Under the dome: Why two longtime Boulder residents keep coming back to Fiske Planetarium
Although Drew Simon and Ron Marks did not attend CU Boulder, they have a deep appreciation for the universityâand for Fiske in particular
When Drew Simon and Ron Marks walk out of Fiske Planetarium after a show, they intuitively know whatâs coming next. Itâs not applause or conversation or even a specific memory of a particular song or image.Ěý
Itâs a feeling.
As the two longtime friends step back into the Boulder night, eyes adjusting, ears recalibrating, both of them are grinning from ear to ear. That part never changes.Ěý
âEvery time we went,â Simon says, âwe knew weâd walk out smiling.âĚý
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Longtime friends and Boulder residents Ron Marks (left) and Drew Simon are avid fans of the Fiske Planetarium, having attended dozens of shows over the past five years. Theyâve seen some shows multiple times.Ěý
That quiet certaintyâmore than any single performanceâis what has kept Simon and Marks returning to Fiske for years. Not because they planned to. Not because either of them studied astronomy or worked in the arts or even attended the University of Colorado Boulder.
And not because they expected to find something transformative inside the planetarium they had driven past many times. Instead, it began with curiosity and a misunderstanding.
Deep roots in the community
Marks, 80, and Simon, 71, have been friends for more than two decades, both with deep roots in the Boulder community stretching back at least four decades. Introduced to each other through a mutual friendâMarksâ housemateâthey bonded over shared interests, which include hiking, live music, art and cultural events.
âThere was a time when we were probably hippies, or hippieâadjacent,â Simon says with a laugh.ĚýOver that time, CU Boulder has been a constant presence in their lifeâeven though neither man attended the university.
Marks has been retired for several years from a career as an electric engineer for Lefthand Design in Niwot.ĚýSimon recently retired from his job as a principal at BSW Wealth Partners in Boulder. Like many longtime Boulder residents, Simonâs relationship with the university grew organically, through connections to the Leeds School of Business and the Conference on World Affairs. Also, his oldest son attended CU Boulder, further weaving the university into his familyâs life.
Yet none of that connected either man directly to the Fiske Planetarium. Neither of them had a lifelong fascination with celestial mechanics or immersive films projected on a dome ceiling. Their first visit came the way meaningful discoveries do: by accident.
âAs for Fiske specifically, we didnât have some grand plan. It was probably curiosity,â Simon says, reflecting back. âWe may have seen a flyer for the planetarium or something in Boulder Weekly back when that still existed. Or we may have simply asked, âWhatâs going on at the planetarium?ââ
Whatever the case, Simon and Marks decided to check it out.Ěý
All the pretty lights
Their first show at Fiske remains memorable largely because of how unprepared they were for it. The show listing read âPretty Lightsââand Simon assumed that meant exactly what it sounded like: a show featuring visually pleasing lights. He had never heard of the musical act called Pretty Lights and didnât realize it was the stage name of the performer.Ěý
âThat probably shows how naĂŻve we were at the beginning,â Simon says with a laugh.ĚýThat misunderstanding says something about where Simon and Marks were at the time. Not insiders. Not trend hunters. Just two curious locals trying something unknown to them.
They saw that first show more than five years agoâand since that time the two men have made up for lost time by seeing as many shows as possible. Still, an exact count is difficult to quantify, Simon says, because the experience resists counting. Some nights, they attend two shows, back to back. At dome film festivals hosted by Fiske, the two men might watch eight or more short films in a day. So, does that count as one eventâor eight?
Simon says heâs never kept track âbecause it never occurred to me that one day someone would ask.â He estimates today that it could range anywhere between 30 and 60 shows.Ěý
What he remembers clearly is thatâespecially in the early yearsâhe and Marks went a lot. They were enthralled.Ěý
So many shows to choose from
Marks says the variety of the programming offered by Fiske is a big part of the draw.Ěý
âWeâve done all of them,â Simon agrees. âWeâve attended traditional planetarium shows focused on astronomyâblack holes, galaxies and large-scale maps of the universe. Weâve done laser shows and weâve attended a lot of Liquid Sky performances.
âEarly laser shows were sometimes underwhelming,â he confesses, âbut the technology and the people running it have improved dramatically. Today, I wouldnât dismiss a laser-only show the way I might have several years ago.âĚý
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âWeâve done all of them. Weâve attended traditional planetarium shows focused on astronomyâblack holes, galaxies and large-scale maps of the universe. Weâve done laser shows and weâve attended a lot of Liquid Sky performances," says Drew Simon. (Photo: Fiske Planetarium)
For Simon and Marks, Liquid Sky performancesâthe hybrid music-and-visual experiencesâhave remained their favorite over the years. Simon says thatâs because these shows are not canned visuals synced to a soundtrack but instead are created in real time by artists operating sophisticated software during the performance.Ěý
Watching the artists (who refer to themselves as ânavigators) felt like watching someone paint while the painting formedââexcept the brush was digital and the canvas was the dome itself,â Simon says.
