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A look at the nominations' unexpected story lines, including best new artist nominees with unusual paths and the event's hesitancy around "KPop Demon Hunters."
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A novelist and biographer, she was also a preservationist, and her meticulous investigations of houses, villages and cities revealed intricate histories.
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He's the first Spanish-language artist to land all three major categories at the same time
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A guide to the main prizes at the 68th Grammy Awards, which will take place in Los Angeles in February.
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Ira Sachs's new film, Peter Hujar's Day, starts off as an elevation of the quotidian but transforms into something more reflective.
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Sabrina Carpenter, Leon Thomas, Doechii and Tyler, the Creator will compete in the biggest categories at the awards show in February.
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This month's picks include a loner on the razor's edge, a witch on a bloodthirsty mission and an actress walking a doomed path.
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The book landed on bookshelves on Nov. 4, and Smith will perform 'Horses' with a national tour to celebrate the album's 50th anniversary
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The Tony winner is producing and starring in the new musical, reuniting with her Wicked songwriter Stephen Schwartz.
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The Grammys jury is still out on The Life of a Showgirl.
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Katseye and Huntr/x are the first girl groups to be nominated for the Pop Duo/Group Performance award
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The Tony winner, back on Broadway in The Queen of Versailles, has been immortalized in glass in her Wicked role.
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The holiday comedy from the Play That Goes Wrong creators brings the chaos and humour of The Cornley Amateur Drama Society to the work of Charles Dickens.
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The annual gala will also honor theatre historian Gray Coleman in an evening featuring performances by Charles Busch, John-Andrew Morrison, and more.
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The singer also seemed to tease a tour on her interactive website Friday
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The evening will bring Moss Hart's fast-paced comedy about the first-night jitters of a theatrical tryout to life more than 75 years after it first premiered.
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What's announced and what's in previews in the West End.
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The 92-year-old's Oh What a Beautiful World will face off with his son's American Romance in the first year of the new country category
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Artists, albums and songs competing for trophies at the 68th annual ceremony were announced on Friday. The show will take place on Feb. 1, 2026, at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles.
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Keep track of the best tracks of the year.
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Her album The Life of a Showgirl came out a full month after the eligibility period ended
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The Museum of West African Art is poised to give Nigeria an institution of global significance, although its most hyped attractions won't be there.
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The Andrew Lloyd Webber-Tim Rice rock opera is getting a new revival, via a staging from Regent's Park Open Air Theatre.
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The reopening of the Studio Museum in Harlem, after seven years of construction, comes with dazzling alumni and collection shows.
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The Alicia Keys musical continues at the Shubert Theatre.
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The director Guillermo del Toro narrates a sequence in which Dr. Victor Frankenstein presents his findings at a disciplinary tribunal.
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This month's picks include the new "Superman" reboot and an adaptation of a beloved Roald Dahl book.
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Guillermo del Toro narrates a sequence from his film, starring "Oscar Isaac."
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Lynne Ramsay's postpartum phantasmagoria doesn't go somewhere so much as it runs right off a cliff, and it's Lawrence who holds its pieces together.
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Playbill has partnered with BookTrib to bring book recommendations specially chosen for theatre lovers.
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The film captures the friendship between an Iranian filmmaker and a Gaza City resident. They never actually meet but speak movingly via video calls.
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"Mishima," which explores nationalism, sexuality and ritual suicide, was screened in Tokyo for the first time since its 1985 release.
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From cradle to late life, the godmother of punk remembers it all — including, especially, her life with the late Fred "Sonic" Smith.
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The actor goes for broke in this story of a new mother losing her grip — and gives what may be the most unique, untethered performance of her post-Hunger Games career
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Sasha Suda was three years into her five-year contract when the museum's board announced that she was being terminated for cause.
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This month's picks include convicted swordsmen, crooked cops and bumbling heroes who can't feel pain.
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A reader asks for help navigating the many places, online and off, where a new film might be showing.
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