This Week’s Day-By-Day Picks

Thursday, July 15 Why is it that other people’s travels in exotic lands are so enticing? Maybe it’s our inherent desire to shift settings temporarily by living vicariously through others. Maybe it’s so we can learn without the risks of really stepping out there on our own. Maybe it’s the…

Sign a Song

Though Mark Twain’s book Adventures of Huckleberry Finn has been a catalyst for heated PTA meetings, classroom protests and the occasional fistfight, a revival of the musical version, Big River: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, tries its darnedest to bring people together. Both tell the now well-worn story of young…

World Tour

7/17 I have a feeling Susan Taylor’s one of those folks who like to find out your favorite Chinese restaurant, then tell you, yeah, sure, it’s OK, but it’s nothing compared with this little outtatheway strip-mall joint she knows in Chinatown. Then, when you say you didn’t know Dallas had…

Strike a Pose

7/17 Time was only Buddhists and hippies did yoga. And Pilates? That was for injured ballerinas, not out-of-shape grandmothers and glamorous movie stars. But now the two practices are as ubiquitous as the Stairmaster, and for good reason: They’re a good way to strengthen and tone muscles without the jostle…

Wild Nights

7/17 What do you want to be when you grow up? In younger years, innumerable adults posed the question, and teachers made us illustrate it with Crayons on manila construction paper. Our fellow snot-dribblers drew rockets to the moon, stethoscopes, tutus and unicorns (OK, so some of us didn’t understand…

Get FIT

7/15 The Bath House Cultural Center is an Art Deco landmark, a former recreation center from when White Rock Lake was a swimming hole and Dallas’ first neighborhood arts center. But each summer it also becomes a makeshift homeless shelter. Not for people or for stray animals. But for the…

Until the Night

“Memory is a wonderful thing, if you don’t have to deal with the past,” declares French Celine (Julie Delpy) to her erstwhile American one-night-stand Jesse (Ethan Hawke) in Before Sunset, the meandering but reasonably charming follow-up to the duo’s 1995 Euromance, Before Sunrise. In the movies as in life, nearly…

The Real World

Not one of this city’s countless film festivals is as much an extension of its founder, and programmer, as the Dallas Video Festival. To see but a handful of entries in this year’s fest is to know the two sides of Bart Weiss–the political animal who gnaws on movies constructed…

Good News

Anchorman, co-written by its star Will Ferrell, plays like a series of outtakes strung together more or less in random sequence. There’s a vague plot, about the fall and rise of a San Diego newsman whose polyester suits are brighter than he is, but this doesn’t propel the movie forward…

Capsule Reviews

The King and I Tony Award-winning actress Sandy Duncan seems a bit long in the tooth to play Anna Leonowens, the widowed twentysomething English schoolteacher who boldly goes where few Western women have gone before: the 19th-century Siam of The King and I. But with her remarkable pipes, she manages…

Capsule Reviews

Cast: Photographs by Jin-Ya Huang In her photographs, Jin-Ya Huang turns fuzziness and blur into a visual vocabulary of the indecipherable. The illegibility of her images is by no means frustrating. The combined result of the artist’s secret prop choices and photo-digital process, these images will keep you guessing while…

Sandy and I

Maybe it’s a mistake bringing my wife and son to the theater, hoping Sandy Duncan can pull off the part of Anna Leonowens in Dallas Summer Musicals’ production of The King and I. Yes, Duncan is a Tony Award-winning actress, with a Broadway résumé as solid as it is varied…

Hey, Wilma

You can’t, and mustn’t, deny that the allure of the sci-fi convention is the novelty of meeting and greeting the faded crushes and fallen icons of decades past. It’s a kick to shake the hand of Adam West or listen to Maud Adams and Tanya Roberts swap Bond-age stories or…

This Week’s Day-By-Day Picks

Thursday, July 8 Cafe Izmir’s hummus is a work of art. This perfect chickpea creation is deserving of sonnets, gallery exhibits and Kennedy Center honors. But mostly, it should just be eaten. The cafe’s downtown restaurant, Izmir Mediterranean Tapas in the Stone Street Gardens, takes the hummus one step further,…

Ticket Takers

7/9 Some Taste of Dallas festivals have been disastrous affairs with crowds doing more cooking on the hot West End asphalt than vendors do with their portable Sternos. It’s one of those shindigs where you have to buy tickets at a booth, and when you find out how many tickets…

Spare Us

7/10 We just thought we’d seen bowling leagues. But after perusing the requirements and details for the USA Junior Gold Bowling Championships in town from July 10 through July 16, we realized that what we really saw were uniformed drinking teams with stats and non-rented balls and shoes. Over the…

Miss Independent

7/8 Remember that time you left the black Sharpie in your jeans pocket and the cap came off and ruined an entire load of laundry and your mom’s sparkling white washer? She made you scrub the tub with rubbing alcohol, and you got such a head rush, then such a…

Girls vs. Boys

7/8 Porn for Puritans is a play. And it’s not. It’s sketch comedy, stand-up, songs, monologues, dialogues and tangos. “It’s Defending the Caveman meets The Vagina Monologues as done by Nickels and May,” says Tim Wardell, who co-wrote and stars in the, well, whatever it is. Leigh Tomlinson, his business…

Show Us Your Pups

No pun intended, but the Lodge is one of the most well-rounded gentlemen’s clubs in Dallas. Not only is the club clean and comfy, but, as a woman, it’s the classiest joint we’ve visited where scantily clad lasses are the main attraction. And we don’t use “classy” to describe only…

Run, Do Not Crawl

All you need to know about Spider-Man 2 is revealed in the opening credits, in which comic-book artist Alex Ross recaps the 2002 original in lovingly, lavishly painted panels. Spidey and Mary Jane Watson are once again entangled in that now-iconic upside-down kiss; nutty Norman Osborn, out of Green Goblin…

Strife Is Beautiful

Samurai have never been strangers to film; in fact, an entire genre has sprung from their legend, with plenty of attendant offshoots, cross-pollinators and beneficiaries (Westerns, slasher films, Star Wars). Lately, the feudal Japanese warriors have enjoyed a particular bounty of screen time: 2003 brought us The Last Samurai, in…

Wisecracker Art

In the secular world, the space of the art gallery constitutes hallowed ground. Its white walls beckon those willfully wayward members of the flock who by habit choose to while away their Sundays at the mall rather than before the pulpit. On Friday night you’ll find them at the opening…