Over time, Marks and Simon became familiar faces at Fiske events. After shows, they stayed behind to talk with the navigators, who would ask what they liked about the performance and what might make the event even better. Did a sequence move too fast? Did a visual linger too long? Was there enough variety?Ěý
In an informal way, Marks and Simon became in-house critics, always with a focus on helping the experience become better. That sense of exchange and mutual engagement with the navigators deepened their connection to Fiske.
Music was the thread that tied many of these performances together. Simon and Marks say theyâve seen many Fiske shows more than once.Ěý
âWeâve seen a lot of Grateful Dead showsâprobably more than any other artist. Pink Floyd would be second,â Simon says. âSome of that has to do with our musical preferences, and some of it has to do with relationships with navigators, who would tell us, âIâm navigating this show tonightâyou should come.ââĚý
ĚýâEach performanceâeven with the same musicâfelt different,â Marks adds. âThe visuals changed. The pacing changed. The interpretation changed, so it was never the same twice.â
A place of musical discovery
Fiske also became a place of musical discovery. Simon says he and Marks had never heard of Tame Impala before attending a Liquid Sky show featuring the bandâs music. Since then, theyâve seen that program at least three times.Ěý
The planetarium didnât just reinforce existing preferencesâit expanded them, Simon says.
At one point, Simonâs involvement with Fiske crossed a small but meaningful threshold. During conversations with one of the navigators years back, he mentioned that the program could benefit from different music. One idea that emerged from that discussion was a Jimi Hendrix showâand the navigator asked Simon if heâd curate the music. He agreed.
Simon says selecting the tracks, shaping the flow and keeping the program within the typical Liquid Sky timeframe gave him a new appreciation for the craft behind the scenes. The Hendrix show doesnât run often, but Simon says he considers it a personal footnote in Liquid Sky history.Ěý
Film under the dome
If Liquid Sky showed Simon what liveâgenerated visuals could be, a single dome film revealed what else was possible. That moment came for Simon when Fiske hosted Samsara, a fully produced film by the visual artist Android Jones. Unlike the performances Simon had seen before, Samsara was created specifically for dome presentation. Although the film was only about 35 minutes long, the experience was, in Simonâs words, like going from blackâandâwhite TV to color. It completely reframed his understanding of the medium.
âAt its heart, Fiske isnât just about astronomy or musicâitâs an immersive experience. Itâs an art form thatâs still finding its full expression.â
The two men have seen Samsara at least three times. While it was more expensive compared to standard Fiske programming, Simon says he never questioned whether it was worth it.
The film demonstrated that the dome wasnât just a venue for live experimentation; it was also a legitimate canvas for fully realized cinematic works. That realization carried forward into other film experiences, including Mesmerica and Beautifica by James Hood and collaborators, both of which Simon and Marks saw multiple times.Ěý
Then there was Dome Fest West, a judged film festival dedicated entirely to dome films. Fiske hosted it for multiple years, and Simon and Marks attended at least two full festivals, spending entire weekends immersed in the medium. Some films were short and abstract, others narrative or technically focused. There were panel discussions, awards and artists present. For Simon, it was one of the best experiences money could buy.
Fiske audience also evolves over time
Meanwhile, the audience has changed over time.
âWhen we first started going, there might be 10 people in the entire theater. And sometimes, we were the only ones there,â Simon says. âNow, shows sell out.â
Also, audiences now often applaud between songsâsomething Simon says would have felt out of place in a traditional planetarium setting.
The environment remains distinctive: everyone seated, the room dark and quiet, eyes turned upward. Simon says he always appreciated when navigators asked people not to use their phones, knowing how disruptive even a small phone screen can be in that darkness. While that messaging has become less consistent, Simon says he finds that audiences are generally respectful and engaged.
So why keep coming back?
Part of the answer is simple: Simon and Marks say they love the planetarium as a resource. Living in a university town is often talked about in abstract terms, but Simon says Fiske represents a tangible way to engage with CU Boulder. Simon and Marks also regularly attend performances through the CU School of Music, and Simon says Fiske feels like a natural extension of that cultural life.
Another part is commitment. Marks and Simon became Fiske members because they wanted to support the planetarium. Membership made them feel connected, not just as consumers of entertainment but as participants in a community invested in what Fiske could become.ĚýĚý
And finally, there is fascination.ĚýĚý
âAt its heart, Fiske isnât just about astronomy or musicâitâs an immersive experience,â Simon says. âItâs an art form thatâs still finding its full expression.â
Each visit to Fiske carries the quiet promise that something new will unfold overhead.
âThe people at Fiske are wonderful and the programming is thoughtful. And every time we go, we leave smiling,â Simon says. âItâs not hard to say, âLetâs go to a planetarium show tonight,â because we know it will be a meaningful experience.â
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