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Arts & Entertainment

Aaron Sorkin doesn't want people calling the Steve Jobs biopic a biopic

“Steve Jobs” is barely in theaters and already enraged fact checkers are out in full force. “Maybe they should have called it ‘iLied,’” Kyle Smith of the New York Post mocked. And...

Eddie Murphy briefly returns to stand-up at Twain Prize ceremony

WASHINGTON - Eddie Murphy showed his appreciation for receiving the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor at the Kennedy Center on Sunday night by doing something he hasn’t done in almost 30 y...

Looking to promote your event? Listen up!

One of our major goals here in the Herald A&E section is to make sure our readers know what is happening when it comes to art, culture, music and entertainment in the region. To ...

A&E Calendar

Friday Black Velvet duo, 5-9 p.m., Rubio’s Fine Mexican Dining, 116 S. Main Ave., Aztec, (505) 334-0599. Opening reception: “Secretive Beauty,” photographs by Roman Lor...

Arts Briefs

Snowdown event forms due Oct. 31 Snowdown event coordinators must submit their Snowdown, Back to the Eighties, event forms postmarked by Oct. 31. Event forms are avail...

Next Week: Not to Miss

Elements of movement, light and shadow are incorporated into every performance by Enra, a dance troupe featuring some of Japan’s most talented artists. The U.S. tour of its show “Primative” ...

Putting a new face on ‘Otello’

FLC to broadcast live Met production of ‘Otello’ Oct. 24

The Weekender

Some top picks of what to do in and around Durango

What’s it like to perform the same play 84 times, 6 nights a week for nearly 4 months?

When most of us see a play, we are there to be entertained, to turn off our lives for a moment, to become lost in fantasy, comedy, drama. What we might not realize is that, for the actors, o...

Review: Learning to Drive

Patricia Clarkson brings her usual delicacy and class to a toothsome starring role in “Learning to Drive,” a gentle-natured if unimaginative allegory about trust, communication and intercult...

Review: Crimson Peak

Like the blood-red clay that lends the eponymous setting of “Crimson Peak” its name, the movie is a visually striking but sticky thing. Set in 19th-century England, in a decrepit but picture...

Review: Bridge of Spies

You could write brief descriptions of any 100 relatively significant chapters in American history, toss them all into one of those hand-cranked raffle cylinders, pluck out one entry, and I’l...
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