Zip-A-Dee Doodoo

What must go on offstage at Disney’s On the Record? Eight singers and nine musicians populate this sickeningly cheerful revue of more than 60 songs plucked from 75 years of movies from the mouse factory. Now playing at the Music Hall at Fair Park, the touring production already has crisscrossed…

Capsule Reviews

Disney’s On the Record It’s too long and unspectacular for kids to enjoy, so what’s in this tedious 60-song revue for the grown-ups? Well, for a start, there are a couple of cuties onstage clad in what can only be described as “daddy-wear.” They may be singing tunes from Mary…

Veni, Vidi, Vici Venice

VENICE, Italy–All the ballyhoo over globalization in the last decade has turned the word into just another catchall for life in the age of electronic dispersion. Though meant to convey a new condition of cultural diversity and interconnection, it has come to describe our collective state of bland tolerance. Globalism…

Capsule Reviews

David LaChapelle David LaChapelle imbues his photographs with a sense of good taste based on culture’s lowest common denominator. Theirs is a beauty based on kitsch run amok. LaChapelle’s photographs are a combination of surrealist celebrity and homages to Andy Warhol. Riffing on Warhol’s silkscreen images of electric chairs, LaChapelle’s…

Big Bang Boom

I like to consider myself a connoisseur of celebratory experiences, and July 4 is my specialty. This is partly because of my patriotic parents as well as my preference for holidays that revolve around grilled meat, icy beer and oddity fireworks–like paper chickens that spin around and shoot fireballs out…

This Week’s Day-By-Day Picks

Thursday, June 30 You remember them. They wore the beret but shunned the authority. They spoke perfect French but refused those insipid potluck fetes. They were the French Club Dropouts. The West End Comedy Theatre has its own French Club Dropouts, and while a few may have been the high…

Your Friends & Neighbors

We’ll probably never know why alcoholic, womanizing, The Gong Show host Chuck Barris claimed to be an assassin for the CIA who ran missions in enemy territory and seduced women across the globe while inventing game shows such as The Dating Game and The Newlywed Game. But I kinda want…

Fired Up

Rockets’ red glare returns downtown 7/3 Searching for an ideal fireworks display on Independence Day weekend isn’t so simple anymore. As the decades roll by, the amount of crap exploding in the Dallas-Fort Worth sky keeps on growing. In order to sift through the selection, try using a checklist to…

With the Flow

Art plus yoga isn’t a stretch 7/1 Chic art gallery owner Nancy Whitenack isn’t afraid to do a little “down dog” to liven things up. “Galleries can get a tad stuffy sometimes,” says Whitenack, who owns the Conduit Gallery in the Oak Lawn Design District. “With summer here, we wanted…

Rock the Walls

From the stage to the frame 7/1 Just as rock and roll evolved into a powerful genre of music, rock-and-roll photography has proven to be an equally passionate subset of the visual art world. When a number of local musicians started intersecting Dallas photographer Blake Askew’s social circle, he wasted…

Fan-Tastic

Gaming geeks and classical connoisseurs join forces 7/1 For more than a decade, nerds across the world have joined hands and celebrated once a year at the Electronic Entertainment Expo (known as E3). Every May, the world’s largest gaming conference astounds geeks with the newest systems, titles and Dance Dance…

Cursed

Bewitched may go down as the first movie about a fictional failed actor that creates a real-life failed actor. This hackneyed, hapless and utterly useless redo of an overrated 1960s sitcom is excruciating to sit through for a dozen reasons. But nothing is more intolerable than the sight of Will…

Girls Interrupted

Not many people saw Lost and Delirious, the 2001 boarding-school drama about two girls in obsessive love, and that was probably for the best. Yes, Piper Perabo (Coyote Ugly) made a stunning androgynous rebel, but she couldn’t rescue the film from its unctuous self-importance. My Summer of Love, a bewitching…

Car Trouble

Anyone who would insist that movie reviewing is not a real job (‘sup, Mom) hasn’t been forced to sit through screenings of Bewitched and Herbie: Fully Loaded in the span of five days–and by forced, I mean either you see both movies, write 800 words about each or else you…

Model Citizens

We wish that, like our esteemed colleagues, we were into something elegant or intellectual–gourmet cooking, world travel, art house films. (What’s that? You thought Dallas Observer employees spent their time playing video games while smoking illegal substances or imbibing obscene amounts of liquor? Where ever did you get that idea?…

This Week’s Day-By-Day Picks

Thursday, June 23 You have your Dick Heads, your Ben Dovers, your Willie Bangers, your Buster Hymens. But these days, it’s quite possible the most unfortunate name to have is none other than George Bush. We’re not sure if Martha Boone Mattia would necessarily agree, but she did interview George…

Runway Renaissance

What I normally think at an airport: Go, go, get out of my way, I’m in a hurry, parking took 30 minutes, I’m a mile from my terminal, I’m late to check in at the airline desk, security will take forever, they’re going to make me take my shoes off…

Think Big

To grill or not to grill 6/25 This Bud’s on Bobby–or at least that’s how it was when my significant other interned with Bobby Flay at the chef’s Mesa Grill restaurant in New York. Flay ended each night with a round of complimentary cocktails for his staff (which almost made…

Load of Bull

A wild and crazy ride 6/25 Cowboys are known for understatement. Take the Professional Bull Riders’ “common injuries” page, for example. It notes: “Virtually every bull rider will suffer from groin injury at least some point in his career.” You don’t say? The usual similes for describing bull riding–tornadoes, jackhammers,…

Terrific Two

UTD/South Side’s artist exchange program 6/25 Few would call spilled wine a work of art. Most of us would spend a lot of time grumbling obscenities under our breath while cleaning up the red spilled mess left over from an all-night shindig. But Ryan Fitzer sees it differently. He is…

Feeling Blue

Some new Shoes 6/26 It took me a while to find the blues. Before my sophomore year in college–a year that, not coincidentally, marked my discovery of dark bars, Tom Waits and bourbon–the blues was a mere historical curiosity. Not something to listen to so much as a thing to…

Break a Leg

If she weren’t so stinkin’ crazy, Annie Wilkes would be a writer’s best friend. In Misery, the highly enjoyable stage play of the Stephen King novel now eliciting laughs and screams at Richardson Theatre Centre, Annie (played with slow-building furor by Rachael Lindley) cajoles and coddles the author whose books…