Driven

5/12 How many chances will you get to drive a hot new BMW and do some good? Four, if you’re in the Dallas-Fort Worth area during the 2004 Ultimate Drive for the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation, the eighth year this event has taken place. For every mile you…

Cool Down

5/6 Nobody knows the trouble they’ve seen at the Dallas Arboretum, all stirred up because of a simple event called Cool Thursdays. Every Thursday night during May, June and July, the arboretum hosted a live band on the lawn along the arboretum’s part of the White Rock Lake shoreline. For…

Capsule Reviews

Claptrap The title word says it all. Empty talk intended to get applause, says the definition. That pretty much sums up Ken Friedmans farce, produced by Rover Dramawerks, which finds a novelist named Sam (Randeep Walia) battling writers block. Over and over, he types opening lines, only to wad up…

Chicken and Opera

5/7 We chickened out. Suzanne Calvin, the always helpful communications manager for The Dallas Opera, said that she might have been able to arrange a phone interview with Carol Vaness, who’s performing at “An Evening With Carol Vaness,” presented by The Women’s Board of The Dallas Opera on Friday. We…

After the Fall

Those seeking a spiritual counterpart to the yin of Lynne Ramsay’s masterfully moody Morvern Callar will find their yang in David Mackenzie’s exquisitely sorrowful Young Adam. Art-house aficionados may recall that in Ramsay’s recent film, a young male writer commits suicide, leaving his simple girlfriend to absorb his very being…

The World According to Ki-duk

Ever evolving, always changing, the universe nonetheless sustains many constants: Hair metal never really goes away. British women inevitably become besotted grumps. And short men always turn into intolerable control freaks. Another “true generality” holds that males of all statures develop their innate behavioral characteristics within patriarchal cultures that, while…

Merry McCarthyism

“It’s a maaaaaarvelous script,” says radiant screen queen Mary Dale of her role as Lady Godiva in a big-budget bio-pic set in the 11th century. “Really illuminates those troubled times. And we have some terrific musical numbers.” Dale, sleeker than Lana Turner, sweeter than Doris Day, is playwright Charles Busch’s…

Capsule Reviews

Red Scare on Sunset Maybe its the chic hostess coat leading lady Mary Dale wears over her mint green slacks, but darn if she doesnt look a little like a blond Lucy Ricardo. Of course, in this production, she is a he. Actor Coy Covington, a pro at putting on…

Capsule Reviews

Decade: Ten Year Anniversary Exhibition The Mulcahy Moderns current exhibition marks 10 years of success in business and the Dallas art world. This gallery has a knack for showing work that is a careful balance of delicacy and perfection. The gallery space functions something like an artwork unto itself, with…

Glory Bound

A passion for bound literature is about more than a good story. The tale is a big part of finding a treasure, but different elements make the hunt all the more enjoyable. There’s that scent that is distinctly “book.” Not dust, nor an unpleasant odor. It’s a soft mustiness that…

This Week’s Day-By-Day Picks

Thursday, April 29 Dear John Grisham: We had you all wrong. We thought you were a writer whose only gimmick was suspense/action stories featuring lawyers and/or government agencies. Your role in writing and producing Mickey, the tale of a widower whose son shows great talent in Little League Baseball, really…

Accidental Tourist

Return with us now to the days of yesteryear. Americans saw the USA in their Chevrolets, and “bad” boys and “easy” girls got their kicks on Route 66. Hertz proved it could put you in the driver’s seat with a daring, black-and-white television commercial featuring a hapless stunt man dangling…

Mexico Wins!

5/2 If you’re a gringo like me, Cinco de Mayo is an awe-inspiring festivity. On what other date after St. Patrick’s Day, but before July 4th, do so many people from so many races and economic classes join together on common ground and get just totally schlocked? How many other…

Flitter Glitter

5/5 Here are some fun facts we learned while doing Internet research for this story about Texas Discovery Garden’s butterfly gardening workshops at Fair Park: A regal fritillary is a type of butterfly found on North American prairies–not some sort of low-level 18th-century court functionary. (Blast! My royal chamber pot…

City Escapes

4/30 If abiding by Webster’s law, there’s a decided difference between a “community” and a “city,” and it’s a divergence that speaks volumes about our Dallas. A community is defined as “a group of people living in the same locality,” whereas a city is “a center of population, commerce and…

Cos It’s Bill

5/1 At first someone plays him. The imitation is solid but not spectacular; the actor has the voice down, the cigar, tennis shorts. Maybe you’d know the impression without an introduction, but it goes like this: In 1971, when Melvin Van Peebles needed some bread to finish his revolutionary pic…

Teen Spleen

One thing few may mention about Mean Girls is that it could have been unrelentingly terrible. It isn’t–it’s actually pretty fabulous on its own terms–but consider: a rush-job comedy (hastily lensed a few months ago) constructed around a high-concept title with built-in ka-ching and endless potential as talk-show fodder. Produced…

Bar Code

Laws of Attraction is the kind of film you might mistake for “cute” or “charming” at first glance. Maybe you will open the paper and spot the ad with Pierce Brosnan and Julianne Moore canoodling and think to yourself how nice it would be to see James Bond defrosting indie…

Rock of Ages

This may sound an eensy bit hyperbolic, but dig: Mayor of the Sunset Strip is the greatest rock-and-roll movie of all time. Of course, as with any advanced class, it’s good to bone up on the prerequisites. If you haven’t explored rock in film (and rockin’ film) from The T.A.M.I…

Big Deal

I am going to give 13 Going on 30 too much credit, though it’s hardly worth the effort; Lord knows the filmmakers didn’t put much into it. It’s a shame, as far as these things go, because what could have been an engaging, maybe even enlightening story about the unfairly…

Kill Wil

Suicide made merry. Brotherly devotion tinged with carnal deceit. Personal tragedy transformed by malicious humor. These are some of the oil-and-water notions advanced by Lone Scherfig’s Wilbur, a mood-switching meditation on love and death that goes out of its way to yank our chains. From the sly come-on of her…

Truth Be Told

Among the so-called highlights of this year’s USA Film Festival, which opens Thursday and runs through April 29, is Napoleon Dynamite, which sold for some $5 million at the Sundance Film Festival in January and offers further proof that what plays in Utah sometimes ought to stay in Utah. It’s…