of your dead pet into paint, and then uses the concoction to create a portrait of the late Bowser (or Spot or Boots or whomever) for all to admire. Taylor, who can also make a clay vessel…

Season’s Greetings

The theater season is about to start — and not a moment too soon. With next to no theater to look at for the past several months, I’ve taken to watching television — and the worst possible programs, too. It’s with more than a little shame that I admit to…

Sucks, Dickie

The 1990-’95 run of Saturday Night Live, when the show was a playground populated by the likes of Adam Sandler, Rob Schneider, Dana Carvey, Chris Rock, Chris Farley, Kevin Nealon, Mike Myers and David Spade, was a low point in a show with a longer history of making you groan…

Goodness Gracious!

As one who assesses creative works, you try to separate the individual artist from the output they produce. Watching Bedtime for Bonzo, you don’t want to think about Reaganomics. Viewing The Pianist tends to produce thoughts of the Holocaust, not of drugged and raped girls. Going back a little further,…

9 Live

Dino Hawkins, a.k.a. “Volume 10,” has dedicated his life to the art of hip-hop in its purest form. Spending late nights at the Good Life Café in Los Angeles’ Crenshaw district, Dino saw bands such as Jurassic 5, The Pharcyde, and Freestyle Fellowship take off and make names for themselves…

This Week’s Day-by-Day Picks

Thursday, September 4 If you still haven’t had a chance to see Phoenix Art Museum’s exhibition “Sculpture in Silk: Costumes From Japan’s Noh Theater,” Thursday, September 4, is the perfect time. That’s when Janet Baker, the museum’s curator of Asian art, gives 30-minute ArtBreaks talks at noon and 7 p.m…

Natural Selection

For all its amazing qualities, one of the great failings of the human race is its consistent inability to balance its needs with those of nature. The result of mankind’s rape-and-pillage attitude toward the environment can be seen in the ecological struggles of an ever-growing number of areas worldwide, struggles…

The Price Is Right

9/5-9/30 How low can LoDo go? Lower than you’d expect from a cutting-edge gallery: 100 smackers. To celebrate its new name and nonprofit status, downtown’s Studio LoDo/Phoenix Center for Contemporary Art greets the fall arts season with “The $100 Show.” Launching with a 7 p.m. reception on First Friday, September…

How to Be a Player

9/8-9/14 A new hobby can be like a mail-order bride — before you know you like ’em, you’re committed. The prospect of pricey lessons and equipment, not to mention a whole new sports trousseau, can keep you from an activity you just might love. Problem solved at Come Out and…

Teddy, Set, Go

Sun 9/7 This weekend, make tracks and make a difference. In recognition of Childhood Cancer Awareness Month, Build-A-Bear Workshop, the interactive stuffed animal store, is inviting kids in 10 cities to join in the Nikki’s Bear Walk-A-Thon for Children’s Cancer. Valley families step up to the plate Sunday, September 7,…

Obedience Cool

9/5-9/30 The Patriot Act may have inspired concern about American society becoming an Orwellian nightmare, but Big Brother already lives — and he looks just like the late pro wrestler Andre the Giant. Leading the conspiracy, or rather, the art movement, is Shepard Fairey, whose subversive fame started with his…

Tome Sweet Tome

9/10-9/14 A librarian’s search takes him far beyond the card catalogue in Underneath the Lintel, the off-Broadway hit being co-produced by ASU West’s Department of Interdisciplinary Arts and Performance and the Valley’s new nonprofit iTheatre Collaborative. Hailed as “a wonderful metaphor for life’s meaning,” Glen Berger’s play tracks an obsessed…

Killer Comedy

Stephen Sondheim’s Assassins looks great on paper: a musical in which four assassins and five failed would-be killers sing and dance about the joys of killing or trying to kill presidents and other VIPs. And, in fact, Assassins is a darkly brilliant musical full of astonishingly naughty humor and wicked…

Habitat for Inhumanity

The last thing the Roman Catholic Church needs at this point is another exposé of its misdeeds. The shock of the pedophilia scandals and of the official cover-ups isn’t going away anytime soon, and when last we looked the former bishop of the Phoenix Diocese was out on $45,000 bail…

Stupor Man

Harvey Pekar, star of a long-running comic-book series he writes and others illustrate, is reminded early in American Splendor that he’s no superhero. It’s Halloween, and the 11-year-old Harvey, played by a bent-over, sneering Daniel Tay, stands on a stoop seeking tricks and treats from a woman who recognizes the…

Tongue Tied

Maverick Russian director Alexander Rogozhkin hit upon a clever idea for his idiosyncratic anti-war fable The Cuckoo (Kukushka in Russian). The three main characters, marooned together on a remote reindeer farm in northernmost Scandinavia, all speak different languages. The Russian speaks and understands only Russian, the Finn knows only Finnish,…

Corvette Summer

Few machines represent the American love affair with the automobile more ably than the Corvette. Sleek and sexy, this amazing creation has been the official automobile of adventurous youth, the midlife crisis, and everyone in between who appreciates its ability to satisfy the need for speed. It takes a mighty…

This Week’s Day-by-Day Picks

Thursday, August 28 Phoenix has its very own live version of The Gong Show: Beat the Buzzer at the Paper Heart Gallery on Thursday, August 28, and the last Thursday of every month. Much like that late, great ’70s game show, there’s a lineup of performers trying to outdo each…

Design and Conquer

After taking just a few small steps toward forming a community, now Valley fashion designers are trying to make the giant leap into commercial success with the Phoenix Infusion Fashion Series, starting Friday, August 29. Inspired by local runway shows held earlier this year, including a sold-out night at the…